Speaker | Time | Text |
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So, over this weekend, we got news that more documents have been found at the Joe Biden residence. | ||
But that's not the big news. | ||
The big news is that on a background screening request application, | ||
Hunter Biden listed this address as his current residence and that he paid $49,910 per month | ||
for this Wilmington, Delaware residence. And look, even if he was renting the whole house to himself, | ||
that's like five grand per month in Wilmington, Delaware. | ||
That's like the high end. | ||
For what reason was Hunter Biden paying 10 times the average rent to live in his dad's house? | ||
I don't know. | ||
Maybe this was how he got the 10% for the big guy sent his way. | ||
How do you clean money? | ||
If Joe Biden's setting up the business, Hunter Biden's doing it, how does the money then go from Hunter to Joe and get cleaned up? | ||
Just pay rent. | ||
And when Joe Biden files his taxes, he doesn't itemize which apartment generated which income. | ||
He just says rental income X and then puts some ridiculous number. | ||
So it could be that. | ||
We'll talk about that and a whole bunch more surrounding Joe and Hunter Biden. | ||
Plus, we've got the World Economic Forum predicting a global recession. | ||
And then, of course, Wyoming is going to ban electric cars to shore up the fossil fuel industry. | ||
What an interesting week. | ||
My voice is also still kind of crummy, but bear with us as we're coming back into the swing of things. | ||
Thanks for hanging out. | ||
Before we get started, head over to TimCast.com. | ||
Become a member to support our work directly. | ||
Click that Join Us button and you'll get access to exclusive uncensored segments from this show Monday through Thursday at 11 p.m. | ||
And I will also add, you will be aiding in our cultural endeavors. | ||
The haters told me I wasn't allowed to skate in the local spots. | ||
They actually tell me that. | ||
They told other people that. | ||
And so we did an event. | ||
We showed up. | ||
It was great. | ||
Bunch of locals were there skating. | ||
Had a great time. | ||
People were giving me fist bumps. | ||
They want to make you think they control these spaces. | ||
They do not. | ||
Simply by showing up and doing our thing, we won. | ||
For all the people who are scared to speak out, I'm telling you, don't be afraid. | ||
These people do not have the power you think they do. | ||
So, thank you all for the support. | ||
Smash that like button, subscribe to this channel, share this show with your friends. | ||
Joining us tonight to talk about this and so much more is Osiris of Middle Maga. | ||
unidentified
|
Let's go! | |
Let's get it! | ||
I'm Osiris, and I have a website and a YouTube channel called MiddleMAGA, and I'm all over the map politically. | ||
I like libertarians, I like MAGA, I like the populist left. | ||
Tim's had Kim Iverson on, Jen Perlman. | ||
I really like them. | ||
So I started out after the pandemic, and I saw the craziness, like you're talking about Biden and people trying to, you know, go after you for skating in the park. | ||
And I'm like, I gotta get a mic, grab the Canon M50, went in my basement and just started recording, and I'm here. | ||
Right on, man. | ||
Thanks for joining us. | ||
It'll be fun. | ||
unidentified
|
Thank you. | |
All right, we got Luke. | ||
Hey, guys. | ||
Lots of crazy news today, as today we also celebrate the day that the government assassinated someone and then made a holiday for that particular someone, paid for by, of course, your tax dollars. | ||
That's why today I'm wearing my MakeTax How's that going? | ||
I'm building muscle. | ||
So far, so good. | ||
I've had positive feedback. | ||
You can get the shirt on thebestpoliticalshirts.com and of course support my efforts here. | ||
Thank you again so much for having me. | ||
Ian, how are you? | ||
Hi everyone, Ian Crawford, doing really well. | ||
Thanks for asking, Luke. | ||
How's your New Year, what was that thing, resolution? | ||
Yeah, I'm building muscle. | ||
So far so good. | ||
I've had positive feedback. | ||
I saw him carrying around a garbage bag full of chimichangas. | ||
Yeah, I'll just keep pushing. | ||
He's cultivating mass. | ||
That's my mind. | ||
When I get started on something, I get obsessive about it for the most part, which is why I don't do a lot of things, but when I do, I do them well. | ||
He sleeps very well. | ||
Yes. | ||
Rest is a big part of it. | ||
A lot of rest. | ||
It's all of it. | ||
It's rock and roll, baby. | ||
Hey, and I am Serj.com. | ||
As always, guys, let's just start rolling. | ||
All right, let's jump into this first story. | ||
We have this tweet from Miranda Devine. | ||
She says, in 2018, Hunter Biden claimed he owned the house where Joe Biden kept classified documents alongside his Corvette in the garage. | ||
Take a look at this. | ||
On this silly little document, you can see, oh, I can't even scroll down. | ||
I got to do it this way. | ||
Here we go. | ||
Scroll down, and you can see right here, monthly rent, $49,910. | ||
He lived there, move in date March 20th, I'm sorry, March 2017 to February 2018. | ||
So 11 months, he's paying his dad 50 grand and you can see current address is the Wilmington address. | ||
What's Hunter doing spending 10 times the high end for rent to live in this house? | ||
I mean, look, you want to talk about the documents that should not have been in those properties. | ||
You want to talk about who else had access to those documents at his UPenn office as well as his house. | ||
And it all sounds very dirty. | ||
And then from that, we're now kind of discovering that Hunter Biden, I think this is evidence. | ||
Of funneling money surreptitiously to his dad. | ||
Now I want to say proof, but it is possible he fabricated that number. | ||
And he's trying to make it seem like he spends a lot of money. | ||
I don't know why he would do that. | ||
So I think this is very, very strong evidence that that's what he was doing. | ||
He was funneling money to his dad. | ||
Well, it is a lot of money and it doesn't really make sense in that particular neighborhood, but Hunter Biden is a big spender. | ||
He spends tens of thousands of dollars on sex workers and on a lot of drugs. | ||
There's also a text message that the New York Post is reporting on specifically detailing how Hunter Biden allegedly was covering a lot of his family expenses and giving as much as 50% of his earnings to his father. | ||
This is according to some of the text messages through the laptop that were leaked. | ||
One specific text message reads, quote, I hope you all can do what I did and pay for everything for this entire family for 30 years. | ||
Hunter raged to his daughter Naomi in January 2019. | ||
It's really hard, but don't worry, unlike pop, I won't make you give me half your salary. | ||
That's Hunter Biden texting his daughter. | ||
That's pretty telling there. | ||
Yeah. | ||
unidentified
|
Yeah, what we see here is evidence of washing money. | |
Like you said, I'm not going to say proof, but this looks like they're doing the laundry. | ||
And I think this is real. | ||
There's two things. | ||
MAGA came in the house. | ||
You just had Matt Gaetz on Friday. | ||
MAGA's really going to do the church-like commission, and that's going to put pressure on Biden. | ||
That's why we're starting to see some of these things come out, in my opinion. | ||
And they have to look impartial. | ||
So now they can say we're going after Trump and Biden, and then on top of that, I don't think Democrats want Biden in 2024. | ||
Are you serious? | ||
Yeah. | ||
So it solves two problems for them. | ||
I think, and Joe Scarborough's on TV, along with Mika, going after Biden because he's handled this sloppily. | ||
They had the message like, we don't think there's any more documents out there than, how many did we see? | ||
Three or four now? | ||
Yeah, the number one thing with crisis management is you nip it in the butt. | ||
You say, here's everything, and then you don't have to talk about it anymore. | ||
So, something's wrong. | ||
I think he's in danger. | ||
You brought up a very good point, because, you know, the corporate media usually regurgitates any slop he throws on the floor, and they love it. | ||
They suck it right up, they spit it right at you, looking at you, smiling as they... Their propaganda and their bullcrap. | ||
They got him elected! | ||
If it wasn't for the corporate media, Joe Biden, hiding in his basement, would not be president of the United States right now. | ||
Also social media, also the intelligence agencies, also a lot of black money. | ||
But that's a separate topic here. | ||
So I do think there's something behind the scenes happening right now. | ||
It could be him saying, hey, I'm going to be running in 2024. | ||
I want to be the next president of the United States. | ||
And some powerful people saying, no, you're not. | ||
You're going to play ball and you're going to give this to Buttigieg or Kamala or Oprah or Michelle. | ||
Whoever it may be, but I think there's a larger power struggle, and it might not even be around the election. | ||
It could be something related to the collapse of the economy. | ||
The globalists or internationalists, the shadowy elites could be like, we're going to crash this economy under your watch. | ||
He's like, nope, don't do it. | ||
Who knows what's going on here, but this smells a foot here because this doesn't really add up to what usually happens in Washington, D.C. | ||
I think it's weird because Joe Biden is the establishment. | ||
They don't need to do this to get rid of him. | ||
They could just be like, all right, hey buddy, we're not going to have you running 2024. | ||
And they'll go, okay. Unless they want to get rid of him early. Then they're like, okay, | ||
here's how we're going to get you out early. We're going to find documents. You're going | ||
to apologize because it's going to be no big deal. And then you're going to resign. | ||
unidentified
|
What if Jill doesn't like Kamala that's allegedly out there in the wind? And if he steps down, | |
it would have to be Kamala at least at first. Do you think it's possible that they, that, | ||
I don't think they tell them directly. | ||
These are all signs that, Joe, your time's up. | ||
I don't think there's any secret meeting where they come in and say, Joe, don't run. | ||
But what if Kamala's next in line and they're like, we don't want Kamala. | ||
We want Buttigieg or Hakeem Jeffries or whoever else. | ||
At this point, it's McCarthy. | ||
unidentified
|
McCarthy? | |
Yeah, if Joe and Kamala are out, the next in line for the presidency is a speaker. | ||
For 2024, we're talking about. | ||
Yeah, I don't know. | ||
I mean, I don't think they need to do this to stop Joe from running in 2024. | ||
They just need to not give him the IV drugs they've been giving him. | ||
unidentified
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Just let him fall asleep. | |
Don't run him. | ||
There's only so many replicas of him that they have, okay? | ||
So they might be running out. | ||
And they're getting worse? | ||
They're like degrading in quality? | ||
Joe Biden number five is not doing too well, okay? | ||
Sorry, Ian, you had a point. | ||
$50,000 a month in rent is complete... It's not normal. | ||
That can't... I don't know if I could say that can't be real. | ||
Is it possible that apartment buildings tend to... It doesn't seem real. | ||
Tons of people have gone through the rentals in the area, and the highest is $6,000, and the average is like $3,000. | ||
The IRS would, in any other circumstance, would look at this and be like, oh yeah, it's illegal. | ||
Yeah, I would think so. | ||
Or he's lying. | ||
I'll put it this way. | ||
That's also illegal. | ||
Ian, let's say I want to give you a million dollars. | ||
You've got to pay a gift tax on it. | ||
There's a bunch of things you can do, but there's like 15,000 is the yearly tax limit. | ||
If I pay you a million dollars, you've got to pay income tax on it. | ||
And so you get people who are like, how can I get the money to someone in a certain way, right? | ||
Okay, how about I buy a painting for a million dollars, sit on it for a little while, Then claim it's only worth a dollar, sell it to you for a dollar, you can then say, oh it appreciated to a million dollars and now you have a million dollar asset. | ||
You just have to pay taxes on it. | ||
I think what this is evidence of, so anyway my point with that is the IRS tracks for these things because you can't just give the money to someone. | ||
Now rental income is still going to have, it's going to be taxed. | ||
So what I think this is evidence of is not necessarily that Hunter is trying to secretly give money Now isn't this very blatant? | ||
as a gift, I think what he's trying to do is clean the money. The money's dirty. So he's giving his | ||
dad 50 grand a month in rent so that Joe can claim on his taxes rental income and then pay the taxes | ||
on it and now it's clean. Yeah, at its face that's what it looks like if Hunter's taking money, | ||
unidentified
|
dark money. Now isn't this very blatant? I mean this is out in the open. | |
So why would he think he wouldn't get caught here? | ||
Because he already got away with so many things. | ||
Today he's also in court demanding that his four-year-old daughter, who he had with a stripper, not take his last name. | ||
So that's what he's up to today. | ||
unidentified
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That doesn't really say the best things about him. | |
Those kind of actions don't scream good father. | ||
They're trying to erase the Biden name from... Is this a female bastard as well? | ||
Four-year-old daughter. | ||
He's claiming that it's a curse. | ||
The Biden name? | ||
Yeah. | ||
He's like, she wouldn't live a normal life. | ||
unidentified
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Yeah, he's trying to claim he's protecting her from the abuse that she might get for the Biden name. | |
Which, he must have been madly abused. | ||
I mean, if he thinks that his kid's gonna be abused, I would have a feeling that maybe he was too. | ||
unidentified
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He's playing games with it. | |
He just doesn't want her to get the Biden name. | ||
So he's saying, I'm trying to help you, don't take the name. | ||
But the name actually would help her. | ||
Yo, Hunter is going to blow the lid on this stuff in like a decade, in the next decade. | ||
unidentified
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He already did! | |
When Joe Biden passes away, the way Hunter is going to be coming clean on all this crap. | ||
unidentified
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Now, did you see they are so cold hearted, they hung up stockings for Christmas and didn't include that granddaughter. | |
No, they included the dog, the cat, everybody. | ||
I think her name was Navy. | ||
I forgot her name. | ||
That's cold. | ||
Yeah. | ||
Is the word still bastard if it's a girl? | ||
unidentified
|
That's a good question. | |
I don't think so. | ||
I think it's just a boy, but let me double check. | ||
Bastet. | ||
unidentified
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And then on top of that, I forget which news outlet it was. | |
They wrote a headline saying that Joe Biden has six grandkids. | ||
He really has seven. | ||
So the media—so whatever Biden does in his personal life, that's his decision, as bad as it looks. | ||
But why would the media not report accurate numbers? | ||
Yeah, and the statistics with fatherless homes are absolutely shocking. | ||
When you really start to look at what happens to a family when the father is not there, it is absolutely horrendous. | ||
It is absolutely horrible. | ||
The possibilities of arrest, of jail, of murder, of assault, of crime skyrocket up dramatically. | ||
Now, when you have, you know, a father who's in politics, who's been in politics for so long, in Washington D.C. | ||
for so long, being the career politician that he is, That usually means he has to neglect being there at home. | ||
Or if he was at home, he was maybe trying to get into some showers that some kids were into. | ||
But that's a separate story. | ||
I don't want to get into great detail here. | ||
But I think it's fair to say that Joe Biden has been the best father, as of course, Hunter Biden isn't really showing the best kind of father figures. | ||
He isn't really the best role model here in this particular example. | ||
As far as I can tell, bastards can be women, boys or girls, any child born out of wedlock. | ||
Also, bastard also historically called whoreson. | ||
That's whoreson. | ||
The full word, whoreson. | ||
Isn't that incredible? | ||
unidentified
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Whoreson? | |
That's vicious. | ||
That's a vicious label. | ||
I don't want that label. | ||
That's a vicious label. | ||
Whoreson. | ||
They were like, no, bastard is better. | ||
Okay. | ||
How about snow? | ||
unidentified
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That's from Game of Thrones? | |
Yeah, that way it sounds cool. | ||
unidentified
|
Yeah, yeah. | |
Snow's cool. | ||
Yeah. | ||
What if the judge was like, you can't be a Biden, but you can be a Snow? | ||
You'd get a name from somewhere. | ||
unidentified
|
Yeah. | |
What a sad family, man. | ||
It's like a royal family, kind of. | ||
They act kind of like that, with that drama and money. | ||
unidentified
|
You know, what I was thinking earlier, imagine aliens came to our planet and landed in America, and they said, take me to your leader. | |
What would they think? | ||
Yeah, they'll just be like, this isn't worth it. | ||
Like, just gone. | ||
There's a story that just came out. | ||
Maybe that's why they're not visiting. | ||
I mean, these are ants. | ||
They show up. | ||
It's us looking at ants. | ||
Like, who's calling the shots here? | ||
This guy? | ||
No. | ||
No, I don't know. | ||
I think if they did show up, they would treat us the way we treat animals, you know? | ||
We'd sit back and watch. | ||
It's funny, because you ever watch Meerkat Manor? | ||
unidentified
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No, I haven't seen that. | |
It's like all the meerkats. | ||
They go to war. | ||
The meerkats have war and tribes and stuff. | ||
And they talk about the leader and they give him silly names. | ||
That's what the aliens are probably doing. | ||
They're like, the Biden family is ridiculed by many. | ||
Well, I don't know if the aliens have British accents or anything like that. | ||
I forgot who I was watching over the weekend, but it was a YouTube video that made the argument that if we do get visited by aliens, that alien would be artificial intelligence. | ||
Because if you want to have that kind of long travel, if you want to, of course, send something, why not just send an AI robot? | ||
unidentified
|
Yeah, I think that's what Elon wants to do with the Tesla bot. | |
Everything Elon Musk does is to get to Mars, and I think he knows that it's very difficult to get out of there with the radiation and all that. | ||
Yeah, I agree with that. | ||
Let's talk about this from the BBC. | ||
White House says there are no visitor logs for Biden's home. | ||
Okay. | ||
So not only did he have classified documents stored there more than we originally thought, Hunter Biden lived there, was funneling money to his dad, and we don't know who showed up. | ||
If Hunter was living there, if he actually was, you know why there's no visitor log? | ||
Because the list of hookers would be too long. | ||
They'd just be like, we got, it's a Rolex. | ||
We got Destiny, Laquisha, Pink Panther. | ||
What else is a good stripper name? | ||
Ian, do you know some? | ||
Candy, don't leave. | ||
Candy, yeah. | ||
Agnes. | ||
She's an old one. | ||
unidentified
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And how many of them are like Feng Feng, like Russian or Chinese spies? | |
I guarantee you some of them are probably spies. | ||
Joe walks in and Hunter's got like two Russian women on his arms and he's got sunglasses and he's smoking a joint. | ||
And he's like, who are these? | ||
Trixie Scarlett. | ||
Yeah, Trixie's like, I don't know. | ||
Spies, I guess. | ||
How did they get past security? | ||
What security? | ||
There's no logs, there's no security. | ||
They're sitting there like reading the classified documents. | ||
I hope Hunter knows. | ||
Champagne, you could read? | ||
unidentified
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Simenon? | |
As much as Hunter complains about Joe. | ||
Those are not tissues. | ||
Did you say synonym? | ||
Simenon, that's a stripper name. | ||
Right? | ||
I want Hunter to keep it in mind no matter- Meg Cardamom and Rosemary? | ||
How angry you are at Joe. | ||
I get Hunter, you're probably pissed off at Joe because of the way he treated you throughout your life, but you never would have had a chance to live like this without him. | ||
You would have had some cheap job that you hated barely stringing by. | ||
You wouldn't have enough money to pull you out of the gutter when you fell, so be thankful to your dad for at least that. | ||
No way, dude. | ||
I think Joe diddled Hunter. | ||
Yeah, I wouldn't be surprised. | ||
unidentified
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What? | |
Don't say thank him! | ||
Yeah, but don't just put it all on Joe, Hunter. | ||
You've been sucking off the tit your whole life, man. | ||
It's your responsibility. | ||
Take care of yourself. | ||
I think Hunter's a bad dude, but I think he got abused by Joe Biden. | ||
Like, you see the Ashley Biden stuff? | ||
You watch Joe Biden grope children and sniff them? | ||
What do you think he was doing to Hunter Biden back at home? | ||
True. | ||
After he lost his daughter and his wife, like, what happened to him? | ||
I wouldn't be surprised if he took it all out on Hunter. | ||
And is it true that he and Jill had an affair and her husband with Joe? | ||
unidentified
|
That's a rumor. | |
I can't confirm that, but Bo was always, rest in peace to Bo Biden, he was always the star. | ||
He was the one that was supposed to be president now, not Joe. | ||
And then the problem was Bo Biden was the good one. | ||
He was the good son. | ||
Hunter was always the dark horse, you know, the black sheep. | ||
So that will mess with you mentally too, on top of, I don't know what other stuff was going on. | ||
What happened to the good one? | ||
unidentified
|
Bo Biden? | |
Yeah, cancer, right? | ||
unidentified
|
Yeah, he died. | |
Was it cancer? | ||
Well, I forgot how he got it. | ||
I think they attribute it to his time in Iraq. | ||
unidentified
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Yeah, I think Joe did. | |
I'm not sure if that is exactly why, but Joe did. | ||
He thinks that could have played a part. | ||
But then Joe claimed that he died in Iraq, I think. | ||
unidentified
|
No, no, yep, yep, he did. | |
He's just gone. | ||
No, he's not. | ||
I mean, Joe lies about everything. | ||
Remember when he, in the 80s, he plagiarized that entire Irish dude's life? | ||
unidentified
|
Oh yeah. | |
I remember when he was saying that he was like the top of his class or something like that. | ||
Like he left school. | ||
I worked in coal mines. | ||
unidentified
|
Yeah. | |
He said so much stuff. | ||
Bo Biden died in 2015 from brain cancer at the age of 46. | ||
And they thought it was from like extensive exposure to burn pits and stuff like that. | ||
Yeah, is that what it was? | ||
It doesn't say. | ||
It doesn't here. | ||
unidentified
|
We don't know for sure on that one. | |
Yeah, there's a book that came out saying that could have been that. | ||
Nobody knows for sure. | ||
But Beau Biden was a star politician. | ||
I mean, he was next in line. | ||
He was very good. | ||
Military vet. | ||
unidentified
|
Yeah. | |
Yeah. | ||
unidentified
|
Wow. | |
And now all I got is Hunter? | ||
Yeah. | ||
That's gotta be brutal. | ||
Hunter 2024. | ||
unidentified
|
That sounded so sad. | |
I mean, if there's ever going to be a redemption arc, it has to be with Hunter, right? | ||
If Hunter was running for President of the United States, I would vote for him immediately. | ||
He has the experience. | ||
Who do you want running the country? | ||
Someone who has never lived a life of excitement, of just experience, or someone who's been sheltered in this entire life? | ||
I would watch a Hunter Biden YouTube channel, and I would enjoy it. | ||
unidentified
|
Oh, that would be dope. | |
But I would not vote for a Biden, any of them. | ||
I think he would be able to deal with serious problems that Americans are dealing with because he dealt with them himself. | ||
If he got the job, he'd keep funneling money to his dad. | ||
That'd be the whole bit. | ||
Well, that's what they're doing already. | ||
That wouldn't change anything. | ||
unidentified
|
But Luke, I'm disappointed in you. | |
What about Fetterman? | ||
I know, that's a good one, too. | ||
Hunter Biden, Fetterman, 2024. | ||
I like that. | ||
I love it. | ||
I love it. | ||
Might as well. | ||
Make it all burn down as quickly as possible. | ||
Make the shirt Hunter Biden, John Fetterman, 2024. | ||
Just make it all burn down faster. | ||
I look at Hunter Biden's Wikipedia page and the picture they use for him make him look like Steve Carell in his awkward office moments, like Michael Scott, super awkward, big eyes, and then maybe that's just how he looks, Hunter. | ||
It's all blurry, the picture's blurry, like they couldn't just get a normal picture of him looking charismatic. | ||
I asked the audience, does this prove Hunter laundered money to Joe? | ||
89% say yes. | ||
So the challenge with evidence and proof, right? | ||
Proof would be like catching him holding, like handing the money out. | ||
I actually think this is as close to proof as you're gonna get. | ||
Like him stating definitively on a background check application that he did give this money to his dad. | ||
I suppose what would be better is a bank log showing the transfer so we know what actually happened. | ||
unidentified
|
Yeah. | |
But him stating he did it is as close to a confession as you're gonna get. | ||
unidentified
|
Yeah. | |
I would say it's evidence, not proof. | ||
I said no on that poll because it could be doctored paper. | ||
It could be doctored. | ||
There's no official stamp on it. | ||
And it could be a lie. | ||
It could be lying about the amount. | ||
Fair point, but any evidence could be doctored. | ||
Any and all of it could be doctored. | ||
Like you're in trial because a guy got murdered. | ||
Like here's the murder weapon. | ||
It's like maybe they've fabricated it. | ||
So I would look for preponderance of evidence to decide proof. | ||
If there's enough evidence that I could say that's probably not doctored or a good portion of it's not. | ||
How about this? | ||
Hunter Biden said he was paying the family expenses. | ||
Hunter Biden says his dad was taking half his salary. | ||
In the emails, he said 10% for the big guy. | ||
And then he's giving 10 times the high-end rent for a rental property that Joe Biden owns. | ||
This is crazy. | ||
unidentified
|
Yeah, we're really close to proof. | |
And what I do on my channel a lot is bring to the bigger picture. | ||
You're talking about there are no logs at his private residence. | ||
So that means he can, I think he spent 200 days there. | ||
He could bring anybody over there and talk about whatever they're talking about. | ||
Looking at the big picture, don't we have enough to just really, as a country, all agree we need to look into it? | ||
Like, why would we have a bipartisan type of battle over this? | ||
Wouldn't you think anybody on any political spectrum would say, this doesn't look right | ||
well part of what i've been thinking as a c degree age of pardons that were upon | ||
is like okay the liberal economic order is turning into the new | ||
world order we need to make oversee this change and why do we hate ourselves | ||
for being the cut the pilots of the deaths are for the last seven | ||
years like we were basically trying to militaristically control earth as | ||
united states Like, people did horrible, horrible things. | ||
Henry Kissinger, Joe Biden, you name it, Donald Trump. | ||
All these people with all these secrets, and it's like, dude, we gotta, like, make the new world order now. | ||
We need to make a Republican-style, decentralized statehood across Earth, or the Chinese, in a world economic form, are gonna do it for us, and they're gonna make a corporate communist state. | ||
So I want to forgive people. | ||
That's where I'm at right now. | ||
I don't even want to go after Trump and Biden for the stupid stuff. | ||
We have a bigger deal. | ||
I just want to say there's a very big difference between Trump, Biden, and Klaus Schwab and all of these people. | ||
When these people were murdering children, Trump was firing people on TV. | ||
The worst thing Trump was doing was selling Pepsi or whatever or being in Home Alone movies, building hotels. | ||
The argument is like the worst of the worst American military psychos that have been controlling this liberal economic order. | ||
I'm just I don't feel like witch hunting because we're going to end up pulling back the curtain realizing we've all been involved in it. | ||
We've all been benefiting from it. | ||
Like it's true that we have. | ||
We've been greatly benefiting from from the US Empire, the petrodollar and all that stuff. | ||
And I'm not a fan of this idea that the US is the world police. | ||
I kind of like the idea that we mind our own business. | ||
But since what 1913, that's not been the case. | ||
And we're the Death Star. | ||
unidentified
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You know? | |
Yeah. | ||
Do we shut it all down? | ||
unidentified
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What do we do? | |
The New World Order, you fear, is already here. | ||
And they're working with the Chinese. | ||
And these internationalists don't give a damn about the United States. | ||
They use it as a vehicle. | ||
They use it as a vessel. | ||
Just like they use China. | ||
Just like they're testing all the latest Big Brother surveillance technology there. | ||
They're going with their plan of what works out best for them. | ||
They have no allegiance to the United States. | ||
They're not American. | ||
They're internationalists. | ||
So you've got to understand it from that perspective. | ||
And when they talk about a new world order, they're talking about continuing pretty much the way that the things are, but for a better benefit for them. | ||
We would need like a populist, a new world order, like a popular world order that people actually want, not let corporations top-down decide it. | ||
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Yeah, that's MAGA. | |
That's how I view MAGA, what you just said. | ||
I wouldn't say the New World Order just because it rubs people the wrong way, but yeah, it's a populist movement. | ||
You saw the holdup of the speaker vote. | ||
We haven't seen anything like that in a hundred years. | ||
International nationalism. | ||
That's what people were jokingly referring to it as, like the idea that there was a movement of individuals to strengthen their own countries and their own borders and respect between different countries to allow each to do so. | ||
So the media tried mocking the idea, but it was actually quite simple. | ||
It meant that someone from the UK was like, hey, this is where I live. | ||
We want to have these rules. | ||
That's totally cool that you live over there and want to have those rules. | ||
And then we'll figure out how to work together. | ||
And everyone's like, yeah, that sounds like a really great idea. | ||
So it's an international movement to restore and strengthen national boundaries. | ||
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Yeah. | |
I think libertarians have the answer. | ||
You hear comic Dave Smith on this show and how based he is. | ||
Decentralization, like you just mentioned. | ||
Yeah, that's the answer to me. | ||
Yeah, they have the United States of Mexico is already primed, we've got the United States of America, we've got, Canada's basically a bunch of provinces, states, China's a bunch of states, like we're really, as long as the people want it, we're prepped to create a decentralized statehood across the planet. | ||
Maybe it's just gonna, you know, in order to get these other countries to recognize the superior way in which our government works... We need to bomb the crap out of them. | ||
Maybe the first thing we need to do... And take their oil. | ||
Is just, you know, go there, And then just make them implement this. | ||
And then after we make them do it, they'll understand why it's so good. | ||
They may resist, but it's okay. | ||
We have bigger guns than they do. | ||
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Well, I think really the key would be... That worked really well in Afghanistan. | |
That's right. | ||
The key would be to teach them English and get people to use English as a primary language. | ||
If we all have one language, I think that the best ideas win. | ||
No, no, no. | ||
That's a good idea. | ||
That's a good idea. | ||
But the other issue is that they might still try to speak their own language and adhere to their own cultural tradition. | ||
So you beat them. | ||
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No! | |
But this is why Hollywood was so great for the American culture in the last hundred years is because it spread English across the planet and English became the language of business and, you know, when you understand what American freedom-loving people are saying, it's a lot easier to get on board. | ||
The solution to a lot of the world's problems is individuals not trying to force their will onto others. | ||
And as long as people realize that, and respect other people, and respect their property, and their individual sovereignty, then and only then the world will be a better place. | ||
But when we have the Karens, When we have Kyle saying, you need to do this, you need to follow this religion, or this edict, or this woke doctrine, and you have to do it, or I will get and use extortion and force with centralized police forces in order to push my ideology onto you. | ||
That right there is the larger problem of our society, and why it is where it is right now. | ||
And it takes personal responsibility, individuals being strong and independent and saying, hey, I respect you as an individual, respect me. | ||
Standing up for themselves, being strong, being able to defend themselves, that truly will lead us out of this nightmare. | ||
The globalist, New World Order nightmare that we all are a part of. | ||
With that mindset, if someone were to instantiate like a revolution to statehood, like Republican statehood or something, Would you? | ||
I mean, the libertarian mindset's kind of like, let them do it. | ||
I'm not involved, but like, usually you can't revolt against your system without outside help. | ||
So like, at what point would you suggest getting involved? | ||
No, other countries always get involved. | ||
And of course, just like the United States got involved in Ukraine, it's a larger proxy war. | ||
But again, conflict is usually routine with that kind of larger idea. | ||
This is why I'm saying, What you're describing is one of the problems I'm describing. | ||
People trying to force something on someone else. | ||
Once we get rid of that force, once we get rid of that extortion, just that belief system of respecting others, there wouldn't be those kinds of confrontations. | ||
There wouldn't be those types of situations. | ||
What I'm talking about is kind of utopian, but more of just like a place where I think we should be going to as humanity, where we could progress to a point where we could respect each other's differences without trying to bomb or kill each other. | ||
The current ethos or the current philosophy, I suppose, is whoever holds the biggest stick. | ||
Because if you don't hold it, someone else will. | ||
And so the United States is basically like, look, our system is better. | ||
We got all of these civil rights we've expanded throughout the years. | ||
We've done a great job of things. | ||
Let's just hold the biggest stick and beat anybody who disagrees. | ||
That way we don't got to worry about them beating a big stick against us. | ||
And that's why the Cold War was so Crucial for these people. | ||
That's why the draft, Vietnam, and all these countries, that's why they used false flags. | ||
All that mattered was we were bigger and more powerful, so we don't gotta worry about it. | ||
They genuinely believe that by being the Death Star, being the Empire, you prevent war and suffering. | ||
So it's almost like their attitude is, there's gotta be some. | ||
There's gotta be some suffering, some war. | ||
And then, you know, we'll make sure there's not too much of it. | ||
That was the limited war doctrine, Kissinger's doctrine. | ||
So we would, you know, instead of bombing Moscow, if Russia was going to war in northern Vietnam, we'd just fight proxy war in Vietnam. | ||
Basically what's going on in Ukraine, you don't just bomb Moscow because you're angry that they invaded Ukraine. | ||
Then Moscow doesn't bomb Washington, D.C. | ||
Or Syria. | ||
Or Libya. | ||
Or Vietnam. | ||
Yeah, it was a mess. | ||
The liberal war machine went so haywire when they invaded Iraq and Afghanistan. | ||
I think that was when you realized... The first time or the second time? | ||
The second time was when it was like, you have gone too far. | ||
You lose the big stick. | ||
You failed. | ||
Whoever's in control of this system has failed you. | ||
But I think that was the first time. | ||
So they had to try again. | ||
They had failed. | ||
Well, I mean, just ethically, as a geopolitical police, invading the Middle East like that is an epic failure. | ||
I don't know if they didn't realize the technology was just so great. | ||
You can fly bomber planes around Earth. | ||
Have you guys seen the solar planes that can fly forever? | ||
Now, imagine they put bombs in those things, and they just have them fly around forever. | ||
And then it's just like, don't step on it. | ||
They probably already have that. | ||
Or the scary thought was, you ever hear of rods from God? | ||
You know about this one? | ||
Oh yeah. | ||
It's satellites carrying giant tungsten rods. | ||
They just drop it and it slams into the earth. | ||
I guess the argument is it takes too much energy to put the rod in space in the first place and then maintain its orbit. | ||
But being able to drop. | ||
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So it just stays up there until they're ready to drop it? | |
Yeah, then it releases it. | ||
If you watch the G.I. | ||
Joe movie, that's what they do. | ||
unidentified
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Oh, I didn't see that. | |
Yeah, Cobra Commander. | ||
He presses the button, then he blows up London. | ||
The elite flocked to Davos this week on their private jets to lecture us average folk on why we must give up our gas-powered cars by an imaginary deadline in order to save the planet. | ||
In the meantime, Wyoming lawmakers proposed a ban on electric vehicle sales. | ||
Well, that's something new, I guess. | ||
What? | ||
Wyoming wants to ban electric cars. | ||
A group of GOP Wyoming state lawmakers want to end electric vehicle sales by 2035, saying the move will help safeguard the oil and gas industries. | ||
So I'm sure most of y'all have heard California, Oregon, and Washington are moving to ban gas cars. | ||
I think California already did. | ||
Goes into effect 2035. | ||
Now Wyoming is doing the opposite. | ||
Could you imagine you're in Oregon and you're like, I'm gonna start, I'm gonna drive, uh, I'm gonna drive east. | ||
And then you get into Wyoming, and you're in your electric car, because you don't have any gas cars, and there's no electric charging stations, and you're just like, well, what do I do? | ||
Or you're in Wyoming, and you're like, I'm gonna go visit the coast. | ||
You drive through, you take your gas car, you drive into Oregon, no gas stations. | ||
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When you're an authoritarian, like what California is doing is an authoritarian act. | |
It's government getting in the way of a private market demanding that you transition to a certain thing by a certain time. | ||
What happens is the other side can play the same game. | ||
I'm against it. | ||
Libertarians have the right idea. | ||
Let the free market go. | ||
Wait, Tim, we have freedom of movement in the future? | ||
That's not supposed to happen. | ||
People have their own cars? | ||
That's not supposed to happen. | ||
We're supposed to rent cars and share them and borrow them, just like all the companies that have World Economic Forum board members that are heavily invested in them. | ||
We're not supposed to be using cars and having private property. | ||
That's not a part of the UN 2030 vision and not a part of the vision that Klaus Schwab was talking about years ago when he was talking about Pretty much. | ||
Making sure that people cannot and will not be owning cars. | ||
A lot of major cities are also making it very difficult to drive cars. | ||
New York City is one of them. | ||
They set up surveillance cameras everywhere. | ||
There's nearly 15,000 surveillance cameras all throughout New York City. | ||
Speed cameras everywhere. | ||
You go over 25 miles an hour, You get a ticket right away, billed to you. | ||
There's a lot of people obfuscating their license plate in New York City because obviously, you know, people make mistakes. | ||
It happens. | ||
25 is not a very high speed. | ||
It's a very low speed. | ||
People make a lot of mistakes. | ||
People are being indebted. | ||
There's no parking spots. | ||
Every street is being closed down so you can't even drive down there. | ||
Drive down most streets. | ||
So we are seeing this 2030 UN-Klaus Schwab World Economic Forum vision be implemented very slowly, but it's already happening in New York City. | ||
It's already going to be happening in California, where they're banning not just electric cars, not just, sorry, gas cars, diesel cars, lawnmowers, even golf carts are now being banned in California, which again is just absolutely insane and crazy and going towards the vision of what Klaus Schwab wants for you and not for what Well, look, I can sympathize with Klaus Schwab. | ||
Just imagine, you're sitting there, you're in your yacht, hanging out with all your rich buddies, and then you look up in the distance and there's some middle-class dude and he's drinking a soda. | ||
And you're like, what makes him think he's entitled to the same drinks that I am? | ||
And you just desperately want to take from him everything he owns and then just put him into indentured servitude. | ||
I can totally understand why they're mad, right? | ||
Or just, you know, just totally wipe them off the planet because there's too many people in this world. | ||
That's also another thing that they're also openly calling for. | ||
But making them super poor is a way of helping, you know, make that process go a lot faster. | ||
So these people are not just eugenicists, they're also utter frickin' hypocrites. | ||
There's an estimated 1,100 private jets at Davos this year. | ||
They quadrupled their private jet emissions last year than the previous year before that. | ||
So these are individuals who obviously live by a different set of rules, don't care about the environment, don't give a damn about it. | ||
This is just their PR words that they're using to, of course, justify their larger takeover of society, which is exactly the hostile takeover that we're going through right now. | ||
Alright, then he's not on the boat watching the guy drink a Coke, he's looking out his window and seeing human beings in general. | ||
He's just mad they're there. | ||
He's just flying on the private jet being like, there's too much open land here. | ||
We need to... Shamus and I came up with a bit a while ago about Bill Gates that we never got around to making because we couldn't put it on YouTube. | ||
It was basically a gag about how Bill Gates is his day and it's like he's driving down the street and he pulls into a McDonald's and then he's like, I'll have the Big Mac with a large fry and don't forget the ketchup. | ||
And when he pulls up to the drive-thru, they hand him the bag and he looks and he goes, | ||
there's no ketchup. | ||
And it's just like a series of things throughout the day where he gets minor inconveniences. | ||
But like, once he's really angry, the woman knocks on the window, she's like, oh, forgot | ||
your ketchup and gives him more. | ||
And then he has an app on his phone. | ||
We can't talk about it on YouTube, but it activates a certain thing in people that wipes | ||
out humanity. | ||
And so he's like sitting there staring at his phone, like ready to press the button. | ||
Then she's like, wait, don't forget the ketchup. | ||
And then he's like, oh, oh, thank you. | ||
And then he keeps doing it. | ||
Just like the general idea is that these people's real anger is not centered in anything logical. | ||
It's centered in just like their emotions related to other people. | ||
Like they just don't like other people. | ||
So they make up reasons to justify why there should be less people. | ||
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And then common people cheer him on. | |
I said, I kind of made my own definition of woke, because I actually think this is a part of wokeism. | ||
And I said, woke is the act of allowing an authority outside of God to define your morality. | ||
And the way they're able to get people to cheer this nonsense on is the climate gods are their woke, or whatever the climate, whatever you want to make it. | ||
And you're cheering on your own demise. | ||
That's how powerful I think this religion is. | ||
Yeah, it's amazing. | ||
It's like when Disney did the Lemmings documentary. | ||
You know the story of that? | ||
No. | ||
So they made this documentary in the Lemmings all walk off the cliff and then everyone believes Lemmings commit ritualistic suicide. | ||
They don't. | ||
Apparently what they were doing was they had like push brooms and stuff and they were like shoving the animals off the cliff and beating them. | ||
And so they were fleeing to their death. | ||
And then they were like, now film it and claim it happened. | ||
That's what it feels like a lot with this World Economic Forum stuff. | ||
They're destroying your life, taking away everything from you, locking things down. | ||
Then when you're miserable, they say, are you miserable? | ||
It's because of climate change. | ||
I mean, all these people are having heart attacks because of climate change. | ||
unidentified
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Yeah. | |
Suddenly. | ||
Suddenly. | ||
Dying suddenly from climate change, you know? | ||
And so, you got to do something about it. | ||
unidentified
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Yeah, I think it's for, you know, talking about it for common people, I think, don't be alarmed. | |
I think we will make it through this. | ||
It might not be the same future you look at a generation from now, 20 years from now. | ||
We might all have neural links to one or two. | ||
Generations from now, life's going to be fine. | ||
People are still going to have friends. | ||
You might be controlled by a central being or a government, but I think humans are survivors and life will be different. | ||
But in the end, it will look dystopian to us. | ||
Could you imagine somebody from like the 18th century looking at what we're doing right now? | ||
They would be blown out of their minds, and I think it would be the same type of thing generations from now. | ||
I think if you took someone from like 1850, in any capacity, and transported them here, the first thing they would do was go on a violent rampage, thinking that it was all Satanists and demons and stuff. | ||
unidentified
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And that's where we are now, kind of, right? | |
We're looking at this stuff, I said it's an anti-God movement, I'm still against it, I'm going to speak out against it, don't get me wrong, but I think we're kind of in that same place. | ||
I think the future is going to be AI. | ||
People will eventually cease to exist in some capacity. | ||
We're already integrating ourselves into the network with Twitter and with these apps and everything. | ||
Elon buys Twitter. | ||
Surprise, surprise. | ||
It's a massive neural net. | ||
He also is running Neuralink. | ||
You combine these two things. | ||
I think Elon bought Twitter because he wants to build a neural net, he wants to connect people's brains to it, and Twitter is already the base component of people injecting their thoughts into a machine. | ||
Next, you just need to hook it to people's brains. | ||
It's there. | ||
Yeah. | ||
One of the clips that I also just saw recently was Elon Musk a couple years ago saying, hey, We need to have a serious conversation about the development of artificial intelligence here. | ||
We need to seriously have some real regulations here. | ||
We need to stop doing what we're doing. | ||
And he's like, no one's listening. | ||
And this is just continuing. | ||
So there's going to be a lot of implications because of this. | ||
And a lot of the most powerful, most sinister people are at the head of these larger technological advancements. | ||
There's a reason Klaus Schwab is calling for the fourth Industrial revolution. | ||
And when he's calling for that, he's calling for, of course, using technology for his own personal benefit, screwing everyone else over. | ||
And with the advancements, I mean, we're seeing the possibility of human beings living forever. | ||
And for a certain group of people to live forever, there's going to be a lot of other people that are not going to be living forever, or won't be living at all. | ||
And we have to understand that there's this larger trade-off that is being talked about very seriously right now at the World Economic Forum. | ||
To be fair, though, I mean, think about it. | ||
If they invented the immortality pill right now, and maybe they already did, could they just give it to every single person? | ||
Well, they're gonna say... How would you guys deal with that? | ||
Right now, let's say some alien came to you and said, here's a bottle of pills, easily replicable, and it will make anyone who ingests the pill one time biologically immortal. | ||
Like, you can still be hit by a car, but you won't age to death. | ||
Would you just be like, okay, everyone can have it? | ||
unidentified
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I would spread it, yeah. | |
Yeah, I'd want everyone to have it. | ||
I mean, what you would see is centralized power obviously trying to control it and not let everybody have it, I think. | ||
But like, all the woke people getting it and all the zombies and everything? | ||
unidentified
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I'm very much, you know, I'm against the woke-ism, but I will support your right to be woke. | |
Yeah. | ||
But I think the challenge is, there are some people that There are some people who believe in hard work, personal responsibility, individual liberty, freedom, et cetera. | ||
And there are some people who think they're entitled to everything and should take from you even by force. | ||
And so it's like, if I'm faced with being like, should I give the immortality pill to the hardworking, freedom-loving individualist or the woke authoritarian psychopaths with guns? | ||
I probably wouldn't. | ||
I'd probably just be like, man, that's a tough call, isn't it? | ||
Because look, we're not talking about killing anybody. | ||
We're talking about granting them extended or eternal life. | ||
Or I should say extended. | ||
The question would be, would you give purified, clean water to all those people? | ||
The people you hate as well? | ||
People you disagree with? | ||
Your enemies? | ||
If you had the opportunity to give everyone access to clean water, you wouldn't? | ||
Yeah, I don't think it's that simple. | ||
I think if we're looking at, say, China right now. | ||
And what they're doing to the Uyghurs in those camps. | ||
And I'm supposed to be okay with being like, I'm gonna overlook all that evil stuff you're doing, just give you some really nice things to help you? | ||
No, I think the opposite is true. | ||
I think maybe, at the very least, you can be like, look, if I've got something you want, you gotta stop torturing and raping those women. | ||
You agree to that, maybe we'll talk. | ||
But I'm not just gonna give you whatever. | ||
You know what I mean? | ||
I think some tech belongs to all of us, if we can make that happen. | ||
Yeah, but an individual like Jared Kushner, who, again, very powerful, and is already making statements about possibly living forever. | ||
You think he's going to be sharing that with the Yemenis that he, of course, brokered a deal with the Saudi Arabians that he's bombing? | ||
Do you think he's going to be doing any of that? | ||
That's a tough question, man. | ||
It is a very tough question because it's also an ethical question. | ||
It's also a question about our existence here and it kind of changes it. | ||
And it changes also our relationship with God as well. | ||
So there's a lot of deeper philosophical implications here that I think are worth debating and talking about on a longer, bigger perspective. | ||
That's why I don't have an answer for it. | ||
Let me ask the audience. | ||
My first knee-jerk reaction is no. | ||
Absolutely not. | ||
You wouldn't share with everybody? | ||
I wouldn't want it to exist. | ||
But the problem is, it does exist. | ||
Like a gun. | ||
And will the powerful people use it to, of course, control humanity? | ||
But again, that also makes you less human, though. | ||
You take away people's humanity at the same time, so you're also a part of their problem. | ||
So there's a larger conundrum here. | ||
Yeah, maybe the gun thing is probably the better analogy, I suppose. | ||
People have a right to live, maybe, if you don't have to give it to them. | ||
Like, we don't just go around handing people guns. | ||
unidentified
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Yeah, exactly. | |
But access to it should be made available to those who want it. | ||
Let me know what you guys think in the comments. | ||
Put a 1 if you don't think everyone is deserving of immortality. | ||
Put a 2 if you think everyone should just be given no matter what, no matter their political opinions. | ||
Yeah, if the Founding Fathers were writing the Constitution today, I could see them putting that in as you have the right to. | ||
I mean, I wouldn't want to live forever, right? | ||
I mean, that takes away from my human experience. | ||
It takes away from all the beautiful moments that I have here. | ||
I don't want that. | ||
The main thing is it makes you not age, so you could always kill yourself, but it won't be taken from you, I think is the idea, except for these tragic accidents. | ||
That's the problem, too, is if people think they can live forever if they're safe, they're going to become obsessive with keeping their surroundings safe and soft. | ||
Bill Gates would lose his ish if everyone got a pill to live forever. | ||
Bill Gates would be, I thought you'd freak out right now and then start doubling and tripling down on all of his efforts that he's already tripling and doubling down on right now. | ||
This is what I think is a large component of it. | ||
There was like 10, no this is 12 years ago, I saw Aubrey de Grey speak in California. | ||
You know Aubrey de Grey. | ||
Long hair, dude. | ||
Yeah, he's a senescence researcher. | ||
And he said that, what did he say, I'll paraphrase it because it's been a decade, that, this is 12 years ago, someone who is 45 today will live to be 1,000 years old. | ||
That's what he said. | ||
Not because We're going to invent a pill in the next 30 years that will make you live for 1,000 years. | ||
But because every year we develop new medical advancements, and our medical advancements progress faster than a person ages. | ||
So for instance, someone's 45. | ||
In 10 years, they start getting bad arteries or whatever. | ||
Well, in the 10 years time, we've already figured out a cure for that. | ||
10 years later, he's got macular degeneration. | ||
We've already got a cure for that. | ||
It's been 20 years. | ||
Now he's a hundred years old and it's like, you know, and he's got joint pains. | ||
Don't worry, we've already figured out how to restore collagen. | ||
And so it's just going to keep happening. | ||
I actually think looking at stem cells and stem cell therapy, you know, that stuff's scary crazy. | ||
We talked about this on one of the members only segments. | ||
You can actually get stem cells taken from the umbilical cord or from your own skin or fat. | ||
They don't even gotta take it from babies. | ||
That was a big concern back in the day. | ||
It was like they're taking, you know, from aborted babies and stuff. | ||
Not even, they can take from your own skin or fat, your own stem cells, multiply them, inject them into your body. | ||
The stem cells will seek out damaged tissues and restore them full. | ||
Doesn't that, when I saw that, I watched this video about it, it freaked me out because I'm like, won't that just make you like immortal? | ||
Because if you're given fresh, so cells have a certain number of divisions as the telomeres break down, if our understanding of science is correct, if they're giving you a fresh, fully young baby cell that bonds, would it not just have perfect, complete, you know, DNA that could replicate or whatever? | ||
Sounds too good to be true. | ||
There's already elites getting blood from young people and athletes. | ||
Bro, stem cell therapy is $8,000. | ||
You call the company and say you want stem cells and exosomes, $15,000, and I bet that's what Joe Biden's getting. | ||
It's on its way to being like $80, but that's the question. | ||
Do the people that own the world or that are trying to run the business of the world, do they want That would start wars, because you're fighting over resources at that point. | ||
And cannibalism, because then at that point human bodies are just mobile food sources. | ||
I want to jump to this story from Media Matters. | ||
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people on earth like I don't think that would start wars because you're fighting | |
over resources at that point and cannibalism because then at that point | ||
human bodies are just mobile food sources I want to jump to this story | ||
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from media matters look you want to read that one it is titled Tim pool and co | |
host to make absurd claims that the government wants to control your cooking | ||
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through the power grid You know, I don't know why that's really funny. | |
So Luke, they're ragging on you here, because you mentioned, and it was Jamie Michelle from Gays Against Groomers, and you said, for me, this is happening in order to push the kind of digitized 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 eat their own food by simply clicking a button, that could be easily done with this new policy. | ||
And I think that's what they're really doing, in my opinion. | ||
Media matters as it's absurd. | ||
Except in California, they already turned off people's ability to charge their cars. | ||
In Colorado, people got notices that they opted into a program. | ||
They couldn't change the heating on their homes. | ||
They couldn't turn the air conditioning up. | ||
This is how the media laundering works. | ||
You see a thing happen. | ||
They say, you cannot charge your car because the grid is overloaded. | ||
That happened. | ||
Then they say, you cannot turn on your air conditioning because the grid is overloaded. | ||
Then we sit here and go, now they want everyone to have only gas stoves. | ||
They want to be able to control the grid. | ||
Electric stoves. | ||
Electric stoves and electric cars, which they want to put on the grid in California. | ||
Which is already overloaded. | ||
And no gas cars or diesel cars. | ||
And they've already turned off. | ||
So we're not speculating at all. | ||
We're saying, hey, you know the thing they already did? | ||
If they get this, they can do it more. | ||
And then Media Matters comes out and says, what a weird conspiracy theory. | ||
Yeah. | ||
New York, California, Washington, and Maryland. | ||
Maryland or Massachusetts. | ||
I think one of those two. | ||
Someone has to correct me in the chat room there. | ||
All have quasi natural gas bans in place and programs that phase them out over the next decade. | ||
The Biden administration is, of course, working closely with the EPA to make this a federal policy. | ||
And obviously, with the grid being overloaded in many instances, this is obviously going into a why would they be doing this other than trying to one control everyone or to create organized chaos? | ||
What's the reason here? | ||
Can someone give me an explanation here? | ||
Did they give us an explanation here with Media Matters explaining why this is happening? | ||
I bet they didn't. | ||
I haven't read this article, but I'll eat my own words if they did. | ||
It's what I said, if they ban gas stoves nationwide, that means rural people won't have access to a lot of those, won't have access, and a lot of those people have gas tanks in their houses, which would put their cooking on the grid, and that grid can be controlled by external forces. | ||
Granted, you can also get solar. | ||
The thing about solar is that even when you're in a rural area, because we set this up, you can get your own gas tank. | ||
Now you can heat your house, now you can cook your food, you don't have to worry about it. | ||
With solar, you still have to get permission from the utilities and the grid to turn on, but theoretically you could create your own solar internalized grid or whatever. | ||
But I think, yeah, this is another step towards absolute control. | ||
Yeah, and now you add that with smart cities, smart grids, walkable cities, surveillance cameras, artificial intelligence, facial recognition, they're setting up essentially a prison all around you, a technocratic digital one that there's no escaping. | ||
And don't forget, the voice of the robot's always gotta be British. | ||
I don't know why, but they do. | ||
And then like, you're gonna go to your kitchen, and you're gonna go to your refrigerator, and there's gonna be a camera on it, and you're gonna try and open it, it won't open, and it's gonna be like, I'm sorry, Luke, you're looking pretty fat. | ||
And you're gonna be like, I'm hungry. | ||
No, you're not. | ||
And then it just doesn't open. | ||
I mean, not seriously like that, but I wouldn't be surprised if it was like, warning, Your refrigerator has been turned off due to excessive usage. | ||
You are over your allotment of carbon by 47 points or whatever. | ||
If you open your fridge, your food will spoil. | ||
Yeah, carbon, social credit score through the central bank, digital currencies that they're all talking about implementing through the World Economic Forum in Davos. | ||
So yeah, it's already here in many instances. | ||
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I imagine it's like we're playing a game of chess and Luke is saying, look, they can move their knight here and that would be a problem. | |
And then Media Matters says, no, no, that's not a problem at all. | ||
And we're like, wait a second, you can make that move. | ||
So that stuff like that actually wakes people up. | ||
The more they do silly stuff like that, it wakes people up. | ||
Look, there's even a quote from Luke saying, oh, your Tesla is also going to be off too. | ||
Yeah, it's like Luke saying, if the knight gets moved there, that could be a problem. | ||
And they say, Luke said that the government's planning on moving his knight there! | ||
And Luke's like, I didn't say that they are. | ||
I mean, at least in your quote, you didn't say they are. | ||
You said, I think that this can happen. | ||
I mean, you were pretty plain that it's what you think can happen. | ||
I don't think you're going to know what other people are doing. | ||
When I express my opinions, I say I'm expressing my opinions, because it's important to do that. | ||
Because again, we don't know for sure what the future is going to look like. | ||
But we see through the UN 2030 vision, we see through the Great Reset, through the Build Back Better, we see through all their talking points, their own articles, their own websites, them calling for this. | ||
Essentially, having total control of everyone's life through technology. | ||
And whether it's your refrigerator having Wi-Fi, or your blender, or your stove, or your car, being dependent on the grid, having, you know, smart grids, having everything online, leads to a lot of possibilities of a lot of powerful people using that power and authority over you to punish you arbitrarily for whatever they want. | ||
Did you see Klaus Schwab saying, uh, the next thing, bad thing will be if the power grid goes out across the earth. | ||
I mean, it was just a Twitter video I'm seeing. | ||
Like, could you imagine a life 2035 where some false flag or some organization decides to shut off the power grid of the entire planet and then people can't cook, they can't drive. | ||
And then they start getting these warnings on their phone. | ||
We need you to mobilize to do X. Like people are going to be out of their freaking mind. | ||
They'll do whatever the government freak can tell it. | ||
Like we do not want to find ourselves in that position. | ||
That is my point. | ||
And it is like, do the math. | ||
Do the math. | ||
If you think it can happen and you've done the math and it shows that it can, then it can. | ||
No matter how many times people ridicule you. | ||
Yeah, we're slowly and surely losing our rights. | ||
And not only that, we're losing our privacy. | ||
We're losing our ability to be secure. | ||
And we're heading down one particular road, and it's a pretty clear road. | ||
We're on a train, and there's another train coming. | ||
And now claiming that a train's coming or you're on the train is somehow absurd. | ||
So, whatever. | ||
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Yeah, there's no dispute that the government could do what Luke is talking about. | |
So it's interesting that they don't cover that. | ||
Like, that could be a problem. | ||
Whether it's on purpose or not, if you get everybody on electric devices, then you have more control over them. | ||
I mean, imagine if Hitler had the technological advancements that we have right now. | ||
I mean, he was already using IBM. | ||
He was already using some of the biggest corporations in the world that were working with him and helping him facilitate his larger power grabs. | ||
What are you waving? | ||
Don't you ever watch Justice League, bro? | ||
No, I don't. | ||
I can't remember. | ||
It's been a long time since I watched this episode, but I think it was Vandal Savage. | ||
I'm not sure. | ||
But all of a sudden history changes and the Nazis had won in the future. | ||
And it's because a single 2000s laptop was sent back to Nazi Germany. | ||
That's a really awesome point to make for a kid's show. | ||
Because, like, to understand the computational power of a modern laptop in the hands of a world power, it's like, dude, the Enigma machine was this, like, ultimate device the Nazis had. | ||
And it was just like this rudimentary analog device where they moved cables around to encode, encrypt messages. | ||
I have to imagine That like, Enigma encryption is like dog crap compared to today's computers. | ||
And I bet any modern laptop, well I could be wrong about this, but I'd assume a modern laptop could crack the Enigma encryption. | ||
So like, I watched, what was that movie? | ||
With Benedict Cumberbatch? | ||
What is it called? | ||
About Enigma and Alan Turing. | ||
Yeah, that's right. | ||
I thought it was a really bad movie, by the way. | ||
But you know, basically he builds this machine that goes through every possible, | ||
you know, uh, a passcode or like permutation, permutation to figure out what the | ||
Nazi messages are. | ||
The imitation game. | ||
Yeah, there you go. | ||
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That's right. | |
That's right. | ||
And it's like he builds the computer. | ||
It's like one of the first computers. | ||
It's mechanical and things are just like spinning. | ||
Man, you take a modern cell phone for 20 bucks and you're gonna like press a button. | ||
It's going to go like decrypting. | ||
Like, don't you think they'll be pretty fast, Ian? | ||
Like, literally just brute-forcing it with a laptop eventually. | ||
I think it wouldn't take too long for it to... To do what? | ||
To crack Enigma. | ||
I don't know enough about Enigma. | ||
I think quantum computing is insane, though, because it can treat numbers as a 1 and a 0, and it's trying to figure out number strings. | ||
If Homie could build a computer in like 1941, or whatever it was, or 43, to crack an encryption, I'm pretty sure our computers today can easily crack that encryption. | ||
I think so too. | ||
Very, very fast. | ||
Hitler was like, the only reason that he was who he was, for the most part, is because of the technology that he had, like telephone, I don't know what their phone situations were like, yeah, telephone, they had video, they had film, you know, the manipulation of film and radio got an entire country of people rallied around him. | ||
So now we're just that, on the next magnitude of global communication systems that got hijacked. | ||
Enigma was, like, considered unbreakable. | ||
It was originally cracked in, like, the late 30s by a Polish dude, and then Alan Turing famously worked on this machine to crack it. | ||
I just Google-searched on Quora, it says, how long would it take today's computers to crack the Enigma machine? | ||
And this guy Rupert Baines responds, GCHQ, the UK version of NSA, did it with a Raspberry Pi and Legos in 15 seconds. | ||
That's wild. | ||
Fifteen seconds, dude. | ||
Imagine taking one of those things back to World War II. | ||
Crazy. | ||
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Yeah, and for that headline, the other part of it is, so Luke says the government could make this chess move. | |
So then Media Matters says, don't look at the move, don't look at the move. | ||
Doesn't that make you even think more, like you're going to make that move? | ||
Why would you not acknowledge that that move could be made? | ||
The downsides to pushing everybody to electric. | ||
And they called me an InfoWars employee. | ||
I was never an InfoWars employee. | ||
You got that wrong. | ||
Again! | ||
Well, they just post fake news anyway. | ||
I mean, get your facts straight. | ||
If you're going to call me an employee of a former company, okay, let's fact check that I actually worked for that company. | ||
I didn't. | ||
I really like Media Matters because all they really do is create clips of the show. | ||
Aside from putting the word absurd in the title, I really don't mind that they're clipping the show | ||
and sharing it with everybody. | ||
And they just run the- It's free advertising. | ||
What's the text they run? | ||
It's just a transcript. | ||
Yeah, I noticed that, article transcript. | ||
Big fans of media management. | ||
Like at the bottom it's like, in this article Tim Pool. | ||
And then I'm like, oh, what's this? | ||
For some reason, they use this picture of me from like 12 years ago. | ||
What's up with that? | ||
I'm glad they brought up that. | ||
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It's hard to find pictures of you, I think, Tim. | |
I don't think. | ||
I'm on the show every single night. | ||
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Well, other than screenshots of the show. | |
Oh, they used the black and the red background to make it kind of look like fascist. | ||
You know what I love? | ||
This one right here. | ||
It says extremist bigots and conspiracy theorists. | ||
YouTuber Tim Pool's 2022 guests in review. | ||
And it's like, they try really hard to smear people. | ||
The things they were saying about Adrienne Curry, it's just like, are you nuts? | ||
They're just desperately trying to make everybody extreme right. | ||
And I'm pretty sure they did not put Seamus on the list. | ||
And Seamus was like, I was a co-host of that show for seven months! | ||
It was the most extreme, the most bigoted. | ||
He's like, I'm a conservative Catholic. | ||
I didn't make the legacies. | ||
One of the problems I feel like Media Matters is having, and a lot of companies are, is that they're looking for drama where there doesn't have to be any. | ||
Sometimes you're just talking about stuff. | ||
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Yeah, I think part of it is to make sure that what they're really afraid of, just like when Tim did his event this weekend, they're afraid of you going out and meeting people and talking to people of all different political spectrums. | |
So Media Matter does that, and it's less likely that you're going to get a leftist on your show, right? | ||
They don't want to be called Right-wing or you're convert you're talking with all these radical people so it keeps you in the echo chamber I think they're really that's why I like the Tim the idea you guys are doing with the coffee shops Like let's get together and talk it can be a political. | ||
I'm wearing a Yaira shirt from Eric July. | ||
He has a comic book He made this character up, and that's just like you guys do your music. | ||
It's apolitical. | ||
They don't want Cenk Uygur on this show. | ||
They wouldn't want that. | ||
I know it would be contentious, but they don't want people of different politics coming on. | ||
I don't think it would. | ||
We had the Krasensteins on. | ||
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It was kind of boring. | |
It was just like, we know each other's opinions and we disagree, and it's like, okay. | ||
You know, cause a lot of people were like, Tim, push back harder. | ||
And I'm like, the dudes are allowed to have opinions we disagree with. | ||
I can't, I can't be like, I think your opinion is wrong. | ||
It's like, well, I think your facts are wrong. | ||
Like, here's where I think you're. | ||
And they're like, well, we like these things. | ||
And I'm like, well, you're allowed to like them. | ||
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But those discussions are important though. | |
So they don't want that happening. | ||
But why do you think that is? | ||
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Why they don't want that happening? | |
It's a speculation at this point. | ||
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Well, I mean, I'm playing chess too. | |
I think they want everybody funneled online. | ||
The pandemic was a great opportunity because you can control people with algorithms. | ||
And it's very hard online to break out of your algorithm. | ||
So they don't want people to convert. | ||
If you talk with somebody else, then you can say, hey, oh, I got this problem too. | ||
My kids are having this problem at school. | ||
And then all of a sudden, how do you do stochastic terrorism? | ||
If I know you and we have a connection and you're my neighbor or we've had a couple of discussions and somebody says, oh, he's saying all this radical stuff. | ||
You can't really make that stick. | ||
I know him. | ||
I'm not worried about your thing. | ||
I think the solution to all of this is connecting with people. | ||
Right, Tim? | ||
That's what you're doing with your culture stuff. | ||
I think so much of this fear the left has is fake. | ||
It's real fear, but the cause of it is fake. | ||
I'll tell you guys, many of you may have heard the story, but we'll talk about it now. | ||
Not this past weekend, the weekend before. | ||
I go and skate in D.C. | ||
at Freedom Plaza. | ||
Nothing happens. | ||
Just literally skate around and hang out. | ||
Apparently, some, like, woke crew got angry and started sending messages throughout the skate community about how I was brought there by some pros. | ||
I wasn't. | ||
I went there, got there before they were there. | ||
And it's like, of course I know who they are. | ||
They're famous pro skaters. | ||
And, uh, so I was like, oh wow, look, you know, pro skaters. | ||
And, uh, so apparently it was a big deal. | ||
And there are messages being sent around. | ||
I'm getting texts from like pros. | ||
They were like, yo, like, it's a lot of flat going on. | ||
Like, people are mad that you were there. | ||
And I'm like, nobody said anything to me. | ||
They were posting in forums lies. | ||
Saying like, everybody's staying on the other side of the park. | ||
What do you think? | ||
I was sitting alongside 15 other people. | ||
We were chilling. | ||
There was a dog and dog pissed on the ground. | ||
And we were like, we're out skating. | ||
These things happen. | ||
And so I'm like, my guys, it's not real. | ||
We go skate all over the place. | ||
You know what I, the only thing I see? | ||
We went to the opening of the Hagerstown Skate Park, Maryland, fist bumps, high fives, people were like, whoa, oh crap, yo, Tim, cool to see you, let's skate. | ||
We went up to one indoor skate park in Altoona, Pennsylvania, and I walk in and what do I hear? | ||
They're coming for your income tax! | ||
And I'm like, are these guys watching Inflame? | ||
I can verify I was there that day. | ||
It was cool! | ||
Yeah, we hung out, and the dudes were like, oh wow, cool to see you, and they were like, dude, skateboarders are like anti-establishment people. | ||
But all of a sudden now I got these industry people being like, bro, we're taking a lot of heat. | ||
Like people are really freaking out about what's going on. | ||
And I said, no, they aren't, dude. | ||
This is not true. | ||
And they were like, well, look, man, like it's getting bad. | ||
And then I said, I'm going to go back on Saturday. | ||
I'm going to tell everybody to be there. | ||
And I'm telling you, nothing's going to happen. | ||
And what happened? | ||
A bunch of people showed up. | ||
We skated, we hung out. | ||
People took pictures. | ||
I gave out skateboards. | ||
Locals gave me fist bumps. | ||
And we had a good time. | ||
Then someone told us about this little spot called the Big Board in D.C. | ||
that defied the lockdowns. | ||
And they were like, you should go eat there because they told Muriel Bowser to F you when she was trying to lock everything down. | ||
And then so then I said to everybody, OK, that's where we're going. | ||
And we packed the place. | ||
It was just like every table filled this whole venue. | ||
That's what it's all about. | ||
Not only did we prove That the fear these people in skateboarding had over, oh no, everyone's going to be mad you're there. | ||
Oh, we're not true. | ||
Never happened. | ||
It was a lie to scare you into not speaking up and being yourself. | ||
And I had no problem showing up, skating around and bringing Taylor Silverman. | ||
And Taylor, of course, is the one who called out biological males competing against females against her. | ||
And she gets tons of threats and hate. | ||
And we announced we'll be in a public square by ourself, well, you know, with our fans or whatever and | ||
our friends, but like skating around. | ||
Any one of these whack jobs could have come up to us and done anything they wanted. Nothing happened. | ||
Not a single hater showed up. No violence, nothing but happiness and high fives. And then | ||
with that gathering and people met each other and talk to each other, hung out and laughed and had | ||
a good time. We also told everybody to go and hang out at the big board in DC. | ||
to you. | ||
to support businesses that stood up for what they believed in, creating nothing but massive positivity without a modicum of hate or resistance. | ||
People need to stop believing the lies. | ||
The woke people are like, we'll cancel you. | ||
What's the worst that's gonna happen? | ||
What's the worst that's gonna happen? | ||
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Yeah, that's why I want to know what the money is behind groups like Antifa, because I don't think it's organic. | |
I don't think it's really there. | ||
I think you have to have some type of funding or push to get, you don't think so? | ||
I don't think you need funding to get a bunch of unemployed whack jobs to go be whack jobs. | ||
You need some, because organizational power is tough. | ||
But it shows you that if there's nothing to target, there's nothing to target. | ||
If I announced we were doing a legitimate event, speakers, tents and everything, they could stop that. | ||
They'd call the city, they'd make complaints. | ||
But when I said, I'm just going to be standing there, Not a single hater showed up. | ||
Not a single complaint was made. | ||
We skated around. | ||
Did some tricks. | ||
I did a kind of a bunk forward flip because it was like windy and cold. | ||
Someone filmed it! | ||
So they put up a video on Instagram. | ||
Actually, let me shout the dude on Instagram out. | ||
I think I have it on my phone. | ||
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That's pretty cool. | |
Were you still going to do a skate channel? | ||
I remember a while back you talked about it. | ||
We're working on it. | ||
It just disappeared. | ||
Do you have this kind of feeling of community where you're from? | ||
And do you think there's a way to help facilitate all that? | ||
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I think everybody has their own talents. | |
So where I'm from, I don't really feel it much anywhere. | ||
I mean, there's not many people working towards that solution. | ||
I want to do a shout-out to Black Pegasus, who's a hip-hop artist out of Colorado. | ||
This Christmas, he went around to Christmas malls, and he's been practicing freestyling. | ||
Him and his partner, Don. | ||
So they walk up to random people. | ||
And they just say, hey, how you doing? | ||
You want a candy cane? | ||
They take a candy cane out. | ||
There's like a little five dollar bill on it. | ||
And then they say, give me three words. | ||
I'm going to rap a song for you just out of the blue. | ||
And then they rap a song for them. | ||
And then sometimes they give them like a stack of ones or something like that. | ||
But that's connecting to people completely apolitical. | ||
But I think I believe everybody has their own talent to do that. | ||
Maybe you sew. | ||
Maybe you play music. | ||
Whatever that is, that's the answer to me to break away from what we're seeing. | ||
The Ballistic Boy on Instagram. | ||
Everybody follow The Ballistic Boy. | ||
He produced a video from the quote-unquote unevent we did, and there's just happy people standing around taking pictures, people skating and doing tricks, fist bumps, no hate. | ||
And that was to prove a point. | ||
That I could show up in public with a week's lead time, everybody can know, nothing bad's gonna happen. | ||
I got mixed feelings about it because it feels like going into a bear's den and then standing there and being like, see the bear didn't attack me, I'm fine. | ||
But like it's not, I don't think it's sustainable. | ||
What bear though? | ||
That's the point. | ||
There was no bear there. | ||
You're calling it a bears den, and I'm like, bro, we're gonna go in, we're gonna turn the flashlight on and show you there's not a bear in here. | ||
Not a bears den, but it's like saying, hey all bears, I'm gonna be here on this time and this day. | ||
They're not bears. | ||
They're not bears. | ||
And you shouldn't leave. | ||
Pretty chunky. | ||
But they don't move like bears. | ||
There's squirrels. | ||
And what happens? | ||
Can a squirrel attack you and bite you? | ||
All these things, yes. | ||
Do you want to run into a cave full of angry rabbit squirrels? | ||
You don't. | ||
But you know what happens? | ||
When you yell around squirrels, they run away. | ||
Right. | ||
It's just that I don't know if it's sustainable to dox yourself and other people a week beforehand to half a million people. | ||
Providing our assassination coordinates? | ||
Yeah, exactly. | ||
If we did that every week for ten years, I would imagine one of those weeks something bad could—it's just not a sustainable practice. | ||
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Maybe. | |
But when we were in Nashville and we wanted to go play at John Rich's Honky Tonk and the death threats came in, they said, we can't do it. | ||
And then I said, I don't care. | ||
I'll do it anyway. | ||
Nothing's going to happen. | ||
And they were like, but there are people here. | ||
If something does happen, there's kids who could get hurt. | ||
I said, okay, fine. | ||
You know, it's like your venue. | ||
I did this to prove that point. | ||
These people are all talk, all bark, no bite. | ||
I used to notice that in LA too. | ||
Like I was like, I'm tired of this people. | ||
They would say in LA people are fake. | ||
And I knew they weren't. | ||
So I had to get through these people. | ||
I just decided, let's get rid of the pretense. | ||
Go straight eye contact, eye contact. | ||
Every human I would meet, I would talk to them like this, as if they were my best friend. | ||
And people would respond as if they were my best friend when you give them that energy. | ||
So I think you can get through to every human. | ||
It was 100% it would work. | ||
100% of the time. | ||
But what I realized is you can't be friends with everybody. | ||
You've got about 60 people. | ||
After that, it starts to drive you insane. | ||
You shouldn't live your life in fear. | ||
Like, I refuse to do that. | ||
And, you know, you talked about how Tim's, you know, doxing himself. | ||
I mean, people know where we live, right? | ||
The address here has been leaked many times. | ||
You know, we've been swatted many times. | ||
So they already know. | ||
So what's stopping them from doing anything? | ||
I mean, it's really based on your approach as a human being and how you interact and what you bring into your own life. | ||
And I just refuse to be in that kind of fear mindset myself. | ||
I agree. | ||
I don't want to live in fear. | ||
I don't. | ||
But I don't think If you decide not to do certain things, it doesn't mean that it's because you're afraid or a coward. | ||
Some things, technically or mathematically, are not a good function that you want to be involved with. | ||
It doesn't mean that you're afraid. | ||
You're just doing the math, looking at the odds, looking at the risk. | ||
But if they could get you there, they could get you here, right? | ||
Because they know where you are. | ||
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I'll give you an example, though, of Tim showing the boundaries. | |
Remember when Andy Noh In my opinion, unnecessarily put himself undercover the second time. | ||
He had already came out with this book on Antifa that he went undercover again. | ||
And you guys covered it, remember? | ||
And Tim, I believe, and I agreed with this, said that was an unnecessary risk. | ||
So I think, you know, you guys did the risk. | ||
I think you have a great point. | ||
You got to look at the risk reward. | ||
I don't think Tim's going to do it every week, but the courage, you've got to show some courage. | ||
I think for everybody watching this, This isn't just for Tim or Ian or anybody else. | ||
We've all got to have courage. | ||
You know, the history of this country is founded on people with courage. | ||
I mean, they, what, tried to tax tea, three cents a pound of tea, and they went nuts. | ||
I don't want, you know, I want peacefulness. | ||
But you have to have courage to stand up for, and courage can be just like what we're doing now, just talking. | ||
I respect Andy tremendously, and I think what he did was tremendously brave. | ||
I just felt that the risk versus reward was extremely high risk with really low reward. | ||
It was a local fringe antifa meeting. | ||
It wasn't a big prominent one. | ||
It was like a handful of just lunatics, and then he went right into the middle of their group. | ||
What we were doing was going to a place I had already been and had no issues at, telling my friends to show up there a week in advance, and then showing up, And nothing happened. | ||
I didn't say like, I'm gonna go find Antifa's house and go inside of it. | ||
Andy and I talked about it. | ||
I apologize for being crass and everything, but I still think it was unnecessary risk. | ||
I respect him wanting to cover this stuff and get more information. | ||
I do, I understand it. | ||
But we were basically saying, hey, we skate, we're allowed to be here, I live here, I live in this area, I'm gonna skate here. | ||
And I proved that a lot of this is just nonsense. | ||
I gotta be honest, I'm willing to bet if Andy Ngo announced he was gonna be at Freedom Plaza, nobody would have shown up to harass him. | ||
It would not have happened. | ||
Yeah, it does seem like it's more about the events. | ||
It's more about the intentions that are being blockaded and stressed, not the people themselves. | ||
It's almost irrelevant who the people are. | ||
unidentified
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Why do you think it was different with the Nashville show? | |
Someone else owned the venue. | ||
Ida's still gone. | ||
unidentified
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So they put pressure on the venue owners or whoever the business is. | |
Well, John Rich owned it. | ||
unidentified
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Oh, it was his, okay. | |
It was his place, and he said, why don't we go jam? | ||
I said, let's do it, and we announced it. | ||
And then they got some suspicious calls. | ||
A guy showed up, some other stuff happened, and he was like, we can't do it. | ||
This is the problem. | ||
They can use this as an attack vector. | ||
They can't use it against me. | ||
It might work against your traditional run-of-the-mill person who's like, look, I can't risk the security stuff. | ||
My attitude is like, dude, I'm not the one, you know, when Antifa goes around throwing Molotov cocktails, I'm not the one to throw it. | ||
That's not on me and you can't put that on me. | ||
If I'm going to exist and live in this space, I will do it. | ||
And if a crazy person is crazy, that's something for the government, for the police to deal with. | ||
And then to the extent that we have to defend ourselves, we will too. | ||
So, when we open our cafe, I'm not going to put up signs in the window saying, please don't hurt us. | ||
I'm going to put up signs in the window saying, Molon Labe. | ||
America first. | ||
Don't tread on me. | ||
And everyone's going to know exactly who we are and what we believe. | ||
And maybe they'll want to say nasty things about us. | ||
Don't know, don't care. | ||
No external factor is going to come in. | ||
And look, I didn't run a business during the lockdowns, but I absolutely would have been one of the businesses saying F you to the machine, just like the big board did in DC. | ||
Shout out to them again, because that's the story. | ||
I guess they said, no way, we're not shutting down. | ||
I've done the same thing. | ||
And see, here's the thing. | ||
It's easy for me to say, because we've got funds. | ||
For these smaller businesses that actually did it, that shows you who's got balls. | ||
These guys do. | ||
Big board, by the way, open until midnight. | ||
If you guys want to get in there and get some food. | ||
If you're in D.C., that's where you should be eating. | ||
Because the wings were good. | ||
I got the Kung Pao wings. | ||
It was really good. | ||
Yeah, it was really, really good, actually. | ||
I'm hungry again. | ||
This is like, once, as you get more famous as an entertainer, your role becomes, like, Andy Ngo's situation. | ||
He used to be able to go undercover because no one knew who he was. | ||
Now he's serving a different function. | ||
But you're right that we need to be brave, but like, I used to do gatherings and meetups and events out in the open. | ||
We'd all be like, hey, on the 7th of July, we're all gonna meet in Washington Square Park. | ||
We'd get like, 50 people would go. | ||
We'd all have cameras. | ||
I never thought in my mind, like, danger. | ||
That never crossed my mind, but I was an unknown person at that time. | ||
I don't know if it matters how famous you are. | ||
I don't know. | ||
I was thinking as well, it's also like, if they know Fox News is going to be there, if they know CNN is going to be there, then they're more likely to go out and do these things and protest and create counter-protests and everything like that. | ||
But if it's just Tim going to go hang out, I don't think that they're going to, you know, they're not going to show up. | ||
There's no reason to. | ||
Well, we announced Phil was going to be there, Libby Emmons was there, Taylor Silver was there. | ||
unidentified
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She moved, didn't she? | |
Did she move from New York? | ||
I think I saw an article. | ||
Yeah, she did. | ||
unidentified
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Because every time she comes on, I'm like, how are you in New York with, you know, things are getting serious. | |
Where did she move to again? | ||
I don't know. | ||
She'll have to stay. | ||
But yeah, Libby went rural. | ||
The way we described it was, if you create an event, they'll attack the venue. | ||
They'll use the government against you. | ||
If you just make it an unevent, there's literally nothing they can do. | ||
Because if they show up to protest, I'll be like, oh, you guys are going to protest here? | ||
I'll go skate across the street. | ||
Yeah, protest what? | ||
Exactly. | ||
unidentified
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You might be on to something. | |
Do you think that would work in Portland? | ||
Yes. | ||
unidentified
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Wow. | |
You might be on to something. | ||
Why Portland? | ||
unidentified
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Well, I mean, isn't that the heart or wherever? | |
Rose City. | ||
unidentified
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Antifa. | |
But this is basically what they do. | ||
unidentified
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Yeah. | |
They march around randomly. | ||
Totally. | ||
And so what are the cops going to do? | ||
You can't stand here? | ||
Okay, we'll stand over there. | ||
Yeah. | ||
So obviously, though, like Patriot Prayer marches around, they fight with them, you know. | ||
But my thing is like, I didn't set up an event to protest anything or declare anything, exactly. | ||
I'm going to be here and I'm going to assert cultural presence in this space. | ||
And then we gave out like 30 or some odd boards and I told these guys, I will flood the DC metro with a thousand free skateboards. | ||
I will give every single little kid in this metro area a free skateboard. | ||
Every skating kid. | ||
And then every little kid will be riding around on a step-on-snack-and-find-out board, and all the woke people can cry about it. | ||
And then you know what we can do? | ||
Because we're opening this cafe, second floor is going to be a skate and game shop. | ||
We will sell our boards at dirt prices. | ||
Cost. | ||
And you know, I know a lot of people, you know, that's bad for other shops or whatever. | ||
Yeah, but the other shops are woke. | ||
There's like one or two other shops, and I don't hear good things about them. | ||
And so I'm like, well, you know what? | ||
If these are the people who ride for these shops, then I hope they go out of business. | ||
And that's competition, baby. | ||
You get woke, you go broke. | ||
I'll open up my shop. | ||
We'll sell all of our stuff as dirt cheap as possible. | ||
And then let's see how long these woke shops can last. | ||
True. | ||
Let's compete. | ||
Are you going to sell wheels and trucks too? | ||
Oh, of course. | ||
Yeah, everything. | ||
Well, we're not going to make our own. | ||
Making your own wheels is actually pretty easy because it's all like you find a company that does urethane and then you get it special formula and labeling. | ||
Skate decks are relatively similar. | ||
You find a company, you find the shape and the sizes you want, then you get the graphics put on them. | ||
So we'll have all our own stuff, but we'll probably just sell your typical skate stuff and we'll sell it for dirt. | ||
We'll sell it at cost. | ||
We'll pass those savings on to the regular people, and the distributors are going to get mad. | ||
A lot of these warehouses might refuse us service, being like, no, because you're going to hurt our other business. | ||
Because if shops go out of business because they're only buying for you, then we lose sales and things like that. | ||
I've seen it happen in the past. | ||
I noticed that when you look around at stores, you'll never see like, Well, I can't say never, but like a discrepancy in the cost of an item from Target to Walmart to Mom and Pop, like, not that much. | ||
Maybe I'm wrong about that. | ||
But are there like cabals that are price fixing behind the scenes? | ||
Like Hasbro? | ||
It's not about price fixing. | ||
It's like, if there are 10 skate shops in one area, And one of them goes to the warehouse and they're all buying from the same distributor. | ||
It's a big warehouse that has everything. | ||
And then they sell it to the shops. | ||
They might not do it the same way anymore now with the internet and Amazon and all this stuff. | ||
But if one of these shops starts selling boards for a dollar over cost, compared to like $5 over cost, the other shops do. | ||
The other shops start being unable to compete, start buying less from the warehouse, complain to the warehouse being like, yeah, this one shop's just gutting us. | ||
Then they'll say, we cut off one shop or we lose five customers. | ||
It's not necessarily price-fixing. | ||
But I don't know, it might be illegal. | ||
I've heard stories, you know. | ||
But I'm down. | ||
We'll see what we can do. | ||
unidentified
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I think that's the answer. | |
What you're doing right there. | ||
It's literally like just making, you know, Marxists always say everything's politics, well then let's make things not politics. | ||
Let's do things that aren't politics. | ||
Let's make music that isn't politics music. | ||
You know, or it is. | ||
Like, you're gonna come to a skate shop with a big ol' Gadsden flag flying above it. | ||
Marxists win if everything's politics. | ||
I'll put it this way. | ||
They want it to be that way. | ||
We'll have a big ol' Gadsden flag on our skate shop, but when you walk through those doors, underneath that Gadsden flag, followed by a Molon Labe flag, you're gonna get a premium quality pro skateboard gear for cheaper. | ||
Good coffee, too. | ||
With coffee. | ||
Yeah, you get a free coffee with every board. | ||
unidentified
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Free coffee. | |
Heavy cream included, because we're keto. | ||
But why would any mother, father, or skater be like, I'd rather go to that woke skate shop where everything's 50% more expensive, because I'm woke. | ||
No, they're going to be like, look, man, dude, the board's a board. | ||
I can't afford it. | ||
True. | ||
And then when they're riding around on a Step Up Snack and Find Out board and their woke friends are like, why are you riding Tim Pool's board? | ||
Because it costs 20 bucks, dude. | ||
And it's pro quality. | ||
unidentified
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Yeah. | |
Shaq did a very similar thing with sneakers because he talked about how a mother came to him and was complaining about how his sneakers were I think $100 or $150 and that was unaffordable. | ||
So he then worked with, I forgot what company he worked with, but he made his own shoe line | ||
and he made sneakers $20 and then he was able to get a huge chunk of the market and make | ||
a lot of people happy and was able to sell a lot more shoes than a lot of the other competitors | ||
that he was going up against because he decided to price them out fairly. | ||
Because a lot of the times when you're paying for a product, you're paying for the branding, | ||
you're paying for the marketing, you're paying for all the other bull crap associated with | ||
it, which is now associated with the ESG social credit score system, which is meant to indoctrinate | ||
you, which is meant to of course divide you and to of course eventually conquer you. | ||
But if you're able to do the opposite of that, let's do it. | ||
I'm in. | ||
You know, I don't have Disney anymore. | ||
Oh, Stefan Mulberry also did a, I want to shout him out because he was around where I grew up. | ||
He was a basketball player. | ||
He also did a very similar thing. | ||
He made his own sneakers, his own clothing line at a very affordable price compared to his competitors. | ||
So shots out to Stefan Mulberry. | ||
Awesome guy. | ||
I don't have Disney anymore because ever since the Uyghur Muslim scandal that happened, I said I would never sign it back up. | ||
So I had already had a year subscription. | ||
It lapsed. | ||
But the thing is, I don't expect people to cancel their Netflix, their HBO or whatever, because people want entertainment. | ||
It's a normal thing people buy. | ||
We just need to create something to compete with it so that people are like, I'd rather not watch that. | ||
It is very difficult. | ||
It is very easy to open a skate shop relative to starting a global media company with subscription service to compete with the likes of the 30 million or whatever Netflix subscribers. | ||
But that's what I'm talking about. | ||
That's what I'm talking about doing. | ||
So I think the brick and mortar shop is Probably the faster route towards building culture. | ||
You know, we obviously, with Cast to Cast, All Tales of the Inverted World, Pop Culture Crisis, we here at TimCast are working on creating media products. | ||
It's hard to do. | ||
It's hard to do because, you know, with an online product, let's say Pop Culture Crisis, we need more, we want more people to watch that talk about pop culture and stuff. | ||
and have that influence exist. | ||
But this is an internet space, meaning there's no location. | ||
You just literally have to create the audience. | ||
With a physical location, you've got natural flow. | ||
So for the building we have now, we open a coffee shop, revenue's basically guaranteed. | ||
We can afford to operate it, and we can make just enough money to keep it running. | ||
Skate shop and everything as well. | ||
And then we can easily make more and keep doing it, replicate it all over the country, maybe even in other countries, and then have a space where when you walk in to buy a coffee, you look on the TV and what do you see playing as you're ordering a coffee? | ||
It's Luke Rutkowski ranting about Klaus Schwab. | ||
Imagine that. | ||
Imagine there were a thousand coffee shops. | ||
And they were like, as ubiquitous as Starbucks. | ||
But instead of going in and seeing CNN on TV, you see Stephen Crowder. | ||
Or SticksXNamr. | ||
Or Viva in Barnes. | ||
Or Middle Maga. | ||
unidentified
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Yeah. | |
And then regular customers aren't going to walk in and be like, oh, what's this? | ||
They're going to be sipping their coffee and be like, oh, that's cool. | ||
And that's how we gain access for more people and more cultural spaces. | ||
That's the plan, man. | ||
Yeah. | ||
So maybe we'll franchise it. | ||
Maybe that'll be the plan. | ||
And also competitions, just like skateboarding competitions. | ||
Stefan Marbury used to have basketball competitions in Coney Island that I used to play in. | ||
And he would get the funds from a lot of his bigger companies and the cheaper sneakers he would give out there | ||
and then pay for this competition, pay for this larger festival. | ||
You got free sneakers, you got free jerseys, and he would always come through the community | ||
and give a lot of the stuff out. | ||
And I remember being a young kid in Brooklyn at the time, being a part of that, thinking how cool | ||
that someone in the NBA is coming here and giving back to the community | ||
more than all these other people who, of course, essentially sell out and forget where they came from. | ||
So, you know, Stephon Walbury was awesome. | ||
I want to shout him out again because of the impact he had on me playing basketball in New York City. | ||
unidentified
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Yeah, I didn't know you played hoops. | |
Yeah, I love basketball. | ||
And that was a big part of my life when I was very young. | ||
And yeah, it's a great way of staying out of trouble, especially in New York City. | ||
We gotta do what we gotta do, man. | ||
We gotta build culture. | ||
We were talking about this a little bit before the show, Elon Musk, or I think even during the show. | ||
And I hung out at a party with a bunch of people in Elon Musk's circle, and they all believe that technology is the solution to the culture war. | ||
And I'm like, that's like saying, if we're gonna win this war, I need to buy a lot of land. | ||
Cause everybody knows whoever controls the land wins the war. | ||
So by owning the land, it's like, okay, dude, they're going to walk onto your land with guns. | ||
unidentified
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Cause you have no people on the land. | |
Exactly. | ||
unidentified
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The challenge is getting the land and people on the land. | |
So they're not, they're not fully there. | ||
Buying the land isn't going to give you the battlefield, but that's, that's how they feel. | ||
So to a certain extent, it obviously does benefit, you know, like Elon Musk buying Twitter did a lot of really important things, but they genuinely, all these guys are like, yeah, once we control tech, then we're going to, it's like, Maybe a little bit. | ||
unidentified
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You can increase awareness, and I look at it like if anybody plays these StarCraft type of games, you can increase your land mass, like Tim's talking about, but you need to have people on it for it to really mean something, to be able to protect it. | |
So I think that helps, but that's not the full answer. | ||
Elon Musk is great in the area of business and engineering and all that. | ||
When it comes to the solutions to these issues, I think he's an infant. | ||
I think morally he's struggling. | ||
We were talking about the Twitter files releases. | ||
Is anybody watching the Twitter files? | ||
Anybody reading those? | ||
I'm reading them, but no, it's not reaching anybody and I think he's struggling. | ||
Look, man, you know, people get, people got mad because I was, you know, Luke and I were eating dinner and I see that one of the Twitter file stories comes out Saturday at like 6 p.m. | ||
And then I was like, are you nuts, dude? | ||
Not only is it a Saturday when traffic is at an all-time low for the week, but it's dinner time on Saturday. | ||
Saturday morning's a maybe. | ||
People are waking up and they might check their phone. | ||
Friday evening is rough because everyone's leaving work and going to the bar. | ||
Saturday afternoon, you're done. | ||
And I'm like, did they intentionally kill this story by doing so? | ||
It seemed like it. | ||
They keep doing this stupid thing where they're like, you gotta slow roll the stories. | ||
Like with the Snowden stuff. | ||
Glenn Greenwald and Poitras, they're like, I don't know whose idea it was, but they were like, slowly release the stories to maximize reach. | ||
And I'm like, no. | ||
What happens is you put out mediocre story, mediocre story, mediocre story, we're done, we're tired, not interested. | ||
With the Twitter files, they should have released like 10 stories all at once. | ||
They should have put the files in a repository and released them, and let the entire community have access. | ||
Instead, I guess Twitter files came out this morning? | ||
Nope, nobody tweeted it! | ||
Nobody shared it! | ||
unidentified
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Are you serious? | |
I didn't even know. | ||
15? | ||
The last one I saw was 14. | ||
Oh yeah, yeah, yeah. | ||
It was Lee Fang. | ||
Yeah, he started the Twitter files thread 10 hours ago. | ||
Wow. | ||
They should have just dropped all the files all at once like WikiLeaks. | ||
unidentified
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If I had access to the Twitter files and I released them like how Elon did, everybody would be destroying me, right? | |
They'd be like, what are you doing? | ||
Who cares? | ||
You're releasing them on a Saturday. | ||
This is a big story too. | ||
This is about the pharmaceutical industry lobbying big tech to ban people who are anti-vax. | ||
unidentified
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Wow. | |
Or not even anti-vax. | ||
Or calling for cheaper medicines. | ||
Right. | ||
And so this dropped from the Twitter files and nobody talked about it. | ||
Here's what should have happened. | ||
He should have dumped all communications because the other issue is Elon Musk is hoping these journalists can find the stories. | ||
Big mistake. | ||
Matt Taibbi is fantastic, but there's probably something in the Twitter files. | ||
I'll give you an example. | ||
If I was talking to somebody and said, let's say the email says something like this. | ||
Hey, this is Tim from over at Timcast. | ||
I was wondering if you can give me an update on the nollie flip frontside crooked grind. | ||
We were looking at John hitting those slappies, and we wanted to get something a bit more substantive, so we needed maybe like a big heel backtail, big flip out. | ||
Matt Taibbi's gonna look at that email and be like, I have no idea what this says, and he's gonna ignore it. | ||
Now, anybody who skates is gonna be like, they're filming a skate video? | ||
Those are some sick tricks. | ||
Big heel, back tail, that's crazy. | ||
We're talking about big inward heel, man. | ||
We're not talking about frontside. | ||
But my point is, jargon, esoteric language. | ||
Someone might say something like an acronym. | ||
One of the pharmaceutical guys might be like, yo, we've got a JN3 out of our backlog files, and this is pretty serious. | ||
And he's gonna be like, I don't know what that is. | ||
And then somebody who knows security might mean this was a Russian hacker who broke in and stole people's medical files or something, who knows? | ||
If Elon were to take all the emails and just dump them out and be like... | ||
There you go, everybody. | ||
You'd have decentralized investigation. | ||
You'd have people in the medical industry being like, whoa, whoa, whoa, look at this. | ||
Instead, what you get are journalists who are not experts in any of this trying to find the social sounding stories to publish. | ||
Hey, look, pharmaceutical companies lobbied to ban content. | ||
Okay, I'm not surprised by that. | ||
But what about the pharmaceutical companies talking in emails with other executives about adverse effects, monetary policy pertaining to the vaccines, things that a layman could not understand? | ||
The journalists are taking a political angle. | ||
How were they colluding with each other? | ||
A person who's into medical or pharmaceutical might be like, how were they preparing to sell this? | ||
And what were they saying about the, the RN-6 codes? | ||
You know, making it up. | ||
But let's say like, there's an FDA administrative code that gets released with every product. | ||
These journalists wouldn't even know what to look for. | ||
Instead, we get limited access, put out on terrible times, and nobody even knows it's happening. | ||
I'm going to take it a little further. | ||
unidentified
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I'm going to take it a little further. | |
I think the Twitter files are a psyop. | ||
This is Elon Musk is not. | ||
He might be kind of a novice in a way with the media side of stuff, but he's not stupid. | ||
And we know there's still FBI and CIA agents there at Twitter right now. | ||
Dr. Shiva Arude said that Elon Musk was asked, point blank, is the portal still open between the government and Twitter? | ||
And he said, I'll look into it. | ||
So it's to me, and then Jim Baker, you probably remember that, Jim Baker was filtering the files. | ||
When you look at all the Twitter files at the end of each thread, They say, we didn't do the searching. | ||
A Twitter lawyer did the search. | ||
They're not even able to search through the data. | ||
To me, you add all of it up, it's almost like Elon, and this is complete speculation, this is playing chess. | ||
Elon, remember he was held up on the deal for a while in court before he said, okay, I'm gonna buy it? | ||
What if Elon was like, I gotta buy it, but I want people to trust me. | ||
So let me go ahead, I gotta release some information for people to buy into me. | ||
So you release some information, you release it on odd hours, you slow roll it, now nobody, I didn't even know, I've been following this stuff, I didn't even know it was released. | ||
So now you've built some trust with the radical people who are paying attention. | ||
There's no Normie. | ||
Around Thanksgiving, I think it was, or Christmas, I was asking Normies, anytime I saw a Normie that, you know, we're just chilling somewhere, I was like, have you ever heard of the Twitter files? | ||
Not one person told me they knew anything. | ||
I was like, what do you think of Elon Musk? | ||
They're like, I hate him. | ||
Like, why do you, they don't even know him. | ||
It's a psyop to, in my opinion, affect those who are paying attention to gain trust and to buy in. | ||
And Elon, I think it's paying off. | ||
How many people do you see on the right, you know, kind of bigging him up and I think Elon Musk has been a fraud. | ||
So far, it could change, but when it comes to his First Amendment stance and the Twitter files, this is a debacle. | ||
And to add to your point, maybe that's why the stories get released on Friday and Saturday nights, to make sure they don't actually have any real press impact. | ||
unidentified
|
Elon? | |
It's a PR 101. | ||
unidentified
|
Yeah, the question's out there, Elon. | |
Tell us why they're released at this time. | ||
Why haven't you released all the files now? | ||
Why are the lawyers doing the searching? | ||
Well, it could be to try to bring people in for when traffic is low on Twitter in order to build up advertisers. | ||
And then, let's be honest here, I think Elon Musk lost more money than anyone else in recorded history on this particular deal. | ||
And he lost a lot. | ||
He wagered a lot, too. | ||
What he's doing with it? | ||
Is he going to be doing the hive mind? | ||
Is he going to be doing the X app? | ||
The everything WhatsApp, WeChat app? | ||
I mean, time will only tell. | ||
I'm still waiting for the Fauci files, and then I'm going to make my decision after that to discern what is going on here. | ||
But so far, hey, we did get a lot of crazy information, especially about the FBI essentially running Twitter, essentially running social media and deciding who has a voice and not. | ||
That's huge. | ||
Having those receipts, I mean, that's big right there. | ||
So what's happening behind the scenes? | ||
I don't know. | ||
But I want to give him a little bit more of the benefit of the doubt myself. | ||
I felt like it was very cringe the way things happened, and I'm going to be really critical about it. | ||
Calling it The Twitter Files is like, hee hee hee, we're a little group, look how cool we are. | ||
What's a name that you would give him? | ||
You don't need to name it, just release the data. | ||
unidentified
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Yeah, I agree. | |
And then he gives it to like particular journalists, they're like, I'm the one with the power now, and you're like, so gross. | ||
unidentified
|
I can't stand it. | |
I always hated it. | ||
It also prevents connecting the dots, because if the general public had it, we could connect the dots between this person and that person in this document. | ||
But when you have it in so many separate hands, it's very hard to get the bigger kind of story here, or even the whole truth here. | ||
unidentified
|
Yeah, it's almost like I do want to give Elon credit because I think the information is true and I think it's good. | |
But imagine if you have the J6 footage and I can't search through it. | ||
I have to ask your lawyer to search through it. | ||
We want all the footage in this. | ||
Let us search through it how we want. | ||
All right, we're gonna go to Super Chats. | ||
If you haven't already, would you kindly smash that like button, subscribe to this channel, share this show with your friends, and become a member over at TimCast.com. | ||
We're gonna have a members-only, uncensored show coming up for you. | ||
And, you know, I'll tell you the reasons why we started doing the members segments on the website is because in 2020, Revenue was bonkers. | ||
It was amazing. | ||
It was a crazy year for everybody in terms of politics. | ||
Everybody was locked up. | ||
All they could do was listen to podcasts. | ||
Januaries always are apocalyptic. | ||
Budgets are in the gutter and you don't make money on advertising. | ||
So I was like, that's not sustainable. | ||
We need to create something different. | ||
And obviously a lot of podcasts had subscription-based stuff. | ||
So that's what we decided to launch. | ||
So I will just tell you guys right now. | ||
It is because of your memberships we make it through January and February. | ||
Then ads come in and supplement. | ||
But the majority of what operates, runs this company is TimCast.com memberships. | ||
That is the bulk. | ||
So we rely on your support if you believe in what we're doing and we really do appreciate it. | ||
That's why we do those uncensored segments and we're trying to make more. | ||
And I think what we're gonna do for the space we're building is we're going to create like a semi-VIP Private area where it's like if you're a member of TimCast.com and you show up, you can like come hang out in this like, I'm thinking like maybe Ian's Crystal Cove will be that little special little spot. | ||
But then we're gonna have a top floor VIP private social club, which will be probably more expensive. | ||
Something like five grand per year, which is I know is a lot of money for a lot of people. | ||
Social clubs typically cost a lot more than that. | ||
But the idea is there's free drinks, free food and networking for people who are working on stuff. | ||
And that's kind of the point. | ||
And then, you know, that's the plan. | ||
We'll see how it goes. | ||
Maybe we can't even do it. | ||
Because the reality is, like, the reason we settled on that number is because you've got to hire staff for it. | ||
You've got to have, like, utilities paid. | ||
You've got to be able to do food and everything. | ||
And then we were going through it and we were like, it actually might not even be possible at that number. | ||
It might have to just be like a pay admission thing where it's like, if you come and you want to come in, you pay one time or something. | ||
But we'll figure it out. | ||
Let's read some super chats. | ||
What do we got? | ||
All right. | ||
James Orenthal Nguyen says, shout out to Supreme Leader Beanie. | ||
Met you at Gore Melts last month and brought my kids to meet you at Freedom Plaza. | ||
Thanks for inspiring the next generation of righteous culture warriors. | ||
Respect. | ||
Good to hear from you, dude. | ||
Glad to see you at Freedom Plaza. | ||
That was a lot of fun. | ||
Glad to meet, get to meet your kids who you talked about. | ||
So really appreciate it. | ||
Gormelts is a pretty cool place too. | ||
We gotta do an event there. | ||
We were planning on doing an event with Gormelts. | ||
I don't want to leave Matt Strickland hanging. | ||
We're big fans. | ||
But we wanted to do a big event over at Gormelts in Virginia because this is a guy who not only is a place of amazing food, but they also defied the lockdowns and said it's unconstitutional. | ||
F off. | ||
We gotta figure something out, man. | ||
And I'm talking to him about getting rid of the seed oils and doing all butter and lard. | ||
I've been having a big conversation with him about that, and he's like, I'm almost there. | ||
So yeah, Gore-Melt's an awesome business that's being punished by the state of Virginia. | ||
They took away a big part of their licensing. | ||
Stall's boost. | ||
Yeah, because they didn't comply with the lockdowns, which is absolutely insane. | ||
So yeah, check out Gore-Melt's if you're in the Virginia area. | ||
Support them. | ||
All right, Logan Culver says, Tim, you're not wearing your whoop strap anymore. | ||
Are they worth the price or what's up with them? | ||
Well, I'll give you my thoughts. | ||
At a certain point, I just didn't feel like I was getting anything from it. | ||
It tracks like my heart rate, but I got the Sleep 8 bed, which is like, it's so awesome. | ||
You guys know about the Sleep 8? | ||
Luke turned me on to it. | ||
Yeah, oh yeah. | ||
It is a bed that has a little air conditioning, like it has a temperature control unit. | ||
You put distilled water in it, a little hydrogen peroxide, and it can warm or cool each side of the bed. | ||
So some days I'm feeling like I'm hot. | ||
It's like a hot day or whatever and I want a cold bed. | ||
Some days it's freezing, you crank it all the way up, oh it's amazing. | ||
But it also tracks your heart rate variability and stuff like that, so I didn't really need the Whoop anymore. | ||
And also, I couldn't find any consistency with what the Whoop was tracking. | ||
Like, you know, I started doing this routine, nothing changed. | ||
I do this routine, nothing changes. | ||
And ultimately, I was just like, okay, literally nothing is changing on the Whoop day to day. | ||
When I don't exercise, when I do exercise, I'm like, I can't figure it out, so there's no point in wearing it. | ||
I mean, for me, I have seen a correlation, and I'm always trying something new and something crazy, especially in the world of health, and it does track the reaction to it. | ||
But again, make sure you save your own data and you use anonymous emails. | ||
There's many different things. | ||
Don't just give up your information to all these private companies. | ||
I will add one thing. | ||
Whenever I would drink any amount of beer, the next day, the recovery would be in the gutter. | ||
I'm like, I am never drinking alcohol again after this. | ||
Because before, I was like, I don't really drink, I'll have something sometimes. | ||
Nah. | ||
I had a beer, woke up, and the whoop was like, you're dying. | ||
And it was like, recovery was like 3%, and I was like, what? | ||
I had like one beer. | ||
And then I was like, maybe it's anomalous. | ||
So the next weekend, I was like, I had a yingling at the casino. | ||
Next day, 3%, apocalyptically bad. | ||
And then I'm like, okay, I'm gonna try not drinking a beer, and recovery was stable. | ||
So, I'm like, alcohol really does screw up your system. | ||
Absolutely. | ||
It's so horrible for you, and especially your sleep. | ||
If you're doing it at night, it's like the worst thing for your liver, your brain. | ||
It shrinks your brain. | ||
People don't understand this. | ||
After my brain injury, one of the things that my neurosurgeon told me was like, it doesn't matter, because he's Canadian, like from Saskatchewan, so deep Canadian accent, you know, and he's like, I don't care if the boys win or lose, you can't have a beer. | ||
It's like the one thing you can't do. | ||
It damages your brain. | ||
People don't understand this. | ||
I've been off of booze except for that one time on the show when we celebrated the purchase of Twitter by Elon Musk. | ||
unidentified
|
I remember that. | |
Yeah. | ||
That was the only time. | ||
And then other than that, I don't remember. | ||
I don't remember any other time drinking. | ||
And I feel amazing. | ||
I only had a teeny little bit. | ||
I took a little bit. | ||
Yeah. | ||
All right. | ||
Let's see what we got here. | ||
Speechless by Michael Knowles. | ||
What a great name. | ||
unidentified
|
Are they still doing that in the chat? | |
chat. Yeah, yeah. Repeal the National Firearms Act of 1934. | ||
It is and always was a gross infringement on the only right that explicitly says it | ||
should not be curtailed under any circumstances. Funny how that works, isn't it? Was that | ||
response to machine guns being invented? It was because of the gangs. | ||
But, you know, the pistol brace ban is total BS. | ||
The ATF is not Congress. | ||
They can't just decide you have an illegal thing. | ||
Oh, we've decided your brace is illegal now. | ||
You can't do that. | ||
It's up to Congress to decide that. | ||
We'll see what happens, man. | ||
Well, they're just trying to register, you know, people right now, and I think it's going to be ruled unconstitutional, just like the bump stock was recently as well. | ||
But are they appealing that, the bump stock ban? | ||
I don't know what's going to happen, but I just know it was repealed once. | ||
They're probably going to challenge it again, and it might go to the Supreme Court. | ||
I think the bump stock ban was also unconstitutional. | ||
The government can't just decree things are illegal. | ||
Congress has to make a law. | ||
unidentified
|
All right. | |
Stephen says Hunter paid for everything with money his daddy made for him. | ||
That's right. | ||
And he paid for them. | ||
OnePissedOff50 says $50,000 on rent, $4.99 on parmesan cheese. | ||
unidentified
|
Yikes. | |
What a horrible life story. | ||
He pulled parmesan on the carpet to smoke because he was desperate for crack. | ||
Damn, dude. | ||
Nowhere to go but up. | ||
Collisionicoff says, Tim, I know what's causing all the sudden heart-related deaths. | ||
Someone has procured a death note and is writing down all the names. | ||
That's the only explanation. | ||
Yeah, someone got like a MailChimp email mailing. | ||
Hold on, this is funny actually. | ||
For those that aren't familiar with the manga or the show, a high school kid gets a notebook called a Death Note. | ||
If you write someone's name in it and a cause of death within physical possibility, it will happen. | ||
If you write their name with no cause of death, they'll have a heart attack in, what is it, 27 days or something like that? | ||
Yeah, I don't know if the time is defined, but they will die. | ||
If you write it more times, they'll die sooner. | ||
unidentified
|
I think it's 27 days or something like that. | |
The time is defined. | ||
So, the main character starts killing criminals he sees on TV and in the news without a cause of death, so they all just randomly have heart attacks. | ||
Because he wants people to see a pattern. | ||
Here's a funny thing. | ||
In the show, eventually the cops find a pattern. | ||
They're like, all these criminals are having heart attacks. | ||
There must be something happening. | ||
In this day and age, right now, with all these people having heart attacks, they're like, climate change? | ||
Right, it makes sense, it makes sense. | ||
It's normal. | ||
Yeah, it checks out. | ||
What are people saying, 27, is it 27 days? | ||
You have six minutes, oh, six minutes, 40 seconds, not 27 days, is that what it was? | ||
I remember it was pretty rapid, like if you'd write someone's name in the book, it'd happen pretty quickly, and if you write it more times, it'd happen faster than instantaneous. | ||
Oh, right, that's what it was. | ||
It was that you could write up to 27 days, I think. | ||
Maybe not 27, but it was like, you could write the cause of death and extend the time frame out. | ||
227 days. | ||
Something like that, right? | ||
People are saying 60 seconds, 6 minutes. | ||
Yeah, but wasn't it there like, he timed things out to where, for people who know the show, where he'd be like, this guy will die on this date at this time, and he would like write it out weeks in advance or something like that. | ||
What did someone say? | ||
Six minutes, 40 seconds. | ||
Six minutes, 40. | ||
Well, there you go. | ||
Six minutes, 40 seconds. | ||
We get it. | ||
That's a death vote. | ||
Someone's got it. | ||
Yeah. | ||
unidentified
|
All right. | |
Let's grab some more. | ||
Mike says, Tim, the Dems are going after Biden so they can justify barring Trump from running in 2024. | ||
Good point. | ||
unidentified
|
It's possible. | |
They go for the documents. | ||
They say you got to forfeit. | ||
Oh, but that means Trump, too. | ||
See, we're being fair. | ||
unidentified
|
Yeah, it's possible. | |
1 and 20 million says, I like this guy, he's based. | ||
Ian, keep rolling 20s, buy Bitcoin. | ||
Yeah, what's Bitcoin up to now? | ||
I just jumped. | ||
unidentified
|
Is it popping up? | |
Yeah, it's jumping a lot. | ||
Over 21k, it is 21.05. | ||
From being at like 16. | ||
Bitcoin. | ||
unidentified
|
Yeah, I believe in BTC. | |
Yeah. | ||
This person's name is Clint Orris. | ||
He says, I tried What are you guys laughing about? | ||
We'll tell you after the show. | ||
Okay. | ||
Mr. Orris, it's probably a mistake, says, I tried searching Joe Biden Hunter Biden on Google News tab and I got a single page of results. | ||
And did it say the results are changing rapidly? | ||
Check back later. | ||
Is the source reputable? | ||
That's how they censor news, man. | ||
unidentified
|
They will not need to rewrite history. | |
They're rewriting it as we go. | ||
Yeah. | ||
All right. | ||
Ekamemnom's Jimbag says this is a motion to have Luke cast during Davos. | ||
I am reporting on the whole Davos thing and having a team of people look at everything that they're doing and covering it on my YouTube channel, We Are Change. | ||
How's it been? | ||
They just started. | ||
Today was the opening ceremony, and they were just saying, Climate emergency! | ||
Climate emergency! | ||
Climate emergency! | ||
Give us all your power and money now! | ||
And that's a short summary of everything that was happening there. | ||
Yeah, they were like, too much carbon dioxide. | ||
I was like, well, we can pull it out and turn it into graphene. | ||
They were like, I mean, too much methane! | ||
I was like, okay, we can turn the methane into carbon dioxide. | ||
Cows are the problem! | ||
And then here's celebrity with endorsed, you know, saying. | ||
And they're vegans. | ||
All right. | ||
Where were you? | ||
Kane Abel says, it won't be a pill, it will be a robot. | ||
The person in charge will say you can live forever, but you won't. | ||
Your soul will not be there. | ||
You will be a slave like the Necron. | ||
Oh my gosh. | ||
Oh my gosh. | ||
You know, you'll, they've already, they've already recreated you on Facebook AI. | ||
You hear the story about how they can take all your posts and messages and everything about you and then create an AI chatbot based on you? | ||
They can do that when you're alive. | ||
Don't be surprised if one day a robot knocks on your door and you open the door and it's you and you're like, what? | ||
And it's like, I'm you. | ||
And then it stabs you and you're like, ah! | ||
And it replaces you. | ||
I think all of the networks are combining data. | ||
All our phones are recording all our words and so what'll happen is either A new corporate governance will come in with a new world order, and we'll be like, oh no! | ||
And then they will mandate all the tech companies to compile the data for them to create the Uber consciousness. | ||
Otherwise, we can make a decentralized authority that would not enforce those kind of things on people. | ||
That's my goal. | ||
unidentified
|
And real quick, the CCP has more data on us than we have on them. | |
Yeah. | ||
unidentified
|
So that's a scary. | |
It's a big problem. | ||
Airbnb, things like that. | ||
They turn over people's data to the CCP to operate in China. | ||
But whereas TikTok, like that's, that's something severely lacking. | ||
We need to take control of TikTok. | ||
unidentified
|
Yeah, well, I think all of them though. | |
Seize TikTok. | ||
All right. | ||
Randy F. says, 11 years ago I got diagnosed with autoimmune disease, Wagoner's GPA. | ||
Lost my kidneys. | ||
Last month I learned there is now a pill to treat and reverse. | ||
unidentified
|
Wow. | |
We got to get Bocas some stem cells. | ||
What's going on with that? | ||
We're just talking about it. | ||
So I have a, we're taking him to New York and we're going to do stem cell therapy. | ||
Yeah. | ||
25th, he's a candidate. | ||
So he's going to have blood drawn on the 25th. | ||
Then he's going to have stem cells put back in him on the 27th, and then we'll keep you guys up to, keep you informed on the status. | ||
But I have to imagine he needs more than one treatment. | ||
Yeah, I think there's three over the course of six months. | ||
I don't know. | ||
We'll find out. | ||
It's a multi-treatment though, as far as I know. | ||
Man, I'm worried waiting that long. | ||
He's getting thinner and thinner. | ||
You know, it's the other, the other, the other route is just wait until he dies. | ||
So I'm into it. | ||
You know, better than nothing. | ||
He's getting hormones that stimulate red blood cells, and he's getting IV electrolyte therapy, but it's been brutal, because sometimes he won't eat. | ||
And we came back, and he didn't eat all day, and we have to try and make it, so I'm putting catnip in his food, and then he'll eat it, which is good. | ||
And then he just drinks water nonstop. | ||
Do you notice with cats, where they won't eat, won't eat, and then you crouch down next to them and pet them, and then they just start eating? | ||
It's a mood thing. | ||
If they get into a mood, they'll just start eating. | ||
I don't know about all that. | ||
All I know is you put some cat drugs in his food and he eats it. | ||
Humans are the same way. | ||
Cancer patients smoke some pot and they start eating. | ||
That's why we need medical advancements. | ||
Medical marijuana. | ||
I don't know if that's what you were going to say. | ||
That's what I'm saying. | ||
Well, yeah, I just mean like general advancements. | ||
It's like not just marijuana. | ||
There's a bunch of stuff like the guy's kidney pills. | ||
Yeah, true. | ||
Stem cells, man. | ||
People were saying that stem cells was like taken from babies and it's like turns out they can get it from you. | ||
Yes, they're going to get Bucko's own stem cells. | ||
All that's coming from his own fat and blood. | ||
From his own body. | ||
And then they replicate it and then put it right back in. | ||
Yeah, it's crazy. | ||
It goes to where the damage is and starts repairing it. | ||
That's crazy, man. | ||
But I'm concerned that if his kidneys are totally shut down and dead, he won't do anything. | ||
Yeah. | ||
The kidneys have to be, like, still viral. | ||
But they are. | ||
They let me know, due to his test results, that he's a viable candidate, because his kidneys are still at, like, stage 3 renal failure. | ||
It hasn't quite entered stage 4 renal failure. | ||
And we got him on the kidney food and the medicine, so hopefully it's, like, stabilizing. | ||
Low phosphorus or something. | ||
All right, let's grab some more Super Chats. | ||
All right. | ||
Josh V says, saw an article or something a couple weeks back that said, to the effect, we are a few years away from all encryption being obsolete with quantum computing advancements at the current pace. | ||
Yep, I've been talking about that for a few years now. | ||
But then we'll have quantum encryption. | ||
Hopefully. | ||
Well, the people who develop it might keep it for themselves, right? | ||
They might not release it to the public, or they might just privatize it. | ||
Man, could you imagine quantum encryption? | ||
The keys are changing in real time in superposition? | ||
Yeah, they have things called time crystals, where the crystal is in motion, and it's the actual motion of the crystal itself that's the shape of it, is the motion of it. | ||
So they're using that for encryption tactics. | ||
unidentified
|
Wow. | |
C2 Gaming says media matters are the perfect example of professional bigoteering. | ||
Look up the definition. | ||
It needs to be used more frequently. | ||
Okay. | ||
Yeah, we want to look up bigoteering. | ||
Bigoteering. | ||
That's a good word. | ||
Yeah. | ||
All right. | ||
Essay Federale says, 2024, hear me out. | ||
Both go to prison. | ||
Bumpstock Donnie gets... I'm not reading that. | ||
Trial by combat. | ||
Winner gets to run. | ||
Loser stays in the yard forever. | ||
Also, if you thought Enigma Encryption was good, wait until you hear about WEP. | ||
unidentified
|
Yeah, yeah, yeah. | |
Bumpstock Donnie. | ||
I remember saying that on the after show. | ||
Bumpstock Donnie. | ||
unidentified
|
Yeah, yeah. | |
Wes Iceman says, Tim, did you do a dark slide this weekend while skateboarding? | ||
You know why I would never do a dark slide? | ||
It ruins your grip. | ||
What's that? | ||
It's when you flip the board over, you like kick flip or heel flip, and then slide upside down on the board. | ||
And it just mutilates the top of your board. | ||
So like, it's a cool trick for like the end of your board's life to get on film and then not do again. | ||
I don't know. | ||
No dark slides for me. | ||
No, I did a Natalie Gazelle second try. | ||
Real smooth, too. | ||
Sounds like we need to develop a material that'll allow it to slide, but also maintain grip. | ||
Yeah, there's also, they have this foam rubber grip, which doesn't destroy your shoes, and it works. | ||
I'm a big fan of them. | ||
I like my sandpaper. | ||
I think it works. | ||
Pinochet's helicopter tour says WWII German concentration camps used IBM punch cards. | ||
Yep, that's true. | ||
unidentified
|
Now imagine if everyone had cell phones back then. | |
Or in China. | ||
Or in Russia. | ||
JustJimmy says, shout out to Raymond. | ||
Chet isn't the same without you. | ||
Tim, load up some local honey. | ||
D3 and a shot of the good stuff. | ||
Great guest. | ||
Heart the Ripperverse shirt. | ||
unidentified
|
Oh, priest. | |
Yeah, yeah, I'm a big... When I got red-pilled, right when the pandemic started, the summer of love, I started finding Comic Dave Smith, Eric July. | ||
Shout out to them, man. | ||
The Libertarian Party is for real. | ||
On Tim Caster is a great article on Renal Reset, the best article that was written. | ||
I forget who did it, was it Chris? | ||
Yeah, the Mises guys are great. | ||
We gotta have Dave on soon. | ||
is for real. Shout out to the Mises caucus. I'm a fan. | ||
Yeah, the Mises guys are great. We gotta have Dave on soon. | ||
He's doing a show out in Maryland, I think on what, the 27th? | ||
Oh, man. Dave, come through. | ||
I think we're gonna go there. | ||
Awesome. | ||
But we're trying to figure out a date Dave can come back. | ||
So we've got to figure it out because we're booked up solid. | ||
So we're like, let's see what we can do. | ||
But I think we'll be at Dave's show. | ||
Dave's great. | ||
Dave can be funny, but he can also give you the most base red pilling of information about the Saudis. | ||
He's just so great. | ||
He knows so much stuff. | ||
Yeah, it'll be cool, though. | ||
So, uh, you wanna look up, actually, when his show's at? | ||
Oh, yeah. | ||
When is this? | ||
Dave Smith? | ||
Dave Smith's show. | ||
It's his website. | ||
Cause I think we'll all be there. | ||
That'll be really cool. | ||
Everyone should show up. | ||
We'll sell out the place. | ||
Everyone'll laugh. | ||
And, uh, you know, we'll get hot dogs or something. | ||
unidentified
|
I love it. | |
Yeah, you did the... It would be a live show, right? | ||
With people there? | ||
Well, Dave's doing stand-up. | ||
unidentified
|
Oh, okay. | |
When is it? | ||
Yeah. | ||
I don't know. | ||
Do you see it in Maryland? | ||
Did you find it? | ||
Coming up... 27th, I think? | ||
Is it there? | ||
unidentified
|
No? | |
What's going on, huh? | ||
Perryville, Perryville, Maryland. | ||
Oh, there it is. | ||
When's the date? | ||
January 28th. | ||
28! | ||
That's not a bad day. | ||
unidentified
|
Cool. | |
January 28th, Saturday. | ||
Be there, be square. | ||
We'll be there. | ||
That sounds cool. | ||
Well, the plan is Saturday, right? | ||
Yeah. | ||
The plan's to be there. | ||
I got nothing else going on, right? | ||
unidentified
|
All right, we'll grab some more Super Chats. | |
All right, Winston Alexander says, Chet, GPT is woke. | ||
I asked, where are the consenting adult females? | ||
Attracted to older, balding, overweight men. | ||
Its answer, it is not appropriate to make derogatory or objectifying statements. | ||
unidentified
|
Well, no, Libs of TikTok tweeted earlier today. | |
I don't know if you saw it. | ||
She asked, she asked it something positive about gender affirming care and it answered. | ||
Then she wanted something like a tweet, like against it. | ||
And it said, no, I can't do it. | ||
Now that is scary considering how powerful AI is going to be. | ||
And where it's getting its data sets from. | ||
Yeah, that needs to be open source. | ||
unidentified
|
And then Sheila, I don't know if you saw this, Sheila Lee from Texas did a hate bill today. | |
Well, it's not gonna go anywhere because nobody's gonna sign it, | ||
but that mentality combined with AI. | ||
Was it the bill about banning white supremacy? | ||
unidentified
|
Yes, scary stuff, even though it's not going anywhere. | |
But people need to understand white supremacy by them is not white supremacy, | ||
it's like anything in support of America. | ||
unidentified
|
I'm a white supremacist to them. | |
Exactly. | ||
So saying stuff like you should work hard, that's hate speech. | ||
And the bill said that if you say something on a platform that another person can see, and then they act violently, | ||
you conspired to commit hate crime. | ||
unidentified
|
That's stochastic terrorism, right? | |
I guess. | ||
unidentified
|
And you know what they're going after? | |
I think the most powerful thing online, other than meeting people in person, are the memes. | ||
They're going after the memes. | ||
I had a guy on my channel, C3P Meme. | ||
Excellent. | ||
He's the guy who did, I don't know if you saw the Sanford and Son memes, where he put Trump's face on Red Fox. | ||
And everybody, it doesn't matter what your politics are, they all love it. | ||
I bet you they would go after simple memes like that. | ||
All right, this is an important one. | ||
Clinton Torres says, Tim, which is healthier, heavy cream or sugar-free organic coconut milk? | ||
I know heavy cream is far more tasty, which screams less healthy? | ||
I actually think both are very, very good. | ||
Like no sugar added organic coconut milk is like one of the healthiest things ever. | ||
It is fatty and coconut oil is really, really good for you. | ||
Heavy cream probably is worse for you, but I don't think it's that much worse for you. | ||
I don't know, what do you think, Ian? | ||
I think that the coconut milk would be the best, but I do think they're both... There's a lot of somatic cells in dairy, which are like, I don't know, are they cancer? | ||
They're not cancer cells, but they're just like... But on top of that, coconut oil would be MCT oil, too, which is medium chain triglycerides, which means that your brain can work faster on them, basically. | ||
And I think they used to use coconut water as saline. | ||
Yeah, that's true. | ||
Like when people were bleeding out in the war, they'd take a coconut and they'd plug it in because, yeah, because it could keep your blood pressure up. | ||
Correct. | ||
Oh, a somatic cell, for the record, is any cell of the body except for sperm and egg cells. | ||
For some reason, the dairy industry is allowed to have a certain number of somatic cells found in milk and stuff. | ||
All food have that then? | ||
Yeah, it's kind of vague, but what I've heard is that it's actually the pus. | ||
They'll be like, oh, somatic cells, they're talking about how much pus they have in their milk. | ||
Get organic, farm-fresh heavy cream. | ||
Yeah, because a lot of us see antibiotics from the non-organic stuff. | ||
We go to Mom's Organic, and we get this glass bottle organic cream, and the taste is just incredible. | ||
It's like when you see those cows hooked up to machines, they get infections on their udders, and then you're drinking the infected pus. | ||
That's the stuff to stay away from. | ||
Yeah, so just go for the organic stuff, but when I went to the dairy farms in California, the cows are free-range. | ||
They choose to get milked. | ||
The cows walk to the machine, the machine milks them, and then they're happy and they walk out. | ||
Yeah, because if the milk builds up and they can't get it out, it hurts them. | ||
So they walk in the machine and they're like, get it, and then the machine... 10 to 12 gallons of milk per day, that's what I'm told. | ||
That's crazy. | ||
All right, everybody, if you haven't already, would you kindly smash that like button, subscribe to this channel, share the show with your friends, and become a member at TimCast.com, because we do rely on your memberships to keep the ship a-sailing, especially in January, because January is like ad-pocalypse month. | ||
There's no budgets in, you know, contracts paid out last month, so like very little revenue comes in through ads. | ||
But because of all of you who are members, we don't got much to worry about. | ||
So that really does mean a lot to us. | ||
So a serious thank you all to the members. | ||
We're going to have that members only show coming up for you in about an hour. | ||
So don't miss it. | ||
You can follow the show at Timcast IRL. | ||
You can follow me at Timcast. | ||
Osiris, do you want to shout anything out? | ||
unidentified
|
Oh, yes. | |
Well, thanks a lot for having me. | ||
First of all, you guys are class acts. | ||
Shout out to Cassandra McDonald. | ||
Great time. | ||
Follow me anywhere, Twitter, YouTube. | ||
The website is MiddleMAGA. | ||
And I want to put a human face, humanize the MAGA movement. | ||
I really think it's the most beautiful movement of my political lifetime. | ||
And then the Mises Caucus and the Libertarian Party is second. | ||
So if you agree, if you're interested, we got people of all different perspectives. | ||
I have people on the populist left come on. | ||
So holler at me. | ||
What was the website again? | ||
unidentified
|
MiddleMAGA.com. | |
Thank you so much for coming on. | ||
That was great. | ||
I really appreciate your voice on here. | ||
My website is lukeuncensored.com. | ||
It is my member's area. | ||
I did a video today on all the things that I can't say here, specifically about Pfizer and the four Pfizer celebrities, one of which blocked me. | ||
If you want to know which one blocked me, check out the video that I did today on lukeuncensored.com. | ||
Also, a lot of people are asking when I'm going to be leaving. | ||
unidentified
|
I'm going to be leaving this week, so I'll miss you guys. | |
Oh, no, that's fine. | ||
We got a way better replacement. | ||
It's the cat. | ||
You guys can find me anywhere on the internet at Ian Cross. | ||
I'm happy to be here. | ||
And also Cyrus, I wanted to shout out your Twitter page stuck in the mid it's stuck and the letter N D A M I D. If anyone wants to follow you on Twitter. | ||
Good to see you, man. | ||
unidentified
|
Yeah, thank you. | |
Nice meeting you. | ||
Hell yeah. | ||
And I am at Serge Dupria or Serge.com. | ||
My name is Serge Dupria. | ||
I'm Serge.com everywhere on the internet. | ||
It's been a really good show. | ||
Pleasure meeting you. | ||
And yeah, I am really going to be sad to see Luke go. | ||
Damn right. | ||
unidentified
|
Thank you. | |
At least someone here is. | ||
We will see you all over at timcast.com for the members only show in about one hour. | ||
Thanks for hanging out. |