Speaker | Time | Text |
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Tonight, Tucker Carlson returned to Twitter with a new show. | ||
And in his show, he talked about what's going on in Ukraine with this dam that exploded. | ||
And who did it? | ||
Was it Ukraine? | ||
Was it Russia? | ||
Now, of course, Western media is saying Russia did it. | ||
Russia is saying Ukraine did it, and then there are elements of the media in the United States that are questioning who did it, saying we don't know for sure. | ||
I mean, a lot of the corporate press actually is saying both sides are accusing each other. | ||
But there are a lot of people online who are saying it makes more sense that it was Ukraine trying to do it, not Russia. | ||
But, to be completely honest, it's fog of war. | ||
We don't know. | ||
In response to this, Tucker is getting a warm welcome from the corporate press, who are ragging on him, calling him a conspiracy theorist. | ||
And I think generally they're just freaking out because the fact that he was able to take his show to Twitter and get a substantial amount of audience, of market share, shows they are completely irrelevant and this is only making it worse for them. | ||
It was bad enough that we were competing directly, and we do compete directly with these cable networks, but now you can just do your show anywhere. | ||
Podcast, Twitter, VOD, On Demand, whatever you want to do. | ||
We got other news we got to talk about. | ||
Actor Elliot Page, Yes, the horrifying Jussie Smollett 3.0 story, where Elliot Page claims that in the gay neighborhood, West Hollywood, of Los Angeles, that, telling the story on the same day that Elliot Page's book is coming out, claimed that a man walked up and verbatim said that they would gay bash Elliot Page, and this is why they need a gun, and Jussie Smollett is probably | ||
You know, rolling his eyes, being like, mm, been there, done that, because nobody believes this story. | ||
So we're gonna get into that, as well as a bunch of other stories. | ||
Cities are collapsing, and we've got a variety of stories in this regard. | ||
The Hilton in San Francisco is surrendering its property, I believe the entire property, to its creditors. | ||
It's just basically saying, you can have it, we're done, we're out, because SF has collapsed so much. | ||
And get this, in Seattle, People have been trying to steal fire trucks. | ||
That's how bad it's getting. | ||
So, sounds like fun. | ||
We'll get into that stuff. | ||
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Joining us tonight to talk about this and a whole lot more is Just Pearly Things. | ||
Hello, thank you. | ||
Who are you? | ||
My name is Pearl. | ||
I run the show Just Pearly Things on my channel. | ||
And I host live shows with women three times a week when I'm in London. | ||
And yeah, we usually debate on like random things. | ||
Right on, yeah. | ||
There's a story right now that we'll talk about in the New York Post that says there's a trend in podcasting to make fun of dumb women. | ||
And they're highlighting specifically the Whatever podcast. | ||
Yeah, yeah, that's my favorite hobby. | ||
But I think, we'll get into this, I just think, It's wrong, because whatever podcast has a bunch of smart women on the show as well. | ||
It's not like it's just, let's go find dumb women and make fun of them. | ||
They bring on different kinds of women who agree and disagree, and then people on the internet make fun of them. | ||
Well, and it's also like when there's a show where men get roasted, there's no article saying, oh, we feel bad for the dumb men. | ||
unidentified
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No one feels bad for dumb men. | |
It's a problem for us. | ||
My life isn't easy, I'll say that. | ||
The fact that I've accomplished what I have is remarkable. | ||
It makes me more impressive, actually. | ||
Thanks for hanging out, Pearl. | ||
It should be fun. | ||
We'll talk about a lot of stuff. | ||
I'm sure you'll have a lot of thoughts on the Ukraine war and Russia and foreign policy. | ||
Oh, yeah. | ||
I know so much. | ||
I know so much. | ||
And we've got Seamus hanging out. | ||
My name is Seamus Coghlan. | ||
I make cartoons for a living. | ||
And I make fun of people on the internet. | ||
It's quite fun. | ||
I've also made fun of the Whatever podcast. | ||
You guys might want to check that cartoon out. | ||
It was a lot of fun. | ||
Freedom Tunes, go over there, check it out. | ||
We just dropped a debunkers video today. | ||
We're going to drop another cartoon Thursday. | ||
I also run a podcast called Shamer on Rumble. | ||
I had an incredible interview today with Jimmy Akin. | ||
He is just an encyclopedia. | ||
And we were talking about conspiracy theories. | ||
So I think you guys would really enjoy that if you want to check that out tonight. | ||
I'm back! | ||
And I'm not saying it's aliens, but it's aliens that did not visit us. | ||
We talked about that on our episode. | ||
I'm probably not going to talk about tonight, but just don't fall for it. | ||
They're trying to manipulate people. | ||
They're seeding terror. | ||
They're trying to see who's going to buy it. | ||
Who's going to buy the next big thing? | ||
Let's give them this one. | ||
Let's give them that alien thing. | ||
Or aliens are real. | ||
Or aliens are real, and they have visited Earth, and there are alien spacecraft on Earth as we speak. | ||
We actually talked about that on the podcast I just did with Jimmy Akin. | ||
Oh, snap. | ||
Like I said, the guy's an encyclopedia. | ||
I'm feeling it, man. | ||
Shamer. | ||
Shamer. | ||
Check it out. | ||
On my right, we have Serge Duprea. | ||
Yes, I am Serge.com, and I'm excited for today. | ||
It's good to have you back, Ian, as always, yeah. | ||
And yeah, good to meet you, Pearl. | ||
Pleasure. | ||
It'll be fun. | ||
Let's get started. | ||
Let's jump into this, uh, the first story. | ||
And this was the big news that's trending on Twitter right now. | ||
Tucker goes full conspiracy theorist on Twitter. | ||
I love this. | ||
The Daily Mail. | ||
They are not too happy with Tucker's position on the war in Ukraine because Daily Mail, | ||
of course, is super pro-Ukraine. | ||
But they say ex-Fox host debuts his new show and rants about the West's unwavering support | ||
Yes, the West is just insanely obsessed with Ukraine, and there's tons of lies. | ||
I like how there's a meme going around right now because of this dam that got blown up. | ||
The West is just insanely obsessed with Ukraine and there's tons of lies. | ||
I like how there's a meme going around right now because of this this dam that got blown up. | ||
They were like in three months, they're gonna come back and be like, oh, yeah, we knew it the whole time, right? | ||
The Washington Post reported that apparently we knew about the attempts to sabotage the Nord Stream pipeline well in advance. | ||
And so now when it comes to blowing up this dam in Ukraine, they're claiming Russia did it. | ||
Surprise, surprise. | ||
It'll probably be in three months. | ||
They'll say, actually, it was Ukraine who did it. | ||
But anyway, look, I'm not trying to ignite that whole conversation. | ||
Deep foreign policy stuff we can get into in a second. | ||
The big story is just that Tucker Carlson has returned He cannot be stopped! | ||
Episode 1, he just posted, he's got 148,000 likes, and the big picture here is the media is officially dead. | ||
The corporate media, it's over. | ||
Man, I longed for this day. | ||
So, you posted this at 6pm, I just want to talk, if you could move, I'm streaming at 6pm, so I'd appreciate it if you slid over a little bit. | ||
Tucker Carlson! | ||
Because we did okay today, but I think if he keeps this up he might steal our audience. | ||
Tucker Carlson posted his first episode, the first episode of his show, on June 6th at 6pm. | ||
Ooh. | ||
I mean, I would love to conspiracy theorize with y'all, but I did do an episode today on June 6th at 6pm. | ||
You did 666, dude. | ||
I didn't mean to. | ||
Really? | ||
It wasn't on purpose. | ||
Well, it never is. | ||
But it happened. | ||
Yeah, maybe you're right. | ||
The road to hell is paved with good intentions. | ||
It wasn't my first episode, though. | ||
I think people are going to need to evolve to start being able to listen to two conversations at once, because there's too many shows at six o'clock. | ||
You just got to put two on it. | ||
Maybe two, and then three, and then four. | ||
You just pick the show that you like, and you watch the show that you like. | ||
Dude, and if you guys all make videos here, you should put on videos of yourself to listen to yourself, and then put on multiple videos of yourself at the same time. | ||
It's like heightened evolution. | ||
That is the craziest thing ever. | ||
How many views does that have? | ||
Oh, let's find out. | ||
I am looking right now. | ||
So it's been up for two hours, and it has nine million. | ||
unidentified
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Wow. | |
My gosh. | ||
It has more views on Twitter. | ||
A lot of people want you to know this. | ||
He is so popular. | ||
He is popular, and he should be. | ||
My dad loves him. | ||
I don't actually know much about Tucker Carlson. | ||
He used to be like deep state shill without realizing like he was in the matrix. | ||
He wore a bowtie and just did talking points for the military industrial complex. | ||
And then he had this interview with Jon Stewart where he was humiliated. | ||
Jon Stewart humiliated him and he like went into some deep mental place like and then he came out like is this new creature of truth. | ||
And now he's like calling out the bull. | ||
Why was he humiliated? | ||
I disagree. | ||
I don't think he was. | ||
I disagree with you on that. | ||
Has he said that's why he transformed? | ||
No, this is just my take. | ||
I don't think Stewart humiliated him. | ||
I thought Stewart's performance was even a little embarrassing. | ||
Because Jon Stewart, he was calling Tucker Carlson out for things that he claimed were mistruths, and Tucker responded by saying, well actually, you said this on your show and that isn't true. | ||
And Jon Stewart goes, it's a comedy show! | ||
No, as if Jon Stewart isn't trying to convince people of things because he's just a comedian. | ||
It was really, really slimy. | ||
Duplicitous. | ||
It was very duplicitous, because you can't have it both ways. | ||
You can't say, like, I do an educational comedy show that teaches people things, and then when someone calls you out for misinformation, say, it's a comedy show, who cares? | ||
But that's exactly what Jon Stewart was doing. | ||
It's just a joke when I say a thing that happened is true, followed by joke. | ||
Exactly. | ||
Exactly. | ||
What Jon Stewart and the rest of his ilk do is they'll say, here's a true thing that happened! | ||
And now a joke! | ||
And it's like, then they claim the lie was the joke the whole time. | ||
Exactly. | ||
So they'll say, like, Seamus was seen kicking dogs. | ||
Was the dog Snoopy? | ||
And that did happen, but there's a justification for it I don't want to get into right now. | ||
Right, so the point is, they'll say, Seamus kicked a dog, and then that's the fact, and then they go, and was the dog Snoopy? | ||
Like some ridiculous nonsense. | ||
Yeah. | ||
And then everyone laughs, and then later they'll be like, the whole thing was a joke! | ||
And you'll be like, Seamus never kicked a dog. | ||
They'll be like, no, we were joking! | ||
Yeah, exactly. | ||
So they'll talk about it like it's news, plus jokes, and then when they get called out for saying something that wasn't true, they'll go, oh, but it's just a joke, what's the big deal? | ||
So I seem to remember Tucker, this is like 2003, 4, 5. | ||
It's a wild era. | ||
Yeah, he was like, just basically like, the war in Iraq is good, Barack Obama's bad, and all the Republicans are good, and the Democrats are bad, and that was like, not, I was in the zone of like, Obama's good, you know, war is bad, but he was like, but we, and something happened right around that Jon Stewart interview with them. | ||
Where he changed. | ||
Like, he disappeared for a year, came out, and he lost the bowtie, and he got way more serious. | ||
I miss the bowtie. | ||
I do miss the bowtie. | ||
But, uh, no, I remember that interview. | ||
The bowtie was so that... You're right that Tucker Carlson was very much like a typical, like, kind of neocon broadcaster. | ||
Well, that's what the bowtie was for, so that when you were looking at him and he was saying that we need to go blow up foreigners, you were like, but that bowtie! | ||
That's a nice, like... It's just so funny! | ||
It is a nice bowtie. | ||
He was like, I tried it myself! | ||
The other thing, uh, idea is maybe he did a bunch of mushrooms one day. | ||
I don't think. | ||
Why is that always it? | ||
Why can't someone just come to realize something true without doing a bunch of mushrooms? | ||
Wouldn't it be great? | ||
So that interview made him change his opinions on the Iraq war? | ||
I don't think it did. | ||
No, Ian's just crazy. | ||
I'm just kind of throwing one out there. | ||
I don't know if it was that interview, but around that time of his life, he kind of had this change of momentum. | ||
He switched all his opinions? | ||
At some point, not all of them, but he began to oppose the kind of neoconservative foreign policy perspective. | ||
Because he used to be very much in lockstep with the rest of the right-wing at that time, which was saying, yes, our freedom is over in the Middle East. | ||
Let's go get it. | ||
Yeah, Osama bin Laden, bad. | ||
We were attacked 9-11, terrorists. | ||
Two airplanes brought down. | ||
I'm being snide. | ||
I'm being snide, right? | ||
But neoconservatism is intellectually bankrupt. | ||
It's just a form of Marxism. | ||
I feel like they just co-opted the conservative movement, this neo-war. | ||
unidentified
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Now they're... Trump kicked them out, though. | |
I was so young when all that stuff was going on. | ||
unidentified
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Like, I don't even... How old were you in 06? | |
I was 10. | ||
Oh yeah, we're like the same age. | ||
unidentified
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Yeah. | |
About the same age. | ||
I remember those times. | ||
Did you watch that stuff when you were back then? | ||
So I watched it a little bit, yeah. | ||
I used to, you know, when we would drive anywhere, we didn't listen to music in the car. | ||
It was always talk radio. | ||
Always talk radio. | ||
And so I heard a lot of it. | ||
You know, my dad is one of those guys where he listens to both sides. | ||
At that time, he definitely did. | ||
And so I heard, unfortunately, I heard my fair share of NPR as well. | ||
But yeah, you know, a lot of like Rush Limbaugh, Michael Savage, the OGs. | ||
Yeah, my dad used to listen to them too, but I didn't know what they were talking about. | ||
I was so confused. | ||
I was like fired, like little 10-year-old James was fired. | ||
unidentified
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I was like, these politically correct liberals are destroying America! | |
I was like, Dad, turn the radio off! | ||
The scary man is yelling! | ||
Yeah, like, Dad, put on country! | ||
I think part of Tucker's, like, what I love about him is that he used to be a neocon, used to be, like, in the Matrix and now he's out of it. | ||
Like, I love the retribution story, the come from behind victory. | ||
What do you mean in the Matrix? | ||
Because when we say that, like, we talk about, like, dating and relationships. | ||
I'm curious what you guys in, like, the political world say. | ||
Well, you explain it first. | ||
Like, what is the dating matrix? | ||
It's just kind of like men grow up thinking that women want the guy that gives them flowers, treats them well, and they grow up and find out that's not true. | ||
Right, right, right. | ||
And there's the red pill. | ||
Actually, they get kind of mad at me because people have so many different definitions of it, so they kind of argue over it, but that's in layman's terms. | ||
About the Matrix? | ||
Yeah, well, yeah, like the red pill, because a lot of people use that word for so many different things. | ||
But but so I'm curious in the political world, what you guys mean, like the literal matrix? | ||
Yeah, I thought like, there's a there's so the political red pill is there is a corporate There is a corporate narrative that the average person believes is reality. | ||
And if you are to, quote-unquote, take the red pill, you wake up to the untruths that is the corporate press, the media, politics, the establishment narrative. | ||
For me it was 9-11. | ||
Like, I was fed, I thought, okay, a couple of planes hit the buildings, they knocked them down, and Osama bin Laden's the one responsible for all of this. | ||
And then I found out later, like, oh, there's a lot of evidence that there's more to it than just a couple of planes and this dude in the Middle East. | ||
I think Saudi Arabia got sued over their involvement or something. | ||
What was that? | ||
unidentified
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I don't know. | |
I don't know. | ||
I don't want to get into it. | ||
I don't know enough about it. | ||
But there was like, there's a lot more than just... It is a rabbit hole. | ||
Are you guys like Bush did 9-11? | ||
No, we don't all share the same opinion. | ||
We're actually a pretty diverse panel, to be honest. | ||
Yeah, I don't have any evidence of who did it. | ||
But there's a lot more going on than what I thought. | ||
Like, the way the buildings fell down in near free fall is like, duh! | ||
But instead of just getting into a whole 9-11 debate, how about we just talk about what the red pill is? | ||
Yeah, I would say for me, like, the political matrix, there's a couple different things. | ||
And I usually don't use terms like the red pill or the matrix for the reason that you described, which is that they're thrown around by so many people that represent so many different things. | ||
But I would say that in one sense, the matrix is... | ||
Sort of like all the social, political ideas that are forced onto people that they're convinced of that are untrue. | ||
And I would say one of those, at least in the dating marketplace, is just, you know, the sexual revolution, more generally speaking, this idea that people are happy when they have sex outside of marriage, that this is something that people should aspire to do, and that it's a healthy way for man to live. | ||
And that we're just a product of our own self-invention, and as long as a person is getting their sexual gratification, what they're doing is beyond reproach, basically. | ||
That's matrix? | ||
Yeah, that's definitely matrix. | ||
That's like a mix of the dating matrix. | ||
Yeah, that's how I was wondering what it is in politics. | ||
But it's also political because the sexual revolution is a massively political thing. | ||
It has a strong political element to it and all of our political establishment basically promote it. | ||
It's a mix of the political and the dating. | ||
Yeah, yeah. | ||
Well, because the family is the building block of society, so any political movement has to- And Reagan destroyed it. | ||
Well, Reagan played a role in the destruction of the American family with no-fault divorce. | ||
He didn't do it himself overnight, man. | ||
There was a lot at work there, but I think it was a massive misstep on his part. | ||
Yeah, that was the final nail in the coffin. | ||
It's hard to say with the final nails, but that was definitely very bad. | ||
Very bad. | ||
No fault divorce ended marriage. | ||
It formalized our ending of marriage. | ||
But there were other things, like there was a massive cultural shift that happened at this time. | ||
So previously, people thought of divorce as something that was horrible, but that we should allow in certain circumstances. | ||
And I'm not even saying that's the correct vision, because I just don't believe a marriage can actually end if it's an actual marriage. | ||
But that's not to say someone who's being abused can't go live somewhere else. | ||
But my main point is, there was There was a reinvention that happened culturally, around the time of the 1970s, where people stopped viewing divorce as this unfortunate thing that happens sometimes and that we should allow a political outlet for, and they started reframing it as an adventure, a method of self-exploration, a way to reinvent yourself, rather than something horrific that we should prevent from ever occurring. | ||
Well, I mean, some people say it's birth control. | ||
If you look up the divorce rate and the rate of women on birth control, it's really interesting. | ||
The charts are the same, pretty much. | ||
Yeah, well, it all plays a role. | ||
You can look it up and put it on the screen. | ||
It's really interesting. | ||
It's like, literally, if you put them side-by-side, it's the same. | ||
unidentified
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I know that people smell different. | |
I would say, like, social media, too. | ||
Huge. | ||
Yeah, because, I mean, you get, like, all these women that think they're hotter than they are because they have the simps messaging them every single day. | ||
Instagram filters. | ||
Yeah, so I think, like, it would be silly to not include that in, like, the destruction of the family. | ||
Yeah, but can't these women still hook up with those simps that are messaging them? | ||
What do you mean? | ||
Like, what about the fact that guys are hitting on these women is different from reality? | ||
Because it makes it a global sexual marketplace. | ||
So it's not, she doesn't just have access to the men like in her town, because before it's like the prettiest guy, prettiest girl in the town, marry each other, whatever. | ||
Now it's like the men are competing with men from, you know, Dubai, like celebrities. | ||
Like how many women has, you know, a celebrity like Drake slept with? | ||
We actually... Future wives, you know what I mean? | ||
We've talked a lot about this, and boy, does it trigger the feminists. | ||
I talked about how dating apps have basically caused a major collapse because what happens is, it used to be that if you were a dude, you had access, men and women had access to their school, basically. | ||
The institution where they spent all their time. | ||
So a guy is 18, he goes to college, and he has access to the women in the college network, which is mostly the college he's at, and then maybe the friends of friends. | ||
Yeah. | ||
But when dating apps emerge, all of a sudden, all of these, you know, 18 plus young women have access to 25 year old plus men who aren't in college, but have cars, have jobs, have salaries. | ||
And now the 18 year old in college has to enter, has to compete with a guy who's already got a career and is already established, and they can't. | ||
Yeah, I think it's really important that you pointed out birth control because that plays a massive role in the way that we've been restructured in terms of our thinking about sexuality. | ||
So people used to recognize that the purpose of sex was unity and procreation, right? | ||
And you wanted to be with the person you were going to be with the rest of your life before you engage in that act with them because it makes new people and someone has to take responsibility for those new people. | ||
What Artificial Contraceptives made possible was a rerouting of our collective cultural thinking about sexuality, which took it from something that was to be revered, that was beautiful, that needed social restrictions, and something that was just about the pleasure of the individual, And that only needed to be considered within the context of pleasure, without actually considering its actual broader purpose, which is the creation of families. | ||
And of course, families are the building block of society, so when you corrupt people's sexual morals, you end up destroying the entire society, inevitably. | ||
I mean, if you don't end up setting that train back on the rail, or putting things back on the proper course, it all falls apart. | ||
You just can't do it. | ||
And, you know, we recognize this economically. | ||
Whenever a marketplace is deregulated, we say, well, this is going to result in unbearable inequalities. | ||
All of the spoils will go to some small percentage of people who happen to have the traits that the market rewards. | ||
But then when it came to the sexual revolution, no one was willing to say that. | ||
Well, when it comes to the sexual marketplace, deregulating it is going to create unbearable inequalities. | ||
And in the end, people aren't going to be happy. | ||
I get the feeling that if we made birth control illegal and made abortion illegal, it would cause devastation. | ||
It would cause a bunch of spousal abuse. | ||
I can't stand no-fault divorce. | ||
I lost faith in marriage, basically. | ||
I have no faith in that institution because she can leave whenever she wants. | ||
But if they're stuck, then won't they just be getting beat a lot? | ||
Um, so if, well this is the whole point of no-fault divorce, is a person could get divorced if they demonstrated that there was some kind of abuse occurring, right? | ||
And this is part of what I was saying earlier. | ||
I believe marriage is lifelong, but that doesn't mean that you can't go live somewhere else if a person is abusing you, right? | ||
That doesn't mean you don't go to the police. | ||
Well, and the one thing, too, they've expanded the definition of abuse so much that we don't even know what abuse is anymore. | ||
Like, it's not just, like, you can include, like, financial abuse, because I'm doing a divorce documentary, and so it's going into, like, basically men that get financially ruined by divorce. | ||
And the issue is, like, they literally, like, have expanded the definition so much to include things like financial abuse. | ||
So if I'm married and he says you can't spend $5,000 on my credit card, he's financially controlling me, and that's considered abuse in family court. | ||
It's very sad. | ||
Do you think there's faith in marriage? | ||
Do you have faith in marriage? | ||
US is state by state. | ||
So like this is this is based in the UK. | ||
Do you know words are violence now? | ||
So yeah, exactly. | ||
Do you think there's faith in marriage? | ||
You have faith in marriage. | ||
Well, I don't think marriage is marriage anymore. | ||
Like I think that marriage, it's a whole different institution. | ||
It's basically just long-term relationships nowadays. | ||
Yeah, it's dating. | ||
I think there's truth in that, yeah. | ||
Because, like, if you can get out, like, how is it marriage? | ||
I think the way... Marriage doesn't exist since no-fault divorce. | ||
Yeah, I would argue that in the United In the United States, our laws don't properly recognize marriage. | ||
Of course, I believe marriage still exists, but the way the culture understands it, you're not looking at actual marriages in a sense because the person isn't truly saying, for better or for worse, till death do we part. | ||
They're saying, I'm just going to do this for a while until I get bored of it. | ||
If divorce is in your mind as an option, it's something you're willing to consider, and you're not saying, there is no one else for me for the rest of my life or this person's life, then are you really getting married? | ||
There's in the service industry, I used to work as a waiter for like a decade. | ||
And when we would finish a shift, I'd marry the condiments. | ||
Okay, take the ketchups and marry them together, which means mix. | ||
I pour one into the other, shake it up. | ||
You could never undo that. | ||
That mix is permanent now. | ||
One flesh. | ||
The two became one flesh. | ||
And what does a guy get out of marriage that he doesn't get out of a long term girlfriend? | ||
If she can leave? | ||
What do you mean half her money? | ||
money. Yeah, well again, I think the... What do you mean half her money? I guess in the | ||
instance of like, wasn't the story with Russell Brand that when he got divorced from Katy | ||
Perry he didn't take anything from her because they're both super rich and he didn't care? | ||
Yeah. Well, I mean, men, but women get money the majority of the time, so it's not like | ||
men get money out of it. Yeah, if she has more. | ||
I think women only get spousal support like 10% of the time when it comes to child custody. | ||
Women get the kids 90% of the time. | ||
So it's really an unfair system. | ||
Totally agree. | ||
So your question has two different answers, right? | ||
When you ask, what do men get out of marriage? | ||
Because in some sense, like, yes, when you're talking about our society, when you're talking about what we are calling marriage, I mean, because the institution has removed... Yeah, in 2023. | ||
If we're talking about what marriage actually is, it's a different question, right? | ||
Because, again, it's not moral to have sex with someone you're not married, so you shouldn't be having sex with someone you're not married to. | ||
In a culture where people are having sex outside of marriage, where they're living together when they're not married, you're correct that it doesn't seem, from a material perspective, that anything is really added to the relationship by Entering into a legal union with each other. | ||
Well, even when you look at like, you know, purity and youth, like men don't even get that anymore out of marriage. | ||
Like in the UK, the average age of first marriage for a girl is 31. | ||
And like purity, like what percent of women do you think were virgins in 1920? | ||
Many more than today. | ||
100? | ||
I don't know if it was 100, but there's been surveys done and many more women. | ||
I mean, you don't know, like, people can lie, but it was like 85% of women did not, like, they said their virgins on their wedding day, like, what is that today? | ||
So what does a guy get from marriage today? | ||
Yeah, so he doesn't get purity, he doesn't get youth, now she has the power to take, I mean... But that's, that is more of a traditionalist argument that doesn't, I don't think matters materialistically or What I'm saying is, there are certainly people who care about purity and all that stuff. | ||
I don't think the average person thinks, like, is my wife pure? | ||
But a lot of guys probably do. | ||
What I'm saying is, you go to a guy and say, hey, you know that long-term relationship you're in? | ||
Yes. | ||
Why don't you get married? | ||
Okay. | ||
Why? | ||
Well, if you do, you open up the door to losing half of everything you own if things go bad, and nothing else changes. | ||
And what does the woman get? | ||
The woman gets half your stuff if she decides to leave at any point. | ||
Well, but this is also the point, right? | ||
The left, the Marxists, they hate marriage and they hate the family, so people look at how the culture has been oriented and they look at these no-fault divorce laws and they say, oh my goodness, there's no point in even getting married anymore. | ||
Well, that was by design. | ||
The entire purpose was to dissuade people from wanting to get married. | ||
That was the long game. | ||
That was the long game. | ||
And make it some sex before marriage. | ||
Exactly, right? | ||
Because if sex before marriage is on the table, then you can have that without committing to a person. | ||
I mean, what are most men going to choose even if you don't have these wacky divorce laws? | ||
Well, all the divorce and marriage stuff aside, I find it weird to say that sex before marriage is bad, because if you have sex with a girl and you don't like it, but you don't know that until after you're married, that would be horrible. | ||
Well, sex isn't tryouts, right? | ||
She's a person, and you're a person, and that's an act that creates human people, and it'll create a person even if you didn't think the sex was all that great. | ||
I think that two people Who are married should should try to communicate with one another so that they could, you know, meet each other's needs in a licit way. | ||
And I think we've created so many problems with no-fault divorce and the sexual evolution and sex outside of marriage to say that, you know, a solution to that problem isn't good enough because it might interfere with some people's ability to have sexual pleasure doesn't really convince me. | ||
Well, and it's not even about, like, moral. | ||
Like, good or bad. | ||
It's like, what outcomes does this have? | ||
And, like, the studies show that the best outcomes are for two people that are both virgins. | ||
The best outcomes of marriage? | ||
That's true! | ||
And marriage satisfaction! | ||
How would you know if the sex was bad if you didn't have sex with anyone else? | ||
Exactly. | ||
That's the same exact argument feminists make. | ||
They're like, wow, that must suck condemning your life to bad sex because you live this puritanical way. | ||
Yeah, yeah it is. | ||
Okay, yeah, but again, that's a horrible way of viewing sex. | ||
It's a horrible way of viewing other people. | ||
Ignorance is bliss. | ||
And it's not just that ignorance is bliss, it's that there are some things you have no need to know, right? | ||
There is some information that's not going to make you happier. | ||
There are a lot of things that all of us could know that we don't want to know because it would make us miserable. | ||
Yeah, a five minute orgasm would be awesome. | ||
Like if you could have non-stop orgasms with your wife, you could do like two hours of tantric sex. | ||
Do you think with sex outside of marriage that's happening for people? | ||
Because the studies show that people rate lower marital satisfaction rates when they've had more sexual partners prior to marriage. | ||
Have you ever watched any romantic comedy? | ||
Yeah. | ||
Like the trope is that the women are always unsatisfied. | ||
Like the guys are in it for a one night stand, it's wham bam thank you ma'am and they leave. | ||
Well, and also, not to get, I mean, since we're already having an adult conversation here, they have done studies with rams, right? | ||
So this is something that I learned when I was looking into the effects that pornography has on the brain, and how men will seek out novelty. | ||
And they found, with these muse that they were studying, that men finished more quickly with a newer partner. | ||
Yeah, because of the excitement? | ||
Exactly. | ||
So I don't think I have to elaborate any further on the implications of that. | ||
It's not just that, I think that if you have two people who care about each other, it's likely going to be better between them than a guy who's like, can I get this woman in the closet for a few minutes? | ||
I think there's a problem of chasing the orgasm. | ||
I think my mom would be like, your dad, he's obsessed with sex. | ||
Oh my God, he just loves that. | ||
And I'm like, well, okay, maybe I gotta not do that then. | ||
But on the other side, it is pretty epic. | ||
A good orgasm is like, I don't think anything else in the world can compete with that. | ||
Maybe not a good meal. | ||
I mean, maybe a good meal if you're hungry. | ||
I'm sure everybody in the comment is going to say... They're saying face. | ||
They're going to say seeing the face of your child for the first time. | ||
Oh yeah, good point. | ||
Raising kids. | ||
They're like, Ian doesn't have kids. | ||
I was actually thinking that today. | ||
Raising kids is far superior. | ||
Like having a family as far as just being with people. | ||
And you're better off in a committed relationship with someone who you know won't just up and leave and take everything and your kids from you. | ||
And that's the other thing too with no-fault divorce. | ||
You have no guarantee you get to keep your kids. | ||
There's just like the family has been completely destroyed and there is a tremendous risk in having kids because they could just take your kids from you and then destroy your life. | ||
There's only 11 states that have automatic 50-50 custody out of 50. | ||
So it's like if it's 50% is DNA, why doesn't he get 50% custody off the bat? | ||
Well, there was a story out of Wisconsin where a guy who wasn't even the father, the woman claimed he was, and the courts ordered him to pay child support because she listed him as the father and the DNA proved he wasn't. | ||
They were like, we don't care. | ||
Kidney's a dead. | ||
unidentified
|
Wow. | |
What do you think, Pearl, what do you think is like a solution to this no-fault divorce situation? | ||
Oh, I think we should ban divorce. | ||
unidentified
|
I think we should ban it. | |
Ban it completely. | ||
What if a guy's beating his wife? | ||
If he's beating his wife, I think there's an exception to every rule, but I don't think that makes the rule. | ||
But you know what else they don't talk about? | ||
When they look at one-sided abuse, women hit men more than men hit women. | ||
So it's the women that are beating their husbands more than the husbands are beating their wife when it's one-sided, because the majority of abuse cases is mutual. | ||
And the other thing they don't talk about, and I'm so tired of this on the show, these girls will come on and say, I was abused, I was abused. | ||
And I used to just believe women, right? | ||
Because it's like, and it's kind of a sensitive, it's kind of awkward in the room when someone's like, oh, I was abused. | ||
But it's like, if you're bringing it up on the show, I'm going to ask you questions, right? | ||
You clearly want, you talked about it. | ||
So, and then I would ask questions, and I'd realize these girls were not talking about the part they had to play in the abuse. | ||
I'll give you an example. | ||
One girl, she says I was abused. | ||
So, I say, okay, what happened? | ||
How, how? | ||
Because I'm thinking, like, the average guy can beat me to hell. | ||
I'd be dead. | ||
Like, and I deadlift 300 pounds. | ||
I'm a semi-pro athlete. | ||
I had pro contracts in the fall. | ||
I'm six foot. | ||
I'm pretty built for a chick, right? | ||
And I'm still saying the average guy can beat me up. | ||
So I'm like, okay, if he was beating you like that, where are your injuries, right? | ||
So I ask her, what happened? | ||
She says, well, he pushed me. | ||
He pushed me down the stairs or something like that. | ||
And I was like, okay, well, why? | ||
What led up to this? | ||
And come to find out, this girl wouldn't leave. | ||
So she refused. | ||
She was trespassing on this guy's house, wouldn't leave, and then he pushes her out of the house. | ||
That's abuse. | ||
That's abuse. | ||
Is that actually, what he did, was that legal? | ||
To push her out of the house? | ||
Oh yeah, did he push her down the stairs though? | ||
Because that's different from, like, trying to remove someone from your property. | ||
Well, that's what she was trying to do. | ||
That's what he was like, yeah. | ||
Well, don't push people down stairs. | ||
I don't think he meant to. | ||
Like, the way she was saying is like, she was like, she wouldn't leave. | ||
So what are you supposed to do? | ||
Now, you could call the cops, but I'm saying it wasn't this like... You gotta call the police. | ||
Yeah. | ||
Because you have to protect yourself. | ||
But my point is, she didn't talk about, like, my point isn't like, was it abuse? | ||
Wasn't it abuse? | ||
My point is, women don't talk about the part they have to play in it. | ||
You know what I'd do? | ||
I would just go in my room, lock the door, call the police and say, I got a break-in. | ||
That's it, I mean. | ||
Yeah, yeah, yeah. | ||
But it is. | ||
Like, a person who enters your property without your permission, and I'd say, there's an ongoing burglar, I've locked myself in my room, you guys can't deal with it. | ||
Because what'll happen is, if you try to physically remove her, and the cops show up, she'll say, help, help, I'm being abused, and you will get arrested. | ||
Right. | ||
So just go in your room, lock the door, I'm not saying run and cower, I'm saying, just separate yourself from this person, and then call the police and be like, please calm burglar in progress. | ||
Then they'll come in and find the lady screaming and ranting, and you'll be like, I am in the other room, door's locked, man. | ||
Right. | ||
Well, and the other thing is, like, as I was saying before, what they did, and this is more pertaining to the UK, not the US, but I know some states have similar laws to this. | ||
They've basically expanded the definition of abuse to include things like coercive control, financial abuse, and they have, like, a list of, like, five to, I think, ten, and it's a point system. | ||
So basically what happens is if you, like maybe two times he said you were financially | ||
abused, three times you were coercively controlled. | ||
They even say they were graped early on in the relationship or something like that, even | ||
though they would stay for later. | ||
And if you get, I don't know, maybe it's seven points out of ten, then that's considered | ||
abusive. | ||
We have grapes growing on the property. | ||
We have grapes growing on the property. | ||
This is crazy. | ||
No joke. | ||
You gotta check them out. | ||
Like, actual grape vines. | ||
And you can see the grapes coming in. | ||
Careful, if you eat the skin before washing it off, there's a lot of, like, tanning on it. | ||
Apparently you gotta freeze them or something. | ||
They're called frost grapes. | ||
I don't know anything about it. | ||
I had a similar situation. | ||
But you said grape, so I was like... Yeah, well, I didn't know if you could say that on the show. | ||
You could say grape on YouTube. | ||
Well, I don't know. | ||
So when it comes to abuse, if it's a genuinely abusive situation, sure, fine, fine. | ||
But I think it's more of the exception than the rule because even people that work at abuse centers will tell you the majority of abuse cases, they're both abusing each other. | ||
So it's not just one sided. | ||
So at that point, it's just like a toxic relationship. | ||
Maybe they should take some time apart and I want to come back to a lot of the subject because we do have another story to talk about. | ||
We have a lot of stories to talk about and then we'll come back to the dating stuff. | ||
Speaking of believing women, we have this story. | ||
Elliot Page reveals chilling transphobic attack outside LA hotel. | ||
Quote, I'm going to effing gay bash you and then homophobic slur. | ||
And then the guy apparently in the most prominent gay neighborhood, probably in the country, which is West Hollywood in Los Angeles. | ||
Well, maybe San Francisco got more prominent. | ||
Yeah, Castro District, San Francisco. | ||
Yeah, but L.A., West Hollywood is one of the most prominent gay neighborhoods in the country. | ||
This is where Elliot Page was. | ||
And then after this person said this, followed Elliot Page into a store called Pink Dot and then said, this is why I need a gun. | ||
It's amazing. | ||
I can't believe it. | ||
This story coming out on the same day that Elliot Page has released their new book. | ||
So, uh, nobody believes the story. | ||
I mean, come on. | ||
So, a guy was walking around Los Angeles, in literally the boys' town of Los Angeles, and was shocked and outraged to see someone who he assumed was gay. | ||
Also- And then specifically said, gay bash, and then, this is why I need a gun. | ||
Like, it- Bad fan fiction. | ||
It's bad fan fiction for liberals. | ||
Guns are bad. | ||
See, that's why they want guns. | ||
Who is that? | ||
I don't know who that is. | ||
Elliot Page? | ||
Yeah. | ||
Formerly Ellen Page? | ||
Have you ever seen Juno? | ||
Yeah! | ||
That was the girl from Juno. | ||
No! | ||
Yeah. | ||
And she transitioned to Elliot. | ||
Oh, that's so sad. | ||
And then there's a big question about whether or not Elliot Page has fake implants for the Yeah, that's gotta be fake. | ||
A lot of people were saying, like, if you look at Elliot Page's arms, when you work out your core for abs, there's a, whenever you work out a muscle, there's like a 30% transference to the surrounding muscles, because all muscles are working. | ||
It's not just like, when you're like working out your arms, you're actually using a bunch of other muscles too. | ||
So you would have muscle development in other areas. | ||
So a lot of people were like, Elliot Page got implants to look like a dude with abs or whatever. | ||
I just think this person's a liar. | ||
I think they're suffering from severe depression. | ||
I think that was publicly known. | ||
And I think that results in desperate cries for attention, like the most ridiculous story you've ever heard. | ||
I'm sorry, it's... I don't know what's more ridiculous, Jussie Smollett or this. | ||
To be fair, it is possible this happened. | ||
The Jussie Smollett thing is kinda like, yo, get outta here. | ||
It's even worse, yeah. | ||
Chicago, 2am, sub-zero weather, two guys carrying bleach and a... | ||
String from a hardware store. | ||
This is maybe there was a crazy homeless guy muttering and sputtering and rambling and then SAR You know, he did not use that for an actor. | ||
He did not say I am going to gay bash you like that's not how people talk That's not a thing. | ||
Anybody's like no if Elliot Page claimed the guy said oh, I'm going you disgust me I'm gonna get you or something. | ||
I'd be like, okay, that makes more sense. | ||
Yeah This kind of reminds me of what we were just talking about, how we only get potentially half the story. | ||
What led up to this interaction? | ||
Was Elliot screaming at the guy? | ||
Because if she's a miserable, depressed person, I wouldn't put it past him to wail on someone verbally. | ||
There was a unicorn that was flying through the sky, and it pooped, and the poop landed on this gigantic behemoth of an angry man, who then turned and saw Elliot Page picking flowers for Elliot's mother, and then went, oh boy, I'm so angry! | ||
Oh boy! | ||
Because if we're just gonna make things up, I'll make up whatever I want. | ||
If she's gonna make something up, I'll just make up how it started. | ||
There you go. | ||
There's the story. | ||
What do you think, Pearl? | ||
Well, I have a question. | ||
I don't know if I can say this or not. | ||
Oh, write it on a piece of paper, pass it over to Tim, and then we'll let you know. | ||
I don't know, do we even have paper? | ||
You can write it on paper, yeah. | ||
I can, okay. | ||
Don't brag, Ian. | ||
I just have a question, but I don't know if this question will... Okay. | ||
Oh, she's writing a racial slur. | ||
Is it too hot for TV? | ||
I don't know. | ||
unidentified
|
I can't believe you... Oh my gosh, look what... Wait, wait, wait, you said this... | |
Seamus is sweating. | ||
This is close-up on Seamus' eyeballs. | ||
I have a feeling it's going to be a very innocuous question. | ||
unidentified
|
I don't think it's that bad, but I just don't want to... It's your guys' show, so I don't want to... What I basically said was... Oh, so... Can I say that? | |
I will check with Tim, but I'm pretty sure yes. | ||
I'll just ask him. | ||
For those that are wondering what we're talking about, basically what we tell people is... I don't know if you can, but it's true. | ||
I don't know if you can say that, but it's true. | ||
I'm pretty sure you can say it. | ||
On YouTube, you do not insult someone based on their immutable characteristics. | ||
unidentified
|
Okay. | |
Outside of that, you're fine. | ||
What about questioning their mental stability? | ||
I'm pretty sure that Elliot Page has publicly expressed they have mental illness. | ||
unidentified
|
Oh, okay. | |
So why are we taking the words seriously of someone that's mentally ill? | ||
Why are they getting articles and stuff? | ||
I think Elliot Page has specifically talked about severe depression and anxiety and disorders and things like that. | ||
I could be wrong. | ||
I could be wrong. | ||
I was more asking because of the other, you know, stuff. | ||
But it's not about being mentally ill. | ||
It's about selling a book. | ||
Right. | ||
This story comes out the same day the book is getting released. | ||
This is not mental illness. | ||
This is cold calculating marketing. | ||
unidentified
|
Wow. | |
I think it's just crazy. | ||
It's marketing. | ||
Why did Jussie Smollett do what Jussie Smollett did? | ||
Because he was renegotiating his contract on Empire and he wanted to be a hot ticket item. | ||
And why now has this story come out? | ||
June 6th is the release date for Pageboy, the new book. | ||
What a weird marketing strategy, right? | ||
The new fake hate crime marketing firm out there that's telling these people that this will help their public image. | ||
But it makes sense, right? | ||
Because we live in a victimhood culture. | ||
If you want people to sympathize with you, you have to be a victim because that's what makes you impressive. | ||
Yeah, I'm real fed up on the victimhood culture. | ||
It's getting under my skin. | ||
Just now? | ||
unidentified
|
Agreed! | |
I could hear a pin drop all of a sudden. | ||
No, no, no, no, I totally agreed. | ||
I just wanted to... Do you get that? | ||
Do you constantly interact with victims on your show? | ||
Oh my... gosh. | ||
I just think women nowadays just want to be victim. | ||
It's like everything. | ||
Like, I've never heard a girl come on a show. | ||
Because we talk about relationships a lot and just say, you know what? | ||
That relationship was my fault. | ||
I've never heard a girl say that. | ||
Oh, there was a story today. I was reading in the Daily Mail and it was a woman crying because her fiance left her | ||
I said it was my fault because I wouldn't listen to why he was upset and I was too stubborn to compromise and now he's | ||
Gone. Yeah, and it made news headlines It made news headlines | ||
unidentified
|
They're like, women says something Like if you ask a guy | |
If you ask a guy If you ask a guy like he had a nice girl | ||
He maybe cheated on her He'll kind of admit it | ||
He'll be like, you know what, yeah, I was a dog, I was this. | ||
But it's like, girls just find the craziest ways to make themselves the victim in every relationship. | ||
Oh my gosh, that's hilarious. | ||
And I used to not really understand why guys were complaining about dating so much. | ||
I was like, why are the guys complaining? | ||
Why are they saying this is so bad? | ||
And then I started doing the show and I was like, oh my gosh, it's worse than I thought. | ||
It's like, one, the girls are so flaky coming on the show. | ||
I've never been really flaked on by guys. | ||
Women, it's like 50, I literally have to book it. | ||
Really? | ||
50-50 if they'll show up. | ||
I book double the amount of women because I know half will cancel. | ||
Are they professionals? | ||
Really? | ||
Are you being hyperbolic or is it really half? | ||
We have! | ||
I mean, I haven't recruited in a while, but when I did the recruiting myself, yeah, and we book ten girls for the show. | ||
We give our recruiters ten slots, and so that's like the most mics we have. | ||
We expect like half to come. | ||
For one show, you'll have ten invites? | ||
Yeah, 10 invites. | ||
I mean, sometimes we add in guys, too, so, like, there are guys. | ||
It depends on the show, but yeah. | ||
That's wild. | ||
So half the time they just don't show up. | ||
Do you think, though, is it something about, like, your show being more controversial that makes them feel more frightened to do it? | ||
No, this was even before I was bit. | ||
Like, this was, like, I started at 15,000. | ||
I was at 15,000 subs a year ago. | ||
What happened? | ||
What sparked it? | ||
You really blew up. | ||
unidentified
|
You really blew up. | |
Well, people think it was the show, but it actually wasn't the show. | ||
Well, sort of. | ||
I would do a show, right, and we would talk about, like, I don't know, maybe the pay gap not being real, or like, not the way they think, right? | ||
Like, basic, like, kind of red pill truths, right? | ||
And I would see a girl where, like, the wheels were sort of turning, where she was kind of understanding what I was saying, when I would say, like, you know, the reason for the pay gap is because we don't work as many hours, we don't do as dangerous jobs, like, you know, etc. | ||
unidentified
|
We flake on podcasts, that kind of thing. Yeah. Yeah. And so what I would do is I would invite | |
the girls back and I would show them like a red pilling like video. So one of the first | ||
videos that went viral was I red pilled my friend for the first time. And it was like | ||
a 45 minute video of Jordan Peterson arguing with that feminist on the pay gap. Right. | ||
And so but these are these would be like three hour conversations really in depth, | ||
like just like where I'm like slowly sort of like deconstructing what they believe. | ||
And, you know, because at one point, like, I mean, I thought the pay gap was real, like, I mean, not, not anytime recently, but, you know, when you're younger, right? | ||
And so that's what initially blew it up was like, it would be like red pilling women in real time. | ||
I found it. | ||
I found it. | ||
The story is real. | ||
But also dunking on women does well, too. | ||
Woman left by her fiancé burst into tears as she confesses the one mistake she made. | ||
And she basically says that they would get into fights. | ||
My one mistake is that I was too good for him. | ||
The failure to address the problems caused them to escalate and ultimately neither was willing to make sacrifices or compromise on their stance. | ||
After the relationship ended, Cam realized that she should have been less stubborn and tried to appreciate her partner's viewpoint. | ||
And now she's alone. | ||
Dang. | ||
And it made news headlines. | ||
unidentified
|
Yeah. | |
Why? | ||
I mean, I guess that's a big deal for modern women. | ||
Breaking news like woman admits fault. | ||
Yeah, it's a sad story. | ||
It happens. | ||
I think that part of what this culture does is it creates this warfare between men and women. | ||
And of course, the man is always the bad guy. | ||
Everything's his fault. | ||
And you see this repeatedly in media. | ||
I mean, even from singers, even from male singers, you hear so many songs that men sing about how they messed up and they did something wrong. | ||
I can't think of a single pop song written by a woman about how, like, she wasn't good enough for the guy she was with. | ||
You get a lot of songs like that written by male pop stars. | ||
Trying to think of one. | ||
Yeah, now, and you see this trope in film and television all the time. | ||
It's always the guy begging the girl to come back to him because he messed up, holding the stereo in his trench coat while it rains. | ||
Baby, come back! | ||
And it's never the opposite. | ||
It's never the opposite. | ||
Movies typically follow two tropes. | ||
One, it's the guy saving the girl, or two, it's the guy apologizing to the girl. | ||
No, but here, you forgot the third one. | ||
The one that got away for women. | ||
Women love that shit. | ||
You're talking about Titanic? | ||
This woman's like 90. | ||
She had a whole family with another dude. | ||
I know! | ||
unidentified
|
She's evil. | |
And she's still talking about her ex-lover she met for like a week. | ||
Lover? | ||
Her one night stand? | ||
No, this is a homeless guy. | ||
Hey, I think it was two nights, alright? | ||
No, but this is very real. | ||
Titanic is an unbelievably evil film, but there's something masterful about the way that the cinematography, the framing, and the music is used to make you sympathize with someone who's a genuinely bad person. | ||
She doesn't have a character arc. | ||
She doesn't go from a bad person to a good person. | ||
She goes from a selfish person to a person who's a selfish person. | ||
person but he's selfish in a different way. | ||
And when you look at- I just want to mention one thing. | ||
What she does, I saw this movie years ago so, you know, take this with a grain of salt, but what | ||
I remember is, she cheats on her fiance, and then has the | ||
homeless guy she's cheating on him with draw a picture of her naked wearing her engagement gift | ||
and then she puts it in his safe with like a snide remark written out of it. | ||
Like, that's psychopath behavior! | ||
That is not what a normal person does. | ||
That is insane. | ||
And people watch this, they're like, wow, her story's inspiring. | ||
She's a demon! | ||
Wasn't she, like, talking to her granddaughter or something? | ||
She was on the boat. | ||
No, no, no. | ||
She was talking to treasure hunters who were looking for the diamond she had, which she throws off the boat! | ||
She's on a boat that costs millions of dollars, hundreds of thousands of rent, and they're asking her To tell this boring old lady story she only tells because they think she has a diamond and she has it and she throws it off the ship! | ||
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She doesn't give it to the people who listen to her for hours. | |
She doesn't sell it to take care of her granddaughter who spent her life caring for her and doesn't have a family of her own. | ||
She throws it off the ship because Jack needed it. | ||
He's dead! | ||
He's alive! | ||
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He's at the bottom of the ocean! | |
And you know what's crazy? | ||
She was on the boat. | ||
She was on the safety boat, right? | ||
And she jumps off the safety boat back into the real boat. | ||
Jack would be alive if she just stayed in the original safety boat. | ||
That saves her later. | ||
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Exactly! | |
Yes! | ||
There would have been room. | ||
And there was room on the door! | ||
Dude, they don't tell you this part of the story, but I bet you Jack, when he saw she was still on the boat, was like... | ||
Yeah, no, I can save both of us. | ||
I can save, yes, fine. | ||
Just come, just... But I think they've proven now that... Who's the guy who did the movie? | ||
What's his name? | ||
James Cameron. | ||
Yeah, Cameron. | ||
He did a thing where they got the two people to sit on the door and it worked. | ||
Yeah, that was a weird idea. | ||
You know what? | ||
Other movies like this too, The Notebook. | ||
I remember being a kid watching this movie and thinking, like, she's cheating. | ||
She's cheating. | ||
Why is this okay? | ||
And they romanticize cheating. | ||
But you know what I think it is? | ||
I think it's like... What's that one about? | ||
I don't know. | ||
Oh, The Notebook. | ||
Basically, it's like, again, The One That Got Away, which is also a Katy Perry song, right? | ||
But basically, she dates this guy in high school and they're in love or whatever. | ||
And then they break up. | ||
I don't remember why, but she goes on to meet this really nice guy that, like, treated her well. | ||
All this stuff similar, you know, to the Titanic. | ||
But she just couldn't get the old guy out of her head. | ||
And then she goes and cheats on him for like three days and then he like runs in the rain and is like, I love you. | ||
And then she leaves her fiance for this guy she dated in high school. | ||
She's an alpha widow, bro. | ||
I actually never saw it, but I had a podcast guest who was explaining the plot of it to me. | ||
I was like, this is horrible. | ||
The Alpha Widow is like, it's really common in music and movies. | ||
Can we do like a sequel to every Hallmark movie ever? | ||
Where it's like, so the woman who's got a fiance, and he's like a snooty businessman, and then she goes back home to see her parents. | ||
And then there's the the nerdy guy who's all grown up and suave and he's like a carpenter now and he's ripped. | ||
And then he's very nice to her and she realized he was the one all along. | ||
Can we just have like a part two where it's like they had a one night stand and he was like, yo, I'm done. | ||
Like I got things to do. | ||
I haven't seen you in 20 years. | ||
Later. | ||
Produce it. | ||
I'll be I'll act. | ||
No, this has to be done. | ||
Wait, what do you mean you're leaving here? | ||
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Right. | |
Every human being has a tendency to wonder, is the grass greener on the other side? | ||
And what Hollywood has done is built an entire sub-industry of telling women, yes, it is, actually. | ||
Go to the other side. | ||
Go check it out. | ||
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No, it's going to be great. | |
You're going to love your time over there. | ||
And then you end up divorced with a broken family or with a person who actually doesn't treat you very well. | ||
And this isn't addressed. | ||
And we just keep churning out media that's horribly irresponsible. | ||
It should just be like the day after she gets the hometown hero guy and she leaves her snooty businessman fiance, he like wakes up and he's like, I think you should probably go. | ||
And she's like, what do you mean? | ||
I thought we were having something. | ||
He's like, no, I was just saying that so that you'd sleep with me. | ||
You can leave now. | ||
But why? | ||
Why would Hollywood producers want women to think the hard-working man who's loyal to them is bad for trying to stop weird strangers from sleeping with her? | ||
Why would Hollywood producers want women to have that in their head? | ||
You keep saying Hollywood, but it's Hallmark. | ||
Hollywood, Hallmark, all of it, though. | ||
I think Hallmark's not made in Canada. | ||
Hallmark is, like, way over the line, but all of these Hollywood movies follow similar tropes. | ||
Like, the man who meets all of society's standards for what a responsible man is isn't good enough. | ||
We either depict him as being, like, you know, bad in some emotional way, you know, there's always a catch, the good, hard-working man always has problems, and, like, the lovable loser always has a heart of gold and genuinely cares for you. | ||
It's like, sorry, no. | ||
Well, and the other thing is, like, whenever they always try to, like, Explain women's cheating. | ||
So like whenever you say, oh, she cheated, they always say, well, why did he cheat? | ||
What did he do? | ||
It's the same thing if she freaks out and is like hitting a guy. | ||
It's always like, what did he do? | ||
What did he do to deserve this? | ||
Like the default is he deserved this in some way. | ||
Where it's like if a man cheats, he's a dog, he's evil, he's just, you know, whatever. | ||
Yeah, but like here's the thing, like now we're seeing all of these polyamorous relationships. | ||
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Gross. | |
Because cheating kind of only really applies to marriage. | ||
And what we've created now is this pseudo-hybrid dating marriage thing. | ||
So here's how it used to be. | ||
A young woman would date several men. | ||
What does that really mean? | ||
It means they'd go out for a cheeseburger and a milkshake. | ||
And then if they were like, hey, we're really getting along and we have a lot in common, this is fun, they would decide to get married. | ||
Now dating is, first, you meet at a bar and then you bang at her place or his place. | ||
Then they decide, hey, maybe we should do this more often. | ||
So you've already, like, jumped the line into, like, living together and hooking up, but there's no actual commitment. | ||
So it's all just a mishmash. | ||
Exactly. | ||
So what is cheating? | ||
Well, cheating was like, you were married. | ||
Marriage is a contract. | ||
The reason it's called cheat is because you have a commitment you are breaking. | ||
If you're just, like, randomly dating some floozy or something, like, how is it cheating if you don't have anything formally set anyway and you could leave at any time? | ||
Well, I would add one thing. | ||
I would say, like, if you are dating someone monogamously to discern marriage, and they can't be monogamous through the courtship process, that does tell you something about them. | ||
It's like, alright, yeah, you're not the one for me. | ||
Yeah, but I mean, from your standard, Seamus, the person you're dating is not going around having sex with a bunch of dudes anyway. | ||
No, it's also true, yes. | ||
At least if she does, I don't know about it, you know what I mean? | ||
But what are you saying, like... No, I would never date a woman like that. | ||
So dating a woman is like, you're going out for dinner, and you're going to the movies, and then one day you find out she went out to a movie with Ian? | ||
And I would be like, first of all, that would never happen. | ||
They're going to see What Is A Woman and I'm like, apparently a liar and a cheater. | ||
I could tell Matt Walsh what a woman is. | ||
If you were in a relationship with, or if you just met a girl that just rocked you, knocked you on your ass, awesome, but then you found out she did it with 100 other guys, Would you still be like, whatever, I'm going for it? | ||
That's a good question. | ||
So, statistically speaking, we know that the more sexual partners a person has, the higher the probability that they will end up being divorced. | ||
So I would say there's kind of an imprudence in not considering a person's history. | ||
A hundred is a very big number. | ||
I think, like, someone can make mistakes, genuinely repent, and then do the hard work to try to do the penance and fasting and prayer to straighten themselves out and become, like, a good, holy person who would be a worthy mother to one's children. | ||
But, um, I mean, after a hundred, I think that's going to be pretty difficult. | ||
I'm not saying it's impossible, but I'm saying that it's not something that shouldn't be considered. | ||
And I think there are a lot of people who want to argue that that shouldn't be considered, and it should. | ||
Yeah, it's like, do you decide with your brain or with your heart? | ||
The thing you have to think about, and this isn't me speaking as a married man, because I'm not married, but I was recently speaking to Jason Evert, who is, and talks about these things, and I asked him a similar question. | ||
Wait, Jason, is it ever? | ||
I think it's ever, yeah. | ||
Oh my god, he went to my high school. | ||
He talked at your high school? | ||
Yeah, he did. | ||
He's selling women dreams. | ||
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I like him, but we can get into it. | |
I do like him, but it's always the same trope with the religious people. | ||
It's always the ran through chick and the guy that was a virgin that marries her at the end. | ||
And she only really gets away with it typically because she's hot. | ||
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I think that's a fair representation of his position. | |
I mean, that's what happened. | ||
Like, he's a nice guy, but... Oh, that's what you're saying? | ||
Well, no, I think that's a horrible thing to say about him and his wife. | ||
Well, no, I'm saying, like, that's what he said. | ||
I mean, I don't know, like, I'm not trying to make it a personal thing, but... Wait, can I finish? | ||
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Yeah, of course. | |
Basically, that's what, like, the wife goes up first, and she talks about how she was, like, slept with all these people, and then the guy goes up and talks about how he didn't, and then the girl, like, gets married at the end, And yeah, it's always the same thing. | ||
Like, so the girl basically gets ran through, and then the guy marries her after. | ||
And I'm like, it's kind of selling dreams. | ||
And like, an attractive girl can get away with it, but like the average chick, it's like... But I think there's an important contextual difference, which is that Jason and his wife aren't saying like, go do this and it'll be fine. | ||
What they're saying was like, this was a horribly damaging thing to do. | ||
She wished she had never done it. | ||
And she repented and got close to Christ and like did the work to undo her scars. | ||
And if it's genuine, sure, but I just think the issue, like why I think a lot of times church attracts women that are a bit slutty. | ||
I mean, come on, let's just be honest. | ||
There's a reason Catholic girls have a reputation. | ||
There's a reason church girls have a reputation. | ||
Well, I think because most people who are supposedly raised in the faith aren't. | ||
They're told they're Catholic and they don't go to church. | ||
Well, I think it's too, because the church kind of sells them dreams that you can do all this stuff and still have a guy waiting for you at the end. | ||
And the data just doesn't support it. | ||
It's like 50% of women are going to be single and childless. | ||
I see what you're saying, Seamus. | ||
It very much sounds like the life of sin followed by a deathbed repentance attempt. | ||
No no no no because there's a difference there's like and this is one of the distinctions you have to make and part of why I brought up Jason Everett is because what he said to me when I asked him this question on air was the question you need to ask yourself is like what could you tolerate 10 years from now in a relationship with this person and that is going to be partially defined by that person's wounds the things that they've done in their past so a person having A very unfortunate sexual history doesn't just or even necessarily mean that they're going to cheat on you or be promiscuous. | ||
They could end up being monogamous and faithful, but they could still end up having all sorts of scars with respect to the way they view sex, the way they view the opposite sex. | ||
They could become an angry, nasty person because of it. | ||
And you want to know that there's someone who has worked through it. | ||
There's no denying that it is better to be a virgin, right? | ||
But not everyone is, and God calls people to marry non-virgins as well. | ||
Well, yeah, but I think my point is that it's like, they just sort of sell, like, I think sometimes the church sort of sells dreams to women, because it's like, you're kind of asking a guy, like, to me, something that's a bit unreasonable, like, why would he wait when you've slept with X amount of men, like, for free? | ||
Well, I think it tells everyone to wait. | ||
And I never see the church, like, really calling out, like, hey, do not marry women that aren't virgins. | ||
I've never heard, like, do not, like, they're a red flag if she's slept with this many people. | ||
I've never really heard that. | ||
And so it's interesting. | ||
I really don't. | ||
No, no, well, there's a couple different things to pull apart there. | ||
I mean, firstly, I've never heard anyone say, don't marry a non-virgin, at least like at any church sponsored talk. | ||
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How could they? | |
In this day and age, that's not so much a church thing as much as that is like, this is something people won't say. | ||
One thing we do believe in is repentance and that a person can restore themselves with the help of Christ. | ||
God can restore people if you cooperate with him. | ||
I would add one detail, which is that it doesn't say, like, men stay a virgin, women sleep around and then get married. | ||
It tells everyone to remain a virgin. | ||
And it will also tell women, by the way, that, like, the man you're with, he might have slept around, he might, like, have had struggles with a porn addiction, or currently struggle with it, and that's real. | ||
The issue is, though, like, women have so much more, like, obviously power on the sexual market, like, there's so much more opportunity. | ||
opportunity to do it from a young age, right? So you're gonna have women that | ||
have slept around and men that are a bit naive and they don't know how to like | ||
like if you have a guy that's a virgin and a woman that slept with I don't know | ||
like however many people, right? Like he's going to be naive and he won't really be | ||
able to pick up on like certain red flags, I think. | ||
No, I think there's some truth in that. | ||
And I think the church doesn't really talk about the baggage. | ||
They don't really talk about the baggage that comes with this stuff and warning men about predatory women because there are predatory women. | ||
I totally agree with you. | ||
Look, I totally agree with you that there are predatory women. | ||
I think it's a big statement to say the church doesn't warn people about this because I know plenty of Catholics who would say, like, yes, stay a virgin, try to marry a virgin. | ||
I also know people who would say it's good to be equally yoked, right? | ||
Like, yeah, if you don't think you can handle that, if you're a virgin and this person has slept with a lot of people, that is something to consider in your discernment. | ||
It's not to say, like, you're evil because you don't want to marry someone who's not a virgin. | ||
Can we talk about what OnlyFans does to society? | ||
Because, you know, we were talking about this downstairs like a couple days ago. | ||
It's basically all of these young women are deciding that they want to be prostitutes. | ||
It's just like, it's like a digital version of it, but it's basically the same thing. | ||
Men can subscribe to pay you money in exchange for this behavior. | ||
There was this clip that's going viral right now, I think Clown World reposted it from the Whatever podcast, where a woman says that she was hooking up with a guy just to break his heart. | ||
And then the dude from Whatever is like, she says her hobby is to humble men, and someone says you're a stripper. | ||
Yeah, he says it. | ||
And then she's like, yeah, but I take their money, and it's like, no, listen. | ||
I feel like a lot of what we're talking about, what you're describing with dudes who have like addictions, porn addictions, and you mentioning like women getting run through or whatever, and then OnlyFans and stripping, is that people are doing things that are genuinely detrimental across the board throughout society, not just related to dating. | ||
And there are people who don't want to feel bad about it, because misery loves company. | ||
So they tell everybody, what you're doing is totally fine. | ||
Keep doing it, even though it's really bad. | ||
And the obvious example, the actual visible example, is morbid obesity. | ||
Like, we know that if you are eating and gorging yourself, you will die sooner, and we don't want that. | ||
We want you to live a long, healthy life. | ||
But the people who enjoy eating hot fudge sundaes all day every day don't want to stop. | ||
They're addicted. | ||
So instead of accepting and admitting to themselves they have a problem, they seek out validation from other people who are addicted, creating a society of people who are engaging in extremely detrimental behaviors across the board, which brings me back to OnlyFans. | ||
I've met women who have said, They've tried it, and they gave up because they weren't making money, and now they have a bunch of porn online that's everywhere. | ||
They were like, people stole the videos, people recorded the videos, people did a whole bunch of stuff, and they made like $17 and that was it, and there you are, you're a prostitute. | ||
Forever. | ||
You can never change it. | ||
Yeah, I mean, I can't remember what the average amount of money is for a woman that goes on OnlyFans, but it's not a lot. | ||
I thought it was like 20 bucks or something. | ||
Yeah, it's not. | ||
I don't remember what it is, but I remember thinking like, wow, that's such a low payout. | ||
It's also sad that any amount is enough for someone to do that in this culture. | ||
Shamus, women and men are very, very different. | ||
And it is sad, but consider there's tons of stories of women quitting their jobs to become prostitutes. | ||
Or marrying into money. | ||
I mean, it's basically a similar kind of thing. | ||
If you don't love the guy... | ||
Sure, gold digging. | ||
But it's still different to marry someone, like, to enter into a binding contract. | ||
Granted, now with no-fault divorce, it is kind of meaningless. | ||
It used to be like, you got married, you were there till the dude died, and then, okay, I guess. | ||
Al Pacino's, like, 90, he's got a 28, 9-year-old wife or something. | ||
And she's pregnant. | ||
Yep. | ||
Man. | ||
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Wild. | |
Oh, you know, in defense of OnlyFans, I think it was Eva Lovia was talking about this, because she did it. | ||
YouPorn, in the porn industry, girls, you can't guarantee that they're not 18. | ||
In the porn industry, it's very difficult to vet the process, so there's a lot of child porn that gets through in that system, whereas on OnlyFans, it's vetted 100%. | ||
So you know everything on there is legal and above board. | ||
I'm not opposed to porn generally. | ||
I'm fairly libertarian. | ||
People can do their thing. | ||
My issue is there is a social trend among many women. | ||
There's a story of a nurse. | ||
I was a nurse making $50,000 a year and I quit. | ||
Now I make $200,000 doing porn. | ||
Is this a good thing? | ||
I don't think it is. | ||
I don't know, maybe I should start reading some more books by sex-positive feminists. | ||
No, that is the last thing that you should do! | ||
I think women lie too about how much they make because I went on the Whatever podcast and there was like, I don't know, four or five girls that said they made over 20k a month. | ||
And I ran the numbers and it was like less than 2,000 people or 3,000 people in the U.S. | ||
make the number of like, make the money they're saying they make. | ||
I'm like, what are the odds they're all on one show? | ||
I think there's some incentive to lie about it. | ||
Oh, absolutely. | ||
Well, yeah, that's also a fair point. | ||
And it's a sad thing because a person might be embarrassed. | ||
How embarrassing would that be? | ||
Oh my gosh, you put your body on the internet and you can't get 10 buyers? | ||
No, no, no, no. | ||
No, but that's- no, no, no, no, no, no, this is the reality of it. So, there are a few people I know- | ||
I know one woman who did cam girl stuff and she literally thought that she would be making, she see these stories. | ||
Here's the crazy thing. | ||
These stories encourage more women to do it and it never works. | ||
So you get these women that go on these shows and say, I'm making 20k a month and they're not. | ||
And then I have a friend who's like, I'm going to try doing it. | ||
And I'm like, yeah, you probably shouldn't do that. | ||
It's not going to work out. | ||
And then when, what did she say? | ||
She said, all it was was people sending messages saying, please post for free, please post for free. | ||
I want a free sample. | ||
And then she made like $17 and was like, this is this is nuts. | ||
Like there's no money here. | ||
But now everything's out there. | ||
And the girl on the show, I looked at her OnlyFans. | ||
I mean, not like that, you know, I just wanted to see how many subscribers she had. | ||
And there was like no premium content. | ||
So like, where are you making? | ||
She said she made 50k a month. | ||
So I'm like, it's not true. | ||
Well, no, I was thinking it could be like prostitution. | ||
That was my thought. | ||
I think OnlyFans is prostitution. | ||
Yeah, but I was thinking if they don't make it through there, maybe they go through. | ||
Well, it's a very sad thing because you could also imagine someone being embarrassed about that, not admitting they're not making any money, and then what they're saying to make themselves sound impressive convinces more young women to do the same thing that they're doing. | ||
So, you know, maybe they're making $50. | ||
Or they're taking it off the books. | ||
Like, again, no amount makes that worth it, but that is, um, that is really sad. | ||
I got good news, though. | ||
With AI technology, all of this industry will be wiped out. | ||
Wiped out clean. | ||
All these women? | ||
There will not be women who are making a living doing this anymore. | ||
It's gonna be a bunch of dudes, and they're gonna be going to, you know, porn.ai or whatever. | ||
I don't even know if that exists. | ||
It's probably real right now. | ||
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And they're gonna be like, Render me a video of, like, two guys and a chick. | |
And then it's going to render the video and they're going to upload it and charge five bucks for it. | ||
But then what's going to happen is every person in the world will just buy a subscription to the porn AI bot and just tell it whatever they want. | ||
And so then women will be like, these women who are doing it now are going to be like, I can't make any money doing it anymore. | ||
Dude, porn has already caused so many problems for society. | ||
AI porn is just going to be unbearable. | ||
People are going to go insane. | ||
You'll be able to change it in real time. | ||
You'll be watching, you'll be like, faster, slower. | ||
Put an ent in there. | ||
And Gollum. | ||
A deer walks in the room. | ||
That's the thing, you're joking, but it's just going to become more and more discraved because people won't be able to do anything with it. | ||
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I want to see Gollum and Frodo with... Erwin? | |
What's her name? | ||
You put the one concrete... I'm sorry, did I? | ||
I have a question. | ||
Do you think with the growing, like, rise of sexless men, that porn is actually, like, helpful to society because they're not that aggressive? | ||
Because that typically happens. | ||
I think, like, wasn't that a conspiracy theory? | ||
And also, do you think it keeps together sexless marriages? | ||
So I would say that if it's a crutch to lean on it actually causes far more problems than it solves. | ||
I think that like the warped understanding of sex that we have in the first place that allows for porn to be not only legal but so prolific is the same corrupt set of sexual morals that allows for things like no-fault divorce and for these sexless marriages to happen. | ||
So I think it's all one part of the same corrupt infrastructure and we just have to do away with all of it. | ||
You know, I think women care substantially more about what other women think of them. | ||
Oh yeah. | ||
And so that's a big component of all of this when it comes to marriages, when it comes to people who are upset. | ||
And maybe it's just because of what I see in TVs and movie and what I hear from other people who are influenced by TVs and movie, but it seems so often there's many stories of women who are like in a relationship with the husband and then they're talking to their other woman friend and they say, here's the thing, my husband, and they go, oh no, that's so bad. | ||
And then they're like, oh no, and now I feel bad. | ||
You're absolutely right. | ||
I've talked to so many, and that's why the trad cons will come in and be like, oh, just find the right girl. | ||
She won't do any of the divorce stuff. | ||
You won't be in a sexless marriage. | ||
Just find the right girl. | ||
But the thing is, women are so easily influenced. | ||
I'll have guys for the divorce documentary. | ||
They'll have a girl. | ||
She had all the typical boxes checked that you would want in a wife. | ||
And then she gets in the wrong group of friends, and then she just divorces her husband, takes the kids, takes half, and just ruins this man's life. | ||
Well, divorce is contagious, right? | ||
We know that if you have a friend who's divorced, you're more likely to get divorced. | ||
I would say that it's really important, like, in our modern time, we have this very, like, atomized vision of what family should be. | ||
You know, you just have two people living in a house together with their children, no extended family nearby, and you're also not part of a community that has the same values as you. | ||
I would say if somebody wants to live a traditional life, it's not enough to find one other traditional person, right? | ||
You probably want to be surrounded by people in a community that is more traditional, where it would be an absolute scandal if you ended up getting divorced. | ||
I think that's going to be harder and harder with media. | ||
Absolutely. | ||
But the thing is, I just think things won't really change until they change the laws. | ||
That's my personal opinion. | ||
I think there's truth in it. | ||
It's so difficult. | ||
At least 50-50 custody would be something, and maybe something to protect men from not getting absolutely wrecked with child support, spousal support. | ||
Well, we should just get rid of no-fault divorce. | ||
Agreed. | ||
Banish it. | ||
I'd ban birth control, too, I think. | ||
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This is what the faith— Oh my gosh! | |
Yes. | ||
Take away—repeal the 19th. | ||
This is what feminists are arguing. | ||
We did a segment on no-fault divorce, and then they started ragging on us, and they gave Seamus' quote to Ian. | ||
It was one of my best quotes ever, and they gave it to Ian Crossland. | ||
What they're arguing is that marriage is now better because women and men, both of them, can just leave whenever they want. | ||
That's what makes a marriage better. | ||
That's literally not marriage. | ||
So my point is, okay, fine, here's what I want to say to all of those feminists. | ||
Whatever it is you have now, let's keep it exactly the way it is, but we'll create something called SUPER MARRIAGE. | ||
And then after you're married, you decide to enter a SUPER MARRIAGE. | ||
Now you can't get divorced without a valid reason. | ||
Problem solved. | ||
Yeah, I mean, look, I agree with you that we need to end no-fault divorce. | ||
I said this, this is one of the things that Jezebel was so horrified by that they quoted it and gave the quote to Ian Crosland, but people talk about how many marriages fail and if we remove no-fault divorce, So many people will be stuck in these marriages. | ||
All right, what they don't consider is that people are less cautious about who they choose to marry because divorce is an option. | ||
And also, because we live in a culture where people do have sex before they're married, they end up being blinded by the sex. | ||
They don't evaluate the person objectively. | ||
They end up becoming bonded by all the chemical reactions that happen in their brain when they have sex with somebody. | ||
And so you end up making really bad decisions. | ||
People say, well, if we change the cultural paradigm, what about all these people who made these bad decisions? | ||
There's going to be fewer of them. | ||
There will be fewer people making those kinds of decisions. | ||
I was gonna answer your question about porn and if it's, because what I think it is doing is, and I'd love to talk more about no-fault divorce too, it burns my mind almost every day, that I think it is helping young people get their aggression out. | ||
Maybe it's winding tighter and tighter and tighter until it explodes, but a lot of times young sexless men, they just get put into the military to go kill. | ||
And I'm not seeing that now. | ||
I mean, it's drastic in the other direction, you might argue, that nobody or hardly anybody wants to go fight. | ||
So maybe it's completely depleted the testosterone of the youth. | ||
Maybe we need enforced monogamy. | ||
Actually, I have another question. | ||
So the more women have been in charge of their own mate selection, the more partners we've had. | ||
So is there something about women that's actually not monogamous? | ||
Well, no, because I think what you're touching, I mean, those things are correlated, right? | ||
So that's correlated with the advent of reliable methods of artificial contraceptive. | ||
It started before, like the birth rate started to decline before it actually, like, because a lot of people think it was the 60s, but it's actually been declining since the 1800s. | ||
And in 1920, we do see a dip in the birth rate. | ||
And they attribute that to women living in an apartment by herself, where before she would go straight from her parents' house to her husband's house. | ||
So it's interesting when you think about it. | ||
Women then began to have more partners sexually. | ||
So it seems like throughout history, they've just been trying to keep women from not to be whores. | ||
So you're saying that women shouldn't be allowed to own property? | ||
I actually have never thought about that question. | ||
unidentified
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The answer is no, by the way. | |
Maybe. | ||
I like it. | ||
unidentified
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I don't know. | |
I haven't thought about it. | ||
I think what's been pretty well understood by basically every culture through all of history is like, men are going to try to have sex, right? | ||
Men are going to try to persuade women to have sex with them. | ||
And so societies have understood that we need to get women to be really good at saying no to this. | ||
Or else everyone's just going to be having sex outside of marriage. | ||
You're going to have a lot of illegitimate children, a lot of infanticide and abortion, which is what ended up happening. | ||
That's actually not hyperbolic. | ||
If you look at ancient Rome, the more sexually licentious people came, the more infanticide there was. | ||
I mean, it's a reality. | ||
Do you think it would be better for you or just for women in general to have like three kids with three different phenomenal dudes or three kids with one guy? | ||
I would say three kids with one guy. | ||
If you think about it from a gene perspective, you probably get better quality genes. | ||
I'd imagine if you said they're high. | ||
But for society, no. | ||
That's like saying, let me try three different guys because one of the kids will succeed. | ||
Instead of being like, let's just have kids together and raise them. | ||
I'm playing devil's advocate. | ||
I guess they could say that. | ||
Also, a good man's hard to find. | ||
You're going to find three and then they're all going to be with the same woman. | ||
It's ridiculous. | ||
Well, they're not good guys, though. | ||
That's what I'm saying. | ||
Let's jump to the story. | ||
I want to pull up this story from the New York Post because I love this. | ||
Making women look dumb is a new disturbing podcast trend. | ||
unidentified
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I'd like to get my metal here. | |
Here's a picture from the Whatever podcast, and there's Mary Morgan from Pop Culture Crisis there sitting with the crew. | ||
And then you've got Destiny hanging out. | ||
And you know why I take issue with this article? | ||
Because if the whatever podcast has Mary on the show and she is based and very smart, how are they making women look dumb when they have women on who also criticize other women and they criticize each other? | ||
So who are they arguing is being made to look dumb? | ||
Are they arguing the women he brings on are making Mary look dumb? | ||
Making you, Pearl, look dumb? | ||
I would like to say I was very offended when I saw this because they didn't include my podcast in it. | ||
I don't know why. | ||
My picture wasn't there too. | ||
I just, but I actually, I think you're right though. | ||
I think it's stupid, like women make themselves look stupid. | ||
I didn't do shit. | ||
So I've made fun of the Whatever podcast, like I did a cartoon about it. | ||
I understand why it exists. | ||
I do understand that there's women who are out there. | ||
Oh wait, was that your cartoon? | ||
Yes, yeah, yeah, that was me. | ||
Yes, yes, that was me. | ||
Oh, that was so funny! | ||
Thank you, I'm really glad you enjoyed that. | ||
That was, but I think that My view of it, and maybe it's changed a little bit recently actually, is you have this podcast and these young women who kind of are very young and they just regurgitate whatever the culture tells them goes on this show. | ||
Then you have a guy who's in his 30s who obviously knows better because he's a guy in his 30s and he explains to them that they're wrong and then it gets clipped and it goes viral and it's like, look at this dumb girl. | ||
One thing I was actually very I'll say impressed by maybe something that made me feel a little optimistic was that when the roles were reversed and Lila Rose was on that show and her is like a good traditionalist woman she was arguing with a man who was trying to justify sleeping around pretty much everyone in the comments was on her side and every clip I saw of that video was people praising her and so it does look like even though the targets are usually women | ||
What people who are watching these podcasts are upset about is the sexual revolution and its consequences, and they don't like when people kind of engage in these rationalizations for this type of behavior. | ||
Yeah. | ||
You know what is a funny thing I will point out, though? | ||
A trend on Instagram is for women to make fake podcast clips. | ||
Have you noticed this? | ||
No. | ||
On Instagram, female influencers will buy these microphones, and then they'll say something that That's genius. | ||
Yeah, it'll be a clip where it'll just be them talking to one and they'll say something like, I think that men should be good providers and too many women, you know, insert opinion. | ||
And that's the end of the clip. | ||
It's got a million views. | ||
Why do I even do my whole hour long podcast? | ||
Why do we do this, Tim? | ||
Let's just make clips. | ||
Let's make fake shorts for YouTube. | ||
You know what's crazy? | ||
I think that the older women are more delusional. | ||
That's my opinion. | ||
unidentified
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How so? | |
Well, it's like... I just think they're dumber on my show. | ||
unidentified
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Hold on. | |
When you say older women, do you mean older women or like older women who are single? | ||
Because that's also two separate categories, right? | ||
I mean, I'd say the majority of people that go on the shows are single. | ||
unidentified
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I thought you were going to say you're dumb, but I just want to point this out. | |
I would just say that I think that the older women are more delusional on my show. | ||
And I think that's a lot of times why men date younger, because they're thinking they'll be better when they're older, but they're just as delusional. | ||
So look at this, New York Post says, while OnlyFans model Nicolette Nicole admitted that her appearance on the podcast was to bolster her own following, she told Vice, the clips were definitely chosen to create controversy and make her look dumb and shamer. | ||
No, no, no, the only thing I want to point out is calling somebody on OnlyFans a model. | ||
No, but you know what makes me mad? | ||
Okay, because what the girls will do is they'll go on the show, and then after they'll play victim, like, oh, boo-hoo, poor me. | ||
They've done this on my show so many times, where, like, they'll come on, and then they'll sometimes say straight-up misandristic statements, and then go back later and say, oh, I'm a victim, blah, blah, blah. | ||
When it's like, if you say dumb shit, like there's so many women that go on these shows and don't go viral and don't say stupid shit, and actually go viral for the right reasons. | ||
But if you go viral for saying something stupid, that's your own fault. | ||
Well that's the thing, they say, so the article that's being cited by the New York Post is vice. | ||
And their subhead is, the whatever podcast is bait, you can stop falling for it. | ||
No, it isn't! | ||
They had Lila Rose and Mary Morgan on that show. | ||
Where are the clips making fun of them? | ||
They're not. | ||
In fact, the clips are praising them. | ||
The clip of Lila went viral because she was, like, telling a guy off, and then people were like, wow, she's very smart. | ||
Well, even she, like, she wasn't telling him off, he was trying to tell her off, and she was just very calmly, like, stating her position. | ||
And the clip that went viral was praising her! | ||
Yes, everyone in the comments was praising her. | ||
And it's funny because I saw one of these Red Pill channels post it to try to shame her. | ||
They're like, oh, this woman tries to tell this alpha what's what, but all of the comments on their channel were like, no, she's right. | ||
Like, this guy's completely wrong. | ||
What Vice is actually doing is saying, stop making us look dumb because we're dumb. | ||
No, no, no, they're saying stop making the sexual revolution look bad because if this was a bunch of left-wing men talking down to women who are trad wives and saying you're an idiot who's missing out on what you should be doing in life, they would say this podcast is great! | ||
Do you think that it's women should be, like, I think what happens is a lot of people get offended is the thought that a woman is supposed to be raising kids. | ||
Your job in life is to be a wife and a mother. | ||
And like, not everybody wants that. | ||
I mean, maybe people will argue that every woman deep down does want that? | ||
The majority of women do want that, I would say. | ||
I think they surveyed childless women, and it was like 80% or something, 85% said they wanted kids. | ||
I can't remember the actual study. | ||
I think the issue is like, they can't find the right guy to have kids with, or the guy that they want. | ||
And usually when I talk to girls on the show, they'll say I'm happy single or I'm happy not having kids. | ||
If I ask further questions and say, what about if you found the guy that meets all your criteria, the majority of the time they'll say yes. | ||
I remember, I just want to mention this, I was at a bar with my uncle and my cousin were visiting and so we were all at the bar. | ||
And her and I were the same age, so we must have been like 22, 23 at the time. | ||
We're talking to this bartender who's probably in her 40s, and my cousin says, you know, I'm like never gonna have kids. | ||
And the bartender's like, how old are you? | ||
She's like, I'm 22. | ||
And the bartender goes, shut up! | ||
He's like, shut up, you're 22, you have no idea what you want. | ||
No, 22-year-olds should. | ||
That's the problem. | ||
I agree that they should, but in this culture, they don't. | ||
And if someone is telling you, like, I know I don't want to have kids, here's the thing. | ||
If they're not saying, I will sacrifice having a family and sacrifice having children because there is a broader, noble goal which I wish to achieve, then, okay, I think that's a person who probably does know what they want and you can take seriously. | ||
But if they're saying, I know in my early 20s I don't want to have kids and it's for selfish reasons, okay, this is just someone who's immature. | ||
That's not like a well-thought-out life plan. | ||
That's, I want to do things that make me feel good instead of thinking about what I can contribute. | ||
I learned pretty early on that to not use terms, say I'll never do something or I'll always do something. | ||
It's just, it always fails. | ||
No, it's just not very effective. | ||
Remember that video of the kids in like the 50s? | ||
They're being asked about war or whatever and they sound like adults. | ||
I know. | ||
Because it used to be that kids were surrounded by adults and learned very quickly how to socially interact what was | ||
and what wasn't. | ||
Now, kids do nothing for five years. We put them in front of iPads or computer screens and they watch Elsa and other | ||
nonsense. | ||
Then they go to kindergarten where they dance around with pride flags. | ||
Then they get institutionalized and learn garbage nonsense. | ||
They don't learn real world things. | ||
Then finally, by the time they're 22, they get out of college, having been institutionalized their whole lives, and they don't know how to operate in the real world. | ||
Yeah, it's because it's not a biological problem. | ||
I mean, it might be an endocrine system problem, but I'm looking at your I look online and I'm like, okay, there are so many hot girls. | ||
There are so many hot girls online. | ||
I watch whatever I watch all these and I'm like these beautiful young women prime candidates for motherhood like and where a why are they not having kids? | ||
What is going on? | ||
You know what the number one like indicator forgot what what the status but it's basically like the birthrate goes down when women go to college. | ||
So like women start having like less children when they started going to college. | ||
And they also, when mate selection was more in the woman's hands, basically. | ||
What happened? | ||
When it became more in the woman's hands? | ||
Yeah, because in the 20s, that was when women started to get their own apartment. | ||
So before, they would go straight from the dad to the husband. | ||
And like then women like started to go and get like the roaring twenties, right? | ||
They started getting their own apartment and like they then had more control of their mate selection. | ||
And like when women have more control of their mate selection, they go for a smaller and smaller percentage of guys where it's like, you know, I mean, why would they keep the bad boy away when they say like, get that guy away from my daughter? | ||
Because they like the dad knew he's not going to stick around. | ||
But women, it's like, we're just so stupid when it comes to mate selection. | ||
Just because you work, not you personally, but work with emotions instead of... Yeah, instead of logic. | ||
And it's also like, I don't think we have a good grasp of our league. | ||
I think women often sleep out of their league. | ||
Well, that's factually true, though. | ||
All of the scientific research and dating data show that women always go for the most attractive men, but they tend to be able to because men have a wider range of willingness Like women have a very tight range of their willingness to sleep and men have a very wide range. | ||
So what happens is it's something like what like the bottom 60% of guys are just like left out of it. | ||
And then it's most of the top 20% of guys who are sleeping with all of the women. | ||
Yeah, well, and the other thing they they'll always say, oh, well, dating apps aren't real life, but that's the number one way people are meeting under 30. | ||
Those things are depression. | ||
Have you ever used those things? | ||
The dating apps? | ||
No, not really. | ||
I started to do it for market research because I was building minds in the social app. | ||
We're like, let's maybe do a Tinder thing. | ||
And then I got addicted to it. | ||
I met a girl on it and it was like, just, I'm like, look why I'm judging these people by the way they look. | ||
It's the most superficial crap. | ||
And I felt sick, depressed afterwards. | ||
Well, I mean, it's honest. | ||
I think most guys, it starts with looks. | ||
Kind of, but it's like the sound of their voice and the way they smell is a big part of it too. | ||
Dudes just go on and swipe right on every single woman. | ||
Because there's like, I was reading data on how men and women use these apps differently. | ||
Women go on dating apps and then swipe right on guys they find attractive and then get messages from every single guy. | ||
And then guys go on there and swipe on every single girl hoping one of them matches with them. | ||
Right, well think about it, like women swipe right 5% of the time. | ||
Guys, it's like there's a video where a guy's going like Swiping everything it's like between 40 and 60 percent depends on the time of day if it's after 1 a.m It's probably gonna be like 70 or 80 percent cuz I'm in a desperate mode. | ||
I'm not anymore, but at the time I was that was Because women like pick non-monogamy in our 20s and then pick monogamy in our 30s when you think about it But that but that's obvious, you know why? | ||
Like, it's getting harder for the woman as she gets older, so now she's like, I need a guy who's not gonna go anywhere. | ||
But again, like, so, when you have a culture like ours where the sexual revolution has just completely destroyed the relationship between both sexes, that seems to be what tends to happen, but like, in most traditional cultures, that's not the case, right? | ||
Like, people settle down, Early, they get married. | ||
Women are known for straying less often than men do. | ||
And so this is part of what I was emphasizing earlier. | ||
This is why, and I believe Fulton Sheen even said this, like, a society's value can be measured by the value of its women, because the men are always going to want to sleep around. | ||
The question is, are women going to be the gatekeeper and say, well, like, no, we're not having sex unless we're married, unless you can provide a stable home and family for myself and for our children, and you're actually going to stick around. | ||
I guess there's a diminishing return to raising psychopaths. | ||
Like if you have a lot of kids that were all horrible humans, that would be worse than having very few kids that were phenomenal humans. | ||
But then there comes a point where it's like population risk. | ||
You might lose the human population if you don't have enough kids. | ||
So it's better to just churn them out. | ||
But like, I think that in order to like, is it better or worse in other societies where they didn't have a sexual revolution? | ||
The thing is, we have... | ||
Well, no society has survived a sexual revolution. | ||
I think it's coming everywhere. | ||
I think, like, with social media, like, and I get messages from guys all over the world saying, okay, like, feminism is coming, and you have places that were typically, like, more traditional. | ||
Like, India has a 1% divorce rate, and I get messages all the time, like, saying that under 30, and I don't know the exact stat, but under 30, like, the divorce rate is rising because Western ideas are going everywhere, in my opinion. | ||
Most places, I think, Like, I don't want it to get worse, but if I had to predict it, I think, like, you will see women getting more modern. | ||
Have you seen the psychological operations the military's been doing? | ||
unidentified
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No. | |
They get, like, a 20-year-old, like, e-girl, and then they have her make an account where she's talking about how great it is to be in the army or the navy or whatever to get simps to join. | ||
unidentified
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Oh, man. | |
Oh, my goodness. | ||
Psychological operations. | ||
With what Pearl's saying about how in countries that were more traditional you see an increase in these abnormal lifestyle choices, this is the one form of colonization and imperialism that the left is very, very comfortable with. | ||
If we went into these countries and we destroyed their temples or took their gold, the left would be very upset, and rightfully so. | ||
But instead what we're doing is exporting ideas that literally destroy these people's families, and it's praised, it's celebrated. | ||
But I wonder if you were able to pull, because now we're in the age of revealment, you know, the revelation. | ||
We're in the apocalypse, essentially. | ||
We're seeing the thoughts of people now that we didn't used to see. | ||
So, yeah, we're seeing the misery of the unmarried, but if we had seen into the minds of people in 1938, would they be just as miserable or more because they were getting beat by their husbands? | ||
Like Sean Connery's like... I reject this analysis that meant we're all just beating their wives. | ||
Yeah. | ||
That's a wave of propaganda that they did in the 40s. | ||
I can't remember when they did it. | ||
There's this girl who breaks it down really well. | ||
Her name's Rachel Wilson. | ||
She wrote the book Occult Feminism. | ||
It's mainly propaganda, this idea that men were beating their wives left and right. | ||
It's a wave of propaganda that was between the 40s and the 60s, I think. | ||
Well, you obviously have always had men who were bad people. | ||
There have been horrible human beings throughout all of history. | ||
And yes, the man is the head of the household, so he's an authority. | ||
And sometimes people abuse their authority. | ||
That doesn't mean you do away with authority, right? | ||
That doesn't mean authority is illegitimate. | ||
And so, yeah, there have always been animals who beat their wives. | ||
The idea that that is inherent to the family structure and to male headship in the home is a leftist lie. | ||
It's complete nonsense. | ||
Inherent only to marriages where you can't escape, if the woman's bound and no one's going to take her word for it kind of thing. | ||
Well, but if you're in a traditional, so there's a couple ways to approach this. | ||
Firstly, if you're in a traditional community where people are near their family and friends, if you married my sister and you're beating her, or you married my daughter and you're beating her, like people had larger families, she had a lot of brothers, she had a dad, she had other men who were interested in protecting her. | ||
There were very serious social incentives to not be that kind of person if you had it in you to be that kind of person. | ||
The idea that men were going, ah, we're in the patriarchy, so I'm okay if my sister's husband beats her, or my daughter's husband beats her. | ||
unidentified
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It's total nonsense. | |
It's called the patriarchy law. | ||
It's complete nonsense. | ||
That has always been one of the most universally detested behaviors by men. | ||
Nothing makes men angrier than women beaters, other than maybe sexual abusers. | ||
Men fantasize about stopping villains and protecting women and children. | ||
It's like every action movie ever. | ||
It's Spider-Man trying to save Mary Jane and a school bus full of children. | ||
And then there are bad guys who do bad things. | ||
And what feminists would have you believe is that what men really fantasize about is being that villain who wants to hurt women. | ||
It's nonsense. | ||
Yeah, it is. | ||
unidentified
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Completely. | |
I bet a lot of the violence of the 1900s comes from post-war to guys coming back from the war and becoming alcoholic and just mad aggression, unfocused aggression. | ||
Were you about to say something? | ||
I don't remember. | ||
unidentified
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Oh, I'm sorry. | |
I was like, I'm stomping on this one. | ||
But like, the idea that feminists were the ones who came around and told us that woman beating is bad is the most insane nonsense. | ||
Well, I can't remember who I was talking to, but someone was talking about how there's like a rape culture. | ||
Oh yeah, yeah, so I worked with somebody. | ||
Uh, and she asked me, how many of your friends are okay with rape? | ||
And I was like, what do you mean? | ||
And she was like, how many of the guy friends you know are like, cool with it? | ||
And I was like, none? | ||
What are you talking about? | ||
She was like, come on, really? | ||
And then I was like, what? | ||
Are you kidding? | ||
Do you actually think that guys in this world are all joking and laughing about this stuff? | ||
And then she said, we live in a rape culture that promotes it. | ||
I said, What are you talking about? | ||
Law & Order SVU has been on for like 20 years and the whole premise of the show is that it's especially heinous and we're trying desperately to stop it. | ||
Well, and again, they've also expanded the definition of rape and sexual assault. | ||
So it's like, what is sexual assault? | ||
Like, that can include, like, a guy grabbing a girl's butt at a bar. | ||
Is that the same thing as, like, what you would think? | ||
Yeah, it's assault, but it's not the same as a rape, but it's still very wrong. | ||
And the other thing they don't talk about is in family court, family in court is not based on evidence. | ||
It is not it is not innocent until proven guilty. | ||
It is based on a balance of probabilities. | ||
And it's again, it's I think it's a different state by state here. | ||
But I know that a lot of us like family courts, it's the same in the UK, this is how they do it. | ||
So it's basically it's more likely you did it than you did it. | ||
But it's not based on evidence. | ||
So a lot of times what'll happen, and I interview these guys, is like their entire reputation is ruined in these communities. | ||
So one, these women, and the crazy thing is, oh my gosh, these guys, they'll be married, right? | ||
And the women will go to the women's shelters. | ||
At the women's shelters, it's basically a business, so they'll tell the women what to say based on your background. | ||
So, you're Irish, so they might say, okay, he's a drunken Irish, or something like that. | ||
And the women, with one phone call, can get a restraining order on the guy. | ||
And typically, he can't even, with that one phone call, he can be kicked out of the house he pays for, he's still paying for a mortgage on it, and she can also take the children. | ||
So, with one phone call, she can do that, and it can take some of the guys, it took them up to a year to even go to court about this. | ||
And now in the UK, the other thing is they get a free lawyer if they accuse a guy of sexual assault, rape, or abuse in court. | ||
So what'll happen is all these guys will be known as an abuser, a sexual assault, a rape, I don't know what you can say on here, in these communities. | ||
And it's like the women have all the power, they can do this with one phone call and it's not based off of evidence. | ||
Have you guys heard about what's going on with Bam Margera? | ||
Apparently the story is he hasn't seen his kid in months and his argument and his lawyers argue that it's arbitrary that he's being denied access to his son under some argument about the safety of the child. | ||
But he's arguing, like, there's no risk to the child at all. | ||
This is ridiculous. | ||
She's just keeping from my kid. | ||
So he's having a breakdown. | ||
He's getting depressed. | ||
He cries every day. | ||
And so he calls his family and says, you're keeping me from my son. | ||
And then apparently he said, this is what they reported, that he said he would smoke crack till he died if he didn't get to see his kid. | ||
So they sent the cops after him. | ||
The cops 5150'd him. | ||
Meaning they took him to an institution? | ||
They involuntarily institutionalized him. | ||
Dude, if you deprive a man of his child and he becomes extremely depressed and says, give me back my son. | ||
They make movies about this with Harrison Ford, you know what I mean? | ||
Instead they're like, lock him up! | ||
I spoke to a guy for the documentary the other day. | ||
The wife is treating the kid as gender binary or gender neutral and there's nothing he can do about it. | ||
She's abusing her child. | ||
What's that situation? | ||
His name's Harrison. | ||
The Daily Wire covered it, Harrison. | ||
Wait, did you donate to his cause? | ||
Is this in Canada? | ||
I actually think he told me you did. | ||
Did I? | ||
Harrison T-something. | ||
Yeah, I probably did. | ||
Yeah, but like, no, it was in California. | ||
Okay, okay. | ||
What was the GoFundMe? | ||
Did I give that man money? | ||
There's a guy named James Younger? | ||
I think he told me you did. | ||
Tell us more. | ||
No, but basically his ex-girlfriend was raising the kid as non-binary, and he's just spent all this money. | ||
He still doesn't have primary custody, and there's nothing he can do about it. | ||
You guys should donate to this in the chat, because he's actually really nice. | ||
He's super nice, and you can tell how much he loves his son. | ||
I did. | ||
So this is a Gibson, go help a single father fight for a son. | ||
I gave him $10,000. | ||
And this is like, this is what a father's supposed to do, right? | ||
He's trying to fight for his child. | ||
Right. | ||
But it's so interesting because a lot of the trad cons will be like, oh, well, why don't men just like fight for their kids? | ||
And it's like, Well, if you saw what they have to go through. | ||
A lot of guys go bankrupt because, again, with that one phone call, he's paying for a mortgage that he's not even living in because the house is still in his name. | ||
So he's paying a mortgage on a house that he's kicked out of because of the restraining order. | ||
This is before court even happens. | ||
He can be on child support and the entire community thinks he's an abuser. | ||
And a lot of these guys have lost their jobs because all your friends, sometimes your family, thinks you're an abuser. | ||
Right? | ||
You're going to go kind of crazy. | ||
And so a lot of times these guys, now they're unemployed, now they're in a ton of debt, and there's nothing they can do. | ||
And this is when a lot of guys zero out and they kill themselves. | ||
It's very sad. | ||
And I think that is one explanation. | ||
A lot of people, they fight until they can't anymore. | ||
As a traditionalist conservative, I don't know that I've ever heard anyone say that about someone who literally couldn't fight anymore. | ||
If they did, that's a callous approach to it. | ||
Well, no, because what they'll do is they'll look at the stat that says like men, like the men that fight for their kids get custody, but they don't like, and so they'll say, well, why don't men just fight for their kids? | ||
And it's like, okay, yeah, but the average guy doesn't have a hundred thousand dollars to spend to get custody of his children. | ||
And then the lawyers will tell him this, like, cause it's kind of, if you're a lawyer, yeah, because it's, it's a tough, like, it's tough for guys to win unless the mother is like, there's something wrong with her. | ||
So the cases that do go to court, like typically there's something wrong. | ||
Even then, there was a case of that little boy that was eventually killed by his mother. | ||
They gave her custody because she's the mother. | ||
In the UK, right? | ||
No, no, no. | ||
That was in the United States, and it was clear that she was addicted to meth, etc., and all these things, and they still gave her custody because, again, like you said, it's just based on probabilities. | ||
And those probabilities, in this case, was an unusual case, and I think literally the day or a day after they gave it back to her, she had killed the boy. | ||
I spoke, there's one guy in the documentary in the UK, a very similar case. | ||
I've heard many cases in the UK. | ||
Yeah, there's a very similar case in the UK. | ||
And this guy, he, his friends, like this was the kid who dies, like best friend, and the government just took the kid. | ||
They didn't even give it back to the dad. | ||
The government just took the kid. | ||
We're gonna go to Super Chats, but I will add, I actually forgot that I donated to that guy, but I saw his story, and I was moved by it, and I also, you know, wanna help, so I donated $10,000. | ||
I've also donated $10,000 to an activist to push back on child sex change laws and to help fight against it. | ||
I'm saying this now because I guess my question for everybody is, I didn't mention that I did this, and I don't know if I should or shouldn't. | ||
You know what I mean? | ||
No, dude, don't mention that stuff, man. | ||
You're the Dark Knight. | ||
unidentified
|
The Dark Knight Rises, baby! | |
But that's the question. | ||
With the gifts I had to go for that guy, it's like, publicly, you can see my name. | ||
But nobody wrote about it. | ||
Nobody said anything about it. | ||
With Daniel Penney, it was big news, and everybody was putting my name on top. | ||
And that one, I said I did. | ||
But for this activist fighting against the child sex change stuff, and for this guy fighting for his kid, I just didn't say anything about it. | ||
I just did it. | ||
But I'm wondering if people think that it would be good if I did. | ||
I don't want it to be like, ah, look at me, look how great I am, but maybe it might be like, hey look, there's a big impact happening, so I'm curious what people think. | ||
It's weird to be like, look how much I donated, I get that. | ||
But it's good to spread awareness for the cause itself, so sometimes it's worth expressing it. | ||
Yeah, I think it's like, if you do it, I think it inspires other people to do it too. | ||
I think you should say something when you do. | ||
When I do? | ||
Yeah. | ||
I think people know you're a nice guy, I don't think you're trying to flash your money in people's, you know. | ||
Right, well I also think too, it's like, Just understand we run a successful company here, and I think that the money we make should go towards things that are good, and we put our money where our mouth is. | ||
So, like, donating to this guy to fight for his kid I think is exactly what people would want their money to be doing. | ||
And a lot of the money that we get is like advertising and stuff like that, and a portion of it is memberships. | ||
Obviously a lot of it's going for infrastructure and things like that. | ||
But I'm just like, I don't know. | ||
I kind of feel like that's what we should be doing with it. | ||
Yeah. | ||
unidentified
|
You know, I don't know. | |
And he's so, like, I could just tell how bad, like, he spent so much money trying to get his kid. | ||
And I could just tell, like, how happy he was to finally have, like, I think he has 50-50 custody now. | ||
Oh, legit. | ||
Yeah, yeah, yeah. | ||
And I could just see how, like, much. | ||
So people should donate. | ||
He's actually, he's really nice. | ||
He's going to be in the documentary. | ||
Let's talk about some Super Chats here! | ||
So smash that like button, subscribe to the channel, and head over to TimCast.com, because the members-only uncensored show will get a bit more spicy and not so family-friendly, because then we're going to talk about more family issues. | ||
And again, TimCast.com. | ||
Click join us. | ||
It'll be up at about 10 p.m., and we'll be live. | ||
Then you can even call in and ask questions. | ||
Alright, Belly Flop says, Hear me out. | ||
Presidents don't have term limits, but every year or two they can be voted out. | ||
Keep good ones in as long as possible, remove the bad ones ASAP. | ||
Current two-term system is anti-matter. | ||
Interesting. | ||
See, when it comes to this question of term limits and also how we modify the presidency, I'm not sold on this idea, but one interesting idea I have heard is one six-year term. | ||
So they don't have to worry about re-election, they also don't have as much time in office, but they're also not spending time campaigning. | ||
Right. | ||
I think that's pretty interesting. | ||
And then some of like their policies will actually take, you'll be able to see some of the early effects of those policies as opposed to like you'll see it in the beginning of the next person that then takes over if they get voted out for other things that are not related at all. | ||
I agree with that. | ||
That's a good idea. | ||
Yeah. | ||
Alright, let's read this. | ||
I'm Not Your Buddy Guy says, Idris Elba couldn't play James Bond. | ||
He isn't suave enough. | ||
Like Jason Statham, he could play generic action hero. | ||
Now Henry Cavill could play James Bond. | ||
You are correct, sir. | ||
I completely agree with what you're saying, and I see it. | ||
I was saying earlier, like, I didn't care if Idris Elba played James Bond. | ||
A lot of people are concerned about race swapping. | ||
The Little Mermaid flopped, and I think a component of why it flopped is the race swap. | ||
Because people aren't going to feel the nostalgia of seeing a character they don't recognize. | ||
Whereas with James Bond, they change the actor all the time. | ||
However, you make a really good point. | ||
Idris Elba is, I think, a fantastic actor and a great action star and has done incredible roles. | ||
But he doesn't have that smarmy bit that James Bond does. | ||
Like, you know, James Bond, call it suave. | ||
He's smug, yeah. | ||
Yeah, he's got that smugness to him, like, shaken, not stirred. | ||
I'm so special, I want my drink made just for me. | ||
As a part of a minority group, uh, gingers. | ||
Redhead, yeah, I knew you were gonna say that. | ||
I was very sad that they took out the red hair, because that's always what I was for Halloween as a child. | ||
I know, I know. | ||
It's weird, there is a weird redhead erasure thing. | ||
All my redhead friends have been telling me about the, like, it's always a redhead character who gets recast. | ||
unidentified
|
And now... All right, Hilde Billory... No, go ahead. | |
No, no, I was just gonna say, ginger representation, bring it back. | ||
Hilde Billory Clinton says, I'd like to think that the beavers are tired of us and are ready to end it all and flood the earth again. | ||
Is that where the beavers flooded the earth the first time? | ||
I love the implication, just again. | ||
No, no, no, you don't understand. | ||
The beavers are the how and not the why. | ||
Ah, of course, of course, yeah. | ||
So when God flooded the earth, you have to understand how the flood happened. | ||
He had beavers. | ||
He made the beavers do it. | ||
See, we're not, the earth is not, like the world is on the back of a turtle. | ||
It's a gigantic valley surrounded by big beaver dams. | ||
Beavers. | ||
That's true. | ||
That's right. | ||
And the beavers... That's the firmament. | ||
The firmament is a bunch of beaver dams. | ||
unidentified
|
And they could just choose to, uh... The great beavers that build the firmament. | |
They become too displeased. | ||
Frozen sticks. | ||
unidentified
|
Oh, man. | |
The Quartering says, I'm just here to remind people about Coffee Brand Coffee Father's Day gift boxes are running out and learn how to finally find a wife from Pearl. | ||
Can we just talk about the Quartering for a minute? | ||
Coffee Brand Coffee. | ||
Quartering's awesome. | ||
Coffee Brand Coffee. | ||
Are you guys your fans? | ||
I'm a big fan of Jeremy, yeah. | ||
And I'm saying Coffee Brand Coffee as many times as possible because he paid for it. | ||
Do you guys get along? | ||
No, he's always tweeting at me. | ||
Oh, you guys should do a show or something. | ||
He's hilarious. | ||
Yeah. | ||
I mean, he's about as based, like, straightforward as you can get. | ||
Yeah, yeah. | ||
Yeah. | ||
I mean, I would if he was nicer to me on Twitter. | ||
All right, Jeremy. | ||
He's just, he's quite rude. | ||
Yeah, that's the problem with text is there's no context. | ||
Yeah. | ||
And tone is lost. | ||
Yeah. | ||
Well, I mean, he's insulted my looks a couple times. | ||
That's pretty rude. | ||
Well, that's not nice. | ||
Did you insult him? | ||
No, I've never insulted him. | ||
Then you should tell everyone to buy Casper a coffee. | ||
We'll buy Casper ads on your channel. | ||
Be nicer on Twitter, man. | ||
The world is your oyster. | ||
Montana Gibson says, Tim, please get this out. | ||
I work for Adams Beverage who delivers BL products for AL and NC. | ||
Is that Bud Light? | ||
They want me to finish my conscious inclusion training and I'm not going to do it. | ||
Would love some advice on what to do if they fire me. | ||
If I were you, I would Write down, take notes of everything, whatever the conscious inclusion training is, and then bring it to a lawyer. | ||
Often what you'll find with these inclusivity trainings is they're overtly racist. | ||
They'll say like, white people do this thing, and white people think this. | ||
And not only that, many of these trainings will show stereotypes of Mexicans, Asians, and black people, and their intention is to be like, don't stereotype them, some people think this about Mexicans. | ||
And then, Doing that is racist because, like, you could then go to the EEOC and say, you know, no one was saying anything about this particular racial group and these things until they brought everyone into a room, made them sit down and watch a video explaining to them how to make fun of people based on race. | ||
And I think that alone is violating, like, businesses should not be able to go to you and be like, here's what some people think about this race, but they've done that. | ||
So it really just depends on what that training has and, you know, talk to a lawyer. | ||
What do we got here from Raymond G. Stanley Jr. | ||
He says, question Tim, as we move to forward the line, we're starting to fight fire with fire. | ||
The cult would attack Popo department online. | ||
Would it be wrong for us to do the same for the reading PD? | ||
You mean like activist stuff? | ||
Like criticizing them and sending emails and everything? | ||
Like, you should definitely do phone calls. | ||
Like, you guys hear about the Christian guy who got arrested for preaching? | ||
No, uh, was this in Canada? | ||
No, it was in Pennsylvania. | ||
I've heard of it happening in Canada. | ||
It was in Pennsylvania, and there was a pride rally, and a couple of guys were holding up, one guy was holding up a sign that had, like, it said, God, um, what did it say? | ||
I mean, you guys might know. | ||
He was about to say something like, God is not the one who spreads confusion or something like that. | ||
Maybe you know the quote, is that? | ||
I didn't see, I mean, I didn't see... He got arrested for preaching. | ||
The cop told him, stop saying this or else, and he was like, it's a public sidewalk and I can say these things, and the cop arrested him. | ||
Yep, so definitely I think you should criticize the writing, uh, is it writing or reading? | ||
unidentified
|
I don't know. | |
It was Damon Atkins is the guy that got arrested. | ||
Is that his name? | ||
Yeah. | ||
Preacher, yeah. | ||
Yep. | ||
And it's crazy, I'm like, if you were a classical liberal, this should be, like, alarm bells in your head. | ||
The guy was standing on a public sidewalk and he yelled, God is not, and they grabbed him and arrested him. | ||
You are allowed to stand on a street corner with a sign and protest. | ||
Dude, the Christian right literally predicted everything that's happening right now. | ||
Or did they manifest it? | ||
No, we didn't manifest it, bro. | ||
This is like, what's happening right here is actually a political cartoon. | ||
Like, somebody could have made this as a political cartoon ten years ago, where it's two panels, and there's a gay pride parade and a Christian protesting it, and then the police come and, like, arrest a Christian and throw him in the people and decently exposed. | ||
I said this was going to happen. | ||
Yeah. | ||
I've been saying this for years. | ||
The Christian rights have been saying it for, like, thirty years. | ||
The cop probably arrested him because there's two things. | ||
One, the cop is ideologically captured and agrees with them, maybe. | ||
There's also the possibility he's sitting there thinking, if this guy keeps yelling, they are going to riot. | ||
They are going to smash windows. | ||
I better arrest him first. | ||
Disturbing the peace. | ||
Protecting the peace. | ||
This is somewhere in Canada? | ||
unidentified
|
No, Pennsylvania. | |
Oh, this is in Pennsylvania. | ||
I was asking if it's in Canada because it's like... Because Seamus doesn't want to accept that his own country is doing this. | ||
unidentified
|
I can't believe it! | |
No, I just know Canada's far worse, and there are, like, hate speech laws do prohibit reading certain parts of scripture, so... Alright, where we at? | ||
Let's, uh, grab some more Super Chats. | ||
Sean DeClue says the bowtie was a mind control device. | ||
The bowtie was actually Tucker. | ||
The left doesn't want you to know this, but look at my bowtie. | ||
And then it starts spinning. | ||
You are feeling very sleepy, actually. | ||
Actually. | ||
What do we got? | ||
Run DC Jesus, Elon just retweeted Tucker's episode 1, pour in the views. | ||
Wow. | ||
And he got, when we pulled it up, within 2 hours he had 9 million views on it. | ||
Let's see where he's at now. | ||
Yo, he's gonna be able to sell some hot advertisements on that. | ||
Like, imagine what it's gonna be like episode 2. | ||
He's gonna open up the show and be like, Hello America! | ||
And then it's gonna immediately cut to, hey everybody, thanks for checking out Tucker Carlson's new Twitter episode! | ||
unidentified
|
My pillow is the greatest pillow! | |
It is! | ||
Current view is 20.8 million. | ||
20.8 million! | ||
Dude, that's gonna start costing like a Super Bowl ad at least. | ||
If not twice as much. | ||
28 million? | ||
Nah, it's the first one, so it's probably gonna go down. | ||
unidentified
|
True. | |
But I imagine it'll be like 6-7 million per episode every night. | ||
Yeah, easy. | ||
Elon got 7.7 of that million for him. | ||
According to views. | ||
Elon's retweet got 7.7 million. | ||
So that's 28 million. | ||
unidentified
|
Yeah. | |
Of his time. | ||
unidentified
|
28.5. | |
Total. | ||
No, no, no. | ||
Of his 20, I think 7 million of them come from Elon. | ||
Do you know how that tracks? | ||
The original video has 20 million. | ||
Elon's retweet has 7 million. | ||
Does that mean that the original had 13? | ||
I think they're both separate. | ||
I think they're both separate tweets. | ||
This might get my dad on Twitter. | ||
He's a big Tucker Carlson fan. | ||
Yeah? | ||
Tucker Unleashed. | ||
That's why Elon's retweeting, because he knows a lot of people are going to sign up now to watch Tucker's show. | ||
Dude, Tucker's got good lighting. | ||
You know what's actually really funny? | ||
My dad said something similar to me recently. | ||
He's like, well now that Twitter's more free speech. | ||
I was like, is it because of Tucker? | ||
Dude, Tucker, if you're listening, the right side of your video is a little dark, so you could brighten up your left cheek a little bit. | ||
That looks awesome, dude. | ||
I do think... I saw someone tweet, like, excellent production quality, and I'm like, is that a dig? | ||
Because the production quality was, like, C-plus at best. | ||
I'm not trying to rag on him. | ||
Tucker's fantastic. | ||
I'm just saying, like, yo, bro, I will for free send someone out and help him set everything up to, like, get a high quality audio, whatever he needs. | ||
I mean, he certainly has the means to hire whoever, and I'm sure there's more than enough connections. | ||
unidentified
|
His show should be way higher quality. | |
It's kind of funny when I started to get good at like making content and whatever it baffled me | ||
How many shows that are so big have such low production quality? | ||
Where I'm like you guys are so big how on earth do you have this low production? | ||
I mean to be fair like to a degree we do too really you guys | ||
Your mics are nice. | ||
I was checking them out. | ||
unidentified
|
Sure. | |
Yeah, but the cast is horrible. | ||
That's for sure. | ||
SM7B. | ||
The new studio that we're building, we're getting a pro company to do, like, a super high-end, crazy... Yeah, it's gonna be bomb. | ||
These lights could be better. | ||
They're good. | ||
He's not gonna let me on anymore. | ||
They wash a little bit, so you get kind of, like, the same color and the whole brightness. | ||
I was looking at your mics. | ||
I was like, These are industry standard mics. | ||
They're actually not that expensive. | ||
It's like around $300, which is like a lot of money, but for an industry standard like cameras are thousands of dollars. | ||
Like for a mic to just be $300. | ||
We're the one under it, but when I bought them, we were a lot smaller, but it's like you want to replace all of them. | ||
This is the best. | ||
The best audio is so key in internet videos. | ||
Let's read some more. | ||
Pgar says, Ask Seamus, is a marriage outside of the church an actual marriage? | ||
Uh, there's such thing as natural marriage. | ||
Yeah. | ||
Natural marriage? | ||
Yeah, like when two dogs hang out? | ||
No, like human beings got married before Christ elevated it to the level of a sacrament. | ||
So just some public explanation, basically? | ||
A public explanation of your mixing of souls or something? | ||
Yeah, yeah. | ||
I mean, I, um... But it's about the public acknowledgment, isn't it? | ||
Yeah, I guess like the mixing of the souls, that's another question and that I would have to like refresh myself more on like natural versus sacramental marriage. | ||
I know some of the differences, but I probably could not get into all of them competently right now. | ||
But yeah, people, I mean, this is the thing. | ||
The church, like marriage obviously existed before the church existed. | ||
No, no Catholic denies that. | ||
No Christian denies that. | ||
There is such a thing as natural marriage. | ||
Well, all right. | ||
What do we got here? | ||
Honest A-hole says, woman tells truth. | ||
News at 11. | ||
And then laughing emojis. | ||
unidentified
|
Yep. | |
Jason Hutchinson said, cheat codes in games caused this. | ||
If you're successful in life, you must have cheated. | ||
I think that's Marxism. | ||
Yeah, it sounds like it. | ||
Yeah, it sounds pretty Marxist. | ||
The only way anyone can succeed is if they stole it from someone else. | ||
I'm like, what? | ||
Dude, I made a birdhouse. | ||
Where'd you get the wood from? | ||
From my yard, where my tree is. | ||
Your yard. | ||
There's no answer you can give to them. | ||
It's always stolen. | ||
Everything is stolen. | ||
Dang Lin Wang says, I can't wait for Seamus's potato coffee blend. | ||
Is that what we're doing? | ||
We were going to do a certain type, but then it didn't taste very good. | ||
Honestly, we want to try. | ||
We could do a sweet, like sweet potato marshmallow. | ||
So it's like cinnamon, nutmeg, marshmallow flavored coffee. | ||
And so it's not really potato, but like, you know. | ||
I'm surprised you guys don't have the guests like try the coffee. | ||
unidentified
|
Oh, that'd be a good idea. | |
Well, you could if you want to. | ||
Yeah, no, I was thinking, I was like, I wonder if it's any good. | ||
But like, do people want to drink coffee late at night? | ||
Oh, it's so good. | ||
Addicts will. | ||
What do you mean? | ||
There's a decaf blend, right? | ||
I was thinking you could put, you could make like, um, even if you just had them tested, you can make like a compilation for a commercial of everyone trying the coffee. | ||
Sleepy Joe and Unwoke are our decaf blends. | ||
I'm full of them. | ||
But then what happens is when we have a lefty on to debate, he takes a sip and goes, Aw, it was horrible. | ||
It was the worst coffee I've ever had. | ||
No, it was really good. | ||
You guys get such big guests, it's like you might as well have them do marketing for it. | ||
Oh yeah, here, drink this. | ||
We should have like a butler in a tuxedo who stands there next to every single person who's on the show holding a saucer that has Casper Coffee on it. | ||
You know what we'll do? | ||
We'll just do, like, video appearance things, like, you agree to appear on the show and let us use the footage, and then we'll put the bag behind them and say, take a sip. | ||
What do you think? | ||
And they're like, this is actually really good. | ||
And then we'll have an ad of, like, like you're saying, like, we'll have Kanye West being like, this is good coffee. | ||
They won't even realize we're filming commercial for them. | ||
And even if they don't like it, you could, like, work with them to make, like, a new flavor they like. | ||
Well, some people I'd imagine don't like coffee, right? | ||
Yeah, but, like, no one's gonna be rude. | ||
They're not gonna be like, oh, yeah, it's pretty good. | ||
unidentified
|
Like, you know, it's alright. | |
I would actually only use those. | ||
It's like, oh, it's okay, I get it. | ||
Yeah, that'd be funny, back to back to back a bunch of those. | ||
It's actually insanely good. | ||
Appalachian Nights... I'm not even kidding. | ||
Normally what I do is I have a cup of coffee in the morning and I'll drink it slowly over the course of like an hour and a half, two hours. | ||
Yeah. | ||
This one is so good, I just end up... I wish I could try it, you know what I mean? | ||
Well, we can make it. | ||
Look it, I'm here for it. | ||
You're allowed. | ||
Yeah, you are allowed to have coffee. | ||
Yes, yes. | ||
Alright, Sparky says, Seamus, what if the girl slept with Bill Lumberg from the movie Office Space? | ||
I don't even, I don't remember that character from Office Space. | ||
He's the boss. | ||
Oh my gosh, that's right. | ||
That'd be, that'd be great. | ||
Actually, that wouldn't be great. | ||
What are they asking? | ||
What if the girls, oh, is he saying, like, if you were dating a girl? | ||
Is she redeemable? | ||
If you were about to find out on your wedding night, you found out. | ||
Oh my gosh, I just got, I just got that that's the whole plot of, oh my gosh. | ||
unidentified
|
Yes. | |
I saw that movie kind of recently, too. | ||
How embarrassing. | ||
And then it turns out it was a different guy. | ||
I haven't been drinking my cast brew. | ||
You slept with Lumberg? | ||
Like, would you flip your lid? | ||
That's hilarious. | ||
That's a hilarious classic, man. | ||
Yeah, I just saw Office Space for the first time a few months ago. | ||
I slept on it. | ||
Dude, Mike Judge, one of his best. | ||
He's brilliant. | ||
God, that movie is so good. | ||
Callan Shaw Indie Game says, this has been a refreshingly different kind of episode. | ||
It's like whatever podcast except also the opposite, but you're just talking about sex to cover for the aliens. | ||
Tim has antennae under the beanie. | ||
That's actually true. | ||
Well, I won't say anything about under the beanie. | ||
Like Piccolo from Dragon Ball Z. I love talking about relationships. | ||
I'm glad that that's your specialty because, man, it's one of the most important topics of our time. | ||
NYBSFP says, AI porn is the answer to everything else you're complaining about. | ||
It's going to put OnlyFans out of business for all of these naive girls. | ||
That's not the answer to what we're complaining about. | ||
It's not the answer, but it will end that whole... It exacerbates all of the problems. | ||
Right. | ||
Dude it's gonna be it's gonna be nuts like dudes are gonna put on the VR headset and be like Wonder Woman and Sansa Stark and like a dog and then just like the AI is gonna make the weirdest crazy nonsense and a carrot comes in but then like there's a rabbit riding the carrot and this is like basically to say this will solve our problems that's like saying like once the most insanely customizable version of the Lotus plant is introduced to everyone and they start munching on that all the time everything's gonna be great Lotus? | ||
That get you high? | ||
That's from The Odyssey. | ||
Oh, Homer's The Odyssey? | ||
Yeah, yeah. | ||
They would eat the lotus and then it would kind of... It was aphrodisiac. | ||
No, no. | ||
It sort of made them kind of zombie-like. | ||
Yeah, like they slept and didn't care about things. | ||
It made you complacent to the world, essentially. | ||
Yeah, exactly, exactly. | ||
Were they talking about marijuana? | ||
Um, it could have been a metaphor for a lot of things, but I think porn definitely fits into that. | ||
A water lily? | ||
That's the Nalumbo Nusifera. | ||
Aubrey Lovett says, no one seems to be addressing how porn addiction in very young men can often be the precipitating event in their sexlessness later on. | ||
Yeah, I didn't see porn until I was 19, so I can't really speak on it. | ||
One of the things we talk about is that virginity is rising among men under 30, and it could be because of porn addiction. | ||
That they've become, like, they've watched this weird, crazy garbage on the internet, you know? | ||
Because I love watching porn as a scientist. | ||
Octopuses or something. | ||
Like, I like seeing, oh, that's the position, that's the spot, I get that, but as a kid I would have messed me up. | ||
I think it's more because that, like, the most of men are invisible to women. | ||
I would say that's more why there's virginity rising, in my opinion. | ||
It's because they don't lift! | ||
They gotta start lifting, you know? | ||
I mean, partially, you're right, but it's like 80% of men and women find ugly, not okay, not decent. | ||
Below average, yeah. | ||
No, they find them as ugly, unattractive. | ||
Was ugly the term? | ||
I thought it was below average. | ||
80% of men. | ||
I thought it was unattractive. | ||
But that's because women like guys who are attractive on the inside. | ||
And I'm not actually kidding, like, they want guys who are charismatic, confident, strong, capable. | ||
For a guy, he wants a symmetrical human body that looks like it can produce children. | ||
And for women, they want a guy who can beat a bear in a boxing match. | ||
Or buy a company and then hire a bunch of people to do his bidding. | ||
Well, it's like, have you ever seen the science of sex? | ||
No, I haven't. | ||
We bring this up quite a bit. | ||
They have a bunch of women sit down at computers and they show them pictures of men and they say, rate these men on a scale of 1 to 10. | ||
Then they do. | ||
Right. | ||
Then they go out into the street with all these pictures and there's a guy who's like a tall chiseled guy with like a, you know, strong jaw and, you know, wavy hair and a beard. | ||
And he was rated a 9 by all the women, like a 9.6. | ||
And so they go out into the street and ask random women, how would you rate this guy? | ||
And it's almost the exact same. | ||
They say, oh, he's a 9, oh, he's an 8, oh, he's a 10, but basically it averages out to the same score they got in the lab. | ||
Then they add to the photos a bio where they show this guy who was a 9, they write down his age, his date of birth, where he lives, and they put his occupation as theater manager. | ||
The women then rate him as a 7. | ||
They took a guy who got rated a 4, who is short, fat, and ugly, but he's a software engineer who makes $500,000, and the woman rated him a 7. | ||
So like from 4 to 7, from 9 to 7, if he had a bad job. | ||
And that was the point they were making, that women care about what a guy does, not just what he looks like. | ||
Because men are shallow. | ||
And they care about status too, status is a huge part of it. | ||
No, I think there's definitely things you can do to improve, but I just think it's like the women, that 70% of us are overweight, 1 out of 4 of us has an STD, 1 out of 3 of us have had an abortion, the average body count is between 5 and 8, 80% of men is unattractive. | ||
Do you know what I mean? | ||
So it's kind of like men are like the audacity. | ||
I just saw a stat that the average woman is 170 pounds in the United States. | ||
170 pounds, yeah. | ||
What? | ||
The average woman is 170? | ||
Think about it. | ||
You can become a 1% man, right? | ||
Top 1% in like any category. | ||
And you still can't expect a virgin. | ||
Only 5% of women are virgins. | ||
You can become the upper pinnacle of man, and if you say, oh, I want a virgin, it's unlikely you'll get one. | ||
Yeah, true. | ||
Well, if you're the top 1% of men and 5% of women are virgins, then you'd think the math worked out where the top 1% are good. | ||
unidentified
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James is saying he's going to have five wives. | |
For every one top 1% man. | ||
Would you ever do multiple wives? | ||
No. | ||
He's Catholic. | ||
unidentified
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We can't do that. | |
You're Catholic, right? | ||
unidentified
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I'm Catholic. | |
Catholic Reformation or something. | ||
No, no. | ||
That would just be called not being Catholic. | ||
Yeah, that's... yeah. | ||
Alright, here's one for Seamus. | ||
Darkhorse989 says, Seamus, I want you to know that you've convinced this atheist to attend church with my wife and son. | ||
You keep doing you. | ||
Tim, the PA town is pronounced like the color red. | ||
Redding. | ||
Redding, yeah. | ||
There you go. | ||
God bless you, man. | ||
Thank you. | ||
I'll be praying for you. | ||
Please pray for me. | ||
And if you're having, like, if you're going to church thinking, this is great, but I'm having trouble believing I am an atheist, just tell God that. | ||
Ask him. | ||
Please help me believe I'm an atheist. | ||
Help me believe. | ||
You gotta go on the Whatever Podcast. | ||
You think so? | ||
unidentified
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Absolutely. | |
Why don't you all go on? | ||
unidentified
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Oh my gosh, just the group of us in a row on the whatever podcast? | |
Come on, guys, do it. | ||
My gosh, that would be hilarious. | ||
Specifically, Seamus has substantially stronger opinions on marriage, family, dating, and all that stuff. | ||
I think you definitely have to. | ||
Do you think so? | ||
I mean, aside from Mary... | ||
You know, have there been very many, like, are there a lot of, well actually no, there's a lot of Christian conservatives. | ||
Yeah, come on, come on in London. | ||
Yeah? | ||
You guys bring me out? | ||
I'll get you, I'll get you, yeah, yeah, yeah, I'll get you a panel of women to speak to. | ||
Oh my goodness, yeah, let's figure something out. | ||
I'm imagining what would actually be a very funny Freedom Tunes skit where it's like, you're Jessica, you have like a chalkboard and you're breaking down things and like teaching them. | ||
I'm like, I have my glasses, I'm like, these are birds in the bees. | ||
We've done shows with a whiteboard. | ||
Yeah, if you got something to say, I'll give you a whiteboard. | ||
Oh, that sounds awesome. | ||
unidentified
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I would happily, happily use a whiteboard. | |
If you had a whiteboard presentation for ten minutes, what would you make it on? | ||
You want me to spoil it? | ||
You want me to spoil it right now? | ||
We gotta know the surprise. | ||
No, just the title of it. | ||
What would you title it? | ||
Love Dr. Seamus. | ||
Like obviously don't give us all the goods, but you know, it's a title. | ||
I'm gonna need a second. | ||
I'm sold. | ||
I'm gonna need a sec. | ||
I'm gonna leave it blank. | ||
I almost don't want to spoil it. | ||
It would probably be something bombastic, you know, like the sexual revolution and its consequences. | ||
I'll get you a panel of OnlyFans girls to talk to. | ||
We're gonna go to the uncensored members-only show called the sexual revolution and its consequences coming up in just a few minutes starring Seamus Coghlan. | ||
So head over to TimCast.com Head over to TimCast.com, click join us, become a member, because the uncensored members-only show, we're going to talk more about family, dating, and stuff, but now it will be uncensored and not for the kids to hear! | ||
So, uh, you've been warned. | ||
Don't bring your kids around. | ||
So, smash that like button, subscribe to this channel, share this show with your friends. | ||
You can follow the show at TimCast IRL. | ||
You can follow me personally at TimCast. | ||
Pearl, do you want to shout anything out? | ||
Oh, follow my YouTube channel, JustPearlyThings. | ||
Also follow my Twitter, PearlyThings with a Z. And guys, I'm back on TikTok. | ||
I've been banned five times. | ||
We're banned. | ||
You're banned? | ||
Yeah. | ||
Just make another account. | ||
That's what I do. | ||
And JustPearlyThings, they gave me my original handle back. | ||
So JustPearlyThings on TikTok. | ||
unidentified
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Really? | |
They gave you your account, your handle back? | ||
Yeah, like, well, it's been so long. | ||
My first ban was like a year ago. | ||
So I think they re-upped. | ||
Yeah, ours was too. | ||
Yeah, so maybe your real, your handle. | ||
Alright, we'll go for it. | ||
If no one took it, yeah. | ||
My name's Seamus Coghlan. | ||
I have a YouTube channel called Freedom Tunes where we make animated cartoons. | ||
We released a video today that I think you guys are gonna love. | ||
We're also releasing one on Thursday about these race-swapped reboots and modern reboots in general that I think you guys are really gonna like. | ||
It's pretty spicy. | ||
It's pretty fun. | ||
Go over there, check that out. | ||
I also have a podcast on Rumble called Shamer. | ||
Had a conversation with the one and only wonderful Jimmy Akin. | ||
It was fantastic. | ||
We talked about UFOs, the JFK assassination, other conspiracy Theories of the Man is an absolute encyclopedia. | ||
Finally, go to freedomtunes.com, help support my work by becoming a member and you'll get an extra cartoon each week. | ||
And that's Freedom Tunes with T-O-O-N-S. | ||
That's right, but I bought both domains because I couldn't get people to spell it right. | ||
You have high intelligence. | ||
Thank you, I appreciate that. | ||
Pearl, also your Twitter you mentioned is pearlythings with a Z. Yeah. | ||
And you have a doc, a divorce documentary that's coming out? | ||
Yeah, it's probably fall. | ||
It's going to come out when I finish it. | ||
Do you have a working title or anything or anything you want to talk about this early on? | ||
I mean, I've interviewed like basically dads that have been wrecked in divorce. | ||
It's going to have lawyers in it, judges in it, like basically all the people that are involved in the divorce court system in the UK. | ||
And yeah, I don't have a name for it yet. | ||
I don't know. | ||
Let me know, chat. | ||
Help me think of one. | ||
Yeah. | ||
And I think that's everything. | ||
If you're interested, I'll get you some coffee for the after show if you want to get a little Snippet? | ||
Yeah, I want to try it. | ||
Do you want to make a full pot? | ||
Do we have a full pot downstairs? | ||
I probably could figure it out, yeah. | ||
Or I'll make a few glasses. | ||
I don't know if we just have the K-Cups. | ||
The little pod thing, yeah. | ||
And we have Mr. Dupre on my right. | ||
Yes, I am Serge.com. | ||
I'm not off Twitter right now because I just want to take a break and I feel like it's good for people to do that because I remember it's not real life. | ||
But yeah, you can follow me anyways at Serge.com. | ||
And yeah, I'm excited to do this after show so we don't have to hold our words. | ||
We will see you all over at TimCast.com in a few minutes. |