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July 28, 2023 - Timcast IRL - Tim Pool
02:03:13
Timcast IRL - RFK Jr DENIED Secret Service Protection Amid ASSASSINATION FEARS w/Viva Frei
Participants
Main voices
i
ian crossland
08:39
t
tim pool
46:49
v
viva frei
01:01:03
Appearances
p
phil labonte
03:41
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Speaker Time Text
tim pool
Welcome to this wonderful Friday night.
It's a bit of a slow news week, bit of a slow news day, but we do have a couple crazy stories.
I mean, for one, I don't know if it's the lead story, but Joe Biden's finally acknowledging his, it's an illegitimate granddaughter, right?
Like it is his granddaughter, but illegitimate, I guess.
And then the story that I thought was actually somewhat silly, but kind of scary, Because RFK Jr.
says he was denied Secret Service protection.
And, uh, you know, he had come out not that long ago saying he recognizes the concern over, you know, his life being taken by intelligence agencies.
So I don't want to make it seem like there is a dramatic concern, like, oh no, they're coming for RFK, but the fears of the possibility.
And then when you hear that they're like, yeah, we know you're polling at 20% for the Democrats, but, uh, we're not going to protect you.
It's kind of like, uh...
Okay, I guess.
Like, they're supposed to do this at this point, I believe, polling at this level, but I guess we'll see what happens.
And then he has a bunch of other stories, I suppose.
Starbucks is a good one.
They're being sued because the woke policies that were recommended by the Obama administration are actually illegal.
Because wokeness violates the 1964 Civil Rights Act.
We'll talk about that.
But also, we're going to talk a lot about Canada.
A lot of crazy stuff happening in Canada and we gotta pay attention to our neighbors to the north because it's apocalyptic.
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Joining us tonight to talk about this and so much more is Viva Frey.
viva frei
Good evening?
Afternoon?
tim pool
Evening.
It's eight o'clock.
viva frei
Afternoon in the West Coast.
Tim, everybody.
Yeah, well, I said before we were talking to friends, like, I'll make sure to get a dedicated bit about the madness in Canada, because I'm not sure that enough people are sort of paying attention to what happens north.
It trickles down if it hasn't already gone to like New York State, California, but it's madness in Canada.
And it's not clear that people in the States are very aware of it or paying the requisite attention.
tim pool
Well, there there's this woke principal who just took his own life.
Because a woker person accused him of not being woke enough, and thus he was racist.
And so I guess the trauma of being ostracized from the cult must be tremendous.
viva frei
It's another terrible story.
There's obviously underlying mental issues going on with someone who responds to being called racist or cancelled to that degree, but it's madness.
It's the snake eating its own tail.
The revolution eventually devours its own children, and we're nearing that point.
tim pool
Yeah.
Well, we'll talk about all that.
Thanks for hanging out, brother.
viva frei
Thank you for inviting me.
tim pool
We've got Phil Labonte of All That Remains.
phil labonte
How you doing?
I am Phil Labonte, lead singer of All That Remains, anti-communist and counter-revolutionary.
ian crossland
I am Ian Cross.
Thank you, Phil.
Good to be here.
Good to see you, David, as always.
People call you Viva Frei.
I'll call you David Freiheit.
viva frei
Well, it's Freiheit, which means verbatim freedom in German.
Yes, Viva Frei.
Not that I care.
I'm not sensitive about that.
ian crossland
What does David mean?
viva frei
David means son of...
I have no idea.
ian crossland
But freedom?
Your last name means freedom?
viva frei
Verbatim.
In German, freiheit.
Frei is free, and height is the state of being.
So Fahrenheit is Fahrenheit is warmth, and the state of being warmth, hence you measure temperature with it.
unidentified
Dude, that's awesome.
tim pool
It means beloved.
viva frei
David means Beloved Freedom.
How do I not know that my first name means Beloved?
ian crossland
Well, let's go from there.
What's a nice start.
What's up, Kellan?
unidentified
Hey, what's going on, guys?
Pressing the buttons over here.
My name is Kellan, and you know, Drake is one of the biggest rappers in the world, and he's Canadian.
Be careful, guys.
tim pool
It's from the Hebrew name Dawid, which came from the Hebrew word dad, Beloved.
viva frei
Beloved Freedom.
I like it.
I'll keep it.
I'm not changing my name.
tim pool
Beloved Freedom.
Jeez.
Heck of a day.
ian crossland
I got goosebumps.
Starly.
tim pool
Should we jump into the news?
Callan, you should.
Let's do it.
Alright, we got the story from the post-millennial!
RFK Jr.
says Secret Service won't provide protection as they do for every major presidential candidate.
You're literally the poster child of why presidential candidates need protection, one Twitter user responded.
On Friday, JFK Jr.
said that he had been denied Secret Service protection, a resource provided to all major presidential candidates since 1968, when Kennedy's father was assassinated during his campaign.
After numerous requests of the Department of Homeland Security-led panel, Kennedy said that Secretary Alejandro Mayorkas handed down the official verdict, telling Kennedy that protection was not warranted at this time.
I love it.
They say, uh, secret service, so there's context added to his tweet on Twitter.
I'm sorry, on X. They changed the app now, like, in the app store it says X. They say it's afforded to major candidates in the period of 128 days from the general election.
Typical turnaround time for pro-former protection requests from presidential candidates is 14 days, Kennedy said on Twitter.
After 88 days of no response, and after several follow-ups by our campaign, the Biden administration just denied our request.
And here's where the story gets fun.
Did you guys catch those numbers?
phil labonte
Oh God, no.
No, I saw someone tweet about that.
We don't have to talk about that, do we?
ian crossland
Yeah, I think we do, because I don't know what to talk about.
tim pool
RFK is being attacked by the left for having the numbers 14 and the number 88 in his tweet.
phil labonte
Everything is stupid all of the time.
unidentified
Everything is stupid all of the time.
viva frei
Can I ask the stupid question?
1488 now, for those who may not know that are watching.
Wouldn't be me, I know what it means.
What's the reference of 1488?
tim pool
It's just two Nazi numbers.
viva frei
Okay, there's a good reason why I might not know that then.
What's amazing about this, it's not, the way they say it, it's not warranted at this time.
Setting aside, it's all like politically manipulated determinations.
When you reach this threshold, we'll give it to you.
What I find very concerning about this is that announcing that he's not getting it itself could be misconstrued as something of a dog whistle, letting the entire general public know he doesn't have Secret Service protection.
tim pool
And it could just be an error.
I mean, the Post Malone points out they usually provide it within 120 days.
I thought it was a polling thing.
I guess I'm wrong.
viva frei
Well, it's a no-brainer thing, is that it's RFK Jr.
Whether or not he even wants Secret Service protection, given what has gone on in the family history, especially his father, because there is a conspiracy theory as to who might have been the actual shooter of his father.
Announcing it to the extent it's not an outright mistake.
Just let everybody know he's a sit. He's he's sitting Goose, I don't want to use hyperbolic expressions, but they
let everybody know he'll have to get his own security fine He might be better off with his own security, but to let
the entire general population know RFK jr. We're not we're not protecting him
ian crossland
I was just watching a documentary about his father Robert Kennedy who I have massive respect for and I don't want to
get any of This wrong, so I don't want to tell the story like I know
exactly what he was assassinated I believe he gave a speech he was in a hotel the Ambassador
Hotel. Is that where was?
viva frei
I'll get mistaken on the names as well, but going through the kitchen.
ian crossland
He went through the kitchen.
viva frei
Where he was directed to go in a spot where he wasn't supposed to go.
You have Sirhan Sirhan, who was the man convicted of, went to jail, just got paroled, or not paroled, just did get paroled, but I think Gavin Newsom overrided the parole.
But many believe that there was someone who shot RFK in the back, close proximity, because there was contact, combustion, whatever that word is, meaning proximity of the weapon.
And even RFK Jr.
himself does not believe Sirhan Sirhan fired the shot, because apparently all bullets that came from Sirhan Sirhan's gun were accounted for, and they were not the ones that had killed RFK.
ian crossland
And he, RFK, was told don't go through the kitchen?
Is that right?
His security?
But he didn't listen to them and he went through the kitchen?
Or was it some other thing?
viva frei
I think it was the other way around where they directed him through the kitchen where he should not have gone.
As far as I know.
Is there a real-time fact checker here?
tim pool
I mean, I can pull this up.
viva frei
I can pull up the... And then the theory is that one of the theories is that it was actually his newly appointed Secret Service who was behind him from which he was shot who purportedly, through this theory, might have been the one to pull the trigger.
ian crossland
So that's why I brought it up is that weird...
You know, conspiracy theory that it may have been his own Secret Service or someone in his own party that did it.
viva frei
Early plug, if anybody really wants to know the RFK Jr.
RFK, JFK conspiracy theories, Mark Rober, Eric Conley, America's Untold Stories.
I mean, they go into this, they know it like an encyclopedia.
And I've learned it from them, but that's my understanding of it.
tim pool
I'll read a little bit here from the wiki.
It says, Kennedy planned to walk through the ballroom after speaking
on his way to another gathering of supporters, but reporters wanted a press conference.
Campaign aide, Fred Dutton, decided that Kennedy would forgo the second gathering and instead,
go through the hotel's kitchen and pantry area behind the ballroom to the press area.
Kennedy had welcomed contact with the public during the campaign,
and people had often tried to touch him.
Soon after Kennedy concluded the speech, he started to exit through the ballroom when Barry stopped him and said, No, it's been changed.
We're going this way.
Barry and Dutton began clearing the way for Kennedy to go left through swinging doors to the kitchen corridor, but he was hemmed in by the crowd and followed Maytradee Hotel, Carl Euecker, through the back exit.
Euecker led Kennedy through the kitchen area, holding his right wrist but frequently releasing it, as Kennedy shook hands with people whom he encountered.
Euecker and Kennedy started down a passageway.
Kennedy turned to his left and shook hands with Juan Romero, just as Sirhan Sirhan stepped down from a low tray stacker beside the ice machine, rushed past Euecker, The theory is that he did shoot.
shot 22 long rifle caliber, uh, 22 caliber long rifle. Ivor Johnson could act 55 a revolver
at point blank range. Kennedy fell to the floor. Others, including George Plimpton and
Grier tried to disarm Sierhan as he continued firing his gun in random directions. Five
other people were wounded. So, so is the, is the theory that he did shoot but missed
viva frei
the theories that he did shoot all of his bullets were accounted for because he did.
They held his hand as he's firing and injuring other people.
And the theory is that all of the bullets from Sirhan, Sirhan were accounted for, which means the mortal shot came from somewhere else and there was an issue if you can find it there.
What is it called when the, when the muzzle is pressed up against the, you know, close to the body as it shoots?
Point blank.
Yeah, but then there's like a combustion discharge indicating that it was done from, you know, inches.
And I forget who the Secret Service newly appointed was, he recently died.
tim pool
He said RFK had, like, point-blank residue or whatever.
viva frei
Yes, and he was the one standing behind him, so he was allegedly the only one who could have fired the fatal shots through the back.
And RFK Jr.
has come to this determination as well.
He does not believe that Sirhan Sirhan fired the fatal shots.
There's no question that Sirhan Sirhan fired shots.
And all of them were accountable.
ian crossland
I mean, from a bird's eye view, just objectively, the assassin was in the kitchen waiting for him, and people right at the last minute said, hey, we're gonna change paths and move you through the kitchen.
So like, what in the hell?
viva frei
Powder burn.
ian crossland
They just happened to move him through an area where there was an assassin.
tim pool
So what it sounds like, based off what you're saying, I don't know if this is true, just saying, based off what's being told, it sounds like Searhan Searhan had accomplices high up that were to bring RFK into this place Maybe he wasn't even the organizer, whatever, but somebody wanted RFK dead, and this guy was supposed to be the guy to do it, but he failed, and then someone had to clean up, finish the job.
viva frei
Now, I am not the expert on this, I have only picked the brains of the expert, Barnes, uh, America's Untold Stories, that is the theory, that all of those bullets were accounted for, they were not the fatal ones, and to make sure it happened, there was this, a new hire, like a brand new hire, the individual recently died, and that's the theory.
So, you know, whether or not RFK Jr.
even wants, I won't say deep state, the administrative state's protection, I mean, that might be more dangerous than not.
That being said, this might be one of those situations where it's going to be damned if you do, damned if you don't, because he doesn't get that.
Now they make the announcement RFK Jr.' 's left to his own devices.
So, you know.
tim pool
Yeah, I wonder.
I think it may be fair to say, well, presidential candidates typically get 120 days out, but don't families of politicians who have, like, wouldn't this be a special circumstance?
viva frei
Doesn't Hunter Biden obviously has Secret Service protection?
tim pool
That's currently the president.
I can understand that.
But this is like a special circumstance where I think, but perhaps it's just not procedural.
viva frei
Well, who knows?
But I, Announcing that it's not there is an act of politics.
ian crossland
Right.
viva frei
And denying it is an act of politics.
Whether or not they even offer it, he says, okay, I'll take yours and I'll take my own protection as well, because, you know, looking at Donald Trump, even if they offer some protection, I'd make sure to have my own that I can trust as well.
tim pool
I think it's important to clarify, too, the 120 days out thing is not particularly relevant to the story.
What everyone's saying is, why would you get protection?
It's not 120 days out.
RFK Jr.
did not say, I am seeking a request for a presidential candidate under the procedural whatever.
He's saying, I am asking for this in general.
Period.
That's it.
Because of his family history, because of the threats against him, because of, you know, I should say, because of his high-profile status and the media smears, he's asking for it.
He was denied it.
He thinks he deserves it.
Maybe he doesn't, whatever.
But I think it's a cop-out to be like, but candidates only get it 120 days.
No, no, no, no.
RFK Jr.
asked for it, didn't get it, and he complained about it.
End of story.
viva frei
He needs it.
It's a no-brainer to announce it.
As much of a dog whistle as I can imagine is a dog whistle, especially from a party that always complains about the dog whistles.
It's apparent.
It's apparent.
Hey, guys!
We've denied him Secret Service protection.
tim pool
Dave Smith tweeted about the 14 and the number 88 in the tweet because people are like, oh, it's like, come on, dude.
We went to a coffee shop and we ordered like an iced coffee and like cookies and cream gelato and it came out to $14.88.
And like, oh, are they going to go after the ice cream shop now because it's like a secret thing they do?
ian crossland
They used to take the number 13 off of hotels.
tim pool
No, no, all buildings.
phil labonte
Yeah, you don't have 13 floors.
tim pool
Go to Chicago.
There's no 13th floor in a lot of these buildings.
ian crossland
It's just the 14th floor.
viva frei
Hold on, just explain to me who doesn't understand.
unidentified
1488 with a reference to Hitler?
phil labonte
The 14 is the 14 words, which basically is, I forget, I don't remember exactly what the phrase is.
tim pool
It's something about like having kids.
ian crossland
I can read it off if you want.
It's not.
No, it's not.
tim pool
It's like on its, you don't need to.
ian crossland
On its nose, it's just a normal statement.
phil labonte
Yeah, you don't need to though.
tim pool
And then 888, H is the 8th letter of the alphabet, so 8-8, you understand.
viva frei
Yeah, the 8-8 icon.
That's like Honk Honk out of Canada, apparently.
Yes.
unidentified
I can't even believe that!
viva frei
First of all, Honk Honk, by raising... Oh no, it's nuts.
phil labonte
Honk Honk HH.
tim pool
But it was also the Clown World meme.
phil labonte
Yeah.
tim pool
And when people would post the videos of the little clown pepes, they were like, Honk Honk is HH, therefore... I gotta make a correction.
ian crossland
The 14 Word Slogan is very racist.
It's not a normal thing.
unidentified
Yeah!
viva frei
I didn't read the whole thing!
ian crossland
Exactly why.
The end of the sentence gets real twisted at the very end.
viva frei
Sentence, I'll google it after.
The irony is by raising these idiotic issues, they just make them more prevalent.
There's going to be a lot of people who never even understood this that are now going to say, good, I'll appropriate that, and now I'm going to use 1488 when I want to make a point.
phil labonte
I mean, to your point, that's one of the best arguments against using Marxist racial theory.
In schools, because you make racists.
You don't want to have an awakened critical racial consciousness if you're trying to not look at people based on their race.
And if you awaken a critical consciousness, you by definition make people see race first.
It's illiberal.
That was the biggest argument against it.
tim pool
I want to go back to the RFK thing because I want to read this.
In a 2018 interview with the Washington Post, RFK Jr.
said he traveled to California to meet with Sirhan in prison, and that after a relatively long conversation, details of which he would not disclose, he believed Sirhan did not kill his father, and that a second gunman was involved.
Let's drive the conspiracy theory even deeper.
What if Sirhan, a fan of RFK, was in the kitchen and he saw whoever was setting up his trap stop him?
viva frei
Can you just Google very briefly?
I think there is Sirhan Sirhan MKUltra type brainwashing that's alleged to have occurred with Sirhan Sirhan, which would explain why When he was going for parole, and the most recent time he got it, he was told, do not invoke the defenses that you've been using previously, which was blackout drunk, I think.
Like, I was blackout drunk and went shooting.
There's a very serious theory that Sirhan Sirhan was a victim subject of MKUltra-type brainwashing.
tim pool
ABC News.
Assassin's lawyer says Sirhan Sirhan was brainwashed.
A lawyer for Sirhan Sirhan, the confessed assassin of RFK, plans to present new evidence at a parole board hearing suggesting that he did not act alone, was potentially brainwashed and cannot remember anything about the 43-year-old shooting.
viva frei
And granted parole and Gavin Newsom overrides it.
tim pool
What is it?
The lawyer's tale has all the makings of a great conspiracy theory, if not a science fiction thriller akin to the Manchurian Candidate.
viva frei
Yeah, but can you understand that mainstream media says this article is what now?
This is 10 years old?
tim pool
12.
unidentified
12 years old.
viva frei
Can you imagine, they say it's conspiracy theory, Manchurian Candidate, as though Operation MKUltra did not exist and did not do the things that they were trying to do.
tim pool
Operation Northwoods was a thing and JFK was like, nah.
Nix is it.
ian crossland
Department of Defense says let's... MKUltra, it was like, I believe, now explain if you know more, but it was like a mind control program where they put people on psychedelics and then Tell them things.
viva frei
Voluntary psychedelics and involuntary.
And it actually has a connection to Montreal.
There was the Allen Memorial, which is the mental institution in Montreal, where they would test on mentally ill people, homeless people.
And the idea was, this is coming out of the Cold War, as far as I understand, and I'm free to make mistakes on this, but I'm pretty sure I got it.
They were testing basically to see if they could administer drugs to get people to tell the truth or effectively just to mess with their brains and and and get them to do crazy
things or For or you know disclose secrets and so it involved involuntary
Intoxication like like dope dosing up people with LSD without telling them it involved experimenting on homeless
people mentally ill people in institutions and It's what it was. This is what they were trying to do it
went on for decades. It's I mean it was institutionalized illegal
tim pool
So I pulled it up. It was a Wikipedia says it was an illegal human experimentation program designed and
undertaken by the u.s.
CIA, intended to develop procedures and identify drugs that could be used during interrogations to weaken people and force confessions through brainwashing and psychological torture.
viva frei
There are people out there who don't know this, and then read that bullcrap article from ABC where they call it a conspiracy theory.
It was implemented, I won't say policy, programs by the government, but for the fact that it's been disclosed, or I don't know how it was revealed, and people still think it's a conspiracy theory.
It's a conspiracy theory.
No, they were trying to do it.
tim pool
Conspiracy theorists have a pretty good track record at this point, unfortunately.
viva frei
more accurate than CNN.
tim pool
I should say, unfortunately for the U.S. government and for our sense of reality.
It's a good thing that people are exposing nonsense.
viva frei
Operation Northwoods, for those who don't know, I mean, everybody should know this,
that was the plan to basically stage domestic terrorist attacks, blame it on the Cuban government
so they could justify public sentiment of a war against Cuba.
And it would involve domestic terrorism.
tim pool
I think it involved shooting.
viva frei
Blowing up planes, and it involved fabricating or, you know, falsifying terrorist attacks, but also carrying them out on US soil to create public sentiment for a war that they wanted to fight.
It sounds very similar to, I don't know, something that happened in 2001.
ian crossland
They wanted to have people wearing, Americans wearing Cuban outfits and stuff.
viva frei
Oh, like planes flying into buildings.
I think there was some talk about mass shootings.
tim pool
They wanted to have people run on the beaches and look like an invading force.
viva frei
John Kennedy said no.
tim pool
And a year and a half later...
ian crossland
Yeah.
A year and a half later, he passed on.
tim pool
What was that?
Let's get the microphone right there.
viva frei
A year and a half later, what happened happened.
And but for JFK vetoing this, this made it all the way up.
It's not like, oh, some crackpot down on the lower chain.
This was like right up there.
JFK said no.
tim pool
We need Shane.
Where's Shane at?
ian crossland
Shane Cashman.
tim pool
Yeah.
ian crossland
He knows.
phil labonte
Oh yeah, he's the authority on this.
tim pool
He was writing a story about the Long Island killer, serial killer.
So like he knows, this is his wheelhouse, he knows all this stuff.
viva frei
Oh, I wanna know.
Reality is stranger than fiction and yet you still have mainstream media outlets calling this conspiracy theory, it's reality.
Call it conspiracy reality.
tim pool
I'll tell you this, if there is anything on this planet that makes me consider quitting this job more than anything, it is the knowledge, the fact-based knowledge I have that everything we talk about when it comes to news is wrong.
What I mean is, when a news report comes out and says, like, Joe Biden did thing, like, it's not true.
His PR people are lying.
Spokesperson is lying.
The journalists are lying.
And then when it comes to war and conflict in Ukraine, the intelligence agencies are lying.
And so I'm like, I know right now there's two dudes in the CIA and they're, like, hanging out in a break room.
Timcast IRL is live.
They're sipping their coffee and they're laughing, being like...
These morons don't know what they're talking about.
What do you do?
viva frei
You can basically take the mainstream media headline of the day and assume that it is 100% inverted incorrect.
And it's not conspiracy theory is the way of writing off people.
I think they've recently, oh, sorry, no, the most recent conspiracy theory was over counting COVID deaths, now confirmed.
But it's just like, they call it conspiracy theory until they can't deny it.
Who was it that said it's not a question of controlling what they know, it's a question of controlling when they know it?
And so, it's a beautiful expression, I've mangled it, but the idea being, eventually the truth will come out.
It's not a question of denying people the truth, because you can't keep the truth hidden forever.
It's just a question of making sure it comes out, you know, later on when they're all fatigued and they no longer care about the fact that they overestimated COVID deaths apparently by X amount.
ian crossland
And that was, are you referencing because they were counting people that died with COVID that maybe got into a motorcycle accident as like a, that COVID had killed them?
viva frei
Tim, what are the rules of the discussion here?
In what capacity?
ian crossland
Regarding, like, miscalculating COVID deaths, if someone had it, but then they, like, got in a motorcycle accident, and they'd say that was a COVID death, so that... There was a metric of died with COVID.
tim pool
And I think you understand that it means quite literally what it says.
viva frei
I don't know.
I don't know for sure.
I mean, it's the rules in terms of not getting in trouble.
ian crossland
I don't know.
The COVID stuff's pretty cooled down now, but I just don't make claims that I don't
have evidence for.
tim pool
But, but the whole medical stuff is what they're actually going after people for.
I don't know, whatever.
viva frei
They all just report what they announced in Canadian news.
And the doctor said, you know, we were not distinguishing died with versus died from COVID.
And now the New York Times came up with an article basically confirming as much, saying we've attributed X amount of deaths to died with.
But first of all, you can never have a number when they were not distinguishing between hospitalized with versus hospitalized from.
tim pool
There was, I think the chief medical officer of Illinois came out and said this, like, Understand, we're saying with, not from.
Like, they were very clear about it.
viva frei
HOKL came out and said it.
tim pool
But media wasn't.
unidentified
Right, right, right.
tim pool
HOKL came out and said it, and then you got to, um... But look, look, look, look, this is the important distinction.
The media lies.
Oftentimes, I think, this is what Alex Jones said, they will tell you there's a bear trap, and if you're too stupid and you walk into it, it's your own fault.
You had Illinois, you had HOKL, you had politicians telling you outright, explicitly, they weren't lying, they were saying, died with, not from, but the media would then insinuate or write things to make it sound a certain way.
viva frei
Yeah, they were.
I think they were indicating it on the death certificates in a way that would allow for this confusion.
You reminded me of one where when the media... One last thing.
Go for it.
tim pool
Always go and talk to your doctor about what's right for you.
Don't take medical advice from podcasters.
viva frei
That's if you trust your doctor.
Now, if you come to like the black pill, Viva, who do you trust anymore?
You have to know a doctor to be able to trust what they're telling you.
tim pool
Absolutely.
And so... I'd have a conversation with him if you can.
I... I... look, if... if... I always say this, like, if you...
if you've got a plumber and you don't trust them, you should not have that plumber.
If you've got a doctor and you don't trust them, find one you do trust.
And everybody says to me, like, oh, all the doctors are bad.
I'm like, clearly not all doctors are bad, right?
Like, Trump has doctors. Of course he's getting good treatment.
There's celebrities and stuff. People say, yeah, it's expensive.
Trust me, man.
Maybe you just gotta call West Virginia.
Because MAGA countries got MAGA doctors.
And if you're concerned about certain ideas, trust me, the MAGA doctors know what you're talking about.
Just find a doctor who can answer your questions.
unidentified
There you go.
viva frei
Especially once you've lost faith because the doctor may have said one thing, which is a litmus test in terms of reliability.
But I just remembered the headline.
To say when the media says something, if you bet against the media headline, you'll probably be right more often than not.
I don't know if you heard about this out of Canada.
When there was allegedly a protester calling Justin Trudeau a pathetic Jew.
I don't know if you heard about this.
tim pool
No, no.
viva frei
So it was the friends of the Simon Wiesenthal Center who put out a tweet saying anti-Semitism is out of control.
We can't tolerate this hate.
A protester calling Justin Trudeau a pathetic Jew.
phil labonte
Is Justin Trudeau Jewish?
viva frei
No, we'll get there.
It's even worse.
And then another member of liberal government, Gerritsen, Mark Gerritsen, puts out a tweet and says, oh, we stand against anti-Semitism is vile, yada, yada.
And I just said, not knowing anything, I said, look, The chances that this person was calling Justin Trudeau a Roman Catholic, as far as I know, and a subservient political whore to Klaus Schwab, also not a Jew, the chances that they're calling him a pathetic Jew doesn't make any sense.
I'm just going to venture that right now.
Turns out, aggregate knowledge of the interwebs gets out there, tweaks the audio of the recording.
It's either pathetic puke or pathetic juke, because there's clearly a uke.
And the story falls, you know, falls by the wayside.
But only after, you know, antisemitism on the rise makes headlines on the Twitterverse of Canadian liberal media.
tim pool
Let's jump to a different story here.
I got some apocalyptic news for you guys.
viva frei
Let's go!
tim pool
The Post Maloney reports, the largest U.S.
power grid faces level one emergency as Biden's decarbonization policies take effect.
Record-breaking temperatures are hitting all the big cities.
Not to mention, these Canadians are trying to choke us out.
You know, we got our power grid.
Our power went out at our new facility.
The power went out.
It was a storm though.
They say on Thursday the largest U.S.
power grid operator, PJM Interconnection LLC, issued a Level 1 emergency over concerns they would not be able to maintain adequate power reserves as customers deal with scorching temperatures.
According to Bloomberg, PJM issued a call for all power plants to operate at full capacity to deal with the increased use of air conditioners as much of the country went under a heat advisory.
So this is not so much about Biden's policies.
It's more so that, uh, I guess... It's a hot summer.
viva frei
It's bloody hot.
tim pool
Well, what are they saying?
It's like the hottest, hottest month on record or something or the hottest day or something?
viva frei
It's because we didn't pay enough in carbon taxes last year and therefore you haven't seen the immediate, uh, payoff of increased carbon taxes.
tim pool
You know what I love though?
I love the meme where it's like, the climate change policy politicians are proof the government can control the weather.
ian crossland
That's funny, right?
viva frei
It's, it's, first of all, we can all agree on the RFK Jr.
principle, pollution is bad.
We want to enact policies that doesn't result in more pollution.
The idea that we're going to control carbon emissions, and that's going to have an immediate effect on the environment.
Okay, if you believe that, And I'll talk to Trudeau again.
If you believe that, crippling the Canadian economy, which represents 1.5% of global emissions, is not what you want.
What you want is someone who's going to be harder on China, which would have ironically been not the person that you have in the White House now in the States.
So it's ass backwards from beginning to end, even if you believe the premises of the...
ian crossland
But I don't.
I think that trying to stop people from producing waste is a misguided effort.
They're gonna poop, they're gonna burn stuff to stay warm and to stay cool.
You need to reuse the waste.
We need a global effort to reuse the carbon dioxide and methane coming out of those machines.
viva frei
True.
But I don't think when people are talking about that type of reducing waste, I'm curious to know, like, you know, in Canada, by the way, now, you can't get plastic straws.
So it's all this paper straw.
unidentified
At all?
viva frei
At all.
At all.
Can't get plastic cutlery.
So you're getting, I don't know what it's made out of.
I don't know what the environmental footprint.
It might be like cornmeal stuff.
Straws are paper.
Straws are actually paper.
So you go get a Starbucks coffee.
You better drink it fast because your straw is not going to last.
That should be the new logo for Starbucks.
ian crossland
Hold on.
tim pool
What if we replace straws with cookies?
You ever had those cookie straws?
phil labonte
No.
I mean, this sounds delicious.
tim pool
Yeah, what they do is they line, it's a cookie, and the inside's lined with chocolate.
So when you're drinking, it doesn't dissolve, and then you eat the straw after.
viva frei
Yeah, and then you're gonna get diabetes and all sorts of other issues.
tim pool
Aw, come on, just a cookie?
What's giving you diabetes is the cookie crumble mocha frappe with two pumps of vanilla and caramel and caramel on top.
You know, if you just did a regular cold brew with a cookie straw, you're good.
But, you know, yeah.
viva frei
But the thing, I do wonder, I don't know what the carbon footprint or the emission footprint is, even of the corn compressed meal cutlery, or the paper straws, the dye that goes into that.
Like, I don't know what the cost-benefit has been done to determine that this is better for the environment than the that, other than a simple plastic bad, this is paper, therefore it's good.
If you don't know how the process, you know, what goes into that in the first place, it could be even worse.
Like, electric cars could be even worse than gas cars.
tim pool
I think we should ban air conditioners.
Just outright.
ian crossland
Today.
tim pool
Yes, right now.
And, uh... You know what I'm thinking?
I'm thinking we want to crank the heat up on the people who don't work, who are entitled, who are demanding.
So my attitude is like, let me tell you.
If tomorrow, you know, aliens came down and just went like, and pressed a button and all air conditioners disappeared, I would be okay.
Now, in all seriousness, a lot of elderly people and people who are at risk, yeah, we don't really want that.
My point is, we have such luxury and the pollution, all the stuff we're talking about, it's typically not the people listening to this show.
It's typically not the people in rooms like this.
When you come out into the country, what do I see?
Solar panels?
Generators?
Chickens?
Septic systems?
The people who live outside of cities are living substantially more sustainable lives than people in the cities.
The people in the cities are overwhelmingly Democrat voting for policies.
Why?
It's obvious.
They want things and they want to make sure that everyone has to cut back so they can maintain their standard of living.
It scales up.
The ultra-wealthy.
Why are... So, you know, we talk about them buying property on beachfronts and flying in private jets.
They say, everyone's got to cut back.
Everyone's got to cut back because of global warming.
What they're really saying is, if you don't cut back, I don't get to fly on my jet.
You all better cut back so I can keep flying on my private jet.
phil labonte
Yup.
ian crossland
Because I'm important.
My time is important.
I'm needed.
tim pool
Oh, because it feels good!
viva frei
Gotta spread the word.
You gotta go city to city complaining about carbon emissions.
tim pool
We love air conditioning, that's my point.
And there are people in these cities who have everything handed to them.
Fresh running water, clean running water, refrigeration, air conditioning, and they complain they deserve more.
And I'm not saying people don't deserve to live better lives, I'm just saying, like at a certain point, you got a big city, it is polluting like crazy, it is concentrating human waste, not just in the biological, but in the consumerist fashion.
ian crossland
Pharmaceuticals.
tim pool
Pharmaceuticals, plastics.
People out in the middle of nowhere are not large contributors to a lot of this.
Look, we have our own eggs.
People who live out in the country, they're more likely to have backyard chickens.
They don't go and buy plastic cartons of eggs.
They are less likely to contribute to the problem, but in these cities, they're voting for policies to force the people who are doing things right to live crappier standards so that they can maintain their awful standards.
ian crossland
Well, I don't get... I think that the mentality is, okay, they want to shut down some power... I don't know what Biden's plan is right now that's threatening to annihilate our electrical grid, but it's like...
Okay, too much air conditioning, but it requires the pollution to get the air conditioning, so we need to make these people suffer by turning off their air conditioning.
tim pool
Am I getting this out properly?
ian crossland
No, this is what I think the Biden mentality is, is like, we need less oil burning.
So we need these people to take, they're going to have to suffer.
They're not going to get their air conditioning because the only way for them to get air conditioning is to create pollution and the pollution is too dangerous.
So he's going to make people use less electricity.
I don't understand.
tim pool
I got solutions for everybody.
You know, we can build structures that remain cool.
viva frei
Well, I was going to say, in the big city environment, you are talking about more pavement, more heat in and of itself.
Out in the country, it's green grass.
It's still hot, but like you say, Tim, I notice a lot of open windows and clothes drying outside instead of in drying machines, whatever they're called.
tim pool
I mean, if we fundamentally changed the way we build homes and we built down instead of up, they'd be cooler.
So at our studio, we have geothermal heating and cooling.
Underground tends to be around 50-some-odd degrees, so when it's cold outside, you concentrate heat from underground and start bringing that in.
Granted, there's a little bit more to it, but for our air conditioning, it's ridiculously low energy relative to compression, because all we're doing is pulling heat from the room and then running it underground to dissipate it where it's cold, so it's a lot easier and cheaper to cool.
You could build downward structures and not need heavy air conditioning.
In fact, back in the day, how would they keep food cold to preserve it?
They'd put it in the basement.
Now it's like, it's the craziest thing that we've abandoned all of that basic pantry stuff because we just have refrigerators.
It's like, well, we should do both.
I mean, we shouldn't get rid of good traditional practices which save energy and prolong life just because it got easier.
But this is the reality of it.
People can't ride horses anymore because we have cars.
And we say nobody needs to learn how to ride a horse anymore.
There's a funny meme about cargo ships using kites to preserve energy, and they're literally doing this.
Kites are very different from sails, but it's a similar principle.
You can actually sail, I'm not a sailing expert, many of you listening probably know, but I know that you can go like 45 degrees at the wind, and then tic-tac left and right to sail forward when the wind is blowing at you.
That's how you move in that direction.
Kites, more so, is what I was told by a sailing guy, they launch when they have the wind at their backs.
Why did we ever stop using that simply because we invented the combustion engine or the steam engine, right?
We should absolutely utilize these things.
But you know what?
My recommendation to people is to learn where in your life you can do these things because it cuts your costs.
Like having your own chickens, growing your own food.
First of all, chickens are great.
viva frei
Your chickens put out, I was talking to someone earlier, like 10 to 12 eggs a day.
tim pool
No, it's like 30.
That's a lot.
We have many chickens.
ian crossland
I think when it's hotter, they make more.
viva frei
Yeah, that's amazing.
I was thinking you have an animal that craps out food that you can eat for breakfast and then you eat it and then you crap it out.
phil labonte
It's like a circle of life.
tim pool
They eat the bugs and give us eggs.
phil labonte
And they make more, like, unless you're eating eggs every day, you're gonna fall behind.
tim pool
Oh, we can't keep up, dude.
We have 30 employees, but it's not like everyone's gonna eat an egg every day.
So we made deviled eggs the other day, we had a bunch.
ian crossland
Those are good, by the way.
Yeah, very delicious.
In France, they did a green, it's like a green roof policy in 2015 of March, and it says that all new commercial buildings need to either have plants on the roof, partially covering the roofs, or solar panels.
unidentified
We have places like that in U.S.
cities.
The problem is, like Tim was saying, they have large pollution centers, these major cities, and each 10, 15-story building is all glass.
And air conditioning is one of the worst greenhouse gas contributors.
So if you do want to do something, stop building all glass structures and then trying to cool them in Miami.
Like, no, it makes no sense.
tim pool
I have a theory.
I think that a lot of what's going on has nothing to do with climate change, and it had nothing to do with COVID.
It has everything to do with war.
We talked about this during the COVID lockdowns.
One of the biggest things that changed was working from home.
You have a company in New York.
Major economic hub.
A company based out of there has a thousand employees.
They all work in the same building.
One nuclear strike on New York, and that company ceases to exist.
Massive economic downturn for the United States.
They even had that New York PSA about what to do in the event of a nuclear strike.
viva frei
Take a shower, wash your clothes.
tim pool
COVID happens, people spread out, leave cities, many wealthier people leave cities, decentralize, making it harder to destroy these companies, and begin working remotely, creating a decentralized network of the US economy.
All at the same time, we're concerned about war with China.
I've been thinking about this with solar panels.
There is one tremendous benefit to having solar panels.
We have solar panels at our new studio that we're building, and we have backup batteries.
I do not have them because I'm like, I'm helping the environment.
I know that it actually takes more energy to produce these things than you'll get out with, unless you wait like 30 years.
I have it so that I can have power when the power goes out and the show can go on.
It's a backup for the show.
We have backup batteries all over the place here because if it rains, the show will not shut down.
Granted, we, you know, you gotta have backups upon backups.
At the new facility, we have a ridiculous solar system and a ridiculous backup battery system so the whole, whole building can be powered for like three days in the event of a major power outage.
The real benefit to solar power is if there is a strike on the US or attack on the grid, Decentralized power generation through solar or otherwise means we will not be shut down completely.
And so I think a large component of why they're pushing this stuff is because they don't want to come out and say, we genuinely fear with the fall of the petrodollar and China's potential incursion into Taiwan and Russia into Ukraine, World War III is on the horizon.
So y'all better start prepping for it.
They don't want panic.
They want economic upturn.
And they want policies that will move people into a direction that will protect us in the event of a major war.
I'm not saying that's the only component, I'm saying it's a large component.
ian crossland
Yeah, or natural disaster.
Something could knock out the electric grid.
The electric grid's super, super vulnerable.
Those power lines are above ground, just sitting there out in the open.
All those power lines.
I mean, they're just vulnerable targets.
So I see what you're saying.
tim pool
In World War II, I think it was World War II.
I'll put it this way.
At Grand Central Station, there was like a main central controller for the railroad track or something like that, for switching the lines.
And you had to go through a secret passage to find it.
Because they were concerned that German saboteurs would go in and shut down Grand Central Station, which would massively disrupt U.S.
economic operations, which is a key strategy in winning a war.
I learned that story and I see what's going on and I'm like, man, if a nuke hits New York, this economy is like 20-30% off, you know?
20-30% off, you know?
viva frei
It's not a crazy idea.
But I think if a nuke hits New York, the solar panels are for individual existence.
I don't think we're worrying about an economy anymore.
We're worrying about, you know, individual existence.
But that's it's like, that's an interesting theory is to not be dependent on a grid on a system.
tim pool
But a nuke, I use that as like a more of a device, not a literal.
viva frei
Obviously, it's something catastrophic that hits if it's a another 9-11.
tim pool
A nuclear power plant gets sabotaged.
And the grid goes down, or, you know... Earthquake.
ian crossland
Meteor strike.
phil labonte
EMP from solar flares.
tim pool
But I do think...
A consideration is, right, natural disasters.
Can we, as an economy, survive in these circumstances?
And I do think a component is, are we weak because we've centralized too much of our economy in our grid?
phil labonte
Not weak, vulnerable.
tim pool
Vulnerable, right.
That's what I mean.
Or weak to a particular attack.
Vulnerable is a better word.
ian crossland
The crazy thing is it's the whole planet.
I mean, maybe not the whole planet.
There are probably places, in fact, I think in Africa they leapfrogged basically 20th century power sources and then they just went straight from like having no electricity to having solar panels on their roofs.
tim pool
So, someone superchatted saying, in Massachusetts your solar needs to be connected to the grid.
If the grid goes down, your power goes down.
Not true.
I mean, I don't know about Massachusetts, they have this special policy, but your electric always has to be on the grid, your solar does, unless you literally remove yourself from the grid.
If you're on the grid, it's a circuit, so you have to get permission to connect your solar to the grid.
If you just want a closed solar system, you don't have to be on the grid.
I have one.
We have the van.
We have a van, and it's got solar power and batteries, and it can run a computer for like three days straight.
As of right now, if the solar was gone, the sun just disappeared, the computer would run for three days.
But with solar, it runs indefinitely because it absorbs more energy, it generates more energy than it dissipates, than it uses.
It's got an air conditioner in there that'll suck up all the juice in a matter of like 8 to 10 hours or whatever.
But the point is, what you're referring to is that because everyone's home is already on the grid, connecting solar means connecting solar to the circuit.
You need permission for that.
I'm pretty sure you can create your own solar grid.
viva frei
Or just have a backup battery.
It wouldn't make sense if the solar would go out if the grid shuts down because it derives its energy from elsewhere other than the grid.
That's the point.
I was actually just talking to two people I met up at Harper's Ferry who were hiking the Appalachian Trail.
They had done a thousand miles and they're going all the way up to Maine.
It's totally cool.
They're totally independent, autonomous, until they get to town.
tim pool
But they're posers because if they actually want to do the Appalachian Trail, they've got to go to, I think, Scotland.
viva frei
Well, okay, they're not posers.
They left in March and they had done like 1,100 miles and had like solar panels to charge because they had a phone.
I was asking how you how you connect whatsoever.
Do you charge up when you get to town?
But no, it's totally cool.
tim pool
But yeah, the Appalachian Trails, it goes through Scotland.
viva frei
So if you really want to do it through Scotland, how do you how do you cross the Atlantic?
tim pool
Uh, I'm half-kidding.
I'm just pointing out that... Oh, you mean, it goes underwater?
The range goes all the way towards Scotland, you know?
Yeah.
The southern end of the International Appalachian Trail.
viva frei
So that would mean, technically, the Appalachian Trail mountain range itself goes underwater while crossing the Atlantic and then resubmerges.
tim pool
The ridge goes straight across.
phil labonte
Because it used to be, like, way back when the ridge was formed, they were connected, yeah.
tim pool
But I'm just being silly, so continue.
viva frei
No, no, that was my act, though.
It was very cool.
They were basically off the grid for months, but they had their solar panel things to charge their phones and whatever, and remained mildly connected.
ian crossland
It's because the Earth is expanding.
That's why the solar, that's why the Appalachians over there, the things are moving.
There's this expanding Earth theory.
You guys ever see that?
phil labonte
No.
ian crossland
It's wicked awesome, dude.
Every solar body, the sun's expanding.
So this theory is that as the Earth twists open, it used to just be all rock.
viva frei
Gravitational expansion or heat expansion?
tim pool
Or mass expansion.
ian crossland
It's probably being pulled open.
phil labonte
Probably?
ian crossland
Yeah.
I think it's because it's got a vacuum.
I don't know.
tim pool
I don't believe scientists consider this to be true.
I don't know.
I'm not going to study this stuff.
But theoretically, with entropy and radioactive decay, it makes sense that Earth would expand as Things fall apart.
viva frei
There's conflicting forces.
There's the heat expansion from the core, then if it stops heating then it would contract, versus I would imagine some sort of centripetal expansion if it spins faster.
ian crossland
Yeah, I think that's what's happening.
It could be a combination of a bunch of things.
But as it twists open, it rips apart at the seams, which you see these deep trenches in the oceans where it's ripping open.
Hydrogen's shooting out, mixing with the oxygen in the atmosphere to create all this water.
I think that's where the water on Earth came from.
Oh, I shouldn't state that as fact.
viva frei
I remember having read that 50% of the Earth's water came from comets, which would be one of the stronger arguments for extraterrestrial life.
ian crossland
That's where I learned it, but that's a lot of comets.
tim pool
Speaking of hellish landscapes and nightmarish places on Earth, let's talk about Canada.
viva frei
This is going to be a long bit.
Okay, this is one story that's terrible.
tim pool
But this goes into a lot.
phil labonte
Viva's getting ready.
tim pool
Toronto principal who was mobbed after false accusation of racism takes his own life.
Yo, sad story, man.
I wish this guy didn't do it.
I wish his family well.
I'll give you the quick version of it.
There was an anti-racist individual who claimed that in some school curriculum that Canada was more racist than the U.S.
The principal said, well, I agree Canada is racist.
I certainly don't think we're more racist than the U.S.
So they attacked him.
Started emailing, complaining.
They wanted him fired.
They called him a racist.
Canada is more racist.
And you know what?
I gotta say, that woman was correct.
Canada is more racist than the US.
America's the best.
We're just perfect at everything, and you guys are awful.
viva frei
Can you believe this level of self-flagellation?
Like, look who thinks he's nothing, is the old joke.
First of all, it's terrible.
There's obviously anybody who's gonna take their own life because of circumstances like this.
There's, I would suspect, more deeper underlying psychological issues.
And when it comes to this type of thing, you know, in the practice of my legal career, I came across two incidents where traumatizing suicide, you know, things that occurred in the context of my practice might always say like, you know, whatever you're feeling, if that's what you're thinking, just wait another day and talk to someone.
You can do it tomorrow and then, you know, keep doing that over and over again.
Something deeper was obviously going on with this individual, but the idea that they're sitting there trying
to argue that Canada is more racist than the States.
No, the States is more racist than Canada.
As far as the world goes, whatever imperfections of both America and Canada exist, I would still say they're two of
the greatest nations on Earth where it's the best to be anybody.
By no means perfect, Canada a little less so.
tim pool
Tell us about your country, good sir, as to how it is that this guy who is woke himself...
viva frei
He's not a MAGA Republican. This guy was, as far as I understand, was a very lefty individual himself.
And this is what happens. The mob turns on itself. The revolution devours its own children.
And nobody is woke enough. Nobody hates themselves enough.
Can you- a mob- Lands on this individual and some people are not prepared to deal with that type of Barrage of hatred, you know, not death threats, but like go kill yourself type comments and some people are Succumb to these terrible ideas that you know, this is the solution.
tim pool
This is the permanent solution to a temporary problem There's another story that I'm not going to get into the specific details of, because it's a bit graphic, but there's an individual who underwent affirmation surgery, which was botched, and thus, because of the pain, they requested the Canadian government terminate their alliance.
viva frei
Oh god, that is the worst.
Will, can we embark on the segment of Canadian madness right now?
You got this story, which is not a tip of the iceberg, it's a symptom of the problem.
tim pool
You're a refugee.
viva frei
I'm literally right now driving from Montreal back to the free state of Florida.
unidentified
Political.
tim pool
I'm glad you made it through safe, sir.
viva frei
Political sanctuary.
You got maids.
Medical assistance in dying is a program in Canada.
2016 Supreme Court says it's unconstitutional to deny medical assistance in dying to the terminally ill.
Liberal government comes in and says, OK, well, we're going to enact legislation that we're going to amend the criminal code.
We're going to allow for it.
And at the time, I think it was basically unsolicited.
It was a liberal member of parliament said, well, we don't want to discriminate against the mentally ill.
We want to allow the mentally ill.
People who are, by legal definition, incapable of consent when it comes to certain judicial acts.
unidentified
Physically painful Nazi stuff, dude.
viva frei
It's going to get worse.
We don't want to deny them the constitutional right to end their own lives, so we're going to allow mentally ill people to commit suicide.
Sorry, to medical assistance in dying, euthanasia, or as it was once called, Project Axion, I think.
They said, okay, we're going to sunset that clause.
We're going to include the exclusion for now, but that exclusion is going to fade into the sunset in, I think it's March 2024.
Within five years, medical assistance in dying went from the hundreds to over 10,000 in 2021.
The number, people are guessing what it's going to be in 2022, it's expected to be about 17,000.
10,064 Canadians were put to death through this medical assistance in dying in 2021.
That represents 3% of all death in Canada is government-induced medical assistance in dying.
3% of all death in Canada coming from the government.
tim pool
Government authorization just be clear. This is like a Country that is trying to come off as progressive and woke
literally enacting the most psychotic eugenics That you can imagine
phil labonte
Literally the most atrocious behavior since, like, probably since the progressive era, like when they were doing lobotomies and all kinds of eugenics.
tim pool
There was that woman who was in the commercial saying that she was happy that she would finally... Yeah, Simons.
viva frei
It was a Simons clothing, did this tribute to the woman who ended her own life.
phil labonte
Wait, a Simons clothing?
viva frei
Yes.
Simon's Clothing.
And it wasn't her video that they sponsored.
They produced the video.
unidentified
Right.
tim pool
And so listen, this woman wanted medical treatment.
The Canadian government said no.
And she said that if I don't get this, then I don't want to live.
And they said, you got it.
viva frei
There might be two different stories there.
The one from the Simon store, the kicker to that story was not that it wasn't that situation where someone needed housing and the government said no and that she ended up getting assistance.
tim pool
Not housing, medical treatment.
viva frei
With her case, in the Simons situation, I think she wanted it.
I don't think it was about being denied treatment.
The kicker there was that she didn't have a terminal illness.
She had, um, it's hardening of the arteries.
tim pool
Right.
I'm pretty sure she had sought treatment a couple years ago, and the Canadian government said, we will not provide this treatment for you.
And then she responded, Okay, well, I'm in pain then, and I don't want to live, and they were like, you got it.
viva frei
I'm not aware of that.
It would not surprise me if that were... When I heard about that story, and it was Simon's, the clothing store, doing this video.
It's called Beauty in Everything or Everything is Beauty.
And I thought the kick in the groin, kick in the teeth, kicker of that story was that she wasn't terminally ill.
It was a condition which caused pain, which reduced life expectancy, but was not a terminal illness.
And Justin, anybody watching who's saying Viva's a heartless bastard, having lived through close family members who've died of cancer, my father-in-law, I can understand it and I actually do support the idea of ending someone's suffering and misery when there's no prospect of... She wanted to live!
unidentified
God!
I can't.
tim pool
I feel like I'm falling through the cracks, so if I'm not able to access healthcare, am I then able to access death care, she said in a CTV interview.
She wanted to live, and because you Canadians have Nazi healthcare systems, I'm being somewhat hyperbolic on purpose, guys.
viva frei
Mercy killings, it's called mercy killings.
Well, mercy killings because you're in Canada, so everyone in Canada should get a mercy First of all, I use Lily Tomlin's expression in my Twitter header.
No matter how cynical you are, it's hard to keep up.
I feel like I'm as black-pilled as I was going to get, and I was not familiar with this aspect of the story.
The aspect that I knew was that she wasn't terminally ill.
That was shocking enough.
tim pool
It was a chronic pain thing.
viva frei
And now, by the way, they want to extend it to minors.
They want to extend it to minors without the consent of the minor if the minor can't consent.
It's oh, and it's not like don't worry.
It's it's not gonna increase health care costs.
It might actually save health care.
tim pool
Is there like some billionaire out there who's just sitting in his chair being like, I hate Canada.
viva frei
I really I do.
I don't want to say it's like an all Klaus Schwab type thing.
But Canada is a if there were a country in which to test these types of theories to see will people do it.
Canada would be the country to do it polite, subservient.
Deferring to authority.
You try to do something like that in the states.
Depending on the state, it won't get very far.
But that's one aspect of the madness in Canada.
You got your maids.
We'll see what the 2022 numbers are.
3% default death?
tim pool
3.03%.
10,064.
The number's only going to be more in 2022 and by a lot.
viva frei
3.03%, 10,064. The number is only going to be more in 2022 and by a lot.
tim pool
Is that, what's the, so the largest cause of death is probably like heart defect or
like heart disease or something.
viva frei
Uh, I would imagine, I thought it was dementia for a little while, but it seems that very
recently deaths of unknown causes, at least in Alberta, overtook dementia as the leading cause.
ian crossland
I want to hear more about the madness, but first I feel like this is like a response to, maybe not directly to COVID, but like in America we've got a lot of homelessness now.
A lot of people going on the street, so it's like if you're suffering from despair...
viva frei
There was a poll, apparently a poll in Canada, Tim, you can find this one, it said I think it was like a third of all Canadians supported medical assistance in dying for homelessness.
There was a woman who had multiple chemical sensitivity, allergies, severe allergies, couldn't find proper housing, applied for medical assistance in dying, got it.
And then when a vet calls up for PTSD services and they unsolicited mention, have you thought about killing yourself?
phil labonte
This is a true story.
What is the motivation for the state to say, no, we do not approve your request for medical aid in dying?
The only incentive is to approve it.
viva frei
And it requires two professionals to agree to it.
phil labonte
And all of the incentive, the financial incentive from the state is that it saves money because they're not going to be getting health services for the rest of their life.
tim pool
Let me, we'll try and do some math real quick.
You said it was 3%.
viva frei
3%, 10,000 deaths was 3% of the annual deaths.
You got to go reverse from there to get the total number of deaths.
What is 3% of 100,000?
tim pool
3000, 3000, very easy.
3000.
ian crossland
3000.
tim pool
I just Google searched, uh, hood.int, top 10 causes of death in Canada,
and, uh, I think this is Canada.
Maybe it's not.
Uh, I pulled up a couple of them, but because they break down death by all these very
specific things, it's not necessarily fair to say that
Maid is the leading cause of death, because there's a bunch of different ailments that are
leading people to want to end their lives.
But if you were to just say, outside of any diagnosis,
the government taking someone's life is the cause of death.
I believe it would be the number one cause of death.
viva frei
It wouldn't be the number one, but it would be, I mean, it would be top five.
It wouldn't be number one because, look, three percent of the aggregate deaths.
I'd have to look, I'd have to refresh my memory on that, but it wouldn't be number one because number one were things like cancer, heart disease.
ian crossland
And to clarify, the government's not taking their lives, it's authorizing them to take their own.
viva frei
The government is authorizing medical professionals to authorize and administer.
And by the way, you want to get one next level down into this conspiracy theory rabbit hole of insanity.
Nova Scotia, New Brunswick recently enacted, they called it the Allen Law in Nova Scotia or New Brunswick, I forget which one, presumed consent for tissue harvesting.
Presumed consent.
So they're going to change the law to be that you have to opt out of organ donation, tissue donation, and you're presumed to have opted in unless you opt out.
ian crossland
Every citizen?
viva frei
There's some criteria as to how long you've had to live in the province, but it's the trend now.
Presumption of organ donation, tissue donation.
And by the way, you don't even have to be dead for it to happen yet.
You can have a medical professional, I forget what they're called, not the coroner, but basically someone determined you're close enough to dying, so therefore you're presumed to have, you know, surrendered your tissue.
tim pool
You were right.
The stats I was looking at wasn't conveying the numbers in a way that was easily translatable, so that was wrong.
Cancer is number one.
This is interesting.
Canada, cancer is higher than heart disease.
In the U.S., heart disease is higher.
COVID is listed as number three.
Accidents, Cerebrovascular diseases, chronic lower respiratory diseases, then diabetes.
So it would be the seventh leading cause of death.
However, the way they probably classify it is... I don't know exactly if... Here's what I imagine they would do.
If you have cancer, and then you ask the government to take your life, they'll say it was a cancer death.
ian crossland
Is that 2021?
I think that David was saying it was from 2021.
viva frei
Yeah, 2021 with the numbers.
There is also some theorizing that the numbers for medical assistance and dying are actually underreported.
That's something that we'll only find out in due time.
The information will come out.
They're just going to control the way it comes out.
ian crossland
I got to know a little bit more about the madness.
But first, how blackmailed are you on a percentage?
viva frei
The struggle is not to give up.
The struggle is just to remain cheery and remain good-natured as I've always been.
I mean, I will.
It's just the struggle is to remain optimistic and not happy, but cheery, I guess.
And to not become cynical, jaded, and angry.
ian crossland
Fulfilled?
Because I think happiness and fulfillment are two different things.
viva frei
Well, that's it.
I mean, I'm feeling definitely fulfilled in terms of the Ica guy that I found in life now.
But it's difficult not to get cynical to the point of saying, holy crap, I don't really want to go into the mountains and just live alone, but nor do I want to lose faith in humanity.
But I might be close.
tim pool
Well, you don't gotta live alone.
You just, you know, buy a studio in the West Virginia mountains, you know, hire some people.
viva frei
Tim, you've certainly I come here and say, yeah, I can get used to this.
Although I've kind of built my own my own refuges, my house, you know, we have a one room studio and we live with our family and a good community.
tim pool
Do you have chicken?
viva frei
I do not have chickens.
We can't have chickens.
tim pool
What?
viva frei
I looked into it.
It's great.
It's terrible.
But Florida?
Yeah, well, it depends on it's like you have an HOA.
There's HOA.
No!
Dude, I said I wouldn't do an HOA, but whatever, it happened.
HOAs are huge.
But Ian, just to get to the madness, we have our own January 6th type madness.
So very few people I think in America have ever heard of the Coots Four.
These are four individuals who have been detained since the trucker protests.
These four individuals were basically, the accusations against them served as the basis for invoking the Emergencies Act under Justin Trudeau, because the accusations were, this peaceful protest in Ottawa, there was equal protests out in a place called Cootes, Alberta.
And these four individuals, allegedly, According to the charges, conspired to commit murder against an RCMP officer.
That's a Royal Canadian Mounted Police Officer.
tim pool
These guys are neo-Nazis?
viva frei
These guys are... three of the four have outright clean records.
They had jobs, they had families.
One of the four, from what I understand, had a record from juvenile.
Uh, but was a functional adult, you know, non-criminality in adulthood.
tim pool
So they're white supremacists?
viva frei
They're white.
I mean, I guess you could fill in the blank after that.
Uh, but so when the protest was happening, and you may or may not recall this, conspiracy to commit murder against an RCMP officer, CBC ran this article, showed front and center a cache of weapons that they seized, and it all looks scary.
tim pool
Is that the one with the spoon in it?
viva frei
No, no, no.
This is the one with a patch on a vest.
We don't even know if they were ballistic vests.
Apparently, one of them was a vest that you could only own with a license, but still lawful.
So they arrested these men, February 2021.
And this was the basis to say, look how violent this protest is.
We need to invoke the Emergencies Act.
And Trudeau invoked it.
These men have been sitting in jail in remand since February 2021.
No trial, no bail.
Bear in mind, in Canada, the dude who ran over four protesters in Winnipeg, four trucker protesters, people suggest he was anti-fraud, doesn't really matter, he ran over trucker protesters, he was given bail.
An accused cop murderer in Ontario, given bail.
These four guys have been sitting in remand, which is even worse than prison, for four years and nothing.
No trial, publication bans on parts of the case, so people can't even know exactly what's going on.
That's one thing.
ian crossland
You said four years, is it two and a half years?
viva frei
Sorry, it's been close to two years that they've been in jail, four of them.
unidentified
Oh, okay, okay, okay.
viva frei
Four individuals.
tim pool
People are saying the trucker protest was 2022.
Whatever, it was when it was.
viva frei
I screwed up on the date.
So they've been in there for 500 and some odd days.
tim pool
Yeah, you're in it.
viva frei
Yeah, the last three years in any case.
ian crossland
Yeah, they're a blur, man.
viva frei
So, they were arrested on conspiracy to commit murder.
The CBC state-funded media runs this photo of these cache of weapons with the RCM tree.
The picture was like Trump's classified documents.
Like, it's as though this is what they do in an investigation.
You got a pending investigation?
Let's mix all these weapons up.
Firearms, not weapons, and make it look very scary.
They arrest them.
They invoke the Emergencies Act, and you may recall they invoked this Emergencies Act, froze bank accounts, came in with a militarized police force, beat the ever-loving piss out of protesters, and then a year later, they had their investigation into the circumstances leading to the Emergencies Act, as required under the law.
We had a six-week hearing in front of this commissioner, For the government to justify invoking the Emergencies Act, which was the replacement to the War Measures Act, in order to justify violently suppressing the most beautiful protest the world has ever seen.
Six weeks, the Commissioner Rouleau comes out with a 2,000-page, four-volume document which relies heavily on this one incident of conspiracy to commit murder to say, yeah, there was violence, so Justin Trudeau was justified in invoking the Emergencies Act.
And Justin Trudeau gets a little pat on the back, gets ratified in everything he did, but he said, yeah, but trying to get them to cancel insurance on trucks, that was too much.
Freezing of the bank accounts was effective.
And he was justified in invoking the Emergencies Act.
ian crossland
How violent was the suppression?
viva frei
I was there.
I was live streaming.
There was concussive grenades.
They were physically beating people.
Some of them were war veterans.
This guy named Chris Deering, his body was literally ravaged, blown up in, I think it was Afghanistan, but it could have been Iraq.
It must have been Afghanistan because he's younger.
He was literally detonated by an IED.
Three of his four comrades died.
He was physically assaulted, cuffed behind his back.
This is in the dead of winter.
Detained for like a couple hours with his arms behind his back.
He lost his medals which were on his chest when they were doing all this to him.
Then they haul him off outside of Ottawa and dump him in the snow and let him make his way back.
It was violent and there was some footage of it where the CBC accidentally live broadcast police officers like kneeing like someone like it was a sack of potatoes.
It was violence.
And I was there the Friday and the Saturday where it was violently suppressed.
Concussive grenades coming in like stormtroopers.
They were budding people with their rifles.
The video's out there.
And then if you put this video on YouTube, the videos get demonetized because, you know, control the dissemination of information.
So the commissioner came in and said, you know, Justin Trudeau was justified.
There were people who were detained for months.
This one guy, Pat King, for five months on nonviolent mischief charges, denied bail.
This woman, Tamara Leach, Metis woman, Detained for several weeks, denied bail because they said, if we let you go, you're just gonna go promote more protests.
The administration of justice will be compromised if we release you on non-violent mischief charges.
Political prisoners left, right, and center in Canada.
ian crossland
Tamara Leach, she set up the GoFundMe?
viva frei
She was one of the organizers, she set up the GoFundMe.
Everybody knows the GoFundMe was frozen.
The monies were basically seized, but then returned to all the donors.
Then they set up the GiveSendGo, which raised $10 million in a day or two.
They could never disperse those funds because the second it would have ever crossed the border into Canada, it would have been seized under the Mareeva injunction.
She wrote a book called Hold the Line.
She was detained.
I mean, for a total of like 50 some odd days, one of the reasons she was detained was for alleged breach of her bail terms because she went to a gala to receive a freedom award by this not-for-profit called the Justice Center for Constitutional Freedoms, and she took a picture with a guy that she had a no communication order with.
unidentified
Wow.
viva frei
They haul her back, put her back in jail.
She spent a total like some 50 some odd days in jail.
Nonviolent mischief charges.
Another guy, Pat King, Chris Barber.
I mean, and the coots for it.
Nobody talks about it.
Partially because there's publication bans.
They had gag orders.
But it's a full hermit kingdom of...
They say, like, injustices, political prisoners that the world doesn't know about, and I think America should be paying a little more attention to, this will trickle down.
phil labonte
Are there significant, like, laws or have there been court decisions preventing people from talking about this stuff?
viva frei
Well, they're not.
They sanction it.
They'll sanction it.
I mean, they've put publication bans on certain aspects of these cases, as far as I understand, pertaining to, like, The evidence or the lack thereof, but it's just an amazing thing.
They gag the defendants while they're out.
They don't let them go on social media.
They don't let them tweet.
They don't let them talk about it.
Tamara Leach was only recently allowed to even give interviews.
And then meanwhile, these four guys are sitting in jail for sitting in remand.
They called me from prison.
It was a week ago.
It might be a week.
I forget if it's a week or two weeks now.
And I spoke to all four of them.
It's like, you know, it's amazing that they can remain optimistic, but they've been sitting in jail and very few people are talking about it.
ian crossland
Say the name of them.
viva frei
Coutts 4.
C-O-U-T-T-S 4.
unidentified
So you fled this nightmare?
viva frei
I have temporarily displaced.
This is one aspect of it.
phil labonte
Political asylum in Florida?
viva frei
In Florida.
Another aspect is they're controlling the media that you can consume now.
They've talked about this thing called the link tax, which was taxing Google and Meta for linking through them to news outlets.
So you go, you Google something, you just click on the link and you get right to the original source.
And the government passed this bill known as the link tax, which would require Google and Meta to pay a fee just to link through to the original source.
And Google and Meta said, piss off, we're not doing it.
What does the government do?
They say, we're going to suspend our advertising on Facebook and Meta, not realizing Meta doesn't need federal funding the way, I don't know, say, CBC needs.
phil labonte
There's only 60 million Canadians.
They're not going to have an impact.
38 million.
38, my man!
viva frei
And they want to double the population by the end of the century.
tim pool
And what Google should have done is say, no problem Canada, we will remove from Google search all of these companies, and then all these companies would scream in fury because their views would drop to zero.
viva frei
You'd think that, but...
It just allows the government more control in terms of what you can see.
This was a win-win for the government.
If they do do it, and they're going to have to pay a fee for linking through to the primary search results, who's that going to be?
It's going to be the ones that the government has determined as Canadian content because of the online streaming.
tim pool
But I disagree.
One way to stop something is a shock to the system.
And if overnight you could no longer Google search any of the sites you browsed, it would be a massive meteor slamming into the cultural psyche of Canadians.
viva frei
I'm not sure about that because the people who watch the alternative journalists and alternative sources, I don't think they rely on Google for that.
What this might have hurt would be like the legacy media that say, well, no, you know, we're not going to get recommended in the search engine anymore.
By the way, the Online Streaming Act, which is going to govern the internet the way it governs radio and television, going to impose Canadian content requirements on content creators online.
tim pool
But what about outside websites, right?
So like a Canadian news outlet would be like, you got to pay a link tax, but what about an American news outlet?
viva frei
I'm not sure I know offhand how that would work in terms of paying to an outside Canadian link.
tim pool
Yeah, Canada can't force Google Canada to pay an American for something that American is not requesting.
Or I guess they can.
They can be like, you got to contact them and try.
But even in that regard, Google can be like, okay, we'll make reasonable attempts to pay them and then not do it.
And what would end up happening is American sources would reach Canadians.
Canadians would be cut off from their own news.
viva frei
Gonna have to think about that.
I'm not sure that it would work like that in any event, because bottom line is the internet is regulated now under the Online Streaming Act in Canada, governed the same way radio and television is in terms of requirements to contribute, create Canadian content, and so on, which determines how you come up with the search engine.
ian crossland
I gotta know about this Online Streaming Act.
What the hell is this?
viva frei
The Online Streaming Act is basically going to This is another amazing liberal law passed in the dead of night under the cloak of COVID, which basically says, if you act like a broadcaster on the internet, we're going to come in and impose the same requirements that the CRTC, it's the Canadian Radio Telecommunications Committee, I might be making a mistake on it.
It's basically, it's a federal agency that governs radio and television.
Says, okay, you want to broadcast in Canada.
You have to have certain requirements.
You got to pay certain fees.
You got to create Canadian content.
We're doing it to preserve Canadian culture.
They come out and say, well, a lot of streaming outlets have been doing, you know, the Hulu's, the Netflix on the internet.
They're, what's the word?
Bypassing.
The Broadcast Act, which governed radio and television.
So they come out and say, well, we're going to govern the online streaming companies the same way we govern radio and television.
Makes sense.
Netflix wants to broadcast stuff in here.
You're going to have to pay a little.
If you don't produce Canadian content, you'll have to pay a little extra tax, so on and so forth.
There was an exclusion because people were concerned, if it's going to govern the internet this way, it's going to govern individual YouTube channels, social media accounts.
So they had an exclusion in the law that says, we will not come for individual social media accounts.
In the dead of the night, they removed that exclusion.
And then when press on this, they said, well, why did you remove the exclusion?
And this guy, this bumbling idiot, Stephen Gilboa says, we're not coming for independent channels, social media accounts.
So it's not what we want to do.
And the guy says, well, if it's not what you want to do, why do you remove the exclusion that said you're not going to do it if it's not what you want to do?
And lo and behold, they ultimately admit, yeah, if you're big enough as a social media platform, we're going to we're going to come after you.
And so this is going to govern everything.
The pretext is always benevolence.
We want to protect Canadian culture.
We want to generate revenue.
Um, it's censorship under the guise of, uh, you know, protecting Canadian culture, which Justin Trudeau has in the past already admitted he doesn't think exists.
ian crossland
You said CRTC, Canadian Radio, Television, Telecommunications Commission.
And they're trying, so this would make it so like if a YouTuber, a guy is like destiny.gg has goes online and they want to be like, yo, destiny, now you got to pay us taxes if you're talking about.
viva frei
Absolutely.
And if your content is not sufficiently Canadian, we're going to require that you don't come up in the search results.
As high as Canadian content, like CBC, even when they're reporting on Brittany Griner's memoir.
CBC would come up there, it's Canadian content.
Radio-Canada, these are federally subsidized, federally funded news outlets.
The joke was that it's just called an alternative media tactic.
They're coming after the rebel news, they're coming after the post-millennials.
Oh geez, True North.
VivaFry.
Hey, one day, hey, Viva, you cover a lot of American stuff, even though you're Canadian based in Canada.
We're gonna, we're gonna demote you algorithmically on YouTube, or we're gonna make you pay fees because your content is not Canadian enough.
unidentified
Make us speak French.
viva frei
Oh, I, dude, I would, I could do an entire channel in French, it would be great.
ian crossland
That'd be awesome.
tim pool
And Anglo-Franco-Viva.
They got the language police up there.
viva frei
They got the language police in the province of Quebec.
Province of Quebec recently passed a law which removed- There's language police in Quebec?
tim pool
Oh, tell them about SpaghettiGate!
viva frei
Oh, well, no, there was one, it was called- SpaghettiGate!
What's Spaghetti Gate?
I mean, there's a number of examples about this, but which one's Spaghetti Gate?
tim pool
Okay, so there's an Italian... So first, people need to understand the language, police.
French has to be prominently displayed... Nettement prédominante.
viva frei
In Quebec.
unidentified
Yeah.
viva frei
So Quebec is a French province.
Not the only one, contrary to popular belief.
New Brunswick, I believe, is officially bilingual.
But Quebec is a distinct province.
tim pool
Spaghetti Gate... I think it happened when I was actually hanging out there like 10 years ago.
There was an Italian restaurant that had a menu that said spaghetti on it, and the language police said, where's the French?
And they were like, what?
And they were like, it says spaghetti, where's the French?
And they were like, what?
It's spaghetti!
And they got fined for not writing spaghetti prominently in French and having the Italian word spaghetti.
viva frei
I need to remember the exact name of it.
There's a story why Tim Hortons doesn't have an apostrophe S.
tim pool
Oh, right.
viva frei
And it goes back to this, I think it was called Sam's Garage, but I might be mistaken on the name.
It doesn't matter.
All that matters is there's an apostrophe in there.
There's no apostrophes in French.
So they said, Sam's Garage, that's not French.
There was an exception for registered trademarks.
They said, that's not French.
He said, well, I'm going to put a Canadian flag over the apostrophe.
Now it's Sam's without an apostrophe.
It's French.
Tim Hortons didn't want to have to have two brandings.
They didn't want to have Tim Hortons apostrophe S for the rest of Canada.
So they just go Tim Hortons without an S. That's the story.
Sorry, without the apostrophe.
So in Quebec, it's called a Bill 101, the language law, and it created a bunch of requirements for businesses, for signage.
The French had to be nettement prédominante, clearly predominant.
It's so preposterous.
phil labonte
That is very French sounding.
viva frei
French is the polite way to say it.
I had a client who sold goods, and the goods were measured in ounces.
And stamped on the can was O.Z.
And that's not the French abbreviation for ounce.
So this individual literally had to go over and put a sticker over the O.Z.
And I think it's O.C.
because it's ounce in French or O.N.
It's crazy.
They go to, like, the kosher stores and say, your kosher food doesn't have French on the back.
They go to, you know, Chinatown and say, well, some of these things don't have French.
tim pool
It's crazy.
How do you say, like, Mugu Gaipan in French?
viva frei
Good question.
I don't know.
Cacher le Pessac.
How do you say that in French?
I mean, that's, well, there's a big Moroccan-French-Jewish community anyhow.
The language law is one thing, and they revamped that law under Bill 96 to make it even more strict, to apply to smaller businesses.
unidentified
Oh, even better.
viva frei
You can't exempt from having contracts in French.
They have to be drawn up in French.
There was a law recently passed in Quebec that removed parental supremacy from the Youth Protection Act.
Now it's government administrative bodies that determine what's the best interest of the child for the purposes of youth protection.
Where does that go?
Forced vaccination.
Or if a kid says, I want to take a shot, parents say, no, well, we'll decide for you.
Kid says, I want to change my sex, parents say, no.
A kid brings in the state, the government says, well, it's a crime to deny this kid what they think they need at the age of 14.
tim pool
I got a good idea for a sci-fi dystopian short film.
We're talking about how we want to do these short films.
I really, really do.
We need to find like a good, talented producer and screenwriter and director.
How cool would it be to do a The year is, like, you know, 2083, and actual Canadian refugees are fleeing.
Canadian society is very much children born in pods through artificial insemination.
They're very much in VR.
Some of these things are in urban U.S.
cities, but people in Canada who are, like, opposed to this have just all fled.
And then Canada is this nightmare dystopian country, and there's, like, political conflict between the U.S., which has a constitution, which is harder to erode, than Canada, which has completely dissolved and eroded all of their rights.
viva frei
It would be Canada basically today.
What drives me nuts is people don't seem to be as outraged by it as I am, as people in my circle are.
There was another story of absolute madness.
This woman named Sheila Annette Lewis in Alberta was taken off the organ donor list because she refused to get the jab.
And she sued.
They put a publication ban on her charter application because people might get mad at the doctors, mad at the hospital.
The woman couldn't specify what organ she needed because it would have been so specific that they would have been able to track down the doctors in the hospital who were denying the procedure, who removed her from the list.
She's recently settled, you know, resolved that apparently.
tim pool
Justin Trudeau, you know, he goes on TV and he's just like, You need to listen to what the massive multinational corporations want for you.
ian crossland
Yeah, it sounds like they're testing government ownership of human beings with the whole, your body, we're going to harvest your organs unless you opt out.
So like, you're born and the government owns your body, or owns rights to your body.
viva frei
And determines when to harvest them.
You don't even have to be dead.
Just close enough.
ian crossland
What?
viva frei
You Google this, it's called Allen's Law, I think, out of New Brunswick or Nova Scotia, and the coroner Or whoever the medical professional is, can determine, you're close enough to death, we can harvest your organs.
unidentified
It's crazy.
viva frei
Close enough!
unidentified
Horseshoes, hand grenades, it's alien made.
viva frei
The only people it disparately impacts are the most vulnerable people in society.
Those who don't have people to speak out for them.
It'll blow your freaking mind.
And it's true.
It's not like Alex Jones ten years ago.
tim pool
And there are people who choose to live in Canada?
viva frei
The reality is a lot of Canadians prefer a safe prison of sorts than the risky freedom that Americans historically, culturally have chosen.
tim pool
What if you go live up in the old tundra up north?
viva frei
So there is a, there is a movement sort of like, there is a dichotomy in Canada between the West and the East of Canada, the way there is between, you know, Texas and Florida and the rest of the states.
A lot of people, not West to the point of British Columbia, but see Alberta, Manitoba, Saskatchewan, Heartland, who say, we want to separate because Quebec and Ontario determined policy for the rest of Canada.
They keep electing this, this, this dumbass.
I feel bad saying that.
This dumb ass Trudeau, who enacts policies that are very much anti-natural resources,
that penalize the heartland and the West.
And they said, get us the hell out of here.
They call it Wexit after Brexit, but this sentiment of loathing the East
has existed for a long time, and rightfully so.
We have these things called equalization payments.
So the federal government collects taxes from natural resources and the revenues of the provinces,
and then reallocates it based on, call it poverty for lack of a better word.
And so they take the taxation from Alberta, oil sands, you know, the natural resources,
and then they apportion it to Quebec and the Eastern provinces, which are poorer provinces
because they don't exploit natural resources the same way the West does.
And so the West is saying, we are financing our oppressors through these equalization payments.
You called him a dumbass.
up to the federal, come down in Quebec, and then Quebec and Ontario by and large determine
elections.
So we are basically financing our own oppression.
ian crossland
Does Trudeau have term limits?
viva frei
There are no term limits, so he can keep getting re-elected as long as he gets re-elected.
tim pool
You called him a dumbass.
He's worse.
I'm being polite.
viva frei
But I think evil.
unidentified
I don't remember him being evil in the early days.
viva frei
The indications were always there, because you go back and you see the admiration for the basic dictatorship of China.
There was a Huffington Post, I think, wrote an op-ed basically saying, in 2015, under Trudeau, Canada's going to turn into China.
And whoever wrote that, I forget his name and I'd love to give him credit.
tim pool
The moment I saw him doing that weird handstand thing on his desk, I was like, that guy's evil.
viva frei
It really is the most insidious type of evil.
It's what C.S.
Lewis said, that the tyrant who tyrannizes you with the blessing of their own conscience is the worst type, because they'll do it endlessly.
phil labonte
They believe they're doing it.
viva frei
At least a criminal.
He says the baron robber.
At least he'll sleep.
Maybe he'll get tired one day and say, okay, you've had enough.
Those who torment you with the blessing of their own soul will do it forever.
tim pool
Is it true that Justin Trudeau is the son of Fidel Castro?
viva frei
There are rumorings to that effect.
tim pool
I hope so.
phil labonte
What the hell is that?
ian crossland
That dude's got some core strength.
viva frei
That looks like Satan is levitating.
unidentified
I told you!
tim pool
The moment I saw Trudeau do the yoga handstand thing, I knew he was evil.
ian crossland
He's got strings attached to his heels.
unidentified
This reminds me of the flagpole trend from like five, six years ago.
I remember planking.
It's kind of like planking, but you go sideways like this, but on a flagpole.
And you'd have to hold yourself up.
Oh yeah, I remember that.
ian crossland
It is impressive, but... No wonder he keeps getting re-elected.
viva frei
Now I'm trying to think, have I missed anything from the Canadian political censorshiporial hellscape?
ian crossland
Well, what's going on with Bill C-16, the compelled speech law that Jordan Peterson basically became famous for talking about?
viva frei
Oh, that's old.
That's already law now.
That was the one that added gender expression, gender identity to aggravating factors for certain crimes.
phil labonte
But that is what Peterson was concerned with actually has come to fruition.
viva frei
Yeah, and I gotta tell you something, I did a video on that back in the day, back in the vlog when Viva had short hair and was not opinionated, and I said, oh, I'll be objective and say, you know, there is the old expression in law, bad cases make for bad law, and I've added to that, bad legislation makes for bad law.
Or bad legislation makes for bad cases, which makes for bad law.
C-16 added gender identity, gender expression, to the criminal code for certain provisions of law, notably hate crimes, notably aggravating factors.
Peterson at the time said this is going to result in compelled speech.
There was another scandal going on.
I forget the details of that, so I don't want to get into it.
He was sounding the alarm back in the day.
He was 100% right.
Then we get into this new law.
Which one is it?
It's called the conversion therapy ban.
Voted unanimously, got unanimous approval, even from conservatives.
And it is literally a provision of law that says you cannot talk someone out of being trans, being gay.
ian crossland
We have that.
viva frei
Well, this now actually, and I know that California is enacting something very similar, which is why I say people should be paying attention to what happened in Canada, when you can violently suppress protests, freeze bank accounts, and then have it ratified by an independent commission.
Big effing trouble for the rest of the so-called free world.
But there's a ban on conversion therapy and it only goes one way.
You can tell someone that they are gay, that they are trans, you just can't tell them they're not.
ian crossland
Which basically, as Jordan Peterson was remarking, turns psychiatrists, psychologists, counsellors into mere affirmation Right, because if someone says I've got some sort of mental disorder, I feel like something's wrong with me, you know, a good therapist will help you figure out that there's nothing wrong with you, it's normal to feel weird sometimes.
viva frei
Or suggest you might very well grow out of this gender dysphoria thing which was recognized forever.
You might grow out of it, so let's not do anything rash right now because 90 some odd percent of all- That would be criminalized now.
A psychiatrist would have to say, I understand, you're good to feel who you are, and what can we do to help you?
Instead of, what can we do to help you?
That's interesting, actually.
That's the first time I've used it.
ian crossland
We had an inflection.
tim pool
Our guest on The Culture War, one of our guests was saying that she was suffering from gender dysphoria to the point where she was considering surgery, and she talked to someone who said, get your hormones checked, and it turned out that her hormones were... Imbalanced.
Imbalanced.
So she got prescribed female hormones, and immediately the dysphoria went away.
phil labonte
That's probably legal.
tim pool
That would be illegal under these things, wouldn't it?
Pretty sure.
viva frei
Oh yeah.
No, no.
It would be, I think, clear.
tim pool
Affirmation is the funniest thing.
Like, someone weighs a hundred pounds and she's just like, I'm too fat.
viva frei
You're right.
tim pool
You're right.
viva frei
Ease up on not eating fat.
I mean, it is literally that preposterous where you've turned You've criminalized the practice of psychiatry, the practice of psychology, although I tend to think psychiatrists are all crazy in the first place, but you've criminalized it.
And so you can only affirm it, and you can only convert one way.
So it's not a ban on conversion therapy, it's a one-way street ban on conversion therapy.
tim pool
You know what the end result of all this is in Canada, right?
Canada's culling itself.
unidentified
Culling.
viva frei
calling. Well so now that you mentioned that and this goes back to the other
not conspiracy theory the so-called replacement theory which is you know racist conspiracy theory
the projections are and the policy is to double the population of Canada by the end of the century.
There's no way. Go from 38 40 million to 80 million through immigration because now everybody's leaving.
First of all, the government is literally ending people's lives in record numbers.
People are emigrating in record numbers.
People are leading a lifestyle that leads to not having children in record numbers.
Government says, well shit, the population's not growing naturally.
I wonder why.
No shit, Sherlock.
What do we do?
Immigrants.
Bring them in.
tim pool
They're erasing Canadian social order.
viva frei
And it depends what anyone even means by that.
What's clear is that doubling the population through immigration, and I presume it's going to be legal, I don't know what the difference is between legal and illegal anymore, it's just what the government says.
Doubling a population in such a short period of time, if it's not replacement, it's at the very least dilution.
Dilute in half the Canadian population as it is, and hope, I don't know how they hope it's going to even work out financially, If you're not bringing in individuals who are going to be working, generating revenue, contributing tax dollars to the system itself, which is already so depleted it can't support its own healthcare system.
It's controlled demolition.
I mean, there's no other way to say it.
ian crossland
Is replacement theory where if someone's got like a racist population, they're like, we're going to move in the race that we want to replace the ones we don't?
viva frei
As far as I understand, what makes replacement theory racist is the idea that you're bringing in non-whites to replace whites.
phil labonte
The thing that makes it racist is the wrong people are talking about it.
tim pool
See, the thing is, it turns out all of those people were actually wrong.
It's not happening in the U.S., it's happening in Canada.
viva frei
And it's not replacement theory.
What it is, you see, is it's just a cultural diversity.
And it's like Canada is not monolithic, ethnically, racially, but much more so than the U.S., which is the irony in all of this.
The U.S., the most racist place on earth.
And people look at Florida and say it's a bigoted, homophobic.
tim pool
That principle, he said, Canada was wrong.
viva frei
And I gotta listen to these Canadian nincompoops say how racist and bigoted Florida is.
I mean, you've never been to Florida, and you've never been to Miami, and you've never seen anything if that's what you say.
Setting all that aside, it doesn't matter where the population comes from.
What you have is an outright dilution of...
The political landscape in Canada, and I, if I had to wager a bet, I don't think Tristan Trudeau is bringing in an immigrant population that he thinks is not going to be favorable to his policy and his party.
And so it's basically a way of importing votes.
phil labonte
If you say that in America, that's racist.
unidentified
I'm not talking race.
viva frei
I'm not talking race. Bring him in from any racial. No, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no. It
phil labonte
doesn't matter what it doesn't matter what you're saying.
It's if you say that it will, you will be accused of racism.
viva frei
Dude, I get it. I get accused of being a Nazi, despite the fact that I'm I'm a quite clearly a Jew boy. I mean,
I mean, it's preposterous, and if anybody says that that's racist, my retort to that is, it is quite clearly policy, because who do they automatically tighten up the borders for in terms of immigrants?
Cubans, because they tend to vote a certain way politically.
So it has nothing to do with race, it has only to do with politics, and that's exactly what's going on in Canada.
ian crossland
I was tripping out just now, thinking Trudeau could be the Prime Minister in 40 years.
viva frei
For a very long time.
Now, there is some talk that there might be another election.
You all know that I ran for federal office.
ian crossland
Yes.
unidentified
Yeah!
ian crossland
I thought you were gonna win, man.
viva frei
Oh yeah, I thought I was gonna win for a second too.
ian crossland
I guess then I realized...
viva frei
I ran for the People's Party of Canada.
That's not going to get very far in Westmount NDG which votes Liberal for the last 30 years over 50%.
I could have put my dog Winston or my other dog Pudge.
Pudge doesn't have a human name.
Winston?
Vote Winston for the Liberal Party?
They would have had a dog representing them in Westmount.
He would have gotten elected.
Over me.
And maybe that's just how bad of a candidate I am.
But there is rumourings now that there's going to be another election called because there's been a massive cabinet shuffle within the Trudeau regime.
The country is falling apart, but it's falling apart by design.
And I can only call it a controlled demolition because the Liberal Party would rather rule over the ashes than cede power to see the country flourish.
ian crossland
Can you appeal to the king?
tim pool
Oh, okay.
viva frei
Say it again.
tim pool
I said we should annex Canada.
viva frei
Tucker Carlton, this is what they wanted to block Fox News in Canada for, because Tucker Carlton said we should invade Canada.
They're so out of their freaking minds.
And the thing is, Canadians hate Trump almost more than the Democrats in the states hate Trump.
tim pool
I want to bring democracy to Canada.
ian crossland
Well, I'm thinking the other way.
Can you not appeal to the king?
viva frei
I don't know.
People always float that.
It's detached.
The king and the queen have nothing to do with Canada except in name only.
ian crossland
It's part of the British Commonwealth?
unidentified
Keno.
viva frei
We'll call it the Keno.
It's king in name only.
tim pool
Look at the UK.
They're woke, too.
ian crossland
Can't the king be like, Trudeau, you're out?
viva frei
No, I don't know.
I don't think there's a legal mechanism for that.
But you know what?
The population could say it.
The only problem is you guys in the States complain about a two-party system.
There's problems with the parliamentary system where you have six parties as well because you effectively have two parties regardless.
In Canada, you got Liberals, NDP, Conservatives.
You got the People's Party of Canada that didn't get a seat in Parliament, but set that aside.
You got the Green Party.
You got the Marxist Party.
I think you even have a Communist Party at the federal level.
Oh, then you have the Bloc Québécois.
That's the...
You have a federal party in Canada whose stated purpose is to have Quebec separate from Canada.
Go figure that Zenonian paradox out. But when you have so many of these parties,
the Trudeau regime only got elected with 30% of the vote at most. And I think in the last election
it was something like 23%. So you have a wildly unpopular loser who remains in power by a minority
government and only stays in power because of his unholy alliance with Jagmeet Singh and the
in the new Democrat party.
And so this is what Canada is.
It's five fractured parties that the loser is in power with a fraction of the vote and stays in power because you got another loser at the NDP who says, I will support you for as long as it takes for me to get my government pension.
tim pool
I am going to make the liberation of Canada a key issue for this presidential election.
It's the only thing I'm going to advocate for.
Every time we talk to a presidential candidate, we're trying to get a debate going.
I'm going to be like, will you liberate Canada?
ian crossland
Make Irie great again.
viva frei
And taxes.
tim pool
How would, like, you know, we've had Vivek on a couple of times.
Like, how would a president, what are you supposed to say to that?
Like, if someone, if you're actually on like a show and you're running for office,
like, will you physically invade Canada?
viva frei
The greater Alaska movement.
tim pool
Yes.
viva frei
It's a joke until it's not a joke, by the way.
Not about the invasion, about the risk that Canada can pose.
You guys know that once upon a time in recent memory, Canada was training Chinese soldiers for wintertime combat
on Canadian soil?
Literally.
ian crossland
Literally.
unidentified
Yes.
viva frei
2019, I want to say?
phil labonte
Yes.
viva frei
Literally.
They get caught.
Then their minister of whoever it is, the minister of defense says,
we're no longer doing it.
That suggests that it recognizes you were doing it.
I mean, you actually have CCP actual interference with Canadian elections.
And I don't want to sound partisan, but I do believe it is more focused on liberals.
Actual CCP infiltration, that becomes a national security concern for the US.
So it's all fun and games until it's no longer fun and games.
ian crossland
I mean, that's super legit.
Not only did the Chinese spy balloon just go right through Canada, nobody even, they didn't even tell, mention it, and maybe they did to Joe Biden, but they also went to the United States.
But like, it's a beachhead.
It's a wartime beachhead.
If Canada decides at the last minute, you know what, we don't think that the Americans are going to win.
viva frei
We really like that basic dictatorship of China.
We want to be a Chinese satellite.
And now America deal with us.
It's the Cuban Missile Crisis with the northern border.
tim pool
It's going to be like 50 to 75 years from now.
Canada is going to have just like become this Chinese supported military regime that's taken over the United States and subjugated everybody.
And there's going to be like these dudes living in an underground bunker, like in ratty clothes, as there's like explosions overhead and they're hiding.
And then they pull up this archival video of us laughing about invading Canada.
And they're like, If only they knew.
ian crossland
Fortunately, it's part of the British Commonwealth in name only, maybe.
Well, I mean, it legitimately is.
And the British are tight with the Americans, apparently.
So I don't think they're a part of this.
phil labonte
You know who else is supposedly tight with the Americans?
Canada.
tim pool
We gotta get this short film thing going.
Because we do one where a Canadian guy comes back from, you know, 50 years in the future, and he tries to desperately warn everybody of the threat Canada faces.
And they all laugh every time he says it.
phil labonte
Nobody believes it.
viva frei
50 years.
Can you imagine 20, let's just say pre-COVID, but let's just say 2015.
phil labonte
Eight years.
viva frei
Someone comes back and says, this is what Canada is going to look like in eight years.
You would tell them to go, you know, to go straight to fantasyland.
tim pool
But the guy comes to America and he's like, you need to convince your leaders to invade Canada.
And they're like, I'll bust out laughing.
phil labonte
China's going to take the eastern half of Russia, and then they're going to have a straight line right over the pole.
They're going to just build roads right through Russia, right over the Arctic, and into Canada.
unidentified
They're doing that.
There's a new Arctic Silk Road, they're calling it.
Northwest Passage.
ian crossland
I'd be down with a freeway across the Bering Strait.
But I'm talking diplomacy.
phil labonte
We're talking about invasion, Ian.
ian crossland
That's a totally different topic.
viva frei
I'm trying to think.
Have I forgotten anything about cultural invasion?
Does the chat?
I'm so used to following a chat.
If I've forgotten anything about the madness of Canada, I think we've covered it all.
tim pool
Let's go to Super Chats because some people did bring some stuff up.
We'll get to those.
And if you haven't already, smash the like button, subscribe to this channel, share the show with your friends, become a member at TimCast.com, and yeah, we'll read some Super Chats.
NotYourBuddyGuy says, it's rather unnerving just thinking about how far the left will go for power.
I mean, people terminate others for insurance fraud.
I mean, what would you do for the keys to America?
viva frei
Oh, debanking.
Thank you.
I'm not your buddy guy.
tim pool
Nigel Farage.
viva frei
Well, debanking in Canada.
Jeremy McKenzie, one of these guys who got caught up with... They debank people for political purposes.
I suspect Paul Bernardo, a convicted murderer and worse, still has a bank account.
It's...
It's the politicization of everything, and it's the weaponization of essential services for politics.
tim pool
It's too much.
How do you pronounce it?
Solzhenitsyn?
Solzhenitsyn.
ian crossland
The Gulag Archipelago, he wrote.
tim pool
I gotta read that.
The criminal, it was just an unfortunate affliction, but you knew better, right?
So when the criminal commits the crime, it's like, well, you know, but when you do it, ooh.
Let's grab some more Super Chats.
Where we at?
Let's grab what we got some questions.
Pinochet's helicopter tour says RFK had powder burn powder burn stippling behind his ear.
viva frei
If anybody in the chat knows the name of his recently appointed like a new guy to Secret Service who was the one who recently died who everybody's you know, who knows this theory seems to suspect is the one who pulled the fatal shots.
tim pool
Let's grab some good questions.
viva frei
I'm trying to find some good questions or stuff about Canada, but... Can I... Can I... Unsolicited, I said I would mention it, because... Have you ever heard about this guy named... You've heard of Phil Damaris?
unidentified
No.
viva frei
Oh, this is another one that's going to blow your mind, because it's come to the States now.
Phil Damaris, the walrus whisperer.
He was the guy who got involved in a ten-year legal battle with Marine Land for whistleblowing on the bad treatment of Smooshy the walrus.
That's one separate story, but now he's turned his sights on the Miami Sea Aquarium, where they have an orca whale that's been living in captivity for, I think it's 40 years, 50 years?
And so he's been, now that he's settled with Marineland, Marineland moved the walrus to Abu Dhabi, he's turned his sights on the Miami Sea Aquarium, and he recently got slapped with a lawsuit in Florida for flying a drone over the stadium where this whale has been kept, not for public viewing.
And he got sued by whoever owns the Miami Sea Aquarium.
They want to prevent him from flying drones over, you know, injunction, but a worthwhile cause.
The guy is Phil Damaris, Walrus Whisperer, and if anybody does not know about what's going on at the Miami Sea Aquarium, definitely worthwhile.
ian crossland
Is that what they made Blackfish about?
viva frei
Actually, I don't know because this is terrible.
I have not watched Blackfish.
ian crossland
It's a good movie.
viva frei
I know.
I'm sure it's really great.
ian crossland
It's about a whale in captivity.
His dorsal fin is just bent because he's stuck in such tight quarts.
viva frei
Horrible.
Yeah, because apparently they need to build that muscle by actually cruising the open.
This orca, Lolita, she swims in a soup thing all day long for decades.
And I went there because he held a protest, and I went in and saw what they did with the manatees.
The manatees They're 55, 65 years old.
They live in a glorified swimming pool.
I mean, I think some... I know people who are not, you know, very well-to-do have bigger swimming pools than this.
Higher-order mammals living in... It's inhumane captivity.
tim pool
You see what we do with Chicken City?
viva frei
Chicken City looks... It's amazing.
First of all, those chickens look delicious.
unidentified
So, you know, if any one of them has an accident... Every Friday they get fresh sushi.
tim pool
There are humans who don't live as well.
viva frei
But why?
Is sushi known- is fish known to be good for birth?
tim pool
Oh, absolutely!
They love it!
But, uh, we do Sushi Friday here with, like, all the crew and everyone gets sushi.
It's like, we do a big order.
It's like a, you know, it's like a team-building thing, I guess.
And then the leftovers, the- only the fresh fish portion of the leftovers that people don't eat, we'll just throw to the chickens.
But it's like, the sashimi is the first thing people pick at, because it's the good stuff, you know what I mean?
But then we don't give the rice and the weird sauce, just the fresh fish.
viva frei
You don't want the chickens to be overweight, they might have to come to you and say, I feel fat today.
tim pool
Well, dude, I just gotta tell you, like, you take a bunch of hens and a rooster, and you throw fish in, the hens are like piranhas.
I'm assuming it's because they produce eggs every day, so they're ravenous, and the roosters don't, so they're just like, whoa, these ladies are hungry.
Alright, let's read this one.
I'm familiar with Tim Tams.
That sounds amazing.
mention the Australian favorite without naming it, the Tim Tams Slam, where you bite the
diagonally opposite corners off and suck coffee or tea through the soft chocolate center.
I am familiar with Tim Tams.
That sounds amazing.
I think I'm going to order some.
No, no, I can't eat it.
No, no, I can't eat it.
I can't eat it.
We can't do it.
unidentified
Have you guys heard of the shoeie?
Have you guys heard of that?
It's an Australian, New Zealand thing.
So it's where you pour beer into your shoe and then you chug it.
viva frei
It's a good way to get probiotics in your belly.
Depending on what's in your shoe.
unidentified
It's your own shoe, but yeah.
tim pool
Covfefe King says, hey Tim, you should check the 2020 movie called Possessor.
It's about an assassin who controls other people's bodies using brain implant technology to execute high-profile targets.
Freaky movie.
Cool.
There was also Gamer, where the bad guy has these nanobots that he can control you once they go into your brain.
viva frei
That's based on nature, where you have those insects that get, you know, the parasites, and they go up and commit suicide.
ian crossland
Grasshoppers and stuff.
tim pool
That's what Last of Us is based on.
Cordyceps gets into humans, and then they become fungus.
ian crossland
I think it's not actually cordyceps, though.
I could be wrong.
Maybe it is.
But Paul Stamets was like, it's giving cordyceps a bad name.
tim pool
All right.
Hank the Hokage Hill says, Viva, please talk about Pierre Poiliev.
viva frei
Poiliev, the leader of the Conservative Party.
I never tell anybody who to vote for.
I will vote PPC myself for obvious reasons.
I don't trust the Conservative Party, which also unanimously voted to support this anti-conversion bill.
Pierre Poiliev, he's charismatic.
He kind of looks like Clark Kent.
But...
Pierre Poiliev supported the trucker protest when it became politically cool to support the trucker protest and then threw them under the bus when it became toxic to do so because of the results of the commission.
He also threw, if we're holding grudges, which I have not been known to do, I'll forgive but I won't forget, he threw Christine Anderson under the bus.
Remember Christine Anderson, the European Member of Parliament who came here, she took a picture with, I'm going to forget the exact circumstances, But bottom line, he called Christine Anderson, one of the European parliamentarians who was radically critical of Justin Trudeau and of what's going on in Canada.
He called her a xenophobe and Islamophobe extremist who shouldn't have come to Canada because she came to Canada to do a tour.
Borderline unforgivable, in my opinion.
So yeah, that's Pierre Poliev.
He might be a better alternative, but he would not be my first choice.
ian crossland
If he'd continue to support the truckers after the Council, would he have been just erased from politics?
viva frei
I don't know.
I think he's going to get—well, he's not going to get erased from politics now because there's no alternative, but it would have been the principled thing for him to do.
He was slow to support the trucker convoy, then he did it when it was cool, and then he dropped them and pivoted when it was no longer cool to do so.
Oh, but that reminded me of one other craziness out of Canada.
This member of provincial parliament, Joel Harden, for the New Democrat Party, I don't know if you heard about this, there was a protest that I went to document.
It was education, not indoctrination, put on by Billboard, Chris, and this 17-year-old kid.
Oh, I'm going to get so embarrassed if I can't remember his name now.
Josh Alexander.
Jeez.
I go to this protest, I get home that night, and apparently a member of provincial parliament was physically assaulted, punched in the face, by the hateful anti-trans crowd.
tim pool
Oh yeah, we saw this.
viva frei
And I'm like, oh shit, that's serious.
If that happened, let's find the person who did it.
Hashtag justice for Joel.
And I said, call me crazy.
If a member of provincial parliament were punched in the face by an anti-trans protester, something tells me the CBC would cover it.
Global News would cover it.
Radio Canada would cover it.
But they weren't.
And I said, oh, we've got to find this person.
Hashtag Justice for Joel.
They found the person.
The dumbass bumped himself in the face with his own bullhorn.
The internet literally, I mean, it's so amazing when you have like 12 live streamers on both sides.
You see the moment.
tim pool
They caught the clip.
viva frei
They caught in his face.
Now whether or not someone bumped into him and it pushed into his face.
tim pool
He was not punched.
viva frei
He wasn't punched.
Then he comes out and does an interview and says, oh, I was hit.
He's like, well, we see the video and you literally see the metal eyelet where the, I guess where the, the, what are they called?
Those things that go around your neck go into.
You see it go into his freaking face.
And I watch a lot of UFC.
I've never been in a fight.
I was like, if that came from being punched in the face, there would be bruising around the sharp incision.
Not just a sharp incision.
Busted.
Never apologizes.
The media never covers it.
tim pool
Of course.
viva frei
And that's it.
Goes on.
He's a sitting member of provincial parliament.
tim pool
Alright, here we go.
Maya Soli says, Hi Tim, my BF and I are both huge fans and have been members since April.
I was hoping you could shout out my boss's GoFundMe.
He has a blueberry farm and back in May we had a freak frost and he lost about 70% of his crop.
Sobieski's River Valley Farm.
ian crossland
Sounds delicious.
tim pool
Sounds great.
Best of luck!
In that, uh...
DTQC says, currently working on a project that will remotely disconnect electrical vehicle recharge stations for the purpose of power balancing.
It will be mandatory to install for new apartment buildings.
How could that go wrong?
Once you all have electric cars... This is another short film we gotta do, we should write these down.
It's, uh, this is really easy, and some of these could just be like three minutes long.
A guy gets into his car and then a couple things happen.
His battery of his car is at 30% and he's like, ah, geez, and then he's like, why wasn't it charging?
And then it's like an alert and it's like energy grid advisory due to excessive heat.
Vehicle recharge has been disabled.
And then the other one is a guy gets in his car and he's backing out and then all of a sudden
everything shuts off in the car and then he's like, oh, oh crap.
And the screen turns on and it's red, and it says, Warrant detected for driver, you know, David Frye, or, you know, whatever.
And then it's, and then it's like, you know, delivery to precinct 37.
And then you're like, and then the car drives you to the police station where the cops are waiting for you.
viva frei
Yeah, or, or, you know, hey, we found out that you donated to the trucker convoy disabled vehicle or assassinations via vehicle, which is also something that I believe has been discussed with probably already happened numerous times.
tim pool
They've been hacking cars for over a decade.
Well, I mean, to be completely honest, they've been cutting brake lines for a long time.
Yeah, true.
viva frei
This just seems much more Diana is done remotely.
ian crossland
That's why it's weird.
tim pool
Alright, Billy No says, no, for household solar, the inverter that changes the power from DC to AC needs an outside charge, just like an alternator in your car.
If you don't have that outside power, it will not work.
So, like, we have solar set up, and then when the power goes out, the solar batteries kick in and power the house, so I don't know what else to say.
You know what I mean?
Like, we don't need the grid.
That's the point.
I guess.
I don't know.
ian crossland
Whatever.
tim pool
Alright, let's grab some more Super Chats.
What do we got?
What do we have here?
viva frei
I feel naked not being able to follow the chat.
Have I been getting insulted in the chat?
ian crossland
No, people are going crazy.
unidentified
Oh, relentless.
tim pool
They're just like, he's the worst.
No, they're like, he's the best.
ian crossland
When I looked at a few times, they're jazzed.
tim pool
Oh, yeah.
It's like most of the superchats are just like, we love you.
viva frei
Well, DTQC, I know from my community, at least I recognize a couple of names.
tim pool
OuterPZ says, the last three years remind me of when I got out of prison.
They say you only do two days in the joint, the day you go in and the day you get out.
The rest is a blur, just like the COVID years.
Oh, man.
Yeah.
No, it's amazing.
viva frei
It's March 2020, two weeks to flatten the curve.
And we are in 2023, where the US just lifted their vaccine requirements to cross the border in Canada.
Oh, well, that was another interesting one where there was a 2020 law, a 2001 law from Quebec that seemingly allows for compelled vaccination.
People only recently discovered it and thought it was new legislation.
We've been on this trajectory for a long time.
We just Yeah, it had monkeypox as one of the specific illnesses named it.
I think it might have been the other I want to say the swine flu or the avian flu.
I think was one of the swine flus 2001 give or take so I whatever the virus was then.
tim pool
TheTerribleRabbitofDeath says, asking for a favor.
If Tim could give me the info on the medical intervention he got in Mexico, I have bolt cartilage in my hips destroyed.
Bolt cartilage in my hips destroyed?
Three years ago, and I could use some info and help.
Here in Canada, we don't have a lot of help.
It is the Cellular Performance Institute.
They are based out of Tijuana, and Joe Rogan talked about it on his podcast with Eddie Bravo, and I think it's come up more than once.
Eddie Bravo's talking about how it, like, totally fixed his shoulder.
It is not cheap.
It is not cheap, but take a look at their website.
It's an experience, I gotta tell you.
Watch their videos.
You're in this room with all glass windows.
So it's like, there's a back area where there's doors and stuff, but then the whole left side in front is glass overlooking the ocean, where there are dolphins jumping around, and it's just the beach, it's the boardwalk, and you're sitting in this chair, if you're up to the window, but you can just see dolphins jumping in the air and stuff.
unidentified
It's like, wow.
tim pool
And then they hook you up on IVs, take your blood, do all the work.
viva frei
But these are real dolphins.
tim pool
Real dolphins, yeah.
viva frei
Out in the open ocean.
unidentified
Yes.
phil labonte
In the actual water.
tim pool
Out, and, and, and, like, extremely close to humans.
And there was even a seal laying on the beach.
It's, that's Tijuana.
ian crossland
Were you in the clinic the whole time, or did you go to a hotel and back?
tim pool
Hotel and back.
Okay.
And then, hilariously, Tijuana has a chain of casinos that are like McDonald's, basically.
You walk into this very small 2,000 square foot casino with one dealer, and that's That's what people do.
viva frei
How long ago were you in Tijuana?
tim pool
Two weeks ago.
phil labonte
Is it?
viva frei
I mean, I am a very fearful person.
I'll never go.
tim pool
Technically, it was like a week ago.
viva frei
Is it as bad as... I mean, the Tijuana crime rate, I remember looking it up, was atrocious.
tim pool
No, no, it's fine.
I was in Tijuana last week.
We were there Friday.
Saturday, what did we do?
Saturday morning... No, Friday night, we flew to Vegas.
Because we're coming back, and they have this thing called JSX, which is... Just sex.
JSX is an airline.
ian crossland
Sounds like it.
tim pool
And they're a regional airline, 30-seaters, but they fly to private terminals, so it's super easy.
You walk right on the plane.
Awesome.
And it's like the same price as a regular flight.
They just have only smaller planes, so they don't gotta go through the standard BS.
So here's the thing, here's the secret they tell you about places like Tijuana and places like Cartagena and Cancun.
You, as an American or Canadian tourist, are probably totally safe.
Because if anyone screws with you while you're down there, the cartels will flay them alive.
This was explained to me by some journalist who specialized in South America ten years ago, and it's the same thing I hear from people who live in Mexico and live in Tijuana and live in Cancun.
There was a guy, literally last week, told me the story that there was a town in Mexico that had a casino and a resort, and someone kidnapped an American, and it was a huge news story.
Within a month or so, the casino was dead and they were on the verge of collapse.
Nobody was booking anymore.
Americans panicked and didn't want to go there.
The cartels got extremely angry that their source of income was destroyed.
So there was another story where this happened recently.
Someone, two Americans got kidnapped by a cartel member.
The cartel searched their ranks to figure out who did it and turned them all over to the authorities.
So the general idea is you are the money for these people when you come to Tijuana.
You may get pickpocketed, someone might snatch your purse or something like that, but for the most part,
people stay away in terms of crime from tourists because justice in this place for people
who take the money away from the cartels is not what we in America would describe as justice,
more so like...
I don't know.
Criminal harm.
viva frei
You can understand the financial repercussions for crime.
I understand that rationale.
I'm still not going if that's the way that law is maintained.
tim pool
It's like imagine you're walking down the street and you're like, wow, look at this delicious restaurant.
And then a guy's lurking behind you and then he's just gone.
It's just like, I gotta tell you man, Tijuana was amazing, we were walking around, it's totally safe, there's lots of tourists.
ian crossland
I've been there in 2007, it was phenomenal.
It's worth seeing, just to see the border wall from the other side, it's really close to the border.
viva frei
My wife went, but it was 20 years ago, took a bus and then walked over the border and said, did not have a good experience.
But that was 20 years ago.
But also, that's like, it's a safe town, but don't, you know, don't get lost, or don't go here, or don't go out at night.
Then I'm like, that's not a safe town that I'm going to avoid.
tim pool
One of our friends has got like a very nice vehicle.
It's very flashy.
And he's like, never had any problems.
You know, there's probably crime, but it's probably not in the areas where most tourists are at.
And For the reasons described.
Now, I don't know to what extent that's like the case, because it's not like I'm watching cartel members snatch people up, but it's basically what everyone will tell you, like, don't worry, the cartels have your back.
It's not like it's a good thing, but, you know, you'll be okay.
viva frei
It comes to the same, it's just for different reasons.
ian crossland
You went to Vegas, you said, did you see that giant eyeball thing?
unidentified
Yeah.
What is it?
viva frei
Okay, what's the giant eyeball?
tim pool
Madison's, the sphere.
viva frei
The new building, okay.
How long ago were you there?
tim pool
Last week.
Last Saturday.
viva frei
They just finished it and just opened it.
phil labonte
Maybe a month ago?
tim pool
What is it?
It's a giant building with TVs all over it.
ian crossland
Oh, you can go in and hang out.
tim pool
It's a venue.
ian crossland
But on the outside, it's a floating eye.
tim pool
It looks like a big old... It's a building shaped like a sphere with TVs on it.
viva frei
And they can make it look like whatever they want.
They've been building that for a decade.
tim pool
When we flew in, it was the moon.
Oh, that's amazing.
And then one was the Earth, and it's spinning.
The dog eye is creepy.
I think... A gigantic dog eye looking around.
unidentified
I think U2 is going to be their very first event there in September or October, but the tickets are going to be insane because it's not that big of a venue, but it's crazy.
They said what you see on the outside is very similar to what you see inside.
So if you're sitting in the crowd, there's like a screen, like you're completely immersed.
viva frei
That's amazing.
Although if U2 is going to play, they better not play a song off that album that came with the iPhone a while back.
unidentified
Yeah, I remember that.
tim pool
1, 2, 3, 14!
unidentified
Whatever.
tim pool
He would say, uno, dos, tres, cuatro, seis, or whatever.
viva frei
Oh no, I know, I know.
At one point in time, no, you gotta remember when we got...
tim pool
1, 2, 3, 14?
viva frei
No, the controversy for me was you got an iPhone and it came preloaded with an unerasable
U2 album, I forget what it was.
Yeah, it was just horrible.
It was just horrible.
I know...
ian crossland
Was it Vertigo?
viva frei
No, that was before.
ian crossland
I know, the picture on it is Vertigo.
Yeah, that's Vertigo.
I remember it.
tim pool
Let's read some more.
ian crossland
You too, War. Check it out.
tim pool
Clearacall says, Tim, it wasn't called SpaghettiGate but PastaGate because the pasta section was
named pasta in an Italian restaurant in both their French and English menu, but pasta was
used because it's the Italian word.
viva frei
It's all ridiculous.
When you have a law that's been in effect for 40 years that doesn't yield the desired result, the law is the problem, not your law.
tim pool
We have a correction.
Self-Made Woman says, correction, Avery's Law, New Brunswick.
viva frei
Avery's Law, yes.
tim pool
That's the organ harvesting law Fry was talking about.
viva frei
And it was named Avery's Law because a young kid, 15 or 16, was in what turned out to be a fatal car accident, I believe, and they wanted to donate his organs, but the infrastructure wasn't there to allow for it.
So the solution became Spiro Florappa says, Vancouverite here.
Viva explain what's happening here.
Tim says to leave cities and be independent.
I have 50-50 custody with my child and will lose if I leave.
I have no choice but to stay and fight if I want to be in my child's life.
avoiding the problem in the first place.
tim pool
Spiro Floropoulos says, Vancouverite here.
Viva explained what's happening here.
Tim says to leave cities and be independent.
I have 50-50 custody with my child and will lose if I leave.
I have no choice but to stay and fight if I want to be in my child's life.
What can peeps like me do to fight back behind enemy lines to help or to help others?
viva frei
Okay, the number one rule of law, they said if you want to stay wealthy, don't get divorced.
And, um, marital stuff will make culture everything.
But now what can you do?
That's what I say.
I say, I say raise awareness and public shaming.
Who was I just talking to her?
They said, like, you know, tyrants don't respond to public shaming.
No, they respond to a sway in public opinion.
When the public shaming has worked on those who have a conscience, there might be the few politicians out there who have a conscience that can be swayed by public shaming.
The rest will only, um, will change based on public opinion, which can change based on public shaming.
tim pool
Eric Mack 1 says, I heard that Canada has oil.
Sounds like Canada needs some US liberation.
phil labonte
Ooh, yeah.
viva frei
We got, we got oil.
They don't want to exploit our natural resources.
And I say Trudeau prefers to buy from Venezuela and Saudi Arabia.
phil labonte
You could use a little democracy up there.
viva frei
Got oil sands.
There's a lot of gas and oil off Newfoundland.
We are natural resource rich, but we prefer to buy from tyrants because it makes us feel better not to make it at home.
ian crossland
But that makes me think that Canada would become a target for global military action if they have a ton of oil and they're not using it.
viva frei
It's just sitting there.
phil labonte
That's our oil.
viva frei
There are suspicions about foreign interests, Chinese interests, buying up massive amounts of interest in certain natural resources or certain properties.
There is that concern.
I don't know enough about it to rant about it.
ian crossland
Global economic action.
tim pool
Let's read.
Carlos Y says, Tim, I've sent you $100 in superchats trying to ask congressmen if they will table a bill to buy Alberta.
We'll trade oil for freedom.
viva frei
Alberta would be the wrong province to do that in.
You can't break up Canada.
California should annex British Columbia since spiritually and ideologically they're quite aligned.
I say that tongue-in-cheek so that no one thinks I'm anti-Canadian.
tim pool
I'm checking the map right here.
viva frei
That's the whole problem with Quebec separation.
It would separate the maritime provinces physically from the rest of Canada.
You can't do that.
tim pool
We conquer Alberta.
And you have no say in the matter because it is your land we'll be conquering.
viva frei
You might not meet that much resistance.
tim pool
Be greeted as liberators!
Invade Canada.
Oh man, that would be great.
I'm Not Your Buddy Guy says, please invade.
I would gladly join the U.S.
viva frei
Oh.
There's a lot of... Well, it depends which state.
I mean, California, New York invading the U.S., maybe like... Who knows?
But no, ideologically, there's a lot of alignment in certain parts.
But big cities?
Yeah.
California is much like Canada.
tim pool
Robert Bradbury says, Tim's just talking Fallout 3, which I'm playing right now.
Such a good game, Fallout 3.
ian crossland
What was the Fallout 3 references?
Yeah, it is a good game.
tim pool
Just talking about the apocalypse, I guess.
What I'm really excited for is, and I mean this somewhat sarcastically, they've already got a mod for Skyrim where you can actually speak into a headset into one of the characters who can respond using chat GPT.
phil labonte
I can't wait to try that kind of stuff out.
tim pool
It's also multiplayer.
You can download it right now and play it.
unidentified
Oh, really?
phil labonte
On Skyrim now?
tim pool
Yeah, download it.
So basically, you're in the game and you'll be like, companion, where do you think we should go?
And then the companion will respond being like, perhaps we should go to this place.
phil labonte
That's really taking video games to kind of the next level for immersion.
viva frei
Wait until they can neurostimulate sexual arousal and then you can play a video game and actually have meaningful relationships with the character.
I've never played Skyrim.
tim pool
We talked about this the other day, like, we are a year or two away from, not neural
stimulation, but when they already have mods for Skyrim where you can actually talk, yeah,
it's going to be seamless.
You're actually going to be playing like, it could be a mod or a new game could come
out within two or three years, and you're wearing a headset and you walk up to a character
and you say, I need you to join me on my quest.
And it's a random NPC, auto-generated by AI, and they'll be like, me?
What's your quest?
You're like, I am a noble knight going to fight a dragon.
And they'll be like, I can't fight a dragon.
You're like, doesn't matter.
You are coming with me.
And they'll go, dude, you're crazy.
I'm outta here.
And they run away.
I've never touched or seen anything personally about Fallout 3 or Skyrim, so I have no idea how these games work.
Bethesda.
Sounds good to me, what's your name?
And they'll be like, my name's John Smith.
You'll be talking to people.
And then you'll be like, hey, go fight that wolf.
And they'll be like, you got it.
And then they'll run over and start fighting it.
And you're just like, it's gonna be nuts.
viva frei
I've never touched or seen anything personally about Fallout 3 or Skyrim.
So I have no idea how these games work.
tim pool
It's gonna be so crazy.
viva frei
It just sounds like social media where you just never know if you're actually interacting
with a real human or a bot.
tim pool
But people are gonna play games.
There's gonna be some duties, an incel guy, right?
He lives in his basement.
He's gonna play the game and he's gonna see this beautiful female NPC character named Anna Smith.
And he's gonna be like, I choose you to be my maiden.
And she'll be like, yes.
It will remember everything you say because text files are not that big.
And then, you'll come home from work, turn the game on, and be like, how was your day?
viva frei
And it's like, well, I was tending to the sheep, a dragon attacked, and... First of all, did you say Anna Smith because of Anna Nicole Smith, or was that just a random... It's amazing.
tim pool
Randomness.
Smith is a common name.
viva frei
Is it the movie Her?
Or She?
Her.
I've never seen that.
With Joaquin Phoenix.
I mean, this sounds like the plot to that movie.
ian crossland
I haven't seen it.
tim pool
Yeah, basically.
unidentified
Uh, Google has, uh, they made a AI with, like, video game with, like, 30 AIs, and they gave them very few parameters, and they came back to it, and they've created, like, memories, like, the different AI characters with each other and stuff.
tim pool
You know what the scary thing is gonna be?
When you're playing, like, GTA, what are they, on 6?
When you're playing GTA 7, and you walk up to a guy in the street, and you say something like, I'm going to end your life, and they beg you.
They beg for their lives.
It's gonna be nightmarish.
unidentified
And those games where they're- I just wanna say this.
tim pool
Everybody who's ever played a game with, um, morality meters, or whatever you'd call it, like Fallout has it.
ian crossland
Yeah, Fable, stuff like that.
tim pool
Right.
Everybody, the trope is, you play as a good guy, and then once you beat it, you're like, alright, now I'm gonna play it again as a bad guy.
phil labonte
Yeah, then you kill everything you do.
tim pool
No, no, and then as soon as you start the game, and the guy walks up to you, in the first one he says, like, my son died, and you can choose screw you, haha, or I'm sorry for your loss.
You're sitting there staring at the wanting to be mean going, I can't press it.
Can't be mean!
Like nobody, people have a hard time playing the bad character and being evil.
phil labonte
I don't know man, it's pretty easy to pick up the hooker in GTA and then take her behind the building.
tim pool
But GTA's not a game where you're like, so in Skyrim and Fallout, you are building relations with the character, they talk to you and ask you for things, and you have to choose to be a bad person to them.
So what people will do is quicksave, be bad, and then load, and then not be bad anymore.
ian crossland
I'm really concerned for the games that are persistent worlds, where even when you log off, they're still going, because then the people will miss it.
They'll be thinking about it, like, I can't be logged out, I have to be in there, or I'm going to miss.
tim pool
You're going to get a phone call from your NPC wife.
Like, you were bringing this up, you can call NPCs, they'll call you!
ian crossland
Yep.
tim pool
And they'll be like, it's time to harvest the crops.
For $1.99, I can harvest the crops for you.
ian crossland
Oh my god.
unidentified
Yep.
tim pool
And you're going to be like, uh, authorized purchase.
Okay, when you come home, you're going to have fresh watermelon available for your game.
viva frei
This sounds amazing.
I'm going to stick with NES Contra, and I'm going to turn it off.
ian crossland
Good game.
Up, up, down, down.
viva frei
I finished the game without losing a life.
Me too!
tim pool
Already, I was talking to a customer service AI bot, and I was like, human, and he goes, I can answer a lot of questions.
Why don't you try?
Ask me anything.
And then I'm like, no, I want to speak to a human.
But I can answer your questions.
Try asking.
Like, we're already there where this creepy bot is trying to be the, you know.
ian crossland
How many lives did you have when you beat the game after you didn't die in Contra?
viva frei
I don't even use the up-up-down-down-left-right-left-right-A-B.
ian crossland
I used the code, but then I didn't die and I had like 33 guys at the end of the game.
viva frei
Oh yeah, because you get an extra life every day.
You end the game with an intact, if you don't lose a life, with 7 men, I believe.
tim pool
6 or 7.
viva frei
14 minutes and 57 seconds, didn't lose a life.
ian crossland
Nice work.
tim pool
Alright, everybody!
ian crossland
Spread gun?
tim pool
It's Friday night!
viva frei
Oh yeah, that's the best.
Rapid spread gun.
tim pool
That's the best one, of course.
Everybody, if you haven't already, would you kindly smash that like button, subscribe to this channel, share this show with your friends, buy our coffee!
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I guess everybody really wanted the medium roast.
And you can become a member at TimCast.com.
You can follow the show at TimCast IRL.
You can follow me personally on X at TimCast.
That's right.
In the App Store, it now says X. There you go.
Viva, you want to shout anything out?
viva frei
Of all of my platforms.
So, VivaBornsLaw, which camera?
Look in this one?
ian crossland
This one.
viva frei
VivaBarnesLaw.Locals.com for an amazing community of legal analysis, political insights, and a lot of family stuff, because I add a lot of the family stuff there in terms of a crayfish from the Potomac River pinched my kid's hands today.
What did you learn?
I asked him, what did you learn?
I learned nothing.
So I threw in a little Stewie clip.
Twitter, Angry Viva, V Viva Fry, or X. What else?
Rumble, Viva Fry.
Those are the, and if you Google Viva Fry, you'll find everything.
tim pool
Always a pleasure, man. Oh yeah, I also just wanted to mention, apparently we're approved to launch in the app
stores, Timcast app.
Oh, sweet. I don't know if it's there yet, but it might be.
That'll be fun. Not yet, but I guess we got clearance to do so. Coming soon.
But if you go to Timcast.com, there's a mobile app section, so you can download the Android one at least. Sick.
phil labonte
I am Phil Labonte, philtheremainsofficial on Instagram, philtheremains on Twitter or X, whatever you want to call it, I don't care.
The band is All That Remains on Spotify, Apple Music, Pandora, YouTube, all the places, you know.
ian crossland
I'm Ian Crossland.
Follow me at IanCrossland on X and everywhere else.
Mines, YouTube, you name it, you go there, I'll probably be there.
And hit me up.
Good to see you, Dave.
Always a pleasure, man.
Really good to see you.
viva frei
Thank you very much.
Now I'm on to the next leg of the journey with down to Florida.
So we'll see if I can get there tomorrow.
It's like 14 hours in good weather, but might have to break it up over two days.
ian crossland
Godspeed, my man.
viva frei
Thank you.
unidentified
And you guys can follow me at kellenpdl.
I'm a supporter of the Great Alaskan Expansion.
That's what I'm gonna call it.
And actually we get dolphins out here in Maryland.
Occasionally they'll come up the Potomac River and the Chesapeake Bay occasionally too.
tim pool
Go right on.
unidentified
But yeah, fun show.
Thanks guys.
tim pool
Thanks for hanging out everybody!
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