Sunday Uncensored: Jack Posobiec Members Only Podcast
Tim & Co join Jack Posobiec for a spicy bonus segment usually only available on Timcast.com. Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices
Tim & Co join Jack Posobiec for a spicy bonus segment usually only available on Timcast.com. Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices
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Welcome to our special weekend show, Sunday Uncensored. | ||
Every week we produce four uncensored episodes of the TimCast IRL podcast exclusively at | ||
TimCast.com, and we're going to bring you the most important for our weekend show. | ||
If you want to check out more segments just like this, become a member at TimCast.com. | ||
Now, enjoy the show. | ||
Ladies and gentlemen, I'd like to have this special announcement for all of you right now. | ||
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And the wicked old witch at last is dead. | |
In come the witch is dead! | ||
Witch, oh witch, the witch is dead! | ||
In come the witch, the witch is dead! | ||
Way down to the sleepy head! | ||
From your eyes, get out of bed! | ||
Way down, the wicked witch is dead! | ||
She's gone where the darkness go below! | ||
Below, below your home! | ||
Of course, um, we are using this to parody the death of Kissinger, who is a disgusting and awful human being, and will not be missed. | ||
Yeah. | ||
I won't miss him. | ||
Yeah. | ||
That was it. | ||
Rudy Giuliani said he's gonna miss him. | ||
Oh, really? | ||
Like, you know, look, like, does the devil miss his demons? | ||
You know what I mean? | ||
Sure. | ||
You think Rudy Giuliani's the devil? | ||
No, I just mean like. | ||
Or is he the demon? | ||
Yeah. | ||
I understand now. | ||
I do always, I was thinking of the munchkins from The Wizard of Oz when Peter Dinklage said that no dwarfs should be allowed to be in the movie because the munchkins from The Wizard of Oz, they were all little people and they all talked for years afterwards about how they made this community and a lot of people had met and fallen in love and everything and Peter Dinklage wanted to deny them He doesn't want them to work, and he doesn't want them to meet people in this community. | ||
What a fucking dick. | ||
He's really a fucking dick, yeah. | ||
It's sort of selfish, though. | ||
He gets this one big role, he makes all his money, and he says, I don't care about the rest of you. | ||
Anyone else who could potentially benefit from this niche advantage that you could have in Hollywood casting? | ||
Leave it to a little person to pull the ladder up behind him. | ||
Like, come on, man. | ||
What the hell is that about? | ||
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Oh, Tim's signaling at me because it's snack time here. | ||
Brimcast IRL, as you know. | ||
Let's see, this says, Michael Latt, social justice charity founder who worked with the rapper Common, is shot dead by a homeless woman who broke into his LA home. | ||
We're seeing a lot of these these days. | ||
Where was his gun? | ||
A homeless lady breaks into his house, why didn't he shoot her? | ||
Probably he didn't have a gun. | ||
Only bad people have guns. | ||
Only bad people want to protect themselves and those they care about. | ||
You know what's funny is, isn't he a first responder? | ||
He's a social worker. | ||
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Yeah, I think so. | |
Yeah, that's true. | ||
He couldn't talk her down. | ||
He couldn't say, can I offer you mental health counseling? | ||
Right. | ||
Real quick, Tim, that thing on Kissinger, I just found the clip. | ||
Which one? | ||
Remember I was saying Kissinger gave this interview. | ||
Yeah, did you tweet it out? | ||
No, I'm about to tweet it out now. | ||
I just found it. | ||
It wasn't just globalism. | ||
He specifically was talking about mass migration. | ||
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Wow. | |
He actually said it was a grave mistake to let in so many peoples of so many different cultures and religions. | ||
It's like, he's like, he's on the way out the door, but he realizes, you know, maybe there were a few mistakes that were made. | ||
And it's like- Did you have the video? | ||
Yeah, I'm shooting it right now. | ||
So there's, I don't know, part of me is like, there's the Kissinger that won the Cold War, right? | ||
Or at least set up the window of the Cold War. | ||
Here we go. | ||
But then there's like everything after. | ||
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It's a grave mistake to let in so many people of totally different cultural and religious and concepts | |
because it creates a pressure group. | ||
Inside each country that that's said. | ||
Let's agree. | ||
How the f- Like, this dude's clearly dead already. | ||
I mean, when was this video from? | ||
Uh, that- Maybe a couple months ago. | ||
You know, I- I- I was, uh, we're- we're- we're talking about building a house. | ||
And, um... It's from October. | ||
The- yeah. | ||
The, uh, the- all the construction guys are like, you don't want to- We were like, we want a- we want to build a silo house. | ||
That is several stories. | ||
So not, it wouldn't be particularly big square footage wise, but it would be tall for security reasons. | ||
And we think it'd be fun. | ||
And they're like, no, that's a really bad idea because you're not gonna be able to do stairs soon. | ||
I'm like, I'm 37. | ||
And they're like, yeah, but you know, we got a lot of clients, a lot of customers, they get in their fifties and starts and they can't do the stairs anymore and they want something else. | ||
And I'm just like, is that for real? | ||
Aging in place is a real concern, especially when you're renovating or buying houses. | ||
I mean, I think there's a reason people want first floor- I'm doubling the stairs. | ||
We're going narrower and eight stories now. | ||
It also becomes a problem if you, like, have major surgery and can't get to your room, right? | ||
Like, there are other times when having tons and tons of stairs isn't you- I don't want to stop on your dream. | ||
I will be 70 years old, and I will be chewing on- I will be chomping on a block of wood as I pull myself up, refusing to not be able to climb stairs. | ||
I'm with you on that one. | ||
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Anyway, that's Henry Kissinger everybody. | |
I will say this though as well, you can dunk on Kissinger, you can be critical of Kissinger, but look at American diplomats now. | ||
Right? | ||
Like, like none of them even hold a candle to this guy. | ||
None of them are even close. | ||
None of them could even, like, come anywhere close to operating on this guy's level. | ||
Now it's like they literally sit there and talk about things as if it's like... | ||
Like Star Wars or Marvel as a reference point. | ||
He's like citing European philosophers and analysis. | ||
Yeah. | ||
Did you see that one interview this lawyer gave and he's like, he mentioned like the worst arc and bleach is like to make his point. | ||
He's like literally using a bleach and anime that I watched. | ||
Wait, who, what? | ||
Yeah, there was a lawyer. | ||
It was something that, uh, Penguin Zero or Moist or whatever. | ||
The Bounce arc? | ||
Yeah, exactly. | ||
And I was like, and it's crazy that she brings it up in like the right context and uses it. | ||
I'm like, yo, is this really like the world that we live in? | ||
We're like people of my age are like watching this and being like, are you really using a bleach reference? | ||
I just started watching Jujutsu Kaisen. | ||
Oh, true. | ||
Yeah. | ||
But it's, it's wild people. | ||
This is like the reality we're in now. | ||
It's like people are using like literal anime references to make their points in court. | ||
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It's because they don't have traditional stories to rely upon to make those points. | |
Not traditional stories, but they haven't done the work. | ||
And these are the people who are supposed to be leading reforms. | ||
There's actually a funny take on, not funny, but you know, like tragically funny take on sort of like Western Russian relations. | ||
where it's like the the Westerners just assumed that the Russians are like them and lying about everything and You know don't have any true beliefs and the Russians are sitting there like 19th century you know diplomats like Talley Rand and And these guys going like well if the if the expansion of NATO continues beyond this border we will have to respond militarily and then it goes back to the American they say I What do they mean by that? | ||
What do they really after? | ||
What's Putin's game? | ||
Ah, the Baltics! | ||
That's what it is! | ||
He's Voldemort! | ||
The quote that I think summarizes it, I can't remember who said it is, no one's trying to solve problems anymore, they're trying to get wealthy enough so the problems don't affect them. | ||
That's everything. | ||
That's Brazil. | ||
So when they say like, we're going to go to war, they come back and like, and they think, okay, so I got to get X amount of dollars and buy a bunker here because we're going to war. | ||
Instead of being like, how do we prevent war? | ||
How do we save lives? | ||
Let me tell you. | ||
When I watched, when I saw those photos of the construction workers in Chicago building the migrant camp, that boiled my blood. | ||
That is the root of all of this. | ||
Individuals who are willing to accept blood money to burn to the fucking ground their own communities. | ||
These construct- or, or, or, or other peoples. | ||
These construction workers probably don't live there, they don't give a shit. | ||
And so when the people who live there are saying, don't bring these illegal immigrants into our fucking town, These construction worker guys smile, spit on the ground and say, I get paid too much to care about how you fucking live. | ||
They are shitting on your floor. | ||
People should be more pissed about this. | ||
People should protest, but there's no cohesion. | ||
Everybody's just going to take the buck and burn it all to the ground. | ||
That's the unfortunate thing. | ||
But to be fair, I do think we're winning. | ||
So call out the shitheads when they're shitheads, but... | ||
You know, I think we're moving in a positive direction. | ||
Which is the point of this story where the guy gets shot in his own home. | ||
The woke left, playing this stupid game, and another one- there's another story where it's like woke leftists who, you know, opposes cops or whatever, I don't know if this guy does, but gets shot and killed by a homeless woman who broke into his house. | ||
It's funny, that's why it's news. | ||
For what reason would the Daily Mail run a story about a guy being killed by somebody? | ||
I mean, murder is not big news for the Daily Mail, an international story for a UK paper. | ||
No, it's because he's a social justice worker, social justice activist who was killed by a homeless person in a city where he likely advocated for these stupid-ass fucking laws which result in this chaos. | ||
You know what my attitude is? | ||
You want cashless bail? | ||
You think you want bail reform? | ||
People get arrested and you can't hold them until they're proven guilty? | ||
Fair, I totally agree. | ||
And I get to have a gun, so when those people threaten me, I can defend myself. | ||
Libby, what was the guy's name in Philadelphia? | ||
Ryan... Oh, I was just looking that up. | ||
Ryan Caron, was that it? | ||
The guy who was killed in his home, and it turned out that he was killed by someone he had molested, that one? | ||
Well, I mean, this is what they claim, right? | ||
Vaguely, yeah. | ||
That my brother actually had met that guy. | ||
Which the suspect, or the... | ||
The victim. | ||
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The victim. | |
And, you know, this was a guy who was all over Twitter, used to attack conservatives, used to attack Scott Adams. | ||
This'll never happen. | ||
Josh Krueger. | ||
Josh Krueger, Josh Krueger, okay. | ||
That was the name, the name that I said, I think, was the guy in Brooklyn, who, by the way, has the Antifa girl, who has the Antifa girlfriend, who, if you follow her account, she's clearly been living off of the GoFundMe, where they raised $75,000, and just, like, living large. | ||
Yeah, it was for her. | ||
Yeah, it wasn't for his family. | ||
It was launched for her to be able to quit her job and grieve. | ||
And grieve, and she's like buying dresses and going out and- That's so, dude. | ||
This is the one, if you remember that video where her boyfriend's getting stabbed and she's just kind of like watching passively. | ||
And I'm not saying- Ryan Karsten was his name. | ||
That's the name, I was thinking. | ||
Yeah, Josh Kruger was the one my brother met. | ||
And yeah, he got shot by a guy six times at his front door. | ||
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No way. | |
Who did end up being a a black criminal who had been in and out of the system? | ||
For real. | ||
and and all right shocking and But the part that was shocking I think was that his family | ||
members the shooters family members came out later and said actually | ||
We have evidence that our son was involved in a sexual relationship | ||
with Josh Kruger had been in this relationship since he was like like a young teenager and | ||
Had been provided with drugs and money and all the rest have been groomed essentially by this guy and | ||
And so the police, this was something that I was told by a source early on in the investigation, was that the police found Josh's phone and that they found evidence of... | ||
I see. | ||
These videos of this relationship. | ||
Let's just put it like that. | ||
That stuff had been filmed. | ||
And so they sent that to me early on and said, go through and screenshot all the Democrat politicians in Philadelphia that are currently praising this guy because he's got photos of him being in a sexual relationship with an underage boy. | ||
I mean, I think part of all of this is that people thought... And yes, I did archive all of them. | ||
There was an argument in 2020 that, you know, we should defund police because we can have social workers and we can have a social justice approach. | ||
We need community, this, that, and the other. | ||
And ultimately crime did not stop. | ||
And so I think that's why stories like this get picked up by the Daily Mail, because it's just so apparent that the system is failing and the attempt to institute a Soft response didn't work. | ||
And at what point do you look at these communities and say, we are, you know, we are, it's a disservice to you because you are experiencing crime. | ||
You are also suffering. | ||
Like, it's one thing when the social worker gets this, you know, Daily Mail write-up, but who is getting robbed on the street? | ||
Who's getting broken into every day? | ||
The people who live next to people who are unstable and who are opposed to violence. | ||
I just gotta read this one because this is a progressive guy's tweeting this. | ||
Henry Kissinger died of natural causes in his home in Connecticut instead of in a cell at the Hague like he deserved. | ||
That's a lefty guy. | ||
I think, I think this, you know, culture war armistice for all of the woke left and whatever and right to come together and celebrate. | ||
It's like, it's like, what was it, the Christmas armistice? | ||
The Christmas Truce. | ||
The Christmas Truce. | ||
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1915. | |
Yeah. | ||
Where we all like, we climb out of the trenches and we go, wait, wait, wait, guys. | ||
I know we're mad at each other, but Kissinger is dead. | ||
We can pop a champagne. | ||
Was it 14 or 15? | ||
I think it was 14 and 15. | ||
That's a based story though. | ||
But then I know they stopped. | ||
Christmas is magical. | ||
You guys are right. | ||
I know they stopped. | ||
Well, they stopped after like the first big one. | ||
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1914. | |
So as the war dragged on, it did not continue. | ||
No, no. | ||
There's a lot of bad blood at that point, I imagine. | ||
Yeah. | ||
So this was the French and Germans decided to not attack each other on Christmas Day and to spend the day playing soccer. | ||
This happens in inner cities in America on Christmas Day, right? | ||
It was actually the week leading up to December 25th, French, German, and British soldiers crossed trenches to exchange seasonal greetings and talk. | ||
Men from both sides ventured into no man's land on Christmas Eve and Christmas Day to mingle and exchange food and souvenirs. | ||
What the fuck? | ||
Yep, smoking cigarettes and stuff. | ||
This is just something that you, I mean, you'll see this in, you know, you know, a Christian European style of warfare, at least at the beginning. | ||
And by the way, this was not something that was sanctioned from early on, from high up, high above, that high command in many people, in many sides, in many cases actually like fought against it. | ||
And some of the later on, some people were chastised over it. | ||
I'm saying you could be giving away military positions, that kind of thing. | ||
But I think it's always spoken to the higher power of of religion, of Christianity, of humanity in some cases. | ||
But, you know, as the war continued, you know, this this this tradition. | ||
We should we should grab some collars. | ||
We should indeed. | ||
Three by if three if by treachery. | ||
That's a great username. | ||
What's going on? | ||
How are you today? | ||
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I'm doing great, guys. | |
Glad to be glad to be back on. | ||
Can you hear me loud and clear? | ||
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All right. | |
Well, shout out to the cast. | ||
Love you guys again. | ||
Thanks for having me back on. | ||
And poso on War Room Posse, brother. | ||
So we don't see you enough anymore there, and we really miss you, but... I appreciate that. | ||
No, I'm going to be... We're going to be doing some more stuff. | ||
Don't worry. | ||
And Steve and I talk literally every single day, all day long. | ||
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Yeah, I'm sure you do. | |
I mean, you and Raheem Kassam were kind of like the young guys bringing the younger crowd to Steve. | ||
So, you know, it's great. | ||
But I don't want to take too much time. | ||
I have a two-part question. | ||
I know you're a Graham Hancock fan, Jack. | ||
Totally vindicated Graham Hancock. | ||
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Totally. | |
You know, with that revelation, though, in Gunung Padang, right, and the fact that it's so old, it's, you know, it's a disruptive discovery, right? | ||
And with your intelligence background, I was curious how you think that legitimate disruptive discoveries like this impact people, because it really destroys centuries of narratives that kind of people have been spoon-fed, and they really base their identities on. | ||
Yeah. | ||
And it, you know, at a time right now also when so many other fundamental truths are being attacked, right? | ||
It's kind of like a reverse PSYOP, but really wanted to know how you think this really impacts society. | ||
And then secondly, you've also mentioned his work doesn't dispute the Old Testament. | ||
And I was wondering if you're explicitly talking about the scripture or the church, because I do think that the church has really tied themselves to some of the narratives that I mentioned before. | ||
So thanks for taking my question. | ||
Yeah, no, that's a great, great long question there. | ||
I'll try to break it up. | ||
So does everyone, I'm going to assume that we should probably explain what Gunang Padang is and all of this stuff. | ||
So, there was this pyramid structure that was found in Indonesia. | ||
It's heavily featured in the Netflix docu-series, what was it called? | ||
Ancient... Oh, I was just reading about this the other day. | ||
Ancient Architects, with Graham Hancock. | ||
And he says this is clearly the oldest pyramid that we've ever had. | ||
There's a new study that came out this week basically confirming that that pyramid dates back to 27,000 years ago. | ||
So that would put it easily about 25,000 years older than the Pyramid of Giza, which is already one of the oldest megastructures that we've seen anywhere on the planet. | ||
There's like that Gobekli Tepe in Turkey. | ||
In what is today Turkey. | ||
And then this in Indonesia, which, you know, and if you, you know, to hear Graham Hancock hear it, explain it, he's saying that at that point, because Indonesia, all of those islands, like Indonesia's, you know, series of broken up islands back then, it would have all been one country, and potentially even connected with the mainland, just because of the way the ocean was at the time. | ||
So this, you know, this question, you know, obviously raises the question of, you know, where did that civilization go? | ||
Because there was no advanced civilization that continued for all those years in Indonesia. | ||
And really, Indonesia doesn't see much development until the Muslim colonization of Indonesia later, which is like, like the 1400s, right? | ||
So it's quite recent in terms of human history. | ||
So, you know, to the second part of his question about how does this, you know, about the IC and the Intel background, I mean, you got to understand that, you know, just in the Intel community, I mean, that's, that's your, That's your DC blob. | ||
People do not go in there to question narratives at all. | ||
They watch CNN, they read the New York Times, the Washington Post, that is the narrative they go by. | ||
And if you raise your hand and say, I don't think that that's what Putin's trying to do, or I don't think that's what China's trying to do, I mean, you'll just be laughed out of there. | ||
Or worse, you'll get reports written against you. | ||
Like, I don't think Russia's trying to take over the U.S. | ||
using Donald Trump, right? | ||
You know, that's the IC. | ||
The IC actually believes these things. | ||
But as far as people's conception, again, there's going to be, I do find it, I think the trajectory is quite good in terms of some of this, where Graham Hancock is a guy who, you know, in the 1990s people would have laughed about him, but because of programs like this, obviously his many appearances on Joe Rogan, you know, it's really become much more mainstream than is acceptable to hear these things and understand it. | ||
And as far as, you know, when I've talked about the Old Testament, you know, I think the Old Testament, the history that we get through there, like, I'm not a fundamentalist, right? | ||
I think everybody knows that. | ||
And so, the history that we get through the Old Testament isn't necessarily tied, I mean, some of it is obviously tied to direct historical events, but some of it, the really, like, book of Genesis kind of stuff that's in there, when they talk about the flood, well, again, you know, there's a lot of evidence of a global flood, and that's something that Graham Hancock finds again and again and again. | ||
That may have been precipitated by this global cataclysm. | ||
We don't know exactly what it was. | ||
I mean, there's a lot of theories, potentially massive strikes from asteroids, meteor showers. | ||
This is something that is heavily dug into in ancient architects. | ||
And so just, you know, highly recommend people check it out. | ||
and keep an open mind about that stuff. | ||
You know, there was a time where the out of Africa theory was taught and that everybody, you know, had to believe | ||
that. | ||
And you were, you know, you were called a racist if you didn't. | ||
And now there's more evidence that's come out and said, well, OK, just because at that time | ||
we had found the oldest skeletons in Africa doesn't mean that there aren't other skeletons | ||
otherwhere that could be found. | ||
And then there were. | ||
And so now people are questioning that and saying, oh, well, I guess it's a little bit more | ||
complicated than all of that. | ||
And so, you know, that's that's all I would say to anybody on that is that history is probably | ||
a lot more complicated than we give it credit for. | ||
Yep, I'd agree. | ||
Yeah, I think that's so interesting, too. | ||
Like, I saw a little bit of a report on this the other day, and I didn't really get a chance to dig into it, but it did pique my imagination, and I started to think about... Oh, excuse me, ancient apocalypse. | ||
That's what it's called. | ||
Ancient apocalypse. | ||
I was saying architects, but ancient apocalypse. | ||
Yeah, I just started to think about what if human beings evolved all over the world and with different civilizations, and we don't know half of what has come before us. | ||
It really is so fascinating to think about that. | ||
Graham Hancock's big line in the series is, we are a species with amnesia. | ||
Yeah, well we have to be, right? | ||
Because we are not actually that great at leaving written records. | ||
The records that we've left, we can track those, we see what they are. | ||
But when I think about our internet age, and I think about what kind of records we're going to leave behind as a civilization, It's all very easily wiped out. | ||
Every record of what we are as a contemporary civilization is so easily destroyed. | ||
You want to hear something cool? | ||
Yeah. | ||
Do you know there's no hieroglyphics that describe the building of the pyramids? | ||
Yeah! | ||
That's so weird. | ||
So one of the most ancient languages on the planet, one of clearly I think everybody recognizes the Egyptians as one of the great early civilizations, have a written language that thanks to Napoleon and the Napoleonic Wars that we were able to translate because of the discovery of the Rosetta Stone. | ||
And yet even with all the hieroglyphics that we found, there's no written record whatsoever for the building of the pyramids, which of course has led to people, people to theorize that, well, that's because the Egyptians didn't build them. | ||
Right. | ||
Which I think is just nuts. | ||
I mean, can't we give humanity some credit for having been brilliant? | ||
unidentified
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Well, no, no, no, no, no. | |
It doesn't mean that like aliens definitely built them. | ||
It just means that maybe the Egyptians found them. | ||
unidentified
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Yeah. | |
Oh, that's interesting too. | ||
The time frame is different. | ||
Can you imagine finding the pyramids? | ||
Crazy. | ||
You'd be like, wow, that's cool. | ||
Well, I don't mean to cut the short, but three if by treachery. | ||
Anything else to add quickly here? | ||
unidentified
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No, I just hope that Graham gives you a promo code POSO for his next book. | |
Nah, I'll definitely give it a shot. | ||
You do a great job summarizing his work, and Serge, you've got the name twice, man, so the enemy isn't coming. | ||
They're already among us, three of my treachery. | ||
Thanks for having me, guys. | ||
Cheers, man. | ||
Great call, great question. | ||
Alright, next up, let's see. | ||
Charbizard17, you're with us. | ||
How are you today? | ||
unidentified
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Hey guys, how are you doing? | |
Good, how are you? | ||
unidentified
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I'm doing A-OK. | |
Long time, first time. | ||
Thanks for taking the call, and I'm really happy with what TempCast has become. | ||
Hey, thanks man. | ||
So, it's for the panel, but it's mostly coming from Tim's comments on being a butt-light guy now. | ||
Here we go. | ||
I was waiting for the shoe to drop on that one. | ||
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We all know that what Bud Light went with and now they're completely reversing course, right? | |
So they're sponsoring UFC again, things like that. | ||
They're completely going for what society is actually accepting. | ||
Should we accept Disney because they took out the diverse dwarves and put in CGI correct dwarves or should or for | ||
that matter Starbucks because they started to kind of veer back towards what | ||
society is actually deeming as acceptable. What's the line to forgive like big | ||
businesses The moment they go in the right direction, you go, | ||
yay, I'm gonna give you money now. | ||
And they go, hey, we're making money doing this. | ||
Then the moment they do a bad thing, you go, no, now we're not giving you money. | ||
And they go, hey, wait, if we do this thing and we keep doing more of this, we're gonna make more money. | ||
It's kind of like raising kids. | ||
Yeah. | ||
You know? | ||
It's positive reinforcement. | ||
Don't buy things that suck and Starbucks will stop carrying them. | ||
Right. | ||
Because they don't actually care. | ||
It's working with Disney. | ||
Zero HP Lovecraft had a tweet about that, about Disney recently. | ||
And he was just like, you know, it's it's really not that hard, Disney. | ||
All you have to do is make a movie that doesn't seem like it's a middle finger to white males and This is like too hard. | ||
Can't do it. | ||
Can't do it. | ||
Impossible. | ||
How can you ask us to do that? | ||
That's crazy. | ||
What? | ||
unidentified
|
What? | |
Which is kind of sad that that's all they had to do. | ||
And they're like, but what if we lose? | ||
And like Aladdin wasn't a movie about, you know, and that doesn't mean like you can't have stories. | ||
Right. | ||
So like Aladdin was one of the biggest stories. | ||
And last I checked, Aladdin is set in the Middle East and has like Jasmine and Sultans and genies and stars like an Arab lead. | ||
You know, and all these things. | ||
And an old man trying to marry a much younger girl. | ||
An old man trying to marry a much younger girl. | ||
That's a cross-cultural. | ||
Happens all the time. | ||
And so, you know, audiences aren't, like, hateful of that kind of stuff at all. | ||
This was one of the most, one of the biggest franchises of the 1990s, easily. | ||
It's just that when you make these things that come across as if they're against a certain group, in this case a group that happens to include my children, then yeah, I'm not going to support that. | ||
Which is funny, by the way, because my son actually at one point had seen, I guess, the trailer for Wish and was like, oh daddy, there's a new movie coming, it's called Wish. | ||
And I was like, yeah, we're not seeing that. | ||
Yeah, it's the evil white man can grant all your wishes if he chose to, but he doesn't want to. | ||
Right. | ||
Right, like, no, this is, right, yeah, I should explain. | ||
The plot is actually anti-white male. | ||
They're bombing, and now Disney is going to their investors and saying, hey, this is not working. | ||
So, now that they're course-correcting Snow White, good. | ||
Doesn't mean I'm gonna go see it, we'll see how it goes, but if they do a, what Jeremy Boring said, it's gonna be a shot-for-shot remake of the original Snow White, good, and he gets asked, what if Disney course-corrects, and he goes, That's wonderful, then we won! | ||
Shot for shot from the animation? | ||
Yeah, they're gonna make a live-action shot-for-shot remake. | ||
Like, now that they're chorus-correcting. | ||
Good. | ||
Do you remember when Vince Vaughn did that with Psycho? | ||
No, he didn't. | ||
It was before he kind of got big and he played Norman Bates in a shot-for-shot remake of Psycho, which was fantastic. | ||
That's wild. | ||
Actually fantastic. | ||
Well, anything else to add there? | ||
unidentified
|
Uh, no. | |
Uh, I've never really been a Bud Light guy, always a Midler Light guy. | ||
It's like, I'm not gay, guys, just wanted to let you know. | ||
unidentified
|
Nah, I just won't look at my friends in a weird anymore whenever they get the Michelob. | |
Thanks, guys. | ||
Yeah, Michelob fans vindicated, I guess. | ||
Yeah, true. | ||
Cheers, mate. | ||
I've been a Modelo guy forever, so. | ||
Modelo's great. | ||
Yeah, not gonna change now. | ||
Uh, Fenris. | ||
Fenris Solfer. | ||
You are live. | ||
How's it going? | ||
Is that a Narnia reference? | ||
I don't know. | ||
Fenris Ulfur. | ||
unidentified
|
Fenris Ulfur. | |
U-A-L dash F-R. | ||
unidentified
|
Correct. | |
Yeah, that's it. | ||
It's a Nordic, that's actually what Fenris' name in Nordic history was. | ||
It means Fen Wolf of the Dwelling. | ||
Right, but then that's also in Narnia, that's where they get the, that C.S. | ||
Lewis got the name for the wolf that's working for the White Witch. | ||
Makes sense. | ||
Oh, yeah, sure. | ||
Is named Fenris Ulf. | ||
unidentified
|
Thank you for taking my question. | |
I'm a big fan of just pretty much all your content at this point. | ||
The question is pretty much with Elon Musk. | ||
Do you think they will make Elon Musk portrayed as crazy? | ||
Maybe to stop him from sharing blackmail information? | ||
It's kind of starting to look like Tesla. | ||
Well, I mean, they can't stop him. | ||
I mean, I think this is one of the reasons Elon bought Twitter. | ||
A lot of people probably don't realize that when the media was attacking Tesla, he's probably thinking, how can I control the narrative so they stop fucking doing this? | ||
And there you go. | ||
The interesting thing about the attacks on Tesla is, you know, Biden has been all in for the EV cars, but he leaves Tesla out because Tesla's an on-union shop. | ||
Yeah. | ||
So. | ||
That being said, if you're talking about like blackmail, trust me, if there were an actual oppo file on Elon, which, you know, I'm sure there's going to be all sorts of stuff that comes out the same way they try to do this to basically anybody these days, whether it's Dave Portnoy or anyone they want to get rid of, there's going to be like Oh, the female employee who got upset. | ||
Elon's weird because he doesn't fit into a complete, like, it's not like he's like, I'm a super Christian who has this nice family. | ||
And then it turns out whatever, like, he's got this weird stance on having kids. | ||
He wants lots of them. | ||
He's open to surrogacy. | ||
And also he wants everyone to have children. | ||
He's like been married. | ||
He hasn't been married. | ||
He's got like, Celebrity models who are crazy as fast I mean like I'm sure stuff will come out on the other hand he is not actually- If there were actual bad stuff we'd know by now. | ||
Well that's the thing he's not claiming a hard like squeaky clean you know persona he's sort of an eccentric weird guy and is open about that so other than potentially like sexual harassment stuff I don't really know what would come out. | ||
And it doesn't seem like he needs to sexually harass anyone because all kinds of women want to have his children. | ||
There would be. | ||
I'm just saying. | ||
I mean, the child support alone is worth it, right? | ||
I think it's a whole career women can have these days. | ||
Look at like Eugene Corral, though, or Eugene Carroll, that they came out for Trump. | ||
Like, Elon, I guarantee you that right now there are operations going on. | ||
They're working on it. | ||
Where they're trying to dig into like PayPal and his, you know, The original SpaceX crew, just anything they can, anyone who knew Elon on the come up when he was getting big, that can come out and will be against him. | ||
Even if it is like Eugene Carroll or, and keep in mind they did this. | ||
Maybe it is Eugene Carroll. | ||
Right, exactly. | ||
That yeah, once Trump was done with her. | ||
Elon Musk was also at Bergdorf's that day. | ||
Right, right, right. | ||
Then Kavanaugh, the way they did this to Kavanaugh. | ||
So it is a tactic that has been proven to be somewhat useful for them and I think they're going to continue to use it. | ||
Yep, they're using against Eric Adams right now. | ||
And them is the regime. | ||
People could say, what do you mean by them? | ||
I mean the regime. | ||
Who's they though? | ||
The regime. | ||
Happy anniversary. | ||
Happy anniversary, everyone. | ||
Fenris, anything else to add? | ||
unidentified
|
Thank you for answering my question. | |
The only thing I wanted to mention is I've recently took your advice, Tim, to step up and make a difference in the culture war. | ||
I opened a business and have started to create an app myself. | ||
I appreciate you taking my question and anyone can look me up on Twitter or XNOW at headfirstspark. | ||
What's the app? | ||
unidentified
|
I'm working on an app that allows users to meet potential people that have assets like trucks or tractors. | |
Pretty much anything that, you know, you may need but may not have access to. | ||
So, like, someone in the city that's moving may need somebody that has a truck. | ||
That's really cool. | ||
Someone that has a tractor and needs to be able to move. | ||
Oh, it's like the share economy kind of thing? | ||
Yeah, co-op idea. | ||
I like that. | ||
That's awesome. | ||
Yeah, it's kind of like co-op, but it's also sort of like TaskRabbit, I guess. | ||
unidentified
|
Yeah, it is like TaskRabbit. | |
But for stuff. | ||
But, well, for truck stuff, though. | ||
Yeah. | ||
unidentified
|
Well, tractors, too. | |
Tractors, too. | ||
I love it. | ||
Hey, man, that's sick, dude. | ||
Four plus, like all of it? | ||
That's cool. | ||
Does it have a name? | ||
Say the name again. | ||
unidentified
|
I know a guy. | |
It's called I know a guy? | ||
It's called I know a guy? | ||
That's hilarious. | ||
Oh, that's so brilliant. | ||
That's so brilliant. | ||
Look at this guy going. | ||
He's got a great name, a great product. | ||
Hey, cheers, brother. | ||
unidentified
|
I wish you the best with it. | |
I guess I'll try and read the first part of your name. | ||
I want to beat GAE. | ||
You're with us. | ||
The other name would be Endil Wayfair. | ||
Endil Wayfair. | ||
unidentified
|
Yep, that's me. | |
How you doing? | ||
unidentified
|
Hey, thanks for taking my call, guys. | |
And it's probably cut off there, but the full thing was I want to beat the GAE with software. | ||
Oh, oh. | ||
I was trying to squeeze a little bit more information. | ||
Surge thought it was something very different. | ||
I couldn't see the rest of it, so. | ||
Surge is fired, it's fine. | ||
He thought he was going to commit a hate crime by reading your name. | ||
Oh man, I'm glad I did not. | ||
I'm glad I did not. | ||
unidentified
|
Anyhow, my question. | |
is for Agent Poso. | ||
Yo yo! | ||
unidentified
|
So, given the tide of the culture war, it seems to be turning in our favor, and we seem to be starting to win again. | |
And I had this question before we found out that Henry KissMyAssinger had shuffled loose this moral coil. | ||
But, what are the most important measures or work, in your personal opinion, that we should have our focus on to keep up the pressure and the momentum? | ||
It's nice to take W's instead of L's every once in a while, but we're still at the turning point. | ||
Am I intended? | ||
Yeah, we're on the precipice of an election year that is, quite frankly, you know, people always say this, this is the most important election, but I mean, I can't think of a chance that the American people have had, and really the planet has had, In any point in recent generations to actually get a movement in power and get a power base in | ||
in place in the country that has the ability to separate like when 1776 happened there's there's an argument to be made that yes of course you know the the normal narrative of the united states declaring independence from the british uh empire and um you know the 13 colonies in student new country but there's also an understanding that it that was the america becoming a nation state and separating itself from the global system of the time the global system of the time was known as the british empire Well, the global system of our time is known as the G.A.E. | ||
or the Globalist American Empire. | ||
We run that empire in many ways, you know, sort of in conjunction with Brussels and the UK, but in general, yes, it's us. | ||
And so we actually have the opportunity in, you know, maybe not as dramatic of a way as 1776, but certainly in as meaningful a way to re-found our country As a nation state once more where we control who lives here and who we don't want here. | ||
We control the laws. | ||
We control the criminality, the level of it. | ||
We actually are able to restore our rights. | ||
We're able to keep our money within our communities, keep our money within our homes, not having to send it over abroad. | ||
I mean, you have all of these things that are on the table. | ||
And there's going to be a series of Herculean tasks between now and, you know, less than a year from now, the election. | ||
We're less than a year away from final election day. | ||
And when I just think of all the hurdles that need to be fought, all of the battles that need to be won on the way to that election, not just the primaries, but the legal battles and not just the legal battles, but then it'll be the ballots and that'll be the harvesting and early ballots. | ||
I just look at so much work in so many states that needs to be won. | ||
Obviously, it comes down to the Rust Belt and so little time that we have to actually achieve it. | ||
I mean, I've already got people calling me. | ||
I'll just say it. | ||
I'm already scheduling dates for Iowa for when I'm going to be in Iowa, then New Hampshire, then South Carolina comes. | ||
And so this is going to ramp up a lot faster than I think people realize. | ||
I think it's sooner than people realize, too. | ||
I mean, when does the primary start? | ||
January 15th, right? | ||
unidentified
|
Less than 50 days. | |
It's crazy. | ||
unidentified
|
Yeah. | |
Who's the first state? | ||
Is it Iowa? | ||
unidentified
|
Iowa. | |
Well, Iowa is a caucus, which is separate from a primary, different system, but it is the first state that votes, yes. | ||
And then what? | ||
New Hampshire is? | ||
New Hampshire. | ||
Unless you're with the Democratic Party, then they want South Carolina. | ||
Well, we're talking about the only one that matters. | ||
Anything else sad? | ||
unidentified
|
Yeah, I suppose that just given your boots on the ground, kind of inside baseball nature, can you think off the top of your head of any of these specific battles, on whatever front, by whatever person or organization or whatever, could use the most help from custom software? | |
Or like if there's a problem that needs to be solved if there's some kind of augmentation. | ||
Yeah, so for software, I mean you've got you've got two examples. Number one is tracking and | ||
understanding botnets on X. So obviously there's botnets involved in Israel-Gaza, | ||
there's botnets involved in Ukraine-Russia, there's botnets involved in pushing all | ||
sorts of things across X. So being able to track those, understand those Antiva networks. | ||
So that's number one. | ||
And then maintaining, of course, freedom of speech on X writ large, which Elon has been obviously leading the way on. | ||
That's why he's under attack, which has really been the theme of today's entire show. | ||
But I don't think we've actually said it, that he has done the most for freedom of speech than any other person alive on the planet, I would say, at this point. | ||
And so that's number one. | ||
That's clearly a ton of software implements there. | ||
And the number two is election integrity. | ||
There's so many issues that are going to come up with not just the general, but also the primary, that I think there's a lot of implementations of software that we can look at there as well. | ||
unidentified
|
Who should I work with? | |
That's the question. | ||
I'm trying to put together a coalition of developers, and I think the most weak part of my plan currently is market research as it is. | ||
Interfacing with the people already doing the work. | ||
Yeah, over at Turning Point Action, which is our C4, we've got an entire data arm that's directly involved in these universes. | ||
So Turning Point Action is a great organization that, you know, even if it doesn't work out exactly with what you're looking at, you know, certainly point you in the right direction. | ||
unidentified
|
Yep. | |
Okay. | ||
Thank you very much, Po. | ||
I greatly appreciate it. | ||
And Lord willing, barring an act of God, I will be there at AmFest. | ||
Can't wait to see you guys in person. | ||
Let's do it. | ||
Can't wait. | ||
Yeah, we're on Monday night. | ||
Wait, you got your schedule. | ||
I haven't got my schedule yet. | ||
unidentified
|
We had to do a show on stage. | |
Monday's a hard day to do. | ||
I might do a breakout with Gadsad. | ||
unidentified
|
Uh, pretty well. | |
Thanks for taking my call. | ||
My question is for the panel. | ||
Yeah, really great gentlemanly discussion about why white people are responsible for the attacks on Israel to him. | ||
All right, man Thanks for calling in Cheers, man | ||
Alright Jay, let's see what this is jammer 68. You are alive. How is it going? | ||
unidentified
|
Pretty well, thanks for taking my call. Of course a question | |
My question is for the panel In a 2020 election. What's the one thing that wasn't looked | ||
at in any of the battleground states that could have turned the election? | ||
Thank you. | ||
I'm pretty sure Jack knows the answer to this, but there were lawsuits involved in it and a lot of other things. | ||
Even the Georgia Attorney General promised to examine it, but failed to do so. | ||
Well, the question is about Georgia. | ||
So there currently is a case that one of the first in the nation in Georgia test case, I believe that's going to be going forward, where a federal judge who is appointed by Obama has actually ruled that so typically when people make cases against the states regarding anything to do with the 2020 election, or just any elections in general, They've, you know, either ruled that you can't make this case because you don't have standing or that you've missed the, you know, you've missed your chance because the election is over and because since the election is over your case won't go anywhere, that it's not been held. | ||
And then on the electronic voting machines, obviously, which Mike Lindell has been probably the key proponent in the country against, you know, they've not seen a lot of relief from the courts. | ||
Again, not because the courts have actually looked into the material, but because they refuse to. | ||
That's not the case in Georgia. | ||
Because in Georgia, now there is a case at the federal level, so the federal district court in Georgia, where an Obama-appointed judge has ruled that the case will go to trial. | ||
And in her ruling, she went through an entire litany of explanations as to why these machines are susceptible to cybersecurity issues, Yeah. | ||
hacking and and this is something by the way where if you remember the questions | ||
unidentified
|
2004? | |
about the electronic voting machines it was always the left it was always the | ||
left that brought this stuff up for like 15 years the same way it was the left | ||
for yeah for the die-bold machines the same way that it was the left that was | ||
anti-vax it was the left that was like you know you zinc don't use sunscreen | ||
for all those years The health movement totally started on the left. | ||
And now it's suddenly like, oh, we're not those anti-vaxxers, not those right wing scum. | ||
It's like, what's funny is I was going on X recently. | ||
Not recently, maybe like a couple months ago. | ||
And I was pulling up old Jim Carrey tweets that he still has up that are anti-vax. | ||
And just to point out that you were the guys that embraced this stuff, right? | ||
And now you claim that you don't. | ||
And so the fact of the matter is that yes, that case will be coming up in January in 2024. | ||
Which is huge, because, now people need to understand this, the outcome of the case, right, may only affect, people are saying that it's, so it may only affect actually the touchscreens, as opposed to the actual tabulation part, because, I mean, these guys, they're geniuses at deception, right? | ||
They say, well, okay, maybe the touchscreens have a problem, but the tabulators are fine, right? | ||
So they'll piece it all the way, they'll make you fight for each inch on the battlefield. | ||
But! | ||
If that case is able to get enough information out into the public sphere, then the public can put pressure on the Georgia legislature to decide to strike down the machines by act of the state legislature because they control the elections. | ||
So what I'm what I'm gearing up towards saying here is that you could actually have a situation where the Georgia election of 2024 is held with paper ballots only, just like they did in Argentina, which would actually be Yeah, that's not exactly what I was talking about, Miss. | ||
unidentified
|
All the battleground states, and every one of them, the one thing that was never looked at was the signatures on the envelopes for the mail-in ballots. | |
Georgia even has a law that says that any candidate can request an examination, but the Democrats sued and claimed it was a issue of privacy, and so they were never looked at. | ||
That's also one of the most common things where fraud is found. | ||
And for context, in 2020, I read an article that said that in Nevada, The average, the machines that can't do the signature verification, the average failure is a 10%, but in the state of Nevada it was less than 1%. | ||
Yep. | ||
Yeah, and remember that's, and so what they're doing is, and I apologize if something was cut off in your earlier question, but they're, what they do is they actually pull a percentage of the ballots, and they don't go one by one, and then they test those, and in some cases they actually use machines to try to verify the signatures rather than someone | ||
actually look like when people hear signature verification you you know i think the general | ||
assumption is that someone is looking at a copy of the signature and then looking at the ballot and | ||
seeing if they match and that's not what happens at all they run it through a machine that's | ||
supposed to be able to track this but the machines aren't calibrated or in many cases even if it | ||
doesn't match they let it through anyway look i'm just going to say it | ||
I mean, there's a million problems there. | ||
There's a million problems with the way that we run elections in this country. | ||
unidentified
|
Paper! | |
Um, you got to go to paper and as if eventually, you know, you need to minimize mail-in ballots because this is why mail-in ballots in general are not a good idea. | ||
Well, and we knew that this was happening when Nancy Pelosi started talking about it in the spring of 2020, and she was like, we're gonna have to do- Remember, HR1 came out before COVID. | ||
It was before COVID, all this stuff was in place. | ||
Yes, and they were ready for it, and they were pushing it so hard, these paper ballots. | ||
In New York, you don't need an ID or anything, you just have to sign your name, and the poll workers are supposed to look at your name as you signed it in the first place, and look at your name as you signed it now. | ||
And I have repeatedly signed it a million different ways and they just let it go through anyway. | ||
I think probably they also don't want to deal with it. | ||
No, why would they want to deal with it? | ||
They're all essentially electing to do a bureaucratic job and so probably bureaucrats are not motivated to do anything that's outside of regulation. | ||
The other thing too with poll workers is these are part-time seasonal jobs. | ||
You get some people that are super into it though. | ||
You do actually get some people that are like really civic minded. | ||
Typically it's like retirees, seniors. | ||
I think not enough though, right? | ||
Maybe not in, like, cities, as she's describing inner cities, but I've been in places where people do take it very, very, like, ridiculously level of serious. | ||
But, like, cities are where it counts, right? | ||
Cities are where massive amount of frauds could potentially be perpetrated more easily. | ||
What I'm saying is, though, is that the only way to really control for that is to get rid of the massive mail-in ballot systems. | ||
Now, obviously, the problem is, And I've said this again and again until I'm blue in the face, and I said this to President Trump, that if you're in a state where you don't have the ability to do that, you don't have the leverage politically to be able to do so, then you've got to beat them at their own game. | ||
So if they're bringing 2,000 mules, you can't complain about it. | ||
You've got to say, all right, you've got 2,000 mules, I'm bringing 10,000 mules. | ||
I want 10,000 Scott Presslers. | ||
That's the only way to win this game. | ||
And then once you win, then you can make the rules, right? | ||
Then you can take it back to whatever you want. | ||
How do you get conservative donors to get on board with this stuff and start funding these kinds of initiatives? | ||
You just keep going down the list until you find the ones that will. | ||
Okay. | ||
Yep. | ||
10,000 Scott Presslers. | ||
Yeah. | ||
Yeah, so I think the important thing about paper ballots to understand, too, is if we do switch, it doesn't change the ballot harvesting, which is why, like you said, 2,000 mules, we need 10,000. | ||
I don't think paper ballots will be the end all be all. | ||
I think there are a lot of places for error, so there have to be a lot of places for correction. | ||
Right, so it's you go paper, but it's how do you collect the paper. | ||
There's also several states that are only mail-in balloting, like Colorado and Washington. | ||
unidentified
|
Yeah, right on, man. | |
Was that good? | ||
Was that sufficient? | ||
unidentified
|
Yeah, pretty much. | |
Just want to shout out my gaming channels on YouTube and Rumble, Gaming with Gamer68. | ||
What was that on there? | ||
unidentified
|
They said they're gaming with Yammer 68 on YouTube and Rumble. | |
Started creating content again after over a year of being off for medical reasons. | ||
Oh hell yeah, man. | ||
Before we go to the next one. | ||
No, that's it. | ||
That's the last one. | ||
Okay, then just to throw here at the end. | ||
Diane Feinstein. | ||
Henry Kissinger. | ||
unidentified
|
Who's next? George Soros. | |
There was already a meme on that. | ||
I saw that meme on Twitter. | ||
It comes in threes and it's gotta, it's gotta be before the end of the year. | ||
All right, everybody. | ||
Thanks for hanging out. | ||
Jack, thanks for hanging out. | ||
It's been a blast. | ||
Always fun to be here. | ||
And I guess we'll see you next time in Phoenix. | ||
We'll see you in Phoenix, man. | ||
Uh, we got, uh, Danny, uh, uh, Danny Palaszczuk and Ryan Long are going to be here tomorrow. | ||
It's going to be a lot of fun. | ||
Friday is going to be wild on The Culture War. | ||
We got Tyler Fisher and Alex Steiner are going to be hanging out. | ||
We're going to be talking comedy, especially with Lady Ballers coming out. | ||
So thanks for hanging out, everybody, and we'll see y'all tomorrow. |