Speaker | Time | Text |
---|---|---|
You Yeah, we're getting dangerously close to World War three | ||
And it's funny because we keep talking about it, but it is just grains of sand making the seep. | ||
So Macron of France says that Russia will not be allowed to win, and that NATO will deploy troops into Ukraine if necessary. | ||
Vladimir Putin said there will be war with NATO if they do that, but it's obvious because if NATO deploys troops into Ukraine, NATO is basically declaring war on Russia. | ||
And that's where we're at. | ||
Now you've got a U.K. | ||
defense minister basically saying, we will crush Vladimir Putin, he can't do anything about it. | ||
China is preparing to conscript its civilians. | ||
I mean, they already do, but they're planning a civilian defense force. | ||
We're seeing this in a bunch of countries across Europe. | ||
And there's even been some fear of the draft coming back in the United States. | ||
unidentified
|
Oh boy! | |
Hope y'all are ready for, uh, World War 3. | ||
Because the, uh, I don't know, the Senate sure is hell-bent on going to war over Ukraine. | ||
Yeah, I, I, well, okay, you know what? | ||
There must be, like, I don't know, just a pot of gold buried somewhere in Ukraine they're trying to find, because they really want to blow the world up for this European farmland, but... | ||
Who am I to say? | ||
I don't know, I guess. | ||
We'll talk about that. | ||
Plus, there is a primary going on tonight in Michigan. | ||
And yeah, Donald Trump's going. | ||
But what is interesting is Democrats are voting uncommitted. | ||
They're refusing to support Joe Biden over Israel. | ||
This is going to be interesting. | ||
Now Joe Biden is saying that there may be a ceasefire coming soon. | ||
A deal to have a ceasefire. | ||
Really? | ||
Man, the far left really does have a lot of swing. | ||
We'll get into that, but before we do, my friends, head over to eyesofadvice.com, pick up the new song, or go to TimCastMusic, or at TimCastSongs on YouTube, and check out the latest song, Eyes of Advice. | ||
We're getting a bunch of rave reviews over the CGI. | ||
You can see here, for those that are watching, the demon, the smoke monster, coming into the room and harassing Ian. | ||
So definitely check us out if you haven't already. | ||
Also, make sure you go to castbrew.com, pick up your coffee to support the show. | ||
Cast Brew is our company, we sponsor ourselves. | ||
And, go to timcast.com, click join us, become a member. | ||
As a member, you'll get access to the members-only uncensored show. | ||
And, as a member, you can actually get tickets to our soon-to-be-once-a-month live shows in Martinsburg, West Virginia at our Cast Brew location. | ||
Shout-out to Good Ranchers! | ||
If you click the link in the description below, you can get a good little discount on your meat! | ||
Good Ranchers is awesome! | ||
Shout-out to them for sponsoring our Super Tuesday event in Martinsburg, West Virginia. | ||
It's GoodRanchers.com. | ||
You can see the link in the description below. | ||
Leads you to a special discount code. | ||
And basically what you do is you pick a box, you get special, real good meats. | ||
It's farm-fresh stuff, and I'm a big fan of this. | ||
I really am. | ||
Because, well basically, I like farm food, and we were talking about this the other day, like I just like eating raw beef. | ||
And if you're getting stuff from real farmers, that's done right. | ||
And if you're getting stuff from Good Ranchers, you're gonna get good quality meat, and you gotta do it. | ||
I'm doing, I just hired a personal trainer, so I'm really excited, gonna be working out, getting that macro plan in, and certainly wanna get a lot of protein. | ||
So, shout out to Good Ranchers, thanks for sponsoring the event. | ||
Again, become a member at TimCast.com for the uncensored show coming up tonight. | ||
At 10 p.m. | ||
Don't forget to smash that like button, subscribe to this channel, share this show with your friends. | ||
Joining us tonight to talk about this and everything else is Riley Moore! | ||
Thanks for having me. | ||
Riley Moore, State Treasurer, West Virginia, also Congressional Candidate in West Virginia, 2nd Congressional District. | ||
Right on. | ||
That's us! | ||
That's us! | ||
It's gonna be great, and it seems like you're a shoo-in for the job. | ||
Yeah, so far it's looking very good. | ||
Polls have us up by about 50, so yeah, feeling pretty good. | ||
All right, well thanks, that should be fun. | ||
We've got Phil Labonte hanging out. | ||
Hi everybody, my name's Phil Labonte, I'm the lead singer of All That Remains. | ||
I am an anti-communist, counter-revolutionary, and tonight I am a cyborg. | ||
Hi Libby, how you feeling? | ||
Everybody listening has no idea what that slight pause was. | ||
Everybody watching was just like, what the? | ||
I'm just playing around with the Apple Space Face, whatever it is. | ||
What the is exactly, right? | ||
This is what I get to look at for the whole rest of the night. | ||
It's very exciting. | ||
Libby's nervous. | ||
I'm not nervous, I just... Phil's gonna be... I prefer your face, Phil. | ||
You can pull up the chat with the Apple Vision Pro and have it like floating in the air. | ||
That's awful. | ||
Literally surrounded by sewage. | ||
Surrounded by chat. | ||
No, if I pull up the Discord, it'll be awesome, but if I go into the YouTube chat, it's just gonna be... Yeah, you know, I ordered them to try them out. | ||
I don't know what they're for. | ||
They're basically an iPhone. | ||
That's it. | ||
They need some apps. | ||
I was messing around with the dinosaur thing, and it's cool. | ||
Dinosaur thing? | ||
Yeah, there's a virtual reality experience that comes in. | ||
You just swipe over to the right and... | ||
There's virtual photographs and videos, which is kind of cool, like you can create a 360 environment capturing a moment or something. | ||
Yeah, I mean, I think that the technology is cool and I think that people will find uses for them. | ||
I don't think that they're going to stay $4,000 forever or whatever. | ||
I think that it's probably going to be something along the lines of Uh, a phone, but I think that's going to be a little more niche. | ||
I don't think everyone's going to pick them up. | ||
But anyways, yeah, I'm not going to pick it up. | ||
I'm Libby Emmons. | ||
I'm with the Postmillennial and I'm glad to be here. | ||
I am Ian this evening. | ||
Hanging out. | ||
I am Serge.com. | ||
unidentified
|
Looking at this robot over here is interesting. | |
Beep bop boop. | ||
We had him downstairs and I was like, hey Phil, do you want to wear this on the show? | ||
And he was like, yeah! | ||
Hell yeah. | ||
Alright, let's get into it. | ||
So, wow! | ||
Here's a story from today. | ||
CNN.com reporting, Macron says nothing ruled out, including using Western troops to stop Russia winning Ukraine war. | ||
I mean, come on. | ||
You know, it's fascinating how they'll try to mince up the headlines. | ||
They can just say it. | ||
NATO is threatening to deploy troops into Ukraine in a direct declaration of war on Russia. | ||
CNN, how about this? | ||
Macron says nothing is ruled out including declaring full-scale war on Russia. | ||
They don't want to do that because you've got now stories popping up where they say Russia warns of war with NATO if troops are deployed. | ||
No, no, no, no. | ||
Vladimir Putin is saying if you deploy troops that would have been a declaration of war on us. | ||
It sure would. | ||
Yeah. | ||
Yeah. | ||
I mean, it clearly would have been. | ||
And also, NATO, I don't know who the person was from NATO, but there was someone speaking on behalf of NATO. | ||
unidentified
|
The NATO chief said Ukraine will be joining. | |
Yeah. | ||
I mean, that's just saying there will be some kind of confrontation with Russia. | ||
Hopefully. | ||
That is a personal declaration of World War III. | ||
Sounds like it to me. | ||
When the NATO chief came out and said, Ukraine will be in NATO, what they said to Vladimir Putin at that moment was, consider yourself at war, and it will not stop until we get what we want. | ||
So I think something important to keep in mind is, so George Kennan, he was a father of the containment policy, right, during World War Two, basically, what created NATO down the road, North Atlantic Treaty Organization, and After the Cold War ended, he said the biggest mistake that we can make is the expansion of NATO eastward. | ||
That is what he said. | ||
The father of the containment policy. | ||
That's something to think about. | ||
And he said it would cause irrevocable damage. | ||
in terms of trying to shore up relations with Russia. This is right after 1991-92. | ||
And he continued to say this into the 2000s. And I think, I can't imagine he's still alive, but | ||
that's been very clear. Secondly, how many of these countries are actually paying their 2% of GDP | ||
into NATO? | ||
Is France and all? | ||
No, most of them don't. | ||
They don't pay. | ||
It's basically Macron being like, hey Russia, my friend America is gonna come beat you up. | ||
unidentified
|
Yeah. | |
And I'm sitting here as an American be like, oh come on dude. | ||
Yeah, I'm gonna get a fight for you. | ||
So and that's why, you know, you have the political side of NATO, the political leadership, that's the Secretary General who here recently said, yes, we're, you know, Ukraine is going to join NATO. | ||
But look, there is a military component to this, which we make up the mass amount of it. | ||
These folks can't even spend 2% of their budgets on defense, which they are treaty bound to do. | ||
So why would we go along with any of the other treaty obligations if the other ones are not being met? | ||
Donald Trump has said this multiple times and everyone freaked out like, what is he talking about? | ||
This makes all the sense in the world! | ||
European countries are basically vassal states for the United States Empire. | ||
So we want war, and they're going to do what we tell them to do. | ||
Well, they had a great deal post-World War II. | ||
We subsidized their security so they could have social welfare programs. | ||
So that's basically what happened. | ||
NATO was the umbrella of security, then they rolled socialism into the countries, and now we're going to have to show up and protect. | ||
Didn't they also go through substantial disarmament in Europe? | ||
Yes. | ||
They haven't been manufacturing munitions. | ||
They haven't been manufacturing any weapons. | ||
They have instead let what they have, you know, rust and they haven't made anything new. | ||
Yeah, at the end of the day, it's NATO. | ||
That's us in the UK and like 10 troops from like, I don't know, Slovenia and like 10 troops from Croatia and you know, this and this and that. | ||
France obviously has a sizable military component in this, but Turkey's in it. | ||
What does Turkey think about this? | ||
I'd be curious to know that. | ||
They are NATO ally. | ||
Have you looked at the NATO map? | ||
Man, we are really surrounding Russia on their western front. | ||
I mean... It's rude. | ||
Yeah, with Turkey to the south, with Finland to the north, and now the last barrier, you've got Belarus and Ukraine, basically. | ||
Yeah, and I mean there are some people that have talked about even expanding this to countries like Georgia, where you have break-off territories, South Ossetia and Abkhazia during that war that took place. | ||
Look, NATO served a very clear purpose and I think it can continue to serve a purpose. | ||
They gotta pay. | ||
Yeah, I mean these folks gotta pay up. | ||
They have to pay up. | ||
And, you know, the terrible thing in all of this, and this has been reported and you all have talked about this, is that there was a peace offer early on in this and that got scuttled immediately to put us in the position we are now, which I think is completely unfair to the U.S. | ||
taxpayer and citizens that we're going to bear the brunt of decisions and statements that are being made by some foreign country who's actually not going to have to do much with it. | ||
Oh boy. | ||
Look, I mean, the whole interview that Tucker did with Putin, I was watching the Lex Friedman interview with Tucker today, and they were talking about the fact that Riley brought up Putin wanting to get into NATO, making comments about we could align against Iran with With Russia. | ||
Now, I don't know how truthful this is, but it seems like a whole lot better than a nuclear war with Russia. | ||
The entire time that, well, since at least 2012, there's been all kinds of CIA operations in Ukraine. | ||
The whole issue with Ukraine and stuff is Heavily influenced by NATO and by the United States and by the you know the intelligence apparatus and stuff none of its actually organic and This is only causing more problems for the whole of the world like why not be you know? | ||
Why not align with Russia? | ||
Granted, Putin's not a good guy, but it's not like... Well, Zelensky's not a good guy either. | ||
Yeah, I mean, we... There's so many not-good guys out there on the liberal landscape globally. | ||
If you imagine that we only align with good people... I don't see any good guys, in fact. | ||
It is a childish way to look at the world to think that the only people that the United States are going to align with are quote-unquote good guys. | ||
Also, there's no basis for what good means. | ||
A childish way to look at the world, I can only imagine what weird little dinosaurs you're looking at right now. | ||
Right, it's very bizarre. | ||
It's weird to interact with you like this, Phil. | ||
No, I mean, look, Phil's right. | ||
Yeah, obviously. | ||
Oh, bless you. | ||
Bless you. | ||
Please do. | ||
unidentified
|
Thank you. | |
It was fun while it lasted. | ||
I mean, look, obviously, Putin is not a good guy. | ||
I got that. | ||
The world's full of bad guys that, you know, and guess what? | ||
The world's also full of hard choices for the United States. | ||
And look, I feel bad for what is happening to the people in Ukraine. | ||
There's no doubt. | ||
I mean, it's awful what is happening. | ||
But let's be realistic in terms of like the ultimate objectives here in Ukraine. | ||
Is it the total defeat of Russia and deposing Putin? | ||
Is that our strategic objective here? | ||
No one's really articulated that to me. | ||
Is it just continue to provide armaments till some type of peace settlement? | ||
I don't know. | ||
I think NATO's plan is the full and total subjugation of the Russian nation. | ||
Well, and if it is... It's a huge nation. | ||
It's a bad plan. | ||
Yeah, look, I think it's like eight time zones or something like that. | ||
140 million people. | ||
And the issue that we're going to have is who's going to be doing the peacekeeping operations and stability operations in that country when you have 20,000 loose nukes running around? | ||
That's going to be us. | ||
We're going to be doing that. | ||
Do you think Macron and France are going to show up and secure that? | ||
How many places are we going to get tied down while China continues to grow and strengthen influence and power? | ||
You know where the real war is going to be between the West and Russia? | ||
It's going to be Canada. | ||
Is there a South Park reference here? | ||
No, I mean, if you think about it, that's the fastest way to get to the United States from Russia. | ||
If Russia is going to war with the US, it's not going to waste time with European countries that don't make weapons. | ||
If it really is going to become a war, Russia just goes over the North Pole. | ||
That's the point. | ||
I mean, Russia's proximity to Canada is It's very close. | ||
Yeah, I mean, they even have a prison north of the Arctic Circle. | ||
That's where they were keeping Navalny and whoever else. | ||
What is it? | ||
The Arctic Wolf Prison? | ||
Yeah. | ||
Yeah. | ||
What a miserable, miserable sentence that must be. | ||
unidentified
|
Go to the Arctic where it's dark fur. | |
Isn't that where Solzhenitsyn was up there in Siberia? | ||
And he talked about, in Gulag Archipelago, he talked about eating prehistoric frozen salamanders and stuff. | ||
I don't know that he was in the same one, but he was definitely in there. | ||
No, but he was up there in the frigid cold with the frozen creatures. | ||
So, you know, we got Google Earth pulled up right here and it's like, you know, I'm half kidding about the Canada stuff, but Russia, I mean, Alaska's right here. | ||
If there's war, Russia is basically next to Europe and next to the United States. | ||
They're gonna go right through Sarah Palin's front yard. | ||
Right? | ||
She'll be able to see them. | ||
unidentified
|
Yep. | |
Could you imagine if, like, Russia conquers Canada? | ||
I don't know how much I would care. | ||
Oh, I like Canada. | ||
Yeah. | ||
I like Canadians. | ||
unidentified
|
Yeah. | |
I like Canadians, too. | ||
A lot of moose, though. | ||
You know what I mean? | ||
I don't know how I feel about those moose. | ||
We still have a bunch of Canadians that are post-millennial. | ||
Cue the blame Canada song. | ||
Hey, I mean, I think we should take Canada first if it's going to be over Canada. | ||
Right? | ||
I mean, yeah. | ||
I mean, here's the crazy thing. | ||
It's like, that's a possibility. | ||
No, I mean, I'm not even joking. | ||
There's a lot of resources, man. | ||
Let's say, you know, whatever the propaganda is, we go to war and it's World War III. | ||
U.S. | ||
troops will immediately be in Canada. | ||
Because Canada is right- We'd have to be. | ||
It's separated by a small, by a relatively small distance. | ||
And Alaska is, the Bering Strait is almost touching Russia. | ||
Russia has very direct access to the United States and to Canada. | ||
U.S. | ||
troops would immediately be stationed in Canada. | ||
Yeah. | ||
I wonder, I mean, this is far-fetched, but like the way that the Canadian government is going, if they don't make some significant changes, there is a possibility that they become, they're currently the most authoritarian country in the Western Hemisphere. | ||
Have you seen that? | ||
unidentified
|
Have you guys seen recently in Parliament how they're discussing, like, if they can say the word fart in Parliament and stuff like that? | |
Yeah. | ||
Whoa, whoa, whoa. | ||
Family-friendly show. | ||
What are you doing here? | ||
unidentified
|
Take it easy. | |
They've got online censorship acts. | ||
unidentified
|
It's crazy. | |
They've got, like, prison terms for hate speech. | ||
I mean, it's all insane up there in Canada. | ||
Yeah, I mean, maybe it's a little far to say that they're the most in the Western Hemisphere, but they're likely up there. | ||
Well, you've got Venezuela. | ||
Yeah. | ||
Like, they're not great. | ||
And Cuba and Venezuela. | ||
Cuba's not amazing. | ||
So maybe they're not... | ||
Cuba and Canada might be a little bit related. | ||
Who knows? | ||
You know, lately Cuba's been relaxing, if I understand correctly, and Canada's been tightening up a lot. | ||
I told some friends of mine, I was like, look, if you need a place to stay and you want to go ahead and run south, it's not that far to my place in New Hampshire, you know? | ||
Oh, that's not bad. | ||
It's a nice offer, yeah. | ||
I will be hiding Canadians from the Canadian Mounted Police, and if the Canadian Mounted Police come on my property, I will shoot at you, police! | ||
unidentified
|
I'm kidding, that's a joke. | |
To help calm things down, we're in this time where we're very scared we could be escalating to World War III. | ||
The good news is we have good leaders of sound mind. | ||
from the sun.co.uk. | ||
NATO would crush weak Russia, and Putin knows it! | ||
That's why we're not on the cusp of World War III, says UK Defense Chief. | ||
Well, okay. | ||
I think we look pretty weak and pathetic, frankly. | ||
Oh, today we just saw that the army is down to 24,000. | ||
24,000 people or something like that? | ||
No, no, jobs. | ||
They're cutting the jobs because there's no people to fill them. | ||
Yeah. | ||
Right. | ||
So they're just getting rid of the jobs. | ||
I'm not sure what the jobs are, obviously. | ||
I don't have the inside track on it, but 24,000 people. | ||
There's a lot of civilian jobs in the army. | ||
It would be funny. | ||
24,000 people out of, I mean, your volunteer army is less than a million now. | ||
And they can't get guys because they hate white people, and white people are typically the ones who join the military. | ||
I think that's wrong. | ||
I think there's a large population base from which to pull to fill those jobs. | ||
You know what's interesting about all of this? | ||
That is a pathway to citizenship, traditionally. | ||
Can you imagine? | ||
They have that bill. | ||
It's in play. | ||
Courage to serve. | ||
This type of rhetoric that we're hearing right now, you know, we'll crush Russia, this and that. | ||
During the Cold War, we were very careful about the language that we used as it related to the Soviet Union at that time. | ||
I remember, like, Ronald Reagan would set people, like, their hair on fire. | ||
They were like, what did he say? | ||
Like, wigging out. | ||
And guess what? | ||
They have basically the same amount of nuclear weapons then as they did now, slightly less. | ||
They actually have more strategic nukes than we do. | ||
Thanks, Obama, for the START treaty. | ||
And that fell apart. | ||
Yeah, thanks for that one. | ||
And it's if I believe them anyway, when they're like, yeah, we'll take apart our nukes, put them in the back. | ||
Yeah, well, the crazy thing when they were redoing that treaty is that it addressed strategic nuclear weapons and not tactical. | ||
And they have like a 10 to 1 advantage on us on tactical nukes on the European border. | ||
So explain the difference. | ||
We're talking about, like, nuclear artillery and battlefield nuclear weapons. | ||
Right. | ||
So it has to deal with how many – I mean, so the size of the weapon and then also how far it can go. | ||
So think about an intercontinental ballistic missile, ICBMs. | ||
Those are strategic nukes. | ||
MIRV technology, multiple independent reentry vehicles, so they'll break into different warheads and target different cities. | ||
One MIRV can hit the entire eastern seaboard? | ||
Yes, yes. | ||
This is crazy. | ||
And they've got what, like thousands of them? | ||
unidentified
|
Thousands. | |
Yeah, I mean they have like close to 20,000. | ||
Of MIRVs though? | ||
Of strategic nuclear warheads. | ||
Right. | ||
The MIRV, specifically, I think it holds between 8 and 12 bullets. | ||
unidentified
|
It can hold up to 12, yeah. | |
Tactical, though, is artillery pieces and things like that. | ||
Right, like 100 kiloton? | ||
Yeah, something like that. | ||
That's crazy. | ||
With one MIRV, they can do, like, a lot of bombing, but their actual operating procedure, if I understand correctly, is to have multiple nukes go to the same target because they want to make sure that it gets wiped out. | ||
The crazy thing, too, is they do not detonate on impact. | ||
No. | ||
They detonate over the city to maximize the blast radius. | ||
Mm-hmm. | ||
Crazy. | ||
Yeah, because thermonuclear weapons really comes down to heat. | ||
Yeah. | ||
Right? | ||
It's about vaporizing. | ||
The crazy thing is, I learned this, I did something, this video for Discovery like 10 years ago, almost now, and the radiation in nuclear weapons is intentional. | ||
They do not need to leave nuclear fallout behind. | ||
There are nuclear weapons that have low radioactive yield. | ||
However, they were like, we kind of want to make the land inhospitable for, you know, decades to thousands of years. | ||
I think thermonuclear weapons actually have less fallout than so like a like a fission weapon versus the fusion weapon. | ||
The fusion weapon has Remember when New York did that duck and cover drill a couple years ago? | ||
Was it years? | ||
Yeah, it was a couple years ago. | ||
They were like, if there's a nuclear explosion in New York City, stick towels under your doors, cover your windows, and duck and cover. | ||
And everyone's like, why are they telling us to do this? | ||
You're stupid. | ||
Well, listen, my friends, I gotta tell you something. | ||
If you're living in a city and you haven't bought chickens by this point, I don't know what to tell you. | ||
Yeah, probably a better drill would be put your head between your legs, kiss it goodbye. | ||
Hold on, but a better drill right now would be get away from high-priority targets and buy chickens. | ||
Yes. | ||
Now you probably want some goats. | ||
You know, you got to learn how to do all that stuff. | ||
We just sent a good portion of Cocktown to the, let's just say, to Rooster University. | ||
So, uh, we're having the first annual, uh, TimCast's first annual Cockfest on, uh, Friday. | ||
Damn. | ||
Where we are all going to enjoy consuming the roosters. | ||
That's right, they're all dead. | ||
Wow. | ||
We spared three of them. | ||
Come to snuff the rooster. | ||
Come to snuff the rooster. | ||
What kind of dishes are you gonna make? | ||
All cock. | ||
We're gonna do chili, pulled barbecue rooster, and I think we're gonna do some just regular rooster. | ||
You gotta cook it a special way? | ||
Yeah, you could do coq au vin, which is great. | ||
It's tough meat. | ||
It's braised, like this French braise. | ||
I'll come by and have some rooster. | ||
It's really good. | ||
I'm just excited to let everybody know that we've butchered them. | ||
Three of them have survived. | ||
It's Mr. Muttonchops. | ||
He got to live because he escaped several times. | ||
Nice. | ||
And so we honored his strength and resilience. | ||
Sheds some promise. Pom Pom, who is this massive poofy rooster who's goofy, | ||
really goofy looking, we're like, well, you can't kill him. | ||
And then Roberto Jr. is one of his sons because RB3, Roberto Beaks III, is the current heir to the | ||
throne. However, it would be... | ||
We gotta keep the legacy going. | ||
Roberto Beaks III is the current heir. | ||
Roberto Sr. | ||
is still alive. | ||
Roberto Jr. | ||
died in a heart attack, and the risk is if Roberto Beaks III passes, then the bloodline is broken. | ||
So we had to keep at least one of his brothers alive. | ||
Yeah, we can't let the bloodline break. | ||
I mean, Roberto Jr. | ||
is, you know, he was the prince who became king and he died. | ||
He's the legacy rooster. | ||
Joking aside, You know, the serious question is, I don't know how many stories need to be placed on news headlines in major publications, screaming at the top of their lungs. | ||
You've got Germany, Sweden, you've got China, you've got Australia, all these countries talking about civilian defense forces. | ||
You've got Houthi rebels bombing cargo ships in the Red Sea, shutting down the majority of global shipping traffic. | ||
You've got Israel-Hamas, you've got China-Taiwan, You've got Putin saying, he will use nukes. | ||
You've got France saying, we will send in troops to defeat you. | ||
You've got Chuck Schumer saying, we must win this war. | ||
And now, you have another story from the Telegraph. | ||
I don't know if I've pulled up. | ||
They said, we have to win before November. | ||
Otherwise, World War III will officially begin. | ||
Surprise, surprise. | ||
Just in time for the election. | ||
But with all of these headlines, at a certain point, a person might put down their pretense and say, maybe prepping's not so bad. | ||
Look, I'm not going to get super involved in telling people what to do or anything, but the dollar is only becoming less valuable if you buy things that last and that you can use in emergency situations and stuff. | ||
You're getting the most out of your money. | ||
If you don't own guns and ammo, at this point, I mean... Okay, come on. | ||
Bezos, Zuckerberg, selling off billions in stock. | ||
I think Zuckerberg did billions, it might have been, I think it was billions. | ||
You've got Quiver Quantitative posted this video where they talk about, I believe it's Senator Tuberville, is it a senator or is it a congressman? | ||
A senator. | ||
How he's got a great track record in Congress and all of a sudden he starts selling a whole bunch of stocks. | ||
There's no pattern, he's just dumping stocks. | ||
So you gotta wonder about what is going on that's making these powerful elites. | ||
And Zuckerberg building a bunker in Hawaii with Wagyu beef. | ||
Yeah. | ||
He's got cattle, Wagyu cattle he's raising in Hawaii. | ||
Look, we've been getting stories for a while about the ultra wealthy building these underground bunkers. | ||
And I'm like, guys. | ||
You've got them saying we will send NATO into Ukraine, which is a full-scale declaration of war with Russia. | ||
Russia saying if we are threatened, we will use nukes. | ||
Maybe they're all lying. | ||
Fine, whatever. | ||
Then don't buy your chickens. | ||
I'll buy the rest of them. | ||
And if, you know, push comes to shove and ish hits the fan, I will be living in a van down by the river with some chickens being raised just, you know, outside, and I will be eating them. | ||
In a van down by the river. | ||
That's right. | ||
Look, I got a van. | ||
It's got solar power. | ||
We haven't used it in years. | ||
It's just been sitting. | ||
We get it tuned up every once in a while. | ||
We're going to redo all of it. | ||
I talked about this on the Joe Rogan show with Dorsey. | ||
I was like, you know, if you guys keep doing this, then tensions in this country are going to boil over. | ||
I'm going to build a van and have that thing ready to go live in down by the river. | ||
And when the world falls apart, and the cities are in decay, and the urban liberals are eating each other quite literally because there's no food or water, I'm gonna be sitting in a van playing Spelunky on a little TV, you know, with air conditioning. | ||
There you go. | ||
And to Phil's point, if you don't own firearms, go get some. | ||
Go get some ammo. | ||
I mean, you know, and to Tim's point, look, for me, you know, look, I hunt every season. | ||
I'm able to Harvest a ton of venison. | ||
Usually lasts me close to a year sometimes. | ||
We're still eating through it. | ||
It's wonderful. | ||
It's very healthy. | ||
You know, everybody goes to Whole Foods for, you know, grass-fed, organic, blah, blah, blah. | ||
These guys, you know, deers are that! | ||
There's too many of them! | ||
And it's free! | ||
And there's too many of them! | ||
Yeah, we had like 20 on our lawn last year. | ||
It was nuts. | ||
I'm like, what are we going to do about this? | ||
That'll only last for one season, though. | ||
Yeah. | ||
One season, there's too many. | ||
The next season, good luck finding a deer. | ||
Really? | ||
I mean, they'll get wiped out. | ||
Think about how many people are around here. | ||
They will go extinct. | ||
Yeah, it will go extinct. | ||
Like a wiped out instant, like within, because you're going to have a certain amount of people that are going to actually know how to harvest them properly and stuff like that. | ||
And then there's going to be literally, you know, a ton of people that are starving that are just, you know, that are going to waste a ton of, of, of meat and stuff because they don't know what to do. | ||
So they'll kill it and chop the legs off and be like, Oh, I got something for now, you know? | ||
And so. | ||
That's not how that works. | ||
Go get those backstraps first. | ||
But yeah, the thing is, now the world is still functioning. | ||
Get prepared for bad times while you can. | ||
People so frequently say, oh, well, you don't need this, or you don't need to do that, or I'll worry about it later. | ||
It's like, look, the time to prepare is when everything's fine. | ||
unidentified
|
Well, it's classic. | |
It's the Ant and the Grasshopper. | ||
It's the classic fable. | ||
It's gonna be really funny when there's like, If slash when. | ||
Let's say war breaks out. | ||
The economy breaks down. | ||
Social order is shattered to a certain degree. | ||
And you end up with like, you know, a farm out in, you know, central West Virginia somewhere where it's not too hilly or whatever. | ||
They've created a fort around their property where they're growing a lot of crops. | ||
They've got maybe like a hundred people there. | ||
And then one day comes a knock on the door. | ||
Some travelers, some weary travelers, and the guards are like, who's there? | ||
And they're like, you know, we're travelers, we're hungry, and we're looking for a place we can do work. | ||
And he looks down and he sees a young ZZam and a ZZer, and he's like, and what skills do you have? | ||
And one's like, I'm an Instagram influencer. | ||
And the other one's like, I write movie reviews for BuzzFeed. | ||
And he's gonna be like, get back, get back! | ||
And he's gonna ring the bell like, they're here! | ||
And then they're gonna chase him off. | ||
I'm half kidding, but I mean like in all seriousness, these city people are going to have, most of them have nothing of value to provide. | ||
And they won't have the physical capability to even lift rocks. | ||
I mean, think about this. | ||
I heard this the other day. | ||
I was talking to one of these gas companies and you know they've got these | ||
new laws in New York as it relates to gas stoves and blah blah blah blah. I hate | ||
that so much. Yeah. So stupid. It's insane. So just Manhattan alone, if those pilot | ||
lights went out, it would take six months to relight all of them. Jesus. | ||
Six months, just in Manhattan. | ||
When I lived in Brooklyn, I had a gas stove in Brooklyn. | ||
unidentified
|
Yeah? | |
I always had a gas stove everywhere I lived in New York City. | ||
Several different apartments, always gas stove. | ||
Now they're banning them. | ||
Yeah. | ||
They're banning them. | ||
Dude, look. | ||
I don't like it. | ||
Cook with fire! | ||
Just cook with fire, it's better. | ||
The people who live in these cities are living on the good graces of farmers. | ||
Yes. | ||
And so long as farmers agree to sell their food to the cities, you'll have order. | ||
But if at any point, Farmers got super political and they're just like we don't we don't sell to you because you're gonna it's gonna end up It's down the chain and end up in New York City if truckers decide to stop sending New York City I mean the politics in this country can change overnight if truckers Just the majority of truckers were like we don't deliver to New York and Chicago in LA | ||
Well, you know, it's pretty interesting because I spent most of my life living in the coast, right? | ||
And so in Boston and New York and Philadelphia, you go to the grocery store and you buy spinach and your spinach is really fresh and it has dirt on the roots. | ||
And now I live out here in West Virginia and I love living out here, but when I go to the grocery store, my spinach mostly is in packages. | ||
And I don't understand why my spinach is in packages in the middle of the country. | ||
Well, could it be that they don't grow spinach here and they do grow it there? | ||
Well, maybe they do, but they don't grow spinach in Boston either. | ||
Yeah, but they'll pay a premium. | ||
unidentified
|
Do they? | |
Spinach in Boston? | ||
I don't know. | ||
Yeah, I mean people in cities have paid more money. | ||
People will have, you know, hydroponic farms and things like that, like there's hydroponic farms all over Brooklyn, but those mostly just go to like the little commie co-ops anyway. | ||
Yeah, yeah, I think it might be price related. | ||
But it's not just spinach, it's lots of stuff comes in packages here and it doesn't come in packages in New York, and I think it's because it gets shipped in. | ||
Yeah. | ||
And there's Jersey, like Jersey isn't much further from here, you know, South Jersey where all the farms are. | ||
Yeah, yeah, yeah. | ||
Yeah, I mean, I think at some places they're probably willing to pay a premium. | ||
Yeah, it looks like New York grows a lot of spinach. | ||
They do. | ||
I could be wrong. | ||
Let me see if I can find an actual map. | ||
There's certainly a lot of farm out there in New York. | ||
Upstate, right? | ||
Upstate and stuff, yeah. | ||
And there's a lot of dairy in New York. | ||
Everything north of Albany is New England. | ||
It's just like Vermont. | ||
Well, it's not as good as Vermont. | ||
It's mostly as good as Vermont. | ||
It's fine. | ||
It's fine out there. | ||
It's fine. | ||
I don't know. | ||
Maybe the chat knows what region they grow spinach in. | ||
I'm not sure. | ||
It's a question that I've been having lately because I go into the grocery store and my spinach is in a package. | ||
What grocery store are you going to? | ||
I go to all the grocery stores. | ||
I try all the grocery stores. | ||
Well, let's jump to this story from NewsNation. | ||
Army is cutting 24,000 jobs in revamp to prepare for future wars. | ||
Wait, what? | ||
You're cutting 24,000 jobs? | ||
Okay, now what people don't understand is They thought this was that they were getting rid of 24,000 troops. | ||
No, no, no, no. | ||
They're saying that there are jobs that are unfilled. | ||
As the U.S. | ||
Army struggles with recruitment, the series is slashing its force by about 24,000, almost 5%, and restructuring to be better able to fight in future wars. | ||
The service is significantly overstructured, and there aren't enough soldiers to fill existing units, according to an Army document obtained by the AP. | ||
The cuts, it said, are spaces, not faces, and the Army will not be asking soldiers to leave the force. | ||
So basically what they're saying is, these normally would have had jobs. | ||
These jobs normally would have been filled by people, but because nobody wants to join anymore, they're just gonna get rid of them. | ||
Now I wonder why it is that nobody wants to join the army. | ||
Well, I mean, there's probably multiple reasons. | ||
Most of them have to do with politics, I think. | ||
You know, the fact that the army's not supposed to be political. | ||
It's not even the army, it's all of it. | ||
I mean, people have pointed out with this Aaron Bushnell guy, He was a member of some, like, leftist LGBT anarchy thing or something like that? | ||
unidentified
|
Yeah. | |
You know what it was called? | ||
Yeah, he was, like, an anarchist. | ||
Lily Anarkitty. | ||
Yeah. | ||
So this individual was clearly, like, known to people for expressing these views. | ||
He's just a communist. | ||
But you know what I think it is? | ||
I think that... | ||
A lot of serious mental issues are being masked by social justice issues. | ||
I think that's definitely true. | ||
So if, like, you go back 20 years and someone was claiming that they were the other gender, like, they would not be given surgeries, they'd be given therapy, evaluation, and treatment, especially young people. | ||
So now you have someone like Aaron Bushnell who's just, you know, commits suicide while screaming free Palestine, and it's clearly a mental illness issue, but Yeah. | ||
It was probably obvious to anybody, yet no one did anything. | ||
And this is indicative of what the current US services are like. | ||
That someone could be clearly unwell, but it's masked behind social justice. | ||
And the military used to be pretty good about getting people that had some kind of mental illness or whatever. | ||
They used to be pretty good about getting people out, and they're not anymore. | ||
Well, because they need bodies probably, right? | ||
Well, not only that. | ||
I think a lot of it is ideological. | ||
Interesting. | ||
They just offer more mental health services. | ||
What? | ||
They just offer more mental health services and all that kind of stuff. | ||
I mean, maybe they do. | ||
I mean, sure, they offer stuff for trans people to get surgeries and stuff like that, which I think is absolutely absurd. | ||
I think so, too. | ||
But the culture in the military has changed so much. | ||
You've got General Miley talking about, I want to understand white rage. | ||
When you have the majority of people that join up are young men, white guys or Hispanic guys, or the vast majority, because there's tons of Hispanic dudes in the military. | ||
But those guys, they look at each other as normal, doodly kind of dudes. | ||
Normal, doodly kind of dudes? | ||
Guys understand. | ||
This is a great phrase. | ||
I love this. | ||
They're just guys, guys, essentially. | ||
And that's the way that they act. | ||
That's the way they behave around each other. | ||
And you get a bunch of Marines together, and you see it instantaneously. | ||
They're going to try and climb something, make everything look like it's wieners, try and beat the crap out of each other. | ||
That's just the way they act. | ||
And when you have a culture that is very, very different. | ||
The leftist culture is not competitive. | ||
It's not aggressive the same way. | ||
If you get trans people and stuff, they don't have the same kind of attitude. | ||
And you're going to see people, like that doesn't attract people that are left-wing or left-leaning politically. | ||
It just doesn't. | ||
This guy was involved with Antifa too. | ||
Andy Ngo was looking into this. | ||
Really? | ||
unidentified
|
Yeah. | |
He's a commie. | ||
He was a commie. | ||
Belonging to Bushnell confirmed his involvement in Antifa social networks and that he was mocking deceased military members and supporting intimidation of elected leaders and that he was involved with the, he was a booster of the stop cop city, you know, Treehouse Antifa. | ||
Oh, so this is a seditionist. | ||
Yeah. | ||
He was a revolutionary communist. | ||
Well, Phil just mentioned the word culture, though, and I think that's an important one because there is a massive cultural shift, not just in the military, but in this country. | ||
There's a cultural revolution going on. | ||
As it relates to public service, serving your country, nationalism, which is like somehow a bad word, I don't think it is at all, like nationalist feeling, having pride in your country, wanting to contribute to it. | ||
That is seen as something that is a negative now. | ||
That's a negative in the United States. | ||
And the left has been winning this narrative now for years. | ||
You have to understand that it's a negative because they have managed to reframe what it means, right? | ||
They've taken the word, and this is something that we're very familiar with around here, the meanings of words have changed significantly over the past five or so years, and the most obvious or the one that people are most familiar with is the word racism. | ||
Racism doesn't mean bigotry based on race anymore, it means power plus prejudice. | ||
And so you end up with people that will bounce between the two meanings in the same conversation, As a tactic to keep people that they're debating with or arguing with off base. | ||
You don't understand what they're meaning. | ||
The intent is to manipulate. | ||
We should change the word. | ||
You know, and you're 100% right. | ||
What's a good word to change? | ||
Look, I say nationalism. | ||
I'm sure there's somebody hearing this out here and they're like, that means racism. | ||
It's like, no, it doesn't. | ||
It doesn't at all. | ||
It actually means, you know, I consider myself a nationalist. | ||
I have pride in my country. | ||
You gotta understand that, like, you're not, you don't You don't get to make the call. | ||
If you say, oh, I'm a nationalist, blah, blah, blah. | ||
Someone's going to grab that and be like, look, he's a nationalist. | ||
Great, put it on a poster. | ||
That is a terrible move because they make a term radioactive and then you can't internalize it the way you can with deplorable. | ||
So deplorable was easy because, first of all, it was so many people that were tossed into it. | ||
Anyone that you didn't like was tossed into these deplorable blah, blah, blah. | ||
There was no association for deplorable with anything in history at all. | ||
Nationalism, when you say nationalism, the average person thinks national socialist. | ||
Whether we like it or not, and you are not gonna get that back homeboy! | ||
You are not getting that back! | ||
Alexander Hamilton was a nationalist. | ||
Alexander Hamilton was a nationalist. | ||
George Washington was a nationalist. | ||
So was Lin-Manuel Miranda when he wrote Hamilton the musical. | ||
Bernie Sanders is a nationalist capitalist. | ||
According to the World Socialist website. | ||
Every one of you is right. | ||
And then... | ||
They're going to take what you say, clip it, and they're going to play it for Norm the Normie and his wife. | ||
Bernie Sanders is a nationalist capitalist. | ||
Bernie Sanders is a nationalist capitalist. | ||
Clip that. | ||
Share with everybody. | ||
It's a fact. | ||
But the point that I'm making is you can't take it back and internalize it and say, oh no, we're taking this, I am, blah, blah, blah, because they're going to clip it, they're going to slime you with racist Nazis, blah, blah, blah, and there's nothing you're going to be able to do about it. | ||
The mistake made by the right is cowering every time someone calls them a naughty word. | ||
That is a mistake. | ||
It's garbage. | ||
I'm so sick of that. | ||
Because on the left, what they do is they say, oh, you're calling us a nasty word. | ||
We're going to reclaim it. | ||
We're going to reclaim the word. | ||
You know what I mean? | ||
The left always takes the nasty word and says, you're right. | ||
It's our word now. | ||
That's right. | ||
And the right goes, don't call me a word. | ||
I can't say nasty. | ||
Did you see the Ricky Gervais joke about the n-word? | ||
That was funny. | ||
I can't say it because it's the n-word. | ||
You have to watch. | ||
Everyone's thinking it. | ||
Go ahead, just let it rip. | ||
You gotta watch it because the context, like his delivery makes it. | ||
It was perfect. | ||
Yeah. | ||
Very funny. | ||
I don't dispute that you should not cower from someone accusing you of something. | ||
Not saying that you should be like, oh I'm afraid he's gonna call me a racist. | ||
But it is foolish to say I'm going to walk into the trap that they've set. | ||
What trap? | ||
And that's what they've done. | ||
They've set the trap with the word nationalist. | ||
No, the problem is we don't control the media and we need to break the media narrative control and nothing else matters. | ||
I don't disagree with that either. | ||
The only way we do that is to flood the word to the point where their statements don't make sense anymore. | ||
So when they say nationalist means X, we keep saying nationalist over and over and over again in a context that doesn't apply to what they're claiming until someone says, wait, what? | ||
But CNN, that doesn't make any sense. | ||
And they say, oh, well, I don't know what you're listening to. | ||
You must be listening to garbage. | ||
Yeah, look, I'm for American nationalism. | ||
I am for conservative nationalism. | ||
I think that is a good thing in this country. | ||
I absolutely do. | ||
National conservatism, good thing. | ||
Everybody should be it. | ||
Put my face on a poster, you can put it on there, and I'll win by 60 points instead of 50. | ||
unidentified
|
Yep. | |
And the point is this. | ||
They say racism over and over and over again. | ||
You know what actually started working is they tired the word out. | ||
And so people just started saying, so what? | ||
Shane Gillis ends up hosting SNL and he made some naughty jokes and they freaked out and too bad. | ||
It's like you have no power here anymore. | ||
You've exhausted the screaming at the top of your lungs. | ||
So what I'm saying is Say you're a nationalist. | ||
Let CNN, oh, I love this story. | ||
Let's jump to this story. | ||
Let me see if I, where do I have this one lined up? | ||
It's somewhere. | ||
Hold on, let me try and find out where I put it. | ||
Is it in the back? | ||
Did it close? | ||
Where is this? | ||
Oh, here we go. | ||
Ladies and gentlemen, MSNBC, yesterday, pro-Trump CPAC speaker pledges end of democracy. | ||
I'd like to play for you this clip from MSNBC, and I hope you enjoy it. | ||
unidentified
|
Welcome to the end of democracy. | |
We're here to overthrow it completely. | ||
We didn't get all the way there on January 6th, but we will endeavor to get rid of it and replace it with this right here. | ||
We'll replace it with this right here. | ||
That's right, because all glory is not to government, all glory to God. | ||
Here we go. | ||
unidentified
|
If I were the Biden campaign, I would pay to have every American see the CPAC convention because the thing that has been thwarting Republicans in the midterms and since has been this impression of the Republican Party as an extreme party. | |
Yesterday you had someone stand up at the CPAC convention as speaker and basically talk about, we almost toppled democracy on January 6th. | ||
We're going to do it now with this. | ||
And he held up a cross basically advocating for theocracy. | ||
This is not the image that the Republican Party wants. | ||
This is CNN. | ||
It's hysterical. | ||
That's former advisor David Axelrod with that message to the Biden campaign after a far-right | ||
activist told attendees at CPAC his goal is to overthrow democracy and finish the mission | ||
of January 6th, which was met with glee. | ||
And it's met with glee here on TimCast IRL. | ||
This is amazing because no one understood anything that Jack was saying. | ||
The room temperature IQ of the people at MSNBC and CNN brings me great joy. | ||
What we want to do here is continually mock them into sheer embarrassment so that nobody would ever want to associate with them out of fear that they will be belittled or shamed. | ||
Any sane, rational person heard Jack laugh after the first sentence, and everyone started laughing as well. | ||
Okay? | ||
If these people want to act like this was, you know, on CNN, I don't think they showed the clip. | ||
So they're playing a dirty game like they normally do. | ||
But if you ever want to ask yourself why CNN's ratings are apocalyptically low, and why they've been, you know, basically about to go under for the past couple of years, look no further! | ||
And this is exactly where we need to be. | ||
To the point where, let me put it this way. | ||
In the Trump years, they didn't know what to do. | ||
All they knew was complaining about Trump got them views. | ||
Millions upon millions of views. | ||
Once Trump left, they had nothing to do, and their views started going down. | ||
I used to have CNN on 24-7. | ||
Back when I was in Jersey, I had a projector screen with CNN on the wall, and I would leave it running for breaking news. | ||
But at some point, I noticed something. | ||
I was sitting in my room, it's gotta be like 2018 or something, and I'm like, you know, reading news articles, and then I look up at the screen and it's a panel sitting in a circle talking about Donald Trump, and I'm like, whatever. | ||
And then I see on Twitter some big news is happening in Iran. | ||
And so I'm like, I get up and I look at CNN, it's a panel talking about Trump. | ||
So I switch to Fox News. | ||
Fox News covering Iranian uprising. | ||
And I was like, okay, well I guess I'm watching Fox News instead. | ||
I eventually posted on Instagram the CNN challenge. | ||
Turn on CNN and then switch to Fox News and what will you find? | ||
CNN will always be talking about Donald Trump and Fox News will be talking about the news. | ||
And that's when I was like, off. | ||
There is no way CNN could ever get me back as a viewer. | ||
What that means is, when CNN got that new boss and he tried, Chris Licht, when he tried to be like, let's stop being far-left psychopaths, it did not bring the viewers back. | ||
Why? | ||
I'm not gonna come back and watch your garbage! | ||
You set yourselves on fire. | ||
I'm out. | ||
Let's encourage more of this. | ||
You know, who's that, Micah Brzezinski, is that who that is? | ||
unidentified
|
Micah Brzezinski, yeah. | |
Micah Brzezinski. | ||
Let her, look at the face she's making. | ||
Can we pull that, look at that face. | ||
unidentified
|
Yeah. | |
Is there a way to zoom in on that face? | ||
Can we, we can't make it any bigger. | ||
I had the similar thought though, she looks absolutely retarded. | ||
unidentified
|
Yes, you can! | |
Sorry, crazy lady. | ||
unidentified
|
You can say that and you can't say nationalism? | |
Listen, I am telling you what the left is going to do. | ||
I'm not telling you what I want. | ||
I'm not telling you my preference. | ||
I'm not telling you that I think this is good. | ||
I'm not telling you I'm happy about it. | ||
I'm telling you what they're going to do. | ||
I'm not telling you that I want them to do this. | ||
Every day, we are seeing the corporate press just destroy themselves. | ||
Let us gloat and mock them and you don't I think you know I was thinking something really it was kind of obvious to me when I thought about it. | ||
Advertisers don't really care that much to advertise to 18-year-olds. | ||
They don't have money. | ||
And so, you know, they're starting to come into that bracket. | ||
And so 18 to 35 is the money demo. | ||
But on the lower end of things, they're like, well, you know, look, if we want to sell a product, we want to find like 34-year-old men and women. | ||
These are the people who are in middle management. | ||
They're starting to take over industries. | ||
They got cash to spend, advertise to them. | ||
And so I'm like, advertise to 18-year-olds. | ||
Send a message to them. | ||
That's where we want to be. | ||
So, we should, uh, do everything in our power to direct all of, like, you know, all of our parallel economic efforts should be advertised towards 18-24 year olds. | ||
10 years from now when they're 35, they'll be, you know, in our camp. | ||
So let's mock MSNBC, let's mock CNN, and mock them and make 18-24 year olds laugh at them. | ||
Bring them in on the joke and say, hey look how stupid these people are, and then you destroy them. | ||
They will not be able to, you know, look man, if 18-24 year olds feel that MSNBC and CNN are garbage, in 10 years, they will be out of business because they will have no viewers left. | ||
I imagine that's probably already written to the cards, but that's just my opinion. | ||
Perhaps, perhaps. | ||
But I rather enjoy the absurdity. | ||
unidentified
|
I'm going to tweet this here picture real quick. | |
There you go. | ||
Democracy. | ||
There it is. | ||
unidentified
|
Solid. | |
I do want to make a point, because Jack is right, is power does come from God, not from government. | ||
That's true. | ||
He's 100% correct. | ||
And you had, what was it, on CNN, where that woman said, the fringe Christian right believes that rights come from, believe that rights come from God or something, is that what you said? | ||
Yeah, the fringe Christian right in the literal founding documents, in the literal declaration of independence. | ||
There's fringe Christian nationalists who started this country. | ||
It's not even that. | ||
This woman on CNN said something like that, like the fringe Christian right thinks that rights come from God. | ||
It's basic moral philosophy as to whether you believe in God or not, within the nature of existence, there are certain things you can do. | ||
And so I have to describe it as like, what rights do you have? | ||
Anything you can do in the middle of the woods. | ||
You can speak. | ||
You can defend yourself. | ||
You can build shelter. | ||
You can do a lot of stuff. | ||
But you don't get healthcare. | ||
Right? | ||
So healthcare's not a human right. | ||
Right. | ||
You don't get food. | ||
Food's not a human right. | ||
You know? | ||
You don't get anyone else's labor. | ||
Ain't nobody there to do it for you. | ||
The difference between positive and negative rights is the difference between actual rights and privileges or benefits provided by government. | ||
Negative rights are things that you can do, like Tim says, In absence of government. | ||
And then all of your positive rights, they're literally all just gifts from government. | ||
So it's literally taking from other people, so that way you can give it to... Healthcare is a human right! | ||
That means someone else's labor belongs to you. | ||
Yeah, I don't remember those in the Ten Commandments, which, I mean, that's literally, right? | ||
I mean, look, this is a Judeo-Christian country. | ||
That's where we founded a lot of our laws, where they came from, Old Testament, New Testament, a mixture of those. | ||
And it's pretty clear, right? | ||
And they weren't talking about health care and these other things, but that is how this country was founded. | ||
Obviously, they pulled a lot from different philosophers in Greece and things like that as well. | ||
But it is a foundational piece of this country. | ||
But Prager, Dennis Prager makes the point excellently, cut flower or cut stem politics, I forgot the phrase he uses, where you can cut a flower from its root and hold it up and it's beautiful but eventually it will die. | ||
So I look at, yes, the things that most people in this country claim they support, even liberals, They claim to support free speech, but half of them don't. | ||
Speedy trials, all of these things are rooted in biblical teaching. | ||
And they were adapted in a way, you know, into our government. | ||
Then you look at someone like Bill Maher. | ||
Total atheist, absolutely secular, but still holds these moral traditions. | ||
Free speech, speedy trials, all of those things that are rooted in biblical teaching. | ||
The next step after him is wokeness. | ||
Amorality. | ||
A lack of morals altogether. | ||
Yeah. | ||
Well, and this is by no means to say, look, you need to believe in God. | ||
You know, people don't, but you do need to respect the values, culture, and norms that have been created in this country by those kind of foundational principles. | ||
Now, myself, you know, I am religious, very much so. | ||
I'm a very strong practicing Catholic. | ||
Not everybody is. | ||
That's fine. | ||
The way we got these laws are the way we got these laws. | ||
You can say whatever you want about it, but you can't go back and rewrite it. | ||
It exists. | ||
Yeah, I think the important thing to understand is the reason why the left doesn't care for the way we see the world is that it is rooted in Christian moral foundations. | ||
And that doesn't mean you need to believe in God to adhere to them. | ||
You know, Bill Maher opens the door to a lot of bad things, but he does call out the woke periodically. | ||
He does believe things that are incorrect, so we can criticize him for that. | ||
But he believes in free speech. | ||
He believes in a lot of these principles. | ||
That's a good thing, but you can see it fading. | ||
And so, the far left absolutely despises all things Christian, including the fundamental rights that most Americans believe in. | ||
And the problem is, when you separate Christianity from the future generations, you eventually will erase all of the moral philosophies that came with those teachings. | ||
Yeah, that's basically what happened. | ||
And like, even the existentialists talked about that, about how they were erratic, you know, they were, they didn't believe in God, but they were essentially using the Christian foundations as a means to build on top of that and as a means to declare that there was necessity for personal responsibility. | ||
But yeah, when you pull the foundation, the whole thing collapses. | ||
It's a house of cards. | ||
And the left doesn't realize that. | ||
They don't realize that everything that they have been doing is actually founded in Judeo-Christian morality. | ||
See, I have a different take on where the left's, like, whole philosophy comes from. | ||
Like, I think they're a counter-enlightenment. | ||
I don't think there is a moral philosophy. | ||
I think it's absence of. | ||
Well, that's part of being counter-enlightenment, right? | ||
Like, if you're counter-enlightenment, then you don't have to worry about truth. | ||
They reject truth, right? | ||
They reject the idea of truth. | ||
They think that everything's subjective. | ||
So, the reason that to normal people it seems like they don't have a philosophy is because They don't believe in anything being true. | ||
There is no objective truth. | ||
We can't even know reality, right? | ||
So the argument goes, because our senses have a characteristic, we can never actually know reality. | ||
Everything that we see and everything we experience is all our brain interpreting what's going on in the world around us. | ||
are forever cut off from reality so that means there is no reality that means talking about | ||
reality is the wrong thing to talk about or talking about things that are true or or any | ||
of that kind of concrete reality they reject entirely and so if they reject reality it | ||
doesn't matter what they're arguing because they're only arguing to try and acquire power | ||
We get to serve That's what happened too with Jack's speech last week at CPAC, which was actually really fascinating. | ||
He spoke on Thursday, but then he spoke to the full convention on Friday, and I was sitting back, you know, with the rest of the dirty media in the media section, And it was an incredibly powerful speech, and he did talk about the end of democracy, but what he was talking about were all of the things that have been put in place by the Democrats over the past several years that will spell the end of democracy, from mail-in voting, you know, as a big thing, to all of these... I can't remember them all right now, which is annoying. | ||
But all of these different things that the left has enacted to destroy the foundations of American democracy. | ||
And he was saying, we are facing the end of democracy. | ||
Why? | ||
Because all of these things have been put in place in order to end it, in order to prevent Americans from You know, having their own country from the decimation of the border to the massive crime, to the lockdowns, to the destruction of the educational system, the destruction of the, you know, ballot integrity, for lack of a better way to say it, with balloting and the harvesting and all of that stuff. | ||
That's what he was talking about. | ||
And so it was so clear, like within 15 minutes of his speech, I looked on Google and it was everybody. | ||
It was Newsweek and The New York Times, everybody complaining about what he had said without listening at all. | ||
One of the best pieces of media that I've seen in a very long time is in Baldur's Gate 3, and that's probably why it's considered like, I don't know, it's gonna win Game of the Year, it's considered this big deal. | ||
And I really do recommend, I don't know, if video games aren't your thing, you can just watch or whatever. | ||
But there's this moment in the game, it's a cutscene basically, where you find a, there's this guy named Malice Thorn, and his ideology is rooted in what he describes as absence. | ||
That, I'll simplify everything for you, the fact that you can see is the actual cancer, because now you can experience all of the awfulness of reality, and you'd be better off being cured by being killed. | ||
And so, it's this, I can't even, it's just one of the most amazing bits of fiction I've seen in a long time. | ||
The actor, the display, the gruesome, the gore is amazing. | ||
He's like, he's claiming to be a doctor as he's mercilessly torturing a guy, claiming, don't worry, I'm curing you. | ||
And I bring this up because it reminds me so much of what the left is. | ||
We are helping you as they steal from you. | ||
We are giving you, protecting your rights as they rob you of your rights. | ||
They are nihilistic, amoral individuals who are assuring you that their morality is the path towards the cure for what ails you while they destroy everything that is good in this world. | ||
Yeah, I think one of the most salient points, though, that, you know, obviously Jack made in the speech, and this is what we're talking about, is, you know, power coming from God. | ||
The big question that we have here in what's eroded in this country is power versus authority, right? | ||
It's power versus authority. | ||
In the absence of those things, and power and authority ultimately coming from God, what are you left with? | ||
You're left with will to power. | ||
Will to power, which is Friedrich Nietzsche, and will to power means whatever you have, I want and I will take, right? | ||
And that's why we're basically left in this situation where there is no kind of moral standard left here to communicate with each other, and it's all will to power. | ||
It's I'm going to destroy you, what you're trying to do, and this and that. | ||
There is no consensus kind of, well, maybe that's kind of You know, above the fray. | ||
Maybe we shouldn't do it. | ||
But that no longer exists, unfortunately, particularly with the left. | ||
And to Phil's point, I mean, really what they are, it's the rationalists, right? | ||
They rationalize their own existence, their own gender. | ||
Well, and they rationalize their own sin, and they rationalize all of it. | ||
Yes. | ||
And it's a self-rationalization where it's like they have to be in constant revolution and change, right? | ||
Yes. | ||
Constantly justifying their own depravity. | ||
Yeah, and the gender that they are, and this and that. | ||
And at the end of the day, what they're constantly searching for and will never find is purpose. | ||
And purpose is the ultimate thing that lacks now, unfortunately, in this country, and which is being eroded further and further. | ||
And that's why you see people, you know, going in to get surgeries and all this. | ||
Maybe this is my purpose. | ||
Maybe my purpose is to be a woman, or this or that. | ||
You know, it's... And it's because for them it all comes from... Or Palestine. | ||
You know, right, that's the new thing. | ||
That's the other purpose. | ||
And it all comes from this internal place of, you know, narcissism and self-obsession. | ||
I think Israel-Palestine is a really great example of the emptiness of heart that this generation is experiencing. | ||
Because, uh, you know, I talked about this with Ian in the Members Only show. | ||
When he gets into it and starts saying, like, oh, Israel this, Israel that, I'm like, Ian, can you name any other country that has received billions of dollars in funding and was set up by the United States government? | ||
He's like, no. | ||
I'm like, so the question is, why do you know and care so much about just Israel? | ||
I think, uh, I think, what did we give, like, 180 billion to Vietnam or some insane number? | ||
Like, at that time? | ||
I can't remember. | ||
Not that we're still doing that, and certainly you're allowed to be concerned about Israel. | ||
My point is simply, for someone to go out in the street and immolate themselves over Palestine, a place they'd never been to, when there's so much injustice in the world, why choose this one topic? | ||
Well, it's the cause celebre right now, of the left, and for people with no purpose, They've found it here now, they can do something. | ||
He didn't do anything, but you know. | ||
And this is important, I just want to, for the audience, and you can Google this, but look, rationalism, the end of the day, means that that individual, self-rationalism, they are the ultimate Arbiter of what is true. | ||
That's why someone's truth is different than my truth, and we don't have common truth anymore, right? | ||
Somebody identifies as a woman, and I'm like, that's a man. | ||
It's like, no, I'm a woman. | ||
This is my self-realized persona. | ||
This is who I am. | ||
That's how we've gotten here. | ||
Yeah. | ||
I mean, they reject the concept of truth. | ||
They don't believe that you can know truth. | ||
Let's jump to this story from the post-millennial. | ||
Before I read the headline for you, I have this hope that my long-shot conspiracy theory is true. | ||
And that is that the Deep State is actually setting up an establishment that is so reviled, it forces people to support Donald Trump and will lead to a great American resurgence. | ||
That is to say, the Deep State is secretly supporting Trump. | ||
By pretending to support Biden. | ||
Why? | ||
Because then sane, rational people come out and say, you've gone too far, you're crazy. | ||
We need someone to secure our borders. | ||
We need to strengthen America. | ||
We need to make America great again. | ||
And if the deep state actually cared about America, they'd be like, that's the way you trick people into doing it. | ||
Because now, headline, young voters, 18 to 34, moving to Trump over Biden, Axios poll. | ||
Yeah, yeah, yeah. | ||
52% of respondents said they would vote for the current president if elections were held today, compared to 48% for his predecessor. | ||
When only those who said they were definitely going to vote in November were asked, however, Biden's support rose to 59. | ||
The vast majority of those surveyed said the economy blah, blah, blah. | ||
The poll was conducted among a representative sample of 1,073 18- to 34-year-olds. | ||
So this is, um, what, like, the fourth or fifth poll showing not necessarily that Trump is winning among the youth vote, but that it's become neck and neck, which is unthinkable. | ||
It used to be, like, two to one or three to one. | ||
Now, young people are actually kind of like, eh, I think I'm gonna vote for Donald Trump. | ||
I want to say this to all the Gen Z and all the younger viewers out there who are watching. | ||
If you're asking yourself why it is your college degree won't get you a job, if you're asking why it is you can't afford to get an apartment, The next question you need to ask yourself is why are Democrats giving luxury hotel rooms to illegal immigrants who just arrived here, and why are they being given debit cards with thousands of dollars on them, while you are struggling to survive in your own country where you pay taxes? | ||
They promised you things. | ||
They said, you go to school, you will get a good job, and what happened? | ||
They're giving away luxury hotel rooms to people who just showed up illegally. | ||
Ask yourself, do you deserve that? | ||
I gotta tell you, in my opinion, you deserve more than that. | ||
I believe we should kick all these illegal immigrants out right now and give Gen Z those luxury hotel rooms. | ||
What say you, Gen Z? | ||
That's a compromise as far as I'm concerned. | ||
I was in favor of a form of student debt forgiveness, which would be the termination of all interest, and anyone who paid interest beyond their principal loan, the rest would be forgiven, and any overpayments would be applied to future taxes. | ||
The money for this should come from the universities themselves. | ||
If you have loans and you, in your principle, you have to pay back what you were given. | ||
But for those who are ripped off and exploited by the system and lied to and tricked, the problem we face now is not a, yeah, but what about me? | ||
That's not fair. | ||
I don't care if it's fair. | ||
What I care about is we need the next generation to be able to buy homes. | ||
We need them to be able to get jobs and raise families. | ||
And they're not going to do it being stunted and corrupted by this predatory system. | ||
Now, forgiving all the loans doesn't solve anything. | ||
I think forgiving the interest and applying overpayments as a credit towards taxes or something is a way to go about doing it. | ||
That being said, Joe Biden justified the Supreme Court and said he would do it anyway because he is an amoral crackpot. | ||
But if we do not have... Let me say one last thing. | ||
You know, I'm gonna give you my thoughts on the housing market right now. | ||
I was telling Riley this earlier. | ||
Yeah. | ||
I believe, and I'm not an expert, I believe that within 20 years the price of houses will collapse to rock bottom. | ||
You think? | ||
And I'll tell you why. | ||
People like to point out how boomers hold a disproportionate amount of wealth in this country, more than most generations ever have. | ||
But most wealth is being held in the form of real estate, which means a boomer owns a house worth $400,000 and will sell it to another boomer for $400,000. | ||
Maybe there's a wealthier millennial who can afford it and they'll buy it too, but typically it's property held by the older generation. | ||
Now what happens when the boomers start dying? | ||
They're going to get older and they're going to start passing away. | ||
Children who are Millennials or Gen Z will inherit a $500,000 property. | ||
Typically what happens in these scenarios is that you'll have a kid who lives in Chicago and his parents were from Maryland, his parents die, and then he gets a phone call, he's like, oh no, my parents are dead, he goes to the funeral, and then the lawyer says, what would you like to do with your inheritance, which is this house and these accounts? | ||
The kid says, I don't want to live in Maryland, I don't want to deal with the taxes, I can't maintain the house, sell it. | ||
That would be a glut. | ||
I got good news for all of you, though. | ||
Who can afford among Millennials and Gen Z to buy a half a million dollar house? | ||
Nobody! | ||
So as it happens, the heir then says, a month later, did you sell the house? | ||
No, nobody wants to buy it. | ||
Why not? | ||
Because nobody can afford it. | ||
Okay, lower it $50,000. | ||
A month later, lower it another $50,000. | ||
Finally it sells for $250,000. | ||
The prices are going to collapse because the value is on paper, based on real estate, which Gen Z and Millennials cannot afford. | ||
Well, this happened, too, with all of the golf properties, right? | ||
Like, all of the, like, my grandparents' generation, which would have been the ones who lived through the Great Depression and fought in World War II, they all bought, like, these homes on golf courses, and then their kids, the boomers, inherited these homes, and no one wanted the homes in the, you know, on the golf course. | ||
No one wanted that. | ||
So, those prices ended up being worth nothing. | ||
But as you were talking about with regard to, you know, Gen Z and millennials and loan forgiveness and things like that, did you see the Washington Post today put out a story saying, the economy is roaring. | ||
Immigration is a key reason. | ||
And that's on the same thing. | ||
Gen Z needs to see this video. | ||
Like, share this video with Gen Zers and say, I don't care if you think Trump's a fascist. | ||
I literally don't. | ||
I don't care if you think he's Hitler number two, you're allowed to hate the man. | ||
But you should ask yourself why it is they are allowing, what is it now, 16 some odd million or 15 million non-citizens, they have allowed them to illegally enter the country. | ||
And you might say, yeah, what's the big deal? | ||
Well, they're getting your stuff. | ||
Yeah, they're getting all your money, they're getting all your accommodations, they're getting your Xboxes, you know, courtesy of the city of New York. | ||
They're getting your property. | ||
And why is it that someone, I'm deeply offended by this. | ||
That there's a 26-year-old who should have their own home with four bedrooms and a white picket fence, a wife and children. | ||
Instead, they are saying, I can't afford this 5 foot by 10 foot box in New York City. | ||
And non-citizens are being given luxury hotel rooms. | ||
They're being given thousands of thousands of debit cards that we are all paying for. | ||
The children of this nation who are entering adulthood and need to be able to raise families and enter society are being barred from doing so. | ||
Unfortunately, many of them are voting for it. | ||
So I can't be too mad about people like David Hogg or... Who's that other guy? | ||
The Democrat Gen Z guy? | ||
There's a couple. | ||
There's that hairy guy and then there's the Asian kid who is... | ||
But these kids are all rich. | ||
They don't care. | ||
They're taken care of. | ||
It's the poor kids, or the working class families, who are now being told, you will never own a home and you will never have a family. | ||
But don't worry, 10 million new non-citizens illegally entered the country and we're paying them to do so. | ||
And they're told, these kids are told to give up their happiness. | ||
They're told to give up the things that will make them happy. | ||
They're told to find, you were talking, Riley, about meaning. | ||
They're told to go seek meaning in things that are meaningless. | ||
And then they are criticized for not being happy enough with their cricket-eating lot in life in their New York City closets. | ||
Yeah, and the interesting thing is also for the left, which, you know, historically we've had labor unions supporting people like Joe Biden. | ||
This mass influx of illegal immigration is undercutting all of their wages, all their ability to be able to even think about collectively bargaining with any company when they just got a million people came over the border that are going to do these jobs for like five bucks a day. | ||
Mm-hmm. | ||
And you have illegal immigrants who don't want to do that kind of work anyway. | ||
Right. | ||
That's a thing, too. | ||
They're getting this money from the government. | ||
They get working papers, but then that's like, what, 180-something days later. | ||
They're just living for free in these New York City hotels, like Tim was talking about. | ||
And the other thing, too, for people who go to New York, you can't afford a hotel. | ||
The other hotels, they're all like $300 a night. | ||
It's ludicrous. | ||
I'm just so deeply insulted. | ||
And I think there's a lot of people on the right who don't. | ||
We had this argument about student debt forgiveness and they're like, no, they shouldn't be given their debt, shouldn't be forgiven. | ||
And I'm like, well, hold on, let's have a practical conversation about this. | ||
What happens if the next generation can't get buy houses? | ||
Then like value, labor, like everything starts breaking down. | ||
We need to figure out how to get Gen Z into the market. | ||
Unfortunately, Joe Biden is burning this country to the ground and he's taking Gen Z with him. | ||
Gotta feel for those kids. | ||
You know, so, uh, what do you do? | ||
And, you know, that being said, that's why I'm like, I don't know that real estate is the right store of value right now. | ||
I have no idea what the right store of value is. | ||
Bitcoin? | ||
I mean, I personally, I don't think Bitcoin's a bad idea. | ||
I also don't think that, you know... What's it at now? 57? | ||
It's looking like it might go for all-time highs in the next week or so. | ||
It's like at 55, 56, 57. | ||
It's supposed to, based on trend records, hit 200 and then fall back down to like 100. | ||
Or like 80, actually. | ||
So you can look at the Bitcoin trends of every spike and you can actually look at the hash rate and you can look at the industry to see exactly why it does this. | ||
The halving is in April, right? | ||
Yeah, so like, when Bitcoin first hit a thousand, everyone went, ah! | ||
And then it fell down to like a hundred. | ||
Then it hit twenty and everyone went, ah! | ||
And then it fell back down to like a couple thousand. | ||
Three. | ||
Three thousand. | ||
Then it hit sixty thousand and it fell down to eighteen. | ||
This is like normally what happens. | ||
My thing is always just like, I'm not going to give anybody advice. | ||
I just buy a little bit periodically. | ||
But I think the expectation right now is it'll hit two hundred and then fall down to like eighty. | ||
I'm bye-bye every week regardless. | ||
Yeah, it's just because, I mean, man. | ||
Again, no advice, but if you, instead of putting money in a bank account, put money in Bitcoin, holy crap. | ||
I told this, so Max Keiser retweeted this clip from the, I think it was Culture War podcast with Alex Jones, Luca Kowsky, and Shane Cashman. | ||
And Alex was telling the story about how Max Keiser in like 2012 was like, Alex, get your IT guy in here so I can give you 10,000 Bitcoin." | ||
And it was just, it was like five grand at the time. | ||
And Alex was like, I have no idea what you're talking about, Max. | ||
I don't know how to do this. | ||
We couldn't figure it out. | ||
And Max got really angry and was like, I'm telling you how important this is. | ||
And like storms off. | ||
And then I was saying like, yeah, you know, I had seen, you know, a spike because I could have bought at 70 cents. | ||
And then, you know, I'm hanging out with Max Keiser in like 2012. | ||
And he's like, Tim, I'm telling you, you gotta buy Bitcoin. | ||
And I was like, yeah, I'll buy some or whatever or whatever. | ||
And I didn't, and then sure enough it spikes to a thousand and I was like, I should have listened to that guy. | ||
And so, I will say fortunately for me, a couple years later I did end up buying a decent amount. | ||
I am very, very happy currently. | ||
So I was telling the story where in 2011 I had five grand in savings that I never touched. | ||
And so I was like, this is for when I'm about to die. | ||
Never gonna touch it. | ||
And so I look at my friend, and Bitcoin's at 70 cents, and I was like, my plan isn't to spend this money. | ||
I could buy some of this Bitcoin stuff, put five grand and buy like 6,000, 7,000 coins. | ||
And he was like, nah, don't do it. | ||
It's probably some scam or something. | ||
Some guy's gonna sell you internet currency and it's worthless. | ||
I was like, yeah, okay. | ||
The sad part of that story, that five grand I never spent. | ||
So that five grand savings never went anywhere. | ||
If I had just said, I'll put it in Bitcoin or whatever, Then it would have grown. | ||
And so again, not advice, I'm just saying, if every time you got a paycheck, you put it into Bitcoin instead of the bank, you would be gaining lots of wealth and protecting. | ||
Or I should say, if every time I got paid, I just bought Bitcoin instead of putting it in the bank, I'd have an insane amount of money right now. | ||
But I just don't do that. | ||
If you have money to live on and you can go ahead and keep most of your savings in Bitcoin, I mean, Again, not financial advice, obviously, but at this point, it's been around long enough and gone up and gone through the cycles enough to kind of acknowledge that it's not going anywhere. | ||
There's ETFs now. | ||
Like, it's not good. | ||
There's ETFs. | ||
There's banking, like the banking industry. | ||
El Salvador. | ||
There's El Salvador. | ||
Countries have staked themselves to it. | ||
I mean, that's a huge deal, yeah. | ||
So like whether or not you believe that it's going to be like a revolutionary technology like people like Jack do. | ||
And honestly, I do think that there are some of the arguments about the capabilities of Bitcoin that your average person hasn't really thought about. | ||
They don't comprehend because most people don't really understand what Bitcoin is. | ||
I like it when you when you kind of conceptualize the things that it could do for not just banking but for energy transfer and and the the the electric grid and and all kinds of things it's it's actually a really really impressive technology yeah we'd like to we were talking to some folks about trying to set up Bitcoin mining operations here in West Virginia just because we have an abundance of energy and a lot of excess energy. | ||
Kevin O'Leary's talking about it. | ||
Yeah. | ||
Billing data centers. | ||
Yeah, he came down to Charleston and met with the governor. | ||
That was just a few weeks ago. | ||
How's that going? | ||
Well, it's going well. | ||
I mean, so I'm on the State Economic Development Authority board, so I can't get into Too much, but we're having really positive conversations about it. | ||
We're going to become like a West Virginia economic powerhouse? | ||
I'm hoping. | ||
That sounds like a lot of fun to me. | ||
I mean, look, we have an abundance of excess energy here that we can help. | ||
What form is the energy? | ||
Coal, gas, I mean we can have oil. | ||
The good stuff. | ||
Yeah, the good stuff. | ||
Oil? | ||
Yeah, we got oil. | ||
Wow. | ||
We got all three, but coal and gas, which is kind of your base load energy, obviously, particularly coal's base load, nuclear's base load. | ||
Gas hits more of like the spiking energy stuff, but we have all that here. | ||
We have the ability to do it and the problem is where they go to Texas and they try to get the gas that flares down there and use that to mine bitcoins and power some of that. | ||
The servers get so hot. | ||
unidentified
|
Yep. | |
So what we proposed is putting these in abandoned coal mines because they're cold. | ||
unidentified
|
Wow! | |
They're very, very cold down there. | ||
That's a clever idea. | ||
And so it keeps it very cool so they could just operate continually, no problem, never overheat or anything like that. | ||
And, you know, to Phil's point, now I can't give financial advice, I'm state treasurer, I legally can't, but they've come up with a lot of different types of financial instruments that include Bitcoin, blended options that are not entirely Bitcoin, that are kind of Like bonds and kind of stuff? | ||
Yeah, you can mix in some equities into it and then have some exposure to Bitcoin so it's not in totality if that's something you're interested in and just have a little bit of it and you know there's kind of blended options that are, you know, they'll build these securities and stack them in differently but there's a lot of ways to get exposure to it if you wanted to. | ||
I'm not telling you to do that. | ||
I'm telling nobody to do anything financially. | ||
It's like interesting, you know, it's interesting new financial technology basically. | ||
It is, and I don't think it's going anywhere. | ||
I mean, Bitcoin is certainly real. | ||
It's not going anywhere. | ||
We'd love to mine some Bitcoins here in West Virginia. | ||
And look, it's so interesting because you'll be co-located to where the energy comes from, and we can put those servers down in that abandoned coal mine and keep them cool. | ||
Hey, learn to mine, right? | ||
Yeah, yeah, yeah. | ||
We're going to mine in a mine. | ||
West Virginia's the place to be. | ||
New York is sabotaging businesses with that Trump verdict. | ||
Kevin O'Leary is like, we're leaving. | ||
With literal communists marching on the street. | ||
unidentified
|
I saw that! | |
There is a reason why New York is such a basket case nowadays. | ||
That crime is through the roof. | ||
It's a mess out there, and it's because of the leftist influence when it comes to the justice system. | ||
If you don't, they believe in restorative justice, which means we don't actually put people in jail for committing crimes. | ||
If you don't put people in jail for committing crimes, they just commit more crimes. | ||
So let's jump to the story we have. | ||
That keeps happening. | ||
Let's jump to the news. | ||
It is a primary night sure in michigan and donald trump is currently winning with | ||
sixty five percent of the votes to nikki haley's thirty percent | ||
but what's really interesting here that comes to win nobody cares | ||
unidentified
|
what's interesting is the democratic party do you see the and can you vote | |
Do you see who's in second place? | ||
It is uncommitted. | ||
Yep. | ||
That's fascinating. | ||
Over 20,000 votes of uncommitted. | ||
Now, Biden's at 79 percent uncommitted at an earlier iteration when I think they were only 10 percent in. | ||
Uncommitted was at 16.4 percent. | ||
So it is dropping a little bit as there are more votes come in. | ||
But 20,000 people said, no, Joe Biden, we're leftists, but we hate you. | ||
Yeah. | ||
That's fascinating. | ||
Do you think a lot of those come from Dearborn, Michigan? | ||
A lot of them, I think, are, yeah, Arab Americans in Michigan who really want to not have the U.S. | ||
back in Israel. | ||
unidentified
|
Look at this! | |
Uncommitted. | ||
New York Times. | ||
Now, they've called it for Joe Biden, sure, but I'm really looking forward to seeing what happens when the rest of these votes come in. | ||
And it looks like around the Detroit area is, no, there's not enough data coming in there. | ||
Where are we seeing uncommitted? | ||
unidentified
|
It looks like Uncommitted, I'm seeing it in... Likely he's Ron Dearborn. | |
Yeah. | ||
Actually, I mean, it's all over the place. | ||
Uncommitted basically means far leftist. | ||
He's not popular with the far left at all. | ||
No. | ||
And Rashida Tlaib came out today. | ||
He's the head of her party. | ||
I love it. | ||
She came out today wearing a keffiyeh in a video talking about how she voted uncommitted against Joe Biden and she was happy about it. | ||
I didn't see that. | ||
So is the Deep State anti-Israel now? | ||
I don't know. | ||
I think that there's a lot of conflict when it comes to what to do about Israel because the left does not like Israel at all. | ||
There's a lot of Democrat Jews in America that are like, what the hell's going on around here? | ||
They were completely unaware that the left absolutely hates them. | ||
They were like, oh, that was only the Nazis that hated us! | ||
What's going on? | ||
Well, it turns out Jew hate is a nonpartisan issue globally. | ||
You know, there's always, yeah, that's always a thing. | ||
But yeah, it is really pretty shocking to see this. | ||
And you wonder if this is going to affect Biden's policies. | ||
We had Bushnell the other day with the self-immolation. | ||
He came out, you know, obviously. | ||
And then you had White House staffers saying, using that to call for a ceasefire. | ||
Unreal. | ||
Right? | ||
Americans are still being held hostage in Gaza and you're asking for a fucking ceasefire? | ||
You fucking morons. | ||
Oh my goodness, Phil. | ||
That's so stupid. | ||
It's like they're actual Americans. | ||
And the answer when you say this is like, they're not real Americans because they're Jews. | ||
unidentified
|
Who says that? | |
That's ridiculous. | ||
Who do you think said that? | ||
Have you guys seen the map showing the left-right overlap of support for Israel and support for Palestine? | ||
It's like Democrats are pro-Israel and Republicans are pro-Israel, but then the far right is pro-Palestine and the far left is pro-Palestine. | ||
It's just absolutely funny. | ||
What do they call that where it connects? | ||
That's horseshoe theory. | ||
That's right. | ||
But I mean, the only reason the left is pro-Palestine is just because they're anti-West and it's all just their commies. | ||
That's all it is. | ||
It's just garbage commies. | ||
There was like a bunch of commies marching around in Brooklyn. | ||
Look, man, I've been complaining about commies and yelling about commies and, like, this has been ongoing for the better part of a decade. | ||
I wrote an op-ed complaining about Tom Morello complaining about, uh, what's his name? | ||
He was the... Oh, dammit, his name slips my mind now. | ||
He was a Republican. | ||
He came out to a Rage Against the Machine song. | ||
Tom Morello had a problem with it because, you know, he was using a rage song and he's a Republican. | ||
Paul Ryan, that's who it was. | ||
So I wrote an op-ed complaining about Tom Morello and his commie ass, and I got all kinds of crap from it, from the metal press, because they're like, oh, how dare you call him a commie? | ||
He is a commie. | ||
Yeah, they didn't have the balls to admit it yet. | ||
He has a Lennon quote on his pedal, we pulled that up. | ||
But again, the metal press... I mean, his guitar says, arm the homeless, if I remember correctly. | ||
Well, arm the homeless? | ||
I agree with that. | ||
I don't got a problem with that. | ||
Yeah, I'm not sure what that means, but... Yeah, no, I don't know. | ||
Second Amendment? | ||
Yeah. | ||
I guess, I don't know. | ||
Wait, wait, hold on! | ||
Government-funded armaments for private citizens? | ||
I'm down. | ||
If there's one thing I'm in favor of the government funding, it's giving each individual private citizen arms to bear. | ||
Yeah, I just saw it on his guitar. | ||
I had no idea what it meant. | ||
I was just like, okay, I don't know. | ||
The government could just give that out. | ||
I was saying, what we should have is, look, you guys want universal health care, agreed. | ||
Then we get the Department of Gun Services, the DGS. | ||
And whenever someone turns 16, they can go in and you get a long gun and a sidearm and a box of ammo for each. | ||
If that happens, you can actually change the ATF. | ||
You can put that into their charter, get rid of all the other stuff they do, and then we could actually have a legitimate reason for the ATF. | ||
No, this is perfect. | ||
The ATF should run facilities where when you turn 16, you can go in and you are given a... Look, I know everyone's gonna say it should be a Glock or it should be a 1911. | ||
Well, it'll probably be a Glock. | ||
It's gotta be something lower cost, versatile. | ||
You don't get to go to a government service facility and be guaranteed, you know, like a high end, you know, SIG or something like that. | ||
You get what you get, you know, a military spec AR-15 or whatever, but the government pays for it and the ATF runs it and they also sell tobacco and alcohol. | ||
unidentified
|
Nice. | |
So you can go in, pick up a pack of cigarettes, a six pack of beer and get your gun. | ||
Zero problems. | ||
When you're 18? | ||
No, well, 16 to get your first firearm. | ||
And then, I guess for alcohol, 21. | ||
I could get behind this way better than the FD. | ||
No, you don't want to give them Zin. | ||
Listen man, Zin for the win. | ||
The Department of Zin, Alcohol, Tobacco, and Firearms. | ||
Listen man, it was a breeze to stop drinking. | ||
Quitting smoking, that shit was hard. | ||
I ain't going, get away, get that nicotine away from me. | ||
I am all in. | ||
Look, it is tis the season. | ||
I am all in for Zin. | ||
I'm a big fan. | ||
Apparently. | ||
What is the argument against allowing 16 year olds to go in for their first gun? | ||
unidentified
|
I don't know. | |
Yeah, there's no argument. | ||
unidentified
|
I think that's so true. | |
No argument. I actually believe that if the if our culture respected and | ||
Had gun training and safety stuff. There'd be substantially less. I think that's so true | ||
I mean we learn all kinds of things in school. They're constantly pushing bizarro sex ed, but we never have any | ||
gun safety In the 60s and 70s, there were kids that would go to school with a gun rack and a rifle, and there were no shootings. | ||
They were semi-automatic guns with magazines that had more than 10 rounds in them. | ||
Kids weren't shooting each other. | ||
That was perfectly normal. | ||
Well, back then I think they were using clips, so they probably had 10 rounds. | ||
Some of them, yeah. | ||
When I was in high school, I saw, I mean, people, they'd roll up gun racks, park. | ||
Also, when I was in high school, you could also get a note if you're 18 and you could smoke at school. | ||
Oh, wow. | ||
Outside. | ||
Hence, the zin now. | ||
That's wild. | ||
You really like that smoking notion. | ||
That's wild. | ||
I went to a Catholic girls' school and we didn't have any of that stuff, and then I went to Quaker school and we definitely didn't have any of that stuff. | ||
Until the right learns how to make a big ask, they're going to keep losing everything. | ||
Because the left keeps saying, we're being reasonable, we're just saying, you know, 18-year-olds should be allowed to have handguns. | ||
And now it's, you know, you have to be 21 to buy a handgun. | ||
I'm like, what? | ||
That's insane. | ||
That's unconstitutional. | ||
unidentified
|
It is. | |
But here we are. | ||
Because the right should be like, two-year-olds should have guns. | ||
And you should, yeah. | ||
And then it's like, okay, well, you want to negotiate, let's make it eight-year-old. | ||
Eight-year-olds can have guns. | ||
All right, fine, 16, we'll stop there. | ||
See, I'm going to get my guitar, and I'm going to write Arm the Unborn. | ||
unidentified
|
Oh, I love this! | |
You know what they should do is they should arm those little embryos in Alabama. | ||
They should just all be armed. | ||
Arm the unborn. | ||
You know what I always think about those IVF, the little IVF babies? | ||
It's like, if you have one, right? | ||
If you like have one of these IVF embryo things or whatever, and then it's like 50 years later and it's still viable. | ||
Are they? | ||
Well, they're viable for a pretty long time. | ||
unidentified
|
50 years? | |
I don't know if 50 years is accurate, but what would it be like to be born 50 years after you were conceived? | ||
unidentified
|
Oh my god. | |
Would you be weird? | ||
10 years. | ||
Or even longer. | ||
Or even longer, it says. | ||
Yeah, wouldn't that be weird? | ||
unidentified
|
Yeah. | |
Would you be out of step? | ||
If you ever look at old movies from the 50s or 60s or 70s, people don't look like that anymore. | ||
Right, yeah. | ||
You know, like, no one looks like Peter Falk anymore. | ||
You know what I mean? | ||
Like, we all, we just get, like, as tastes of attractiveness change, we all just start looking different than our, you know, people 20, 30 years ago. | ||
So- Wow, 55 years! | ||
Would you just look weird? | ||
55 years? | ||
55! | ||
We could time capsule an embryo and then, like- Right! | ||
And then somebody could give birth to it! | ||
Well, that's kind of freaky because... Totally freaky! | ||
There's an argument to be made for storing genetic material in IVF embryos for 55 years in the event that something happens. | ||
Like, imagine there's a chemical... Oh, damn, that's messed up! | ||
Nuclear war, radiation, and pesticides sterilize all humans. | ||
Then we go to our emergency embryo bunker that gets replenished every five years. | ||
It'll be like in the Arctic Seed Vault. | ||
Yep. | ||
Same. | ||
And it's like, well, humans have lost the ability to reproduce. | ||
Go into the embryo vault. | ||
We need to make some more humans. | ||
That is wild! | ||
And then those humans would probably be able to reproduce because they're all there. | ||
They have all of their parts. | ||
That's a good idea for a movie, actually. | ||
This is terrific. | ||
Yeah, I love it. | ||
Yeah, it's like some kids grow up in this lab in, you know, in the Arctic or whatever. | ||
And then when they get older, they find out that- And they're there with the seeds. | ||
But you have to look at the age that you- All people on Earth are like 70 years old. | ||
There's no one younger than 70 because that's when everyone became sterile due to pesticides, chemical contamination, and war and stuff. | ||
unidentified
|
Bummer. | |
And so- Born in a bag. | ||
It took 20- They were all in there. | ||
And you're born in a, yeah, thing. | ||
Like a- Yeah. | ||
Just David and I. I guess- There you go. | ||
Just David and I. Every time I see those things, I'm like, that looks like bagged milk. | ||
Because the plastic things on them, it's hooked up, it's like an embryo in a bag or whatever. | ||
It would be so interesting. | ||
It'd be weird, like, born into an old folks home. | ||
It's like Benjamin Button. | ||
We're gonna be like kids in 20 years looking like Duran Duran. | ||
It's like, isn't that a good look now? | ||
Or like in excess, you know, like, is this cool? | ||
No. | ||
Well, just your facial features would look so different. | ||
Yeah. | ||
And what would be different about you than your contemporaries of the same age group, but who were conceived in a normal time frame? | ||
Here's a crazier thought. | ||
If we stored embryos for up to 55 years, or figured out how to do more than 55 years, I wonder why the 55 year is a limit. | ||
And then, 55 years later, there's no races anymore. | ||
The world is just, like in South Park, olive-skinned bald people. | ||
And so, they're like, if you'd like to bring back Irish people, we have a hundred Irish embryos, we have a hundred Chinese embryos. | ||
unidentified
|
That's so crazy. | |
Which ones would sell for more money? | ||
It would be like such a black market. | ||
Nah, they'd destroy them all. | ||
They'd be like, you can't have them. | ||
They'd destroy them all. | ||
That's a good idea for a movie. | ||
unidentified
|
Purists, leftists are like, we can't allow them to bring back race. | |
It would be a catastrophe. | ||
I love when I'm on the show and we come up with movie ideas. | ||
Or it's like a group of like, traditional, like, what's the right word? | ||
People who, reactionary types, they're like, the world was better 200 years ago. | ||
And so they break into the embryo vault, steal a bunch of, and then seed the different races to return them. | ||
And then it's like, 10 years later, there's a bunch of kids who have race, but all adults don't. | ||
And they're like, these kids must be stopped. | ||
It'll be like on Star Trek when they get rid of the genetically engineered people. | ||
It's the movie where the kids are part animal. | ||
You see that one? | ||
Oh, the Netflix thing. | ||
unidentified
|
Yeah. | |
Was that Sweet Tooth? | ||
Sweet Tooth. | ||
Yeah. | ||
Yeah. | ||
Imagine that, but like, it's in the future and there's no race anymore and then all of a sudden a bunch of kids are born and they're just different races and people go around killing them. | ||
Yeah, he's like the... I thought that was really interesting. | ||
I watched that because an actor that I used to know in New York was in that and so I think he's really talented. | ||
So I watched the film and I thought it was so bizarre. | ||
Yeah, it was. | ||
unidentified
|
Really weird. | |
Yeah, it's like some weird hippie to be message about like being an animal and living in the earth is better or something. | ||
And like not technology. | ||
Right. | ||
Yeah. | ||
Yeah, what was it, like, some plants got you sick? | ||
Something like that. | ||
I don't remember much of that. | ||
I mostly just remember the antlers. | ||
I can't remember how it happened. | ||
I got kind of, like, intrigued with the antlers. | ||
There were flowers, and if you were sick, the flowers would start to grow or something. | ||
Yeah, that's right. | ||
Yeah, they would grow. | ||
And so if you had those flowers growing around your house, then they'd be like, okay, we gotta go kill that guy. | ||
unidentified
|
Yeah, yeah, yeah. | |
He's gotta go. | ||
And then if you got into the flowers, you would get sick. | ||
Yeah, something like that. | ||
And then they had, like, this total side story. | ||
The guy from Parks and Rec with the mustache. | ||
What's that actor's name? | ||
Oh, gosh. | ||
Are you thinking of The Last of Us? | ||
Oh, no. | ||
Yeah, I am. | ||
Sorry, I confused the two of those things. | ||
What's The Last of Us? | ||
The Last of Us is where they had the gay guys Yeah. | ||
Yeah. | ||
Who like live together. | ||
They would be the last, I mean. | ||
Yeah. | ||
And that was a total gay conversion therapy propaganda. | ||
Oh yeah. | ||
Because it was basically in that show, there's a guy and he's like, help, I need help. | ||
And he's gay. | ||
And the guy who lives there is not, but there's no one else around. | ||
So the dude like hooks up with him and the guy just goes with it. | ||
And then they get married and it's just like, you know, I don't know that I believe a straight guy | ||
in his forties would just be like, well, the world's ending, I guess I'll be gay. | ||
Like, I don't know that that would happen. | ||
Ron Swanson. | ||
Parks and Recs. | ||
That was that character's name. | ||
But that's the guy that was in it. | ||
Yeah, that was the strangest thing about that show. | ||
I was like, what? | ||
Yeah. | ||
Let's go to Super Chats! | ||
If you haven't already, would you kindly smash that like button, subscribe to this channel, and share the show with your friends. | ||
Head over to TimCast.com, click join us, become a member, support the show directly, because this show is made possible thanks in part to viewers like you. | ||
As a member, you'll get access to our uncensored members-only show coming up at 10 p.m. | ||
tonight. | ||
You'll get access to our Discord server, and you will get notification for our upcoming monthly events in Martinsburg, West Virginia. | ||
Only available to members. | ||
Not only that, elite members, meaning you're a member at a hundred bucks a month or more, | ||
will get key cards to the private social club in West Virginia. | ||
Meaning you can walk up to the door, go, and then the door opens, you come in, hang out, | ||
there's couches, games, pool table. | ||
We're building it all right now, but that's the general plan. | ||
And the reason we're doing it is, all these ultra elites, | ||
they've got social clubs where they spend something like 50 to a hundred K per year to be able to show up, | ||
schmooze with big network industry executives and stuff. | ||
We gotta, we gotta rival that. | ||
Of course we're not gonna charge a hundred grand a year, we're gonna charge a thousand bucks a year. | ||
It's gonna be like a hundred bucks a month and you get a key card and you can come and go as you please when it's open. | ||
That, that hundred bucks basically funds the staff who will be there. | ||
It'll make sure there's food and drink and things that are available for everybody. | ||
But then, we bring people together. | ||
And when they hang out and share ideas, things get done. | ||
So that's the ultimate plan. | ||
I love that it's like a gentleman's club in London. | ||
Well, not a gentleman's club. | ||
No, but like, you know, the clubs that they would have in London. | ||
In New York, like Soho. | ||
Right. | ||
Yeah. | ||
I went to one club where it was like $50,000 a year. | ||
I don't mean like Delilah's Den or whatever. | ||
No, right. | ||
CEOs of big companies, media executives, they're all hanging out. | ||
They're drinking whiskey and smoking cigars. | ||
And if you're a member of the club, you can walk up and say, Hey, how's it going? | ||
And, Hey, I got, Hey, check it out. | ||
I work for this company. | ||
And they're like, Oh, that's fantastic. | ||
And you could, you could, you could work in, you know, some company where you're like, we're looking for marketing and advertising. | ||
And there's the CEO of the biggest advertising firm. | ||
And you can say, here's my card. | ||
I got money for you. | ||
And they'll be like, great. | ||
What's your product? | ||
I'm like, here's what we do. | ||
And they'll be like, we're going to sell you more product. | ||
And it's like, those network connections make everything happen. | ||
Well, that's what you're doing. | ||
You're building community. | ||
That's the plan. | ||
That's, I think, one of your greatest projects. | ||
That's the plan, and then hopefully we have a thousand Casper Coffee locations hosting Saturday morning cartoons and families are coming together and watching wholesome family entertainment. | ||
Here we go! | ||
Super Chats! | ||
Clint Torres says, Howdy, people! | ||
Howdy, Clint! | ||
Welcome back. | ||
Jose Alfredo Diaz says, First! | ||
In fact, you were second, sir. | ||
Dom Dancam says, Jesus saves, Jesus heals. | ||
I watched this funny video on Instagram. | ||
It's a guy, he goes to people and says, I will pay your gas if you can name one Bible verse. | ||
And everyone just says no. | ||
And I'm like, man, you don't even wanna try? | ||
I mean, free gas? | ||
It's like 70 bucks. | ||
All you gotta do is say a Bible verse? | ||
Do you have to know which verse? | ||
Does he have to know which one it is? | ||
I don't know. | ||
In the video, everyone just says no, not interested, not interested. | ||
One lady says something that's not a Bible verse, and he goes, well, that's not a Bible verse. | ||
And then one guy says a Bible verse, names the verse, and then says he reads the Bible every day and he studies, I think it's called, what is it, eschatology? | ||
Yeah, so he's like, well there you found the guy. | ||
But I'm like, you wouldn't, you know, if someone came up to me and said, I'll pay for your gas if you read a Bible verse, I'd be like, give me a second, I'd pull out my phone, look up a Bible verse, and I'd say it. | ||
That wouldn't be that hard. | ||
I'd be like, you know, he might be like, oh come on, that's not what I meant, and I'd be like, hey, you said you'd pay my gas if I read your Bible verse. | ||
So I looked one up. | ||
Give you a free one, easy one, Psalm 95. | ||
If today you hear his voice, harden not your hearts. | ||
There you go. | ||
Free gas for everybody. | ||
I guess the issue was, though, did you need to name the actual verse? | ||
Isn't that a psalm? | ||
Or just say the verse? | ||
Yeah, it is a psalm. | ||
No, not just a psalm. | ||
I don't know if it's a psalm. | ||
I feel like I've sung that at church before. | ||
Probably. | ||
Yeah. | ||
My favorite was, it was weirdly translated, but it's talked to me all the time. | ||
Astronaut says, I think the clock hit midnight. | ||
When will the Mervs fly? | ||
Yeah, it's funny because like every time they move the clock, the doomsday clock, closer to midnight, it's just like sooner or later, guys, you're not going to be able to move any closer. | ||
Like, come on. | ||
It's all for show. | ||
unidentified
|
Right. | |
It's just so dumb. | ||
Should we make our own version of it? | ||
Yes. | ||
Yes, we should do that. | ||
We move the rooster closer to the hen house. | ||
I love it. | ||
unidentified
|
The rooster is three meters from the hen house. | |
With the latest news about Vladimir Putin, the rooster has been moved one meter. | ||
The largest move in the history of the... Do they still do the clock? | ||
Yes. | ||
unidentified
|
Yeah. | |
Yeah. | ||
It's like what is it like for 30 seconds to midnight or something right now? | ||
Yeah, it's something ridiculous, something... Arbitrary and... Are they going to play an Iron Maiden song when it's two minutes? | ||
I wish. | ||
Well, they missed the chance years ago. | ||
But the whole point of it is just to give people anxiety. | ||
All right. | ||
Wyatt Caldenberg says, Tim, according to Tech Times, AI favors nuclear warfare and war simulations. | ||
Raising concern in a war simulation, AI launched nukes to promote world peace. | ||
So Skynet is real and we are all dead meat. | ||
Well, I suppose whoever develops the true AI first will likely get a weapon that could wipe out their enemy before their enemy realizes it. | ||
I think biological weapons are probably going to be what war is next because you can target a gene and then one group of people just die from it. | ||
Everyone could carry it and that's a good idea for a movie too. | ||
You know, a bioweapon that's engineered to kill a specific race of people? | ||
Everyone ends up getting it, and it doesn't do anything to most people, but it targets certain people with certain genes, and then all of a sudden they start dying, if you have any percentage of, like, a certain ethnic background. | ||
That's the scary thing about bioweapons. | ||
Dr. Doom says, do you guys think a band should release all their albums, or do you think they should hide albums that clash with their image, like Pantera 80s albums? | ||
What did they do? | ||
Cowboys from Hell is still cool. | ||
But do you know Power Metal? | ||
Yeah. | ||
The Pantera record I mean? | ||
unidentified
|
Yeah. | |
So it's this hair metal band. | ||
It is significantly different to the rest of the stuff that they have. | ||
I think that it's okay. | ||
You shouldn't hide it, but it's okay to not focus on it. | ||
I'm not drawing a spotlight onto Behind Silence and Solitude. | ||
That was our first record. | ||
I'm not trying to show that off. | ||
If people hear about it and they listen, great. | ||
It's not our best work, so I get it. | ||
I think the answer is, you're not really hiding it. | ||
Imagine if I was like, today, you know, actually I'll put it this way. | ||
We have, we've had, we've been pitched on Tim Guest IRL to do specific themed shows, and I'm like, the people who tune in to the show, tune in for the show as it is. | ||
News commentary, shifting through these stories, different guests chiming in. | ||
If one day we decided to do a show about Like, a debate, which we stopped doing that because you're basically making something totally different. | ||
So if a band is known for making a certain kind of music, and they want to release a dance album, they should call it something else. | ||
They can say, like, Pantera Presents. | ||
Dance, you know, instead. | ||
Or whatever, you know what I mean? | ||
Vulgar Display still rules. | ||
Vulgar Display is probably my favorite, yeah. | ||
That being said, like, the music stuff that we're working on is not intended, like, I don't care about genre at all. | ||
I don't even... don't know whatever. | ||
You know? | ||
People are like, you know, we've been told to just make the same song 12 times, basically. | ||
And I'm just like, we'll make the songs we feel like making. | ||
It's a better way to do it. | ||
Amen to that. | ||
Alright, let's go! | ||
Adam Wilber says, Phil, where can I buy physical copies of All That Remains albums? | ||
The website only has links for digital purchases. | ||
I think you can get them on Amazon? | ||
Um... | ||
Or... I think Amazon. | ||
Circuit City! | ||
Actually, I'm gonna see if you can get them on Amazon. | ||
Man, that's kinda crazy that Circuit City's gone. | ||
That was gone 20 years ago, wasn't it? | ||
Can't be it. | ||
Circuit City! | ||
Remember Radio Shack? | ||
They turn into a cell phone store before disappearing. | ||
Yeah, I remember Radio Shack. | ||
I loved Radio Shack when I was a kid because you could buy components and you could build little things and little lights and gizmos. | ||
They were the only place that had the cables you needed. | ||
FGC Hotline says, not first, do a sequel of Eyes of Advice with Ian battling with the smoke demon at the end of the video. | ||
He takes off the space face all sweaty. | ||
We actually are working on what the next song we put out will probably include a storyline connection with Eyes of Advice in a different way. | ||
And, uh, we're gonna start working on that one tomorrow, and I'm hoping to get that one out really, really fast. | ||
Because this one has, like, a prescient political message for our times, and I think it would be good to put out. | ||
So that'll take a lot of work, but, you know, we'll get to it. | ||
I Am What I Am says, Tim, can you make a physical copy of all your music? | ||
When the powers that be delete your channels, still would like to be able to hear your music. | ||
Uh, well, we... | ||
We could- I think we are aiming to release an album soon. | ||
Maybe the next song that comes out will come out with the album. | ||
It's just, like- Will you do vinyl? | ||
Yeah, that's what I'm thinking. | ||
That'd be nice. | ||
unidentified
|
It's not expensive. | |
I know a couple people in the game, because obviously, DJs. | ||
How many songs can fit on vinyl? | ||
Like six or seven? | ||
Depends if you're 33 or 45. | ||
unidentified
|
It depends on what you're trying to do, yeah. | |
It depends on the side, too. | ||
unidentified
|
It's like 15 minutes, roughly, if you're pushing an absolute length on 33. | |
Wow, 15 minutes. | ||
That's talking about, like, singles. | ||
If you want to do a full length, you can do... Yeah, exactly. | ||
I don't know, a Tim Cass 7-inch would be baller. | ||
unidentified
|
7 inches? | |
Yeah. | ||
Or is that a little 45s? | ||
unidentified
|
Yeah, a little 45s. | |
I usually do one... So, at the Cast Brew Coffee Shop, we have the Record Your Own Vinyl booth. | ||
unidentified
|
That's sick! | |
That's awesome. | ||
unidentified
|
Have you seen it before? | |
You haven't seen it? | ||
unidentified
|
Oh, it's so sick. | |
It's a custom build. | ||
Yeah. | ||
Jack White has one in Detroit. | ||
I think it's in... Is it in Detroit? | ||
No, it's in Nashville. | ||
What am I thinking of Detroit for? | ||
And so we got one built. | ||
Very expensive. | ||
And so when you... I mean... | ||
I think we have it in the actual Casper location is probably the way to do it but it costs money to use like because you get a vinyl and it's very expensive and we have to maintain it but so you spend like 20 bucks you go in it gives you two and a half minutes you can record whatever you want and it cuts a vinyl for you and that's it that's a single copy. | ||
That's really cool it's like a photo booth but sound. | ||
Yeah so we could go in and play an acoustic version of one of the songs and that will be the only copy that exists. | ||
That's cool. | ||
That's really cool. | ||
I love that. | ||
And, you know, dude, you could do that kind of stuff. | ||
You could, like, if you go and you do, like, a live acoustic or whatever version, you could do that, and you could, like, either sell them or give them away for gifts or special events. | ||
Give the one you have away. | ||
Exactly. | ||
It cuts one. | ||
Right? | ||
Super cool. | ||
Auction it off. | ||
It's a one-time thing. | ||
You know, the fact that it's unique, people would dig that. | ||
I would dig that. | ||
Yeah. | ||
Yeah. | ||
All right, let's go! | ||
Number one of one. | ||
One of one. | ||
Yeah. | ||
Let's grab some more Super Chats. | ||
Ronnie says, I'm a retired Canadian infant infanteer, and I did sovereignty ops in our Arctic. | ||
And I'll tell you right now, there's so there's no army making successful land moves through that terrain. | ||
No, I agree. | ||
What I'm saying is the direct path from Russia to the United States in terms of warfare is over Canada. | ||
Over. | ||
Right. | ||
Yeah, so if Russia wants to bomb the United States, sure, there's Alaska, but over Canada. | ||
I, I, yeah. | ||
Canada's not in a good spot being between us. | ||
You know what I mean? | ||
Everyone, you know, people look at the map. | ||
They see Russia over here, and the US over here, and they're kind of like, well, the war's over there. | ||
I'm like, uh, Russia's very close. | ||
It's right here. | ||
It's right here, yeah. | ||
The Earth is round. | ||
It's like part of how our maps are all screwed up. | ||
unidentified
|
Yeah. | |
The world is not actually flat, y'all. | ||
So you wanted something crazy. | ||
unidentified
|
Uh, yo, this is wild. | |
Someone, Texas Lindsey on Twitter said, write me a poem in the style of Tim Pool and said, no, I can't do that. | ||
And so it didn't say anything bad about me. | ||
It accused other people of being very, very bad. | ||
And I was like, it looks like there's a product limitation here. | ||
So I tried it and Google Gemini actually, actually wrote something that I thought was pretty good. | ||
You want me to read it? | ||
Yeah. | ||
This is written by Google Gemini, allegedly in the style of Tim Pool. | ||
The world's on fire, they say, a culture war's blaze. | ||
But is it really burning, or media's manipulative haze? | ||
They call us far-right, a dangerous fringe, they claim. | ||
But who's defining the terms, playing the victim's game? | ||
Big tech censors, their algorithms biased and bold, silencing voices they disagree with, stories left untold. | ||
Cancel culture, rampant careers destroyed in a tweet, while corporate media churns out narratives never complete. | ||
We question the narrative of the mainstream's manufactured plight, seeking truth in the shadows where independent voices take flight. | ||
They call us conspiracy theorists, lost on a web of our own. | ||
But who's truly lost, following blindly seeds of fear sown? | ||
We're the skeptical generation, the information age-brewed, demanding nuance, not soundbites, refusing to be subdued. | ||
We navigate the echo chamber, seeking diverse points of view, for in the clash of ideas, truth might finally break through. | ||
That was written by Google Gemini. | ||
Nice. | ||
unidentified
|
I know. | |
I was like, wow. | ||
I think I'm going to use that for something. | ||
It said it was written by me, so that proves it. | ||
unidentified
|
I mean, you just said it, so. | |
That's right! | ||
Now it's copyrighted. | ||
That's a poem. | ||
Well, the way I think the AI stuff works is that you do own it when it generates or something. | ||
I don't know Google Gemini's terms of service. | ||
I know that for, I think, mid-journey, when you generate an image, it's your image. | ||
Oh, is that right? | ||
I don't know, you gotta check. | ||
I'm pretty sure there's still some kind of limitation or something, but it's yours to use. | ||
Yeah. | ||
unidentified
|
Yeah, you can just use it. | |
And people have been using all of the AI-generated stuff. | ||
Oh, no, no, I think you can slightly alter it, or something like that. | ||
Which fair uses it, and then it's free for you to use. | ||
unidentified
|
Oh, okay. | |
So I'll just change a word or two, and then... Yeah. | ||
Alright. | ||
Martin Edgar says, I know we showed off all of our equipment during the Gulf War, where we tested all of our new toys, but I'm concerned that Russia will learn how to defeat our equipment since Biden sent our tanks and Bradleys to Ukraine. | ||
All the tanks that have gone to Ukraine have gotten smoked. | ||
Every single Abrams that we've sent over there has been destroyed. | ||
Really? | ||
All of them? | ||
Wasn't it like 36 of them? | ||
Every single last one has been destroyed or disabled. | ||
Wasn't it 36? | ||
Yeah. | ||
Really? | ||
They're all dead? | ||
All of them. | ||
Do you see the thing where now they're talking about, oh yeah, we'll send you long-range missiles now. | ||
unidentified
|
Well, it's just drones and artillery. | |
AU Dirty Bird says, Yo Tim, the UK just recently launched a gnarly satellite laser weapon called Dragonfire. | ||
The videos are awesome. | ||
Really? | ||
Maybe we'll pull that one out. | ||
All right. | ||
Spidgebee says, so the guy, they guys her on the chat have been talking about this and we decided we can't take it anymore. | ||
Nuclear, not nuclear. | ||
Oh, they got you. | ||
You just nuked me. | ||
unidentified
|
Yep. | |
Let's see. | ||
Kay says, talking about prepping, we could go raid the cheese bunkers. | ||
We'll all be sitting on food for a long while. | ||
What's a cheese bunker? | ||
Is that a bunker full of cheese? | ||
I mean, it must be that. | ||
A lot of people talk about, we can go raid some stuff, and they ain't never done a raid before. | ||
I can't raid. | ||
You don't want to raid anything! | ||
So, you need to figure out how to survive on your own. | ||
Raiding only lasts one or two times. | ||
If the world collapsed and you were like, let's go find food, you're going to run into people who are better prepared to defend their food than you are prepared to take. | ||
Yeah. | ||
Like, you're, you, you, if you get, like, if the world ends and you get into one gunfight, your second one's probably going to kill you. | ||
Like, you don't get a lot of chances. | ||
Like, and you know, you take, you're doomed. | ||
It is really funny in movies when like someone's being shot at and they're just running and they're not getting hit. | ||
And it's like, dude, with a long gun, Yeah, half your buddies are gone, and then you hope you're the one who won. | ||
You're gonna walk into an L-shaped ambush, and you are gonna be a loot drop. | ||
Loot drop. | ||
That's right. | ||
They're gonna take your shoes. | ||
It's like, oh, look at this, that guy, all I see is toilet paper, clothes, boots, socks. | ||
Katrina Miles says, my son has been in the Air Force since 2009, and he hates it now because of all the politics. | ||
He is seriously thinking of getting out. | ||
That's unfortunate, but I think he should. | ||
It does not seem like it's going to get better. | ||
Let's go! | ||
Let's grab some more Super Chats. | ||
Uh, let's see. | ||
Where are we at? | ||
Barely a Millennial says, I would love to have chickens, but no idea to take care of them. | ||
Not even sure where to start. | ||
Recommendations, maybe a survival or bushcraft series. | ||
You can simply go on YouTube and look up chickens. | ||
It's really easy. | ||
In fact, here's what we did. | ||
We went to a chicken farm. | ||
We went to the chicken man and we said, we would like chickens. | ||
And he said, okay. | ||
And he grabbed a little, what looked like a Dunkin' Donuts munchkins box. | ||
And he just reached in and grabbed and threw them in. | ||
He said, do you want a certain kind of chicken or would you like the sampler? | ||
I'm not kidding. | ||
And I said, we'll take the sampler. | ||
I would take the sampler. | ||
We got a couple different kinds of each and that's how we got our original chickens. | ||
And they said, what do we do? | ||
Took a minute and he told us, keep warm. | ||
Use this light bulb. | ||
I'll sell it to you. | ||
Here's food. | ||
Here's water. | ||
There you go. | ||
unidentified
|
And then we had... How often do you have to feed chickens? | |
Every day. | ||
You have to feed them every day? | ||
Unless you want to like... You can let them run around, yeah. | ||
But if you want the chickens to lay eggs every day, you gotta feed them. | ||
You gotta feed them every day. | ||
Yeah, so they need food in order to lay eggs, obviously. | ||
And if they eat every day, one thing you can do is you put wood planks on the ground, and you put ropes on the ends of them. | ||
Every day you walk up, lift it up, and there are bugs! | ||
And the chickens will run up and eat all the bugs, and then you move the plank, and then the bugs go onto the plank, and then you keep doing that every day. | ||
You move the plank and give the chickens a snack. | ||
That's nice. | ||
So they get seed and stuff plus bugs? | ||
They don't eat seeds, they're carnivores. | ||
Well, they're omnivores, but they eat bugs. | ||
They eat bugs and grass. | ||
Isn't there, like, chicken feed? | ||
And, like, my neighbors have chickens, and they, like, check out some stuff. | ||
When you go to buy food for chickens, you're not, like, if you're buying them scratch, it's like a treat. | ||
unidentified
|
I see. | |
If, you know, if you're getting layer feed, chicken, like, there's a layer, there's, like, chickens that lay eggs, you're getting protein meal. | ||
unidentified
|
Yeah. | |
And so the roosters can eat it, too. | ||
You know what's funny is, like... What do the roosters eat? | ||
They eat something different? | ||
So, uh, Sarah Avenberg, one of our chickens, the Brahma, ate a mouse. | ||
Yeah. | ||
Just ran up, grabbed a mouse, and then... One bite. | ||
unidentified
|
Wow. | |
Yeah. | ||
They eat meat. | ||
And there's a video you can watch online where a chicken runs up, grabs a mouse, and bashes it. | ||
unidentified
|
Just, like, bites it and then slams it on the side of, like, the... My cat used to do stuff like that when I used to have cats. | |
That eats it. | ||
Yeah. | ||
Yeah, but what's really funny is because the hens are ravenous. | ||
Because they have to lay eggs every day. | ||
So they're just always hungry. | ||
So when you throw food into the chicken coop, the roosters just watch. | ||
Because they're not that hungry. | ||
They're like, you know, I eat what I eat. | ||
And then the girls just are fighting. | ||
They play rugby. | ||
They pick up the food and they run and they all chase them around. | ||
It's the funniest thing ever. | ||
So I think we just put like ten roosters in the chop. | ||
Yep. | ||
So we're gonna have the first annual TimCast Cockfest this Friday. | ||
I love it. | ||
Yeah, I'm excited. | ||
Rooster Chili. | ||
I'm gonna make Rooster Taco. | ||
So we're gonna do pulled barbecue rooster and then I'm gonna- That'll be really good. | ||
Corn tortillas with some sour cream. | ||
Nice! | ||
That's the way you do it. | ||
unidentified
|
Yeah. | |
But then we're gonna have some just like regular brined and then broiled pressure cooker stuff. | ||
Yeah. | ||
Let's grab some more Super Chats. | ||
Very Angry Citizen says, Mr. Moore, I'm a citizen of District 2, Westover, West Virginia. | ||
What guarantee can you provide that you won't become another Crappido or Joe Manchin? | ||
What I would point you to is my voting record when I was in the state legislature. | ||
If you want to know how I'm going to vote in Congress, it'll look exactly the same. | ||
I had one of the most conservative voting records in the West Virginia state legislature. | ||
We had some news just come out yesterday. | ||
We've listed a bunch of woke banks. | ||
Barring them from doing business with state government because they're boycotting the fossil fuel industry. | ||
I'll be on Fox Business News six o'clock tomorrow talking about that. | ||
That's important because it's a huge portion of the West Virginia economy. | ||
It is, it is. | ||
So coal, gas and oil severance taxes We get $1 billion a year from that. | ||
We got a state budget of $4.7 billion. | ||
So what we're doing is protecting our resources and we can't hand money over to one of these banks that is trying to diminish those funds through like ESG activities, right? | ||
Because they're trying to destroy the fossil fuel industry. | ||
We can't do that, so we just sent some letters out, put some banks on notice, telling them that they're potentially going to lose their ability to bid on contracts in the future. | ||
We've already listed five other institutions, BlackRock, JPMorgan Chase, Morgan Stanley, Goldman Sachs, and Wells Fargo. | ||
And that was about two years ago, so we're doing a re-up on it, and we're gonna see. | ||
They got a 40-day appeal. | ||
The appeal process is always interesting, so looking forward to it. | ||
Right on. | ||
They'll probably just come around, most of these companies don't care, they just want to make money. | ||
And they'll say, oh no, oh geez, I guess we're going to have to make more money and, you know. | ||
Yeah, and look, all I want them to do is not restrict capital to fossil fuel industries, which is so important to West Virginia, get away from ESG, maybe just a bank, act like a bank and the free market, remain free. | ||
Just a thought. | ||
Wild and crazy idea. | ||
That's all we're looking for here. | ||
The Sig P says nationalism is synonymous with collectivism from the perspective of the anarchist. | ||
Anarchism is synonymous with communism from the perspective of the boomer media watcher. | ||
The American hive mind is indicative the U.S. | ||
populism is still socialist. | ||
I'm not trying to convince anyone that I'm in favor of any of the left's garbage, but I'm just trying to articulate this is what they're going to do, the response that they're going to have, and what their Their attack vectors are gonna be, so you should be prepared to deal with those things, at the very least. | ||
Don't blow off what I'm saying, thinking, oh, Phil doesn't know what he's talking about, blah blah blah, or he wants this, or whatever. | ||
Like, be aware. | ||
These ideas, there are people on the left that have already thought about these things, and they have plans in place to capitalize on the reaction. | ||
So, don't walk into a trap. | ||
No, certainly. | ||
No traps. | ||
But I will tell you this, if you have a problem with immigration in this country, if you think it's out of control, that's probably a feeling of nationalism that you're having. | ||
All right. | ||
Justin Kaufman says, Nikki Haley is coming to my college campus tomorrow. | ||
If I am given a chance to ask a question or say something, what should I say? | ||
What is wrong with you? | ||
Drop out! | ||
What would your parents think? | ||
I don't know. | ||
Why did you lie at the debate and say that Putin said he was going to invade Poland? | ||
Is that what you said, right? | ||
You said Poland, right? | ||
Yeah, I think so. | ||
Fact check that one. | ||
She basically said at the debate that Putin says he wants to invade, you know, some other part of Europe or something. | ||
So, you know, I wouldn't start off by calling her a liar. | ||
I'd say, why did you say that Putin said he wants to do X? | ||
That's not true. | ||
And then she'll give you some politician patter answer and she'll say, look, I think we can tell based on Vladimir Putin's, you know, she does that thing where she doesn't move her jaw when she talks, so her teeth are just like that the whole time. | ||
I'd ask her, why are you raising money in New York with Larry Fink? | ||
That's a good one. | ||
That's what I'd want to know. | ||
Outdoors with the Morgans! | ||
Big fan of Riley Moore. | ||
I live in PA, but have a slice of heaven in Preston County. | ||
Good luck in DC, but wish you would stay in West Virginia. | ||
DC is far too gone to try fixing. | ||
I will not be staying there. | ||
I will go there and back every day. | ||
Yeah, that's an important thing for people to realize. | ||
It's extremely important to vote for your state reps and senators. | ||
That's more important than anything. | ||
You know, people think that your federal representative is here to fix your neighborhood. | ||
Well, that's your local rep. | ||
Your federal rep is going to go and try and put a stop to what the disgusting federal government stuff is happening, right? | ||
Voting against wars. | ||
Well, I suppose if you're for war, then you want to vote for somebody who's for war, but that's what they're going to do. | ||
Oh, this is what Haley said. | ||
She said this was in July. | ||
Russia said they were going to invade Ukraine. | ||
We watched that happen. | ||
China says Taiwan is next. | ||
We better believe them. | ||
Russia said Poland and the Baltics are next. | ||
If that happens, we are looking at a world war. | ||
And he never said that! | ||
Right. | ||
No one in Russia said that. | ||
That's insane. | ||
Hey look, whether anyone wants to believe it or not, the universe is just. | ||
which were dumb enough to get indoctrination certificates to live as paupers for life for the crime of failing a | ||
basic IQ test. | ||
Hey look, whether anyone wants to believe it or not, the universe is just. | ||
And when civilization grows too great, too safe, too secure, and too luxurious, | ||
you end up with large amounts of people who are incapable of survival on their own. | ||
Those people will eventually act as ankle weights on society, voting and destroying and gutting the system, which will then result in hard times, which will excise the people too weak to survive. | ||
And I'm not saying it's a good thing, it's just it is what's going to happen. | ||
When we say hard times make strong men, strong men make good times, good times make weak men, weak men make hard times, what's not included in that is Strong men make good times, which lead to abundance and population growth. | ||
Population growth and good times lead to an excess of weak men. | ||
Weak men voting, and women, create instability and chaos, which causes death, famine, and collapse. | ||
And then the weak people die. | ||
The strong people who survive are then able to rebuild and make another good society. | ||
So, that's the scary thing about it. | ||
Alright everybody, if you haven't already, would you kindly smash that like button, subscribe to this channel, share this show with all your friends. | ||
Buy the song, Eyes of Advice. | ||
Aw man, you knew it! | ||
This is wild. | ||
So Eyes of Advice just dropped last Friday, and the video is getting rave reviews. | ||
It is the most shazammed song we've had yet, which is kind of wild, meaning people are hearing it somewhere and they want to know what it is. | ||
That's really, really great. | ||
I'm excited for that. | ||
Yeah, that's cool. | ||
But sure enough, we get an email from our good friends tracking the metrics, and they're like, oopsie daisy. | ||
There is one individual who was like, guys, something's wrong. | ||
We got to fix this. | ||
Check this out. | ||
And somewhere in the chain, they are once again like it's just their mission. | ||
Do not let these people into the into the system. | ||
We have the means. | ||
To support and sponsor artists in ways none of these labels can. | ||
But they have direct access to the machine, and they're trying to shut us out. | ||
So, buy the song Eyes of Advice on iTunes. | ||
iTunes is the best place to buy it. | ||
If you're on an Apple device, you have iTunes. | ||
Otherwise, you'll have to download it. | ||
Amazon is good too, but they play dirty, dirty games. | ||
More importantly, just watch the video. | ||
Check it out. | ||
It's the most extensive music video we've ever done. | ||
Heavy, heavy CGI. | ||
We're gonna make We're going to make a behind-the-scenes. | ||
When you see the behind-the-scenes video, you are going to lose it. | ||
It's hilarious. | ||
But when you watch the video, it's nuts. | ||
There's like a smoke demon that floats into the room and then Ian's slowly dying. | ||
We are going to announce on Friday who won the pseudo contest. | ||
I said I'd give someone a thousand bucks if they could accurately describe the video in detail. | ||
So far, I think there's a contender for the victory here. | ||
And I think, to put it fairly, I mean, most of the people who watched the video agreed that this one user is probably on point with it. | ||
So, uh, there's that too. | ||
You can follow the show at TimCastIRL. | ||
You can follow me personally at TimCast. | ||
Riley, do you want to shout anything out? | ||
Yeah. | ||
Hey, just real quick. | ||
So we're having an event with Public Square in Martinsburg on March 4th. | ||
It's a really great event that we put together here with the State Treasurer's Office. | ||
If you're not as familiar with Public Square, it's a marketplace like Amazon that's focused on connecting customers and businesses with shared values. | ||
They're pro-life, pro-family, pro-America. | ||
Please check it out. | ||
You can go to publicsquare.com and you can also go to my website more for wv.com. | ||
I am PhilThatRemains on Twix. | ||
I'm PhilThatRemainsOfficial on Instagram. | ||
The band is All That Remains. | ||
You can follow us on Amazon Music, on Apple Music, Pandora, YouTube, you know, the Internet. | ||
And don't forget, the left lane is for crime. | ||
I'm Libby Emmons. | ||
I'm the editor with The Postmillennial and Human Events. | ||
You can check out what we're doing at ThePostmillennial.com and HumanEvents.com. | ||
And if you want to find me, I'm at Libby Emmons on Twitter. | ||
And iamsurge.com. | ||
unidentified
|
Just find me on the internet, argue with me. | |
It's iamsurge.com. | ||
I'm ready for this after show when you watch, Tim. | ||
We will see you all over at timcast.com in about a minute. |