Speaker | Time | Text |
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Thank you. | ||
They've been going on since this past weekend. | ||
Today, I was actually surprised to see that midday they tore down the barricades around the DNC and actually breached the perimeter. | ||
Wow, it's getting the riots started early, but it wasn't too intense. | ||
The police eventually got control of things, put the barricades back up. | ||
I can only imagine that as the night goes on, it's going to get a bit crazier. | ||
Joe Biden will be speaking around 11 p.m. | ||
Eastern, so we're not going to be live for that. | ||
But I imagine that's when the protests and the riots may actually start devolving. | ||
Because I was surprised. | ||
I thought we weren't going to see any kind of physical action from these groups until nightfall. | ||
But I guess I was wrong. | ||
So we got that going on. | ||
We got a whole bunch of stories. | ||
We're going to go through all of what's going on with the riots. | ||
They're boarding up windows. | ||
What's going on at the DNC. | ||
Kamala Harris, this is a big story now, I suppose. | ||
A lot of the news is DNC. | ||
Kamala Harris is accused of being a drunk and videos are surfacing showing her slurring her words and many people are saying that she's got a drinking problem and that others have attested to this, although others are saying she may be taking some kind of drug to assist her with public speaking. | ||
So we'll see. | ||
And then possibly my favorite story out of the DNC that we absolutely must discuss is the free vasectomies and abortions for attendees. | ||
I kid you not, this is not a joke. | ||
There is a bus from Planned Parenthood offering vasectomies and abortions to the attendees at the DNC and Wiener Circle, a famous Chicago hot dog shop, is offering free hot dogs for everyone who gets an abortion or a vasectomy. | ||
unidentified
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It's just true, I guess. | |
So we'll talk about that. | ||
And Putin is offering asylum. | ||
We got a bunch of other funny stories. | ||
And then Hillary Clinton may be speaking around 9pm or 9.30. | ||
So if we can catch Hillary Clinton's presentation, we will absolutely pull that one up. | ||
In the meantime, my friends, head over to mypillow.com slash Tim. | ||
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Joining us tonight to talk about this and so much more is Mark Lobliner. | ||
Thank you for having me back on, man. | ||
It's great to be here. | ||
What a beautiful spot you have. | ||
Oh, thank you very much. | ||
Who are you? | ||
What do you do? | ||
So I'm Mark Lobliner. | ||
I am the chief marketing officer at tigerfitness.com, also in a company called Ambrosia. | ||
We're available at vitamin shops nationwide and every single Sprouts. | ||
So tigerfitness.com. | ||
If you want to shop with a company that doesn't hate you, all your nutritional supplements from vitamins to proteins, you name it, tigerfitness.com. | ||
That's what I do. | ||
And if you don't like what I say, I don't know who those guys are. | ||
You should probably just shop with them anyway. | ||
There you go. | ||
And also big news too, like Harley Davidson backed down from their woke policies. | ||
So I love when you said shop with companies that don't hate you. | ||
I'm like, that's just everything right now. | ||
So thanks for hanging out. | ||
It should be fun. | ||
We got Raymond hanging out. | ||
Hey, hello friends. | ||
I am Raymond G. Stanley Jr. | ||
I am the Facilities Maintenance here at Temcast. | ||
I do like—I hear Chicago hot dogs are the best, so that might be very good incentive, I'm thinking, Tim. | ||
You know, man, it's kind of wild how—well, so I'll say this. | ||
I was watching Fox & Friends this morning, and I don't even know what hot dogs they were eating. | ||
But then Lawrence had Portillo's, and I was like, duh. | ||
And then he was like, you guys think of Portillo's? | ||
And then he shows the Portillo's. | ||
I mean, anybody from Chicago knows Portillo's. | ||
Absolutely. | ||
unidentified
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They're all fakes. | |
Maxwell Street's good. | ||
They're all frauds. | ||
That's what I'm saying. | ||
I'm just saying, Chicago hot dogs are so good. | ||
Portillo's actually has good ribs. | ||
Their ribs are underrated. | ||
They're delicious. | ||
Anyway, Chicago, how fun. | ||
Hannah Clare's hanging out. | ||
I'm Hannah Clare Brimel. | ||
I'm a writer for sdnr.com, Scanner News. | ||
Guys, thanks for checking in tonight. | ||
Yeah, let's get started. | ||
Here we go from the Postmillennial, breaking! | ||
Far-left agitators breach DNC perimeter in Chicago, clash with riot police. | ||
The agitators with some wearing keffiyehs and holding anti-Israel signs and flags broke open the fencing surrounding Chicago's United Center. | ||
I would just like to pause and offer up this proposal to our friends over at the Postmillennial. | ||
I would change the headline to, breaking! | ||
Democrats breach DNC perimeter in Chicago clash with riot police because the DNC is courting these individuals actively. | ||
It's why they didn't choose Josh Shapiro. | ||
So the people who are outside screaming and protesting Probably many of them will be voting for Kamala Harris. | ||
Now, to be fair, not all of them will. | ||
Many of them probably absolutely despise who they call her Killer Kamala and Genocide Joe, so I'll give them that much. | ||
So, I don't know if—here we go. | ||
Here's one of the videos from Savannah Hernandez. | ||
Yelling and the occupation now they're they're tearing down the barricades. | ||
And the funny thing is, when we were talking about the RNC and the DNC before the RNC happened, I pointed out that since 2012, I'd been to all of them except for the COVID. | ||
So 2012 and 2016, I went. | ||
2020, we didn't. | ||
And it's the same every time. | ||
The RNC doesn't have protests. | ||
And I'm like, it's kind of weird. | ||
You'd think that people would protest the Republicans, but I guess it was the Obama administration, so whatever. | ||
And then with Trump, I thought the RNC convention would have massive protests with Trump. | ||
Not really. | ||
But the 2016 DNC was crazy. | ||
The barricades were higher, and there were thousands of activists, and they were jumping over the barricades and tearing them down and trying to breach the perimeter of the DNC because of Bernie Sanders getting screwed over. | ||
So when this one came around I was like, there's not going to be anything at the RNC, the DNC is going to be nuts, there's going to be rioters, they're going to be attacking the DNC, and this is what we're seeing? | ||
It's their own voter base, you know, so I don't know, whatever. | ||
Well, they think they have a say. | ||
They think if they get the violence and be destructive that they have a say in what the Democrats are going to do, and they don't have a chance with what the Republicans are going to say. | ||
They don't care, the Republicans can do all they want. | ||
That's true! | ||
Yeah, they're lobbying for a lot more from the DNC. | ||
They have certain speakers they want on stage. | ||
They want the promise of a ceasefire. | ||
I mean, there is more negotiating because ultimately, like you said, they are Democrats. | ||
They are not people who are thinking, oh, well, maybe we can convert the Republican Party. | ||
They have complaints against the Republicans. | ||
I mean, of course, we have to acknowledge that Democrats were preparing for a riot, so they built a wall. | ||
I think that's deeply hilarious. | ||
But, you know, only to protect their stuff, not to protect the country. | ||
How effective are these protests, though? | ||
Like, they're out there, nobody's really paying attention, they're causing trouble. | ||
Does it really change anybody's mind? | ||
Does it really win hearts and minds? | ||
That's the question. | ||
There's got to be a strategy. | ||
I was saying the same thing this morning, like, you know, the intention of perhaps ordering an air conditioner is so that I can put it in my window and make my room cool. | ||
You see how one action leads to an outcome? | ||
I ask this of these protesters, for what action do you take to expect which outcome? | ||
Because there's none. | ||
It would be like if I bought an air conditioner and then just dumped it in the lake. | ||
Like, why would you do that? | ||
I don't know. | ||
Maybe someone will notice that my room is too hot. | ||
Or you can fix your air conditioning. | ||
I think it's mostly negative, though. | ||
Like, they're doing these college campuses. | ||
Kids who go to college, they just want to walk to class. | ||
You start getting in their way, you're going to create a lot of Republicans along the way. | ||
I just sent my daughter off to college on Friday and they had an encampment at her university. | ||
The state she goes to college in is like, we're not doing that anymore. | ||
We're done. | ||
They left a mess. | ||
They destroyed the entire area. | ||
It's going to cost the university thousands and thousands of dollars to fix. | ||
I'm like, keep doing it. | ||
Like, it's bringing more people to the right side. | ||
It's bringing more people to wake up. | ||
But the Democrats, for some reason, they kowtow to these people. | ||
They kowtow to these terrorists. | ||
They are domestic terrorists. | ||
They're terrorizing their homeland. | ||
They're kowtowing them, yet they're not getting anything accomplished except making people really hate their cause, to the point where the Democrats literally had Look, Shapiro's a better candidate. | ||
And I think that's what they got. | ||
They successfully stopped, they helped Trump. | ||
But I mean, the Democrats will do that though. | ||
They'll be like, you know what, fine, we won't have the Jew. | ||
We'll get rid of the Jew. | ||
So they're giving in here and there, but does it really change anything for the positive, for their messaging? | ||
No, no, no, not for their messaging, but for Trump. | ||
Shapiro was clearly the better candidate. | ||
He would have been a great debater. | ||
He's charismatic. | ||
He doesn't have the history Waltz does. | ||
He didn't do as much crazy stuff during COVID. | ||
The guy literally banned Thanksgiving. | ||
Waltz literally had neighbors telling on other neighbors for having dinner. | ||
I mean, that's how crazy this guy is. | ||
And Shapiro didn't refer to himself by the wrong rank over and over again. | ||
So much baggage. | ||
Shapiro was literally the perfect VP candidate, except for one thing. | ||
His name was Shapiro. | ||
That was it. | ||
20-something years ago, was it? | ||
He had some college paper where he said that the Palestinians will not get peace until they come to the table or something to that effect. | ||
And then he had to distance himself from those statements where he's like, well, I mean, you know, that was a long time ago. | ||
And they're like, nope. | ||
Thank you to these protesters. | ||
Because of them, the better VP candidate who could have helped Kamala win Pennsylvania is out of the picture. | ||
That's insane. | ||
And the thing is, we—it's funny, you know, because we'll get into it in a little bit, this Planned Parenthood free vasectomy abortion thing, but it's like, you know, we're all sitting here. | ||
begging them to stop harming themselves. | ||
We're like, please don't abort your own children. | ||
Please don't sterilize your kids. | ||
Please, please stop protesting and rioting. | ||
And they keep doing it. | ||
And it's just benefiting Trump. | ||
And we're like, okay, I guess. | ||
Yeah, and I think to your point, the Democrats, and whether that's Democrats in these institutions like universities or Democrats at political gatherings like this, they do give in on certain levels. | ||
Like, when we had all of these, like, encampments, which hypothetically they're asking their schools to, like, divest from Israel or whatever. | ||
You might get some who kick students out. | ||
I was just listening to a report. | ||
I think it's one of the UC schools in California. | ||
They had a bunch of students who were involved with one of these encampments and they all weren't given their diplomas. | ||
And months later, you know, basically before the start of new school year, they have actually all received their diplomas and there's nothing. | ||
The disciplinary committee said, oh, you guys didn't do anything wrong. | ||
I mean, they just sort of made martyrs out of their causes. | ||
I know with Columbia, there was an alternative graduation, right, where they said, we're not going to go to the main schools graduation because they're wrong and bad and evil. | ||
And so it has this effect of, to your point, Moderate students on campus are going to remember this as like extremely inconvenient or at times threatening to their safety. | ||
Think of how many students that were like locked down in dorms during these things. | ||
But for other students who are like drawn to progressive ideology anyways, it's going to make them double down and want to take bolder actions, which the universities are not prepared to handle. | ||
But how many students are actually at these protests? | ||
Like, they found that most of these people don't even go to the schools. | ||
They're bused in. | ||
This is all one major PSYOP, but I don't know if it's working to what they want it to work for. | ||
I think a lot of people are looking at this and they're thinking to themselves, these people are crazy. | ||
I don't want to be a part of this movement. | ||
These people are nuts. | ||
Well, they're targeting low information individuals. | ||
Which are Democrats. | ||
So who was it who was saying that, maybe this was on Fox, someone was saying this, People who – someone tweeted this maybe. | ||
I read it in passing. | ||
People who are not too bright don't care that their freedoms are taken away because they're not doing anything anyway. | ||
They don't see anything different. | ||
So when you've got individuals who are trying to run a business and they're being told there's going to be price controls and things like this, you're like, this is impossible for me to run my business. | ||
For an unemployed 20-something running around smashing windows, that policy doesn't matter at all. | ||
Then they go, yeah, yeah, corporations are bad. | ||
I mean, you had a woman at the DNC only like a half an hour ago saying that they were gonna take on Big Pharma, and then five minutes later they were cheering for the big pharmaceutical companies during the COVID lockdowns, being like, Kamala got the vaccines to everybody. | ||
And it's like, I think the issue is, When these big protests are happening, and you wonder why it is that these people aren't engaging in an action that will result in a positive reaction, it's because they are not smart. | ||
They do not have the capability to understand what they are doing. | ||
They attract other people who are like that. | ||
These people don't know, don't care. | ||
They're not going to vote based on things that'll make the world better, make their life better, make anyone's life better. | ||
They're voting because other people are voting, and they're on Team Blue. | ||
That's it. | ||
And also, it's a sign of the times. | ||
In school nowadays, they're teaching their young kids on how to be activists, how to get out there, how to take school trips to protest. | ||
And they've been living that way for the last 15 years for them. | ||
That's a good point, too, because I've often talked about how Like, I think that the college crisis that we see right now is because you have this chain of events starting with the greatest generation. | ||
And this is just my personal perspective from my personal family history, not from any research or anything. | ||
But, you know, you hear all the time that coming back from World War II, these men were able to take care of a family of five on a high school education. | ||
And so these kids, the boomers, grow up in a society where you don't need to go to college. | ||
No one's telling you to go to college. | ||
They're saying, nah, you can graduate high school, get a job and feed a family of five, own a house, buy a car, have 2.5 kids, all that good stuff. | ||
And then these boomers, they grow up. | ||
And some of them choose to go to college because they're passionate about an issue. | ||
And then what happens? | ||
The boomers in their 30s who didn't go to college, and they're making like the equivalent of $50,000, $60,000 a year. | ||
Back then it was like $20,000. | ||
And they're looking at their counterparts who went to college who are making $100,000, $200,000, and they're wealthy. | ||
They're like, College was the answer. | ||
I wish I went to college. | ||
And then they tell every single kid, you have to go to college to get a good job. | ||
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No, no, no, no, no. | |
The issue was the boomers who are making a lot of money. | ||
It wasn't college that did it. | ||
It was their passion that led them to college in the first place. | ||
So now we have a society that says college is the answer, thank you and have a nice day, and we're wondering why it is all these people are going to college racking massive amounts of debt and then going nowhere with it. | ||
It's because low information individuals who lack the ability to understand complex systems believe the answer is college and not that college was down the line from the passion that led someone to wealth. | ||
To go back to what Raymond said, you have people who grew up watching the civil rights movement and seeing the protests, and they're going, wow, protests are good. | ||
That's what the TV tells me. | ||
So now they're telling their kids, if you're the protester, you're good. | ||
Doesn't even matter what the protest is for. | ||
The protesters are on the right side of history. | ||
And that's what they're trying to emulate, despite having no real cause behind them. | ||
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Right. | |
And this is something their education system rewards. | ||
I mean, isn't there that book, The Activist Baby or whatever? | ||
Like, this is a term that has become... Anti-racist baby? | ||
I don't know. | ||
There's a bunch of them. | ||
How prevalent and where is this being taught? | ||
Those ones are like board books, but I remember working at a private all-girls boarding school and they specifically had donors invest in their like, I forget what they called it, like basically their social justice center. | ||
And that was like, again, they rewarded, you know, in a lot of cases, very smart, precocious teens who are like, I want to seem impressive. | ||
Maybe they have passions about certain issues. | ||
I really don't think so for a lot of them. | ||
And told them like championing these values, staging the like, Anti-gun walkouts at your school. | ||
These things are good and ultimately will look good when you apply for college. | ||
It's sort of false activism, but I think you see this on the collegiate level like the one of the main leaders at the Columbia encampment. | ||
I remember finding his college and missing essay where he talks about, you know, the buzzwords systemic racism how that was bad for him and like. | ||
It's just another sort of trend for students right now. | ||
Some of them may feel really passionate about, you know, especially with Palestine, certain students may feel genuinely passionate about. | ||
But I think for a lot of them, they think this is like the current social norm and a way to kind of climb socially. | ||
But I think that depends on the degree, because I don't think business or marketing students are really caring about that. | ||
And schools too, right? | ||
Not all schools have these big encampments. | ||
Exactly. | ||
It's the liberal arts degrees. | ||
It's those kind of degrees that are having the problems, I think. | ||
Because I would think that if someone's going to a business school, they just want to shut the hell up, go to school for four years and get their job. | ||
A lot of engineers are taking part in it. | ||
Harvard. | ||
Yeah, I mean... | ||
That's a very popular smart people school. | ||
But how many of those Harvard protesters were actually Harvard students? | ||
Right. | ||
That's the question we need. | ||
It's a big psyop. | ||
These are not the actual students. | ||
I know these students. | ||
I coach youth athletes. | ||
These kids aren't going out to protest. | ||
They don't care. | ||
They don't care. | ||
These are paid activists. | ||
And what happens is you get a group of 10 people doing something. | ||
What are you guys doing over there? | ||
Oh, we're protesting. | ||
That sounds fun. | ||
I think I'll go protest too. | ||
They got a lot of tagalongs, but the people are actually starting it. | ||
The actual people are lighting the flame. | ||
the kindling to the fire that is being set forth by bust in people like for example you look at 2020 the summer of love i went to nashville the day after that thing went down talk some cops he's like none of these guys are from here we saw them unloading buses well so so most of them are not bust in they show up to loot yes it's it's like okay uh where can oh there's a riot happening let's let's go find it good stuff the the far left Actually yell when they go through residential areas, come outside and join us. | ||
Come outside and join us. | ||
It really is just a join the mass. | ||
There's no rhyme and there's no reason. | ||
But I want to jump to this story. | ||
We got this from the post-millennial. | ||
Democrats in Chicago book hotels under fake names to hide from protesters. | ||
unidentified
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Oh. | |
Some hotels have been getting random calls asking for people, an anonymous lawmaker said. | ||
AXIOS reported the Democratic Party security officials are worried that demonstrators might turn on members of Congress. | ||
Might? | ||
If they get access to a member of Congress, they don't need to turn on them, they will target them, period. | ||
The protests were planned before Kamala Harris was appointed. | ||
According to AXIOS, House Democrats attending the DNC next week are being advised by congressional security officials not to book hotel rooms under their own names or engage with protesters if confronted. | ||
AXIOS has learned. | ||
The guidance comes as some Democratic lawmakers are fearful about their safety. | ||
That's just so weird! | ||
So weird! | ||
The RNC didn't have this problem. | ||
No. | ||
They didn't have this problem because the Democrats are the party of violence. | ||
It's been shown time and time again, yet they psy-op us by saying that, what is it, right-wing white conservative men are the biggest threat to... Militias. | ||
Yeah. | ||
I don't run... I live in friggin' Tennessee. | ||
I've yet to run into one militia. | ||
I've yet to see a militia in real life. | ||
And I live in the South. | ||
I'd imagine I'd see some here and there. | ||
Nobody wearing camouflage. | ||
No one walking around. | ||
I do not think that's our problem right now. | ||
Domestic terrorism is a problem. | ||
We saw who they are. | ||
It's the left. | ||
All act blue. | ||
Remember BLM? | ||
Where did those donations on the website go to? | ||
ActBlue. | ||
It literally goes through ActBlue. | ||
ActBlue gets a percentage of the donations that go through. | ||
So it's funding the Democratic Party. | ||
And by the way, where did those donations go? | ||
Did they ever help any black lives? | ||
A couple who bought really big mansions in California. | ||
But other than that, you're just looking at one big way to make money. | ||
And stupid people fall for it. | ||
And white people are so guilted. | ||
They're like, if I don't give to this, I'm obviously racist. | ||
White guilt waltz. | ||
He lies about not putting seasoning on his food because... I season my food. | ||
That's just so weird. | ||
The East India Trading Company was engaging in warfare at sea. | ||
Naval battles over spices. | ||
Maybe the Minnesotans don't like spice. | ||
They're weird. | ||
Like, they like cold weather up there. | ||
They're weird people. | ||
Maybe it's Minnesota. | ||
You're gonna make so many people mad right now. | ||
Kirby Puckett was my favorite. | ||
Didn't he win that contest? | ||
Tim Walz had a taco hot dish recipe with chilies in it. | ||
But he's a truthful man. | ||
He would never lie about anything. | ||
No, do you see that video of him, like, tossing Kamala Doritos? | ||
Yes, that was so cringe. | ||
So cringe, and also they're just trying to market them as like Obama and Biden 2.0, like a very weird buddy cop show, but it involves him just prostrating himself as this caricature of a like dumb white man. | ||
And I think that that's gross. | ||
Like, it's amazing to me how divisive the Democrats are while also saying, we build each other up. | ||
Kamala Harris gave a speech over the weekend, you know, We know that leadership is not tearing people down, but building people up. | ||
We know that's real leadership. | ||
Meanwhile, all they do is have this, like, kind of weird white guy just prostrate himself at her feet. | ||
Like, all of it is very, I think, disingenuous, number one, but also miscalculated. | ||
Like, they believe these stereotypes that they have created about race because they're obsessed with it. | ||
And it's not about uniting the country. | ||
It's not about fixing anything at all. | ||
It's about using identity politics to retain power. | ||
And I think voters can see through that. | ||
I'm just mad that he threw her Doritos. | ||
Couldn't he have thrown her an outright bar? | ||
How do I get that kind of product placement in politics? | ||
You have to start donating to ActBlue. | ||
Seriously, how do I get that kind of money? | ||
Do we boycott Doritos? | ||
Doritos is probably like, please don't bring us Doritos. | ||
Not the chili lime ones. | ||
You need chili limes. | ||
No, I jokingly tweeted that I was going to order 100 cases of Doritos to support Kamala. | ||
Look, I was thinking about it. | ||
There, you know, he throws the bag of Doritos, and apparently, like, I heard, I don't know if this is true, that they did it twice? | ||
Yeah, Doug, her husband, gave her one, and then, like, two seconds later, he threw her one. | ||
Like, they went in there knowing, like, hey, we're gonna give her Doritos, and make sure they give her Doritos. | ||
Because it's a relatable, middle-class food, you know? | ||
This is what regular people eat. | ||
I think it was, um, I think- That's our problem. | ||
I think it was Perino, is her name? | ||
Maybe on the five? | ||
I can't remember who it was. | ||
Judge? | ||
unidentified
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No, no, is that, no, no, no, uh, who's the blonde- Is that Jean Perino with that? | |
Who's the blonde woman? | ||
She was just like, no woman that age is eating Doritos. | ||
And I was like, yeah, I agree. | ||
Kamala's not eating Doritos. | ||
Not with her figure, no. | ||
She's not eating Doritos. | ||
She's eating salad. | ||
Look at her shape. | ||
Yeah, she's not eating Doritos. | ||
I just think everything they're doing is pandering. | ||
unidentified
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What do you mean? | |
They're on a road trip together. | ||
They're friends! | ||
Because they don't have chefs or anything. | ||
We met three weeks ago. | ||
Kamala's the kind of person who wants, like, imported escargot on her bus as she's driving to a new location. | ||
And then she has her wine glass and she's reading, like, the news and she goes, holding it up, waiting for someone to fill it for her. | ||
She's not stopping at Sheetz. | ||
She's not stopping at Sheetz and getting the chicken sandwich. | ||
No. | ||
People fall for it though. | ||
But you saw how apparently they shut the store down, kicked everybody out, and then brought in Kamala supporters instead. | ||
And there were people there who were like, they kicked us out so they could bring in her people and film this staged thing. | ||
She likes regular people. | ||
Just regular people that she's hand-selected. | ||
The RNC needs to just tail that thing, and when they do that, just go interview everybody out there and just hold a little... | ||
Waltz is what they want the white base to be. | ||
They want to bend the knee to BLM. | ||
They want to feel bad for their race. | ||
Waltz is though, he is what they want the white base to be. | ||
They want to bend the knee to BLM, they want to feel bad for their race, they want to guilt | ||
their whole life. | ||
So he personifies everything that they expect in their voter for the white folks. | ||
A demure, white, guilty man. | ||
unidentified
|
Yes. | |
Who's like, I eat white guy tacos. | ||
What is that? | ||
Mayonnaise and tuna? | ||
It's beef and cheese. | ||
With any seasoning? | ||
No. | ||
They're always so soft. | ||
Salt and pepper me. | ||
These men are always so soft. | ||
Like, can't we get somebody masculine? | ||
Arnold kind of went the other way. | ||
Have you seen the Democratic Party? | ||
I have. | ||
I've seen the pan out of the crowd, and it's exactly what I'd expect to see. | ||
Again, we talked about this a little bit before we came on, but Republicans, it just seems to be the party of fitness. | ||
I bet I can switch over right now to our tab with the DNC, and you will not be surprised by the way the person on the DNC looks. | ||
You guys ready? | ||
Yeah, let's do it. | ||
Let's get it. | ||
Old white lady with- Oh no, wait, wait, okay, there's nobody there. | ||
You had clicked ten seconds before, you would have nailed it. | ||
Yeah, it was like some- some woman. | ||
Wait, wait, someone's coming on. | ||
I don't know, it's kind of neutral. | ||
I don't know who this guy is. | ||
I mean, I can make fun of his weight, but that wouldn't be nice. | ||
No, he seems fairly average. | ||
He's a fairly average guy. | ||
Right before you said that, it was our black glasses, blue giant earrings, librarian jacket. | ||
What was she? | ||
She was the Lieutenant Governor of Minnesota. | ||
With the funny glasses going sideways. | ||
So, uh, so it was the twenty-six, I think it was the twenty-sixteen, uh, conventions. | ||
It was, uh, Laci Green, actually, if you guys remember Laci Green, I don't know if she's still on YouTube these days, but she was talking about how at the RNC, everybody's attractive at the DNC. | ||
Not so much. | ||
And apparently, this wasn't super offensive to the left at the time, but if you bring this point up now, the left, they get really offended. | ||
And then what they do is, there was this one segment I did a few years ago where I was talking about how Republicans are more attractive than liberals, scientifically, statistically, and all of these leftists, like the Young Turks and Majority Report, they were just like, oh yeah, well, Tim Poole's ugly! | ||
Look at him! | ||
And I was like, why are you insulting me for me bringing up a study that the Washington Post reported on? | ||
This is true, and this is the problem with the left. | ||
I'll tell you exactly what makes it easy for me to not want to be involved with these people, is that they argue against their own arguments. | ||
So I'm literally making a segment where I'm like, if you go to the DNC, you see a bunch of short men, Effeminate men and fat women. | ||
And if you go to the RNC, you see slim, busty women, and you see tall, chiseled men with, you know, like, they look like the Chad meme, right? | ||
Yeah. | ||
And it's not absolute. | ||
There are fat, you know, ugly people at the RNC, and there's attractive people at the DNC too, but it's a tendency. | ||
And the reason why has to do with individualism versus collectivism. | ||
If you are more attractive, Either through working out and exercising, meaning you're into meritocracy, you've earned your appearance, or maybe you're just like naturally a good-looking man or woman. | ||
If you're better looking, you will go through life, it'll be a lot easier. | ||
People are going to want to be nicer to you, people are going to want to be around you, and this is going to afford you certain opportunities that you would not get if you were ugly. | ||
Thus, you'll say, if I can do it on my own, why can't anybody else? | ||
If you are a short effeminate man and you're having a hard time getting through life because women don't want to talk to you and you're getting angry, you will fall into collectivist ideas like, we can't do it on our own. | ||
We need to band together to survive. | ||
And this is not my opinion. | ||
This is actually what the research shows, why you see this split between the Democratic Party for collectivism and the right for individualism and meritocracy. | ||
And they get really offended that you bring up, quite literally, the leftists' argument on privilege. | ||
I'm like, the left has been arguing about attraction and thin privilege for a decade. | ||
The moment you bring it up, they call you ugly. | ||
They're like, no, you're ugly. | ||
Well, I got news for you guys. | ||
Democrats are uglier. | ||
That's a fact. | ||
Well, speaking of science, it is literally scientifically, science is very, pretty much well established. | ||
That conservative men have higher testosterone than Democrat men. | ||
They have actually done published studies on this. | ||
What do you think caused... Do you think the testosterone leads men to be conservative? | ||
Or do you think being conservative leads to testosterone? | ||
Which came first, the chicken or the egg? | ||
Like, why are Democ... Well, Democratic men... Here you go. | ||
I just want to make sure I can pull this up so that... Okay, here it is. | ||
Conservatives really are better looking, research says. | ||
By the far right outlet, the Washington Post. | ||
Right, but it's exactly as I explained it. | ||
It's collectivist versus individualist. | ||
Anyway, continue. | ||
Well, Democrat men, their voting patterns are much like women. | ||
It's directly correlated with their hormonal profiles, with their testosterone levels. | ||
I think it could be a lot of things. | ||
I think a lot of times you look at the hormonal system, the endocrine system in the body, it's all interrelated. | ||
So if someone goes out and they work out, they train. | ||
If you look at what's causing the low testosterone males, we could point to microplastics and we could point to whatever we want. | ||
There's a lot of things. | ||
If you look at the number one correlation, it's obesity. | ||
So if you're someone who works out, you're going to naturally have lower body fat. | ||
Lower body fat, body fat is extremely estrogenic. | ||
You're going to have higher testosterone. | ||
So that will tend to influence your voting patterns because you're going to start thinking like a man. | ||
So whereas Democrat men tend to vote like women, conservative men tend to vote like men. | ||
I'd hate to say it, but if you look at the maps, Democrat, like women voters, Democrat voters and men, then you look at, okay, here's what happened for men vote. | ||
Like if you look at those conservative men, like they're going to have specific voting patterns. | ||
And I think you can boil it down to hormones. | ||
And a lot of it has to do with exercise, different sports they choose. | ||
Cernovich was talking the other day, like you go to a runner's club and they're all liberal. | ||
They're all Democrat. | ||
You go to a gym, a weight training gym, you're going to run into a lot of libertarians and conservatives. | ||
It just is what it is. | ||
Activity almost predicts where they're going to vote. | ||
That's interesting. | ||
I do think that, I mean, obviously science backs this up, but men and women's brains function differently. | ||
So the balance of hormones is really important. | ||
And I think, you know, whether it's you start as conservative and therefore you have higher testosterone as a bat or you change your lifestyle and it, you know, balances your hormone in a more positive way. | ||
It is interesting how much health correlates with a change in lifestyle and often a change in voting pattern. | ||
Like Tim said, meritocracy. | ||
Well, look, if you are one of these unemployed far leftists, angry, in the streets, and the Democrats say, we're going to make your food cheaper by force, and these people have never run a business, have no idea how economics works, they're gonna be like, awesome, my bread will be cheaper. | ||
It won't be. | ||
They're just lying to you. | ||
Then imagine you run a business, you hear that, you're like, that won't work, that's insane. | ||
The individual of merit who's established a business which benefits all of mankind, I mean, if it's a small shop it's a local thing, but still benefiting mankind, they are going to be negatively impacted by Democrat policies. | ||
Because Democrats are pandering to people who are not On average, well I shouldn't say on average, but they're pandering to many people who are not functioning members of society. | ||
If the argument from Republicans is the more aggressive, I would say, if this is the Democrat argument, that they don't care for the homeless, they don't care for any of these groups, they're going to cast you out, give their buddies tax cuts, well then you're basically saying that their policies favor those who are running businesses and are going to create systems that lift everybody up. | ||
They don't understand how hard it is to run a business. | ||
Businesses are flailing left and right. | ||
Big Lots is closing down hundreds of locations. | ||
They're shutting down left and right. | ||
Right now, companies are operating on slim profits. | ||
My favorite is when Biden brought up shrinkflation. | ||
Well, it's the same price for less product. | ||
Yeah, because the cost of goods went up, so to hit the certain price point, they had to reduce the amount of product in there. | ||
Cost of goods is through the roof. | ||
Right now, businesses are flailing. | ||
That's why I always tell people, support companies that don't hate you. | ||
Trump should do the same thing, but instead of Doritos, he should do Funyuns. | ||
I don't know anybody who likes Funyuns. | ||
Do you guys? | ||
I'm a Funyun guy. | ||
It's a weird, weird, weird snack. | ||
You got to eat them kind of slow. | ||
You can't eat them all at once. | ||
It's not like potato chips. | ||
You got to kind of, because it's so hard and crispy, you just got to do one at a time. | ||
But yeah, I rock Funyuns. | ||
I don't know. | ||
You're the only one. | ||
I don't know anyone who does either. | ||
If you get them in like the little variety packs, they're always the ones that are left over. | ||
I think the thing about Trump is, like, he doesn't have to stage this, like, I'm tossing you some Doritos because we're actually friends, like, stage moment because he does things naturally and also doesn't hide the fact that, like, yes, he is extremely wealthy, you know? | ||
Like, he eats – he posts this photo of his, like, taco salad online, gets dragged for it. | ||
He defends Diet Coke while also criticizing it. | ||
Like, there's a lot of stuff that Trump does just Authentically that I think resonates with people. | ||
As opposed to these moments where you're trying to say like, we're of the working class, see we eat Doritos and this guy doesn't know what seasoning is. | ||
It's a different campaign and I think people can tell the difference. | ||
Just the same way that like people can tell instinctively when Kamala was like, I'm gonna tax or like end tax on tips. | ||
They were like, you're just playing catch up now. | ||
She's the one who voted to tax tips. | ||
She's the one who voted to enforce taxation on tips. | ||
Let's jump to the story. | ||
It's the moment you've been waiting for, my friends. | ||
From the New York Post, Planned Parenthood offers free vasectomies abortions in truck outside of DNC. | ||
I just want to say, Democrats, it's absolutely fantastic. | ||
I'm so excited to see that you're offering this. | ||
If there's any way I can help fund this for more democratic events, or if we can put on more events, maybe the Krasensteins and Harry Sisson and others would be interested in coming and enjoying these fine services. | ||
It's completely aligned with their politics. | ||
I completely support it, and I encourage more. | ||
A vasectomy hurts. | ||
I've had one. | ||
I'm not doing it in a food truck. | ||
I went to a legit doctor in an office with real equipment. | ||
I wasn't in a bus taking turns. | ||
That was a big moment. | ||
They stick a needle in your scrotum. | ||
It's not easy. | ||
It's horrible. | ||
It's terrible. | ||
I still have flashbacks. | ||
It's like NOM. | ||
It's my NOM, looking back. | ||
It hurt. | ||
Look, at the end of the day, this is... So, I side with Tim on this. | ||
I've gotten a lot of arguments with the right, because, you know, a baby's a life. | ||
They can't defend themselves. | ||
I get it. | ||
But if you're playing the long game, and they're sterilizing and aborting their children, I'm not... Look, I've said what I need to say. | ||
I don't like it. | ||
But hey, if you're going to do it anyway, I'm not going to lose sleep over it. | ||
What am I going to do? | ||
My attitude is, it's actually quite simple. | ||
Conservatives are not of the mind to engage in violent disruptions. | ||
Conservatives won't go out and flip over the Planned Parenthood truck. | ||
They're not going to go to Planned Parenthoods and, like, protest and link arms and shut it down. | ||
They're going to complain on the internet, they're going to complain at church, they're going to complain to their politician, and they're going to say, do something about this. | ||
And then you have a lot of conservatives who are like, well, we'll keep it to the states. | ||
The states can decide. | ||
Well, the end result is going to be that Democrats will get their way in their jurisdictions. | ||
They will go unimpeded and uninterrupted. | ||
And so what do you say to that? | ||
We say, OK, when we have the voting majority, we say you can't do this anymore. | ||
Until then, they will sterilize themselves. | ||
Abort their own children. | ||
They are not reproducing replacement levels. | ||
And over a long enough period of time, there's not going to be very many people adopting the liberal ideology. | ||
Whatever it is that is within these people to hold these views, whatever it may be, be it small, large, or otherwise, will not be carried in the gene pool. | ||
And conservatives will have more and more kids. | ||
And the ideas of conservatives will be more successful in the long run. | ||
It only takes a generation or two To see a large enough swing in voting patterns, you only need 1%, you don't even need, you need 0.1%. | ||
0.1% and it goes 50 point, you know, 0.1 to 49.9 and that's it. | ||
Boom. | ||
Outlawed. | ||
So for each state, California, of course, being like two to one Democrat Republican. | ||
Many people are saying this is why they have illegal immigration. | ||
People coming from Honduras, there's no guarantee they want abortions either. | ||
So it's ultimately not going to work out for Democrats. | ||
It may work out for illegal immigrants and migrants in general, but the real winner here is going to be conservative Christians and Muslims. | ||
I think the vasectomy thing is, like, weird and sort of like, okay, you guys want to round up a bunch of men at your convention who then are going to, like, walk around with stickers, I guess, being like, I got an abortion. | ||
You can't walk around. | ||
You have to, like, sit in a chair for, like, three days. | ||
It's very weird. | ||
For me, the abortion one is just kind of creepy. | ||
It gives me human sacrifice at large rally events. | ||
And I know not everyone feels that way, but it's just this weird optic where with Democrats, I feel like you have made the abortion into, again, a caricature of an issue. | ||
I think it's weird that you would make this a public spectacle. | ||
What I find absolutely fascinating about this is that it's at the DNC, and that means these are the highest levels of Democrat party members and activists. | ||
We're not talking about regular poor people. | ||
We're not talking about some dude named Jim walking down the street getting a vasectomy. | ||
We're talking about Leaders of Democrat youth organizations showing up to the DNC with badges. | ||
We're talking about young women who are part of the party and are working for a member of Congress or some staffer, and they're being offered to never have children or to eliminate the life of the child right now. | ||
And so I just, I want to stress, the Democratic Party and Planned Parenthood are offering up to literally give vasectomies to their political organizers and staff. | ||
unidentified
|
Right. | |
They're sacrificing their own future. | ||
Like, it's, it's, it's, the optics are so strange to me, but again, they're like, it's so liberating and we should do this and a hundred, like, whatever the reasons are, it's, it's like such a, uh, we have drunk the Kool-Aid kind of, uh, activity. | ||
But, but, but my friends, my friends. | ||
The Wiener Circle in Chicago is happy to support all reproductive health decisions. | ||
It's up to you and not the government. | ||
All patients at the Mobile Health Clinic will get a free hot dog coupon on us. | ||
I want to stress, they said all patients. | ||
That means if you get a medication abortion in a food truck, You get a free hot dog! | ||
And you might need it because it's a win-win. | ||
That's where the DNC is right now. | ||
It's kind of weird that they're giving wieners for vasectomies, right? | ||
Anna Claire's point is better. | ||
You are trading your child's life for a hot dog. | ||
I mean, people got the shot. | ||
I mean, people got the shot for Krispy Kremes. | ||
unidentified
|
That's what I was like, what kind of gift cards are they giving out? | |
And it also makes me think of that movie where that character goes, makes me want a hotdog real bad. | ||
Like, what? | ||
Also, Wiener Circle is famous for having the Trump footlong, which is a three-inch hotdog. | ||
You go there and it's like a little tiny one. | ||
What is up with Democrats and penises? | ||
Every time I say anything, you're a bodybuilder, you have a small penis. | ||
I'm like, what? | ||
I drive a truck, you have a small... It's so weird, it's just the weirdest, their fixation on wieners. | ||
No, no, no, it's masculinity. | ||
Democrats who argue that masculinity is bad, toxic masculinity, etc., love to attack and insult people for not being masculine enough, which says to me one very obvious thing. | ||
And actually, I should pull up a tweet from Carl Benjamin. | ||
So these are people who feel like they're outcasts, so they attack masculinity because they themselves are not masculine, and then they attack you for not being masculine because they wish they were, and they know it's a point of attack. | ||
So they're projecting. | ||
They're basically saying, I'm going to insult your masculinity because I feel pain over mine, right? | ||
Look, there's a lot of people, most people, think everyone's brain works the same way as theirs, and everyone sees the same thing they see. | ||
They cannot understand. | ||
Other people have different life experiences. | ||
So what happens is, they grew up in the society, They feel bad that they're a short, frail, effeminate man. | ||
They get angry about not being the Chad. | ||
So they say, it's bad to be a Chad! | ||
Toxic masculinity! | ||
Then, when they see another guy who is masculine, they'll say, what, you got a little dick? | ||
You're not, you know, you're not a real man! | ||
Because they're actually saying, what would send me pain, I think would send you pain. | ||
And then when they say that to a guy who is like ripped, a millionaire and successful, he's going to be like, okay. | ||
Yeah. | ||
I've got three kids and a million dollars. | ||
I don't know what you're talking about. | ||
I'm married. | ||
I quit caring about my penis a long time ago. | ||
I forgot I had one the other day. | ||
I'm like, oh, it's still there. | ||
Thank God. | ||
That makes me think of their Lizzo and Dylan Levine. | ||
Oh, no. | ||
Lizzo's getting lean now. | ||
Did you see that? | ||
Yeah, good for her. | ||
But they're gonna start hating her like they did to Adele. | ||
Well, fat shaming is effective. | ||
This is a case study. | ||
Carl Benjamin tweeted, remember that everything they do is about, always about revenge on normal society because they feel like outcasts. | ||
And it's a tweet from someone named Aurora saying, it brings me so much joy to know that you feel like all your favorite hobbies are being stripped away from you. | ||
You will never get what you think you had back and that is hilarious. | ||
He's completely right. | ||
The reason why they try to make companies get woke is they want to destroy what you love because they weren't allowed to play. | ||
It is the epitome of envy. | ||
It represents envy and greed and wrath. | ||
I tell you, the Democratic Party represents the seven deadly sins Too perfectly. | ||
Yes. | ||
Quite literally. | ||
And all of its different forms. | ||
You've got wrath outside the DNC right now. | ||
You've got greed and envy in their policies. | ||
Sloth. | ||
Oh, that one's so obvious. | ||
That goes along with the greed as well. | ||
They don't want to work. | ||
They think other people should pay. | ||
Price gouging policies. | ||
You should have to just lower your prices. | ||
I shouldn't have to work for it. | ||
And pride. | ||
Need I say more? | ||
That just makes me sad, reading that. | ||
That's in their hearts, that they feel bad, they want to take away stuff, they want to destroy everything that they can have, that they don't like. | ||
The thing too is, but it's in their own mind. | ||
They have mental health problems. | ||
It's like they're walking past you playing a game of basketball and they get really angry. | ||
You're like, I can't play basketball. | ||
unidentified
|
They're stupid people. | |
They're stupid. | ||
And if they only walked up and said, guys, I've never played basketball before. | ||
Could you teach me how? | ||
They'd be like, yeah, for sure, man. | ||
Like, you know, come hang out. | ||
We're here on three. | ||
We could always have another person come play. | ||
But they live in their own mind. | ||
Where they're scared and they bring the negativity upon themselves and then try to infect others with it. | ||
That's Planet Fitness's entire marketing strategy. | ||
unidentified
|
Yeah. | |
Have you ever been to, you've been to a gym gym, right? | ||
A hardcore lifting gym. | ||
They're the most supportive people you'll ever find. | ||
One time it was Metro Flex Long Beach. | ||
I'll never forget. | ||
This is an overweight woman trying to lose weight. | ||
She was pushing a sled and she was about to give up. | ||
Everybody stopped what they're doing and they went around her and they cheered her on until she finished. | ||
There you go. | ||
Is Planet Fitness the thing with the Lunk Alarm? | ||
Planet Fitness Lunk Alarm. | ||
They're also the one who had the dude shaving in the women's bathroom. | ||
A couple dudes down. | ||
I want to ask about the Lunk Alarm. | ||
I've seen it, but I don't get it. | ||
So the Lunk Alarm, basically, if you make noise or if you drop weights, which is essentially how I train. | ||
I understand dropping weights. | ||
Some weights are really heavy. | ||
There's only go up to 70, but you can't gently place down 150 pound jumbos. | ||
unidentified
|
Yeah. | |
They're going to drop. | ||
So basically if you say you're getting that last rep, you have your headphones and you can't hear yourself go, ah, woo, woo, woo. | ||
The lunk alarm goes off. | ||
So it's their big marketing thing that you won't be intimidated by big, strong people. | ||
How does it work? | ||
You have to yell for it to go off? | ||
You have to, you have to make a noise or drop a weight, or maybe they just don't like you. | ||
It's not like an actual alarm, it's just like the people. | ||
No, it's an alarm. | ||
Literally, it measures the decibels. | ||
There's a switch. | ||
There's actually a switch on the floor and behind the desk. | ||
And it goes, woo, woo. | ||
Yeah, yeah, yeah. | ||
The one I saw had a crank. | ||
And you go, what? | ||
And that's not as disruptive as somebody dropping their weight. | ||
I was on business and I actually went and I did it just because I thought it was funny. | ||
So I went into a Planet Fitness and I had them do the alarm for me. | ||
And they did. | ||
It was kind of cool, actually. | ||
I'm like, hey, this guy was cool. | ||
He's like, yeah, yeah, look at this. | ||
But I got to be honest, like, I wouldn't want to go there. | ||
You know, we've got weights upstairs. | ||
And I don't, I'm not a lifter guy. | ||
I don't know much about it. | ||
We had a trainer. | ||
But when he's pushing me to lift more than ever lifted, I I'm groaning. | ||
I get motivated by people who train hard. | ||
I just, I growl when I'm trying to break my limit or whatever. | ||
And I'm like, I'm not going to go to a gym where they insult me for that. | ||
It's just, it's not even like I'm intentionally doing it. | ||
I'm not trying to yell to people that I'm doing it. | ||
I'm like trying to push myself and it just happens, I guess. | ||
I do it when I'm alone. | ||
Like, cause I'm exerting. | ||
Like if you're doing some, if you're, even if you're doing anything hard, if you're moving furniture and you're lifting, you're like, just trying to move that couch. | ||
It's just what humans do. | ||
But again, like you look at their whole entire marketing strategy is geared towards that, is geared towards that mindset. | ||
Like emotional. | ||
That whole mindset that, oh, those, you can't have those guys. | ||
Like we don't like those guys. | ||
unidentified
|
That's threatening. | |
Yes. | ||
They're toxically masculine. | ||
Let's jump to this from the New York Post. | ||
Don Lemon shocked by deep blue New Jersey voters' support for Trump in 2024. | ||
You know why I love this story? | ||
Don Lemon basically does this man-on-the-street interview. | ||
I don't know if they have the... it looks like they don't actually have the tweet. | ||
He was in Atlantic City, I think, right? | ||
unidentified
|
Yeah. | |
And he's walking up to people and he's like, who are you voting for, Trump or Kamala? | ||
And a lot of people are basically saying Trump. | ||
And then he's like, why? | ||
Here's what I absolutely love right now, okay? | ||
One person said Trump for the win. | ||
And he says, does it have anything to do with being a woman? | ||
Okay. | ||
One guy said, four years ago was a lot better. | ||
I made a lot more money than I do now. | ||
Lemon pushed back and said, I know you feel that way, but that's not actually what the record shows. | ||
The economy was better under Biden. | ||
The voter laughed and said, and Lemon said, I'm serious. | ||
And then the guy said, do you watch CNN? | ||
To Don Lemon. | ||
Now, here's what I find really funny about this with Don Lemon. | ||
This is the Democrat argument. | ||
To all of those listening, when you're sitting down with mom and dad, or your aunt and your uncle, and they're liberal or whatever, and they're like, well, the statistics show that the economy's actually better under Biden than it was under Trump, say, then why does everyone think it's bad? | ||
Who do you believe more, a government statistician or literally a run-of-the-mill carpenter guy who's like, I can't afford to make ends meet? | ||
Why is it that the independent voters Two to one, and Republican voters are all saying the economy is not doing well, but Democrats think it is. | ||
Don Lemon going to a guy who quite literally is saying, I'm not making as much money as I used to, and he goes, you're actually wrong. | ||
The economy's better. | ||
It's like, my guy, I'm not making money. | ||
Why are you telling me some statistic? | ||
It's the most insane talking point from liberals right now, when they're like, actually, according to the government, inflation is down, unemployment is down, and things are better than ever. | ||
And there's like some lady and she's like, 110 pounds gaunt being like, I can't feed my kids. | ||
It's according to Biden. | ||
His economy is great. | ||
So I don't know why you would question it. | ||
It's just like a gaslighting campaign. | ||
And I hate to use that word. | ||
I feel like it's sometimes overused. | ||
But in this case, they're telling you to your face as he asked him generally, like, why are you voting? | ||
And he's like, it was better. | ||
I was doing better financially under Trump. | ||
He's like, no, you weren't. | ||
You don't know anything about him. | ||
I'll just show this. | ||
Okay. | ||
When you walk up to a regular person and go, the data suggests the economy is good, and 53% say it's getting worse... | ||
27% say getting better and 18% saying the same. | ||
53% of the majority of people are saying the economy is getting worse and then Don Lemon walks up and goes, you're wrong actually. | ||
The things you're experiencing with being unable to afford gas, rent, groceries or otherwise are all just you because you're a failure and everyone else is doing well. | ||
People can't afford as much. | ||
You know, I sell finished goods. | ||
For example, people can't afford five pounds of whey protein at a time now. | ||
We had to standardize it to pounders. | ||
Because people just can't afford to buy that much, so they'll just save up, wait for the paycheck to come in. | ||
They'd rather buy every one week to two weeks and budget then, than buy a month in advance because people just don't have the expendable income. | ||
I know this from a micro standpoint running multiple businesses that sell finished goods. | ||
At the end of the day, the average household does not have as much expendable income. | ||
And that's from my direct in the economy. | ||
And that's the problem with the government right now. | ||
That's why I need to run for office sooner or later. | ||
Is that none of these people have ever run a business. | ||
They've ever balanced a balance sheet. | ||
They've never done a P&L. | ||
They have no idea how this works. | ||
They remember, oh, the funniest thing was when someone pointed out a Walmart. | ||
Walmart made this much operating profit. | ||
And someone's like, oh, well, they're meant to know. | ||
Operating profit is not what you made. | ||
That is, they don't even know how these work. | ||
You need someone with business acumen. | ||
And that's where Trump kind of gets it. | ||
Cause even though, Oh, he was just dad, his dad gave him a million dollars. | ||
Now he has buildings in every major city with his name on it. | ||
Don't tell me that man can't grow a business. | ||
Yeah. | ||
Trump's Trump's story is interesting, right? | ||
Like he might've been born wealthy, but he made it even better. | ||
I mean, that's really what I think a lot of like the legacy of the American dream people want. | ||
Like you want to be able to have something that you can then help your children build off and build even more with. | ||
unidentified
|
Yeah. | |
And I think that's why you hear so many voters – I mean, you'll see men on street interviews where voters will be like, well, he's a businessman so he knows what he's doing. | ||
That idea that he is not just like a politician who's been hanging out in Washington passing bills that seem to never actually get anything done. | ||
In fact, he has built something and he can point to his – and I think this is very like Americana, being able to like point to your skyscrapers in New York City or your hotels or something like that. | ||
There is concrete proof of his success in a way that you just kind of have to trust that Biden and Harris have done something with their lives. | ||
To be a politician, to be in any form of office, you should have had to run a business. | ||
Because the entire purpose of this is to keep this thing running. | ||
They can't. | ||
And that's why I keep telling my wife, I'm like, I need to run for office one day. | ||
She's like, no, don't get into that. | ||
I'm like, if I don't, who will? | ||
Because it's at the point now where the real business owners need to sacrifice. | ||
And look, if I get, let's say Trump had a million dollars, I think, from his dad, something like that. | ||
If I, when I die, my kids are going to get money. | ||
If my daughter, let's say, takes a million dollars, and then there's low-blinder buildings in friggin London, I'm going to be like, whoa, she crushed it. | ||
Right? | ||
That is called taking an investment. | ||
And I think the important thing to understand is people don't know how much a million dollars really is. | ||
It's not much. | ||
So let me stress, everybody knows- I'm not gonna say a lot. | ||
For business, no. | ||
You can't start a business for- No, not even close. | ||
The average person's gonna say something like, man, if I had a million dollars, oh dude, I'd pay off all my debt, I'd buy a house. | ||
Okay, your average car dealership generates a million dollars per month, and their profits are nowhere near that. | ||
It's everyone's salary, it adds up. | ||
So let's say you have a car dealership. | ||
Let's say you have 100 employees. | ||
So you've got salespeople, you've got mechanics, you've got detailing, then you've got delivery drivers, whatever. | ||
At the end of the year, how much are you going to pay? | ||
Maybe $100 is a lot for a dealership. | ||
I was going to say, yeah, that's probably... $30? | ||
Something around there. | ||
$30 people? | ||
Yeah. | ||
$30 people? | ||
So each of them is going to average between, like, what? | ||
$60,000 to $70,000 per year, which is... Mechanics, $45,000 to $60,000. | ||
Okay, so you're looking at a couple million dollars right there per year. | ||
And so then you've got the cost for the land, you've got taxes, you've got your inventory, you've got fixing up all the vehicles, all of those costs, how much money is coming in. | ||
And so I went to a local dealership And, uh, this is like a year ago, and they said, we generate about a million dollars a month, and I was like, and that covers your costs? | ||
No, because I break even, basically. | ||
And so, the average person thinks, like, a million dollar loan? | ||
Man, he must have had so much money, and it's like... | ||
Dude, a million dollars is absolutely nothing. | ||
I mean, maybe this is, what, in the 80s or whatever? | ||
A million dollars was effectively five million, I guess, back then. | ||
Now, that's a good angel investment in a modern startup. | ||
You're going to be able to operate for maybe a couple years at startup level to get something going. | ||
Trump turned that into his name on buildings in every major city. | ||
That's a successful business. | ||
Can I put this on a micro scale? | ||
Scaling. | ||
Growing a business, right? | ||
So ambrosia planta, we're in all sprouts and vitamin shop this and that. | ||
Let's say I hit a home run and I land Walmart, which is a possibility. | ||
Do you know how much it's going to cost to fill that order? | ||
Explain Landing Walmart. | ||
So Landing Walmart goes, we like your product. | ||
We think it's going to sell off the shelves. | ||
We would like to place a purchase order. | ||
And the purchase order is, let's say, a million dollar purchase order. | ||
I have to fill that order. | ||
Now with profit margins being down, with all the operating costs, It's gonna cost me hundreds and hundreds of thousands of dollars, which we don't have just sitting around. | ||
So what do you have to do? | ||
You have to go to either a board, if you're a company that has partners and a capital group behind you, or you have to go to the bank. | ||
Yeah, I don't know if Mark Cuban likes me anymore. | ||
Although my daughter is going to his school, but... So let's play this game. | ||
Yeah, I love this game. | ||
Here we go. | ||
This is my game! | ||
I love this game! | ||
Let's create a fake product. | ||
Yes. | ||
It's called Mark Bar. | ||
Okay, you've got it right. | ||
So now you launch Mark Bar. | ||
unidentified
|
Good name. | |
I knocked off my own bar. | ||
It costs you... No, it's like a new version. | ||
It's like, this one's got... No sugar. | ||
Yeah, and it's got, you know, there you go. | ||
And so it costs $1 to make each bar. | ||
Then you've got, and let's say it's everything, staffing, ingredients, sourcing and everything, $1. | ||
How much do you expect to sell that for? | ||
Like, so then Walmart comes to you and says, we want, you know, a million bars at our stores. | ||
So a million dollars isn't going to get you there, you need a little bit more for incidentals and things like that. | ||
How much would you need to sell that bar for? | ||
To Walmart or to the consumer? | ||
So Walmart's buying it and Walmart's going to sell it, right? | ||
Yeah, but we have the Walmart cost and then their end prices, right? | ||
Because they have to make money too. | ||
unidentified
|
Right. | |
So generally speaking, depending on the discounts they want, the bar would end up selling between $299 and $350. | ||
For you to sell to Walmart, Walmart's... | ||
When Walmart sells the bar after the fact, do you get a piece of that or no? | ||
So Walmart would place a purchase order, pay us, then it's their inventory to sell. | ||
Right. | ||
Okay, so here's where I'm going with this. | ||
Walmart says, we want 1 million bars from you. | ||
It costs you $1 to make each bar. | ||
How much will you sell each bar to Walmart for? | ||
So if they're selling, so it depends on what... We don't know what Walmart's selling it for. | ||
Okay. | ||
So their minimum cost would have to be between... | ||
I would say it would be, just doing the math off the top of my head, it would have to be at least $1.50 to $2. | ||
So you would say, okay, so, you know, $1.5 to $2 million for me to complete this order? | ||
And that's minimum, yes. | ||
So then Walmart is thinking, we have to sell this for at least $3, right? | ||
And then Kamala comes in and says, $3?! | ||
That's too much! | ||
You can't sell this for more than $2! | ||
We go out of business. | ||
Exactly. | ||
We bankrupt. | ||
So basically companies will just go under if they ever try to price fix. | ||
It can't work because there's not enough margin built in. | ||
They do not factor in the cost to be able to price control. | ||
You would have to go in and audit each company and look at their cost of goods sold and then determine what is a fair. | ||
Cost of goods. | ||
What is a fair profit margin? | ||
And also you got to understand there's a lot of other costs. | ||
Actually, the price is probably closer to $2 because you got insurance, which is through the roof. | ||
You got legal fees. | ||
You got to understand you have to dedicate, you could probably speak to this as well as me, at least 10% budget a year to legal expenses. | ||
At least. | ||
We're getting class action lawsuits out of California. | ||
You ever see those Prop 65 warnings? | ||
Those aren't because it's, it's literally, it's on everything. | ||
It's on furniture. | ||
It's on, and the reason you have to put it is because if you don't, even if you have passable levels, they'll sue you anyway. | ||
Now here's the best part. | ||
Let's say you end up selling, it's, it's, it's a dollar to make the bar. | ||
You've got to cover insurance, legal, all of these things. | ||
So you're like, we're going to do $2 and that's going to give us. | ||
$2 is fair. | ||
$2 is fair. | ||
And that's going to put 10 cents per bar profit. | ||
Profit. | ||
Then you sell a $2 million package and with that profit you get all these protesters being like, how much money did he make? | ||
unidentified
|
He made 5% return on all those bars sold! | |
And what people don't realize, how much of that profit has to go into the bank? | ||
To actually sustain the business's operating costs outside of the cost of producing. | ||
You have to have, I would say, I mean you want six months to a year of operating minimum available. | ||
So you make a profit and you're like now with this profit I'm putting in the bank. | ||
Because if you are running on, let's say your business, let's say Microsoft or something, they go, or no, Amazon. | ||
Amazon made five billion dollars last year. | ||
Okay, how many warehouses do they have? | ||
How many employees do they have? | ||
And what's their monthly operating cost? | ||
Let's say their monthly operating cost is three to five hundred million dollars, and that's what they spend outright every month to maintain the entire infrastructure. | ||
They can't have zero in their bank and live paycheck to paycheck. | ||
They make $5 billion. | ||
They say, we're going to keep $3 billion in the bank as cash on hand so that if we get a downturn one month and our revenue dips below our fixed operating costs, we don't go out of business. | ||
Then you get these Democrats being like, they made $5 billion in profit. | ||
We should tax them on it. | ||
And they're like, okay, now we're down to $3 billion. | ||
So we've got Just shy of a year emergency operating costs. | ||
Uh oh, we're hitting a recession. | ||
We are not going to be able to cover our fixed operating costs. | ||
Layoffs. | ||
Now we're going to lay off 10% of our workforce. | ||
And they already do. | ||
Yep. | ||
If you have an S Corp, they tax you on inventory. | ||
So if I have, if I pay myself, and this might be a real thing that happened, if I had a decent year where I'm able to scale, grow, and launch new products next year, let's say I bring, I pay myself $50,000. | ||
Yet I have inventory. | ||
I might get a tax bill for $200,000 to $300,000 personally, because in S-Corps you're taxed both on the business and personally. | ||
This is the worst. | ||
I don't know how other countries are, but it is almost impossible to run a business and to scale. | ||
94% of businesses fail. | ||
The government wants you to fail. | ||
Because they want Amazon and Walmart to succeed. | ||
Actually, I think Milo was talking about this in the Culture War, basically saying that entrenched bureaucracy makes it impossible for small businesses and the individual to navigate the legal system. | ||
Walmart likes it when new regulations get in, Facebook likes it when new regulation gets in, because they have the billions they can spend on legal to navigate this, and the small guy can't compete, so it basically locks them in and boots everybody else out. | ||
That's why what we've been saying, it's easy to hear Amazon this and that. | ||
That's why, you know, I'll unabashedly say on X, I'm like, hey, support tigerfitness.com. | ||
Like, it's freaking tough out there. | ||
We're going up against Amazon. | ||
We're trying our best, but at the end of the day, the system is working against small businesses. | ||
So if you want to build this parallel economy we're talking about, invest in what you're doing, your coffee shops, your coffee, everything Tim sells. | ||
Everybody who comes on here who you think is cool, you agree with, support them, buy their books. | ||
Because at the end of the day, man, By percentages, just by percentages, only 6% of us are going to make it. | ||
So we need to support each other. | ||
That's what it comes down to because the system is rigged. | ||
Well, if Kamala actually does, it's Kamala, right? | ||
Now they're complaining about her name so often. | ||
I just call her Harris, right? | ||
People call her Kamala and then they get mad at you. | ||
They get really offended you don't know how to pronounce her name properly. | ||
It's Kamala. | ||
But anyway, if she actually does implement price controls, I mean, the collapse is fast. | ||
Very fast. | ||
The supermarkets, supermarket chains operate on a one to two percent margin. | ||
And so this idea that they're bringing to the look, look at the protesters marching around D.C. | ||
I mean, marching around Chicago, the DNC. | ||
This is who they're pandering to, who have no idea what's going on. | ||
And they say, we're going to make it so your bread is cheaper. | ||
And they're going to go to the supermarket and say, knock $0.10 off your bread. | ||
And they're like, the bread's profit is only $0.02 per loaf as it is. | ||
If you take $0.10 off, those companies will stop selling the bread. | ||
So I'll throw it back to you, Mark. | ||
Let's say... | ||
You sell the new Timbar, a low-sugar protein bar, $2 a bar. | ||
Then Kamala shows it to Walmart and says, these health food bars shouldn't be this expensive. | ||
People deserve health food. | ||
You can't sell it at Walmart for more than $2.30. | ||
So they say, Okay, well then we can't make money. | ||
And then, hey Mark, we're not going to order anymore because of price control stopping us from selling it at a margin. | ||
If you could knock the price down, then you say, I can't knock the price down. | ||
I'm barely breaking, I'm making enough as it is. | ||
Then you come to me and say, we're discontinuing your bar. | ||
We're going to switch to styrofoam bars instead because it costs 10 cents. | ||
And that's literally happening right now. | ||
Yep. | ||
That is happening as we speak. | ||
We've had to cut off great, great supply, great vendors because, I'm sorry, great retailers because their demands were too high and we weren't making money. | ||
We did an analysis of one customer of ours. | ||
We actually lost hundreds of thousands of dollars selling to them. | ||
Don't you have to like pay extra to be on Walmart, to get into Walmart, to get the good spots? | ||
So I'm not going to give away the secrets. | ||
Walmart's actually... I'm not saying that... Walmart is probably one of the best retailers cut and dry to work with in the country. | ||
Walmart's actually awesome to work with. | ||
They're great. | ||
Um, but at the end of a lot of retailers, aren't there's a lot of, and also you're not, not including slotting fees. | ||
You're not including promotions. | ||
So to get on a shelf, you need to pay them. | ||
Hey, we need a one time a year per SKU $10,000. | ||
Yep. | ||
So if I have seven SKUs, 70,000 out of my profits right there. | ||
done so it's it's so hard to navigate and it's so hard to because you think you have your margins figured out and then they're like oh well we have this extra cost oh well we have to take this rebate and then you got returns you got damages Where's the money? | ||
Where's the money? | ||
It takes a lot to work. | ||
That's why General Mills, Post, Kellogg, that's why they crush it. | ||
They're a multi-billion dollar company. | ||
You got a little guy like me trying to compete on that battlefield? | ||
Yeah, it's hard. | ||
Well, let's jump to this story from Newsweek, which may explain why Kamala proposed price controls. | ||
She's drunk! | ||
Newsweek says Kamala Harris' drinking problem rumors are being spread by Republicans. | ||
I love this because it's like, Uh-huh. | ||
Democrats aren't going to call her out if she's drinking too much. | ||
It's going to be the people who are in disagreement with her, right? | ||
Here's the best part. | ||
It says, no evidence has been offered up to support these allegations. | ||
And I love this because they don't know what the word evidence means. | ||
There's videos of her slurring. | ||
That's called evidence. | ||
It's not proof. | ||
It's evidence. | ||
Proof would be Kamala carrying a flask, or like a fifth of jack, walking on stage, stumbling around, swigging it from it, and then being like, I drink way too much. | ||
That would be proof. | ||
This is just evidence. | ||
So there is evidence that Kamala is on something. | ||
Have you seen these videos? | ||
I'll try and pull one up. | ||
I thought it was a nervous thing. | ||
I did a lot in public speaking. | ||
I do my best at it, so I've researched a lot. | ||
Some people get these weird things when they public speak. | ||
But that is really weird. | ||
The uncontrollable laughter. | ||
unidentified
|
Yes. | |
The way she kind of conducts herself. | ||
It just doesn't look, it doesn't look as if she's still there. | ||
Now, I have an alternative theory that the stuff they were keeping Biden prepped up on, they have everybody on it because these new nootropics and peptides, they're frigging awesome. | ||
So I don't know if maybe they just gave her too much. | ||
They're trying to dial in the dose, which we've seen them do that with Biden, where it's like, dude, they got this dose right this time. | ||
Yeah, it seems like it's not always consistent in how he's prepared for, you know, going out in public. | ||
I think with Harris, some of it, like, to me, the most simple explanation, if it's not a substance, would just be exhaustion, right? | ||
She's been nonstop campaigning for three weeks, and maybe she's just really not able to keep up with it, right? | ||
Like, it's not that it's easy for anyone, Republican or Democrat, to just be, like, constantly going state to state, plane to plane, you know, delivering speeches all the time. | ||
It's not for the faint of heart. | ||
So we've got this tweet from Owen Gregorian saying, Trump campaign posts about Kamala Harris' serious drinking problem. | ||
It's a Gateway Pundit story. | ||
And he says, James Blair, the political director for Trump, a lot of rumors out there about Kamala having a serious drinking problem apparently coming into focus as the campaign heats up. | ||
And there are some videos. | ||
This one. | ||
unidentified
|
And he's gonna speak in a minute, but She sounds the most drunk in this one. | |
There's a lot of love in this room for our president. | ||
Oh man, I haven't seen that. | ||
She sounds pretty drunk, right? | ||
That would be a drunk person. | ||
But it also explains the laughing. | ||
She's buzzing, she's just laughing and stuff. | ||
Because when we think about the strength of our democracy, you know, I think that there's a duality to the nature of democracy. | ||
She might be smoking something in this one. | ||
unidentified
|
When it's intact, oh, it's so strong. | |
In terms of what it does to uphold and protect individual rights and freedoms. | ||
unidentified
|
So strong in its nature. | |
And it's very fragile. | ||
unidentified
|
What? | |
It will only be as strong as our willingness to fight for it. | ||
She's drunk there, dude, I swear. | ||
I don't know what that means. | ||
No, no, but I don't... Are you kidding me? | ||
This reminds me exactly of sitting in the bar with my buddy who's drunk being like, and dude, I'm telling you, man, Bigfoot? | ||
He's real. | ||
Like the mannerisms of being like, dude. | ||
Or she's from California, you know, it's illegal there and certain things for smoking and you get off on topic and you start thinking about this and that. | ||
Taking some medicines? | ||
Yeah. | ||
She's going off on pageants. | ||
unidentified
|
Circles. | |
This one, she's on drugs. | ||
This one, in my opinion, Kamala Harris is on some kind of psychoactive stimulant. | ||
Watch this. | ||
Yes. | ||
unidentified
|
You're very different in the policies that you've supported in the past. | |
Just look at her face already. | ||
unidentified
|
You're considered the most liberal United States Senator. | |
Somebody said that and it actually was Mike Pence on the debate stage. | ||
Why is she laughing? | ||
I don't know! | ||
And watch, watch. | ||
Look at the interviewer. | ||
unidentified
|
The non-partisan GovTrack has rated you as the most liberal... What's she doing? | |
What is this? | ||
She's busting up like she's in a comedy show. | ||
She's hepped up on goofballs, dude. | ||
I think she's on goofballs. | ||
I don't know what's going on. | ||
What are goofballs? | ||
It's just some kind of drug. | ||
She's on goofballs. | ||
I would like some of those. | ||
unidentified
|
You supported the Green New Deal? | |
Look at her, she's like... | ||
She's her eyes are glazed over. | ||
She's like, why is she she's she's being heavily criticized right now. | ||
And she's just busting out laughing. | ||
She does this all the time. | ||
At first, I thought she was trying to mask some kind of tick. | ||
And then people are like, she's drunk. | ||
And I went, Oh, well, that makes a lot more sense. | ||
It's more sense than the tick. | ||
I mean, that that's insane. | ||
When I saw that first video, I was like, yeah, that's super slurring, super makes sense. | ||
Like she's been drinking a little bit. | ||
Especially at like a big rally. | ||
I feel like I'd be like, oh yeah, you took a couple drinks. | ||
To your point, her schedule is crazy, right? | ||
Maybe she's taking uppers to go with it. | ||
Maybe she's doing the, you know, suburban mom. | ||
Or mixing speedball type sounds. | ||
A little bit of the Adderall, whatever. | ||
Yeah, maybe. | ||
Here's another video. | ||
Never let anyone take your joy from you. | ||
Already. | ||
I call myself a joyful warrior. | ||
Right? | ||
Never let anyone take your joy from you. | ||
You do what you gotta do. | ||
And isn't that a wonderful... | ||
Way to live. | ||
Doesn't that remind you of like when you're hanging out with your bud and he's drunk trying | ||
to explain something to you and you're just like, dude, what are you saying? | ||
You know, we talk about how she has these weird sentences where she's like, we're gonna | ||
do the work that we've been doing because the work we're doing is the work that needs | ||
to be done. | ||
And you're like, why is she talking like that? | ||
She's drunk. | ||
It also makes me think she's always been surrounded by like, yes men, people who are like, what | ||
a great point. | ||
You are a joyful warrior and you got to do what you got to do. | ||
Have we considered maybe she's just an idiot? | ||
unidentified
|
Well, drunk idiots would probably communicate like, stay woke. | |
And everybody, this one needs to be woke. | ||
You see how she's wheezing? | ||
I thought that was a tick. | ||
unidentified
|
And you can talk about if you're the wokest or woker, but just stay more woke than less | |
woke. | ||
She's not even saying anything coherent. | ||
She's just like out of her mind. | ||
She's never had to effectively communicate. | ||
That's how I feel right now. | ||
Like I feel like she is just someone who has gotten by and people are like, yeah, she's she's a lady boss and we'll just keep promoting her. | ||
I mean, none of these I don't know what this last video is, but it's also in the collection. | ||
any intention to communicate. | ||
She seems like she is weirdly filibustering until someone takes | ||
her off camera. And I think like when you have the interview where | ||
she's being presented with the criticism, you're most liberal | ||
senator, and she's like, I don't know. To me, that tells | ||
me she's not used to being pushed back into it. She's only only | ||
used to friendly interviews. | ||
I don't know what this last video is, but it's also in the | ||
collection. | ||
It's like a Kamala event or something. | ||
unidentified
|
Oh my God, Becky, look at my boy. | |
I mean, yeah, people are drinking there. | ||
That looks like my high school prom. | ||
Yeah, I don't know what this is supposed to be. | ||
This one's not... I don't see Kamala here. | ||
She... Oh, okay, she was there. | ||
Our nation needs you, and I look forward to your continuing leadership. | ||
unidentified
|
Welcome to the house party at VPU. | |
Yeah, I wasn't so sure with this. | ||
Oh, is that it? | ||
Like, she's at a party where everyone's drinking? | ||
I thought it was. | ||
The first one I seen was right, and then I wasn't so sure. | ||
But seeing all those other videos, all these videos now, like, wow. | ||
Putting them all together, I think something's going on. | ||
She might be drinking a little bit. | ||
I think she's drinking. | ||
If she isn't drinking, that's not good either, right? | ||
It's even worse. | ||
There's not even an excuse for how she's drinking. | ||
I would rather send her to, like, the Ford Clinic and get her cleaned up, ready to be a president. | ||
I was saying this morning, like, I would feel really bad if it turned out she was diabetic, and she's just having, like, insulin shock, and so she's sounding drunk, but she's actually having a medical emergency. | ||
I think they would come out with, she's diabetic, you can't make fun of her, and also she relates to the insulin crisis. | ||
And she has a stutter. | ||
Anything to make her relatable. | ||
She's not diabetic. | ||
No, because I heard this story, there's like this famous story about a guy who's in his car and it's like he's swerving and driving real slow and the cops try to pull him over but he won't stop. | ||
They finally get him to stop because he like drives into a ditch and then when they try to pull him out he's slurring like, and he won't get out of the car so they tase him and it turns out he was in a diabetic coma. | ||
They couldn't pull him out, they had to tase him. | ||
Yeah. | ||
They were like, get out or we're gonna tase you! | ||
And then they tased him and he was like, ugh! | ||
Like, the poor guy! | ||
Why am I laughing at that? | ||
I shouldn't. | ||
But Kamala... She's on stage right now at the DNC. | ||
Who is? | ||
This... She's what? | ||
Harris is on stage right now at the DNC. | ||
Oh, okay. | ||
Well, let's hear what she has to say. | ||
Is she drunk? | ||
...in this hall and everyone at home. | ||
unidentified
|
Yep. | |
You're wine on that Thanksgiving. | ||
Yeah, Michael Maus called her the wine mom. | ||
And I want to kick that off by celebrating our incredible president, Joe Biden. | ||
unidentified
|
She does seem drunk here too, if you're paying attention. | |
The more you know. | ||
Joe, thank you for your historic leadership, for your lifetime of service to our nation, and for all you will continue to do. | ||
So disingenuous. | ||
We are forever grateful to you. | ||
unidentified
|
Yeah, except you don't want him to introduce you before you accept the nomination. | |
You want it to be totally separate. | ||
She's accepting him four days in. | ||
Reports are saying that Joe Biden's going to leave the DNC. | ||
He's not going to stay for any longer. | ||
unidentified
|
Wow. | |
Looking out at everyone tonight, I see the beauty of our great nation. | ||
People from every corner of our country and every walk of life are here, united by our shared vision for the future of our country. | ||
And this November, we will come together and declare with one voice, as one people, we are moving forward. | ||
You stole Ford the line from me. | ||
Just throw it out there. | ||
You stole it. | ||
That was yours? | ||
Yeah, Ford the line, yes sir. | ||
For years. | ||
Or if you don't want to get a vasectomy on a food truck. | ||
by our love of country knowing we all have so much more in common than what | ||
separates us let us fight for the ideals we hold dear or if you don't want to | ||
unidentified
|
always remember me on a when or an abortion Are they doing actually inside the food truck? | |
Medication abortion. | ||
Okay. | ||
I was really freaked out by the parking lot, like, shots during 2020. | ||
I was really freaked out, like, dude, go to the, like, if I'm gonna get it. | ||
Yeah, go to the doctor, man. | ||
If I'm gonna get it, I'm going to a doctor's office where they have alcohol swabs and it's not just me sticking my arm out the window. | ||
Maybe I'm just freaking out. | ||
They could've stuck you with anything. | ||
Yeah, I'm like, no. | ||
And did some guy have... | ||
Casey Neistat, famously. | ||
He's a big name. | ||
He tweeted, like, something about going to get vaccinated in a parking lot. | ||
And I was like, dude, no, go to your doctor. | ||
And he said something like, go out and get vaccinated. | ||
And I said, go and talk to your doctor first. | ||
And then he said something to me like, that's weird. | ||
I didn't do that. | ||
I just pulled into a parking lot and got my vaccine. | ||
And I was like, bro, you pulled into a random parking lot. | ||
Some person you didn't know just stick you with some fluid. | ||
Go to your doctor, man. | ||
Like, that's crazy. | ||
2020 was an IQ test. | ||
We found out a lot about a lot of people. | ||
See, I'm a skeptic. | ||
I'm like, let me see how this pans out. | ||
Let me see how this goes, right? | ||
And I'm looking at this and they did one, I think it was North Carolina Zoo. | ||
When I think about the zoo, I don't think about getting a medical procedure there. | ||
Like, I'm not a rhinoceros. | ||
Like, what are you doing? | ||
7-Eleven parking lots. | ||
Weird. | ||
But I'll add this, too. | ||
One of the protesters at the DNC, like, someone storms the stage, screaming about ending the war, and she, like, takes the mic. | ||
Rachel Maddow lady looking like? | ||
I don't know. | ||
She's wearing a mask. | ||
Okay. | ||
And I'm like, I can barely hear what you're saying because you're wearing a mask as you scream. | ||
I can't see your mouth. | ||
They still live in this world to this day. | ||
Like Taylor Lorenz still, she's like, I don't know if it was her, but someone called it an ongoing pandemic. | ||
It's like, did your brain stop working back then? | ||
Joe Rogan said it in his comedy special, said we lost a lot of people during COVID and some of them are still alive. | ||
But in that regard, let's jump to the story. | ||
I know where I'm going. | ||
Vladimir Putin's offering asylum to foreigners rejecting neoliberal ideas, ideals. | ||
Russian officials will begin issuing three-month visas in September. | ||
Dude, three months? | ||
If you're fleeing your country because you're worried about, like, neoliberal ideas, three months ain't gonna be enough. | ||
I need to call Putin. | ||
Get, like, three years. | ||
Like, we need to extend that thing out. | ||
I feel like that's Russia saying, like, you come here, and if we decide we like you, maybe we'll extend your view. | ||
But if you're importing your terrible values with you, we don't want it. | ||
We should do that in Tennessee, for the Californians. | ||
The policy reported by the Russian state media agency TASS offers temporary asylum and residence to those who align with traditional values as defined by the Russian government. | ||
Putin's decree allows foreign nationals who wish to escape neoliberal ideals to apply for residence in Russia. | ||
The policy is framed as providing humanitarian support for individuals fleeing cultural shifts perceived as negative and attracting those who embrace conservative values. | ||
Under the new directive, foreign nationals will be eligible to apply for three-month visas outside the quota approved by the Russian government and without the need to provide documentation proving their knowledge of the Russian language, Russian history, or basic laws. | ||
I'd like to pause, and I wonder how long after you arrive they're going to conscript you and send you to Ukraine? | ||
That's a good question. | ||
I didn't consider that. | ||
I guess I won't be going to Russia after all. | ||
You don't need to know their basic laws and Russia has now learned that they can, you know, wrongfully detain Americans and that eventually the American government will just come to the table and negotiate on whatever terms they want, at least under Biden. | ||
You know, I actually think Russia is a really interesting country and I have, you know, I think their culture is interesting and a lot of people would find values that they appreciate about it. | ||
But it's difficult to, I don't know that I'd encourage anyone to apply until Donald Trump is in office, right? | ||
Like, the Biden administration cannot negotiate with Russia over anything. | ||
And the actually true, you know, it's just really bad foreign diplomacy. | ||
So, you know, when you go abroad, be very careful about who the Biden administration is trying to talk to. | ||
I just want to say that the reason I'm so bullish about America is because of the Tenth Amendment. | ||
Because you could live in states like Tennessee, states like West Virginia, and you're pretty good. | ||
You're shielded from a lot of things that happen in other states. | ||
So that's why I'm not threatening to move. | ||
I'm not like, oh, I'm going to Russia. | ||
Because I'm outspoken about sending money to foreign countries for war, Israel included. | ||
And by the way, if people don't know, I'm genetically Jewish, right? | ||
Like my mom served in the IDF. | ||
My grandfather escaped Auschwitz. | ||
I don't think we should send any money to Israel. | ||
I don't think we should send any money to Ukraine. | ||
And I'm outspoken about that. | ||
People are like, oh, you're a Putin sympathizer. | ||
No, I'm an American sympathizer. | ||
We're $34 trillion in debt. | ||
We should be sending money anywhere. | ||
That's like if I was broke and you needed money, so I borrowed money from Tim to give it to you. | ||
That would make no sense. | ||
I can't even feed my own kids. | ||
It's just, it's ridiculous. | ||
But yeah, I mean, look, Putin's I don't know if there's a PR ploy or if he's just saying it to rub it in that people might come to Russia. | ||
I don't know what his motivation is. | ||
They're going to send you to Siberia and then you're going to be living in eternal winter or something. | ||
It'd be like Rocky IV. | ||
I think it is to remind people in the West that their values are not as foreign as you think they are. | ||
There are lots of ideologies that are present in Western and European countries right now that I actually think are antithetical to American values. | ||
I think we have shifted away from the fact that China is actively run by the Communist Party and for some reason Democrats are like, yeah, but we'd rather work with them than Russia. | ||
Like, you know, interesting that we are like using different sliding scales to measure our world enemies. | ||
I think Americans are also, we're isolated. | ||
Like, we don't understand. | ||
I've traveled abroad. | ||
I understand how these other countries, there's a lot of cool things in other countries. | ||
There's culture, there's their systems, like we think our way is the best way because we were taught that from a young age. | ||
American patriotism, nationalism, it puts us on this level where we don't empathize with other countries and their values. | ||
So we think, oh, this is wrong. | ||
And I could point to Sharia law, right? | ||
Like Sharia law, it's their culture. | ||
Who am I to speak about someone else's culture? | ||
Would it work here? | ||
No, I don't think my wife would go for that. | ||
But, but I think we need to empathize that our way of life doesn't necessarily have to be everybody's way of life. | ||
Spreading democracy, that doesn't have to be our end goal. | ||
Our goal should be to make America great. | ||
Yeah. | ||
Period. | ||
unidentified
|
Agreed. | |
I have a question about the China-Russia thing going on here. | ||
Is it because our politicians like China more than they like Russia? | ||
Is it because they make products for us and we make money from them, whereas Russia we don't? | ||
Yes, China does have an economic stranglehold on America right now, and I think all of our politicians are aware of that. | ||
Well, they're getting rid of a lot of it, and with the petrodollar deal ending with Saudi Arabia, who knows where this ends up. | ||
Yeah, it could just be the end of the American empire. | ||
Everybody is gonna be in for a rude awakening when the dollar value completely implodes, and they're wondering why an Apple MacBook costs $15,000. | ||
People don't understand this. | ||
Like, they don't get economics, right? | ||
What does increasing the minimum wage in, say, New Jersey, do for the people of New Jersey? | ||
Every business then has to charge more, but let's play a game. | ||
Let's say every business in New Jersey had absolutely no problem increasing everybody's starting salary to $30 an hour. | ||
Just like that. | ||
The businesses didn't get shut down. | ||
The government... New Jersey came in and said, we're giving everyone a flat grant to normalize all revenue. | ||
Prices are up. | ||
Everyone's wages instantly go up. | ||
And everyone goes, well, okay. | ||
The number is higher. | ||
Everything costs the exact same. | ||
It doesn't matter. | ||
The value of labor doesn't change. | ||
The number assigned to the labor that you're involved in is relative to the labor around you. | ||
If everyone was getting paid 30 bucks an hour, Then you'd have to increase the cost of the cheeseburgers made by the guy who gets paid $30 an hour to make the cheeseburger. | ||
Then when the construction worker comes in to buy a cheeseburger, he's like, why is the cheeseburger $37? | ||
It's like, because this guy gets paid $30 an hour to make them. | ||
In order to cover the cost of his government-mandated wage, the burger has to be sold for this amount of money. | ||
It changes nothing. | ||
Now, that being said, if somebody's making cheeseburgers in California and freezing them and their wages are less, you could order it to be delivered for a lot cheaper. | ||
That's basically how it works here in the United States with China. | ||
China's wages are dirt, so we get things made for dirt cheap and they sell it here. | ||
The only problem is that means U.S. | ||
dollars are being extracted and brought to China so that China can then spend whatever they want with them and our dollars are leaving our own country. | ||
Ultimately, what I'm trying to get at is the benefits we have with the current economic system is that the laptops and our cell phones that are made in Korea and China are extremely cheap relative to what they should be if the U.S. | ||
economy was normalized off the petrodollar with every other nation. | ||
It should cost you probably $5,000 for that $1,000 laptop. | ||
But the petrodollar is the U.S. | ||
just makes money, they print money, they offer up debt, and with that debt, you know, at the barrel of the gun, we tell everybody, trade in dollars or else, if you want oil. | ||
With Saudi Arabia getting off that arrangement, now people are going to be like, we don't need U.S. | ||
dollars anymore. | ||
We can trade in whatever we want. | ||
So the question then becomes, what does the U.S. | ||
dollar represent? | ||
Nothing. | ||
So that means we're going to go to South Korea and we're going to be like, you know, if you want to buy oil, you got to use U.S. | ||
dollars. | ||
And they're like, actually, we can use won now. | ||
And so now the U.S. | ||
petrodollar is in competition with China. | ||
China's offering us a better deal. | ||
We have to give them a lot less. | ||
So they're going to buy laptops from us for the equivalent of $3,000 instead of $1,000, and we're not going to sell to you anymore. | ||
Then the U.S. | ||
prices are going to skyrocket. | ||
All of your imports are going to go through the roof. | ||
Unless, you know... Actually, I don't think there's an unless. | ||
I don't think there is either. | ||
unidentified
|
Right. | |
It's coming. | ||
And have you ever priced out product, like, let's say gym bags? | ||
Have you ever priced it out something like that in the U.S. | ||
and in China for the same product? | ||
Oh, I have, yes. | ||
It's $5 to probably $40. | ||
Oh, yeah, yeah, yeah. | ||
Easily. | ||
So we're putting skateboards together for the Boonies. | ||
People are asking about the skateboard we have behind Hannah Clare that says, Step on Snack and Find Out. | ||
And everybody wants one. | ||
We've got it slightly redesigned. | ||
The Boonies logo is updated. | ||
And so we're getting all American-made stuff. | ||
They have these... And you know what's really sad, man? | ||
I gotta be completely honest. | ||
We're talking to these manufacturers and they're like, we can do American-made or we can do Chinese-made. | ||
And we're like, no, no, no, we're not gonna go anywhere near Chinese-made. | ||
We want American-made. | ||
And they're like, well, we'll send you samples. | ||
You let us know what you think. | ||
We get these samples and a couple of them are just amazing. | ||
Chinese. | ||
unidentified
|
Oh yeah? | |
Yep. | ||
The Chinese gym bags are better every time. | ||
Yep. | ||
Every time. | ||
They're better made, better quality, they'll last forever. | ||
I did not expect that. | ||
I was like, I was like, hey, which board is this one? | ||
Like, oh, that one's the China one. | ||
I was like, really? | ||
Yeah. | ||
Wow. | ||
They do good work. | ||
But the problem is, You take North American rock maple, harvest it, ship it to China, Chinese laborers make the skateboards, and send them back. | ||
And that is the stupidest thing in the world, but they're cheaper! | ||
And so we have to sell $10 more per board. | ||
I think it's actually $15 more, but we're reducing our profit margin to compensate. | ||
So when we're looking at the original prices, it's going from like $30 to $50 for a board. | ||
And so our profit margins are dirt on this. | ||
And I'm like, that means we have to sell substantially more skateboards to finance the operation in terms of selling skateboards. | ||
This is why the skate industry is in trouble. | ||
What do you do? | ||
A Chinese board and you get it here out the door, $30. | ||
Now you're looking at pros sell their board for $70. | ||
They make $40 on top. | ||
And $30 covers the cost of everything. | ||
I think the actual boards themselves might be like $7. | ||
But then with legal, shipping, blah blah blah, everything out the door, $30. | ||
They sell them for $70, they take $40 at the top, they give like $10 to $15 to the pro skateboarder, and the company takes the rest. | ||
We're gonna do American-made, and it's gonna be $50 out the door, and we make $5. | ||
It's hard. | ||
It's at the point now where... So we do the same thing with Shaker Cups. | ||
We get them American made, and a lot of times they're given away, but we're giving away a GWP gift with purchase that could be $1.25, and instead it's $4.25. | ||
And that gift with purchase obviously takes away from our direct margin. | ||
So to do business as we try to do as much as humanly possible with everything, including ingredients, you're going to have a higher cost. | ||
So let's say you go on Amazon, you're looking up supplements. | ||
You go, this one's cheaper. | ||
I can tell you why it's cheaper. | ||
They're using cheaper ingredients. | ||
Unfortunately for ingredients, the quality doesn't always pan out. | ||
Like, it's different. | ||
Like, we have these policies in place. | ||
I'm usually an anti-policy guy. | ||
The FDA does have a place in a lot of oversight. | ||
I'll say that as someone who's in direct discussion with the FDA every week. | ||
You know, the FDA does more good than bad in my industry, because we need that policing. | ||
We're not going to self-police. | ||
You're dealing with consumable goods, like E. coli outbreaks at Chipotle. | ||
I was going to say, the consequences of some of not having regulation on these things is actually pretty bad. | ||
Exactly. | ||
So I'm actually more pro-FDA than I am anti-FDA. | ||
And my co-host on Evening Rants, Alan Roberts, we battle about this all the time. | ||
But, you know, I'm very, you know, I see more good in the FDA than bad, especially for consumables. | ||
So we kind of do need that oversight of some nature, because the industry will not police itself. It just won't. | ||
And talking about what Tim was talking about, is that the economy being so bad, | ||
and people can't afford the extra 15 bucks, 30 bucks for American-made, | ||
we're gonna have to keep buying from China and not buy from Americans. | ||
And the sloop. Yeah. | ||
So when you can support businesses that are American... | ||
Support businesses that represent your ideals, that will actually reinvest in the economy, in the American economy. | ||
But so the question then becomes, why do you want to buy American? | ||
And I can explain it, because the extra money that it costs to make the skateboards in America are us funding what we want more than anything else. | ||
And so I explain to people like this, The average person, you go to them and say, what would you do if you woke up and you won a million dollars? | ||
Like, here you go, like Uncle Sam shows up, the government's like, my oh my, a million dollars, clean, tax-free, you win, good sir, what do you buy with it? | ||
The average person's gonna say, oh, I'd get a new house, I'd buy a new car, oh, I'd get a cyber truck, I'd do this, I'd do that. | ||
You know what I would buy? | ||
I would buy the American dream for America. | ||
I would buy a functioning society, I would buy a good policy, good governance, Why am I buying boards from China? | ||
The skateboard isn't really what matters. | ||
I can skateboard on a board for 30 or 50 bucks. | ||
Now, obviously I want to make the business operate, and there is a challenge when you're competing with Chinese cheaper cost goods, and sometimes they're better quality. | ||
It's a challenge. | ||
But I'm looking at it this way. | ||
For every skateboard we order from an American-made company, it's not about getting a skateboard, selling it for $50 and putting $20 in our pocket. | ||
It's about getting a skateboard, selling it for $50, putting $5 in the company for investment and expansion, and $15 of that board is invested into American workers and American jobs. | ||
When American jobs start expanding, And American industry gets better, our city streets get cleaner, the buildings around us don't have broken windows, and I can go to Main Street and I can see a skate shop that's making it because I'm buying boards from them and it's paying for these things. | ||
So, people need to understand that when you buy Chinese-made products, Chinese Main Street is getting better. | ||
And your main street is collapsing, and the windows are falling out, and there's homeless, and there's junkies, and you're like, how could this be happening? | ||
Because all of your labor is being sent overseas, and all the revenue from it, so that American companies can get a cheaper product and make a better profit margin, so they can buy an infinity pool, I guess? | ||
Yeah, that was amazing. | ||
That's exactly what happens. | ||
You're making China's main street better and killing your own. | ||
To save a couple bucks. | ||
Again, it's choices, right? | ||
And as a society now, again, it was one of those things where you're building your coffee shops, right? | ||
And that's friggin awesome. | ||
I think it's awesome. | ||
Physical locations. | ||
Obviously, I own a couple gyms. | ||
I love having those things. | ||
Build culture, have a place for people to hang out. | ||
It's a parallel economy, a parallel hangout, whatever you want to call it. | ||
But that's as a group who we need to support. | ||
We complain all we want. | ||
But the difference is to do what Tim's doing and actually put your money where your mouth is. | ||
That's something a lot of people don't do. | ||
So, you know, it's just about kind of putting your money where your mouth is. | ||
Walking the walk. | ||
Do you think that internet commerce has hurt the brick and mortar business model? | ||
I hear so many stories of people saying like, I don't want to open a store because that will cut into profits. | ||
Like if you're trying to start a business right now, it seems like being more direct to customer, not having to pay for the overhead of a store. | ||
It's kind of mandatory because everyone's margins are so tight right now. | ||
I think it's evolved. | ||
Brick and mortar still exists. | ||
People still want to go to the store, they still want to touch the product, feel the product, put it in their cart. | ||
People want to do that. | ||
People want to go out. | ||
I want to, if I'm buying a computer, I want to go to the store and, okay, what's this? | ||
What's that? | ||
What's the best computer? | ||
Talk to the guy there, right? | ||
The internet is something I see it evolves. | ||
I think people could evolve to an internet buyer where they start out in brick and mortar and then they know what they want to buy. | ||
So they just go, I'm just going to get this online. | ||
But as an online retailer, I think it works hand-in-hand with brick-and-mortar. | ||
And we try to operate our online facility like you would a brick-and-mortar. | ||
Like, we're a family-owned business. | ||
You could talk to us. | ||
We're easily reachable, easily available. | ||
So we try to make it as close to a brick-and-mortar experience as possible. | ||
But I don't think brick-and-mortar will ever die. | ||
I just think it's evolved. | ||
People are still going out. | ||
People are still buying stuff. | ||
Problem is, they're not going out and buying stuff as much because they just don't have as much expendable income. | ||
Yeah, that's what I wanted to do with this anti-Times Square in Martinsburg, but we gotta get people who want to do it, and that's the challenge. | ||
There's already some really great businesses, they're very base, they're great, and obviously we're putting our shop there, our coffee shop. | ||
Next door to us we have Mamba Collectibles, which is trading cards, sports cards, and I like to play Magic the Gathering there on Saturdays. | ||
Do you have room for a supplement shop? | ||
Absolutely. | ||
I mean, it's not even about me. | ||
It's like if you went to, if you looked in Martinsburg and you looked, there's a bunch of places that are open and available for business. | ||
And so what I was hoping is just by putting it on the ether on this show with the millions of people who listen and said, you know, it'd be really cool. | ||
A public square store, which is like a Walgreens, which you walk in and all the products are public square companies. | ||
Cousin T's diner, there's the blue white grill in Martinsburg that shut down out of business for sale right now, 600k. | ||
All the equipment. | ||
Everything ready to go, bang out the door. | ||
And I'm like, how do we get Terrence to open up his diner right here? | ||
And then when you have Casper coffee, when you have Cousin T's diner, when you've got Mark's supplement shop, when you've got Luke Rudkowski's weird... No seed oils. | ||
No seed oil crystal, whatever. | ||
People are going to want to come there just because it is this place of, it's like, it's like Times Square almost. | ||
And then the foot traffic will be like a main street of walking around and figuring out which store you want to go to and like, oh, let's go to Mark's. | ||
Oh, that's really cool. | ||
Oh, the public square store. | ||
They have beef jerky. | ||
That's what I'm hoping we could make. | ||
However, I as one person can only do one thing, right? | ||
I can only... We're setting up our cast brew. | ||
We're trying to get the coffee shop and the club going. | ||
We're dealing with permits, and it's a historic building, so it's been taking forever. | ||
But it'll happen. | ||
I don't know. | ||
It will happen. | ||
We're getting there. | ||
Sure. | ||
But when that is, that's phase one. | ||
And then the other businesses there are great people. | ||
There's some great restaurants already. | ||
Bricks 27 is awesome. | ||
And Mama Collectibles are good dudes and we're friends of theirs. | ||
I'm hoping that maybe in a few years, Habanero Tacos is delicious. | ||
Oh, those are good. | ||
Like if you like cigars and stuff, there's like a tobacco shop that's like, apparently. | ||
You had me sold like four minutes ago. | ||
This sounds awesome. | ||
It's clean too, man. | ||
It's nice and clean. | ||
It's, you know, it's good. | ||
I think it's the fastest growing city in West Virginia. | ||
A couple hours from Pittsburgh, a couple hours, hour from DC. | ||
And so I'm just like, we need to make our own anti-Times Square where it's like, none of this woke business. | ||
This is West Virginia. | ||
This is mega country. | ||
This is, you know, people believe in American values and you can walk down the downtown strip and see all of these cool businesses. | ||
That would be awesome. | ||
Yeah. | ||
That sounds amazing. | ||
I love it. | ||
Maybe after we get the coffee shop set up, we can... Maybe that'll entice people to come in, maybe? | ||
Yeah, I was talking to Terrence, and I was like, maybe we gotta do a crowdfunding thing so you can get the initial financing, and then a bank loan to open the diner, and then have Cousin T's diner. | ||
I mean, this is the thing, this is crazy. | ||
Blue White Grill, I always saw people in there. | ||
And there's restaurants that are packed all the time, so I don't understand how a diner would not succeed. | ||
They just didn't know how to cost it. | ||
Or maybe they retired. | ||
And that's why the business is still fully operational, just ready to go, but no one's there. | ||
You put Terrence Williams, Cousin T's Diner, up top. | ||
People will drive from Pittsburgh, from Philly, from D.C. | ||
They will come to Cousin T's Diner. | ||
His business is guaranteed. | ||
He just needs startup capital. | ||
So figuring out how we can get... I want a Papa Jack's Pizza Shack. | ||
That's what I want more than anything. | ||
I want the Pizza Hut family-style restaurant like back in the day that Jack Posobiec talks about. | ||
The Red Cups. | ||
The red cups, and the salad bar, and the book it, and you bring your family, and you sit down, and it's a family restaurant with pizza, and I don't know if Jack actually wants to do it, but I was like, we gotta pop a Jack's Pizza Shack. | ||
People are gonna be like, we have to, it becomes a tourist destination. | ||
So, you know, maybe one of these days, maybe one of these days. | ||
That's the goal, man, that's the mission, right? | ||
It's one of them, I guess. | ||
But it's hard to juggle all these different projects at the same time. | ||
I'm hoping this one could be a decentralized, just people go for it. | ||
But people gotta go for it, you know? | ||
Everybody's busy with their own thing. | ||
How do you make something like that happen? | ||
Well, if they care about America. | ||
If they care about America and saving America, let's go. | ||
I can't- I can't- I'm not trying to talk- Like, no, but it's like- Right, telling someone, prioritize your business in our city where we have a business. | ||
Do it! | ||
Come on, do it! | ||
You know where you want to. | ||
It would be- It would be- It would be so- I'm like, dude, a public square store, like- Like it's like- Imagine it's like a CVS. | ||
You're going to get milk or whatever, and they have- Their product, their beef jerky, it's all their Public Square different, you know, companies. | ||
Whatever it is, they got books from the Public Square companies, clothing, handbags. | ||
Brave books, yeah. | ||
And brave books, and you're going in to pick up some essentials, and they'll have normal stuff too. | ||
There's going to be local farm fresh milk from the local distributor, and there's going to be butter and eggs, but then everything else, Public Square companies. | ||
A public square store. | ||
Michael, you got to do it. | ||
Yeah, we're on public square. | ||
Yes. | ||
Imagine a public square store. | ||
You walk and you go to the protein bar section and it's Tiger Fitness. | ||
That'd be great. | ||
Yeah. | ||
That'd be great. | ||
I like the concept. | ||
Who'd have thought West Virginia's were the revolution? | ||
Oh, for real. | ||
That's amazing. | ||
That's going to be a beautiful thing. | ||
West Virginia is one of two states in the country that won 100% for Trump. | ||
I mean, part of what you're talking about is like, yes, maybe some other businesses have to come in, but I really think part of it is like, Local community people should say like, well, what do we want? | ||
What are we looking for? | ||
What services do we need to provide for ourselves? | ||
Because we don't want to spend money both outside the state, but also to these mega corporations that donate to causes that are not our values. | ||
It would be interesting if you could get kind of a local survey going for that. | ||
Alright, we're gonna go to Super Chat, so if you haven't already, would you kindly smash that like button, subscribe to this channel if you haven't already, share this show with all your friends if you do like it, head over to TimCast.com right now, click join us, become a member, your membership is what makes all this possible, but... | ||
As a member, you get access to our Discord server. | ||
It's a chat room. | ||
It's multiple chat rooms. | ||
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It could be you talking to us and our guests. | ||
So become a member because you, as a member, you're making all this possible. | ||
I think some people are saying AOC is speaking. | ||
unidentified
|
That's always funny. | |
Thank you Kamala Harris and Tim Walz for your vision. | ||
Thank you Joe Biden for your leadership. | ||
She got whipped into shape so quick. | ||
The resistance is over. | ||
Six years ago I was taking omelette orders as a waitress in New York City. | ||
Omelette? | ||
I didn't have health insurance. | ||
My family was fighting off foreclosure. | ||
And we were struggling with bills after my dad passed away unexpectedly from cancer. | ||
Like millions of Americans, we were just looking for an honest shake. | ||
And we were tired of a cynical politics that seemed blind to the realities of working people. | ||
It was then, only through the miracles of democracy and community, that the good people of the Bronx and Queens chose someone like me to elect them in Congress. | ||
unidentified
|
I don't seem that excited. | |
I'm pretty excited. | ||
I'm pretty pumped up. | ||
unidentified
|
Hillary is next. | |
I'm pretty pumped. | ||
unidentified
|
From that same cloth of hope and aspiration, we will also elect Kamala Harris and Tim Walz | |
as presidents and vice presidents of the United States of America. | ||
I am here tonight because America has before us a rare and precious opportunity. | ||
In Kamala Harris, we have a chance to elect a president who is for the middle class because she is from the middle class. | ||
She understands the urgency of rent checks and groceries and prescriptions. | ||
She is as committed to our reproductive and civil rights as she is to taking on corporate greed. | ||
I hate to say reproductive rights. | ||
I'm not reproducting anything. | ||
And she is working tirelessly. | ||
Yeah, you're right about that crowd. | ||
They just don't seem that excited about her. | ||
Oh, look at this. | ||
unidentified
|
That's a big one. | |
They love that. | ||
unidentified
|
I agree. | |
Yeah, he's into it. | ||
No, you don't. | ||
Nobody does. | ||
The DNC agenda mentions Biden, like, what, 20 times? | ||
That's all? | ||
Because they never changed it. | ||
It says Biden's re-election. | ||
I did a YouGov poll today about the 2020 presidential election, and it only said Biden. | ||
It didn't say anything about Harris. | ||
Donald Trump would sell this country for a dollar if it meant lining his own pockets | ||
unidentified
|
and greasing the palms of his Wall Street friends. | |
It's like, dude, that's 10, 13 years ago. | ||
It's not a thing anymore. | ||
Hey, that made zero sense, what she just said. | ||
Yeah, but dumb people believe this. | ||
unidentified
|
Yeah, you know, it's sad, man. | |
I think that makes zero sense, what she just said. | ||
Yeah, but dumb people believe this. | ||
Yeah, you know it's sad, man. | ||
You're talking to the lowest common denominator. | ||
unidentified
|
Just... | |
Ugh. | ||
Yeah, it's sad. | ||
It's just terrible. | ||
unidentified
|
Complete smooth grains. | |
You have to fight for the wealthy and big business. | ||
Oh, I can't wait to hear Hillary. | ||
I'm excited for that one. | ||
To love this country is to fight for its people, all people, working people, everyday Americans like bartenders and factory workers and fast food cashiers who punch a clock and are Is she just naming her jobs? | ||
Bartenders and fast food workers. | ||
It's her resume. | ||
unidentified
|
I do? | |
And members of Congress. | ||
You know, if they had only fans when she was younger, we would have never had to deal with that. | ||
Wait, wait, wait, look, look, look. | ||
unidentified
|
Uh-oh. | |
But let me tell you, I'm happy to any day of the week because there is nothing wrong with working for a living. | ||
unidentified
|
Let's see it. | |
Honestly, like, go bartend a little bit. | ||
I'm sure she would do it. | ||
unidentified
|
Let's see it. | |
Imagine... One week. | ||
unidentified
|
Imagine having leaders in the White House who understand that. | |
Leaders like Kamala and Tim. | ||
She's too busy fundraising. | ||
Well, she could fundraise off that. | ||
Just because the choice is clear to us does not mean that the path will be easy. | ||
Over the next 78 days, we will have to pour every ounce, every minute, every moment into | ||
making history on November 5th. | ||
Pelosi went to AOC and said, we'll kick you out or you can be the next speaker. | ||
Fall in line. | ||
And AOC said, done deal. | ||
This happened like a year ago. | ||
What's going on? | ||
And they're fighting her. | ||
I think it's telling that she's supposed to be this rising star and she's not later in the week. | ||
She's an early day. | ||
Right before Hillary. | ||
They said you can be a bartender again, or you can be a speaker in 30 years. | ||
Pick one. | ||
And she was like, I want to be speaker. | ||
And they're like, then you will do as you're told. | ||
unidentified
|
That's how it works. | |
Politics are dirty. | ||
No, she's not. | ||
If you are a senior who had to go back to work because your retirement didn't stretch far enough, Kamala is for you. | ||
unidentified
|
If you're an immigrant family just starting your American story, Kakamala is for you. | |
You see that? | ||
Kakamala is for you. | ||
You saw that? | ||
On the CCTV? | ||
unidentified
|
The subtitles are based. | |
Kakamala. | ||
The most basic. | ||
unidentified
|
Kakamala. | |
The subtitles are just based. | ||
Are those AI or is it some guy just like Kakamala? | ||
I think it's AI. | ||
Organize our communities and elect Kamala Harris to the presidency. | ||
Would she like stutter maybe? | ||
Kakamala? | ||
I didn't hear a stutter. | ||
that the people of this nation will not go back. | ||
unidentified
|
No. | |
We choose a new path and open the door to a new day, one that is for the people and by the people. | ||
For the people is today's theme. | ||
Thank you. Thank you very much. | ||
There's still everything from the right. | ||
Read the people. | ||
Are you guys ready for Hillary Clinton? | ||
I love how they throw a God bless when they're literally having an abortion rally in the parking lot. | ||
I hate when they say God bless. | ||
It's like you don't go to church. | ||
It doesn't mean anything when it comes from you. | ||
I don't know if God's down with them. | ||
Hillary Clinton. | ||
Coming right up right away. | ||
Hillary Clinton. | ||
Hillary. | ||
unidentified
|
How about that AOC? | |
No. | ||
I know that guy. | ||
He's an actor dude. | ||
I think we had a... I drank with him once. | ||
Kelly. | ||
unidentified
|
Kamala Harris' story begins in a middle-class neighborhood in the East Bay. | |
Yeah. | ||
In a modest apartment above a nursery school. | ||
In a close-knit community where people looked out for one another. | ||
You know the Kamala story. | ||
unidentified
|
Of course. | |
Who instilled in Kamala Harris the core principles that have defined her life in public service. | ||
These are the experiences that made her the leader she is today. | ||
This guy's not Hillary Clinton. | ||
It says on the speaker list that Hillary's supposed to be after AOC. | ||
Are they going to make us watch this because they know we want to watch Hillary? | ||
unidentified
|
They got her like a heartwarming story in the middle. | |
Was her mom? | ||
They got like a whole warming story in the middle. | ||
unidentified
|
Middle class, tight knit community. | |
Is her mom? | ||
unidentified
|
Family's going to church on Sunday. | |
It looks like a sister. | ||
unidentified
|
Kids playing in the front yard. | |
Mommy got us these bright blue matching bikes with banana seats. | ||
And we were surrounded by cheering adults. | ||
Look at this neighborhood on Bancroft Way. | ||
We've spent so much time here. | ||
Behind me is where it all began. | ||
Her mom, Shyamala, rented the apartment. | ||
Shyamala and Kamala? | ||
That's her name, Shyamala? | ||
Amazing. | ||
I'm not even mad about that. | ||
unidentified
|
That's hilarious. | |
That's good. | ||
Yeah. | ||
I'm okay with that. | ||
Shyamala was a single mom. | ||
That's awesome. | ||
Isn't there like a Pee Wee Herman song? | ||
Shyamala. | ||
unidentified
|
Shyamala La Ding Dong. | |
Kamala herself says that her mom told her that she may be the first to do many things, but to make sure that she's not the last. | ||
She's always been that kind of person, a true leader, and very protective of her friends and her family. | ||
When Kamala was all of four years old, her best friend in kindergarten, Stacey Johnson, got into something with another kid on the playground. | ||
It's so interesting that this was going to be like a big Biden pep rally until three weeks ago. | ||
Yeah. | ||
Shouldn't a farewell speech be like one? | ||
unidentified
|
It's like Brett Favre keeps coming out of retirement to do another season. | |
Is he back again? | ||
Brett Favre? | ||
Farewell speeches to the nation as he wraps up his political career. | ||
Shouldn't a farewell speech be like one? | ||
unidentified
|
Yeah. | |
We're gonna make him suffer. | ||
It's like Brett Favre keeps coming out of retirement to do another season. | ||
unidentified
|
Is he back again? | |
Brett Favre? | ||
Brett Favre's like 60. | ||
Okay, I was, yeah, I haven't played in 40 years. | ||
I haven't been walking for a minute. | ||
Tom Brady actually could come back. | ||
unidentified
|
I believe that. | |
I'm a Dolphin fan, but, you know, he's the goat. | ||
I can't get mad at him. | ||
I can't get mad. | ||
unidentified
|
And I have seen it over and over again in our growing up. | |
Thank you. | ||
I appreciate that. | ||
unidentified
|
When we were in high school, my sister's friend, Wanda, was being molested by a family member. | |
Oh my god. | ||
And Kamala just jumped in. | ||
She wanted her to come and stay with us. | ||
It says Kakamala again! | ||
unidentified
|
Kakamala! | |
Look it says it again! | ||
Kakamala! | ||
unidentified
|
Kakamala. | |
She can't help herself from standing up for people and standing up for what she thinks is right. | ||
She has been that way our whole lives. | ||
Being a protector is what led her to become a prosecutor. | ||
I don't know why they told a story about her being six years old. | ||
Like, what does that have to do with anything today? | ||
It's just to make her a person. | ||
No, I know. | ||
She also enslaved a bunch of people in California for free work. | ||
Amen. | ||
Almost didn't let a dude get off the prison rope. | ||
False advertising. | ||
I want a super chat. | ||
I don't want to listen to these ladies. | ||
I pulled up the schedule. | ||
I got it right here. | ||
It says AOC followed by Hillary Clinton. | ||
And who is this? | ||
They're not even on the list. | ||
Are they going to introduce Hillary? | ||
They're introducing the person who's introducing Hillary Clinton. | ||
No, they do have people introducing her. | ||
unidentified
|
We are so excited and honored to be here with you. | |
Kamala and I have known... Not interested. | ||
I don't know who that is. | ||
It's going to be Kamala's mom, I think it says. | ||
Doris Johnson. | ||
Just like her friend. | ||
unidentified
|
Oh. | |
Where are they on the list? | ||
I'm just trying to read the words that's going by. | ||
I don't see them here on the list. | ||
Why were they let in? | ||
We'll grab some Super Chats, and then if Hillary pops up in the meantime... Hillary pops up, as she's apt to do. | ||
Okay. | ||
tokenblackguy says, Howdy people. | ||
Since Clint has abandoned the mantle of first comment, I hereby declare myself as king of the first comment. | ||
Any who dare challenge my claim, step up. | ||
Get it? | ||
Congratulations. | ||
unidentified
|
Yes. | |
All right, we'll grab some more. | ||
What have we here? | ||
Srinanesh Out Of Pressure says, Tim, did you see last week's Politico article about white hat hackers finding vulnerabilities in voting machines? | ||
There's no time to fix them before the election. | ||
I think that says something about it, I'm not sure. | ||
unidentified
|
Maybe. | |
Yeah. | ||
Good luck. | ||
unidentified
|
Yeah. | |
Gonna be fun, right? | ||
All right, where are we here? | ||
Star Trek Geek says, Democrats are Romulans. | ||
Arrogant, sneaky, constantly deceitful, but occasionally too heavy-handed. | ||
Republicans are Klingons. | ||
Obsessed with honor and decorum, but consistently incompetent. | ||
Live long and prosper from Iowa. | ||
Very nice. | ||
Yeah. | ||
Sounds good. | ||
Yes, indeed. | ||
John Marafa says, will the male attendees be sporting their I Got Snipped snickers they receive from Planned Parenthood on the floor of the convention? | ||
Oh no, they'll be limping. | ||
I don't know if those stickers are real, but someone, like a turning point person, whoever's on the ground, should make them really quickly and start passing them out. | ||
So we start seeing this. | ||
I think that would be kind of a funny counter, like, semi-counter protest. | ||
I got snipped for a hot dog. | ||
Devin Fail says, we had Democrat canvassers in our neighborhood today. | ||
We have no trespassing posted everywhere. | ||
Called the cops and had them all trespassed. | ||
unidentified
|
Whoa. | |
They entered people's closed screen porches. | ||
Charges to come. | ||
It's lawfare warfare. | ||
Wow. | ||
Shout out Devin. | ||
Wow. | ||
That's kind of crazy. | ||
That creeps me out. | ||
Like, it's one thing to stand outside and knock on someone's door. | ||
You don't go into Scream Porch. | ||
Scream Porch, come on! | ||
Well, it's not just that. | ||
Like at the castle, the old property, we had a big sign saying, no trespassing. | ||
Nobody cared. | ||
It didn't mean anything. | ||
So we set up a physical barrier. | ||
It doesn't matter how, it doesn't matter what kind of barrier it is. | ||
If someone crosses a physical barrier, it's now burglary. | ||
It's not trespassing. | ||
Really? | ||
Yeah. | ||
So we set up this, like, pull rope thing. | ||
And people would still drive up to the property and take it off and try and come in. | ||
And then we're like, you will go to jail. | ||
Like, we will prosecute you if you... We have no choice. | ||
So we had one issue where... | ||
You know, we had people saying like, no, no, don't, don't prosecute. | ||
And I was like, if we don't prosecute people who commit burglary, we have little standing in the future. | ||
And we are basically saying we don't, like there's, we actually, no, no. | ||
Oh, here she is. | ||
You're like, do what you want to at that point. | ||
All in white. | ||
What a classic lady. | ||
unidentified
|
She has no facial surgery ever. | |
Stone cold killer, baby. | ||
Most gangster ever. | ||
Is that the Katy Perry song? | ||
Yes. | ||
unidentified
|
Wait. | |
Oh no, that's Sara Bareilles. | ||
I just want to see you again. | ||
Thank you all so much! | ||
Please speak less than eight minutes. | ||
Have a minute and thirty seconds. | ||
you again. | ||
unidentified
|
Thank you all so much. | |
Please speak less than eight minutes. | ||
unidentified
|
Thank you. | |
The worst. | ||
unidentified
|
Speaking of body count... I want one of those girls who does, like, outfit analysis to, like, price her outfit. | |
It's a good bit where it's, like, someone asks her, what's your body count? | ||
And she's like, 73. | ||
Oh, wait, did you mean partners? | ||
unidentified
|
Oh, man. | |
Thank you so much! | ||
Yo! | ||
I really like this lady. | ||
I'm gonna go get my coffee. | ||
Thank you. | ||
Eight years later. | ||
unidentified
|
Imagine the state we'd be in today if she won. | |
If she announces her candidacy as the Democrat presidential candidate. | ||
Come on, nobody gets a vote. | ||
Oh, jeez, what? | ||
Relax, people. | ||
unidentified
|
Thank you! | |
Thank you so much! | ||
Damn liberal white women, striking again. | ||
You know, if I was to be racist, it would be against the liberal white women, you know? | ||
I am. | ||
unidentified
|
Yeah. | |
Ugh. | ||
I didn't know Skeletor was a Democrat. | ||
unidentified
|
She's right about that. | |
Yes. | ||
Something, something is happening in America. | ||
She's right about that. | ||
You can feel it. | ||
Yes. | ||
Something we've worked for and dreamed of for a long time. | ||
Trump winning? | ||
First though, let's salute President Biden. | ||
unidentified
|
They're doing their best. | |
Harumph! | ||
Harumph! | ||
Harumph, he says. | ||
They want this to be Biden's last night on stage ever. | ||
Yeah. | ||
Democracy's champion at home and abroad. | ||
Democracy's champion. | ||
He brought dignity, He's accused of pooping his pants at the Resolute Desk. | ||
unidentified
|
He got kicked out and he's still competent. | |
A true patriot. | ||
Joe Biden is a true patriot. | ||
Did you guys know? | ||
It's like borderline obituary. | ||
unidentified
|
They're eulogizing Joe Biden. | |
It's all positive. | ||
It's crazy. | ||
Thank you Trump. | ||
Thank you Joe. | ||
I like how they talk like they're not in office right now. | ||
And now we are writing a new chapter in America's story. | ||
You know, my mother Dorothy was born right here in Chicago before women had the right to vote. | ||
I still think that was a mistake. | ||
That's crazy. | ||
She's old. | ||
unidentified
|
104 years ago yesterday. | |
Think about it. | ||
She's in her 70s, right? | ||
Yeah, that's crazy. | ||
Time flies, Tim. | ||
like that's crazy. | ||
The final state. | ||
Time flies, Tim. | ||
To ratify the 19th Amendment to the Constitution. | ||
The state legislature was deadlocked until one lawmaker's mother, a widow who read three | ||
unidentified
|
newspapers a day, sent a letter. | |
No more delays, she wrote. | ||
Give us the vote. | ||
letter to her son. No more delays, she wrote. | ||
What do you all think about the 19th amendment? | ||
Give us the vote. And since that day, every generation has carried the torch forward. | ||
In 1972, a fearless black congresswoman named Shirley Chisholm, she ran for president. | ||
And her determination let me and millions of others dream bigger, not just because of who she was, but because of who she fought for. | ||
Working parents, poor children, the last, the least, and the lost. | ||
In 1984, I brought my daughter to see Geraldine Ferraro, the first woman nominated for vice president. | ||
It's interesting, she's almost filibustering without having to comment on the Biden administration or Kamala Harris so far. | ||
She's just kind of going over history. | ||
I don't know how long she's going to speak, but like... She's going to do that. | ||
When it was the honor of my life to accept our party's nomination for president. | ||
She looks so much better now than she does in that photo. | ||
There are these girls who do this for, like, Alabama Rush. | ||
We'll go, like, price the girls' outfits, and they'll be like, she's wearing a $1,000 dress, and that breakfast is worth, like, how much. | ||
Somebody should do this for Hillary Clinton today. | ||
I bet they will. | ||
Yeah, they do all the time. | ||
Oh, yeah, they do. | ||
That looks like actually a, one of those, Tim, you used to want to make pillows filled with burlap sack? | ||
It looks like a burlap sack. | ||
Yeah, it's not flattering. | ||
unidentified
|
Yeah. | |
And afterwards, we refused to give up on America. | ||
Millions marched. | ||
Many ran for office. | ||
We kept our eyes on the future. | ||
Well, my friends, the future is here! | ||
unidentified
|
Is it? | |
I wish my mother and Kamala's mother could see us. | ||
They would say, keep going. | ||
unidentified
|
Shirley and Jerry would say, keep going. | |
Shirley? | ||
The other woman. | ||
Oh. | ||
Not Shamala. | ||
unidentified
|
Shamala. | |
I had heard a rumor that Shamala didn't want Kamala to run for president, but I don't know if that's true. | ||
Families building better lives, parents stretching to afford child care, young people struggling to pay the rent. | ||
They're all asking us to keep going. | ||
unidentified
|
Specifically, though. | |
And they're asking not to keep going. | ||
They want to be able to afford things. | ||
With faith in each other and joy in our hearts, let's send Kamala Harris and Tim Walz to the White House! | ||
unidentified
|
It's like an old, angry woman at a retirement home just talking. | |
Look, but she's a better speaker than Harris. | ||
unidentified
|
Oh, yeah. | |
Yeah, I agree. | ||
The story of my life and the history of our country is that progress is possible but not guaranteed. | ||
We have to fight for it and never, ever give up. | ||
There is always a choice. | ||
Do we push forward or pull back? | ||
Come together as we, the people, or split into us versus them? | ||
That's the choice we face in this election. | ||
Kamala has the character, experience, and vision to push us forward. | ||
I just wonder what's behind the scenes. | ||
Like, this is everyone who's mad and bitter tonight. | ||
Joe Biden is mad that he got forced out. | ||
She's mad that she never got the support she could've. | ||
She knows her heart. | ||
I think Joe Biden thinks he quit. | ||
I think he's a great man. | ||
Those kids stay with you. | ||
Kamala carries with her the hopes of every child she protected, every family she helped, every community she served. | ||
So as president, she will always have our backs. | ||
And she will be a fighter for us. | ||
She will fight to lower costs for hard-working families, open the doors wide for good-paying jobs, and yes, she will restore abortion rights nationwide. | ||
That's the number one thing. | ||
That's all they care about, all these people. | ||
unidentified
|
That's all they care about. | |
They just want to kill babies. | ||
Yeah, right, right. | ||
What are we going to do? | ||
We're going to kill babies! | ||
It makes me feel like women are stupid. | ||
It's just like, at first, we're all like, abortion is this buzzword to send them into action. | ||
I know they're doing like an abortion rights, what's it called, protest for Palestine today or yesterday. | ||
unidentified
|
Yeah, abortion rights in Palestine. | |
Nobody cares about women's rights more than Palestinians. | ||
I don't know if abortion is legal there. | ||
Who knows? | ||
He fell asleep in his own trial. | ||
unidentified
|
And when he woke up, he made his own kind of history. | |
The first person to run for president with 34 felony convictions. | ||
The felony thing pisses me off because they're fake felons. | ||
Right. | ||
And I think that's the reaction from a lot of independent to right-leaning voters. | ||
These people aren't smart enough to understand that. | ||
And these events are not about opening up the door to the independents. | ||
They're about rallying the base right now. | ||
It just breaks the brain how they're also dumb. | ||
I don't understand the 34 counts. | ||
I don't understand a lot of things. | ||
I expect humans not to be as ignorant as that. | ||
Well, these people are also aborting their kids, so. | ||
I know. | ||
unidentified
|
Are they doing the lock him up? | |
Yeah, they're doing the lock him up. | ||
unidentified
|
Are they? | |
They're not good at it. | ||
It was much clearer at the RNC. | ||
They're off cue with each other. | ||
Lock him up. | ||
Benghazi lady. | ||
Look, like leaving 13 U.S. | ||
Kamala sat in the Situation Room and stood for America's values. | ||
I know what it takes, and I can tell you as Commander-in-Chief, Kamala won't disrespect | ||
our military and our veterans. | ||
Look, like leaving 13 U.S. Marines in Afghanistan to die? | ||
12, one other Navy, but 12. | ||
unidentified
|
She revered the Medal of Honor recipients. | |
She won't be sending love letters to dictators. | ||
unidentified
|
Thank you. | |
Thank you. | ||
No, she'll be sending surrender letters. | ||
And booty pics. | ||
She'll be sending declarations of war, which nobody wants. | ||
Who is she talking about when she says, enemies domestic? | ||
She's talking about MAGA, like, it's so crazy. | ||
unidentified
|
And then in the same breath they'll be like, unity, we're the party of the future. | |
But it's not MAGA, it's anybody who doesn't buy into their entire message. | ||
unidentified
|
Independence, as long as they don't. | |
Those are the words of our founders. | ||
Take care. | ||
unidentified
|
I thought they hated our founders. | |
Kavanaugh cares. | ||
Cares about kids. | ||
They tore down the statues. | ||
They don't care about the founders. | ||
unidentified
|
Donald only cares about himself. | |
Donald. | ||
On her first day in court, Kamala said five words that still guide her. | ||
I am drinking right now. | ||
For the people. | ||
That is something that Donald Trump will never understand. | ||
So it is no surprise, is it, that he is lying about Kamala's record. | ||
He's mocking her name and her laugh. | ||
Sounds familiar. | ||
And you lost, lady. | ||
She's so salty. | ||
But we have him on the run now. | ||
unidentified
|
Thank you. | |
I held back. | ||
Family friendly. | ||
unidentified
|
Good job. | |
Good job, my friend. | ||
Further analysis on the after show. | ||
unidentified
|
Yeah. | |
I'd love to hear it. | ||
No matter what the polls say, we can't let up. | ||
She's right. | ||
We can't get driven down crazy conspiracy rabbit holes. | ||
We have to fight for the truth. | ||
We have to fight for Kamala as she will fight for us. | ||
Because you know what? | ||
It still takes a village to raise a family, heal a country, and win a campaign! | ||
She's got five more minutes. | ||
unidentified
|
That's it. | |
That's all I'm doing. | ||
unidentified
|
Good, good. | |
America needs every one of us. | ||
Our energy, our talents, our dreams. | ||
We're not just electing a president, we're uplifting our nation. | ||
Except for some of you. | ||
Except for half of you. | ||
We're opening the promise of America wide enough for everyone. | ||
Together we put a lot of cracks in the highest, hardest glass ceiling. | ||
What'd she say, craps? | ||
unidentified
|
Cracks. | |
When is the glass ceiling bit going to go away? | ||
Women don't get paid as much as men, so... | ||
Most college graduates are women. | ||
There's no argument anymore. | ||
Y'all just don't know how to use your degrees? | ||
Stop getting dumb degrees! | ||
Sociology. | ||
Life matters for each and every one of us. | ||
What do I see? | ||
I see freedom. | ||
I see the freedom to make our own decisions about our health, our lives. | ||
The same people who tried to force us to take an experimental shot. | ||
Very nice. | ||
I kind of hate that argument, but it's still true. | ||
You can't fight against that. | ||
unidentified
|
You can't ban Thanksgiving. | |
You can't ban Thanksgiving I see freedom from fear and intimidation, from violence and injustice, from chaos and corruption. | ||
and corruption. | ||
I see the freedom of work, our children's, the eyes of the dead. | ||
unidentified
|
In America you can go as far as you are working to protect the kids. | |
You can't mean it. | ||
You can't mean it. | ||
On the other side of that. | ||
Her eyes do flicker. | ||
Do you remember those videos? | ||
Where like the camera would glitch and they'd be like, that was it! | ||
She's a lizard! | ||
They just did it the other day with someone. | ||
I forget who it was but it was a dude. | ||
It was LeBron James. | ||
unidentified
|
He had a glitch and people all said things and he was a lizard. | |
Honestly, the fact he could play that well at 39, I think he's a lizard. | ||
I mean, but he is also a beast. | ||
unidentified
|
He's, you know, he's a specimen, yeah. | |
Great athlete. | ||
Amen, yeah. | ||
I hate him, but he's, I can't get, you know, he's good at what he does. | ||
I don't know, man. | ||
LeBron hasn't really had controversies. | ||
He's a good man. | ||
He loves his kids. | ||
Well, maybe politically, I meant to say. | ||
I don't mean as a person. | ||
We disagree with him politically, but I think he's a man. | ||
unidentified
|
He's a good man. | |
Sure, sure, sure. | ||
I take that back. | ||
unidentified
|
You're right. | |
We're gonna, we're gonna, you're right. | ||
I don't know if we need to hear what she has to say anymore. | ||
Is she done yet? | ||
It's just rah-rah. | ||
Hey, any s on Kyle Rittenhouse? | ||
What about him? | ||
We call him Crocodile Tears when Kyle was crying about killing people which is kind of a, you know, that's one reason why I guess I dislike him. | ||
Because he said that. | ||
Well, I mean, is she done yet? | ||
Otherwise, you're right. | ||
I don't know anything about the dude. | ||
He might be okay. | ||
unidentified
|
She mentions volunteering and having to, like, text to join things. | |
Either way. | ||
We like sports. | ||
I'm done. | ||
And that we were with Kamala Harris every step of the way. | ||
This is our time, America. | ||
This is when we stand up. | ||
This is when we break through. | ||
The future is here. | ||
Because they couldn't have broken through under Biden. | ||
They are an incumbent party, and she's like, this is our moment to change everything. | ||
I think she's done. | ||
unidentified
|
Thank God. | |
It's been almost four years, guys. | ||
Yeah, they need another 20 years. | ||
Oh, and they're playing her off. | ||
in another 20 years to get it made work out. | ||
Oh, thank heavens that's over. | ||
Okay, well, we wanted to hear what you had to say. | ||
So smash the like button, head over to timcast.com. | ||
We got to, I want to show the Democrats are really about. | ||
We're going to show you a video and talk about the Democrats are doing in certain states. | ||
And it's not family friendly. | ||
So we'll leave it at that. | ||
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Yeah, yeah. | ||
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But otherwise, I appreciate you guys having me here for a third time. | ||
It was super fun and I appreciate it, Marc. | ||
Pleasure to meet you, sir. | ||
Likewise. | ||
Raymond's a huge Hillary Clinton fan, so he's specifically emotional about her. | ||
No, I'm just kidding. | ||
unidentified
|
That's offensive. | |
Yeah. | ||
There's going to be an HR complaint tomorrow. | ||
I'm Hannah Clare Brimel. | ||
I'm a writer for scnr.com at Scanner News. | ||
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