Speaker | Time | Text |
---|---|---|
The government shutdown is imminent. | ||
Chuck Schumer says Democrats are going to block Donald Trump's continuing resolution. | ||
It will not pass the Senate. | ||
They need like 60 votes anyway to get past the filibuster, so it was kind of a long shot as it was. | ||
Thomas Massey had been saying that this was rigged from the get-go. | ||
They'd already cut a deal, but it looks like maybe not, unless this is all part of the game. | ||
But my friends, the government will be shutting down. | ||
And jokes on Democrats. | ||
Trump's been trying to shut the government down the whole time he's been president. | ||
I guess just not in this way. | ||
So it'll be interesting to see what exactly goes down with this shutdown. | ||
Trump's already fired a ton of people. | ||
So, you know, Democrats are just doing the rest of everyone's paychecks in. | ||
We'll see what happens. | ||
We got a couple other stories. | ||
The big news coming out of West Virginia, of course, was that the state legislature has passed a ban on artificial food dyes. | ||
This is Maha. | ||
Now, apparently, RFK Jr. is giving an ultimatum to all these big producers. | ||
They've got to make this change and get this garbage out of the foods. | ||
Several other states are making this change as well. | ||
However, Big Soda is apparently lobbying West Virginia to prevent this from happening. | ||
So, ladies and gentlemen, this is a massive battle before us which could change the course of history. | ||
We're going to change how we consume food in this country, so it's big news. | ||
We'll talk about that. | ||
Then we got, yo, a reporter from InfoWars not only got murdered over the weekend. | ||
Sad story. | ||
But following this, two swattings now. | ||
One of the reporters was forced to walk backwards out of his house. | ||
It looks like InfoWars, of course, is being targeted. | ||
And then there's a bunch of other stuff. | ||
Did you guys know that Disney canceled the red carpet for Snow White? | ||
It's bad. | ||
They released a new snippet from the film, and oh boy. | ||
Yeah, basically Snow White's character is like, the poor people need things, and the evil queen is like, they don't need luxuries, and I'm like, oh no, they're actually going to do it. | ||
They're going far left on this whole thing. | ||
This movie is going to bomb, and they know it, so Disney has pulled the red carpet. | ||
That's crazy. | ||
We'll talk about all that and more, but before we do, my friends, we've got a great sponsor. | ||
It's American Financing. | ||
Head over to AmericanFinancing.net. | ||
Slash Tim. | ||
Look, I don't know your exact situation, everybody. | ||
But if you're like the thousands of homeowners, homeowners American financing talks to every month, you're struggling to keep up, barely making ends meet. | ||
Many of you may be drowning in high interest debt. | ||
It's not your fault. | ||
Life got more expensive. | ||
Inflation hit hard. | ||
I think everybody remembers what happened over the past four years and why things got pretty bad. | ||
So now you're dealing with... | ||
Credit card balances of 20% plus interest rates while your mortgage is untouched. | ||
You're ignoring the one thing that could turn it all around, your home. | ||
This is where American financing can help. | ||
Would you trade 10 minutes for a shot at saving an average of $800 every single month? | ||
Because that's exactly what homeowners are doing when they call American financing. | ||
A simple no-obligation call could change everything. | ||
They have a team of salary-based mortgage consultants, so there isn't any incentive to put you into a loan that doesn't make sense. | ||
And there are no upfront fees to find out how much you can save. | ||
So don't wait. | ||
Call American Financing today and start feeling that relief. | ||
866-890-7811. | ||
That's 866-890-7811. | ||
Or visit AmericanFinancing.net. | ||
Shout out. | ||
Thanks for sponsoring the show, American Finance. | ||
Don't forget to also check out CastBrew.com for all of our delicious coffee. | ||
We got all the good stuff except Ian's Graphene Dream. | ||
It's sold out. | ||
Appalachian Nights is available, as is Rise with Roberto Jr. And don't forget, we've got Misty Mountains and Focus with Mr. Bocus. | ||
We're also going to have an uncensored members-only show at 10 p.m. | ||
tonight at rumble.com slash timcast IRL. So make sure you become a premium member of Rumble if you want to watch that, plus our green room show. | ||
Today's episode was good fun. | ||
Yesterday's was particularly crazy, which is up now. | ||
I can't really tell you what was in it. | ||
It's uncensored. | ||
It is not for the faint of heart or for the overly censorious social media platforms. | ||
But you can go to rumble.com slash timcast IRL and check that out at our Green Room playlist. | ||
Don't forget to smash! | ||
What was I going to say? | ||
Smite the like button! | ||
Smite it! | ||
And share the show with everyone you know. | ||
Joining us tonight to talk about this and so much more is The Native Patriot. | ||
Hey, I'm Maurice, the Native Patriot. | ||
First and foremost, I am a husband and father. | ||
Shout out to my wife, Lady Patriot. | ||
But I'm the co-creator of the Patriot's Prayer Network, a volunteer group of podcasters around the country, just trying to spread the good word. | ||
All working nine-to-five jobs, but decided to speak up. | ||
I'm an associate board member for NAGA, the Native Americans Guardians Association, and an ambassador for a new company, our new 501c3 just started up, Hetero Awesomeness Incorporated. | ||
Right on. | ||
And you're wearing a Make America Great Again headdress. | ||
Yes, yeah. | ||
I customized it myself, but it's part I'm paying homage to my Native American history, or my Native American ancestry, and also moving forward and showing that, hey, Native American history is really cool, and Native American history is American history. | ||
Right on. | ||
Nice. | ||
Thanks for hanging out. | ||
Ian's here. | ||
Good to be here. | ||
Ian Crossland in the house. | ||
Participant in the global spiritual revolution that's been happening since. | ||
especially the internet video got invented and developed. | ||
So happy to be here. | ||
Let's push this thing forward. | ||
Hello, everybody. | ||
My name is Phil Labonte. | ||
I'm the lead singer of the heavy metal band All That Remains. | ||
I'm an anti-communist and a counter-revolutionary. | ||
Let's go. | ||
Here's the big news, ladies and gentlemen, from the New York Post. | ||
Government shutdown likely after Schumer says Senate Democrats will block the GOP funding bill. | ||
And I'm of two minds here. | ||
I like the idea of the government shutting down, but I also do understand that Donald Trump is trying to get this budget passed so he can start going after his agenda, which we want to see happen, which largely includes dismantling government. | ||
So it's like short-term gains versus long-term losses, right? | ||
Senate Minority Leader Chuck Schumer announced Wednesday that most Democrats in the upper chamber will not support a House Republican-passed bill to fund the federal government through the end of September, all but ensuring a partial shutdown beginning at 11.59 p.m. | ||
Friday. | ||
Funding the government should be a bipartisan effort, but Republicans chose a partisan path, drafting their continuing resolution without any input, any input from congressional Democrats based. | ||
Because of that, Republicans do not have the votes in the Senate to invoke cloture on the House CR. Our caucus is unified on a clean CR through April 11th that will keep the government open and give Congress time to negotiate bipartisan legislation that can pass. | ||
So with the Republicans holding a 53-47 advantage... | ||
They need at least 60 votes to overcome a filibuster. | ||
Looks like it's not going to happen, not to mention Rand Paul says he ain't going to be voting for it. | ||
But I don't know. | ||
I like it when the government shuts down, I guess. | ||
The only concern I have is I don't want to see the Republicans get blamed for the shutdown, considering they are – most people know that Donald Trump is a Republican. | ||
They have a slim majority in both the House and the Senate, and people don't have a – A deep understanding of how the sausage is made in D.C. So I feel like the Republicans are going to end up owning this shutdown. | ||
I think that's the intent of the Democrats as well. | ||
All of the stuff that's going on now is going to be funded in the CR. There's no serious cuts yet. | ||
So the Democrats should ostensibly like that, but they're going to go ahead and say no. | ||
We're not going to vote for it. | ||
And the reason is because they want to go ahead and see the Republicans get smeared, in my opinion. | ||
What's the longest we've had a shutdown? | ||
Oh, weeks. | ||
But no more than that. | ||
There was a long one, wasn't there? | ||
Let me tell you, that's a good question, Ian. | ||
Back in the 90s, my mother used to work for U.S. Fish and Wildlife. | ||
And she was out of work for, I want to say a couple of weeks. | ||
I want to say it was at least... | ||
It was recent. | ||
It was 35 days in 2018 and 2019. That's what I was thinking about, yeah. | ||
35 days. | ||
Is it paid? | ||
Do they pay? | ||
I mean, I imagine... | ||
They don't pay while the government's shut down, but they end up getting paid when they go back. | ||
Oh, they'll get paid back pay? | ||
Yeah. | ||
Usually it's the stuff that you end up seeing is stuff like, oh, we're going to shut down the parks. | ||
You can't go to Yosemite. | ||
You can't go to national parks because they send those people home. | ||
And because that's a low effort way to get political points. | ||
Serious things that, say, the DOD is doing or serious things the State Department is doing, they're going to keep doing it. | ||
Your foreign stuff, when it comes to U.S. foreign policy and stuff, they're going to keep doing it. | ||
It's just barely serious when the government shuts down. | ||
Most Americans don't notice the people in... | ||
unidentified
|
Go ahead. | |
This time, I think that the media is looking for a big win, or at least the Democrats are looking for a big win, because so much has been happening over this past month that has been in favor of Donald Trump and the Republicans in general, that this is finally their first big break where they can say, look at what Trump is doing. | ||
He's now shut down the government. | ||
Look at all these stories about all these park employees being out of work, and they'll play on that to get as much as they can against Donald Trump right now, because obviously it sure seems like they've had a hard time showing that what he's doing is bad. | ||
And of course, we all know Orange Man bad. | ||
Yeah, I think you're totally right. | ||
I think that the... | ||
The effort by the left to see some kind of negative headline, any kind of negative news about Donald Trump or the Republicans is really, really important to Democrats right now because they are in such disarray. | ||
And they have so they have nothing that they that they can actually get behind. | ||
They don't have leadership. | ||
They're not sure what the party actually is anymore. | ||
And I've made this point a couple of times in the show recently. | ||
Democrats have a serious civil war between the progressives and the and the, you know, I guess your your boilerplate liberals. | ||
And they're not sure what they want to do. | ||
The progressives are the ones with the energy, and the boilerplate liberals are the ones that can actually get funding from the donors. | ||
They don't know who's in charge. | ||
They don't know how they want to present themselves. | ||
You can't get a platform when you can't agree on what direction your party should take. | ||
So the Democrats are relying on the Republicans to mess up. | ||
That's something that James Carville had said a couple of weeks ago. | ||
I don't know if I care. | ||
The fear is that Republicans are going to get blamed for the shutdown. | ||
I don't think so. | ||
Or I don't care if they do. | ||
In fact, go ahead, Democrats, please, for the love of all that is holy, put the blame on the Republicans because it's going to expose how the Democrats' insane ideology can't even overcome a government shutdown in terms of PR, right? | ||
The Democrats could come out and give everybody a free Twinkie, and their ideology is so insane, people are not going to want to vote for them. | ||
So if they blame the Republicans for this, fine. | ||
They're still going out and going on TV and saying men are women. | ||
Yeah, I mean, that was a little hubbub when it was Sarah McBride, I think. | ||
Exactly. | ||
Did you guys see this story? | ||
Where is it? | ||
In Delaware? | ||
unidentified
|
Yep. | |
So the chairman introduced the congressman, Sarah McBride, who is biologically male, as Mr. McBride. | ||
And then some other guy was like, how dare you? | ||
I refuse! | ||
Have you no shame? | ||
unidentified
|
And the other guy was like, I will not participate in this fantasy. | |
And so, yeah, I mean, and they shut down the hearing and adjourned. | ||
You know, people are all—a lot of conservatives are bent out of shape over this transgender member of Congress, Sarah McBride. | ||
It's federal Congress, right? | ||
Yeah. | ||
McBride? | ||
Yeah. | ||
And I'm just like, why are y'all mad? | ||
We want the Democrats to stand on an 80-20 issue on the wrong side. | ||
Yeah. | ||
They're going to lose. | ||
I would like to see more Democrat trans Congress people, so that way the American people can really understand that that is the platform the Democrats want to— And see how fake the outrage is. | ||
Because you can see clearly from the guy grandstanding saying, how dare you address... | ||
It's great to see because a lot of people are kind of waking up and realizing, like, obviously it's a biological male. | ||
Obviously it is. | ||
But for some reason, we're still kind of playing this game as the adults and they're supposed to be the representatives who represent their own constituents, but it suddenly has become all about them. | ||
And so they're furthering exposing themselves as to how selfish their party is. | ||
It's not about representing the other people. | ||
It is about, you have to address me in this certain way, even in our Congress. | ||
The rest of Congress should actually take a page out of McBride's own book. | ||
Because the way that McBride handles this, McBride doesn't get upset, doesn't get worked up, doesn't make a stink, lets people say Mr. McBride and doesn't make a big deal about it. | ||
Just like, okay, I'm here to do a job for the people of Delaware. | ||
That's not blah, blah, blah. | ||
And so McBride allows other people to make us think about it, which is exactly what happened. | ||
And that's actually the right course of action. | ||
If the Democrats really wanted to not have this be an issue, they could just say, all right, well, we're not going to make us think about it. | ||
We'll let... | ||
The Republicans look like the meanies because they're not using the preferred pronoun of this person, but they can't. | ||
I don't know if they can't moderate themselves or whatever, but that would be the actual smart play. | ||
I would think that their entire ideology has been built behind having that virtue signaling kind of support. | ||
You have to constantly declare your loyalty to the narrative, and so I don't think that they can just turn that off. | ||
Because in order to move up in their social circles, you have to declare constantly on how virtuous you are. | ||
And one-up each other. | ||
I keep thinking about Gavin Newsom. | ||
Is he... | ||
Didn't he buy a statue of himself? | ||
That is hilarious. | ||
I hope so. | ||
He made a bust. | ||
You saw that story? | ||
unidentified
|
Yeah. | |
There's a story where he apparently paid money to a non-profit to make a statue of himself. | ||
Anyway, what were you saying? | ||
He doesn't seem like he's adhering to a narrative. | ||
He's kind of a rebel in the Democratic Party, and now he's got his own show, which is a great movie. | ||
You interviewed Charlie Kirk. | ||
No, no, no. | ||
I wouldn't call him a rebel. | ||
Maybe more like a lizard person. | ||
He's a lizard in the Democratic Party? | ||
Yeah. | ||
Snapping turtle. | ||
Are you saying that he is recently, or are you saying that that's the way that he's been, do you think? | ||
I don't know. | ||
See, governing California is a tough job because it's a big place to govern. | ||
Northern California is very different. | ||
You should probably have two governors, two states, except for the water rights, and then they'd be all hell. | ||
I agree. | ||
Northern California should be at its own state. | ||
You need someone to govern Northern California, maybe? | ||
Yeah. | ||
You could have maybe like a state governor that oversees transportation and electrics and water. | ||
But like those culturally, the north of California is very different than the south. | ||
Like just trying to govern San Francisco is insane with all that poop. | ||
And the south, all the desert and the entertainment industry, like it's a whole other beast. | ||
And north has all that green, the trees and the south has all that desert. | ||
So I think that he has done, you know. | ||
He hasn't been your average Democrat. | ||
I don't know why. | ||
I just brought him up because I watched his interview with Charlie Kirk, and I'm like, he's really trying to break that brainwashing mold. | ||
He's like, what do I do? | ||
Charlie, tell me. | ||
What should I do? | ||
He's not trying to break the brainwashing mold. | ||
He's trying to seize control of it again. | ||
Yeah, he wants to be president in 2028, I think. | ||
I agree with you. | ||
He needs the mind control, and he's realizing what's not working, and he's trying to reassert something to work. | ||
I agree with you about... | ||
Lately, he's trying to remake his image and stuff because I think that he's really damaged after COVID and after a lot of the quote-unquote woke policies that California's had. | ||
But I would say that prior to maybe the past year, he was very much in lockstep with the... | ||
Average Democrat and very progressive Democrat. | ||
He'd be a great guest, too. | ||
I know he's super busy and stuff, but I wonder if he, as the walls started to fall around Kamala, if he just realized this imperial democratic organism is insane. | ||
If he just shocked him awake. | ||
I think he's realizing that his support has to come from a different avenue because he saw... | ||
Exactly what happened and how Kamala spent over a billion dollars and still lost the election. | ||
And he's realizing that if he does want to make a future presidential run, he's obviously not stupid. | ||
So he's kind of just realizing that, okay, in order to make plans for the future and be successful in it, he's going to have to step into this arena. | ||
And so he had that podcast with Charlie Kirk in trying to open that door and then show that Democrats can be cool too, right? | ||
They can be... | ||
Part of that crowd and move on from the old legacy to change their image from what they have been to this new sphere of media. | ||
It didn't work, though. | ||
The whole narrative is, look at Gavin Newsom pretending to not be woke. | ||
So he was hoping the narrative was going to be, oh wow, Gavin Newsom's moderate, but who believes that? | ||
The progressives are attacking him because he attacked progressives, because he agreed with Charlie Kirk. | ||
They're saying, I don't care, whatever he said, he promoted Charlie Kirk. | ||
He's persona non grata. | ||
And everybody on the right is like, yeah, we don't believe you, Gavin. | ||
Nice try. | ||
There is no future for this guy, in my opinion. | ||
I mean, obviously, he may run for office, but he's not convincing regular people that he's not a psychopath. | ||
He's going to burn Democrat bridges at the same time. | ||
This dude is going to run in the Democrat primary in 28, and he's going to get 13%. | ||
Do you think it'll be that low, huh? | ||
Well, I'm kind of being a dick when I say 13, but it's going to be low. | ||
And it's going to be because... | ||
He's going to be attacked from two fronts. | ||
The right is going to go after him and say, this guy's smarmy, and the left is going to say, this guy's smarmy. | ||
This is the problem Democrats have had over the past decade. | ||
They know that if they go up against the progressive sect, they lose 10 points. | ||
And maybe they can win 30% with the existing moderate Democrat base, but 30% doesn't get you over the line unless you've got a four-way race, which ain't happening anytime soon. | ||
So now Gavin Newsom is like, we've got to moderate. | ||
We need to pull the party closer to the center. | ||
If we want to start attracting people. | ||
So what happens? | ||
He sits down with Charlie Kirk, plans his podcast. | ||
Everyone on the right immediately is like, nice try Gavin, we know what you're doing. | ||
And then the left goes, I can't believe you would say those things about trans people. | ||
So he's lost. | ||
There's a lack of fairness with men and women's sports, I think. | ||
I didn't see that part of the interview, but that's what I heard he said. | ||
The most plain thing you could possibly say is it just acknowledge biological reality. | ||
And say that it's not fair, and he's getting torched for it. | ||
It was a great moment. | ||
He was like, Charlie, what do I do? | ||
What should I do? | ||
He was basically prostrating himself to Charlie Kirk, like, how can I win? | ||
And Charlie's like, you gotta say that it's not cool to have men in women's sports. | ||
And then I guess he did. | ||
And he was like, yeah, it's not fair. | ||
That's the point of the video where I hit the stop button. | ||
And now he's getting attacked by progressives. | ||
So he's gonna end up with no one on the right supporting him. | ||
He's gonna get very few moderate liberal types. | ||
Maybe he gets all of them. | ||
But again, 30%? | ||
It's an inevitable shattering of the Democratic Party. | ||
Unless the money tries to hold it together. | ||
unidentified
|
That's good. | |
Like if the funding just is like, listen, we're not going to let this thing break. | ||
We're just going to keep pumping it up like foie gras and just disgusting tube feed this thing. | ||
That's like a baby duck that you tube feed, by the way, to get its liver all fatty before you eat it. | ||
It's pretty gross. | ||
Well, not baby. | ||
Regular duck. | ||
Regular duck? | ||
Foie gras? | ||
Or goose. | ||
Or goose. | ||
Thank you. | ||
They got a big metal tube and they grab it by the throat and they jam. | ||
It into its throat, and they pump it full of corn and oil. | ||
So that's what the liberal economic order has been doing to the United States and Democratic Party for about 50 years. | ||
I agree with that. | ||
Maybe they'll keep trying that, but I think culturally, it's destined for a shattering and a regrouping. | ||
So I think the money... | ||
It would go to people like Newsom. | ||
I think that Newsom is charismatic and has enough—not that I in any way agree with his policies or anything, but I think that he's charismatic enough and good-looking enough where the— You know, rank and file donor, the millionaires and billionaires that actually spend money on Democrat races, I think that they would give him money. | ||
I don't think the money will go to the progressives because the progressives want things like, you know, they want to tax billionaires out of existence and they will end up going after millionaires and they don't like rich people at all. | ||
They think that every billionaire is a policy error and they want to expropriate property and they want to have price controls. | ||
All kinds of control over your private life and personal property and stuff. | ||
And I think that that's really unpopular with the people that have money because they don't want to have that. | ||
They don't want government to have that kind of control over their lives. | ||
So I don't think the Democrats are going to have the progressives leading at the end of the day. | ||
I think it's going to be the regular liberals. | ||
Let's jump to this story from the Daily Mail. | ||
Yo, check this out. | ||
Leaked audio of DEI activists sharing air traffic controller exam answers with minority candidates. | ||
This is wild, and they really bury the lead. | ||
So I want to give a heartfelt, do better Daily Mail. | ||
They're going to say, in audio footage, and you scroll down. | ||
Shelton Snow, the frontline manager for the National Black Coalition of Federal Aviation Employees, can be heard promising advanced access to test answers to minority prospects vying for an air traffic control job in 2014. Holy crap. | ||
The funny thing is, they call him an activist. | ||
A top activist. | ||
Like, heavens me, Daily Mail, can you at least, like... | ||
Actually tell people in the lead he's the frontline manager for the National Black Coalition of Federal Aviation Employees because that makes it a bit more serious than some random guy in the street being like, let me get you some answers. | ||
When it turns out he's part of an organization trying to advance this specifically, and then you've got leaked audio where he's basically helping people cheat, they say. | ||
The question then becomes, how many people are air traffic controllers who don't actually know how to do it but were given advanced answers by people like this? | ||
Why do they need to cheat and have preferential hiring? | ||
Like, if you've got preferential hiring, why do you need to cheat as well? | ||
I think you're already cheating. | ||
It's the other way around. | ||
What do you mean? | ||
Despite the fact that these people are being given preferential treatment, they're still not getting in. | ||
Right. | ||
Well, that's part of the whole merit problem. | ||
When you're just seeking out colored people in order to fill these jobs. | ||
And you're not looking at merit. | ||
You're going to have to help them out in some way in order to get them there. | ||
You can't say that anymore. | ||
It's people of color. | ||
I know there's a distinction for some reason. | ||
I haven't figured out how or why. | ||
I don't believe there's a distinction anymore. | ||
But it's okay because you're Native American, so you can't be racist. | ||
There we go. | ||
I was thinking the other night about that. | ||
I was like, is my skin dark enough? | ||
Anyone going through this color issue, like a woman of color, like, oh, it's just not colorful enough. | ||
I'm like, what is this? | ||
Grotesque mind racism virus thing. | ||
I mean, I'm so weird. | ||
I'm quite pasty myself, but you actually have a nice pink hue. | ||
Thanks, sir. | ||
That's probably blood flow from all the caffeine I've been drinking. | ||
Maybe. | ||
Actually, caffeine constricts the blood vessels. | ||
Does it, like, squeeze it and then make it shoot faster? | ||
No, it can't stick it. | ||
That's how I feel right now. | ||
So, you would be less pink. | ||
Unless Ian is... | ||
unidentified
|
Maybe it's just the red jacket and the yellow, what were you saying? | |
Could be. | ||
The hair. | ||
Yeah, yeah. | ||
I feel like the DEI hire this podcast right now, just surrounded by white people. | ||
Well, I'm actually mixed, so... | ||
Oh, yeah, I guess that's true. | ||
That's right. | ||
Yeah. | ||
Well, I'm half white as well, so I... Uh-oh. | ||
So you're only half minority. | ||
Yep. | ||
That means that past comment might get you in half trouble. | ||
unidentified
|
I'll get half canceled. | |
Only one side of your family, I guess. | ||
I mean... | ||
So somebody super chatted, free men die free, says if you think airline's bad, wait till see the medical field. | ||
What do you say? | ||
Go in for a tonsil removal and come out as Caitlyn Jenner. | ||
I mean, yeah, the reality is the ultra-wealthy liberal types who push these things don't have these problems. | ||
So I always just tell people, look, just go to Loudoun County. | ||
I guarantee you Loudoun County ain't going to have this problem. | ||
So, for instance, a lot of people talk about – I'll keep it vague as I can to protect people's privacy, but – How, like, the doctors are going to say your child needs to be prescribed this medicine, I say so, or else. | ||
You go to Loudoun County and they're like, literally we don't care. | ||
You'll get the best treatment by the best doctors and you pay for it. | ||
You go to some of the poorer areas and it's all heavy DEI stuff and forced medication stuff. | ||
You go to the rich areas, ain't nobody messing around. | ||
Because as much as wealthy white liberals push these ideas in DEI, they don't want it to affect them. | ||
So you go to Loudoun County. | ||
Wealthiest county in the country. | ||
And what do you find? | ||
Everything is free market. | ||
Yeah. | ||
You can go to private practice. | ||
You can get prescribed medications. | ||
Yo, the funny thing is, without, again, getting too specific, Loudoun County is the place where you go to a doctor and say, I feel like I need this medication. | ||
And they'll say, sure, here's how much it costs to come and visit. | ||
And if they, it's not like they're going to give you any random drug. | ||
Don't get me wrong. | ||
I'm saying like... | ||
There was a period where a lot of people wanted to get prescribed certain medications and doctors were like, we won't prescribe this for you despite it potentially treating whatever you're feeling. | ||
Now, a lot of counties are the place where you're like, heard on the internet, this thing treats this thing. | ||
They're like, here you go. | ||
Pay your bill and have a nice day. | ||
Yeah, they called my hometown Pharmaceutical Falls, but it wasn't because of the doctors. | ||
It was just because of all the high school kids. | ||
Pharmacy. | ||
I mean, you're rich, you get meritocracy. | ||
Although, this is the thing about free market. | ||
I think it's a... | ||
It's not meritocracy, though. | ||
What's that? | ||
It's not meritocracy. | ||
Well, like, if you can afford it, you just get the best. | ||
You get the free market. | ||
You look for the best of the best, and that's who goes there, because that's where the money is and the resources are. | ||
But free market works to a point. | ||
It's kind of like communism. | ||
Like, real free market has never been tried, because as soon as it... | ||
It can't work in mass. | ||
That's not true. | ||
It works in small scales, but as soon as you... | ||
It grows, you get monopolies, and then... | ||
I agree that it works on small scales, but real free markets have existed. | ||
I don't know about that. | ||
They can function. | ||
So I agree with you, largely. | ||
Communism works with like 10 people, where it's like 10 people on a farm, and there's no real, like, you can leave whenever you want. | ||
No one can force you to eat gruel or whatever. | ||
So 10 people on a farm being like, hey man, I grew a watermelon. | ||
Would you like to share it with me? | ||
unidentified
|
Sure. | |
I also did the dishes. | ||
Easy. | ||
Communism in large sense is like, why aren't you growing watermelon? | ||
I don't want to. | ||
unidentified
|
Bang! | |
That's communism. | ||
Free markets can grow a little bit bigger until they start getting regulated and getting monopolistic. | ||
But real free markets have been tried and they do function. | ||
The only problem is you get people selling heroin to kids and then libertarians clap for it. | ||
Idiots. | ||
I mean, you can see the free markets play out in places like Loudoun County where there's the actual good doctors who... | ||
The rich people seek out are kind of all congregate, right? | ||
unidentified
|
Right. | |
Into one area. | ||
But it's not a, like, Loudoun County, I wouldn't call anywhere in America a free market. | ||
So there's like some, there's more free market than others. | ||
My point was, in Loudoun County, you can get what you gotta get. | ||
The doctors are gonna be there, and they're gonna say, if you can pay for it, it's fine, and no one's gonna bother or interfere. | ||
You go to the poor areas, and they're like, government mandates and government grants require us to do this, so do it or else. | ||
unidentified
|
Mm-hmm. | |
And, I mean, it would be nice to see that kind of be everywhere in the U.S., but I do feel like the people that are, you know, we keep picking on Loudoun County, but the people in Loudoun County, they're very quick to be like, well, it's okay for us, but the poor people, they can't make those kind of decisions for themselves because they're unsophisticated. | ||
They're, you know, the reason they're poor is because they're unintelligent, they're bad people, etc., whatever. | ||
And I think that that kind of attitude is something that a lot of wealthy people have. | ||
How does that lead to DEI? I must be missing a gap in something. | ||
So the rich people are like, we want the best for ourselves. | ||
I don't care what color you are. | ||
Come in, you're the best doctor. | ||
You're the one. | ||
But everyone else that can't afford you, we've got to make sure that they have a black doctor. | ||
It's everyone has to have the opportunity to be a doctor, regardless of color or background or identity or whatever. | ||
But the problem is just because they need 50 doctors and they want to have X amount that are of a particular race doesn't mean that there are enough qualified doctors of that race to fill the desired slots. | ||
So what ends up happening is an official... | ||
Practice at companies that we have to quota certain races? | ||
That should be illegal, by the way. | ||
That's DEI, and it is illegal. | ||
Okay, then it should be eradicated from business in the United States. | ||
That's not... | ||
Vote Donald Trump! | ||
Oh, wait, you did. | ||
Yeah, I did, but... | ||
In the process of it right now. | ||
Right. | ||
That's what's going on. | ||
But your confusion, I don't think it plays out exactly like that. | ||
I think it plays out more so that the... | ||
The liberals and the rich people who advocate for these policies advocate it for somewhere else. | ||
It's kind of like the way that they see the border. | ||
They should have an open border, but they don't want to see illegals in their backyard. | ||
They actually want to have them taken care of and say that they're able to vote for these policies and they're so virtuous in that way. | ||
And that's kind of how DEI has worked throughout this entire country is that you can say that you support these policies because it's a good thing and you're helping the... | ||
Brown and black people. | ||
But in all reality, it's always away from the rich people. | ||
It's always kind of put into place in practice in poorer areas first. | ||
Does it help minorities when planes crash? | ||
I don't think so. | ||
I think they're on those planes, too. | ||
Yeah, I took a plane here. | ||
Planes be crashing a lot, huh? | ||
I don't know. | ||
You guys brought that up a couple nights ago on the show. | ||
It might just be more cameras on it nowadays. | ||
In terms of these crashes that are much more serious, it seems like there's a higher concentration at the beginning of this year than at other times. | ||
The Boeing story from last year, some whistleblower came out and was like, by the way, for the last 15 years, they've been cutting corners, the planes are not coming out high quality, and then he got killed. | ||
He died. | ||
He was killed a couple weeks before he was going to testify before Congress about it or something, the Boeing whistleblower. | ||
That kind of went quiet, didn't it? | ||
Wow. | ||
And that's Boeing. | ||
Of course, you see little planes. | ||
I don't know. | ||
So what's the plane crash numbers? | ||
Have they gone up lately? | ||
Have you been following? | ||
You guys been following the numbers of plane crashes? | ||
It seems that serious fatal accidents are slightly higher than you normally get. | ||
Oh, and then Ben Davidson was saying maybe it's solar activity. | ||
Well, I asked him that, and he said maybe. | ||
That's cool. | ||
Because I was saying, you know, in one of those plane crashes, it comes in hot and belly flops. | ||
And the issue is, if there is any kind of anomalous activity... | ||
In the magnetosphere or whatever, instruments, GPS, etc., could be off. | ||
And if the instruments are off, and altometer specifically, and they think they're at 100 feet, but they're at 50 feet, they're going to belly flop. | ||
And there was that plane up in, what's the state? | ||
Up north. | ||
Alaska. | ||
Where was it? | ||
Ontario, was it? | ||
I thought it was Nome, Alaska, and it disappeared. | ||
Oh, Nome, right. | ||
It disappeared, which is an interesting thing. | ||
For being that close to the North Pole, the magnet, like, maybe it went off. | ||
I don't know. | ||
unidentified
|
I don't know. | |
I'm stretching here, and it's kind of off topic. | ||
No, it's in Nome, Alaska. | ||
It was cold, and the plane probably crashed. | ||
Just the sensors malfunctioned because of the temperature? | ||
No, planes crashed in inclement weather. | ||
Didn't they say it disappeared before it went down? | ||
Like, disappeared off radar before it went down? | ||
Maybe it was snowy. | ||
Yeah. | ||
Like, sometimes it snows and planes get lost. | ||
Yeah, I mean, you know that, like, at, like, 36,000 feet, it's, like, frequently minus 30 or 40 outside of the plane. | ||
So they're... | ||
You know what really is funny is that, like, Amelia Earhart goes missing, and now there's all these movies and shows about how she was abducted by aliens, and it's like, bro, a plane crashed. | ||
Like, there's no mystery! | ||
Her plane crashed! | ||
And they're like, but what if aliens? | ||
Like, why would you even... | ||
Why is it... | ||
You know, whatever, man. | ||
They're looking for new conspiracies because most of ours have come... | ||
True. | ||
Well, there's an old one, but they're fun, I guess. | ||
unidentified
|
Yeah. | |
So I suppose that's why. | ||
The Bermuda Triangle was a cool one. | ||
People thought there was like, I don't know what, aliens or people would disappear, like literally time travel and portal through wormholes and stuff, but it was just, I think it was just magnetic interference in that area of the world. | ||
I don't know why. | ||
Is it like deep there, maybe? | ||
Deep trench underwater there? | ||
I don't know exactly. | ||
Where in the Bermuda Triangle? | ||
Yeah. | ||
No, I... I don't think that has anything to do with the depth of the water there. | ||
Because if a deep trench in the water were to actually have an effect on planes flying over it, the planes would plummet out of the sky over the Marianas Trench. | ||
unidentified
|
Oh, do they? | |
No, they don't, but I'm saying they would. | ||
Let's jump to this next story. | ||
I'm the Daily Caller. | ||
Big Soda floods state capital in unprecedented fashion to lobby against Maha. | ||
So RFK Jr. has apparently issued an ultimatum to these big food producers. | ||
We got this from the Vigilant Fox. | ||
And this is actually from a couple days ago. | ||
This is Robert Kennedy will meet with senior leaders of the Processed Foods Industrial Complex to discuss potential topics ranging from banning seed oils and certain food additives to nutrition labels as the Maha Revolution begins. | ||
So as most of you know, I've been harping on this one for quite a bit because this may be one of the biggest stories in the country right now. | ||
West Virginia banned artificial food dyes in food, in schools, and just in general. | ||
The legislature passed this. | ||
It's supposed to go into effect in 2028. The Senate extended it by a year, giving them three years to figure this out. | ||
These big soda companies are now going to the government and trying to get the governor to veto this or to stall it. | ||
Daily Caller says lobbyists from the American Beverage Association descended on West Virginia State Capitol building on Tuesday in an attempt to thwart a bill that would ban synthetic food dyes. | ||
And these are largely made from petroleum, by the way. | ||
National lobbyists who rarely, if ever, show up in Charleston came out in full force to oppose HB 2345, which would ban the in-state sale of any food products containing red three, red 40, yellow five, six, blue and blue one and two, as well as green three. | ||
Newly minted Health and Human Service Secretary Robert F. Kennedy Jr. has lambasted the synthetic dyes and touted studies which show the dyes are linked to negative neurobehavior outcomes in children. | ||
I'll tell you this. | ||
I got a question for everybody. | ||
Why is it that when I look at the ingredients on my food item, instead of putting cockineal mite residue, they write red 40. Oh, God. | ||
Imagine if they wrote cockineal mite residue, parentheses, insect paste, and bracket, and parentheses. | ||
A lot of people would be like, I ain't eating that. | ||
And this is what they do with cricket as well. | ||
What's the word for cricket? | ||
There's another word. | ||
What is it? | ||
Do you remember what it is? | ||
Millet? | ||
No, it's not millet. | ||
No, no, no, no. | ||
Yeah, they have a word for cricket so they can not put cricket on the food label. | ||
Oh, yeah. | ||
I'll look it up. | ||
Let me... | ||
unidentified
|
Chet's probably already got it. | |
It is called... | ||
Where is that? | ||
H-E-A protein. | ||
unidentified
|
A-C-H-E-T-A. A cheddar. | |
Really? | ||
Yeah. | ||
That's a new word? | ||
I guess these are the tricks they use to make you eat the bugs. | ||
What if I told you guys that red dyes, I don't know which one, are made with cockineal mites? | ||
You ever see this one? | ||
Gross. | ||
We did talk about this on the show before, but let's get it. | ||
Cockineal mite red dye. | ||
You are eating the bugs, everybody. | ||
I'm going to tell you again. | ||
You all said, I wouldn't eat the bugs. | ||
You're eating the bugs. | ||
Let's see, they got little pictures of this little guy. | ||
Look at that little disgusting thing. | ||
Where are they at? | ||
Where are the pictures of this stupid thing? | ||
The truth about red food dye made from bugs. | ||
Ew. | ||
Feed it to your kids. | ||
How come nobody wants to know the picture of that little bug? | ||
Oh, look at this. | ||
Whole cockineal insects from botanical colors. | ||
Oh, they're out of stock. | ||
unidentified
|
Whoa, wait. | |
Jeez. | ||
Wait, where's the picture of the little bug? | ||
Is that? | ||
Oh, man, that's the insect paste you guys are eating? | ||
Yuck. | ||
Harvard Museum of Science. | ||
There you go. | ||
Look at these little guys. | ||
Yeah, eat the bugs. | ||
There it is. | ||
You guys want to eat that? | ||
Apparently they have like an aluminum compound in their bodies, which is bright red. | ||
And so they breed them, mash them up, and then you eat them. | ||
So that's the diet. | ||
So my point is this. | ||
Yellow five. | ||
Imagine if it said tartrazine, parentheses, coal tar. | ||
Yeah, that was the first one. | ||
That was the big, maybe late 90s or early 2000s, yellow five. | ||
They were like, it shrinks your testicles. | ||
That was the big. | ||
Oh yeah, because wasn't it in Mountain Dew? | ||
Yeah. | ||
And they were like, if you eat Mountain Dew and Butterfinger at the same time, it lowers your sperm count. | ||
Man, I ate a lot of that. | ||
That was what every teenage boy told everybody. | ||
You'd get frozen Snickers and go golf and drink Mountain Dew and eat frozen Snickers. | ||
Those were the days of... | ||
Zits, and I didn't know why I would have zits. | ||
This is big news, though, my friends. | ||
I don't know if you like eating the bugs, but check this out. | ||
At least a dozen U.S. states rushed to ban common food dyes, citing health risks. | ||
I love this. | ||
It's great. | ||
Yes, it is. | ||
And so West Virginia needs lobbying right now. | ||
This means we need RFK Jr. and his cohorts and other big... | ||
Look, there's a big opportunity here. | ||
You want to get rich? | ||
Open up a food processing factory plant, whatever. | ||
That doesn't use these artificial dyes and you will own the market in a few years. | ||
These mass producers are fighting this. | ||
So if we can get big companies to tell the governor that they're going to commit to producing food in the state to adhere to the new ban on artificial dyes and say, screw the big producers, you are not only going to see these investors are going to make mad bank because it's basically right now zero. | ||
The amount of food production in the state without artificial garbage in it is like close to zero. | ||
Everything's got some garbage in it. | ||
I'm sure there's stuff like tortillas which don't have dyes in them. | ||
It's just cornmeal in water or flour in water. | ||
There's a big opportunity in replacing most of the food people eat. | ||
Sports drinks? | ||
That's what I'm thinking about. | ||
Gatorade. | ||
Why even color the Gatorade? | ||
You don't need to. | ||
All the Gatorades could be white. | ||
Just clear. | ||
And with a yellow label or a red label or a blue label depending on the flavor. | ||
And you don't need the poison in it. | ||
Right. | ||
And so there's a lot of money to be made right now. | ||
The other big thing that I'm really excited for is the food tourism. | ||
Because we talked about this before the show. | ||
You've got Kentucky, Ohio, Pennsylvania, Maryland, and Virginia. | ||
All surrounding West Virginia. | ||
And I guarantee you, anybody who's within like 15 or 20 minutes of the border is going to be like, you want to go to the grocery store? | ||
Sure, but let's go to West Virginia because we know literally all the food is clean. | ||
Now imagine if they ban glyphosate residue, which they should. | ||
Yeah, that's a big one. | ||
That's a challenge, too, because of the way... | ||
Who was on here last week talking about it? | ||
Oh, Robert. | ||
Sitting here on the Culture War last week. | ||
unidentified
|
Malone. | |
Malone. | ||
unidentified
|
Glyphosate. | |
He's like the most interesting... | ||
You ever see that commercial of the most interesting man in the world? | ||
That's Robert Malone, by the way. | ||
So for those that don't know, glyphosate is a... | ||
I believe it's a pesticide, but it's used as a desiccant. | ||
Herbicide, fungicide, pesticide kills it all. | ||
Plants, fungus. | ||
And so here's what they do. | ||
My understanding is that the wheat grows and the wheat needs to die so they can harvest the seed heads, the grains, right? | ||
And anybody who's ever seen wheat grow, it's green. | ||
And then when it dies, it dries out. | ||
And then you can grab the, whatever they're called, the... | ||
Socks of wheat? | ||
Yeah, the grain head or whatever. | ||
And then you can... | ||
Not the chaff, it's the other part. | ||
I don't know, whatever. | ||
It's the actual wheat. | ||
The grain? | ||
The wheat. | ||
Well, the wheat is the plant. | ||
But then you can get the little seed heads out, right? | ||
And then you can get... | ||
We did this, we made bread. | ||
Yeah, super fun. | ||
Because we had wild wheat growing in the yard. | ||
So what happens is the producer, the refineries and the distributors will be like, hey, we need to come in and harvest your wheat on this date. | ||
So the farmers are like, okay, well, it won't all be ready at the same time unless they spray a desiccant, which kills it. | ||
And then the glyphosate residue is all over it, gets harvested, and you eat it. | ||
And they've got, and those are the people that aren't using genetically modified wheat that is resistant to Roundup because the Roundup won't kill it. | ||
I believe. | ||
I believe you cannot desiccate GMO wheat that's resistant to Roundup. | ||
Maybe I'm wrong about that, but I don't know. | ||
So we'd have to revolutionize that farming industry, which is now set to feed billions, hundreds of millions, if not billions of people, and get them to grow. | ||
They're going to have to change their entire crop, some of these people that have Roundup ready. | ||
Wheat, that's a big one. | ||
But incrementally, it could be done incrementally. | ||
But also the problem is it cross-contaminates. | ||
Like, you'll get GMO wheat will, like, fly through the air and the wind, and seeds will land in other farms, and then they'll have all of a sudden GMO wheat in their farm. | ||
You know what I really can't stand? | ||
Is that, okay, so we know that they use glyphosate and other things in these wheat, and they go, yeah, but it's safe. | ||
I'm like, I don't care if it's safe. | ||
I don't want to eat it. | ||
So why, like, so I'm gonna go out of my way and I'm gonna buy glyphosate residue-free wheat. | ||
Imported, organic, European, no glyphosate, whatever garbage. | ||
I think the best part about this as well, especially with them putting up so much of a fight, is the fact that it's going to bring a massive amount of tension on this movement. | ||
And with RFK being the head of this and now the media kind of making a spectacle of all the lobbyists going there, we can kind of see that there's going to be resistance. | ||
And the only way that we can overcome that is if we have the support of the people. | ||
And by... | ||
Having that resistance, it's going to start hopefully a conversation with everybody around the country on, okay, what are we actually eating? | ||
I mean, you said it yourself with the way that they will deceive the majority of people by putting red dye 40 or whatever it is. | ||
So now people are going to start to wonder. | ||
And once they start to get healthier, once they stop eating a lot of this crap, they'll actually start to be able to think better as well. | ||
They'll have a more clear mind and have more energy. | ||
I mean, I learned that myself by changing my diet entirely. | ||
But once this national conversation really starts to happen and we focus a lot more on what we're ingesting in our body... | ||
I think the support is going to come for it. | ||
It's kind of the same exact way Trump got into office, is the fact that we're able to now direct away from the distractions or whatever they have on the media and look into, you know, well, what kind of media are we consuming? | ||
And eventually it's going to be what kind of food are we consuming? | ||
And hopefully it starts a nationwide movement to actually become healthy again. | ||
The Maha movement is going to help this country with... | ||
I mean, I don't even know what the outcome is going to be of it, but hopefully it's a really good thing. | ||
You ever see the videos of, like, a drain being unclogged? | ||
Do you ever watch videos of that? | ||
Like, in the very beginning, all this guck just starts oozing out. | ||
That's, like, the phase we're in right now of cleaning the guts of the American health system. | ||
And it's just, like, miraculous to watch. | ||
There is a particularly good video where it's a dam. | ||
Like, the dam's drainage or whatever is blocked. | ||
And then they, or no, no, I think it's actually the dam has never had the pressure released. | ||
So it's a big concrete dam and they like open the valve and then like sludge starts slowly pouring out. | ||
Then you see like a massive wave of mud before water just goes boom and shoots out of it full speed through the air. | ||
So how do we lobby? | ||
We're kind of lobbying now because you got what West Virginia politicians are watching or listening or people all around the world. | ||
Well, here's the thing. | ||
It passed with, I think, like 90 out of like 100 reps, it was like 90-something. | ||
Out of 34 senators, it was 31 senators. | ||
So even if the governor were to veto this, it's happening. | ||
How does that work? | ||
If the governor were to veto, what would... | ||
It goes back. | ||
Typically how it works to veto, it goes back and then you need a larger majority to approve it. | ||
But because the large majorities have already... | ||
They've got a veto-proof majority, apparently. | ||
We'll see, though. | ||
But it doesn't need to happen like that. | ||
We just, you know... | ||
Got to make sure the governor knows. | ||
And the governor is a big MAGA guy. | ||
He's a big Trump guy. | ||
Morrissey. | ||
So I think as long as he's made aware that people really care about this nationally, then he's going to do it. | ||
What people need to understand, though, it ain't so simple. | ||
When you're dealing with this, it's like on the surface, I'll tell you how the liberals would handle this. | ||
They'd be like, why don't ban it? | ||
Like, why not ban it? | ||
It's crazy. | ||
Only evil people wouldn't ban it. | ||
In the real world, you have the adults who are like, we want to ban it. | ||
We want to get out of our food. | ||
Where will the food come from once we shift off this entire infrastructure of food production? | ||
We need X amount of tons per food per day, which generates X amount of dollars or Y amount of dollars. | ||
And if we turn this off now and we lose a massive portion, are we going to have the food? | ||
Because I hate to break it to everybody. | ||
Most of the cheap, massive food production. | ||
All has is garbage in it. | ||
Yeah, I know. | ||
Can you pay 40% more for bags of food? | ||
This is just a question for you listening. | ||
Can you afford 40% cost increase on your bag of chips? | ||
I think it's easy, man. | ||
Local. | ||
So if you don't want... | ||
Fruity Pebbles? | ||
What is that? | ||
unidentified
|
Post? | |
I don't know. | ||
If they're like, no, we want our garbage petroleum chemicals in our food, then all you need is some local West Virginia company to be like, we're going to make fruity rocks. | ||
And they're not going to have any colors on them. | ||
And it's going to be a fruity-tasting cereal with no fake petrochemical dyes. | ||
They'll make it here, and they're going to instantly be a multi-million dollar company. | ||
It could be that humans, there's a type of human that looks past what they see, and they'll consume something regardless of what it looks like if it's good for them. | ||
And then there's everybody else that is blinded by what they see. | ||
And we may just be diverging as a human species into the discerning ones that can like... | ||
Sense out the healthy stuff and will be like, I'm not eating the crap. | ||
And then everyone else that just gets dumber and dumber and becomes a subservient class. | ||
I don't know if we'll necessarily evolve away and become separate species, but it's a very different type of person that overrides their senses. | ||
Kind of describing like NPCs right now and the issue that we've been having culturally for years because there's so many people that will just go out and repeat the rhetoric of what they, you know, they'll become a parrot for the TV and then be willing to I mean, | ||
he owns Tesla, but these local companies that are getting all of their inventory burned down, or if you're just an everyday American driving a Tesla because a couple years ago you wanted to save the environment, but now they'll damage your car and spray paint a swastik on the side. | ||
There's a big difference, and this is why I think Trump won in general, was because people are tired of that particular way to consume information. | ||
and they're, they're, they're breaking away from the NPC mindset and actually being open and tolerant and not, not just preaching it because that's what they heard on the TV. | ||
They're embodying these values. | ||
So I feel like what you're describing is, is like an enlightenment versus continuing to be a drone. | ||
You said they spray-painted a swastika on a Tesla? | ||
Did that happen? | ||
The people that would put symbols on other people's property were the Nazis. | ||
They would put the Star of David on the Jews' front door. | ||
This is crazy that someone would think this other person is a Nazi so much that they're going to put the Nazi symbol out there. | ||
They're firebombing Tesla dealerships in Portland. | ||
I've only heard a little bit about it. | ||
And you know who did it because they put a swastika on the side of the Teslas that they didn't burn. | ||
Yeah. | ||
I think the Babylon Bee put out a good article today on it. | ||
Is that what you're pulling up there, Tim? | ||
I've got an excellent article. | ||
I saw this from the Babylon Bee. | ||
Yeah. | ||
We actually are going to be using a story from the Babylon Bee. | ||
Okay, we're going to start the segment off. | ||
With what is supposed to be satire, but is literally just true and correct. | ||
So I would like to just say to all of our friends at the Babylon Bee, guys, this is a not-the-bee article, not a Babylon Bee article. | ||
It's titled, Liberals Defeat Nazis by Painting Swastikas Everywhere and Torching Immigrant Businesses. | ||
This is it. | ||
That literally happened! | ||
That's exactly what they're doing. | ||
How about this? | ||
Here's a headline for you, Babylon Bee. | ||
Climate change activists defeat... | ||
Oil execs by torching electric vehicles and electric car dealerships get shot up. | ||
Like, it is the antithesis of what the left is to be going after Tesla in the way they're going after it. | ||
But I will just say it again. | ||
Yo, the left is literally spray-painting swastikas everywhere and torching electric vehicles. | ||
This is the Nietzsche quote of, if you look into the abyss, long, I don't want to bastardize the quote. | ||
Long enough, the abyss becomes you. | ||
Like, if you stare at the demon long enough, you become a demon. | ||
Be careful when fighting monsters, lest you become one. | ||
Exactly. | ||
When you stare into the abyss, the abyss stares. | ||
And when you haze into the abyss. | ||
If you hate something, with every fiber of your being, and you're obsessed with it, and you hate it, and you hate it, you'd be surprised at how likely you are to become that thing. | ||
You've got to be real careful that you don't become a Nazi in your attempt to stop them somehow by spray-painting the Nazis' insignias and destroying property. | ||
This also kind of shows exactly how it doesn't matter who you are, eventually you'll become a victim of this Marxist mentality. | ||
Because you could be a complete liberal living in Seattle who owns an electric vehicle, and you've supported them the entire time, and now you have a sticker on your car that says, you know, I bought this before Elon went crazy, but believe it or not, fealty won't save you. | ||
You can pledge your allegiance to these psychopaths all you want, but if they just decide that... | ||
You're the next target. | ||
You will be the next target. | ||
And there's nothing you can do to stop it. | ||
I really, really do want to just thank all the liberal progressive activists here. | ||
Thank them so much because they've proven exactly what we've been saying for so long. | ||
So now when I go to my liberal friends and they're like, but Tim, Elon, blah, blah, blah. | ||
Stop. | ||
Okay, I've been telling you the whole time the left has no ethos. | ||
They have no ideology. | ||
An example is... | ||
Liberal left progressives painting swastikas on everything and torching electric cars. | ||
You ain't going to tell me they hate Nazis when they spray paint swastikas everywhere. | ||
And they do. | ||
They do it all the time. | ||
This has been a meme for almost 10 years now where people have been making fun of the left because liberals or progressives would ironically spray paint swastikas to mock the right. | ||
But then you're just literally doing it. | ||
But now, now, they're actually setting electric vehicles on fire, shooting them up. | ||
They were privately owned Tesla vehicles. | ||
That far leftists fired guns at. | ||
So, I don't think they care all that much about emissions and climate change, and I think this just proves the point we're making the whole time. | ||
There is no ideology on the left. | ||
Or at least it proves what I've been saying. | ||
There's not really a constitutional, coherent, structured ideology that I can discern. | ||
To the left? | ||
Yeah, I can't. | ||
There's none. | ||
Like, come on, I've pointed this out with Hassan Piker, where... | ||
I was commenting, he was commenting on a video I made, commenting on a video he made, which is funny. | ||
And I said, he's completely correct about, the story was, they were, Mr. Beast did cataract surgeries for blind people to cure their blindness, and it was like 10k a pop. | ||
And he was like, why are we turning healthcare into a game show? | ||
Why can't we actually just give people healthcare? | ||
Like, it's a simple procedure, one time. | ||
And I said, he is completely correct. | ||
I don't know the solution is government healthcare necessarily, but it is kind of cringe that, These people had cataract blindness, and we were making a game show out of it to try to help these people. | ||
In that video, I said, the military-industrial complex is bad. | ||
That's why we shouldn't be funding Ukraine. | ||
And, yo, in the same breath, the dude says, well, the military-industrial complex is bad. | ||
unidentified
|
Ha! | |
But he doesn't want to fund Ukraine because there's no ideology. | ||
They're told what they're supposed to believe by the rest of the cult and they just march in lockstep. | ||
And we keep saying, hey, you're hypocrites. | ||
And they go, no, we're not. | ||
We are a hive mind of ravenous insects that only care about whether we have the majority. | ||
That's it. | ||
The hive mind thing's wild. | ||
Facebook, I had a lot of friends from Los Angeles in the acting industry, and man, when they started posting, Hive, what should I do about thing, I feel. | ||
Okay, I gotta go to the Hive on this one, and they'd use that. | ||
They were proud of the Hive mind. | ||
It was very disturbing, because if you tried to eviscerate from that in any way, they would... | ||
Ostracize you. | ||
Eviscerate? | ||
No, viscerate. | ||
If you tried to, like, just slice pieces away off, yeah, coming from a tangent, trying to describe something differently, they did not like that. | ||
Maybe it's anecdotal, but I don't think so. | ||
Because the amount of people I've heard that have been ostracized from their friends that go into that state of mind, I don't think it just ends with me. | ||
Well, and you can see it clearly from who they target. | ||
And over the years, the target could be literally anybody. | ||
I know that last year, when Holden Armento went to the Chiefs game, And he was wearing a headdress to celebrate his team and different... | ||
He had black and red face paint. | ||
He was targeted by this same ideology. | ||
He was a nine-year-old child who literally was just going to the game in costume to celebrate the Chiefs. | ||
And of course, he's Native American as well from the Chihuahua tribe in California. | ||
And they were perfectly willing to target a nine-year-old child and label him as a racist. | ||
And then they went after his family who... | ||
Stood up for him in every way, shape, and form, which is something that I really admired. | ||
We were actually able to start a fundraiser and get him to the Super Bowl that year. | ||
It didn't make a lot of headlines, but it was really, really cool to kind of see a whole bunch of people come together in support of that when you do stand strong against it. | ||
But my point here is that they'll come after anybody at any time, even if you're an innocent nine-year-old child. | ||
And now you're seeing that they've turned on electric cars, or at least... | ||
Elon and his electric cars, because it's the next target that they can all get behind, and it's more about destroying than it ever has been about creating. | ||
Yeah, I mean, this is something that's been kind of ubiquitous with the left for the better part of at least 10 years, probably more. | ||
But the idea that they want to use, they enforce their... | ||
Ideology or their preferences, whatever you want to call it. | ||
And they use fear to keep people in line because that's all cancel culture and stuff is. | ||
It's all a method of control. | ||
It's a way to keep people from saying things they don't like, having opinions or sharing opinions that they find offensive. | ||
And those opinions can progress and change very quickly. | ||
One day... | ||
It's okay to say one thing and then a week later you say the same thing and someone's giving you a rash of crap about it because what is politically correct has moved on without you. | ||
Do you think that's why they always have to constantly virtue signal? | ||
Like what we talked about in the beginning of the show with how dare you address him as her? | ||
I don't know. | ||
They almost have to constantly do that to keep updating everybody around them what the current narrative is. | ||
So it's constantly changing and moving forward, and the only way to keep up is to constantly virtue signal. | ||
Super exhausting. | ||
That's why I'm into the Constitution, because it's a constant. | ||
I don't have to worry about, like, is free speech okay yesterday or tomorrow? | ||
I don't have to dance around hoping I'm doing the right thing because I know what the right thing is. | ||
It's to follow the law of the land to an extent. | ||
You follow the Constitution, which allows you to change it if you need to. | ||
Free speech. | ||
You uphold the speech of your enemy, of those you oppose. | ||
You give them an opportunity to speak their mind. | ||
That's the whole ethos of how you even have the opportunity. | ||
Yeah, and that's what you should realize if you find yourself identifying with the cult mentality is like, you need resistance. | ||
You need to hear ideas you don't agree with. | ||
You need to be offended so that you can grow. | ||
I largely agree with Carl Benjamin on a lot of these things. | ||
We were all very naive to play this game of, I don't agree with what you say, but I'll defend to the death of your right to say it. | ||
Because these are people who are exploiting any and every weakness to try and bring about Marxist-Communist BS. So my attitude now is if you believe in free speech, then I'll defend your free speech. | ||
If you don't believe in it, then I don't care if you get banned or censored or shut down. | ||
Liberalism is a closed system, and I'm talking about actual liberalism, like liberal ideas in a liberal society. | ||
It works for liberals. | ||
People that are not liberals, which are outside of the closed system, they can take advantage of things like freedom of speech. | ||
But to be honest, all systems work within closed systems, right? | ||
So if, like I said this all the time, if the whole world was as devout as Seamus Coughlin, you wouldn't need police. | ||
I mean, arguments may arise which would result in the need for courts, but you wouldn't need cops. | ||
Or armies. | ||
No, not everything works that way because if you're an authoritarian, you use violence. | ||
You use force. | ||
So it's force that keeps people in line. | ||
What I'm saying about liberalism is everyone that's aliberal accepts the fact that... | ||
That this is the way our society works. | ||
Right, what I'm saying is, in a system of fascism where everybody is a fascist, there's no fighting. | ||
They all agree with each other, and they like what is happening. | ||
There maybe could be coups and backstabbing, but that applies to literally any other closed system as well. | ||
A classically liberal system where everybody agrees on all the rules and gets along could still have backstabbing and infighting. | ||
So ultimately, if you have 100 people of the same ideology, they're going to work together. | ||
I got this. | ||
In other words, fascism, none of these ideas work outside of their spaces, and classical liberalism does not work, especially because it is ill-equipped to defend itself. | ||
Yeah, and this keeps going across my mind. | ||
Civilization IV, you may have played the fourth one. | ||
Absolutely. | ||
But you research liberalism, and then that opens up the ability to research communism. | ||
So it's kind of like liberalism gets hacked by the communist state of mind. | ||
The whole, we can all do this together. | ||
Well, to be fair, the reason why civilization does that is because they're actually following the historical literature. | ||
Yeah. | ||
That is, liberalism came about well before communism. | ||
Yeah, and it kind of lays the groundwork for people to become communist. | ||
That's the argument that Carl Benjamin makes. | ||
That communism is a natural outgrowth of liberalism. | ||
So I tend to disagree with him. | ||
I think that his perspective is that the Enlightenment leads to liberalism, which leads to communism. | ||
I think that the English Enlightenment and the French Enlightenment and the German Enlightenment, the Scottish Enlightenment, those are actually substantially different in principle and stuff. | ||
And I know that there are... | ||
There are things in the French Enlightenment that you really saw come to fruition in the French Revolution. | ||
Exactly, Rousseau and that kind of man. | ||
Society should be... | ||
Man as an animal, but socialized. | ||
That's something that came from the French Revolution, and I don't think that there's some kind of allegory in the Scottish or English revolutions, or Enlightenment, I'm sorry. | ||
And I think that that makes a difference with the results that you get, but I haven't had a chance to talk to Carl about that yet. | ||
So what was it, the state property aspects of liberalism that... | ||
That led towards communism? | ||
Like, what happened? | ||
Well, the idea that everybody should have the same stuff. | ||
So that's something that you get with the French Enlightenment, that everything is the same, everybody is the same, and everyone should have this, yeah, the leveling of the... | ||
Thank you. | ||
Leveling of society, whereas you don't really have that same kind of impulse in the Scottish and English Enlightenment. | ||
So if everybody has the same, that means that the people that have more, you can't make people that are incapable of doing things capable, right? | ||
You can make the capable incapable. | ||
You know, the funny thing about communism is, is how remarkably stupid it is in its simplicity, and how in order to actually believe in it, you have to be developmentally disabled. | ||
I can explain. | ||
What is it? | ||
To each according to their need, from each according to their means? | ||
Is that how it's saying? | ||
From each according to their ability, to each according to their need. | ||
Right. | ||
So what happens when you have growing populations of people with no ability? | ||
Their needs stay the same. | ||
Let's call it 100 food resource units required per person. | ||
You are going to have a society of an increasingly lower ability with communism, no matter what you do. | ||
It's fascinating that you can have, you know, George Carlin make the joke. | ||
Think about how stupid the average person is. | ||
Now realize half of them are stupider than that. | ||
Just that joke alone explains why communism can never work. | ||
We're going to have a lot of people who have no ability to produce but need tons of food. | ||
Let's make sure they get it. | ||
That means if, on average, a person can produce 100 resource units and a person requires 100 resource units, In order for there to be a functioning communist system, you would need equal amounts of people who can produce in excess and to accommodate the people who can produce in the negatives or who can't produce at all. | ||
So someone can produce 110. Congratulations, you're now accommodating someone who can produce 90. Then you need to make sure those people who overproduce are happy and can continue to overproduce. | ||
You can't. | ||
It's not possible. | ||
And thus, communism can't work. | ||
You also have to enforce the level of need. | ||
You have to say you're always going to need 100. That can't change because then our system will fail. | ||
And some days you need 130 because you fell down. | ||
This is what I love about how stupid the Soviet Union was. | ||
So, you guys ever hear of Soylent? | ||
You know what Soylent is? | ||
I've heard of it. | ||
So, this company wanted to make a meal replacement so you don't have to eat anymore. | ||
That was the idea. | ||
And I remember when it first came out, it's like 12, 13 years ago. | ||
I think it was 12 years ago. | ||
We got sent, when I was at Vice, we got sent this bag of like Soylent Beta or whatever. | ||
Like the early release. | ||
And it was this powder that tasted like cardboard. | ||
And you got sent a tube of oil. | ||
And you'd mix it with water in the oil. | ||
And the idea was, this has the average amount of food, protein, and everything a human body needs. | ||
So you're eating as clean as possible. | ||
Well, guess what the people behind Soylent figured out? | ||
Literally every single human has a different requirement. | ||
There is no every human needs X amount of milligrams. | ||
There's an average, but every human needs a slightly different amount. | ||
You're slightly taller, you're slightly fatter, you're slightly shorter, whatever. | ||
So then they said, okay, you can largely consume Soylent, but you must get a regular full meal once or twice a week to supplement what your body is missing. | ||
So it just did not work. | ||
In the Soviet Union, they were like, every family gets one bag of this, one carton of that, one box of this, and you fill it out in your little book, and it's like, yeah, that can't work, because everybody is different. | ||
They were hoping everybody would be as tall as each other. | ||
And everybody will change, too. | ||
Like, I'm different than you, and I'll be different tomorrow than I am today. | ||
So, like, tomorrow I might need more vitamin C. Yesterday, maybe I needed more omega-3. | ||
And that's going to change every day, too, depending on the weather, depending on what other... | ||
I think it's also a fundamental misunderstanding of how they teach history. | ||
Because if we were to take... | ||
The Constitution and the Declaration of Independence that all humans are created equal and endowed by our Creator with certain inalienable rights. | ||
Of those rights are life, liberty, and the pursuit of happiness. | ||
That is completely ignored in this entire ideology. | ||
And they just believe that every human can be molded into whatever they would like as opposed to being an individual created and have the right to pursue happiness. | ||
Without that fundamental understanding of why our country is so different than every other country or nation created before it, then it will inevitably keep falling into these, like what the Soviet Union did in trying to hand out to everybody as if they're the same people. like what the Soviet Union did in trying to hand But we're not. | ||
We're unique. | ||
That's why America is so great, is because we actually can see that the individual is a unique and created in the image of God and that we should be able to, that we should have more responsibilities than we have creating a burden on society. | ||
unidentified
|
That's not true. | |
Has there ever been a liberal republic, like a democratic republic, that's converted to a communist state? | ||
Because I can't think of a democratic republic that's become a communist state. | ||
I think of monarchies that have, like Russia got rid of their king, they became communists. | ||
Usually it's a revolution. | ||
That would lead to it, of course. | ||
But I can't think of it like a Democrat. | ||
Because the Democratic Republic, at least the United States is so unique. | ||
It's just like resilient against it because you're allowed to speak out against it. | ||
I mean, kind of. | ||
We're 250. We're not very old as a country. | ||
And we're like, you know, 36 and a half trillion dollars in debt on the brink of collapse in several ways. | ||
Venezuela started, voted their way into socialism. | ||
You know, they voted their way right into it. | ||
And now... | ||
They're stuck. | ||
Yeah. | ||
And, you know, first it was Chavez and then Maduro. | ||
Maduro has been expropriating property, taking, you know, taking people's businesses, taking homes, taking farms, and they're having the economic results that go along with it. | ||
And that's just off the top of my head. | ||
I'm sure there's multiple other ones because the idea of communism or the idea of socialism sounds good. | ||
If you only have a surface-level understanding. | ||
It's like, oh, everybody gets what they need. | ||
Nobody goes without. | ||
Everybody gets what they need. | ||
And that's what people hear, and they're like, government should be able to do that. | ||
But government can't do that. | ||
It feels so good to say it, too. | ||
I don't know if you have ever inadvertently been a communist. | ||
I have. | ||
In 2006, 2007, when I was on internet videos, I'm like, we can all do this. | ||
This is all of us in this together. | ||
But I kept this whole all-encompassing. | ||
We all are the same. | ||
We are all. | ||
And it just was so empowering as a leader to speak like that. | ||
And to think, just without really thinking about it, to act and talk like that. | ||
Here's a fun viral meme. | ||
One user posts, what are y'all going to do once communism is achieved? | ||
The next person says, building gardens, teaching classes on my farm, creating organizing spaces, and cultivating resources for my community. | ||
So basically what I'm planning to do anyway, but without fighting capitalism. | ||
To which the response is, your farm? | ||
That's right. | ||
Well, that's perfect. | ||
Yeah, you're not going to have a farm. | ||
They will expropriate it. | ||
You're better off building a biodome that you own and then living inside the biodome. | ||
Well, the funny thing to me is that, as Ron Paul pointed out somewhat 20 years ago or longer, socialism is allowed in the United States. | ||
There is nothing stopping any one of these people from going and setting up a socialist little commune. | ||
In fact, there are some communes that exist. | ||
There's one famous commune in the United States. | ||
They have a cap at like 100 members. | ||
And in order to join, there's a wait list. | ||
Some people will leave and move out, and then people can move in. | ||
Has anyone ever been killed? | ||
No. | ||
Okay. | ||
No, it functions pretty well. | ||
What if there was like someone wanted to get in, and there was like the wait list is just, when is this wait list going to drop? | ||
This is the thing about a commune existing within a capitalist system. | ||
You've got the protections of the government, police, fire, and military, so you're not going to get attacked. | ||
You can choose to leave whenever you want and go do anything else, and that's why it works. | ||
Small scale. | ||
Large scale doesn't work. | ||
Well, it's voluntary, right? | ||
Right. | ||
They're building something that they believe in, which is not what communism would boil down to. | ||
Communism is forcing everybody to do what you want to do, as opposed to them volunteering and doing it themselves. | ||
The reason the communists tend to kill so many people is that they're hoping to kill anyone who disagrees with communism. | ||
Their idea is if everyone just agreed this is the way it should be, we'd be totally fine and the system would work. | ||
Which one is worse, right? | ||
A totalitarian system or an authoritarian system? | ||
Probably totalitarian. | ||
Yeah, because totalitarian doesn't allow you to think anything different. | ||
Like, they need to control your mind. | ||
That's why the communists put people away in re-education camps, right? | ||
Like, authoritarians, like... | ||
Maybe they'll just take your stuff, or maybe they'll beat the crap out of you just because they feel like it or whatever. | ||
But if you keep your mouth shut and your head down, you might be able to fly under the radar and kind of just go about your day, right? | ||
With a totalitarian system, like, they're interested in you being a true believer. | ||
So that's why you get sent to re-education camps. | ||
You get sent to a place to relearn how to think. | ||
And the crazy thing is, there are people that are on Twitch today that say, yeah, we should send people to re-education camps. | ||
Hassan Piker. | ||
He said that? | ||
Didn't Hillary Clinton say that not that long ago? | ||
He said they would need to be... | ||
Yeah, absolutely. | ||
But he said that you would need to send people to be re-educated. | ||
You need to teach them. | ||
They need to be re-educated. | ||
I think he said it in context when he was talking to Ethan Klein. | ||
I'm concerned. | ||
I don't think that guy could run a mile. | ||
unidentified
|
Who? | |
Hassan. | ||
Hassan Piker. | ||
He was just on Theo Vaughn's show? | ||
Yeah, Theo had him on last week. | ||
That was nice. | ||
I watched 10 minutes of it. | ||
That was pretty cool. | ||
I think he was stoned. | ||
It was pretty funny. | ||
Or he was really tired. | ||
It was early morning. | ||
unidentified
|
I don't know. | |
He was talking like this. | ||
I don't know. | ||
I appreciate what Hasan does. | ||
He's super surface level. | ||
You appreciate what he does? | ||
Advocate for murdering people? | ||
No, no. | ||
Sit around eight hours a day and talk on the internet. | ||
That I appreciate. | ||
That's pretty horrible. | ||
If he did that, I would debate him. | ||
He does it all the time. | ||
And he thinks... | ||
The funny thing is, there's no serious law enforcement in this country. | ||
Because if there were the case, when Hassan was like, you gotta go do X in a video game, there'd be a knock on his door. | ||
Sam Hyde, after his boxing match, Hasan, I'm gonna! | ||
Hasan recently said that someone should go and murder a sitting U.S. Well, he said if you actually cared about X, then you would go do Y. Which is, oh, won't someone rid me of this? | ||
The argument is some people will bottle it up and then they'll go do it. | ||
And they won't speak about it. | ||
And you'll never know who they were. | ||
You didn't see it coming. | ||
Hassan, at least, is vocal about these. | ||
But then the other side is maybe he's inspiring people to act like that. | ||
Hassan does what literally all these other people are doing right now, but he has a big following. | ||
There are tons of people all across social media advocating for harm and death against Trump and Elon and others. | ||
Dude, like the current stuff with... | ||
Oh, my camera's all off. | ||
But the current stuff going on with Hassan and the whole Twitch groups that are attacking Hassan's kids and sending CPS to his house and stuff like that. | ||
Let me pull this one up right here. | ||
This is a tweet that's going around. | ||
It's from Maggie Moda. | ||
Viral tweets are now referring to plans to assassinate Elon Musk in coded language. | ||
And someone said, the person who does it... | ||
It's going to be mentioned in so many rap songs. | ||
Someone says, does what? | ||
And the response is four asterisks. | ||
It's four asterisks three times. | ||
Because we know, everybody knows exactly what they're saying. | ||
Here's the thing. | ||
So do judges. | ||
Like, these people are so stupid. | ||
They think the judge is going to be like, well, after seeing that message and taking an action and committing a crime, we can't prove any link to it because he used asterisks. | ||
It's like, yeah, judges won't do that. | ||
They're going to be like, we knew what you were intending to do. | ||
Easily taken apart by anybody with common sense would actually be able to look at that and know what they're advocating for. | ||
And, I mean, these people believe that there's no truth but power. | ||
And so they apply that to everybody and everything. | ||
And it shows in their tactics and the way that they have been, I mean, the violent riots around this country for the past You know, a decade at least have been because they believe that there's no truth but power. | ||
And so when Trump and Elon get into power, they think that they have to use their own and advocate for violence in order to get it done. | ||
You can see it the way that the left lionizes Luigi Mangione. | ||
Bill Burr made a dumb remark about Mangione the other day. | ||
What did he say to free him? | ||
He said free Luigi, yeah. | ||
He was complaining about rich people. | ||
People richer than Bill Burr, mind you, because Bill Burr's worth like 20 mil. | ||
But he was complaining about rich people, and then he threw in a free Luigi at the end of it. | ||
That was a couple months ago, wasn't it? | ||
I just saw it today. | ||
Is it again? | ||
Yeah, it's the second time. | ||
unidentified
|
Oh my gosh. | |
That's crazy, dude. | ||
I mean, comedy's one thing, but talking about freeing a murderer, is he convicted? | ||
Was he convicted? | ||
Is he on trial? | ||
No, and I think that's a good reason to believe he's not the guy. | ||
Really? | ||
Yeah, because we all said this. | ||
Before he got arrested, and then even a week after he got arrested, and then it sort of became de facto that everyone just assumed he was the guy. | ||
And I'm like, guys, he's wearing a different jacket with a different backpack than the guy in the video shooting the CEO, and you have what we refer to in the Minority Report sense, an orgy of evidence when they found him, which is, here's a guy with a backpack with the motive and the weapon and, like, everything on him, and it's just like, okay, do we... | ||
Do we really believe that? | ||
Fair enough. | ||
When you look at the surveillance footage of the guy with thin eyebrows, who looks middle-aged, and then you look at Luigi with massive thick eyebrows, I'm not convinced he actually is the guy. | ||
Fair enough, but Bill Burr didn't say free Luigi because he thinks that Luigi didn't actually do it. | ||
Right, everyone's lionizing the guy because they think he did it. | ||
The point of Bill Burr's comment was Luigi Mangione did something actually... | ||
You know, actually acted on his beliefs and he went after the... | ||
Crooked CEO, Health United or whatever CEO, and murdered him so he should be let go because he did a good thing. | ||
That's essentially the synopsis of what Bill Burr is saying. | ||
And that's the norm nowadays. | ||
Again, whether it be terrorist attacks against Tesla dealerships, which is what they are, the point is to terrify people, the point is to frighten people, and it's about politics because of... | ||
His association with Donald Trump and with Doge, people saying things like Free Luigi, whether it was the whole entire summer of riots over George Floyd, which proved to be over nothing, the total burning down of half of Kenosha over a misunderstood video or a BS narrative. | ||
The left is constantly violent, constantly violent, and it is the norm nowadays. | ||
Was it all just being directed in the 90s? | ||
Because I don't remember it until internet video. | ||
Now I can see it. | ||
Was it just happening overseas before? | ||
They were just directing all the vitriol towards our enemy, our common enemy? | ||
If you look at the number of bombings in the 70s from leftist organizations like the Weather Underground, there were bombs going off all the time. | ||
All the time. | ||
Hundreds of bombings. | ||
I'm going to take a look now. | ||
Well, I think we're entering that weather underground period with the Tesla attacks, and I think this summer it's going to get real crazy. | ||
I agree with that. | ||
And I feel like I kind of underestimated the amount of resistance because it's felt like for this first month since Trump has been elected, there's been almost like a lack of resistance in a certain way. | ||
Between 1971 and 1972, the United States experienced more than 2,500 domestic bombings, according to FBI statistics. | ||
These are all... | ||
From left-leaning groups. | ||
These are all radical leftists. | ||
These are all the leftovers of the Summer of Love in the 60s, the anti-capitalist movements that were born in the 60s, the communist movements that were born in the 60s. | ||
And this is just in... | ||
One year, 2,500. | ||
Additionally, during the 1970s, nearly a dozen radical underground groups, including the Weather Underground, the New World Liberation Front, and the Symbionese Liberation Army set off hundreds of bombs. | ||
So the idea that the left is actually looking for peace and whatnot, that's all BS. And we had a leftist on here the other day. | ||
A couple weeks ago or whatever, saying that, oh, you know, it's the right wing that is the dangerous one and stuff. | ||
Hundreds of bombings! | ||
2,500 in one year, and then additionally, hundreds of other bombings throughout the course of the 70s. | ||
But yet, that doesn't actually compute. | ||
There was a bombing of Congress. | ||
There was a bomb that went off in Congress. | ||
And Bill Clinton let the people out. | ||
Free. | ||
Free them. | ||
I think there might have been a small difference, though. | ||
Is that nowadays these people hate the idea of America. | ||
Yeah. | ||
And have been segregated into kind of their own groups and they're not actually going in this with a goal in mind apart from maybe like a thumbnail view of communism where everything's just bunnies and flowers. | ||
But they're literally just driven by hatred and division. | ||
They hate the idea of this country and they want to burn it to the ground. | ||
So hopefully they can come out on top. | ||
And rule over the ashes. | ||
But, I mean, that idea that a lot of the groups back then at least had the idea that they liked this country. | ||
I wonder about funding, because, like, USAID shut down. | ||
Where are all those people now? | ||
What are they doing? | ||
Are they involved with this? | ||
Because, like, in the early 70s, you're saying 70, 71, 2,500 bombings. | ||
Nixon? | ||
Was he the president at that point? | ||
I think it was Nixon. | ||
And apparently, Nixon, I always thought, Nixon, horrible guy, he resigned, he got impeached, he was going to impeach. | ||
Turns out maybe not. | ||
Maybe Nixon was going to blow the lid on who killed Kennedy and they wanted him out and they framed him. | ||
And maybe there was money behind the scenes to disrupt the powers that be at the time. | ||
Didn't Murray just say Nixon was framed? | ||
He was talking about it on... | ||
Yeah. | ||
He said Nixon was framed. | ||
First it was Nixon and Ford. | ||
And I mean, just looking at everything that kind of happens now, would that surprise you in any way, shape or form? | ||
I mean, they tried framing Trump. | ||
Yeah, it wouldn't now. | ||
No. | ||
If Nixon was trying to push back against the liberal economic order at the time, which he very well might have been trying to control it. | ||
Remember the Bulls in the 90s? | ||
Oh, yeah. | ||
They were like the best basketball team ever. | ||
Pippen, Jordan, Chamberlain. | ||
Yeah, how many people could you name on one team at one time that were massive? | ||
Yeah, I love that. | ||
I played a lot of Lakers versus Celtics. | ||
The Bulls have that now? | ||
I don't know. | ||
No, definitely not. | ||
The cultural ubiquity of the bulls in the 90s was crazy. | ||
unidentified
|
Yeah. | |
It was crazy. | ||
Space jamming. | ||
So I'm saying, when it comes to Nixon, you've got, effectively in the CIA, the bulls of the 90s. | ||
And with Trump, you have the bulls now? | ||
Oh, yeah. | ||
The power is... | ||
So back then, these guys were the dream team of coups. | ||
And they could pull it off on Nixon. | ||
And Kennedy, maybe. | ||
And with Donald Trump, you got like a ragtag bunch. | ||
The brand is there, but the talent isn't. | ||
And they couldn't make it work. | ||
It's like the sons of Michael Jordan's son and Pippen's son. | ||
You're like, dude, they never even practiced basketball. | ||
He's like, yeah, but he's my son, so he's the one in charge. | ||
He's the one that gets the part. | ||
I don't even think they're the sons. | ||
I think they're DEI hires. | ||
Yeah, they're not. | ||
You know, it'd be really funny if the reason why the CIA was unable to stop Trump is because they enacted DEI and hired a bunch of incompetent people. | ||
What happened? | ||
How come the coup didn't work? | ||
Well, you know, we hired a bunch of people based on race and gender instead of their ability to stage coups, so we couldn't do it. | ||
Because I imagine they don't do that at the top. | ||
They don't care about race and gender at the owners. | ||
I bet they do. | ||
You think they sit around there like... | ||
Jack Dorsey. | ||
Jack Dorsey was like, Twitter is the free speech wing of the free speech party. | ||
And he ran the show. | ||
unidentified
|
And then in a couple of years, he was like, we should bad people forsake the wrong pronouns. | |
And it's like, how does that happen to you? | ||
You run it. | ||
It's because they plug the garbage into their own brain. | ||
You said, what did he say? | ||
I couldn't understand what you were saying. | ||
We should ban people forsake the wrong pronouns. | ||
But I mean, at the top. | ||
I keep thinking about Swiss bankers. | ||
There's no difference, though. | ||
There's no difference at the top. | ||
One thing that I kind of... | ||
I've gone through a couple stages in my life where I've noticed that... | ||
A lot of the drama that you see, even up at the very top, is no different than the drama that you experienced in middle school. | ||
You kind of realize that these adults, they don't grow up and they're not responsible and they'll lie straight to your face. | ||
So even at the very top, they still fall victim to this DEI and this virtue signaling because in order to get there, they had to participate in that. | ||
It's kind of sad to see now, but we're seeing the ramifications of... | ||
Years and years of this taking place in our culture and society now, but there's no difference between what's happening up at the top and what you experience like in drama workplace. | ||
Like the Epstein stuff, we had Mike Cernovich on a couple weeks ago, and he's basically the guy that broke the Epstein story. | ||
And he was like, I think the reason it's not coming out super fast is because it's like top-level royal governments, kings are like, yo, we're not going to sell oil to the United States anymore now that you release the files. | ||
Did he say that? | ||
No, he was intimating that he thought it was like top-level global royalty. | ||
Stuff, which is why it hasn't come out. | ||
And I'm open to that idea, because if we release the files and we lost 20% of our imports because countries are just like, all right, well, you crossed the Rubicon. | ||
We're not there anymore. | ||
But those kings, those people, king of Saudi Arabia, he doesn't have to appoint DEI. He wouldn't. | ||
He'd appoint the best. | ||
They still have slaves in Saudi Arabia. | ||
So they're not worried about those kind of things. | ||
Remember, in the Middle East, they don't change the logos in the Middle East for Pride Month because that would get them booted out of the country. | ||
The Middle East and the cultures in the Middle East are not at all anything like the West. | ||
So we live in a culture... | ||
That, like, if someone attacks you, right, it's normal to go to the police. | ||
If someone attacks your property or attacks you, it's normal to go to the police. | ||
There are other cultures in the world where if you go and appeal to authority, someone disrespects you or someone hurts your property or whatever, and you go and you appeal to authority, you're cast out of society. | ||
Like, you're expected to go, like, it's an honor society. | ||
You're expected to go handle that by yourself. | ||
And the police aren't going to do anything. | ||
So you go handle it by yourself. | ||
And that's far closer to something like the Middle East, or in some cultures in the Middle East, because it's not a panacea in the Middle East. | ||
But, you know, specifically in Saudi Arabia, it's not the same thing as the U.S. at all. | ||
Well, maybe, I mean, I'm thinking about inbreeding royal families for my whole life. | ||
But finally, it's time. | ||
Hundreds, millennia, children are born from parents that are brother and sister. | ||
To save royal blood, that's like DEI. That's like, we need to force a result. | ||
We have to create, you know, you're not going to marry the hottest girl, you're going to marry your sister. | ||
And it's like, well, I have to. | ||
We still do that in parts of the world. | ||
And that's kind of like DEI. It's like choosing... | ||
Yeah, and then it creates these, you know, developmentally, you know, handicapped... | ||
Kids sometimes because of the inbreeding, which is why it's illegal in a lot of places. | ||
And so that's the immediate result of a DEI marriage. | ||
Cousin marriage is extremely common in the Middle East. | ||
I think it's more cousin marriage than marrying sisters and stuff like that. | ||
Like the Habsburgs were a son of brother and sister. | ||
I think at some point. | ||
Wasn't it like in World War I, the Warring Kings were all cousins or something like that? | ||
I think so. | ||
Yeah. | ||
Very common. | ||
I think the only way to kind of get back to being the true leader of the free world, like what America is supposed to be, and not bending the knee to the World Economic Forum and things like that, would be to release this list, because here in this country, and what we're supposed to be promoting worldwide, is that all men are created equal. | ||
And we don't believe in the royalties. | ||
We separated from the British monarchy for a reason, because we believe that all men are created equal. | ||
So whoever's on that list, be it... | ||
Royalty from another country or D's or R's here in America. | ||
That list needs to come out. | ||
I know that it can't be done tomorrow, even though I would like to see it and figure out who's been running this stuff or who's been compromised behind the scenes because it sure feels like we've had Puppets in place of representatives that do their own thing, as opposed to having representatives for the people. | ||
Our government hasn't been running the way it was designed by the Founding Fathers to run, because we've had too many compromised representatives that we will vote in because they say the right thing during the election time. | ||
But in all reality, once they get in, they get into that club, and they perform these terrible things to where now, all of a sudden, it's no different than a Joe Biden presidency. | ||
It wasn't actually running things, and then you kind of take that and you bring it all the way down to all of our representatives and judges and all these famous people who participated in the Epstein and Diddy parties, and then you realize that the government itself has been compromised, and that's why people are waking up and saying, like, how did we get to this point? | ||
Where they're arguing now for genital mutilation of children and trying to codify it into the Washington state constitution. | ||
How did we get to this point? | ||
It's because we've had compromised representatives that haven't been representing the people itself. | ||
If we are all created equal and our system of governance being a constitutional republic is meant to have us vote in representatives then we need to actually have representatives and transparency in what they're doing is key. | ||
It's all fake. | ||
Like when Al Green got up there and wiggled his cane at Donald Trump, it's all fake. | ||
Congress is not real. | ||
They're not legislating. | ||
That's just not what they do. | ||
And we've known this for some time. | ||
It's been, what, like two years now since we had Marjorie Taylor Greene tell us how Congress actually functions, where nobody actually goes to any of the votes. | ||
There's someone who's not the parliament or the parliamentarian, not the speaker, is like, we have a bill that says this, and they go, eh. | ||
And there's like four Republicans and four Democrats, and no one really cares. | ||
That's what's actually going on. | ||
So when I hear that story, we heard from Thomas Massey too, and we heard from everybody, Matt Gaetz and everybody, and then you're like, then why do we keep seeing these great battles over certain bills? | ||
It's like, oh, it's fake. | ||
When you see on TV and it's like, this is the bill they're battling over, certainly the funding bills like CRs, those are real. | ||
That's where they're trying to get the money. | ||
But on most of these bills that are inconsequential, like... | ||
Don't say gay. | ||
Providing a million dollars to a bread manufacturing plant in Nebraska. | ||
unidentified
|
Eh. | |
Whatever. | ||
Go for it. | ||
Nobody cares. | ||
With Al Green, I'd love to see that censure. | ||
It hasn't happened yet, correct? | ||
It was supposed to, but Democrats started singing. | ||
Because I used to be like, what's the point of censoring, or censuring congressmen? | ||
It just seems so pointless. | ||
But now I realize, do it in public. | ||
Do it on TV. Humiliate the character for abusing power, and we'll all watch. | ||
And that's what it is, except now Democrats block the censure and start singing. | ||
And then Speaker Johnson was just like, adjourned. | ||
And they leave. | ||
I'm like, adjourn? | ||
Arrest him! | ||
I don't think you need other congresspeople in the room. | ||
You put Al Green on the podium, you censure him with all the cameras on him, and just make it a humiliation ritual. | ||
That's literally what it is. | ||
He just said no, and then Johnson adjourned the meeting. | ||
He said no, what do you mean? | ||
Like he wouldn't acquiesce to the censure? | ||
Johnson's banging the gavel, being like, a present for censure! | ||
And then he starts singing, Democrats block the well, and then Johnson goes, adjourned, and leaves. | ||
Censure is supposed to be exactly what you're describing, but it's meaningless if there's no enforcement of it. | ||
So maybe we get a speaker with some balls. | ||
Make me speaker. | ||
One day I will arrest all of these people. | ||
I don't know if you need to arrest those guys yet. | ||
Yes. | ||
Or necessarily. | ||
If you block the well. | ||
During an official proceeding to censure somebody who was obstructing Congress, I am going to instruct the Sergeant-at-Arms to collect the Capitol Police and have every single person obstructing right now arrested. | ||
They were warned three or four times, and they were singing songs. | ||
unidentified
|
Out! | |
They used to do, my assumption is censorship or censuring in private. | ||
I mean, it would just be Congress. | ||
They'd do it in front of their fellow congressmen. | ||
They'd be like, alright, fine, whatever. | ||
He's loud. | ||
He's been loud for 20 years. | ||
Whatever. | ||
But now you do it in front of 100... | ||
Three billion people on TV, and it's a real humiliation session. | ||
Yeah, I mean, the point before was to just put it into the congressional record, right? | ||
So it officially says this guy was a pile of crap, right? | ||
And he did this misbehavior. | ||
But I do think that it is valuable to put it on TV and have it all over the Internet so that way people can see, oh, yeah, he should be embarrassed. | ||
He's a schmuck. | ||
But it's on TV where it is. | ||
It's on C-SPAN. It's on whoever wants to carry it. | ||
And then we're at the point now, Where, for one, we know it's fake. | ||
No one's actually doing their jobs. | ||
And Democrats and Republicans, for decades now, since TV, have been like, all I need is a video of me acting like I'm working so that I can go and not work. | ||
So you'll see these videos where you're going to get a member of Congress and they're going to be standing up going, you bigots! | ||
You're all fascists! | ||
Blah, blah, blah. | ||
And then the cameras turn off and they're like, all right, everybody, good seeing you today. | ||
I'm going back to my district. | ||
Send me that video. | ||
Need it for fundraising. | ||
That's Congress. | ||
And that's the point of it, is to get the video for fundraising so that way they can be like, look at me, I'm fighting the man, blah, blah, blah. | ||
Whatever, because... | ||
That's why they sang songs and obstructed Congress. | ||
There's no consequences for them to make a mockery of the legislative branch. | ||
And Speaker Johnson won't do anything about it. | ||
They shouldn't be invited to future censures. | ||
We shouldn't have crowds of congressmen there to support the guy. | ||
You have to vote on it. | ||
Congress is supposed to vote on who gets censured. | ||
So when the Republicans voted to censure Al Green, Democrats blocked the proceeding and sang songs. | ||
So they all vote not present. | ||
unidentified
|
So then the censorship succeeds. | |
They all vote not available. | ||
So now let me explain to you, because I think it would have really helped if you actually looked into what this is before asking us to do a thing that exactly happened. | ||
And now you can understand what the problem is. | ||
Congress shows up. | ||
Are we censuring Al Green? | ||
Yays have it. | ||
Al Green, present for censure. | ||
Democrats, block the proceeding and sing songs. | ||
Congress adjourned. | ||
Now you say, Al Green, report for censure. | ||
No one else is coming. | ||
It's just you, Al. | ||
You're in the room with the panel, and we're going to censure you on TV. I've got to stop you right there, Ian. | ||
What do you not understand about he did not listen to Speaker Johnson? | ||
I understand. | ||
What do you mean? | ||
What are the consequences of him saying no? | ||
Like no to... | ||
Present yourself for censorship. | ||
That would be contempt. | ||
So what you are saying now is, exactly as I've described, when he was called to censure, he said no. | ||
And then I got angry because Speaker Johnson adjourned Congress and left. | ||
Rather than arresting him for contempt or something? | ||
Or holding him in contempt. | ||
Or arresting the rest of the Democrats for obstruction. | ||
Or even removing them from the well. | ||
Yeah, remove them. | ||
For sure remove them first. | ||
Nothing. | ||
And if they kept banging on the walls, you have them arrested. | ||
The issue is, so long as there is no enforcement or penalty for wrongdoing, there is no real Congress. | ||
And I think Mike Johnson didn't want to spark a civil war. | ||
He's like, oh God, this is not the moment. | ||
I'm not going to... | ||
Make a pariah out of the sky. | ||
I was going to say, that's kind of the entire problem with what we've been experiencing. | ||
And a lot of the reason why I started speaking out in general is back in 2020 during the government lockdowns, I kind of just assumed that a lot of the people that I knew, a lot of the men that I looked up to and respected would be against the mandates. | ||
And a lot of the men that I saw and respected folded immediately. | ||
And they were wearing the mask, they were taking the jab and doing all that, and saw obedience as virtue. | ||
And I realized kind of at that point in my life that I'm going to have to stand up and speak out against a lot of this stuff. | ||
And it turns out that courage is contagious, but what we've had for a long time in someone like Speaker Johnson is one who's... | ||
Played the game for too long and doesn't have that kind of conviction to make the change. | ||
He's not willing to throw them all or get them all arrested when they're clearly obstructing. | ||
And we need to have leaders in there who are willing and Who are willing to do that. | ||
Because in all reality, if we continue to not have that conviction, if we're not trying to restore our country, the entire message of Make America Great Again is to make it great again. | ||
And that means that you have to have the conviction and the willingness to put yourself out there and to stop proceedings like this. | ||
When we do censure someone like that, and the Democrats are obviously obstructing it, have them arrested. | ||
It sounds simple, but... | ||
It hasn't been that way for a long time. | ||
We've had Republicans in office that have just been complete spineless and gutless, and they haven't stood up in any way, shape, or form for the Constitution for years. | ||
They just go with it because that's just the way it's been. | ||
Is he just, okay, I guess we'll just close out and try again tomorrow. | ||
Instead of, you know, kick the can down the road, somebody else is going to handle it. | ||
Another adult is going to be able to handle this. | ||
But that's how we've got to this point. | ||
I would hope if we do, if Mike, eventually Mike Johnson will be replaced, you know, that's just the nature of the job, but that it's the next guy or girl is a little more, if they are more adherent to the rules and they're willing to like, you're under arrest, you're being held, like that kind of thing. | ||
Just don't become a villain. | ||
That's important because it's an optics game too. | ||
Like you don't want half the world to turn on you because you're too heavy handed. | ||
But I do agree with you that just adjourning the thing was kind of, Dismal. | ||
Yeah. | ||
For him to turn that off like that and not like, dude, you're in charge, Mike. | ||
Like, that was your show. | ||
Just make me speaker for one day, and I will clean up Congress. | ||
We'll have a bunch of, we're going to convene the, let's just call it, we'll do it on May 1st, because it's May Day, and it'll really irk the leftists. | ||
And we'll call it the May 1 Commission. | ||
And then after we have all the Democrats arrested for obstruction, they're going to be censured, there's going to be votes on expulsion, all of that stuff, and then we're going to put together a committee that will investigate them, because I'm willing to bet you could easily get most of these members of Congress on fraud, when you actually dig into how they don't actually do their jobs and spend all their days ponying up to lobbyists for money. | ||
It's going to be fun. | ||
Let's go to Super Chats and Rumble Rants! | ||
So smash that like button, share the show with everyone you know, my friends. | ||
My birthday was last Sunday. | ||
Happy birthday, man! | ||
Thank you very much. | ||
You want to get me a gift? | ||
Share the show right now. | ||
Shit, I already did it. | ||
There you go. | ||
And you can also join Rumble Premium at rumble.com slash timcastirl. | ||
We're going to have the uncensored call-and-show in about 20 minutes. | ||
Not so family-friendly, but always fun and funny. | ||
What do we got here? | ||
We got ChafedBM. | ||
Jeez, what a name. | ||
Shut it down so Doge can have free reign on executive records that they should already have access to. | ||
Federal judges don't have the authority during a shutdown. | ||
I just made that up like the judges make up law. | ||
It is an interesting point, though, that if they shut the government down, it's possible no one's going to be working. | ||
Elon's going to be able to go in with Doge. | ||
It would be nice. | ||
That might be good. | ||
Ostensibly, I thought that Doge being able to continue doing the work that they're doing is why there was justification to have the CR. Or that was one of the things that Trump said. | ||
Look, we need to make sure that we have the CR so that way Doge can continue to do their work. | ||
And I also heard Chip Roy talking about that, too. | ||
So I'm not sure what the situation is. | ||
Your25 says, Tucker interview a known surgeon. | ||
Interviewed. | ||
And he said that up-and-coming doctors are inexperienced and incompetent. | ||
Yep. | ||
I would not disagree. | ||
I think that's probably the case. | ||
Yeah, this goes to the crisis of competency that we have been talking about for years now. | ||
The idea that if there is, before we knew the degree of DEI hires that were going on in the government. | ||
We talked about, look, if this is happening, then there's going to come a point where there's going to be negative consequences in these fields that have people getting jobs that they're not qualified for. | ||
That's not some kind of difficult thing to understand. | ||
It's like if you're hiring people that aren't qualified based on their identity, then eventually you're going to have a degraded service that they're supposed to be providing. | ||
Some people are – I see in the chat they're asking when my birthday was. | ||
It was Sunday. | ||
My birthday is March 9th. | ||
I am 39 years old. | ||
Nice, dude. | ||
Look at that. | ||
And here's another present you can get me. | ||
Go to TimCast.com and join our Discord community. | ||
Click join us, sign up, download the Discord, get in the server, and be an active participant in the fray. | ||
Maybe it's a bit stressful, but there's a lot of people who are passive observers of the news who see how bad everything is, and that's all they are. | ||
Maybe you should become active and all it takes is to send one sentence in that chat and start networking with people and we can save this country. | ||
As an active participant, you'll be surprised at the results because it's not linear. | ||
It's not like I said the thing, now I'm going to get a response about the thing and it will be solved. | ||
You'll be surprised at the opportunities that open up in your life when you become aggressively publicly vocal about what you believe. | ||
I mean, there are many moments where in politics, some random dude... | ||
Said one thing and then all of a sudden became a national headline. | ||
Remember Joe the Plumber? | ||
Like that was a news cycle for like a month because some regular guy was like, here's what I think. | ||
So if you want that opportunity and you want to share what you think, maybe that will be you and you will, you know, you never know. | ||
You could be the person who throws that snowball down the hill, an idea nobody thought of, and then all of a sudden a month later President Trump's talking about it on TV. 90% of success is just showing up. | ||
And you miss 100% of the shots you don't take. | ||
I can attest to that story because, you know, I'm personally from a small town of 2,500 people and didn't really have any social media up until two years ago. | ||
And I started speaking out and then, I mean... | ||
There you are. | ||
Yeah, a lot of things happened. | ||
Here I am, so... | ||
Wearing a MAGA headdress. | ||
All right, let's grab some more Super Chats. | ||
FireDog says, stop calling it Snow White. | ||
It's Snow Woke. | ||
Quantum Strange Quark says, did anyone notice that when Rhett McBride responded to the chairman today that he called him Madam Chairman and he didn't get upset about it? | ||
That guy who was like, how? | ||
So here's what happened. | ||
The chairman says, Mr. McBride. | ||
Then some other guy goes, oh, well, then McBride goes, thank you, Madam Chairman. | ||
Misgendering the obvious old man. | ||
And then some other guy goes, well, how dare you? | ||
unidentified
|
I refuse to participate in this minute. | |
And I'm not kidding. | ||
That's basically what he was doing. | ||
The funny thing is, that guy who lost his mind didn't get mad about McBride calling the guy Madam. | ||
McBride called the old man Madam. | ||
So they do it to each other, but then the one guy just virtue signals. | ||
There you go. | ||
Let's go. | ||
Devin True says, corporations are making too much money off the people. | ||
They need to be taxed more. | ||
Trump, other countries are making too much off the American people. | ||
I'm going to tariff them. | ||
The left clutches their pearls and gasps. | ||
Interesting. | ||
We should start calling Snow White, Snow Yellow. | ||
Because it's just dog piss. | ||
Yellow Snow? | ||
Yeah. | ||
They're calling it Snow Yellow. | ||
Well, I mean, there's so many controversies with this movie. | ||
Oh, we didn't even get into that, did we? | ||
Maybe we'll talk a little bit about it in The Uncensored. | ||
For one, Gal Gadot, a lot of people are like, she's way more attractive than Rachel Zegler. | ||
They're also saying, Snow White's skin was white as snow. | ||
It's part of the fairy tale. | ||
And they chose an olive-skinned, swarthy woman. | ||
Shocking. | ||
To play Snow White. | ||
And then apparently they're girlbossing it. | ||
So I guess she had some quotes where she was like, there's going to be some girlboss or something. | ||
And instead of doing the actual story, they're doing like, her dad was the king or something. | ||
And then she was the princess. | ||
And then the king died. | ||
And then, I don't know. | ||
Oh, so it's not Snow White. | ||
They just made a new movie? | ||
Loosely based on Snow White? | ||
It's going to bomb. | ||
But it's not new. | ||
It's what they do to everything, which is they adopt something that we cherish and love from our childhood, and they destroy it. | ||
And they keep the same name on it. | ||
It's like changing the owners of a corporation or changing the ingredients in a product. | ||
That's right. | ||
We're making a show for our YouTube channel called Power Rangers. | ||
It's about seven chess players who go to a chess tournament and win. | ||
That's awesome. | ||
That's right. | ||
And they wear costumes as they do it. | ||
Oh, that's right. | ||
Different color costumes? | ||
Yes. | ||
That's unique. | ||
And they all will shout out their uniforms. | ||
There's the red Power Ranger and the blue and the yellow. | ||
They're actual army rangers, but they all go to the best chess players in the army, so they get sent to the chess tournament. | ||
Yep. | ||
They're like the most powerful rangers. | ||
And then there's Rita Repulsa, and that's just an ugly Asian woman who plays chess against them and tries to win. | ||
And that's just the mean name they call her. | ||
And that was a rip-off of Voltron, Power Rangers. | ||
Do you guys remember? | ||
Well, actually, I could be wrong about this, but wasn't it like Power Rangers was an Asian show? | ||
And what they did was the fight sequences were the original Asian footage, and then they filmed only half the episode. | ||
Oh, really? | ||
Yeah, I'm pretty sure what it was is they have an Asian show where they're wearing the costumes and they're fighting. | ||
That's why there's never any mouths moving or anything. | ||
And that's why when Rita would talk, her mouth never synced with the actual words that were being said. | ||
Then they would have the American half-story filmed with Americans, and then they would just incorporate the kung fu fighting footage from Asia. | ||
Super Sentai. | ||
That's what it was? | ||
You looked it up? | ||
The shows are of the tokusatsu genre. | ||
Huh. | ||
Yeah, yeah, there was a lot of shows like that. | ||
Voltron becoming one of them. | ||
I remember Voltron from, like, the 80s. | ||
That was a huge Voltron fan, where there was, like, five pilots. | ||
They each piloted a colorful cat, and the cats could combine into this giant robot. | ||
The Lions one, yes. | ||
I didn't like the Cars one, though. | ||
There was, like, 20 cars they'd put together to make a different Voltron. | ||
Oh, I didn't see that. | ||
Yeah, there was the Lions. | ||
Was that, like, not Transformers? | ||
It was Voltron. | ||
Absolutely Voltron. | ||
Called it Voltron and everything. | ||
Yeah. | ||
unidentified
|
All right. | |
I guess it's a genre of itself, so I shouldn't say that Power Rangers ripped off Voltron. | ||
It was a genre. | ||
Oh, yeah. | ||
Apparently, they're race-swapping Snape. | ||
Oh, good. | ||
Yeah, and the new HBO, Harry Potter, they're going to make Snape black. | ||
Cool, good. | ||
unidentified
|
Dude. | |
I mean, he's the villain. | ||
He's of House Black. | ||
He's not a villain. | ||
What are you talking about? | ||
Well, he's kind of like the villain of the movie. | ||
He's not House Black? | ||
Snape? | ||
What are you talking about? | ||
Oh, spoiler alert. | ||
Are you talking about a different show? | ||
Wait, I'm thinking of Snape. | ||
Yeah. | ||
Severus? | ||
Severus Snape? | ||
Maybe I'm mixing them up. | ||
He's one of the biggest heroes in that story. | ||
Serious Black and Severus Serious Black. | ||
He's not involved with the school, but Snape is the poison teacher. | ||
Potions. | ||
Yeah, Potions. | ||
He wears black. | ||
They all wear black. | ||
unidentified
|
What are you talking about? | |
Slitherin, the snake, the dark. | ||
He's the dark arts guy. | ||
Isn't it funny that in Harry Potter they have like four dorms and one is the Nazi dorm? | ||
With all due respect to J.K. Rowling, it's the most overt Story ever told. | ||
Where it's like, welcome to school, Harry. | ||
unidentified
|
You've got good kids, good kids, good kids, and the Nazi room. | |
It's like, but seriously, it's like you have a whole dorm in your private boarding school where they're all known to be racial purists. | ||
Yeah, we're on their hair, blue eyes. | ||
Did any good guys? | ||
Right on the nose. | ||
Were there any good kids that got into the... | ||
Slytherin. | ||
And how about this? | ||
How about how crazy it is that in the last movie, it's been so long since I read the book, but I'm assuming it's the same thing, McGonagall is like, so the castle's under attack, and she goes, would you please put all the students from Slytherin in the dungeons? | ||
It's like, yo, lady, come on. | ||
These students are just in the dorm. | ||
You put them in, and now you're ordering them all in the dungeon. | ||
That's what they did. | ||
That's like Japanese internment stuff. | ||
Hey, I like Snape. | ||
He's probably my favorite character in the entire... | ||
I have a really good idea for J.K. Rowling. | ||
I hope she hears this. | ||
What really irks me about things like Harry Potter is it's always Hitler. | ||
It's like, we get it. | ||
You basically wrote a story about Magic Hitler, okay? | ||
And he comes back! | ||
And I do want to mention this meme, too. | ||
It's Voldemort, though, right? | ||
So the funny thing about it is, I saw this funny meme, and they were like, Voldemort is literally the worst villain of, like, any story. | ||
And then someone responded, like, what are you talking about? | ||
He's, like, gifted. | ||
And they're like, bro, he tried using advanced magic to kill a baby. | ||
He could have literally just dropped it on the floor. | ||
Like, he walks up to baby Harry, and he's like, babies are fragile. | ||
And Voldemort's like, let me use his complicated style. | ||
He could have just, like, he could have just picked it up and dropped it. | ||
Pillow, yeah. | ||
Tons of different ways. | ||
He could have been creative. | ||
And, you know, he loses. | ||
But my idea is... | ||
You know, it's always Hitler, right? | ||
Voldemort is basically magic Hitler. | ||
Like, we must have pure-blooded wizards! | ||
And it's like, okay, we get it, dude. | ||
You know what they need is they need magic Stalin. | ||
That's what I'm saying. | ||
I want to hear more. | ||
Here's my pitch. | ||
My pitch is the next series, because she did like the, what is it, the Cursed Child or whatever, boring, and then they did the Weird Animals one, stupid. | ||
No, no, here's what it is. | ||
I want you to imagine this. | ||
Remember that Great Hall scene in Hogwarts, and they're doing the sorting cap, and all the kids are giggling, and it's like, the head is like, Gryffindor! | ||
And they're like, woo! | ||
Everyone's cheering. | ||
Now, right when that happens, a bunch of grenades burst through the windows, land on the ground, and start flashbanging, boom, boom, boom! | ||
And a bunch of special forces guys drop down with, like, rifles, and just start blasting the professors with guns. | ||
And then, um... | ||
The professors are all panicking and trying to, like, use magic, but the magic won't work on the dudes. | ||
And then the story here is you've got non-magic people who know, in the book they're called Squibs, and have been working with governments to expose the existence of the magic world because they believe that... | ||
Some people having magic and some not is oppression. | ||
And that magic people oppress the un-magic people. | ||
And so they're trying to bring about a one-world, no-magic utopia where everyone is equal. | ||
And you find out the ringleaders are actually magicians. | ||
Later in the movie you find out. | ||
Oh yeah, totally. | ||
All the leaders of the party who are like, we are equal! | ||
And nobody should have... | ||
If there is anybody without magic, then no one should have it. | ||
And then they all have magic. | ||
That's a good story. | ||
I'm telling you. | ||
That actually might work. | ||
And then it's cool because it's modernized and it's for an older audience where you literally have like special forces dudes. | ||
Like one guy's got his hand on the other guy's shoulder and they have the guns pointed and they're just blasting professors at Hogwarts. | ||
And like what do they do about, you know, like getting shot? | ||
They're like trying to put up shields, but they're just... | ||
They're getting shot. | ||
It'd be a good scene where he's like, the guy's behind him, like he's got him. | ||
He's like trying to cast a spell, but he's stuttering. | ||
Like the wizard can't get it out because he's so afraid. | ||
That'd be funny. | ||
To be fair, did they ever actually address that in Harry Potter? | ||
I know that there was like in the very beginning, Harry's uncle like points a shotgun at Hagrid and he like grabs it and bends it. | ||
But did they ever actually address any of them using guns? | ||
Like how much of their problems would have been solved if Harry just like bought a gun? | ||
I mean, look, let's be serious. | ||
They give children what is a thousand times more deadly than a gun. | ||
There was that part of the story where... | ||
Magic wands. | ||
Exactly, and they can kill with them. | ||
So it's like all the kids are running around with loaded weapons. | ||
Based. | ||
Anyway, we had super chats. | ||
I'm saying, I want to make that movie. | ||
Actually, maybe we should do a short film. | ||
That's very cool. | ||
That's very funny. | ||
The U.S. government... | ||
You mean to tell me... | ||
The U.S. government doesn't know these people exist. | ||
Of course they do. | ||
They got the NSA. They're spying on them. | ||
They know what's up. | ||
You think that's kind of the same thing as how the X-Men universe handled it with the School of Mutants? | ||
Like in what way? | ||
How they integrated it with... | ||
I'm pretty sure everybody knew the School of Mutants existed because mutants were like a big, contentious debate in X-Men. | ||
Yeah. | ||
Right, so in Harry Potter... | ||
Nobody outside of the Wizarding World knows about magic people. | ||
It's all a big secret. | ||
It's like a crime to reveal them. | ||
Were the X-Men well-known? | ||
Yes. | ||
Did they become well-known over the course of the comic? | ||
They were well-known the whole time. | ||
X-Men? | ||
Yeah, they already knew. | ||
Xavier was public about everything. | ||
That's basically the... | ||
The early premise was Magneto was like, I am an evil mutant! | ||
And this is my brotherhood of evil mutants! | ||
And they actually called themselves that. | ||
And then later on they were like, maybe we need a little bit more dimension to our villains. | ||
So then they tried doing this Malcolm X, Martin Luther King Jr. thing, where Xavier is public about his fight for mutant rights, and Magneto is Antifa. | ||
I'm gonna burn everything down and take everything over. | ||
It's a great storyline. | ||
Yeah. | ||
I like that storyline a lot. | ||
Because, like, it's just, it's deep. | ||
Like, you start to see the villain's psychology, and you're like, well, I get it why he's like that. | ||
Well, Magneto literally called his organization the Brotherhood of Evil. | ||
It's so funny. | ||
It's so cheap. | ||
No one would do that. | ||
Everybody thinks they're the good guy. | ||
I think. | ||
Maybe people realize they're the bad guys sometimes. | ||
Yeah, some people do. | ||
But that's why I really like the character Victor Zsasz in DC. You know who he is? | ||
unidentified
|
No. | |
Serial killer, that's it. | ||
Is he a hero or anything? | ||
Is he got superpowers? | ||
No, that's it. | ||
What's so good about him? | ||
It's a well-written character. | ||
He's literally just a serial killer. | ||
He's an evil guy who knows he's a murderer, and he carves a notch in his body when he kills people. | ||
So you can have these one-dimensional villains who are like, I can shoot cold blasts from my hands, and I'm evil! | ||
Or you can have a guy who's literally just evil, but there's dimension to that character of evilness. | ||
He's a serial killer, and he's driven to murder like some serial killers are. | ||
Yeah. | ||
Batman's an idiot, by the way. | ||
unidentified
|
Why? | |
Like, dude, how many times has Joker murdered people and Batman's like, it's too bad. | ||
It's like, bro, at a certain point, you're allowed to defend other people. | ||
And then you have the whole Injustice story arc where Joker poisons Superman and then detonates a nuke in Metropolis, killing everybody. | ||
And while Superman is hallucinating, he beats his pregnant wife to death. | ||
And then what happens is Superman says to Batman, like, if you just stopped this man that you knew was an insane, deranged murderer, none of this would have happened. | ||
And then Superman becomes authoritarian. | ||
Wild. | ||
unidentified
|
Yeah. | |
Anyway. | ||
And Batman's like, he's my cash crop, baby. | ||
No one will buy my comics if I kill him. | ||
No, like, Batman's like, no, you can't kill. | ||
It's wrong. | ||
And it's like, bro, your government is literally letting this guy out every day to do it over and over again. | ||
At Arkham, do they not have, like, capital punishment at Arkham? | ||
It's not even that. | ||
Do they not have, like, restraints? | ||
It's not a... | ||
Prison. | ||
It's an asylum. | ||
Have you seen that new animated series called Invincible? | ||
Yeah, yeah, yeah. | ||
Yeah, I've been watching that one. | ||
They're kind of working through that entire system right now. | ||
I think it's tomorrow. | ||
I'm excited about it. | ||
Yeah, it's pretty good. | ||
It's an old comic. | ||
It's not Supergirl. | ||
It's like a 20-year-old comic. | ||
So for those that are watching it, you can literally just read it and, you know, know what's going to happen. | ||
Who's it based on? | ||
Invincible. | ||
Yeah. | ||
It's a guy called Invincible. | ||
Yeah. | ||
So the problem with most stuff they do today in superheroes, it's all derivative. | ||
So in Invincible, it's basically just a guy was like, let's take the DC universe and change everybody's name and then I'll write my take on it. | ||
And it's like, yeah, I guess whatever. | ||
Is it a DC? Make it a little bit more gory. | ||
Yeah, it's more brutal. | ||
But come up with some original superheroes and stuff. | ||
Oh, a psychic gorilla, dude. | ||
There are some straight up like... | ||
They're all knockoffs. | ||
Every character is a knockoff. | ||
Like, I'm trying... | ||
What's... | ||
Is a psychic gorilla is kind of unique, but, I mean, you get the cosmic creatures that come down with... | ||
Talking about Gorilla Grod? | ||
Gorilla Grod is what it's called? | ||
In D.C. Is he a space gorilla that comes down to Earth? | ||
No, no. | ||
That's what I'm envisioning. | ||
Okay, Ian. | ||
Tell me, Tim. | ||
There's so much you need to learn. | ||
unidentified
|
Yeah. | |
Gorilla Grod is from Gorilla City, and he's a villain, and he's psychic, and he can control people's minds. | ||
And Gorilla City is basically D.C.'s version of Wakanda, but I guess it's more racist or something because everybody in that secret African city is gorillas. | ||
So I don't know what's up with that. | ||
That seems wrong. | ||
Marvel is an enemy of the Flash. | ||
I'm not kidding. | ||
You know, that's true. | ||
A gorilla city. | ||
I believe you. | ||
It's super intelligent. | ||
Gorillas have a hidden city just like Wakanda in the exact same way with a barrier that protects it and keeps it hidden. | ||
Racist. | ||
Gorillas. | ||
But they're gorillas instead. | ||
So imagine Marvel's like, there's Wakanda and it's this African nation that's got advanced technology and then DC goes, yeah, but they're gorillas. | ||
I know. | ||
Okay, dude. | ||
Or a city of rats, but they're wherever you think they would go. | ||
That's like really racist. | ||
In New York sewers? | ||
I was thinking over, I don't know how to say it, Middle East somewhere. | ||
unidentified
|
Yeah, but it's rat people instead. | |
Wow, Ian. | ||
Yeah, that's how you get away with it in a video game. | ||
I was going to say New York, because that's where all the rats are, but... | ||
Keeping it clean. | ||
Yeah, anyway, let's talk about something else, I guess. | ||
unidentified
|
Let's talk about comics. | |
Angry Marsupial says, I played Civ IV while watching the show almost every night. | ||
Pinnacle of the series. | ||
Yep. | ||
Can't have fascism without communism. | ||
Can't build Mount Rushmore without fascism. | ||
Figure that one out. | ||
That is funny, but the Mount Rushmore one doesn't make a whole lot of sense. | ||
I guess it's related to their looking at timelines when they developed the game. | ||
We were also pretty fascist in the 20s. | ||
Civ IV was when they had Leonard Nimoy, right? | ||
Yeah. | ||
Yeah, that's the best game. | ||
It was. | ||
It was. | ||
I think it's where religion got introduced. | ||
Colonization? | ||
The original colonization? | ||
On MS-DOS is one of the best games ever made, and still to this day is one of the best games. | ||
It's just called Colonization? | ||
Yeah, so they remade it off of the Civ IV engine, but that's lame. | ||
The OG MS-DOS Colonization game to this day is still great. | ||
It's a turn-based strategy game where you can choose to be British, French, Dutch, or Spanish. | ||
Each different European nation gets a bonus. | ||
If you choose English, it's easier to get immigrants to want to join. | ||
Spanish get a bonus to killing Native Americans. | ||
Yeah. | ||
The French get a bonus of trading with Native Americans. | ||
There we go. | ||
And the Dutch get a trade bonus with Europe. | ||
So usually I just pick either, you know, if you pick the Spanish, it's great because you just, you bring your carival to the New World and then just start blasting the Native American tribes and they drop treasure. | ||
You loot and ransack. | ||
And when you find the Inca, baby, oh man, the Inca and the Aztec, they got gold for days. | ||
This is a good one for you. | ||
Totally racist. | ||
This sounds like a fun game, guys. | ||
Colonize my ancestors. | ||
You recruit founding fathers, and then you generate sentiment for independence. | ||
You can trade. | ||
You produce crops in the colonies, sail back to Europe and sell it. | ||
Build up your country, and then you can declare independence, and then whatever country you pick, they try to come and stop you, and then you get some intervention from another country, and if you win, then you can sign the declaration. | ||
Is it a mod based off a mod of Civ IV? No, it's Sid Meier actually made. | ||
It's basically, I think it's based off what, like Civ II or something? | ||
No, no, Civ I. Oh, is it? | ||
I'm reading about it now. | ||
Like a modification of Civ I, I think. | ||
Epic game! | ||
And it's got fun little flute music from the colonial era. | ||
I used to play Civ 1. Alright, let's grab one more. | ||
We got Eyes Open Canada who says, For those that don't know, Laura Jane Grace is the lead singer formerly of Against Me, which I believe is defunct. | ||
Against Me was basically the, like, punk And now, transitioned, what happened was, if you didn't see the story, performed at a Democrat rally, singing a song about God's dick and being rather vulgar and crass with it. | ||
And it's really sad because... | ||
The original, a lot of the, there were a lot of naive lyrics, because it's punk. | ||
Baby, I'm an Anarchist is one of the famous songs. | ||
But some of them are actually, like, just really great folk punk songs. | ||
Like, one of the lyrics is, street faces all blend into one. | ||
They ask for spare change. | ||
And then, am I just effed up because I've forgotten what it's like or whatever? | ||
I don't know. | ||
I'm not thinking of lyrics right now. | ||
But basically, telling the story of, I've forgotten where I've come from. | ||
The lyrics work really well. | ||
Now this person is just old, out of touch, and singing some vulgar song for a Democrat rally. | ||
But what really makes it funny is in the song Baby I'm an Anarchist, one of the lines is, you have faith in the elephant and the jackass, and to you solidarity is a four-letter word. | ||
Really, really funny to see the lead singer now performing for Democrats at a rally. | ||
And I describe that as a hilarious SLC punk ending for the legacy of Against Me. | ||
We're going to go to the Uncensored show over at Rumble, my friends. | ||
Rumble.com slash TimCast IRL. Don't miss it. | ||
Make sure you smash that like button. | ||
Share the show with everyone you know. | ||
You can become a member of our Discord at TimCast.com if you'd like to call in, get in, talk to people, or go to TimCast Premium, which will sign you up for Rumble Premium right there on the spot. | ||
Ten bucks off with promo code Tim10. | ||
You can follow me on XN Instagram at TimCastNativePatriot. | ||
Do you want to shout anything out? | ||
Go ahead and follow me at LaNativePatriot. | ||
That's LA Native Patriot and the Patriots Prayer Network on Rumble. | ||
You can just look it up that way. | ||
And maybe my wife, Lady Patriot. | ||
She's a big part of the reason why I'm here and everything that I fight for. | ||
You are accomplishing your dreams and I'm happy to be here with you while you do it, man. | ||
I'm Ian Cross and we're going to... | ||
Pivot over to Rumble, so follow us over there. | ||
If you're not over there yet, rumble.com slash TimCastIRL, I believe is the channel. | ||
TimCastIRL, we've locked that in. | ||
And I'll see you there. | ||
Bye. | ||
I am PhilThatRemains on Twix. | ||
I'm PhilThatRemainsOfficial on Instagram. | ||
The band is All That Remains. | ||
Our new record dropped on January 31st. | ||
It's called Anti-Fragile. | ||
It's available on YouTube, Apple Music, Amazon Music, Spotify, Pandora, and Deezer. | ||
Don't forget the left lane is for crime. | ||
We will see you all over at Rumble.com slash TimCastIRL for that uncensored show. | ||
About 30 seconds. |