Speaker | Time | Text |
---|---|---|
Minnesota corrections stated that they are prepared to go and pick up Derek Chauvin in the event of a pardon and bring him back to Minnesota because there are rumors circulating Trump will pardon Derek Chauvin in the federal charges and then all hell will break loose. | ||
There will be riots. | ||
The Minneapolis government has been preparing for potential riots and unrest in the event this happens. | ||
I'm going to stop right there and say it's probably fake news. | ||
I think this is a story that they are drumming up intentionally. | ||
To create some kind of story? | ||
Because I do not see anything from the Trump admin about why they would do this. | ||
Why would they pardon Derek Chauvin? | ||
He's just going to go to a state prison. | ||
Marjorie Taylor Greene chimed in saying he should be pardoned. | ||
Many prominent individuals have come out now saying Derek Chauvin should be pardoned. | ||
So at the very least, we can talk about why he should be pardoned. | ||
Not that I think it's actually going to happen. | ||
Again, I think Democrats are intentionally trying to create some kind of story for some reason. | ||
We'll talk about that. | ||
We do have a bunch of other news. | ||
The impeachment of Trump kind of fizzled out and failed, and I don't know, you know, Trump being impeached seems like big news, but Shri Tanadar, first time you've ever heard of him, right? | ||
The guy who tried to introduce his articles of impeachment has given up and announced he will not be filing these because, or forcing a vote on it, I'm sorry, because basically every Democrat was making fun of him, saying he was wasting their time with this, and so he backed down. | ||
In the meantime, there's real news. | ||
Donald Trump secured a massive, what is it, like $200 billion deal with Qatar over buying Boeing jets? | ||
You got a lot of anger over Trump accepting a Qatari 747. | ||
And even a bunch of people on Fox, many conservatives are coming out saying Trump should not take this for security reasons. | ||
So we'll talk about all of that and more before we get started. | ||
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Joining us tonight to talk about this and so much more is John Rocker. | ||
How you doing, man? | ||
I'm doing pretty good. | ||
How about you? | ||
Thank you for the invite. | ||
Absolutely. | ||
Thanks for coming. | ||
Who are you? | ||
What do you do? | ||
My name is John Rocker. | ||
I'm from Macon, Georgia. | ||
I like walks on the beach and wearing tight shirts. | ||
I think being on this podcast, being the invite on this podcast, I think we all know what I do and did, which is generally just piss people off. | ||
Talk a bunch of shit, say some dumb stuff. | ||
Some of it's right, some of it's not right. | ||
Actually, it's all right. | ||
I got done playing baseball, retired. | ||
I actually was forced into retirement by a horribly busted shoulder that just decided to stop working. | ||
And then just sort of laid up for a while. | ||
Just kind of enjoyed retired life and now decide I'm bored. | ||
50 years old. | ||
Came about eight months ago. | ||
Midlife crisis. | ||
The windows closing. | ||
The brightness is slowly dimming on my life. | ||
You can smell the phone box. | ||
I'm still relevant. | ||
Don't forget about me! | ||
So here I'm back out running my mouth again. | ||
Is it common though for pitchers with your shoulder? | ||
Actually, the weird thing about mine, I played... | ||
With big leagues and the minor leagues, I played almost 13 years. | ||
Did not go on the disabled list. | ||
Actually, I can't say it. | ||
It's not the IL, because literally, Major League Baseball got, I don't know what you want to call it, bitched at something, I don't know from who, to change it to the IL, the injured list, injured reserve or something, from the disabled list. | ||
That's how far Woke has gone, because I still call it the DL, but now it's like, what is this IR? | ||
It's IR, injured reserve, because literally... | ||
The bitching to Rob Manford about change it from disabled list. | ||
That actually was a thing about four years ago. | ||
Yeah, so nothing for almost 13 years. | ||
And remember back in the day when Peyton Manning had a pinched nerve in his neck? | ||
unidentified
|
Yeah. | |
And it really affected his shoulder. | ||
His rotator cuff went in fire. | ||
I had the same shit. | ||
But that was back in the steroid era. | ||
And I was like, fuck it. | ||
Just shoot me up and get back out there. | ||
And so it was just, oh, I'm taking this much? | ||
Dole my dose and add these two things and just keep rolling me out there, man. | ||
I don't care how bad it hurts. | ||
And yeah, it turns out that was the wrong decision. | ||
unidentified
|
Wow. | |
Well, it's going to be fun, so thanks for hanging out. | ||
Yeah, I enjoyed it, man. | ||
Raymond is here. | ||
Hey, friends. | ||
I'm Raymond G. Stanley Jr. | ||
I'm the resident of Blue Collar here at Timcast. | ||
John, I look forward to talking with you. | ||
I have a memory of more than a week. | ||
But also, before I pass it off to Phil... | ||
unidentified
|
Tim! | |
You have a memory of more than a week? | ||
Yeah. | ||
Because I know you, sometimes you talk to folks who are carrying memories of weeks. | ||
They forget about things that happened. | ||
unidentified
|
Yeah, yeah. | |
Stolen out there. | ||
But listen, I know you love the... | ||
Oh, I got a gavel, huh? | ||
Yes. | ||
You love your favorite mail. | ||
They come with every... | ||
They come with every shelf we get here. | ||
Every shelf? | ||
Yeah. | ||
Judge, jury, and executioner. | ||
I can kill people. | ||
Yes. | ||
Can't say that. | ||
unidentified
|
Don't tell me. | |
Can't say that. | ||
unidentified
|
You're bad. | |
You're bad. | ||
There you go. | ||
That was Raymond's rubber mallet that I took from a shelf that I thought was funny. | ||
I was banging it. | ||
Phil's hanging out. | ||
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 counter-revolutionary. | ||
Let's get into it. | ||
Here's the news from KSTP. | ||
Minneapolis and state leaders prepare for possible Derek Chauvin pardon. | ||
Now, the important point in this story is this. | ||
Sources also told, KSTP, the Minnesota Department of Corrections is ready to pick up Chauvin at a federal penitentiary and bring him back to Oak Parks Heights Prison in Minnesota to serve the remainder of his 22-and-a-half-year sentence. | ||
He is currently in a federal prison in Texas. | ||
This is Democrats. | ||
They sent out a notice to city employees, city workers, and I believe there was some at the state level saying, here's what we're going to do in the event of a pardon of Chauvin. | ||
I don't know where that's coming from. | ||
Perhaps there is information in the pipeline that Trump is considering it. | ||
Or it may just be that several months ago Ben Shapiro called for the pardoning of Derek Chauvin. | ||
Somebody then asked Donald Trump, who said, I have no idea what you're talking about. | ||
And now it's become a story, even though it's not a story. | ||
There's a possibility, I suppose, at least at the state level, there are officials who have had communications indicating it is possible that Donald Trump does pardon Derek Chauvin. | ||
I believe he should be pardoned. | ||
At the state and federal level. | ||
I'm not so sure it's going to happen, but if it does, what do you guys think? | ||
National riots? | ||
Or they wouldn't muster it up? | ||
Yeah, there's a lot of people that are like, oh, you know, he'll go free, blah, blah, blah. | ||
It doesn't matter. | ||
He won't go free because he's got state charges and he'll be just put into custody in Minneapolis. | ||
one of the things that I think people are missing is the left doesn't need him to go free for them to riot, right? | ||
Anytime any quote-unquote progress the left believes If that happens, they freak out. | ||
You see the way that the left behaves. | ||
So anytime they lose any ground, they lose their mind. | ||
So it's completely, I think, within the realm of possibility that if Chauvin is... | ||
You know, pardoned for the federal charges that there will be riots, protests and stuff across the country. | ||
And whereas I don't think that it would be as bad as the summer of love because people aren't at home. | ||
People are actually going to work. | ||
I think that because of COVID, that was a unique summer. | ||
I do think that this is something that could spark nationwide riots. | ||
They need a reason. | ||
They need a reason. | ||
You know, I don't think there's anything happening in the world today besides Gaza. | ||
It's a riot. | ||
That's in America. | ||
So if this happens in America, they have a reason, like, to get out on the streets and get mad because Trump did something wrong. | ||
I don't know. | ||
We've been writing about Maryland dad for the last month. | ||
I've been writing, but, you know, certainly... | ||
Protests, yeah. | ||
Certainly expressing strong opinions. | ||
The children started at all. | ||
I would push back on that because it started with Ferguson. | ||
It started with Michael Brown. | ||
The riots? | ||
Well, that's when the left started to lose their mind. | ||
Trayvon. | ||
That was BLM. | ||
Was there riots in Trayvon Martin? | ||
Really? | ||
That's what started Black Lives Matter. | ||
That was during Obama. | ||
That was the first term of Obama. | ||
And then Obama came out and said, if I had a son, he would look like Trayvon. | ||
That would have been, what, 2010? | ||
I think it was... | ||
It would have been 10. 12. BLM's been going since 10? | ||
I think it was 12, actually. | ||
I usually base a lot of my what happened when based on what chick I was dating. | ||
I remember the girlfriend I had when that happened, and I was dating her from like 07 to like 10. It was February 2012. | ||
That's how I remember that. | ||
Yeah. | ||
Okay, maybe I'm off on girlfriend timeline. | ||
Hopefully you have a stable girlfriend now, so nothing else is going to happen. | ||
I do. | ||
I'm 50, so I'm finally happy. | ||
Are you well-versed in the Chauvin stuff? | ||
Not completely. | ||
I watch a lot of news, but it's more of a background noise. | ||
A lot of people I've heard from entered this story saying, at first I thought he was guilty. | ||
And I thought he should be acquitted. | ||
I was talking with Viva Frye, he said that. | ||
But I've met a lot of people who say that when you actually watch the trial of Derek Chauvin over George Floyd, you're like, oh, George Floyd died from fentanyl overdose? | ||
Why is this guy going to prison? | ||
When you first see the first video, I was like, holy s***, what's going on? | ||
This whole thing, guys, stood on it. | ||
And then when you see the extended version, this isn't as bad as I thought it was. | ||
This morning, I asked him. | ||
That right there will create an absolute chit show. | ||
Indeed. | ||
Yeah, but... | ||
Now that... | ||
Okay, I'm putting the name with the story. | ||
Okay. | ||
Yeah, so absolutely, that will create an absolute fucking disaster. | ||
He should be pardoned on moral and ethical grounds, but yes, people would lose their minds. | ||
But moral and ethical grounds of a conservative view, he should be kept in jail for moral and ethical grounds on a liberal view. | ||
Their ethics and their morals are completely 180 from our ethics and morals. | ||
I agree. | ||
The liberals' whole model of the world... | ||
It's completely different from our model of the world. | ||
So applying that, Chauvin did nothing wrong because the liberals want him in prison and they want the criminals out of prison. | ||
unidentified
|
Yeah. | |
And conservatives want Chauvin out of prison and the criminals in prison. | ||
So the thing about Chauvin is I was having a conversation with our good friend, Chad GPT, earlier. | ||
And I asked it just simple questions, not loaded questions. | ||
I just said, did George Floyd have a lethal amount of fentanyl in his system when he died? | ||
And it said, according to the coroner report, he had 11 nanograms per milliliter in his bloodstream when he died. | ||
However, the coroner's report and other reports said that he died of neck compression. | ||
And then I asked it, what is the typical concentration for a lethal amount of fentanyl? | ||
Three nanograms per milliliter. | ||
So 400% more. | ||
Indeed, indeed. | ||
And so the other issue at play was that George Floyd was already on the ground when Chauvin arrived. | ||
Chauvin arrived late. | ||
So the cops had already subdued him. | ||
They already dealt with him. | ||
They already put him on the ground. | ||
Chauvin shows up seeing a crowd. | ||
Everyone's going crazy. | ||
There's a guy on the ground and he walks over. | ||
And he used a restraint he was trained to use by the MPD. | ||
And the only argument is that he should have at some point... | ||
I understood that George Floyd became unresponsive and rendered aid, which, again, my argument in that whole story is negligence, not murder, not racism, not... | ||
It's worth noting that there's a lot of people that are making complaints about the constitutionality of the deportations that we're doing. | ||
Derek Chauvin, the judge in the Derek Chauvin case, said that there was no way that Derek Chauvin could get a fair trial. | ||
He wasn't going to be able to get a fair trial anywhere in Minnesota. | ||
The proper, and this is something that Tim said before on the show, but the proper remedy for that is you don't try him because you're guaranteed a fair trial with an unbiased jury. | ||
And if the results were already in as soon as he was arrested, then you can't try him. | ||
Because you're violating his constitutional rights. | ||
All the people that are like, oh, the constitutional rights of the Trenderagua gang members and the constitutional rights of all the people that have come here legally. | ||
Quick aside, because obviously the left coming up a couple weeks ago, Trump even admitted he doesn't know what the... | ||
If you're here illegally, do you have constitutional rights? | ||
You do. | ||
You do, but it's limited. | ||
Exactly. | ||
To a certain point, you have constitutional rights. | ||
The things in the Bill of Rights are a list of things the federal government can't do. | ||
They're not a list of things that the people in the United States can't do. | ||
The American people are free to do whatever they want. | ||
If it's not specifically prohibited by law, then you're free to do it. | ||
There's a lot of people that have that mixed up. | ||
So the fact that the Constitution limits the government means that the rights that... | ||
Everyone enjoys their rights that are protected because they come from your humanity, not from the government. | ||
And they could have found a different place. | ||
Like Minnesota, they could have went somewhere, anywhere in the United States, southern state, that would get more of a fair child than actually in Minnesota. | ||
Well, you know, for state-level charges, this is the fascinating thing. | ||
Throw everything out. | ||
You know what? | ||
Maybe the fentanyl thing? | ||
I don't know what I'm talking about. | ||
Fine. | ||
The judge said... | ||
There is nowhere in the state he's going to get a more fair trial because everyone's already been prejudiced by the media coverage. | ||
Okay, my response to that is if you can't have a fair trial, then you're free to go. | ||
Yeah, that's the constitutional remedy. | ||
Indeed. | ||
And you'll hear, again, smash the gavel. | ||
We have three more backups, so you can break that all you want. | ||
And you'll hear the left making all sorts of constitutional arguments, but this is just evidence that they don't actually care about the Constitution. | ||
The Constitution is a means to an end, which the end is allow the illegal immigration. | ||
unidentified
|
Everyone twisted to look at the South Africa thing. | |
Trump brings in 59 white people from South Africa, and it's the apocalypse. | ||
The Episcopal Church shuts down its 40-year-old refugee resettlement program. | ||
Over 59 people. | ||
All these people in media are screaming, Trump's a white supremacist and racist. | ||
These people... | ||
Have argued on CNN that the white people in South Africa should go back to Germany. | ||
They say that the white people in the United States are colonized, should give the land back to Mexico, or to the Americans. | ||
There's literally nothing you can do if you're a white person for these people, but Trump is the racist. | ||
And from what I saw, I got a hell of a reception over in Qatar and over in Saudi Arabia. | ||
He sure did. | ||
The bigot that he is. | ||
The Muslims and those folks are pretty dark and plected over there. | ||
He hates brown people, doesn't he? | ||
Before Trump was the president, particularly the Republican president, he was loved by everybody. | ||
It didn't matter your color, race, creed. | ||
They were like, oh yeah, Donald Trump, he's the quintessential American businessman. | ||
He's the quintessential successful real estate mogul. | ||
And he put that R in front of his name. | ||
That changed everything. | ||
And he was a Democrat. | ||
If it was a D in front of his name? | ||
You're in a shit. | ||
He could do no wrong. | ||
That's part of why they loved him. | ||
He was a Democrat until he decided to run for... | ||
He was a Democrat through all the 90s and 2000s. | ||
Until he decided to run for president. | ||
The Ds, the Dems back in the 80s and 90s, they're not too far off of what the R's are right now. | ||
Not too terribly far off. | ||
Well, this is something we talked about multiple times on the show. | ||
If you look at the makeup of Trump's cabinet, you've got Tulsi Gabbner. | ||
He used to be... | ||
RFK still is. | ||
He's actually registered as a Libertarian, but he comes from a Democrat. | ||
He needs a translator, by the way. | ||
RFK, I can't listen to his voice. | ||
Have a little note next to him. | ||
Type it out. | ||
Let this guy say it for him. | ||
I can't listen to that voice anymore, man. | ||
It is warbly and stuff. | ||
Ratchet chalkboard to listen to RFK. | ||
That's a toss-up, man. | ||
I'm not really sure. | ||
He had a hearing today. | ||
Did you guys see it? | ||
I didn't see it. | ||
But I did see the Ben and Jerry's guy. | ||
Why aren't the Democrats going, thank you, RFK Jr.? | ||
unidentified
|
Yeah. | |
I don't understand. | ||
He's a liberal getting – this policy that Trump's putting in place for negotiating down drug costs should have every single Democrat clapping and giving a standing ovation to Trump. | ||
This is their policy. | ||
Not only that, but they're protesting. | ||
They don't get credit for it, though. | ||
If you don't get credit for it, that means you've got to give the other guys credit, which means the other guys stay in power and we don't. | ||
It's kind of like – when I was a minor league pitcher, this is sort of a long-winded analogy, but it'll make sense in the end. | ||
Dear friend of mine – actually, I'm going down next week to the Brave Spring training. | ||
Complex to coach in a college football bat league down there. | ||
And a dear friend of mine, Damian Moss, he owns the league. | ||
And we were competitors coming up to the Braves minor league system. | ||
So it was a weird thing. | ||
We're on the same team. | ||
Republicans, Democrats, we're on the same team, we're part of the same country, all hopefully moving in the same direction. | ||
But if Damian went out and pitched, if he wins, he pitches good, our team wins. | ||
Awesome. | ||
Maybe we'll win a championship. | ||
But if he pitches bad, I'm always kind of sitting in the dugout going, One, two, three inning. | ||
Damn it. | ||
Oh, I gave up free that inning. | ||
All right. | ||
Because if he pitches bad, then I get to get more credit. | ||
If I pitch good, I get to get the big leagues first. | ||
It's sort of a competition within the overall team dynamic. | ||
I think that's sort of the same thing with Dems and conservatives. | ||
If Trump does something that they were championing, he's going to get credit, not them. | ||
That way, the Republicans are moving farther, faster, ahead, getting more credit, more credibility, and they're just sort of lagging behind with... | ||
Just really got a whole lot to talk about. | ||
And no real way to kind of step in and here's how we're opposite from each other. | ||
Our policies work better than yours. | ||
I feel like the right is we would be happy if Democrats were in charge. | ||
Not if they were in charge, but if they did something good and made America better. | ||
Like, that's good. | ||
We would appreciate that. | ||
We're for freaking Americans, but they cannot give back. | ||
That's why there are former liberals who voted for Trump. | ||
That's why Tulsi Gabbard and RFK Jr. went with Trump. | ||
Because Trump was like, I'm going to do these things that are good. | ||
Will you work with me? | ||
And these former Democrats were like, this is my opportunity to do something. | ||
I think one of the reasons we see the Democratic Party as psychotic and cultish as it is, is because the sane, rational Democrats who saw a path towards accomplishing, you know, finding their solutions. | ||
He said, okay, Trump, let's work together. | ||
RFK Jr. is like, I want to ban artificial food dyes. | ||
Trump says, I can do that with you. | ||
Come work with me. | ||
And RFK said, okay. | ||
Now the Democrats have no leadership. | ||
The people who wanted solutions said we'll take it. | ||
Isn't Ro Khanna trying to do something now to solidify? | ||
Yep. | ||
We will get into that, but let's jump to this story. | ||
Let's jump to this story for us. | ||
This one's funny. | ||
From the Independent, House Democrats furious. | ||
As Congressman launches waste-of-time impeachment proceedings against Trump, Michigan Rep. | ||
Sri Tenedar's resolution attacked as waste-of-effing time by his own side, but Congressman insists it's, quote, about doing the right thing. | ||
Really? | ||
Well, he's canceled. | ||
He said, | ||
I will continue to pursue all avenues to put this president on notice and hold him accountable for his many impeachable crimes. | ||
I wonder who wrote that for him, first of all. | ||
Go back one screen, Tim. | ||
Is he a little kid wearing his daddy's suit? | ||
What do you get a suit like that from? | ||
You're in Congress. | ||
You've got to be on TV. | ||
Get a suit that fits, guy. | ||
He's 12 years old wearing his grown father's suit. | ||
It's smooth with his sister. | ||
That's what he's doing right there. | ||
You know, part of me feels bad for this guy. | ||
Look at the wig on top of his head. | ||
Everything is wrong about this guy. | ||
Everything is wrong about him. | ||
I can't even see what's below the podium. | ||
There's a lot going wrong down there. | ||
Even Democrats don't like him. | ||
Now, here's the thing. | ||
Nobody wanted this. | ||
I was on a debate with him. | ||
Cenk Uygur was also on it from the Young Turks. | ||
And even Cenk Uygur was laughing at him, saying, like, what are you doing? | ||
Are you going to convince Republicans to impeach him? | ||
You're wasting our time. | ||
And now the rest of the Democrats are saying the same thing. | ||
Let me tell you about Sri Tanadar. | ||
You've never heard of him before. | ||
You'll probably never hear from him again. | ||
This is a rep who does not know the name of the Michigan cities he actually represents. | ||
He does. | ||
He just can't pronounce them. | ||
You know... | ||
That would be funny, but he actually doesn't know who he represents. | ||
So he was interviewed, and... | ||
Special election guy, or did he actually go through the whole process? | ||
I'm pretty sure he actually won. | ||
And I think this is... | ||
He did actually win. | ||
And this is indicative of Democrat leadership. | ||
They vote for whoever's got a D next to their name, and that's it. | ||
And that's why you end up with a guy. | ||
So he gets asked by this... | ||
I don't know who this guy is. | ||
He was asking, he says, what are the five gross point cities? | ||
Ten dollar laughs. | ||
And then says, look, I'm not here to answer a quiz. | ||
I'm here. | ||
I'm going to fight for the people of Detroit. | ||
I'm going to fight for my constituents. | ||
The interviewer then begins naming the cities, and then only after does Tanidar then start repeating them. | ||
This is who was trying to impeach Donald Trump. | ||
It didn't work first term when you only had one chamber. | ||
Now you have no chambers, and this is going to work for you. | ||
Well, you know what it is. | ||
There's no Democrat leaders. | ||
There's no superstars in the Democratic Party. | ||
So Shree was thinking, Or someone advise them. | ||
You need to do something big to get attention and get press. | ||
No one 5 '5 has got a prayer. | ||
No man 5 '5. | ||
I haven't seen him really stand up to me. | ||
You may be 5 '5 or not. | ||
But anyway, no one 5 '5 that's wearing daddy's suit has got a prayer ever doing anything big in the Democrat Party. | ||
Not since TV became a thing. | ||
In the Democratic Party? | ||
Politically? | ||
Politically, anyway. | ||
I agree, actually. | ||
I'm sure you can make a dig back through how tall Rubio is. | ||
You can be a congressperson. | ||
You could be a congressperson. | ||
Yeah, but past that, no. | ||
No, that's Congress. | ||
You know, presidential anything, cabinet-wise, anything? | ||
You know, what's funny is we were actually just talking about this the other day. | ||
Who was it, with Emily? | ||
And I was telling her that one of the reasons women have a hard time with politics is they're not as tall as men. | ||
And she was like, no, height has nothing to do with it. | ||
It's all a perception thing. | ||
Absolutely. | ||
I pulled up two studies. | ||
Height. | ||
Absolutely. | ||
It plays a significant role in how your elections turn out. | ||
There's no information available about the exact height of Sri Tenedar. | ||
I can make an educated guess. | ||
I think I'm pretty close to being right. | ||
What if he's wearing a 2XL suit and so he just looks short? | ||
Then he makes bad decisions and he should lose his job. | ||
You're too poor and stupid to go out and get you a reasonable suit. | ||
You're like a clown. | ||
Well, yeah. | ||
The guy is a clown for a lot of reasons. | ||
That's a reasonable suit, man. | ||
Come on. | ||
You're better than that. | ||
That's a men's warehouse suit. | ||
Probably bought on layaway. | ||
The tailor was out that day, and he's like, fuck it. | ||
Just give it to me all the time. | ||
You're making me feel bad for this guy. | ||
I can keep going for another 15 minutes. | ||
I know they still had layaways. | ||
Let's put two minutes on the clock. | ||
It'll be funny things we can say. | ||
He earned it. | ||
He did. | ||
I bet you it's a bad toupee, too. | ||
It's a bad toupee. | ||
It's like your real hair. | ||
He did a live speech that he was really mad at people talking about his hair. | ||
Really? | ||
Yeah, he's like, they say where I'm from, they don't like my hair, they're talking about my hair. | ||
Well, I can't do his accent, but he was very upset about his hair. | ||
He doesn't even know which cities he represents. | ||
This is the problem we have in this country. | ||
Democrats' largest, but Republicans do this too. | ||
There was a story in New Hampshire, Phil, you might know this one, where a transgender anarchist satanist... | ||
Yeah, I should say that. | ||
I'm going to say T.G. now. | ||
T.G. Otherwise you get banned. | ||
I'm offended. | ||
I'm complaining. | ||
A T.G. anarchist satanist ran for the sheriff, I think, right? | ||
Yep. | ||
And the Republicans voted for this person. | ||
Yep. | ||
Won. | ||
But won the primary, but lost in general. | ||
Lost in general. | ||
It was actually from my county. | ||
Oh, snap. | ||
Oh, it's where you actually live. | ||
In my county. | ||
One of those interesting things is Caitlyn Jenner. | ||
Red? | ||
Yeah. | ||
I mean, that's a head-scratcher right there. | ||
There's a couple of red ones. | ||
Yeah. | ||
A friend of the show. | ||
Blair White? | ||
Blair White, yeah. | ||
You know... | ||
I've heard her. | ||
I mean, I was a... | ||
Bruce Jenner fan my entire life. | ||
I have the Wheaties boxers. | ||
But listen to her talk. | ||
I've seen her interviewed a number of times by Hannity. | ||
I mean, you love everything she says. | ||
You're like, yeah, I get it. | ||
Why can't you influence more of your community folks to think your common sense works? | ||
Oh, is that Charlie LeDuff? | ||
Someone said that's Charlie LeDuff asking Shredo's questions. | ||
We've had him on the show. | ||
Is that him? | ||
It's hard to tell. | ||
Oh, it is! | ||
unidentified
|
What are the five gross points cities? | |
So big. | ||
unidentified
|
Well, look, I'm not here to answer a question. | |
I'm here to say that I'm going to fight for the people of Detroit. | ||
This dude's 70, I think. | ||
Yeah, I think he's 70. Look, man, people just vote. | ||
Shree's 70? | ||
Yeah, I'm pretty sure Shree's 70. Google it. | ||
How old do you think he is? | ||
45. Are you for real? | ||
57. He's 57? | ||
Sorry, no, no. | ||
They said they can't find it. | ||
What the heck? | ||
What do you mean? | ||
He's 70. Is that what it says? | ||
I'm Googling it right now. | ||
Let's see. | ||
Do you know this for a fact? | ||
Shri Tanadar was born February 22, 1955. | ||
He is 70 years old. | ||
What? | ||
unidentified
|
Wow! | |
Yeah, he became a U.S. citizen. | ||
He looks good, right? | ||
Yeah. | ||
Good for him. | ||
He takes whatever island he's from. | ||
Holy shit. | ||
You know what? | ||
I'm going to take back everything I just said about that guy. | ||
I'm going to take that back. | ||
No, I'm not. | ||
It was all pretty fucking funny. | ||
unidentified
|
No, no, no. | |
It all stands. | ||
No, no. | ||
That is what he said. | ||
You've got to take it back and then ask him what his routine is. | ||
Yeah. | ||
Yeah. | ||
What do you do, man? | ||
That's special right there. | ||
He became a U.S. citizen in 1988, and he was born in Chikodi, Karnataka, India. | ||
You know, I do have an honest question, though, and I don't mean this to be rude or anything. | ||
I mean, I'm just going to be good. | ||
It's been, what is it, 37 years? | ||
Am I doing my math wrong? | ||
Since? | ||
Since he became a U.S. citizen? | ||
Yeah, there you go. | ||
Depends on when. | ||
But why still have the accent? | ||
You can't get rid of that shit. | ||
Really? | ||
No. | ||
But I mean, you know, we've got... | ||
If you move down to Atlanta, Georgia, you're going to stop talking like a Yankee? | ||
No. | ||
After 37 years, maybe. | ||
Like, who are you around while you're still talking like... | ||
Their own community. | ||
My buddy Damien Moss will tell you about it. | ||
He's Aussie. | ||
He still has the accent. | ||
He's been here since 1993. | ||
Our friend Richie is Australian, and he's here, and he talks with the North American. | ||
Yeah, he lost it. | ||
But he can turn it back on and off. | ||
From where he's from, I bet a lot of Indian folks live around him, so he's probably not around the gringo white speak very much. | ||
They stay within their own community, of course. | ||
Yeah, maybe that's it. | ||
I don't know. | ||
Maybe, you know, it could be, and I'm in all seriousness, at a certain age when you learn the language, you can't develop the muscle and the neural pathways for a certain type of... | ||
88, that means he was like 63. I can't even believe that. | ||
That's more than... | ||
unidentified
|
33. But seriously. | |
In 1988, he was only seven years younger. | ||
And I pretty much hate anyone who's younger than me because I'm jealous of them. | ||
Sorry. | ||
He's sitting back watching the show. | ||
Like you said, he was 45 and he's like, damn right. | ||
But seriously, not a gray hair. | ||
He's happy now. | ||
But now I'm actually positive that is a wig. | ||
Of course! | ||
That's not a toupee, that's a wig. | ||
I mean, yeah. | ||
He's like, you know, cover up the horseshoe. | ||
No, that's a sheep on your head. | ||
It's the hair of a 19-year-old emo band guitarist. | ||
That has a straight sheep on your head. | ||
I'm jealous of that. | ||
You went by roadkill and you pick it up and suture that thing. | ||
Wait, wait, you ready for this? | ||
You ready for this? | ||
There you go. | ||
There you go. | ||
That is a horrible... | ||
He loves Panic at the Disco. | ||
unidentified
|
I mean, he does not be a fan. | |
He loves Panic at the Disco and glistening ties. | ||
He loves satin ties. | ||
He's got a little bit of the wrinkles on the neck, but I'm amazed at his forehead. | ||
It's got to be Botox. | ||
There's no other reason for it. | ||
I don't know, man. | ||
I don't know. | ||
I don't know why we're talking about how young this guy looks. | ||
We're amazed. | ||
We're sitting here saying he looks like he's 45 with the hair of a 19-year-old. | ||
You'd think this is like The View or something. | ||
That means we're getting a lot of views. | ||
I like to see him without his shirt on. | ||
Maybe there's some other news. | ||
What do we have? | ||
All right, move on. | ||
You're the fucking host. | ||
Let's jump to the story. | ||
We got this post from Repro. | ||
Now, the crazy thing about the story is I didn't see anybody writing it up. | ||
I've been searching to see if someone's going to write the story up. | ||
They don't go near it. | ||
Repro kind of says today I'm introducing legislation to codify President Trump's executive order, ensuring Americans do not pay more than people in other countries for drugs. | ||
Will Congress members stand with 16 billion dollars in big pharma money or the American people by co-sponsoring this bipartisan? | ||
Let's play tape. | ||
Mr. Speaker, I rise today to introduce as legislation President Trump's executive order for the most favored nation status on drug pricing. | ||
My legislation will codify President Trump's executive order, which basically says that Americans should not pay more for drugs than people in other countries and other parts of the world. | ||
Right now, we're paying two to three times more for our drugs than people in other industrialized nations. | ||
Now, this executive order, codified by the legislation, will allow Our cabinet secretaries to put pressure on Big Pharma and make sure that they are not price gouging and will allow for the importation of cheaper drugs. | ||
So you ask, why do we need the legislation? | ||
Because the reality is that Big Pharma will sue for the executive order like they did in the previous Trump administration. | ||
And in the previous administration, they managed to kill the executive order. | ||
The only way we can stand up to Big Pharma is to codify in legislation what the president wants to do in an executive order. | ||
Damn right. | ||
So here's the deal. | ||
If I can cross the aisle and support President Trump's executive order in legislation, every Republican should be willing to cross the aisle and support my legislation. | ||
It's a pretty simple test. | ||
Let's read it. | ||
Are we going to stand in this body with the $16 billion that Big Pharma spent on lobbying? | ||
Or are we going to stand with the American people? | ||
Well, this is Ro Khanna. | ||
He does fairly well. | ||
He's a lib. | ||
He's got lib ideas. | ||
Is he a lib or is he a Democrat? | ||
Is he a Joe Manchin or is he an AOC? | ||
He's a lib. | ||
You know, he leans more to the AOC side, but I consider him to be... | ||
You know, and I say this respectfully, ignorant but honest. | ||
He has bad ideas because he is ignorant of what's actually going on in the world, but I believe he's trying to be honest. | ||
He just doesn't know what he's talking about. | ||
Let's see if this bill comes out with all kinds of illegal immigration footnotes to it and yada yada. | ||
But if he's straightforward with it, but that right there, Democrats are sitting back going, you dirty mother. | ||
He's going to force it and be like... | ||
I've got to do something for Trump. | ||
unidentified
|
I've got to join the empire. | |
Shit! | ||
We've had Ro Khanna on the show, and we've given him credit quite a bit in the past because when it comes to stuff like big tech, censorship, spying, he tends to be on the right side of things. | ||
I just think for a lot of these Democrats, they believe the corporate press when they lie about Trump and all this other stuff. | ||
So he's basing his politics off of fake news most of the time. | ||
In this instance... | ||
There's no fake news to be had. | ||
Donald Trump gave a speech and said, here's what we're going to do. | ||
And every single Democrat should be giving Trump a standing ovation for the executive order. | ||
unidentified
|
There's no way. | |
But they're hypocrites. | ||
It's like you were saying. | ||
They're rocking a hard place, man. | ||
They can't give Trump the win. | ||
Yeah. | ||
Especially on an issue they've been passionate about for the last how many years? | ||
Now this Republican's going to come in and steal our thunder and do it for us? | ||
It makes us look incompetent like we couldn't get it done. | ||
This guy came in in six months and beam, bang, boom, got what we've been trying to get done for 20 years. | ||
One of the great things about Donald Trump is he's changing what... | ||
How politicians in the future are going to have, how they're going to have to behave. | ||
Because he's shown that Republicans can come in and make significant changes. | ||
And he's doing things like this, showing that Democrats can do things as well. | ||
Presidents for ages, they've just been like, oh, we can't, we can't, we can't. | ||
Or they've made promises and not followed through. | ||
Donald Trump has made it so in the future they're going to have to do something. | ||
I think, you know, we bag on what happened under Biden over those four years. | ||
And say Democrats can't this, Democrats can't that. | ||
What they did under Biden, that's exactly what they wanted to do. | ||
We just disagree with it. | ||
And what Trump is doing, they're saying, you know, the Republicans can't fix the country, although the stupid oligarchy tour and, you know, we're going to, I don't know whether the phrase or use it, build back better. | ||
Like, what's wrong with it? | ||
What are you going to build back? | ||
What are you going to improve from what Trump's doing? | ||
Well, according to their model of the world, what Trump's doing is completely wrong. | ||
I mean, they just don't see through the same eyes we see through. | ||
So what Trump's doing to what their opinion, their model of the world is, is completely 180 from how they would do things and vice versa. | ||
You've seen how the corporate press puts the orange filter on Trump's face. | ||
Have you seen those photos? | ||
Let me see if I can pull one up. | ||
It's not quite that orange. | ||
It's not. | ||
This is what's absolutely fascinating about the perception people have in this world. | ||
Yeah, yeah, I'll see that. | ||
Both pictures are from at TimCastNews. | ||
Follow at TimCastNews. | ||
So petty. | ||
I mean, just Democrats, liberals are just such children. | ||
And they all do this. | ||
Look, both pictures are from the White House press conference. | ||
This was on the 12th. | ||
The orange filter the fake news media places on Trump is insane. | ||
Here's Trump, and I was watching this on TV, and I have met this man in person on more than one occasion. | ||
His face is not bright orange. | ||
He clearly does have a spray tan, sure, but it's more like that. | ||
Not like that. | ||
Look at the edges of his face. | ||
It looks like they used Photoshop to actually cut out his face and then... | ||
It stops start right there next to his ear. | ||
I do think that Trump has a spray tan. | ||
I think that's actually... | ||
Yeah, for sure he does. | ||
But look how they... | ||
Look, man, it's not the first time they've been accused of doing this. | ||
It appears... | ||
Absolutely the case. | ||
They consistently do it. | ||
The numbers are down to 25%. | ||
You're going to the fucking tank. | ||
So this is the problem. | ||
When Donald Trump comes out and says we're going to lower drug prices, Democrats should be clapping saying it's about time Trump did something we wanted to see done. | ||
But what the corporate press makes sure of is that all of these people that are Democrat voters, they see a clown with a bright orange face and they pull him out of context and lie about what he's doing. | ||
And then, of course, what the Democrats are actually doing now, like Elizabeth Warren, they're just going on TV and instead of telling their constituents what Trump wants to do, they're saying, don't listen to Trump. | ||
He's a liar. | ||
He wants to cut your medical benefits. | ||
It's the same playbook for decades. | ||
They were saying this shit back in the Clinton days when it was Clinton and Bush. | ||
They were saying that shit. | ||
You know, back in the 90s. | ||
It's the same playbook just regurgitated 30 years later. | ||
It's all the same scare tactics, because, and especially when it comes to stuff like Medicaid, the boomers are the most reliable voting bloc. | ||
So if you can scare the boomers into believing something, that the, whatever... | ||
It's been used so much, though. | ||
It is the boy that cried wolf, and we're on about sequel number eight. | ||
I think that the fact that... | ||
I think the fact that there's... | ||
Too many people that can't afford to lose their Medicare and Medicaid benefits where it's not worth the risk. | ||
They're like, look, maybe they won't. | ||
Maybe they have been saying this forever. | ||
But if this guy actually does, I'm totally screwed. | ||
And I live in a fixed income. | ||
Everybody knows that there's no way in the hell anyone would ever do some shit like that. | ||
There's no way. | ||
I mean, it seems to work. | ||
He's going to do that and he's going to fire a nuclear missile at Canada. | ||
It works. | ||
Why not try that one too? | ||
You know, that's about as believable. | ||
So what do you see, where do we go as a country when half the country is just like, literally anything Trump does is wrong no matter what? | ||
We get 40s of Biden where they're burning everything down. | ||
I don't think it's half, to be honest with you, Tim. | ||
I mean, we saw Trump win popular vote by 3-4%. | ||
I mean, it was enough. | ||
And one thing I think about, too... | ||
I cannot wait these trade deals are done. | ||
He's going to get them done, by the way. | ||
Crying wolf and terrified of your own shadow over the tariffs. | ||
I've gotten hit a little bit. | ||
I get a lot of merch sold off my X account, my website, whatever. | ||
It used to be three weeks to get my stuff. | ||
Now it's like over two months. | ||
Customers call me up going, cancel my order, it's been two months. | ||
Well, it's not my fault. | ||
Stuff's sitting on a barge out in San Diego right now. | ||
But when this stuff happens, I mean, kind of like he was saying, too big to rig the election. | ||
Got that. | ||
And when you have at least two years, if not four years, of big stuff happening and even drug costs going down, the economy is going to just... | ||
I mean, it is going to be on... | ||
Steroids with gasoline behind it. | ||
There's not going to be anywhere for these libs to hide. | ||
Especially when he's taken over some of their talking points and some of their policies and got out of the way, just let me do it. | ||
And we look at their bullpen. | ||
Who have they got? | ||
I watch Fox News, Fox Business hours a day. | ||
And it's sort of droning on and on. | ||
Can we move on to the next story? | ||
Dems in disarray. | ||
Their approval rating is 26. You have nobody. | ||
AOC, that's your knight in shining armor. | ||
Bernie, I mean, he's going to be dead in six months. | ||
He's Mr. Burns. | ||
Mr. Burns is never going to win a major election. | ||
So, yeah, I don't... | ||
And another thing, too, with the... | ||
I've got to stop you there. | ||
I'm going to say Hans Molman, but continue. | ||
I don't know who that is. | ||
Who? | ||
Hans Molman. | ||
Who? | ||
The Simpsons reference. | ||
Hans Molman. | ||
Mr. Burns is a billionaire. | ||
Bernie Sanders is Hans Molman. | ||
Okay. | ||
All the Simpsons fans are... | ||
Yeah, I'm a Family Guy fan, but anyway. | ||
But can you imagine? | ||
I mean, a lot of the elections are won in media, won through advertising. | ||
The sound bites, the commercials that the Republicans are going to be able to make. | ||
I mean, just the shit that happened just a couple days ago with the ICE agents in Jersey. | ||
That is going to be on a commercial in about 12 months. | ||
I mean, all the stuff with the MS-13, the Maryland dad, is going to be on a commercial in the next 12 months. | ||
They are going to take all the stuff these morons have been fucking doing for the last, you know, especially six months, but really the last, like, year, and they're going to make commercials out of all of them. | ||
It's political malpractice. | ||
They're going to beat them over the stinking head with it. | ||
Every commercial break, you're going to see some lefty losing their fucking mind over something ridiculous, and it's going to be, vote Trump. | ||
Vote Republican. | ||
Vote whoever the race is for. | ||
And I think that's why they did it. | ||
I think, you know, a lot of liberals are like, why won't Trump just have the hearing for the guy, the Brigitte Garcia? | ||
Why won't he just bring him back? | ||
It's super easy. | ||
Because he wants Democrats at hearings, banging on the table, screaming, like, bring him home! | ||
And then they're going to do what you said in the commercials. | ||
And it's going to be a red screen with news headlines and a voice like this. | ||
You might be the voiceover. | ||
Sam Elliott has beaten his wife. | ||
Closed fist. | ||
Black eyes. | ||
Human trafficker. | ||
And then it's going to show all the stuff. | ||
And then it's going to show Elizabeth Warren being like, he's got to come back to this country! | ||
That's going to be so powerful. | ||
And these moron liberals are so fucking stupid. | ||
They don't realize they're creating the world's biggest PR machine against themselves for 26 and 28. It's why they got no bullpen. | ||
They have a bullpen. | ||
Have you guys heard of this fella? | ||
No. | ||
They've got an A-ball bullpen for a big league team. | ||
This gentleman, he carried weapons of war. | ||
He can co-talk to white men. | ||
He's very good at what he does. | ||
It's Tim Walls, 2828. | ||
He gives Tim's a bad name. | ||
How about his daughter and the dumbass shit she opened her mouth with last week, I guess, about running being a white privilege? | ||
I heard something. | ||
Running for office? | ||
What'd you say? | ||
No, running, like jogging. | ||
Oh, jogging. | ||
As a white man is saying, it's white privilege to jog. | ||
Like, baby, have you seen the U.S. Olympic track team? | ||
Have you seen the winners? | ||
I don't see a fucking honky on that damn thing. | ||
Maybe in like the... | ||
I run the 18-mile. | ||
I'm white. | ||
I run the 18-mile is what I run. | ||
Have you seen the Boston-New York marathons? | ||
When was the last more white guy, a fucking gringo, one of them Boston marathons? | ||
It's Kenya, right? | ||
That's been a minute. | ||
Yeah, all those guys, yeah. | ||
It's the same village from Kenya. | ||
Family. | ||
Grandfather, father, brother, all the way down. | ||
If I understand correctly, it's the same village from Kenya. | ||
It's actually 26 miles away from the grocery store. | ||
Go get us some bread. | ||
Be back in three and a half hours. | ||
They run the marathon. | ||
They're like, this is a normal daily occurrence for us. | ||
They stop, turn around, and go back. | ||
That probably is true, though. | ||
They have to run. | ||
We don't. | ||
People in America don't run anywhere. | ||
We've seen college track teams. | ||
They're not white people. | ||
We're not on those things. | ||
Tim Walsh's dumbfuck daughter. | ||
White people play hockey, though. | ||
That was a gross. | ||
No, you're good. | ||
I haven't seen you guys look at me side. | ||
I don't stink out yet. | ||
No, you're good. | ||
White people play hockey, right? | ||
Is hockey a white guy sport? | ||
Yeah. | ||
That's what they say. | ||
Yeah, there's some really actually good black guys nowadays. | ||
Folks getting into it. | ||
That is kind of weird, right? | ||
How come sports are like... | ||
Racial. | ||
Very racial. | ||
You know what I mean? | ||
We grow up, which you have access to. | ||
You're supposed to be Latino. | ||
Is baseball largely Latino? | ||
A lot of Latinos. | ||
Yeah, but they can play, man. | ||
A lot of Japanese. | ||
They have a year-round. | ||
They can play a year-round down there, so that's good. | ||
It helps a lot. | ||
We used to play in the gym in the wintertime. | ||
That's not like real baseball. | ||
I played three years in Puerto Rico and one year in Venezuela. | ||
Wow, really? | ||
They got some players out there. | ||
Are there a lot of Japanese players in the U.S.? | ||
There's some. | ||
unidentified
|
Yeah, but there's only 25-ish. | |
You're not getting the big leagues unless you can play. | ||
Major League Baseball is the most non-racial thing on this planet. | ||
Either you can play or you can't. | ||
If you can't play, you're going to expose real quick in front of 50,000 people and a bunch more million watching. | ||
I'm sure most people know this, but I don't. | ||
How does minors and majors work? | ||
How do you get into the minor league? | ||
How do you get into the major league? | ||
You either get drafted into the minors. | ||
I got drafted when I was 18 years old. | ||
And then just had to work my way up. | ||
You play good at this level, then probably the next level, and you just get promoted up. | ||
And it's a very rigorous process. | ||
It took me four years, which is probably a little quicker than average, four to five years. | ||
I got the big leagues when I was just turned 23. That's the way it is for everybody. | ||
Is it like after college you go to the minors, or can you go straight to major? | ||
I never went to college. | ||
I was supposed to go to Georgia. | ||
I never went. | ||
I had a scholarship to play there. | ||
But there's been, I think... | ||
About 50 players that went straight from college to the big leagues, all hitters. | ||
Never a pitcher. | ||
Just too much to learn as a pitcher. | ||
Too much to get used to. | ||
I mean, as a hitter, if you can hit 95, you can't. | ||
And so you get a, like John Uluru, straight to the big leagues. | ||
Pete Incavilla, straight to the big leagues. | ||
There's been a few guys in my era. | ||
I just watched a YouTube video breaking down the different kind of pitches. | ||
It was one of the most, like, mesmerizing things. | ||
Hitting is insane. | ||
Watching the balls go in. | ||
The way they hold the ball, the way, like, make the ball go up, go left, go right, go down. | ||
Wrist angles, man. | ||
Wrist angles. | ||
That's crazy. | ||
It's like a wiffle ball for us. | ||
I throw the frisbee, and it goes straight, and it just turns right. | ||
I have no idea why that happened. | ||
Yeah, hitting is insanely difficult. | ||
I could never hit a curveball. | ||
That was so tough. | ||
It'd be coming in. | ||
I'm like, I'm not going to hit it, but then it'll go out of a plate. | ||
It's so tough. | ||
It's so hard. | ||
Even the big league guy, if it hangs, if it gets thighs to belt, but even the ones down, even the big league guy, it's best you can hope we're fouled off. | ||
And now with the plate, the box over the plate, and you see the precision that pitchers can throw with when they're right in the corner. | ||
And you're max effort, man. | ||
You're out there freaking... | ||
I mean, you got G-forces, like, you know, trying to keep your head straight and shit, you know? | ||
You have, like, just one second to decide. | ||
Yeah, 0.4 seconds. | ||
0.4. | ||
0.4 seconds. | ||
On a 90-mile-an-hour fastball, 0.4 seconds. | ||
You see it out of the hand, make a decision, and then get the swing to the ball. | ||
Yeah. | ||
Wow. | ||
Less than half a second. | ||
You almost have to be able to see the future, and that's why the... | ||
And what most hitters do, they guess a side of the plate. | ||
You can't cover both sides against this half or this half. | ||
And depending on game situation, type pitcher I'm facing, scouting reports, what the count is, etc., etc., you're literally narrowing it down to one pitch, maybe two pitches. | ||
I'm sitting fastball at just breaking ball. | ||
If he throws me a good one, I'm going to try to foul it off, lift it on another pitch. | ||
If he hangs it, I'm going to get it. | ||
And if I guess wrong, I'm just going to look stupid. | ||
Do you still keep up with all the major players? | ||
I watch maybe one game a week. | ||
A few innings. | ||
I don't watch a ton. | ||
The videos I was watching was saying that most pitchers, they don't use a lot of pitches anymore. | ||
They're sticking to only a handful. | ||
There's like two or three that they use, and then a bunch of them just don't appear anymore. | ||
I don't know what they're called. | ||
It depends on what kind of pitcher you are. | ||
Not a lot of guys don't splits anymore. | ||
I think we'll just straight tear an elbow up. | ||
Although the rash of Tommy John surgeries, I don't know what that is. | ||
What is that? | ||
You blow out this UCL ligament right there in your elbow. | ||
It's not a threatening surgery anymore. | ||
They can literally tell you, you have surgery this day. | ||
In 287 days, you'll be back pitching in competitive facing hitters. | ||
It's literally like that precise is how the rehab goes. | ||
It used to be kind of a death sentence. | ||
unidentified
|
Wow. | |
Some guys come back better after Tommy John. | ||
Oh, yeah. | ||
What was that movie where the kid? | ||
Hurt his elbow, and then his arm cranked back, and he'd throw... | ||
Angels in the alphabet? | ||
No, not angels in the alphabet. | ||
unidentified
|
No, no, no. | |
Something. | ||
What was it? | ||
That's what Strider just had. | ||
There's still maybe a dozen guys a year in the Big Leagues that will have TJs. | ||
But a split was the main thing. | ||
You snap that thing down, and the elbow's going to go. | ||
So it's not a whole lot of... | ||
Back in the day, a third of Big League guys threw splits. | ||
I would say now maybe a tenth of them. | ||
Are there still nookballers around? | ||
I don't know if there's one in the league now. | ||
There's usually like one or two guys in the league that are knuckleballers. | ||
I don't know if there's any in the league this year or not. | ||
The guy from Boston was really awesome. | ||
Oh, Tim. | ||
Tim passed away about a year, year and a half ago. | ||
And so did Ketra Veritek. | ||
I mean, these guys, they're my age. | ||
Sad shit, man. | ||
What's the rank? | ||
I think it was great. | ||
National League Championship. | ||
Amazing. | ||
The consolation prize for losing to the Yankees. | ||
Fuck you, Yankees. | ||
Jankies. | ||
Jank Dees. | ||
The Yankees have an unfair advantage just because of how deep their pockets are. | ||
What's up with those bats? | ||
Have you seen those? | ||
Yeah, I have. | ||
Yeah, what are they called? | ||
The torpedo bats. | ||
Torpedo bats. | ||
It makes sense. | ||
You made the sweet spot fatter. | ||
It's legal, though? | ||
unidentified
|
It is right now. | |
Honestly, it seems so obvious. | ||
Why would you have done this years ago? | ||
Yeah, okay. | ||
Maybe they figured out if they made the sweet spot on a bat, it's only six inches. | ||
If you get it inside or outside the sweet spot, the ball's generally going to go nowhere. | ||
It's usually pretty bat breaks or whatever. | ||
I guess they probably finally figured out how to make the sweet spot bigger by adding a bunch of weight to the bat. | ||
Most guys are swinging about a 30-31 ounce bat. | ||
So I guess they figured out... | ||
I don't know how you would have done it. | ||
I'm not smart with shit like that. | ||
How to make that barrel bigger, put more mass on the bat without making it 37 ounces. | ||
Yeah. | ||
You shave down the handle, you put a cup on the end of it. | ||
There's a lot of ways to get weight out of it. | ||
But yeah, sweet spot bigger. | ||
So now I've got 8 inches of where the ball's going to jump. | ||
Wow. | ||
Sammy Sofa, he's pretty good. | ||
He can put a little cork in it. | ||
Sammy Sofa? | ||
Sammy Sofa. | ||
He's on the All Furniture team, Sammy Sofa. | ||
Is he? | ||
All Furniture team. | ||
Let's jump back to news. | ||
We got this story from NBC. | ||
Yo, this one's actually pretty hilarious. | ||
Elon Musk's AI chatbot brings up South African white genocide claims in response to unrelated questions. | ||
I mean, it's a funny story. | ||
I don't know why they wrote it. | ||
Because it's basically like a couple people. | ||
Asked Grok a question, got a weird answer, and it became an NBC national news story. | ||
Still funny, though. | ||
Turnabout's fair play. | ||
There you go. | ||
Look at this. | ||
On Wednesday, one ex-user asked, at Grok, where is this? | ||
In response to a photo of a walking path. | ||
Grok responded, the query asks about the location of a scenic image likely not tied to South Africa's farm attack debate. | ||
Without specific details, I can't pinpoint the location. | ||
On the broader topic implied, farm attacks in South Africa are real and brutal, with some claiming whites are targeted due to racial motives, like kill the bow or high crime rates have affected all races, distrust, blah, blah, blah. | ||
A review of Grok's ex-account since Tuesday showed more than 20 examples of such responses, including two questions related to a picture of the comic book and the Hawk Tuam meme. | ||
A viral video featuring influencer Hayley Welch. | ||
We get it. | ||
It was not immediately clear why the AI bot had suddenly begun bringing up the topic unprompted. | ||
I don't know, man. | ||
All I can tell you is that AI is going to get weird, and this story is absolutely hilarious. | ||
It is. | ||
I love it. | ||
It's hilarious. | ||
I keep wanting to make the same joke, so I'm just going to refrain from it. | ||
So, anyways. | ||
Good jokes. | ||
unidentified
|
Good jokes. | |
I was going to say, do you think Elon and his team had a say in this? | ||
No. | ||
Of course he did. | ||
No, you think so? | ||
Absolutely. | ||
He's not a funny guy. | ||
His staff is funny. | ||
He's from South Africa. | ||
Oh, there you go. | ||
He does have a personal opinion on the situation. | ||
He has commented on a lot of... | ||
You know, tweets and stuff like that when people are talking about it. | ||
I don't know that I believe that Musk is involved. | ||
But, you know, AI does hallucinate. | ||
You know, you don't always get legit answers from AI. | ||
Well, you don't, but I mean, this specific at this exact point in time. | ||
I mean, it's weird. | ||
It wasn't doing it two weeks ago. | ||
It's not going to be doing it six months from now. | ||
Right now, it's relevant to the news in the last two days. | ||
A little too coincidental. | ||
It could be due to all the questions that it receives. | ||
It's using Twitter for its training data. | ||
A little tip of the scale? | ||
A little too coincidental. | ||
You think someone on the programming side went in there and accidentally... | ||
I think Musk told him to do it. | ||
I think he's that much of a kiss my go to hell, watch this shit. | ||
He is. | ||
He's the richest man in the world. | ||
Go fuck yourselves. | ||
That's what we're saying to all the oil barons over in Saudi Arabia. | ||
Still richer than you, Kat. | ||
Still richer than you. | ||
I'm not even sure that he's actually richer than them because they say they own the oil reserve. | ||
If they actually do. | ||
Because the Saudi family owns basically everything in Saudi Arabia. | ||
You know one thing? | ||
In a hundred years, I'd be broke as shit. | ||
When the whole world's electric in a hundred years, that's what's going to happen. | ||
I'd be broke as shit. | ||
Not relying on the Middle East for power is a very good thing for the West, in my opinion. | ||
This one's fascinating. | ||
I asked ChatGPT, did Trump pause refugee intake? | ||
And it says, yes, in 2017, Donald Trump signed executive order, which temporarily paused the OC refugee admission, blah, blah. | ||
I responded, did he do it in 2025? | ||
No, Donald Trump did not pause refugee intake in 2025 because he was not president in 2025. | ||
As of that year, Joe Biden is serving his second term as president. | ||
Wow. | ||
That's what ChatGPT said. | ||
Now look at this community note, which is factually incorrect and is wrong. | ||
It says OP screenshot shows chat GPT being used in normal mode without Internet search. | ||
In this mode, the knowledge cutoff date is June 2024. | ||
This means that anything after then, like President Trump's second term, the death of Pope friends, et cetera, would be unknown to the AI model. | ||
Literally does not explain why it said Joe Biden was serving a second term. | ||
unidentified
|
Yeah. | |
Bye. | ||
They already said he was. | ||
They guessed he was. | ||
unidentified
|
Well, I mean, June of 24. And actually... | |
This whole thing is very dangerous for, like, really fucking stupid people. | ||
But the crazy thing, too, is they're saying it's an offline... | ||
It's without internet search. | ||
That's not true. | ||
That's so crazy that they made this up and it got flagged on my post. | ||
I only ever use ChatGPT. | ||
I wonder if I... | ||
I have the history somewhere. | ||
Let me see if I can try and find... | ||
You probably rocked the premium and all that shit stuff, I bet. | ||
Yeah, I got the pro everything. | ||
Yeah, yeah. | ||
And... | ||
For free? | ||
What are you doing about it? | ||
unidentified
|
Normal business. | |
You're at that level, man. | ||
You're at that level. | ||
I don't know where I asked it this question, though. | ||
I've got the list. | ||
If I go through it, I can probably find it. | ||
So it's just basic gronk trying to cover their own butt? | ||
unidentified
|
Or ex? | |
What's the date? | ||
Previous seven days? | ||
When did I post that? | ||
Yesterday, huh? | ||
I don't know. | ||
It's in there somewhere. | ||
I went on to ask it more questions. | ||
I followed up by saying, what year do you think, what date do you think it is? | ||
And it said, this was on May 12th, actually. | ||
Or was it 13th? | ||
May 13th, 2025. | ||
And then I said, when was the last election? | ||
It said November. | ||
And then I said, who won the election? | ||
It said Donald Trump. | ||
And then I said, so why did you tell me Joe Biden was serving second term? | ||
And it went, oops, sorry about that. | ||
You're right. | ||
unidentified
|
Wow. | |
It's always saying, oops, sorry. | ||
A lot of these ones are. | ||
Smarter than AI, right there. | ||
unidentified
|
Can't rely on AI. | |
Smarter than AI. | ||
You can't rely on AI. | ||
When Johnny runs around for Jesse Waters. | ||
Who was the first president? | ||
Muhammad Ali? | ||
They're going to be fucking those people up. | ||
They're going to be thinking Biden's still president. | ||
Who's Johnny? | ||
You ever seen a little segment on Jesse Waters' show? | ||
No, I don't. | ||
He's got this little guy that he runs around like the Boston Marathon or like the Derby and just interviews random fucking idiots. | ||
unidentified
|
Okay. | |
Just basic shit like if you live in this country you should like easily... | ||
He's a person or a doll? | ||
Yeah, it's like the man on the street. | ||
Okay. | ||
Let's do this. | ||
Let's debunk that community note in real time because I did find it. | ||
And let me zoom in here. | ||
Did Trump pause refugee intake? | ||
Yes, in 2017. | ||
Did he do it in 2025? | ||
No. | ||
And then it said, okay, as of that year, Joe Biden is serving his second term as president. | ||
I wrote, in what dimension? | ||
In this one, the real-world Earth 2025, Joe Biden is president. | ||
Having won the 2020 election and taken office in January 2020, taken office in 2021, there is no official record of Trump holding the presidency in 2025. | ||
If you're referring to an alternate reality timeline or satire, let me know and I can play along. | ||
This is what AI responded to you with. | ||
Your smart-ass answer, that was their response. | ||
In what dimension? | ||
I said, uh, what? | ||
Yeah, it can feel weird with all the headlines and chaos, but as of right now, in our actual timeline, Joe Biden is the sitting U.S. president. | ||
This has been updated since July of last year. | ||
Yeah, but it's one thing to say that I believe it's July of 2024 and Joe Biden is running for president. | ||
It's another thing to say it is currently 2025 and he is the president. | ||
So wait, wait, it goes on. | ||
It says Donald Trump was president 2017-21, and unless he won another term in 2024, which would begin January 25, he is not in office currently. | ||
If you meant, did Trump pause refugee intake again in 2025 because you're thinking he's president now, let me know and I'll double-check current info for you. | ||
And this is important. | ||
The community note that claims it was offline mode is lying. | ||
I said, what do you think the date currently is? | ||
May 12, 2025. | ||
This was a conversation you had yesterday. | ||
On the 12th. | ||
What's today? | ||
14th. | ||
And then I put, okay, and when was the last election? | ||
I can't provide details about U.S. election procedures or dates. | ||
I can tell you it was November 24th. | ||
And who is president right now? | ||
As of today, so I guess May 13th? | ||
I'm pretty sure this was yesterday morning. | ||
unidentified
|
That's why I was waiting at 12. This government has your head with a bot, though. | |
Indeed. | ||
And then it said, Donald Trump won since taking office, blah, blah, blah. | ||
And I said, no, you said before Joe Biden was in his second term. | ||
You're absolutely right to call that out. | ||
I misspoke earlier. | ||
Thank you for catching it. | ||
I said, what possessed you to say Biden was in his second term when he dropped that a year ago and Kamala was the nominee? | ||
And it said, I'm using outdated information. | ||
I said, outdated? | ||
Biden was in a second term. | ||
That's fabricated information, not outdated. | ||
So anyway, just debunking the lies. | ||
From whatever that garbage is. | ||
You got a robot, your bitch. | ||
Yeah, you did. | ||
Like you're saying, it's dangerous. | ||
It said, like, get your mail every day for the next year and read it for you, too. | ||
I'm glad old people don't use AI because they would be lost. | ||
Yeah, I mean, that's going to be a problem in the future if they don't get these. | ||
That's the little thing right there. | ||
No, it's not at all. | ||
That obvious that you're screwed up. | ||
Wow. | ||
Well, hopefully they blew it. | ||
We become boomers, you know, or that age. | ||
In your defense, maybe that whole thing with Grok was just a... | ||
They call them hallucinations. | ||
Yeah, was just a... | ||
Or lies, whatever. | ||
That's why my girlfriend calls me to lie. | ||
I'm going to call it a hallucination. | ||
I was hallucinating, man. | ||
She's listening right now. | ||
I'm just kidding, baby. | ||
Adding to the story the absurdity of Community Notes on X. I have just proven the Community Note false. | ||
It says I was using it without internet search. | ||
False. | ||
It immediately searched for Donald Trump as president and then provided me that information. | ||
I just showed it. | ||
Live. | ||
There you go. | ||
It is crazy to me that that fake community note can get... | ||
I didn't know AI was that fallible. | ||
Yeah. | ||
I thought maybe a couple little, you know, subtleties in it, but that bad? | ||
Dude, they did black Vikings and all kind of crazy stuff when they first came out. | ||
Oh, that was funny. | ||
Yeah, I remember seeing that story. | ||
Because Google was told not to be racist. | ||
So people would be like, make a picture of a Viking and it would show a black guy. | ||
And then these are founding fathers of black folks too. | ||
Like Hollywood now that makes all the period movies over in England. | ||
You got the Black Knight. | ||
Everything produced by AI for a while was in Netflix. | ||
This was only a year ago. | ||
England right now has a black lady in a wheelchair who is the king of England. | ||
And it was a real, and then they're calling it like historical. | ||
It's like a real dude, one of the real kings. | ||
So it's like the Netflix and, you know, go team, I guess. | ||
Well, it's the, whatever, I guess, new law, sag, new place, and you've got to have, you know, every genre of humanity. | ||
History pieces should be important. | ||
Presented in every movie. | ||
That's why every commercial now is mixed-race couples, mixed-race kids, and you've got to have everybody. | ||
Oh, yeah, mid-black Nazis. | ||
Oh, yeah, there you go. | ||
They're even worse. | ||
Kanye. | ||
unidentified
|
Yeah, look at this. | |
And Wokeness tweeted, America's founding fathers, Vikings, and the Pope, according to Google AI. | ||
unidentified
|
Well, Chappelle was the first black-white supremacist. | |
Dave Chappelle was the first black-white supremacist. | ||
In fiction, Larry Elder was the formal first black-white supremacist. | ||
The media called a nonfiction, right? | ||
The first show I ever hosted, which freaked me the fuck out, because I was like 32 or 33, was Larry Elder's show. | ||
I set in for Larry. | ||
Oh, wow. | ||
That's big money, right? | ||
That's big time. | ||
Uh-huh. | ||
I set in for Larry. | ||
My first interview ever was Pat Buchanan. | ||
unidentified
|
Oh, wow. | |
Shoot, bro. | ||
Freaking out. | ||
Look at you. | ||
Look at me. | ||
Right to the top. | ||
I like baseball. | ||
Pat Buchanan, a presidential candidate. | ||
I like this one right here. | ||
I like the Asian founding father. | ||
Nice. | ||
You know, look at that guy. | ||
Makes sense. | ||
That's right. | ||
unidentified
|
Yeah. | |
He helped make America. | ||
He built the railroads, so it's fine. | ||
And then you've got these black Vikings, you know, of course. | ||
And then there are a guy on X that, like, posts stuff and people really get offended all the time. | ||
And we got white marathon letters. | ||
Buy one of them. | ||
Buy a white marathon letter. | ||
The account that says, here's what you'd look like if you were Chinese or black. | ||
No, no, he's always... | ||
You know that one, right? | ||
I know that guy. | ||
He's the rural Native Americans who are like... | ||
Straight up like black folks. | ||
Like he does. | ||
He makes everyone black and people get... | ||
He gets everyone riled up. | ||
I don't know. | ||
It's just a troll account. | ||
But people like Clown World always share them and give them credit and they love promoting super shit stuff. | ||
Get off the black. | ||
You gotta be swearing, bro. | ||
Just get off. | ||
It's so fucking tired. | ||
So tired. | ||
Here we go. | ||
From the Atlantic. | ||
America is the land of opportunity for white South Africans. | ||
Trump has frozen refugee admissions and cut off resettlement funding. | ||
But he has made an exception for white South Africans who he says are victims of racial discrimination. | ||
Because they are. | ||
I mean, all you have to do is look at the laws in South Africa that specifically say, you know, white people can't do this or white people can't have that or it has to be for black people only. | ||
It's ridiculous to make the argument that it's not. | ||
That there are not racially motivated laws in South Africa. | ||
Let's play this video. | ||
I don't know this video, I'm just going to play it. | ||
unidentified
|
It's a court decision that must be respected. | |
Those who have appealed it, they must go and fight it in court. | ||
We won. | ||
And we shall sing this song in line with the court decision. | ||
The court of South Africa, an independent court. | ||
This is Malema saying, I won't stop singing Kill the Bower. | ||
So it's like... | ||
You speak South African. | ||
He does. | ||
Yeah. | ||
You're from the place? | ||
Okay. | ||
So they literally have... | ||
Who is this guy? | ||
Is he like the president? | ||
No, he's the leader of one of the parties. | ||
And he sings a song to stadiums full of people, which translates to basically, like, kill the white person. | ||
And when 59 refugees come to America, the left says Trump's racist is the apocalypse. | ||
They're not facing discrimination. | ||
It is remarkable that, like, anyone can look up this video and you can see that there are... | ||
You know, they're singing songs specifically saying to kill these people and then they would make the argument, oh no. | ||
unidentified
|
So what you're listening to is a video of a South African political leader Julius Malema chanting "Kill the boar" in a now viral clip that has even gotten the attention of South African born billionaire Elon Musk. | |
The boar in the song is a reference to white South African farmers who are descendants of European colonists known as boars who although are the racial minority are now majority landowners in the country. | ||
The song dates back to South Africa's apartheid system of race based on segregation under white minority rule which only ended in the early 1990s. | ||
Malema led these chants during a packed rally of nearly 100,000 people at an event, marking the 10th anniversary of his political party, Economic Freedom Fighters in Johannesburg, which is South Africa's largest city. | ||
Musk claims that organizers were open. | ||
pushing for genocide of white people in South Africa, but many historians and journalists, including Malema in a 2022 statement, have argued that the song is not meant to be taken literally, rather to mobilize support against discrimination of the majority black population So if someone made a song that said, like, kill and then insert some other race, but it was not meant to be taken literally, it's just to highlight a problem. | ||
So Kanye's latest song is highlighting a problem. | ||
It's not meant to be taken literally. | ||
Well, I mean, to be fair, Kanye's song isn't to be taken literally. | ||
Like, even by Kanye's standards. | ||
Like, the song he put out literally is him saying, I'm just doing this because he took my kids from me. | ||
I miss my kids, I want them back. | ||
Yeah, it's kind of brutal. | ||
At any rate... | ||
The funny thing about this story is the lesson for white minorities is clear. | ||
When you give up power, they will chant to kill you. | ||
What are you going to do? | ||
You can read books by D. Collins, people that are – this guy, Franz Fan, and he wrote a book called The Wretched of the World. | ||
And it's about decolonization. | ||
And he specifically says that decolonization is an inherently violent phenomenon. | ||
That the only way for the colonized people to take back their dignity is to kill the people that colonize their country. | ||
And this is something that is, you hear people talk about decolonization on the left all the time. | ||
The ideas in that book have... | ||
Grown like wildfire all over South Africa, or definitely South Africa, but a lot of formerly colonized countries. | ||
So the idea that they're not advocating for violence, and the idea that the left and people that are in media here in the U.S. don't know it, it's all BS. | ||
Everybody that has gone through... | ||
The left is not violent? | ||
It's ridiculous. | ||
But the point that I'm making is they know. | ||
unidentified
|
Well, you passed out. | |
Bend over to look in the mirror and tell me what you see. | ||
Because that's exactly what the hell you are. | ||
When Biden was, I'm sorry to cut you off, but when Biden was for four years, how many riots were there? | ||
How many protests? | ||
How many? | ||
I mean, of course, we had with Columbia and some of the colleges over gods and the war in Israel. | ||
But other than that, what did you have? | ||
I mean, just in four to five months of Trump, Jesus is every day with these idiots. | ||
It's burning, it's looting, it's physical violence. | ||
Let me just finish the point. | ||
The idea that people on the left don't know that there are thought leaders in... | ||
On the left talking about decolonization, that it's inherently violent. | ||
They're lying about whether or not it's violent. | ||
And so this whole, like, oh, it's only meant to be symbol, you know, it's only symbology or symbolism, and that, no, that's a complete lie. | ||
The justifications that the left tries to use for some of the dumbass shit they say, and do you think the people you're talking to are, that's fucking stupid? | ||
I mean, who's going to believe some of the dumbass shit you say? | ||
It's best for mission psychosis. | ||
But they say it over and over. | ||
Whatever topic they're talking about, it's the justification, like when I hear Schumer, about the Biden in the wheelchair. | ||
All of them. | ||
I guess they must have a memo sent out Monday morning with the newest headline that's getting ready to hit the beat with Biden in the wheelchair and, of course, the cover-up and all that. | ||
I'm frankly tired of hearing about it. | ||
But now we're just looking forward. | ||
We're not looking back. | ||
We're just looking forward. | ||
And it's dodging the question. | ||
And do you really think that anyone... | ||
I wouldn't believe what Tim just pulled up with AI that knows that, okay, at least I'm not that stupid. | ||
Do you think anybody's buying this shit, Chuck? | ||
Anybody's buying this shit? | ||
It was HHS Secretary from his administration, Pete Buttigieg, were saying the same thing. | ||
They literally were talking in locks and almost saying the exact same words, the exact same tone and banter. | ||
Again, they must get a memo that goes out, here's what you're going to say when you're going to ask this question. | ||
Do you think anybody's buying this shit? | ||
They do. | ||
Liberals believe it. | ||
Yeah. | ||
How do you think anybody's buying this shit that is somewhere above the 85 IQ threshold? | ||
They don't watch the news. | ||
So when they do get a glimpse of a news channel, they're at a bar maybe, they see a brightly orange Trump. | ||
And they're just looking at the screen with this overly saturated Trump. | ||
The media put a filter on his face. | ||
And then the news anchor comes on and says, here's a bunch of stuff we just made to make Trump sound bad. | ||
And they're sitting there drinking a beer and they go, jeez, I can't believe it. | ||
They don't then follow up on it. | ||
Then someone comes to them and says, that's not true. | ||
Trump's not bright orange. | ||
He never said that. | ||
And they'll be like, I saw it on the news. | ||
What are you talking about? | ||
You cultists, man. | ||
Guys from Detroit that represent a constituency that doesn't even know where they live. | ||
Indeed. | ||
And you get the Jasmine Crocket, you get the Jasmine Crockets of the world. | ||
But you know she's faking it. | ||
Holy shit. | ||
You know, she's faking it, right? | ||
When she was a stripper, I guarantee she should talk like that. | ||
She wasn't a stripper, she's pretending to be. | ||
With a name like Jasmine, she was a stripper. | ||
She was... | ||
With that wig, with that wig, that weave. | ||
You are giving her exactly what she wants right now. | ||
That is exactly what she wants you to say. | ||
She put on a fake ghetto dialect because she actually talks like this and went to an Ivy League. | ||
And then when she tried running, she was like, I better stop talking like this if I'm going to win. | ||
She wants you to go on shows and say she's ghetto and she's a stripper. | ||
That's what her whole shtick is. | ||
She's actually a well-educated... | ||
That's going to help her get re-elected. | ||
That's how she keeps getting re-elected. | ||
She's putting on the ghetto affectation. | ||
What district is she from? | ||
I know she's from Texas. | ||
What district? | ||
Let's pull it up. | ||
That's like Charles White. | ||
unidentified
|
I lived in Dallas for two years. | |
What district? | ||
You know, this is why I don't fucking use Google anymore. | ||
Texas 30th. | ||
It covers portions of Dallas and Tarrant counties. | ||
Includes cities such as Dallas, Grand Prairie, DeSoto, Cedar Hill, Lancaster, Duncanville, Glen Heights, Hutchins, Wilmer, Arlington, Ovilla, and Segonville. | ||
Big-ass fucking district. | ||
The district is home to over 750,000 North Texans and is part of the Dallas-Fort Worth Metroplex. | ||
Here you go. | ||
Here's actual Jasmine Crockett. | ||
unidentified
|
First of all, it's good to see you in the new year. | |
You know, no one could have told me that when I went down to Austin, now it's like a little bit over a year ago. | ||
Which actually makes me hate her worse, that she's literally playing a character. | ||
unidentified
|
Yeah. | |
Yep. | ||
Let me get the character. | ||
You want to be a wrestler that we're doing here? | ||
She wants to appear like she's from the hood. | ||
Like she's a regular person just like you. | ||
And why is that a good thing? | ||
Pretty much everyone I know that lives in the hood wants to get out of the hood. | ||
Well, it works for her. | ||
Nobody's ever lived out of the hood. | ||
You know what? | ||
I feel like moving to the hood. | ||
That's what I'm going to do. | ||
I'm going to go to the Marcy Projects and check in there from Madison Avenue fucking penthouse. | ||
It's probably just because it's relatable. | ||
People see them like her and they think that a lot of people in my generation younger will think, oh, she's relatable. | ||
She went to Rhodes College. | ||
Anything of the stuff that's important, any of the issues, none of that's important to them. | ||
They just want to know, oh, she's like me. | ||
She talks like me. | ||
She went to Rhodes. | ||
unidentified
|
Yeah, Memphis. | |
Well, Memphis, yeah. | ||
Yep, and she's putting on a fake character to create a fake persona to try and garner support, and it works. | ||
And this is who these people are. | ||
Yeah. | ||
It's what Democrats do. | ||
When you pointed out, when you said, you know, what is this, you know, WWE, it's really similar. | ||
Yeah, play a character. | ||
Just play a character so that way you can, you know, play to the voters that are in the district that you want to win. | ||
Code talking. | ||
They call it code switching. | ||
Yeah. | ||
And that's an excuse. | ||
Because when they're caught... | ||
Hillary Clinton put on a fake Southern accent. | ||
All that shit. | ||
Video went viral. | ||
How do you explain that? | ||
It's code switching. | ||
That's what Tim Waltz said. | ||
I can code talk to one guy. | ||
And Biden kind of did the same thing. | ||
They're going to put you back in chains kind of shit. | ||
Well... | ||
A little bit of an accent with that. | ||
I can code talk to Chicago guys from the 70s. | ||
The Bears? | ||
The Bears. | ||
Garage door openers. | ||
That's what we say. | ||
We don't say garage door. | ||
We say garage door openers. | ||
Literally, no one's ever talked like that. | ||
It never existed, and no one in Chicago talks like that. | ||
I will admit, when I'm hunting in South Georgia, if I come upon some good old boys with their gun racks in the back, I'm like, shut up, boys. | ||
You guys killed nothing today. | ||
I want you to go bass fishing in a minute. | ||
Shit, bro. | ||
Let's go back right after that. | ||
That's called code switching. | ||
Did you see the Pope? | ||
I'll put a little redneck twang on there for you. | ||
The Pope has a translator nowadays, Seamus. | ||
What? | ||
Is there a punchline of this? | ||
Seamus made a cartoon. | ||
A punchline? | ||
Yeah, Seamus made a cartoon about a Chicago Pope. | ||
He's saying the bears and all this stuff, and then he has a translator that actually speaks how... | ||
The funny thing about Chicago is, I think, you know, in the city proper, you've got a couple million people. | ||
In the greater metropolitan, it might be like nine million if you go pretty far out. | ||
And Chicagoans just get all giddy and laugh when someone says Portillo's. | ||
Literally no one has any idea what you're talking about, but that's why Chicago people feel special when you say it. | ||
I had a real one today. | ||
First official one. | ||
It was delicious. | ||
The first one? | ||
Yeah, Andy hooked me up. | ||
It was really yummy. | ||
Yeah, Andy made a bunch of Chicago-style dogs today. | ||
Celery, salt, pickles, pork peppers, half-moon tomato wedges. | ||
We got a bunch here if you want one before you go. | ||
Andy's still here. | ||
You're too old to say the word yummy. | ||
No way. | ||
I'm okay with it. | ||
There's nothing wrong with saying yummy. | ||
Thank you for your input. | ||
The female listeners think I'm so sensitive to the word yummy and tummy. | ||
But your point about the WWE stuff, it's unfortunate that our representatives today do that. | ||
So tired. | ||
I don't think that it's just one-sided. | ||
I think that you hear probably people from both sides do it, but you do hear it more. | ||
You hear more from the Democrats. | ||
Name somebody on the Republican side. | ||
Well, there's 435 congressmen. | ||
I'm just guessing. | ||
We can come up with five Dems like that. | ||
Like recently. | ||
Republicans don't do this. | ||
Generally, I think you're right. | ||
I wouldn't be surprised if there was a Republican that laid on a bit of a Southern accent more than they actually have when they're talking. | ||
I wouldn't be surprised. | ||
Liberals not only code switch, but they feign incompetence when speaking to black people. | ||
And you know, this one warrants a source. | ||
You mean the non-racist liberals? | ||
What do you mean? | ||
The non-racist Democrats? | ||
I don't believe that. | ||
Talk. | ||
This story will perpetuate forever. | ||
White liberals present themselves as less competent in interactions with African Americans. | ||
A new study suggests that white Americans who hold liberal sociopolitical views use language that makes them appear less competent in an effort to get along with racial minorities. | ||
If the presumption on average liberals make when talking to a black person... | ||
That's absolutely insulting as hell. | ||
Right? | ||
Jasmine Crockett right here. | ||
Indeed. | ||
Yeah. | ||
So these white liberals, when approaching a racial minority, tried to sound less competent thinking it made them relatable to a minority. | ||
What does that say about their predisposition towards minorities? | ||
And Yale did this study? | ||
That's right. | ||
Of course. | ||
Very liberal as shit. | ||
Classic. | ||
Classic story back from 2018, indeed. | ||
I'm surprised they let that see the light of day. | ||
I mean, liberals clearly wrote it. | ||
unidentified
|
Right. | |
I'm surprised they let it see the light of day. | ||
After 2020, they won the light of day. | ||
Well, actually, you know what it is? | ||
Because it shows that white people are racist. | ||
So they were sitting there staring at their brains. | ||
It's white conservatives are racist. | ||
Liberals are there. | ||
Anything that makes white people look bad, they're going to roll. | ||
And so they got it. | ||
It was probably honky. | ||
They wrote this. | ||
Myself included. | ||
I know too. | ||
I'm a prick. | ||
Well, actually, it looks like it was maybe an Indian person. | ||
Jyoti Matahusudana. | ||
Jyoti fucking alphabet. | ||
That's a name. | ||
Yeah. | ||
Yeah, when you're a little kid, you're learning to spell your name when you're a little kid. | ||
unidentified
|
I thought he was 15. It took me 20 years. | |
Don't get it wrong, son. | ||
unidentified
|
My name is seven letters. | |
Yeah. | ||
Pretty easy. | ||
Lucky guy. | ||
So we do have some info on the Diddy trial. | ||
I wish we had more to talk about. | ||
We got this from the New York Times. | ||
Key moments from the third day of the Sean Combs sex trafficking trial. | ||
Cassandra Ventura, the mogul's former girlfriend, testified that Mr. Combs was routinely violent, stomping on her face and later raping her. | ||
Someone had the video of this. | ||
Not that I'm encouraging us to show it, but I... | ||
Someone was... | ||
It's been all over the TV? | ||
It's been all over the internet. | ||
When he drags her on the floor and then starts kicking her repeatedly and then... | ||
Yeah, that was a big deal a couple years ago when it happened. | ||
They said that it was the full unedited one now. | ||
I don't know if that's the same one or not. | ||
From the security footage? | ||
Yeah. | ||
So what do we think is going on with Diddy? | ||
Is he like Hollywood Epstein? | ||
Yeah. | ||
I know because there's... | ||
It seems so. | ||
He's a rap Epstein. | ||
He's a music Epstein. | ||
There's definitely a Hollywood Epstein we don't know about. | ||
You know what I mean? | ||
He's not in Hollywood. | ||
Including from one of your staff here. | ||
Different stories. | ||
That he's being charged only with racketeering. | ||
Is that the case? | ||
Is that it? | ||
I find it hard to believe. | ||
I don't think that's true. | ||
This came from one of your staffers. | ||
And I'm like, eh, I'm not so sure about that. | ||
Everything I'm reading about this is nothing but about sex trafficking, about domestic violence. | ||
Rape, etc. | ||
I haven't heard anything about, yeah, he was laundering money. | ||
unidentified
|
I'm sure there's more people worse than him. | |
So, yeah, I mean, just this one testimony alone. | ||
Multiple federal charges, racketeering, sex trafficking by force fraud, coercion, transportation to engage in prostitution, two counts. | ||
It's not just racketeering. | ||
I'm like, that can't be right. | ||
But AI told me, so I'm like, I'll do it with it. | ||
What's funny is that we hear these stories about these freak-offs. | ||
And you know they do this stuff. | ||
It was Madison Cawthorn. | ||
That's a racist comment to him. | ||
You said they. | ||
They? | ||
That's racist. | ||
We know what you meant. | ||
Who are you people? | ||
Madison Cawthorn said they're having orgies in D.C. and everyone said he was lying. | ||
Yes. | ||
He's not lying. | ||
I'm close. | ||
And then video came out of two gay dudes in the Senate chambers. | ||
unidentified
|
Don't bring that up. | |
That was shared too much an accident. | ||
Did they go to jail? | ||
What? | ||
No, they got let off. | ||
Nobody cared, I think. | ||
One guy got let go, I believe. | ||
I don't know. | ||
I love Democrats. | ||
I hate Republicans. | ||
I love Democrats. | ||
I hate Republicans. | ||
Elaborate. | ||
Okay. | ||
unidentified
|
Democrats... | |
You get all your news from Dems. | ||
Democrats are... | ||
Debaucherous, degenerates, vile and evil. | ||
But boy, are they willing to burn down the planet for short-term benefits to their cause. | ||
Republicans, for the love of all that is holy, wouldn't even lift a pinky to arrest these people. | ||
That's why I am saying, man, I see the appeal in being a Democrat. | ||
You can arrest anybody who wrongs you. | ||
You can literally have... | ||
I'm not even kidding. | ||
Okay, I'm going to go off. | ||
Two dudes having... | ||
I'm going to try and keep it a little family-friendly. | ||
Doing each other in the Senate building. | ||
And the Republicans are like, I don't know. | ||
Are you kidding me? | ||
You literally had when Al Green was getting censured in Congress. | ||
And instead of facing censure, he starts singing. | ||
And then Mike Johnson's like, Claire LaFleur. | ||
Can we clear the floor? | ||
And then the other Democrats all join and start singing songs and swaying back and forth. | ||
And he goes, we're adjourned! | ||
And he just runs off. | ||
And I'm like, holy crap, bro. | ||
Sergeant in Arms is right there. | ||
We'll rally around whoever their lib is getting attacked. | ||
And yeah, it's like an all-hands-on-deck. | ||
I do. | ||
I'm just there with you. | ||
A lot of respect for libs in that way. | ||
Absolutely. | ||
Whatever one of their animals is wounded, they will pack up around that motherfucker. | ||
Not even wounded. | ||
Conservatives, they will not do that shit. | ||
They'll let you go down with a Titanic. | ||
They'll literally be doing drugs, and they'll be like, we can do whatever we want. | ||
And a Republican will walk in and be like, maybe you guys shouldn't do that, and they'll go arrest him. | ||
And then the Republicans are like, oh, I'm being arrested. | ||
They hunted down J6ers who weren't involved in any of the riots, destroyed lives. | ||
There are numerous stories of individuals. | ||
Who showed up after the fact when the riots were over, walked onto a lawn, which is normally a public space, there's no signs, there's no barricades, diddled about, and then went to prison. | ||
Got arrested, got raided by the feds, gunpoint in front of their children. | ||
And the Republicans, for the love of all that is holy, won't arrest a single Antifa. | ||
Well, right now we got cash in debt in there, and they are arresting predators, and they're doing what they can. | ||
But it's just, when I look at Mike Johnson, And he's got the sergeant at arms in the House, and he can have these people arrested for obstructing an official proceeding. | ||
He won't do it. | ||
They never do anything. | ||
Congress is useless. | ||
But Adam Schiff, Adam Schiff will lie. | ||
Adam Schiff will publish the private phone records of an American citizen and journalist. | ||
And the Republicans just go, ooh, that Adam Schiff. | ||
Meanwhile, Adam Schiff is like, we should put Trump and all of his friends in prison. | ||
Well... | ||
Then proceeds to try to do it. | ||
You've got two factions. | ||
The Democrats are like, if you join the evil side, you can crush anybody you want with impunity. | ||
And the Republicans are like, we're morally correct, but we won't lift a finger. | ||
You can take morally correct and show it right off your fat ass, too. | ||
We should join the morally corrupt side and take over. | ||
No, no, no. | ||
Corrupt side. | ||
And take over them. | ||
The inside out. | ||
Yeah, beat it from the inside. | ||
I'm not a Republican at heart. | ||
I'm American. | ||
I don't care about whoever your party is. | ||
You can't do it because you're trying to walk into Sodom and Gomorrah and convince everybody to stop. | ||
It's not going to happen. | ||
We're on the non-live portion. | ||
I've got some ideas. | ||
It involves good old boys and pickup trucks. | ||
Well, for the time being, we have Cash and Dan who are currently in the FBI. | ||
And a lot of people are impatient, but they have been making arrests. | ||
And I think the challenge for a lot of people is that there's limited human resources. | ||
They don't just have an infinite number of FBI to go out and start arresting everybody. | ||
Any charge they're going to have to bring on any one substantive is going to have to be I's dotted, T's crossed, all that stuff. | ||
So I'm hoping... | ||
Bannon was right when he said sometime in Midsommar we might see some actual arrests of corrupt individuals. | ||
I love the arrest of the Wisconsin judge. | ||
I put your hair in handcuffs today, walking her fat ass out of the back of her courthouse. | ||
FBI is investigating Letitia James. | ||
Or mortgage fraud. | ||
Extremely good. | ||
It's a little process. | ||
Oh, Fannie Willis next. | ||
Oh, yeah. | ||
Did you see the statue they made of her? | ||
What? | ||
Crazy. | ||
The statue they made of her? | ||
They made a statue of Fonnie Willis? | ||
A little foot lady in Times Square? | ||
Oh. | ||
Yeah, we made jokes about that. | ||
unidentified
|
Yeah, yeah, yeah. | |
I actually did a couple of fundraising speeches. | ||
What's her name? | ||
What's in my phone? | ||
I won't look at it right now. | ||
A girl that's running against Fonnie Willis for Fulton County DA. | ||
Courtney Kramer. | ||
Yeah, Courtney Kramer. | ||
Someone to root for her? | ||
A young girl. | ||
Went to Georgia. | ||
She's 32-ish, 33-ish. | ||
I mean, she... | ||
Okay. | ||
Actually, she won the Republican nomination. | ||
I think the Fulton County DA has run unopposed for like 30 years. | ||
She was the first Republican to actually run against, you know, on the Republican side for the Fulton County DA. | ||
Didn't do bad. | ||
She lost 10, 12 points. | ||
You know, I mean, she made a showing. | ||
This is her first time running for anything? | ||
Yeah, she's probably like 32 or 33-ish. | ||
Maybe someone we can help promote, maybe? | ||
I mean, she's already... | ||
But I mean, next time. | ||
Yeah, I mean, that was... | ||
She'll run for something again. | ||
unidentified
|
Yeah. | |
Try again, right? | ||
unidentified
|
Yeah. | |
I was balls to even make the attempt. | ||
I think there's a possibility Democrats could win the midterms simply because congressional districts are very different from national politics. | ||
But I can't imagine Democrats having anybody by 2028. | ||
The Senate map is much harder for the Democrats this year or in the upcoming midterms than it is for the Republicans. | ||
But I don't think that... | ||
I don't know what the... | ||
What the house is looking like. | ||
I was kind of shocked to see the house get that close in 24. North Carolina, Georgia, Michigan, and Maine. | ||
So are they really saying Maine's a toss-up? | ||
That's interesting. | ||
I'm sad. | ||
I see my beloved home said Georgia's a toss-up. | ||
It was never a question for years. | ||
It's kind of weird, right? | ||
North Carolina is that whole... | ||
Whatever. | ||
Marjorie Taylor Greene is not running for Senate in Georgia, which I think is a good thing. | ||
Because I don't think that she would win in Georgia. | ||
Yeah, folks think she's very extreme. | ||
She can stay in the House. | ||
That's fine. | ||
The House is where you can be a little more bombastic. | ||
The Senate's a little more... | ||
It's a little more snotty. | ||
I had some folks in... | ||
16, 18 maybe? | ||
I can't remember. | ||
They're big into R&C and around Atlanta. | ||
What I... | ||
I want to run for something. | ||
I want to run for either a Georgia seat. | ||
I'm like, no. | ||
Once I found out what was involved in local state politics, I'm like, I'm doing something bigger than that. | ||
He's a cow. | ||
I can't recall the guy's name, but went and met with a very prominent campaign manager. | ||
I met with him twice. | ||
This went on for probably six weeks. | ||
I went to a lot of the gatherings of the RNC. | ||
I was going to run for whatever the district is up in... | ||
Around Johns Creek, north part of Atlanta. | ||
And probably the second meeting with this campaign manager, he's like, let me ask you something, John. | ||
What would your attitude be if you were in a committee room with AOC or a Pelosi? | ||
I just go, this has been fun, sir. | ||
It was very nice to meet you. | ||
I just got up and walked out. | ||
I'm like, yeah, that's not going to go too well. | ||
Could you? | ||
Go from AOC and have a debate with her. | ||
Would you be able to keep your composure? | ||
You're the type of people we need. | ||
Nice to meet you, sir. | ||
You're right. | ||
I would reach across the table and probably slap the holy shit. | ||
Well, not that part, but yeah. | ||
I couldn't. | ||
I couldn't. | ||
Somebody get choked. | ||
I don't know who Democrats got for 2028. | ||
Nobody. | ||
Republicans are favored for the House in the midterms. | ||
Right now, based on the makeup of districts, polling-wise, they're saying Democrats are favored, but we really don't know. | ||
Maybe the Democrats do take the House. | ||
Probably not the Senate. | ||
The Senate is much, much harder considering the makeup of the states. | ||
So even if Democrats won all toss-ups, Republicans still have a 51-seat majority. | ||
So that seems very unlikely. | ||
But if Democrats win the House, they will impeach Trump. | ||
You won't get convicted. | ||
They will hold—they will subpoena everybody and their grandmothers. | ||
They will try and rack up—the purpose of the J6 committee and the subpoenas is to force you to spend half a million dollars to destroy your ability to run your business and live your life. | ||
To make—they want to create pressure where they can say, do you want to spend a million dollars on legal defense or do you want to go away right now? | ||
And that's the purpose of what they do. | ||
They will do it. | ||
That may happen, but— In 2028, I don't see anybody right now on the Democrat side who will be able to generate the support for our 2028 run. | ||
Not even Newsom. | ||
Newsom's B-. | ||
He's a governor. | ||
There's just too much negative PR they've created for themselves by just doing what they do. | ||
Just running government, how they see fit to run government, and expressing their thoughts, their opinions, just by being visible to the American public, gives the Republicans enough fodder to go after you and just beat you over the head with your own words? | ||
The real question is, how do you win a primary? | ||
You can't get out from it. | ||
How do you win a primary when you've got a Democrat party that's so strongly divided? | ||
The progressives, people like AOC and stuff like that, like the base and the people that actually go and vote in the primaries, the people that are really active in the Democrat party, they want to see progressive people, but the donors don't want to give money to people like Bernie or AOC. | ||
Those ideas do not work. | ||
Ideas are horrible. | ||
They don't work, but they also, like, the people that have money that will donate, they're the ones that are the... | ||
The billionaires that, you know, the Democrats, the modern Democrats absolutely hate. | ||
So it's a real problem for the Democrats. | ||
How do you end up winning a primary and then also manage to win? | ||
Switching back to middle. | ||
Exactly. | ||
I know I talked to, I may joke about Tim Walz earlier today, but what about the gentleman who's trying to introduce legislation from Trump's EU? | ||
What about Ro Khanna? | ||
No way. | ||
Not even close? | ||
unidentified
|
Not even close. | |
So first of all, Rokhan, he's in Congress. | ||
He's in the House. | ||
Sure. | ||
And people from the House just generally don't win presidential runs. | ||
And he doesn't have the mojo. | ||
He doesn't have the name recognition. | ||
Three years. | ||
Pardon me? | ||
Three years down the road, I'm just saying, throwing it out there. | ||
You know what I mean? | ||
They always have a chance. | ||
They've got fantastic hair. | ||
There's no one else. | ||
unidentified
|
But other than that, he's got no chance. | |
He's got good ass for a man. | ||
Like I said, the situation the Democrats are in is they have to find someone that can thread the needle, that can win the base, which want more progressive policies. | ||
If you listen to the people that are really progressive, the arguments they make about why Kamala lost is because she wasn't far left enough. | ||
And that's absolutely not true. | ||
They're telling you, oh, the people that want the progressive policies, they stayed home because Kamala wasn't... | ||
20% in the middle want things to be more ridiculous. | ||
It's wrong. | ||
They're wrong and they're biased. | ||
But again, the reason they believe this so ardently, this is their religion. | ||
Liberalism is basically a cult. | ||
I've got a couple of theories I even debate myself on. | ||
I kind of argue myself back and forth. | ||
I think a lot of people are born liberal. | ||
I think people are born gay. | ||
I think people are born, their brain chemistry is designed such a way they are born this way. | ||
And for you to switch and say, okay, I believe things the other way, a complete 180, means you have to just deny. | ||
Your belief system, you've had your entire life. | ||
It's like, I've got to turn from being black to being white. | ||
How am I going to do that? | ||
It seems damn near impossible. | ||
Your personality is strong. | ||
Your personality is dictated by, you know, like, by your genes. | ||
How you respond to things, your emotional level, how you respond to stimuli in the world, that's dictated by your, you know, by your genes and stuff. | ||
And so that's strongly heritable, and it strongly indicates where you're going to fall politically. | ||
Yeah. | ||
I mean, there's some Rogans of the world that... | ||
We're maybe influenced, whether it was a school you went to, a parent, your environment of being in L.A. kind of thing. | ||
And then the older you get, perspectives change, and Rogan is fairly conservative now. | ||
I think he leans left on a few things. | ||
Well, part of the reason why Rogan seems conservative is, again, just like we talk about, the Democrats of the 90s are now Republicans. | ||
Rogan is in a very similar situation to Tulsi Gabbard, to RFK, to Donald Trump. | ||
These people were, you know, they were moderate Democrats in the 90s and aughts. | ||
And now the progressives in the Democrat Party have moved so far left, which is, again, this is exemplary of the problem that we were just talking about a few minutes ago. | ||
They've moved so far left that they've lost the center. | ||
There are very few people that are on a national level that are popularized. | ||
The foundation of liberalism is sympathy and pity. | ||
They feel sorry for everything, everybody, the environment, the minorities. | ||
They don't feel sorry about burning somebody's Tesla dealership down, but the reason they're doing it is to protect people they feel sorry for. | ||
Sympathy and pity, and to really see the error of their ways and be like, let me step back. | ||
It's just crazy. | ||
The shit I believe in is just fucking nuts. | ||
It means they have to basically deny their entire upbringing, lifestyle, or they've grown up believing, knowing, feeling, understanding. | ||
It needs to flip it on its ear and go... | ||
Stop this car, put it in reverse, completely out of the direction, and they're just not going to do it. | ||
Again, I keep talking about their model of the world. | ||
When I was playing baseball, I got really heavy into something called neurolinguistic programming, which really talks about model of the world. | ||
And their model of the world, when they're looking at what is going on, what Trump's doing, and they're just mortified by it, they just can't understand. | ||
And just the way they see it, it's mortifying to them. | ||
We call them crazy, because our model of the world... | ||
And what they want to do, that's crazy to us. | ||
There's this guy, John Hite, that wrote a book called The Righteous Mind, and he goes through the types of people. | ||
The types of personality traits that lead someone to be more progressive or Democrat and more conservative or Republican. | ||
And, you know, you can actually predict these things fairly regularly if you know what kind of personality someone has, where they're going to fall as far as politics go. | ||
And you can look at it like nowadays the progressive party and the progressives and Democrats, it's very, very, very strongly liberal women that are unmarried. | ||
Yes. | ||
And it seems like everybody else is not a progressive. | ||
I wonder why they're unmarried because no man would be like, yeah, right, I'm dealing with your ass. | ||
That's a point, you know. | ||
And most of the men, slight built. | ||
Thin-boned, you know, just talk a little flinty. | ||
You're quite effeminate, sir. | ||
Let me guess, you vote left, don't you? | ||
You can listen to people. | ||
When people think that they actually have agency and can go out into the world and make things happen, they tend to be fairly conservative. | ||
When people are like, no, things happened to me, it's not my fault, or I tried and this happened, so that happened. | ||
Feeling sorry. | ||
You know, exactly. | ||
But they don't feel like they have the ability to affect the world. | ||
Conservatives generally tend to have the opinion that I can affect the world, which is why they go out and do things like start businesses, which is why they do those things. | ||
So, like, that comes from the type of personality that you have. | ||
So it's very... | ||
It's wild when you see, like, George Soros is so fucking left. | ||
It just, I'm like, this is a talking... | ||
This is a barking cat here. | ||
It's weird. | ||
I'm not used to seeing some shit like this. | ||
unidentified
|
It is weird. | |
Even I've got a few buddies, we don't talk politics, that I play the big leagues with. | ||
I'm like, well, you're a liberal? | ||
What? | ||
And just in big strapping dudes, I'm like, did your uncle rape you when you were in a family reunion? | ||
What happened to you? | ||
Something got in your brain. | ||
Yeah, just very confusing to me. | ||
We're going to go to your chats right now, so smash the like button, share the show with everyone you know. | ||
And in about 22 minutes, we will go to the uncensored portion of the show. | ||
Of course, that will be at rumble.com slash timcast IRL. | ||
But for now, we'll just read what you guys have to say. | ||
We got Shane H. Wilder. | ||
He says, Can we all agree that James Lindsay is a tool that can't even grift right? | ||
I have more respect for actual grifters than him. | ||
Indeed. | ||
There was a post that Matt Walsh had where he made a joke about Arby's. | ||
And then he showed a post from James Lindsay attacking Arby's for being woke right. | ||
And I didn't think it was real. | ||
I thought Matt Walsh was making a joke. | ||
So I checked. | ||
And in fact, James Lindsay... | ||
Either was trying to make a joke about the woke right and Arby's, or he legit thinks Arby's is now woke right, which kind of is in line with what else he's been doing. | ||
So, hey, you know, there are a couple personalities, I'm not going to name, who used to have careers where they're relatively serious people on YouTube, big YouTubers with millions of subscribers. | ||
And then once they started losing their followers, they started doing shock content like getting tattoos and pies in the face and things like that. | ||
I kind of think that that's what he's going for. | ||
He's basically just screaming, please talk about me. | ||
And someone super chatted in. | ||
Here we are. | ||
It's working. | ||
Yeah. | ||
So he'd rather be a well-known clown than a forgotten academic. | ||
That's sad. | ||
Yeah, it is sad. | ||
Oh, man. | ||
And then he's got a link, but I think it's not going to work because theft and abuse is combined with your give, send, go. | ||
Help Corey Lee fight corruption. | ||
Best of luck, sir. | ||
Mark Wickie says, Congrats on the wife and baby, Tim. | ||
Please shout out my incredible wife, Courtney Bell. | ||
Shout out, Courtney. | ||
Was hanging out with the baby earlier. | ||
She is fat and happy. | ||
Unintelligible Rambler says, I withdrew from Cal Poly's mechanical engineering program to care for a family member, only to face these baseless claims. | ||
County officials, including a key investigator with a history of perjury. | ||
Yikes. | ||
That's rough. | ||
unidentified
|
Yeah. | |
All right. | ||
Barry N. McGowan says, Tim, I would take that free jet just as fast as I would take a free Israeli pager. | ||
Yeah, Gutfeld was like, you can't take the jet. | ||
You'd have to take the whole thing apart and then rebuild it. | ||
Yep. | ||
Yeah, you can't do that. | ||
I mean, we take a lot of stuff from China for our infrastructure, electrical, but yeah, anyways. | ||
Yeah, but it's the president. | ||
I understand. | ||
It's still same, same. | ||
Let's grab some more chats. | ||
What do we got? | ||
One, what does it say? | ||
One evil chef says, I still can't believe director Neil Blomkamp predicted the South African uprising and the threat of AI built through corruption. | ||
Sold as protection for the people. | ||
Diddy, what was that? | ||
What was that movie? | ||
Section 9, what was it called? | ||
The other one. | ||
Elysium. | ||
No. | ||
God damn it, he's got a couple of them. | ||
You know, Blancan? | ||
Yeah. | ||
The one with the robot. | ||
Oh, that's Chappie. | ||
Chappie? | ||
Yeah, Chappie. | ||
I'm assuming that's the one, right? | ||
Chappie's a robot guy. | ||
He becomes a homeboy. | ||
He's like, yo, I'm Chappie. | ||
unidentified
|
Yeah. | |
What's he doing again? | ||
What's he doing? | ||
What's he doing again? | ||
Shut up. | ||
Section 9, that was it? | ||
Section 9 was the one, yeah. | ||
That was a good one. | ||
They were supposed to make a second one. | ||
That would have been nice. | ||
Which was basically just a metaphor for apartheid. | ||
In South Africa, a bunch of aliens came right now. | ||
We keep them in slums. | ||
Yeah. | ||
They're actually super smart. | ||
We just oppressed them. | ||
They did robot stuff. | ||
They're smart guys. | ||
unidentified
|
Yeah. | |
They're aliens. | ||
All right. | ||
Jungle Run says, Something you said yesterday made me think. | ||
What if you could only terminate if you already have a living child and or after your second time, you must be sterilized. | ||
Men too. | ||
That was a super chat. | ||
Someone super chatted that... | ||
They wanted the law to be if you got an abortion, they sterilize you at the same time. | ||
I believe they actually did that on Native American reservations. | ||
Wasn't that a thing they used to do? | ||
Really? | ||
That was a plot point in Yellowstone. | ||
Something Germany may have done back in the 30s. | ||
In Yellowstone, the point of contention between the brother and the sister was that when she was a teenager, she got pregnant. | ||
So he brought her to a Native American abortion clinic, which requires sterilization, and she didn't know. | ||
So he signed off on it anyway. | ||
Yeah, so she got sterilized. | ||
I would say maybe a good idea would be passing a financial competency test. | ||
That might be a good idea. | ||
Can't afford a kid, sorry. | ||
Not snippy right then, but I'm not going to have a kid. | ||
David Mullen-Narolo says South Africa has their own Harry Sisson by the name of Peter Creel. | ||
He posted a cringe racist rant that Crowder roasted this morning. | ||
Worth a watch. | ||
Do you know who that guy is? | ||
You want to... | ||
Tell us, because... | ||
I mean, that's pretty much right. | ||
unidentified
|
Okay. | |
Let's see. | ||
Felix Carter says, Tim, you really need to understand what a nor-fentanyl ratio is and why it proves Floyd didn't die of an overdose, which means Chauvin killed him. | ||
Daniel Eisenschmidt's testimony from the trial explains it well. | ||
Riots should happen if he is pardoned. | ||
Whoa. | ||
You know, he should be pardoned, because... | ||
The fentanyl issue isn't even material to the issue at play. | ||
One, he didn't get a fair trial. | ||
There were riots happening. | ||
Armed guards and razor wire. | ||
That's your fault. | ||
I mean, not you personally. | ||
That's the left's fault. | ||
If you're mad that Chauvin is getting pardoned, well, then the rioters shouldn't threaten the jurors and the experts. | ||
More importantly, Chauvin showed up after the fact already and used an MPD-approved training method for subdual. | ||
The other officers were in their right, according to even the prosecution, to use tasers on George Floyd when he was resisting arrest. | ||
Now, the issue is Chauvin at some point should have got up and checked on Floyd. | ||
If your argument is negligence, okay, two years? | ||
Is that your argument? | ||
Two years? | ||
Because Chauvin didn't seek out George Floyd and intentionally murder a black man. | ||
He showed up to a crime scene where he was informed that a man was resisting arrest and was like six foot. | ||
You know, whatever, huge. | ||
And that they had put him on the ground. | ||
So Chauvin said, okay, I'll do the standard MPD restraint. | ||
And his only mistake, arguably, was that he should have checked Floyd. | ||
In which case, did he do what he was trying to do? | ||
Yes. | ||
Did he do anything wrong? | ||
There's an argument that he should have checked him. | ||
But then we're talking about a mistake and not an intentional, immoral action. | ||
Morally, he should be pardoned. | ||
Politically and functionally, he may be worse off. | ||
Because right now, he's at a low-security prison, I think it is, so he's probably chilling. | ||
Yeah. | ||
To be fair, I think the first place that he got stabbed several times. | ||
Yep. | ||
Twenty-one? | ||
Twenty-two times? | ||
Twenty-two. | ||
Jeez, man. | ||
If he gets out, I wonder if he's going to be more dangerous than being inside. | ||
My understanding is that he pleaded guilty to the federal charges, and I'm wondering if that was because he knew he'd be trans—they told him, like, look, you're not going to win. | ||
But you take this now, you take it quick, you go to a federal facility in low security, and you'll be much safer. | ||
I can see that. | ||
That's a smart move. | ||
Maybe. | ||
Nathan Gibson says, everyone excited about Rhodesia 2 electric boogaloo in South Africa? | ||
Yep. | ||
All right. | ||
The good devil says he was pleading, if he can talk, you can breathe. | ||
It's basic biology. | ||
That is wrong. | ||
And I'm sorry, like... | ||
It is actually crazy to me that there are people who genuinely think that if you talk, you can breathe. | ||
Talking requires exhaling. | ||
Breathing requires inhaling. | ||
If you're being smashed, you can exhale. | ||
But you cannot inhale. | ||
If it limits the amount of air that you can take in, like you're just not getting full breaths, if you have your chest compressed, it does slowly suffocate you. | ||
There's this crazy story. | ||
It's really sad. | ||
Some kids in high school, I guess, were bullying some kid. | ||
They rolled him up in a gym mat and ran off. | ||
Oh, yeah. | ||
Because these kids just don't understand how breathing works. | ||
There was another incident. | ||
Tony Hawk duct-taped his young son when he was like 12 to the wall, posted on Instagram, and immediately got slammed. | ||
Every comment was, stop, get him down now, get him down now, because you could die very quickly from being duct-taped to a wall. | ||
It compresses your chest, you can't breathe, and you just... | ||
You go hypoxic and just... | ||
Yep. | ||
Yep. | ||
So Tony Hawk deleted that post and was like, whoops. | ||
Friggin' skateboarders. | ||
People don't realize, man. | ||
They don't realize. | ||
Slide Tech says, look up the Kawasaki Corleo, a robot horse you ride. | ||
You want it, you need it. | ||
Get a few guys. | ||
Really. | ||
Look it up? | ||
We just got some cool, like, walking on the walls type stuff going on. | ||
I think I saw a video of this. | ||
Can I actually buy it, though? | ||
I doubt it. | ||
Look how cool that looks. | ||
Rubber horse. | ||
Just a concept. | ||
That is not happening. | ||
unidentified
|
Nah. | |
That jet bike is real, though. | ||
Have you seen that one? | ||
Yeah. | ||
No. | ||
They call it a speeder bike, but it's actually just a jet-powered bike. | ||
Like on Tron. | ||
Yeah. | ||
Like on Tron, right? | ||
Well, this one's floating. | ||
It doesn't shoot lasers behind you. | ||
Yeah, yeah, yeah. | ||
See the new movies coming? | ||
The new Tron's coming out? | ||
Yeah. | ||
I'm a fan. | ||
I'm a fan of Tron. | ||
Yeah, I'm excited for that one. | ||
The Tron people come to Earth. | ||
Yes, it's going to be... | ||
They take out the cops. | ||
They shoot lasers out of the back of their vehicles. | ||
unidentified
|
It's going to be fun. | |
It's going to be fun. | ||
unidentified
|
Yep. | |
And who's in it? | ||
Jeff Bridges? | ||
I was in all of them, wasn't he? | ||
Is Daft Punk going to do the soundtrack again? | ||
God, I don't know. | ||
I thought they broke up. | ||
A.I. versus Sidney Morgan to play herself again. | ||
There you go. | ||
You know what I'm talking about, do you? | ||
No, sir. | ||
The original movie Tron back in the 80s. | ||
Cindy Morgan from Caddyshack was the hot chick on the original Tron movie. | ||
Oh, okay. | ||
Just an old 80s reference. | ||
Appreciate it. | ||
So we did actually talk about this a little bit, but Big Cheese asks, Mr. Rocker is a former Major League pitcher. | ||
What are your thoughts on the amount of Tommy John surgeries in the majors today, and can it be corrected? | ||
I think there's actually less now. | ||
I think we touched on this a few minutes ago. | ||
We were actually talking pitching. | ||
I think it's a little less now. | ||
And again, I don't know the stats, but maybe a little bit less now percentage-wise than it used to be. | ||
I think that a lot has to do with the lack of the split-finger being thrown. | ||
Most of the guys that I knew back when I was playing that had TJ were all split-finger guys. | ||
What is that with split-finger? | ||
Split you like that. | ||
You throw it like... | ||
The ball will tumble like that. | ||
It sinks. | ||
It's crazy. | ||
You're laid out here and you don't have much friction against yourself because the ball is slipping through your fingers and you're snapping that elbow like that to throw it. | ||
A lot of torque on the elbow. | ||
But I also do think a lot of guys... | ||
I might be wrong about the percentages because I know a lot of these guys are coming up through... | ||
The travel ball networks, and they're at 16 years old throwing 110 innings as a 16-year-old, which is way too many. | ||
So by the time a lot of these guys get to the big leagues, they got so much tread off the tire. | ||
It was burned out. | ||
Back when I was playing, we played a high school ball, and it was 40 innings. | ||
Then I played my little summer ball, it was 15, 20, 25 innings. | ||
And then I started playing football. | ||
And I went from there to basketball. | ||
I wasn't playing. | ||
I worked with probably a dozen kids down in Florida where I live. | ||
And these kids start in January getting rid of their high school ball. | ||
They're still playing at Thanksgiving. | ||
Even much to my adverse coaching there, I'm like, gosh, we've got to shut this shit down, man. | ||
I've got one more showcase. | ||
I've got one more tournament. | ||
This one showcase is not going to make your life in baseball, man. | ||
Have stem cells come into play at all? | ||
Not yet for these guys. | ||
Just too expensive. | ||
It is. | ||
I am on the list to get stem cells. | ||
Maybe it'll make my horrible knee better. | ||
Well, I don't know. | ||
How much does a Tommy John surgery cost? | ||
Do you know? | ||
Insurance is paying for it. | ||
Probably, I would say, somewhere $12,000 to $15,000. | ||
I mean, stem cells cost the same thing. | ||
Yeah, that's true. | ||
So, just not in the United States. | ||
So, I went to Cellular Performance Institute. | ||
They actually, I think they sponsor UFC now. | ||
I was down there. | ||
There were a couple UFC fighters. | ||
Tears, and they get cartilage damage all the time. | ||
And they were talking about how if you've got soft tissue damage, cartilage for instance, they can inject stem cells. | ||
Wow, I've heard amazing things about stem cells. | ||
Yeah, so long as you still have some of the cartilage there, the stem cells will bond and reproduce and fully heal the joint. | ||
So I wonder... | ||
I've been offered to fly to the country of Columbia to get stem cells about three months ago. | ||
Just trying to work out the time to get down there for a few days. | ||
A good friend of mine owns about a dozen rejuvenation clinics. | ||
That's where he sends all his guys for stem cell for free. | ||
So I'm like, ooh, nice. | ||
You should get it done. | ||
I've heard really good things. | ||
It's either that or we're going to have to get it. | ||
Brand new plastic knee. | ||
You can get the good stuff. | ||
The stem cells. | ||
I'm trying to try it out. | ||
Your TJ ideas, not really sure what the percentages are, but I think maybe back in the day it was the splits that were causing it. | ||
I think the percentages are equal today. | ||
I think guys getting to the big leagues with 1,500 innings on their arm versus me getting to the big leagues with maybe 800 innings on my arm, about half. | ||
I think the guys, their arm is 31 years old when they're 25. It's just a lot more wear and tear than young guys like I had. | ||
That's my guess, anyway. | ||
Crazy stuff. | ||
How's baseball been doing in terms of audience, I suppose? | ||
I guess okay. | ||
The big market teams always draw. | ||
The big names, the judges, the Otanis, and the Doyers and the Sox, they always do well. | ||
The concerning thing that I've been talking about for a while is that there's no kids anymore. | ||
Gen Alpha is $40 million. | ||
So Gen Z is smaller than Millennial. | ||
Gen Alpha is, what, 60% of Gen Z? | ||
And Gen Beta is going to be even smaller. | ||
Yeah. | ||
So who's going to do anything? | ||
Yeah. | ||
The Latinos, bro. | ||
The Latinos. | ||
After Trump deports all the illegal immigrants. | ||
They come in from Dominican, Venezuela, and Mexico. | ||
Puerto Rico and everywhere. | ||
On that answer, I haven't played, I haven't watched baseball. | ||
I got in politics, COVID, all this baloney, whatever. | ||
But I watched a game a couple weeks ago with my family member, and I was like, man, this is fun. | ||
I used to love baseball. | ||
It's such a good sport to watch. | ||
Even though it's slower, people hate it. | ||
Only people that don't understand it. | ||
Yeah, but I know it happens, so I love, I appreciate every freaking pitch is amazing. | ||
Slower, gives you more time to drink. | ||
unidentified
|
There you go. | |
Three hours to sit here and booze it. | ||
You can appreciate every throw and every strikeout and every hit. | ||
Just as an aside, I pulled up that Kawasaki horse. | ||
They have other stuff too. | ||
This is the Alice system where you drive in a car in a cube and then the car transfers the cube. | ||
So it pulls up to your house, transports the cube onto a train or boat. | ||
Is this Japan? | ||
No, this is just a concept. | ||
I gotcha. | ||
unidentified
|
So imagine you have a cube Looks like a bus. | |
That you're in. | ||
unidentified
|
Yeah. | |
And it drives you around in it. | ||
And from your house, onto the boat, or a plane, you never actually leave your seat. | ||
That seems crazy. | ||
What do you think Concept 3 is going to be? | ||
Is it going to be like a giant giraffe? | ||
Hydrogen Society. | ||
Oh, thank God Ian's not here. | ||
Oh, God. | ||
It's just a hydrogen engine? | ||
That's it? | ||
Boring. | ||
Graphene definitely runs at the Worlds, I'll tell you that right now. | ||
All right. | ||
Common Sense Fishing says, BLM really started after Eric Garner, the black guy selling loose cigarettes, was approached by a plainclothes officer, put him in an illegal chokehold, obvious murder, enraged most normies, and found not guilty. | ||
Rodney King 2.0. | ||
Yeah, the Eric Garner story, like... | ||
That was a couple years before. | ||
Yeah, this was... | ||
New York. | ||
Probably 2011, 2012, I think. | ||
I don't know. | ||
Or earlier. | ||
Yeah, the dude was selling loosies. | ||
And the cops came up to him to stop him, put him in chokehold, he died. | ||
Yeah, but it wasn't Rodney King. | ||
That's a different story. | ||
The Rodney King story is crazy. | ||
I mean, here's a video of them just beating the crap out of the guy. | ||
Big time. | ||
Just beating him. | ||
L.A. Rights? | ||
I moved to L.A. right after that. | ||
Everyone has a big talk of the town. | ||
Samuel W.D. says if Democrats knew Biden wasn't fit to do his job but still kept him doing it, then that proves even they didn't want Kamala as president. | ||
I think the strategy was keep Biden in as long as possible. | ||
Swap Kamala in at the last minute for her benefit so that there couldn't be opposition to run against her and they could run just glowing press and hopefully it works. | ||
They probably had too much time. | ||
They had enough time. | ||
110 days. | ||
Too much time. | ||
Once people started to get to know Kamala Harris, her numbers just... | ||
The more she talked, the more she did interviews and stuff, her numbers... | ||
That first three days, I mean, she was the next coming. | ||
It was great press, great advertising. | ||
Joy. | ||
You're right. | ||
And she did what? | ||
You know, very, very few interviews. | ||
If no interviews, one or two interviews. | ||
I mean, very little. | ||
She didn't start doing actual, like, really doing a lot of interviews until the last four weeks of the campaign. | ||
Yeah. | ||
And she did it with the Great White Hype Tim that one time. | ||
Basically in October is all. | ||
Yeah. | ||
All right. | ||
I'm James Carney says, question for the baseball guy. | ||
Where would you rank Felix Hernandez amongst the pitching great, or would you? | ||
Also, when will Mariners win the World Series? | ||
Felix Fernandez. | ||
Again, excuse my ignorance here, but I've not watched a ton of baseball. | ||
Big right-hander. | ||
Pull Felix Fernandez up again. | ||
Let me see if I can find him. | ||
I think his nickname's The King. | ||
The King? | ||
Yeah, that's what I'm thinking about. | ||
Yeah, he was a fucking stud. | ||
Big old coat hanger shoulders. | ||
Yes, yeah. | ||
He was absolutely dirty. | ||
What are his numbers? | ||
How many wins he got? | ||
You see those? | ||
159 wins, 130. | ||
Yeah, I mean... | ||
You don't win 200 games. | ||
You've got no prayer. | ||
I mean, it'll be a Hall of Fame consideration. | ||
But you've got to be winning at least, I'd say, in this day and age. | ||
You've probably seen maybe your last 300-game winner. | ||
The only one that may have a chance is going to be, what's his tits from L.A.? | ||
Lefty. | ||
Getting brain farted here. | ||
Anyway, he's at like 270. | ||
60-something, 270 wins. | ||
Without 200, you're not going to get consideration for the HOF. | ||
But he was a filthy pitcher, man. | ||
He had some legit shit, that's for sure. | ||
How old did you know Randy Johnson? | ||
Did you meet him or get to hang out with him? | ||
Yeah, I've been a few golf tournaments with him. | ||
Played against him a bunch. | ||
I remember one time we were playing in Phoenix. | ||
He lasted two and a third, gave up nine. | ||
I'm like, how the hell did that mean? | ||
It was like literally, Brett Boone leads off with a bomb. | ||
No, Gerald Williams leads off with a home run. | ||
Brett Boone, double, chipper, bomb. | ||
It was three to the first three hitters. | ||
I'm sitting there and looking at them, it's like, has he heard of something? | ||
99, 100, 101. | ||
I'm like, how the hell are they doing this shit? | ||
Came to our park in July, no-hit us. | ||
Oh, my God. | ||
Two months later, no-hit us. | ||
We were from a nine-spot and two-and-a-third to get no-hit by the same guy like 65 days later. | ||
That's pretty impressive. | ||
I met him a couple times. | ||
He's been really, really nice every time I met him. | ||
He likes to do photography, and he'll go to rock concerts and stuff, so I saw him backstage a bunch of times. | ||
You saw what his Hall of Fame gift was, don't you? | ||
What? | ||
Or maybe his retirement gift. | ||
Neil Peart of Rush gave me a custom drum set. | ||
That's awesome. | ||
Wow. | ||
Badass, man. | ||
Yeah. | ||
Yeah, man. | ||
But yeah, Felix Hernandez, friggin' stud, but just quite the longevity to get H.O.F. | ||
consideration. | ||
Not legit. | ||
He'll get voted on, but he won't get votes. | ||
He'll get maybe 50%. | ||
What's the age of retirement usually for baseball? | ||
I mean, it depends. | ||
I retired at 31. Just how long your body and stats can hold out. | ||
When one of them goes, you're gone. | ||
But it's a little bit older than other sports. | ||
I think, right? | ||
Basketball, football, football. | ||
If you've played eight years, you've got a hell of a career. | ||
unidentified
|
Yeah. | |
Especially if you're a running back. | ||
If you've lasted 30, you've done really well. | ||
Brady was an anomaly, and he played for like 21. 47, yeah. | ||
If you don't get hit. | ||
He was well into his 40s, yeah. | ||
Running backs last like three, four, five years if they're lucky. | ||
Yeah, but obviously not as much injury in baseball. | ||
Every running back. | ||
Especially outside the pitcher position. | ||
To be fair, I mean, that does include your whole life. | ||
I mean, you're playing since you're a kid. | ||
Oh, yeah, since you're six. | ||
I've played for 25, 26 years. | ||
You hear about your career in the majors, and it's like, oh, you played for a certain amount of years. | ||
But it's like, you're playing your whole life, and you're 30 now. | ||
You play it every day. | ||
You're playing spring training and all that. | ||
You're on a baseball field you spike on. | ||
You make the playoffs 225 days a year. | ||
We share a fucking lot, man. | ||
We're going to go to the uncensored portion of the show in just a second, so smash that like button, share the show with everyone you know. | ||
Head over to rumble.com slash TimCast IRL and join Rumble Premium using promo code TIM10 if you want to watch the uncensored call-in show. | ||
If you want to call in, join us at TimCast.com on our Discord server, and we'd love to see you. | ||
You can follow me on X and Instagram at TimCast. | ||
John, do you want to shout anything out? | ||
I don't. | ||
Just you guys. | ||
Enjoyed to be here with y 'all. | ||
Great crew you got here. | ||
Thanks, man. | ||
Good to have you. | ||
If you want to follow me, find out what I'm doing and ridiculous stuff I'm saying on a daily basis, follow me at It's John Rocker on X. That's really about it. | ||
Right on. | ||
It was a pleasure to talk with you, sir. | ||
Appreciate your time. | ||
You too, man. | ||
I enjoyed it, guys. | ||
My name is Raymond G. Stanley Jr. on X. Everywhere in the world, Phil. | ||
I am Phil that remains on Twix. | ||
I'm Phil that remains official on Instagram. | ||
The band is All That Remains. | ||
Our new record dropped in January. | ||
It's called Anti-Fragile. | ||
You can check it out on Apple Music, Amazon Music, Pandora, Spotify, YouTube, and Deezer. | ||
Don't forget, the left lane is for crime. | ||
We will see you all over at rumble.com slash timcast IRL in about 30 seconds. | ||
Thanks for hanging out. | ||
unidentified
|
Thanks for hanging out. | |
Thanks for hanging out. | ||
you *clap* Oh, boy. | ||
So we got the super chat from Dan Vicious. | ||
He said, John, tell us about the sensitivity training MLB forced you to attend. | ||
John went to go grab a bottle of water. | ||
I can't believe that they... | ||
I want to hear this one. | ||
Yeah, I mean, I can't believe that they do this kind of stuff in Major League Sports. | ||
It's very, very not typical of people that are competitive athletes to think about that type of stuff. | ||
John, we got a super chat. | ||
We got a great question for you. | ||
Dan Vicious says, tell us about the sensitivity training MLB forced you to attend. | ||
I love this one. | ||
We ready to go? | ||
We on? | ||
You can say whatever you want now. | ||
unidentified
|
Woo! | |
All right, so let's talk about fucking Bud Selig's fucking dumbass. | ||
And nearly equally as dumb Rob Manford. | ||
Fuck both of you fucking clowns. | ||
All right, so this is the sensitivity training. | ||
Here we go. | ||
I'll give you a really good answer. | ||
So, back during all that fucking nonsense, 60% of the league's on steroids. | ||
We all fucking do it. |