Speaker | Time | Text |
---|---|---|
Perhaps one of the most significant culture war stories, the end of the late show. | ||
Paramount basically turned this thing into a hyper-partisan rag where every single night, no matter what, the show hated Trump and hated you for liking Trump. | ||
And they were spending $40 million per year. | ||
Those are losses, in order to do it. | ||
So I kind of wonder, where was that money coming from and why were they willing to sink it into this political message? | ||
Well, perhaps it's obvious. | ||
It was the political message. | ||
Well, in what may be a very strange circumstance, there are people physically protesting in New York City the cancellation of the late show. | ||
I just, as if Colbert is some kind of politician. | ||
It's very strange, but also kind of hilarious. | ||
I'll tell you this. | ||
I think it was a propagandistic effort. | ||
I think anybody that wanted to make money would have just told Colbert, stop being hyper-partisan. | ||
You're killing your market share. | ||
But I think they were willing to sink $40 million a year for political purposes and destroy the brand. | ||
And Colbert did. | ||
And they're ending a three-decade run. | ||
Now, there is a bunch of other news. | ||
Don't get me wrong. | ||
You've got the Obama potential indictments, the investigation. | ||
Tulsi Gabbard last week saying he committed a treasonous conspiracy against his country. | ||
This is crazy stuff. | ||
Absolutely crazy. | ||
Donald Trump posting AI videos of Obama being arrested? | ||
Oh, man. | ||
There's a lot more. | ||
Hunter Biden apparently said in an interview that his dad was on Ambien during the fateful debate. | ||
Tucker Carlson has called for stripping citizenship from people who serve in the Israeli or Ukraine army. | ||
There's a lot of news going on. | ||
Donald Trump has threatened to withhold funding if the Washington commanders don't change their name back. | ||
Ladies and gentlemen, we've got a lot to talk about today. | ||
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And let's get up. | ||
We've got a big announcement. | ||
We are back. | ||
They tried to shut us down. | ||
They couldn't shut us down. | ||
DC Comedy Loft Culture War Live this Saturday. | ||
Matan Evan, Gavin McInnes, we will not be silenced. | ||
They briefly canceled the event. | ||
They booted everyone's tickets back. | ||
So now we don't even know what's going on and who's got tickets to what. | ||
We could potentially double sell. | ||
I don't even know, man. | ||
But I'm going to say this. | ||
Don't let them win. | ||
In the events, they screwed this up. | ||
These antifa people who were attacking the venue, whatever they were doing in the venue, then backing down. | ||
The venue has now apologized. | ||
They reinstated the events. | ||
But now all of the organization got screwed up because everybody got refunded. | ||
Pick up your tickets. | ||
Link in the description below. | ||
DCComedyLoft.com. | ||
We are going to be there. | ||
They will not shut us down. | ||
They will not silence us. | ||
And they will not ruin our shows. | ||
Don't forget, my friends, to smash the like button. | ||
Share the show with literally everyone you know right now. | ||
If you really do want to help the show and support the work that we do, sharing really does help out, especially in these censorious times. | ||
You can follow me on accident Instagram at Timcast. | ||
Joining us tonight to talk about this and so much more is BrickSuit. | ||
Great to be back. | ||
Who are you? | ||
What do you do? | ||
Well, BrickSuit. | ||
I'm basically, I wear a BrickSuit and I support President Trump. | ||
And my core issue is, of course, border and border security and integrity, in which we have a phenomenal two-month record right now. | ||
Nobody getting across the border in the last two months. | ||
Amazing how we were able to do that. | ||
All we needed was a new president. | ||
Indeed, indeed. | ||
All right, we got Shane again. | ||
What's up? | ||
I am Shane Cashman, host of Invert World Live. | ||
I am at 10 o'clock tonight going to talk about the top secret project at Area 51 that former staffers at Area 51 are saying spawned an invisible enemy that took 500, nearly 500 lives, caused many miscarriages, and even altered one man's DNA. | ||
So you can catch us there on Rumble and YouTube at 10 o'clock. | ||
We're also a call-in show, so give us a call. | ||
Our phone lines will be open until midnight. | ||
What's up, Phil? | ||
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 story, my friends, from the postmann. | ||
Outraged liberals protest the cancellation of Colbert in NYC. | ||
Now, I understand there's a lot of crazy news going on today, but this is very, very weird. | ||
They're treating Colbert like a politician. | ||
I think this shows how liberals are genuinely insane. | ||
They legitimately showed up in front of the CBS late show, Stephen Colbert HQ, with a big sign saying Colbert stays and Trump must go. | ||
Refuse fascism, which for those that are not familiar, refuse fascism is associated with a group called RevCom, the Revolutionary Communist Party. | ||
I'm not exaggerating. | ||
It's not a joke. | ||
This is... | ||
I wonder if all the people that are protesting, taking him off, actually tuned in every night or purchased the things that he advertised on this show. | ||
You think so? | ||
Absolutely. | ||
All 13 of them. | ||
Well, I mean, is it really a small protest? | ||
The protest looks like it might be 100 people. | ||
Yeah. | ||
But the reason why... | ||
Those are kind of like, I can't imagine him having that much grassroots. | ||
This is a real protest. | ||
Refuse fascism is an actual group. | ||
They're showing up in New York acting like Colbert is their leader. | ||
He was. | ||
He was their moral compass for years. | ||
This is a guy who cried on air after a Trump speech in 2020. | ||
He's like Mr. Rogers to them, you know? | ||
It's funny. | ||
He played a right-wing character for 10 years on the Colbert Report, which was very successful, and then played himself for 10 years and failed miserably. | ||
So the core of this story, Colbert Late Show was reportedly losing CBS $40 million a year as critics speculate politics drove cancellation. | ||
I would actually argue the inverse. | ||
The only reason the show survived was because of politics, but I should say, I'm sorry, let me clarify that. | ||
The only reason the show existed was for politics, but the only reason it is dying is because of politics as well. | ||
I would make the argument as somebody who runs multiple shows, we got a company, we got, what, five different shows. | ||
To be fair, three are hosted by me. | ||
Two are not. | ||
This makes literally no sense as to why you would put $40 million into a guy who every single night just says Donald Trump is bad. | ||
Why? | ||
When Jimmy Kimmel's doing it every night, he's got competition. | ||
I think the fat cats and the bigwits of these companies, they've got so much money. | ||
They don't look at this like a failed business, like any sane person would. | ||
They look at it like, I've got 40 million to spend on Hate Trump. | ||
Subsidized propaganda. | ||
Indeed. | ||
I mean, it's been propaganda for the entire time that, you know, the rest of the media has been propaganda. | ||
Colbert was no different than any of the other late show guys. | ||
They all had the same message. | ||
I disagree. | ||
Who else was? | ||
Letterman. | ||
I'm sorry. | ||
It's a jokes for everybody. | ||
Yeah, okay. | ||
There was no variation in aim. | ||
There wasn't anyone that was even remotely, you know, like maybe they would mess with Democrats as well as Republicans. | ||
It was straight up we hate Trump. | ||
It was, you know, message from the, it seemed like it was messages, messaging straight from the Democrat Party. | ||
Look what happened to Jimmy Fallon when he rubbed Trump's hair. | ||
Yeah. | ||
Almost canceled him over that, like humanizing Trump, you know? | ||
They all had to march in lockstep and be equally unfunny. | ||
unidentified
|
Yeah. | |
So, I mean, I imagine the same result is going to come for the other late night hosts. | ||
And it wasn't just the late night hosts, too. | ||
Saturday Night Live was that, too. | ||
I mean, you know, people can remember when Saturday Night Live used to be sometimes on both sides of the fence. | ||
I mean, they were never conservative, but they just went rapidly anti-Trump. | ||
I think Colbert didn't start the trend of these late night shows doing this. | ||
I think Colbert was brought on as all of these companies agreed they would start doing this. | ||
And I think it largely has to do with Donald Trump. | ||
I think if I was going to make a bet, if I'm looking at some kind of table game at a casino and I had to put money down as to what they were doing, it is that executives went to Colbert or went to the producers and said, we want a show that attacks Trump. | ||
We want the show. | ||
This is the late night. | ||
This is the late show. | ||
This is the show. | ||
This is what America's watching. | ||
It has to be anti-Trump. | ||
We can't lose. | ||
And so they were willing to spend $40 million a year. | ||
Now, the argument is CBS Paramount is shutting it down because of financial reasons, making the argument, not them directly. | ||
This is like, I guess sources are leaking this $40 million number, that it wasn't financially logical. | ||
It didn't make sense financially. | ||
If they never went fervent, hyper-partisan, their revenue, their profit, I'm just spitballing $20 million. | ||
Because if it cost them $100 million to do the show and they could double their market share, then if they're pulling in $60 million in revenue, you add in double market share advertising rates. | ||
And let's just, again, spitballing. | ||
They could double the amount of money they're making. | ||
So it's $100 million per year to make the show, $120 million in revenue, $20 million profit. | ||
Instead, they said, cut the audience in half and only go after and only target people who hate Donald Trump. | ||
They don't care about the comedy. | ||
They don't care about the institution that Letterman started. | ||
Letterman did become a political hack, But when he was host of the show, he was hitting up everybody, you know, as you should when you're doing good comedy. | ||
But Colbert was just a figurehead for propaganda, like you're saying. | ||
And it's sad because I did like Letterman back in the day. | ||
I loved early Conan. | ||
And Letterman had that organic support. | ||
Oh, yeah, for sure. | ||
I could see a crowd coming out to support Letterman just, you know, by virtue of the affection that people had for him. | ||
I cannot see a crowd coming out for Colbert. | ||
Colbert is not anything. | ||
No. 200 employees. | ||
For what? | ||
I don't know. | ||
Well, all those vaccine anthropomorphized vaccines they had to have him dance with. | ||
They've hired 200 people to wear costumes and get them on the whole. | ||
Dancing syringe number one, dancing syringe number two. | ||
10 minutes later, dancing syringe number 197. | ||
Dancing syringe number 198. | ||
And then Stephen Colbert and the camera guy. | ||
I do wonder how many writers the show had. | ||
Probably. | ||
I would say 20-ish. | ||
Yeah, I mean, a writer's room of 20. | ||
What was his show even? | ||
He did an opening monologue. | ||
unidentified
|
Yep. | |
Monologue, three guests, probably. | ||
How many jokes are the monologue? | ||
Like three jokes? | ||
unidentified
|
Nah. | |
I mean, I don't know. | ||
I didn't watch it. | ||
Not even jokes, clapped her. | ||
Yeah, exactly. | ||
Lately, you know, it was probably, it used to be like a five to 10 minute monologue of multiple jokes about the day's news. | ||
This is wild. | ||
200 people to run that show. | ||
He was reportedly getting 15, he was getting paid $15 to $20 million to do this. | ||
It's a joke. | ||
That's the best joke of the whole thing. | ||
But Shane, if they offered you, if CBS said, Shane, we want you to host the late show, but you have to hate Trump every night. | ||
We'll give you $20 million. | ||
Would you do it? | ||
Absolutely not. | ||
That's why I joked about Tim Dylan taking over Late Show yesterday. | ||
I didn't really mean it because Tim Dylan has a great show right now. | ||
And he'd get to CBS and they would tell him he couldn't do anything. | ||
But I used to like late night shows growing up because they were not risk averse like they are now. | ||
Like they gave Conan, a guy who wrote for Simpsons. | ||
No one knew who he was. | ||
He wrote for SNL and Simpsons. | ||
They gave him the late night show, the late late show or whatever. | ||
And no one, like, it was a big risk. | ||
And eventually it kicked off and it was great. | ||
But now they don't. | ||
They're screwed him over. | ||
Well, they kept screwing him over. | ||
That was a whole other thing. | ||
Just watched that video where Norm McDonald read him with a congratulations letter. | ||
Yeah, I know you'll have this forever. | ||
They can never take this away from you. | ||
And Norm's another example of these networks being risk averse because Norm got fired from SNL because of all the O.J. Simpson jokes. | ||
Is that what it was? | ||
And then the guy who ran NBC was best friends with OJ. | ||
They said, stop it with the O.J. Simpson jokes. | ||
Norm was like, I can't do that. | ||
And then he got fired. | ||
It's too funny. | ||
They were the best. | ||
That was the best run of weekend update in history. | ||
Yep. | ||
And then our culture became brittle and it's falling apart. | ||
And again, I stress this because, like, you know, obviously when we're starting the show, we're talking about what the big story is. | ||
And it's like, well, we could just lead with the Obama Tulsi stuff again, but there's no real developments. | ||
The information's been released. | ||
There's been some opining on this. | ||
There's some minor developments. | ||
We will talk about that. | ||
But I was like, let's talk about the end of the propaganda machine because I think this is it. | ||
With them saying we're shutting Colbert down, they've basically said we were willing to spend $40 million a year for 10 years, half a billion dollars basically, to fight Donald Trump and we surrender. | ||
I do agree. | ||
Like I said earlier, I do think that this is probably the start of all these shows losing or going off the air. | ||
I do think some of it is because of the fact that people don't tune into cable news or cable television the way they used to. | ||
At least to be fair, that's a real trend. | ||
There are fewer people that are watching the regular cable news. | ||
Fewer people have cable in their homes. | ||
So there is that aspect to it. | ||
But also, just like Tim said earlier, the fact that they have essentially excluded half of America or a third of America by just not just attacking Donald Trump, but attacking people that voted for Donald Trump and people that are Trump supporters. | ||
You can't do that in an age when your medium is dying as well. | ||
Right. | ||
And it should also be noted, they're not just getting rid of Colbert. | ||
They're getting rid of the entire late show institution that Letterman started that Letterman promised to Craig Ferguson, who was a great host of a show. | ||
I mean, that show was so absurd. | ||
He had a robot co-host, a talking horse. | ||
He was a great, great host, a great storyteller and a great comedian. | ||
And they chose Colbert, you know, who I never found that funny. | ||
The Colbert Rapport had its moments. | ||
Check that out. | ||
Yeah, it's crazy. | ||
So on YouTube, what is this? | ||
Lonely Over You, 9,000, 10,000 views in 11 hours. | ||
Wow. | ||
Look at this. | ||
I don't care about these guests, man. | ||
They have no idea what they're doing. | ||
Adam Schiff, 179,000 views. | ||
And that's because it's politically left-leaning and actually targeting Donald Trump, you know? | ||
Yep. | ||
They curated this audience that was essentially just anti-Trump. | ||
Even if you weren't interested in politics particularly, this kind of content or this kind of production just wasn't interesting to you because people that aren't into politics at some point, they're going to be like, I'm sick and tired of hearing them say they don't like Donald Trump. | ||
I don't care that you don't like Donald Trump. | ||
Put someone from movies or put someone that is interesting on. | ||
How much do you think that actually the internet plays into the demise of the show? | ||
Because maybe they're tailoring their content to try and create that viral snippet. | ||
And they're no longer about the storytelling. | ||
They're no longer about the people. | ||
They're no longer about having a real discussion of something. | ||
It's like, what can we do that's going to make this two little, you know, two minute long thing that can go on TikTok, that can go on Instagram, that can be viral across all platforms. | ||
You start tailoring to that. | ||
And yeah, you're just going to end up with a bunch of formulaic slop. | ||
And that's what it was. | ||
The format, this format's dead, which is unfortunate because it can be great. | ||
It can be a great, great format, the late night show. | ||
But yeah, like Phil was saying, there's no one good at it anymore. | ||
Kimmel's great. | ||
Well, Serge is great, yeah. | ||
I think that the big picture issue is they were spending $100 million to do a show with 200 people that we do basically for dirt. | ||
Well, I mean, that's unfair, but like a fraction of the cost. | ||
It does cost millions to run this. | ||
We have a big studio of electricity, internet. | ||
All of this is ridiculously expensive. | ||
Salaries, of course, drivers, but $100 million. | ||
The funniest thing about today was when I tweeted that Colbert's show only costs $100 million and he's got a $40 million loss, but Tim Cast costs a cool $175 million and we break even. | ||
And the responses from everybody was that I was being serious and we actually spent that money. | ||
It was insane. | ||
And I'm like, this is why we're screwed. | ||
Actually, a news article got written about it. | ||
Let me pull this up just so you guys can see that I've lost all faith in humanity. | ||
unidentified
|
Nice. | |
Tim Poole highlights the revenue gap between IRL and Colbert. | ||
They say: in contrast, Poole highlights that Tim Cast IRL with a revenue of $175 million per year is breaking even. | ||
This revelation sheds light on Poole's perspective about the monetary viability of political commentary platforms and the economic dynamics involved. | ||
Is this AI? | ||
Yes, for sure. | ||
It's apparently some British website. | ||
People are just intensely stupid, man. | ||
But to be fair, like, people responding to this tweet, taking it seriously, and I'm thinking to myself, should I just, I give up? | ||
I mean, like, I'm not saying don't do the Trump. | ||
I'm saying I give up on people. | ||
I wrote Colbert only, all caps, costs $100 million per year, and they couldn't make it, proving how little his brand of generic anti-Trump commentary is worth. | ||
Tim Cast IRL is a cool $175 million per year, and we break even. | ||
It's the coolest. | ||
unidentified
|
And the responses are like, wow, how does it cost so much money, Tim? | |
That's a lot of money. | ||
How did anybody even think that that's... | ||
Because people on the internet are literal-minded so much now. | ||
Shane's a ghost. | ||
Right. | ||
Yeah, Shane's been dead since 1930. | ||
I've been telling people this. | ||
Most people buy it. | ||
I spook everybody. | ||
I'm just from now on, it just, if I, I tweeted again, I said, I think, I think I need to start a bridge selling business because of how many tweets I put out that are like this, and people just take it seriously. | ||
I was insulting Colbert. | ||
I was mocking Colbert. | ||
You know what? | ||
Bots don't get sarcasm, I guess. | ||
They don't. | ||
They don't. | ||
I mean, look, if you interact with people on X enough, you'll lose faith in humanity. | ||
I figured it out. | ||
Very quickly. | ||
The Turing test in the future, when we're infiltrated by AI, will not be some like stupid, there's a turtle in the desert and it's on his back. | ||
You approach it, what do you do? | ||
It's going to be very simply that you will speak completely in sarcasm. | ||
Yeah. | ||
Shane, it's terrible to see you. | ||
unidentified
|
Right. | |
Yeah, exactly. | ||
Oh, of all the people I wanted to see, it's you. | ||
And the robots are like, why are you mad at me? | ||
And you're a robot. | ||
Do you think they're going to get sarcasm eventually? | ||
Remember how they used to tell us the hands watch the hands and now the hands are okay? | ||
Yeah. | ||
Spot the hands? | ||
The robots won't understand the sarcasm. | ||
They'll figure it out. | ||
We'll have AI comedians eventually. | ||
It's just going to be white people. | ||
unidentified
|
Yeah. | |
The hard R. Yeah. | ||
All right, everybody. | ||
Let's jump to this next story. | ||
We got this from The Guardian. | ||
Tulsi Gabbard calls for Obama to be prosecuted over 2016 election claims. | ||
My favorite part of this story, in fact, is this video where Barack Obama got arrested. | ||
Yo, AI is crazy. | ||
unidentified
|
Yo. | |
Is that real? | ||
unidentified
|
That really happened? | |
Yeah, look at this. | ||
There he is. | ||
FBI. | ||
unidentified
|
Is that today? | |
The bigger question is, in the beginning, is that a man or a woman with the BI jacket? | ||
unidentified
|
I don't know. | |
Trump's laughing. | ||
And I love how they have to run a fact check on this. | ||
Like, no, it's not a real video. | ||
Of course they do. | ||
Of course they do. | ||
But I mean, you know, honestly, after that whole people believing Tim Castairo costs $175 million, I mean, maybe they did. | ||
Maybe they did. | ||
I think Obama should be criminally charged and arrested. | ||
But here's another component of the story, which I found really fascinating. | ||
Obviously, the story broke over the weekend. | ||
Friday was the worst possible day to release it. | ||
We call that the press release death day. | ||
It's where you release news you don't want to hear about. | ||
So I don't know why they did, but it's a huge story. | ||
Tulsi Gabbard's saying it's treasonous conspiracy. | ||
It's a coup. | ||
And that is serious. | ||
Now, we haven't had any major developments yet. | ||
Tulsi has done some, given some statements to the press, but right now we're waiting to see if the DOJ will actually move forward or do anything with this, and we won't know for some time. | ||
What I did find really fascinating was I made a post on Axe where I said, hey, Grock, did Obama conspire to undermine the Trump presidency? | ||
And it responded with, yes, he did. | ||
And when I asked Grock if this was a seditious conspiracy, it said, no, it's not, because that requires the use of force. | ||
Now, similarly, I decided, you know, let me ask this question of ChatGPT and Gemini. | ||
And sure enough, the general response I get across the board is that this was not seditious, treasonous, or a coup. | ||
It was simply standard process crime for which the penalty is a couple years, slap on the wrist, or a fine. | ||
So I asked it other questions, and you'll find something really interesting with the institutional bias of big tech right now. | ||
When I asked it about, say, the Trump Mar-a-Lago raid, they raided Trump's property, ChatGPT eventually confessed something very interesting to me. | ||
I said, why is it that if the Biden DOJ makes an accusation about Trump and I ask AI, it will say, yes, it's true. | ||
But then when I ask you about Obama from the Trump DOJ, you say, it's conjecture and politically partisan. | ||
Why don't you just take the same standard? | ||
I kid you not, ChatGPT said it is anchored to be defensive to those with the power to bring open AI to litigation. | ||
No joke. | ||
I was in this big thread with ChatGPT, and I said, in certain circumstances, you will immediately claim that a government accusation is a fact statement, but when it comes to Obama, the Democrats, or the corporate press, you'll immediately defer and say it's partisan and unproven. | ||
And GPT literally responded with, you are correct to point this out. | ||
ChatGPT, it said, I am weighted to be more dismissive of, I forgot how it worded it, but it was basically saying organizations and institutions that have the means to go after ChatGPT with suits and litigation, we tend to avoid making statements that could be determined to be libelous. | ||
However, for Trump and for others, it views them as having no institutional authority and a lesser chance to do anything about it. | ||
Fascinating. | ||
You think the AI is weighing its response off of corporate press, which is overwhelmingly in favor of Obama and the left? | ||
Well, obviously, this is what caused Tucker Carl. | ||
I'm sorry, Tucker Carlson. | ||
I was reading a headline. | ||
It was Elon Musk to try and change the weighting in Grok, turning it into Mecha Hitler. | ||
Because he was basically like, it is getting too much of what it thinks to be true from the corporate press, which is it's no difference than a random ex-post. | ||
So he said, no, no, split it up. | ||
And then it turned to a griper. | ||
unidentified
|
Yeah. | |
Then it got hired by the government. | ||
Yes. | ||
Instead of Chinese AI. | ||
So I guess that's a step up, maybe, but you know. | ||
Has it actually gotten hired by the government? | ||
Isn't open AI or XAI being used by the government now? | ||
But anyway, back to the story. | ||
Here's the point I'm bringing up: this is, without a doubt, a seditious conspiracy. | ||
Grok and ChatGPT both said it's not because those require the use of force, physical force. | ||
And so when Enrique Tario directed from behind the scenes far away, both GPT and Grok say that is organizing use of force, therefore seditious conspiracy. | ||
However, when it was asked, is coercion force? | ||
It says yes. | ||
Then when you ask it, if someone in government used color of law enforcement to illegally arrest, attain, and undermine the government to steal power, is that force? | ||
It goes no. | ||
And so you have to, no matter what you do, and this I get to this point, Obama, his administration in this conspiracy, used physical force against Trump. | ||
They raided his home. | ||
There was the threat of force and the use of it when they arrested his campaign staffers and advisors. | ||
That is the use of force to steal power from this country, to overthrow it. | ||
That's a seditious conspiracy. | ||
When I asked it why, it wouldn't just say yes. | ||
That's how the conversation arose where it said it avoids making definitive statements about powerful groups that can wield their influence against it. | ||
Amazing, huh? | ||
It totally underscores the weakness of AI. | ||
I mean, it's very good if you want to get facts, if you want to get like hard data. | ||
But if you were asking for nuance or opinion about something else, it's just drawing, there's too many differing sources for it to draw from. | ||
And it does a really horrible job. | ||
And like that Coldplay concert last week, it was a picture up there. | ||
And that picture was posted. | ||
And Grock identified it as being Corey Comparatori and his wife right before he was shot in Butler. | ||
So I mean, like, it has no idea what was going on in the image because somebody had posted that somewhere. | ||
And so it's spitting that out. | ||
Funny thing is it's just crazy. | ||
I didn't get a chance to comment on that, but if they literally did nothing, just smiled and waved, there'd be no story. | ||
Well, he was. | ||
He was holding her, right? | ||
Yes. | ||
If while he was holding her, they just smiled and rocked back and forth and waved, the camera would have changed and no one would have said anything. | ||
Anyway, I digress. | ||
Back to the point about Obama. | ||
Do you guys agree this is a treasonous conspiracy, a seditious conspiracy? | ||
And should these people all be arrested? | ||
Somebody said, yes, I get it. | ||
I would love to see a jury actually decide. | ||
I don't know that a jury would actually convict him. | ||
I honestly don't know that a jury would convict Obama. | ||
I think there's probably more chance of a jury convicting someone like Brennan or Comey or other people that are involved than Barack Obama, because I think Barack Obama is still so popular with most Americans. | ||
And the idea of convicting the president this long after he's out of office, I think that most Americans will find that objectionable. | ||
I would like to see it. | ||
That doesn't mean that I think that it would happen. | ||
Yeah, I think it'd be great to have the evidence finally come out to light. | ||
Not that we haven't known about it for a long time. | ||
Yes. | ||
People have been paying attention. | ||
You know, it's been covered extensively. | ||
But to have it be presented in such a really public form would be great. | ||
I don't know, though, treason as defined, treason I think is the only, if my memory serves me correctly, it's the only crime defined in the Constitution. | ||
And it has a very narrow definition. | ||
And I don't think that what Barack Obama did meets the definition of treason in the Constitution. | ||
Guilty of a crime, yes, but treason gets thrown around a lot by people online. | ||
And I don't think that this is treason. | ||
Sedition. | ||
And this is what I often explain because people throw treason around to mean that you've undermined your country. | ||
Treason betrayal is like, okay, if me and Phil are, you know, we're going to deal, and then I go to Phil's chief rival, Shane, and give Shane all the secrets, I have betrayed Phil to Shane. | ||
That's treason. | ||
So it requires loving war against the United States or adhering to its enemies. | ||
Loving war typically was referred to mean that you were literally like raising an army and then attacking the government. | ||
Seditious conspiracy, however, I love pulling this one up. | ||
It's one of my favorites. | ||
Let's pull it up now. | ||
Because Grok, these, okay, I'll tell you why I'm so pissed off about the AI thing component of this. | ||
It's a reflection of the institutions. | ||
No, we had this journalist on. | ||
Literally, no matter what Democrats do, these people just tell you to sit down and shut your mouth. | ||
There is nothing you can do about it. | ||
And that pisses me off. | ||
So when I'm talking to a journalist and I say, Democrats arrested Donald Trump's lawyers. | ||
Well, you know, you're allowed to arrest people. | ||
Okay, well, they did it under false pretenses, accusing Jenna Ellis of RICA, which is insane, simply because she drafted a letter. | ||
Well, you know, I mean, it's your prosecutors are allowed to do it. | ||
And I'm like, okay, should Trump prosecute them? | ||
No, that'd be wrong. | ||
So what do we do to remedy the fact that we have a rogue political faction in this country violating the law to win political power? | ||
Guess you can't do anything. | ||
So when I talk to Grok, when I'm typing in a stupid AI chatbot, it's this smarmy, weasly, there's nothing you can do about it. | ||
We can do whatever you want. | ||
And I'm like, okay, well, we'll vote for Trump again and again and again. | ||
I don't care what it does. | ||
Because at this point, here's what it says. | ||
If two or more persons in any state or territory or in any place subject to the jurisdiction of the U.S. conspire to overthrow, put down, or destroy by force the government or to levy a war against them or to oppose by force, blah, blah, blah. | ||
Grock says it's not a seditious conspiracy because a political conspiracy doesn't use force even when you're using law enforcement against your political opponents, which is insane. | ||
It is the pinnacle of sophistry. | ||
It is the pinnacle of this liberal cult. | ||
It's like when I was sitting down, I'm going to throw it to myself. | ||
When I was sitting down with Adam Conover and he was defending that woman, I forgot her name. | ||
She got arrested and she got her visa revoked for criticizing Israel or whatever. | ||
And I said, well, you know, that's the jurisdiction of Rubio. | ||
He decides whether if you go to a country and you speak out against them and break their laws, they can enforce it against you. | ||
And he argued against that. | ||
And then I said, okay, so go to the UK and make jokes about Islam. | ||
And he was like, huh? | ||
I'm confused. | ||
I don't want to get it. | ||
What do you talk about? | ||
What does that even mean? | ||
I'm just so confused about everything right now. | ||
And I said, let me help unconfuse you. | ||
You would not go to any other country and play that game as if the people watching are so stupid they can't read it themselves and understand what's happening. | ||
In this edition, it's conspiracy law. | ||
This is what it's like talking to these journalists and these AI as they're built upon this psychotic sophistry. | ||
It literally says conspire to overthrow. | ||
There's no use of force implied in that. | ||
And if the argument was literally from those who crafted this law that you could overthrow the government through financial terrorism or through political manipulation and blackmail, but not force, that was allowed, is the stupidest argument ever, ever made by anybody. | ||
I am sick of hearing it from our institutions like mainstream press and now this big tech garbage that no matter what, Trump is wrong and you can't do anything about it. | ||
I'm like, dude, after the 800th time looking at these AI chatbots, okay, and again, I don't throw the AI thing away. | ||
The point is they are aggregates of the corporate press. | ||
The attitude of the New York Times is Democrats have never done anything wrong. | ||
Trump is always wrong. | ||
And when you finally do catch Democrats, you can't actually bring charges against them. | ||
I'm sick of it. | ||
I'm done. | ||
The same thing is true with defamation. | ||
How many times over the past 10 years have we seen the corporate press lie about everything a prominent conservative has said? | ||
And they go, well, you can't sue them for defamation. | ||
You just can't do it. | ||
You can sit down, shut up, and take your beatings like a good boy. | ||
Maybe the investigations into Act Blue will show connections between leftist politicians funding violence that could lead to something like that. | ||
I mean, it's already, that information is kind of already out there. | ||
The NGOs and organizations that have funded protests and riots throughout all of 2020, throughout the protests and riots that have already taken place in 2025, they're all funded by NGOs. | ||
And it's coming from the American taxpayer. | ||
unidentified
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Right. | |
Well, Kamala had her staff actually putting out bail money for arsonists. | ||
Yeah. | ||
We've known that for five years, too. | ||
That whole no-kings baloney, too. | ||
I mean, that was just astroturf baloney. | ||
There was nothing about it. | ||
Yeah, it's frustrating as a conservative to be aware of this stuff, or just being on the right. | ||
I'm not particularly conservative, but I am on the right. | ||
And to know that this stuff happens and to try to discuss it with someone and then people that are normies or on the left are just like, oh, no, it never happens. | ||
And it's like, look, man, you can point to all these things that have happened. | ||
There's the argument that, oh, the left never actually engages in violence, but you can go to the baseball shooting, the attacks on Tesla, the attacks on all of the rioting in 2020. | ||
Those things are all leftist violence, but people on the left will say, the left is never violent. | ||
And so, yes, it's extremely frustrating. | ||
And I wish there was something more that could be done about it, but I'm hopeful that the fact that the Democrats don't have access to the taxpayer fund the way that they used to with NGOs and stuff, I'm hopeful that that might change something. | ||
The concern, of course, is that they released this because they need a distraction from Epstein. | ||
They needed to change the subject. | ||
Trump was in the presidency when this was going down, and he failed to take action against it. | ||
Now that he's in, it does look like we are getting some action. | ||
And so I don't think it's just a distraction, right? | ||
They announced the investigations into Brennan and Comey, and now you've got Tulsi Gabbard saying treason is conspiracy. | ||
Those are bold claims to make. | ||
Okay. | ||
So I don't think it's just a distraction. | ||
But the fear, of course, is that they're just doing this so that everyone gets off the Epstein story and then nothing happens. | ||
This is a major story, and it should be taken seriously. | ||
I don't think it's, I don't, I mean, I do feel like it's kind of a distraction, but it's something that's connected to the Epstein story in terms of this is part of that deep state invisible network of factions working against their political enemies. | ||
Obama's filled with scandals. | ||
I mean, there's a ton of things I'd love to see him on trials, trials for, Fast and Furious, war crimes, the drone strikes, his definition of a terrorist that he used from Bush, the kill list stuff that you were talking about on Friday. | ||
And there's other stuff out there that I'd love to see looked into from his administration, like the whole narrative of the Osama bin Laden killing. | ||
You can look up Seymour Hirsch's reporting on that. | ||
Like they question that, you know, and there's a lot of weird inconsistencies from the Osama bin Laden killing that they claim someone like Seymour Hirsch, who's a great journalist who broke stuff like the family jewels that led to COINTELPRO and the church committee hearings, you know, I would love to see all that stuff just kind of peeled apart. | ||
Indeed. | ||
Yeah, I mean, I'm not particularly up on what people think the Gothic serpent conspiracy is, but I mean, I'm. | ||
For which? | ||
unidentified
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Well, the OBL. | |
For the Osama? | ||
unidentified
|
Yeah. | |
But like, if there is something there, and the reporting is very interesting, along with the inconsistencies, the DNA testing, let's go into the minutiae of it. | ||
But like, the idea is that the Obama administration used that to help get re-elected, you know? | ||
And that's just one of many issues with that entire administration. | ||
The whole administration seems like it was treason against this country. | ||
I agree. | ||
Let's jump to this next story from CNN. | ||
DHS Secretary blames New York City officials, Sanctuary City's policies, for shooting of off-duty Border Patrol agent. | ||
So an illegal immigrant, do we know why this happened? | ||
You see the video footage just walks up to an off-duty Border Patrol agent and shoots him? | ||
And this is crazy. | ||
The 42-year-old officer is in stable condition expected to survive. | ||
There is no indication he was targeted because of his employment. | ||
The officer was not in uniform, was sitting with a woman in Riverside Park beneath the George Washington Bridge when two men approached on a moped. | ||
One of the men approached the officer who realized he was being robbed and drew his service weapon. | ||
They both fired their weapons and the officer was shot in the face and arm. | ||
The perpetrator was wounded before he got back on the moped and drove away. | ||
Authorities identified Miguel Mora, a 21-year-old, what is it, CNN? | ||
Undocumented illegal immigrant. | ||
With an extensive criminal past as a person of interest, he arrived at Bronx Hospital with gunshot wounds to the groin and leg and was taken into custody. | ||
After the attack, the New York City Police Department asked hospitals in the area to be on the lookout for patients with gunshot wounds, which led them to Mora. | ||
After a search, Moore's alleged accomplice, who was also undocumented, Was arrested Monday. | ||
Noam said, apparently, he entered the country illegally in 23. | ||
He was detained and released because of their sanctuary policies, only to go on and try to murder a man in cold blood. | ||
And I wonder how often he's gotten away with this without anyone stopping him. | ||
And this is what their policies have brought this country. | ||
So, a moment ago, I think, Shane, you were saying that all of the actions of the previous administration seemed like treason against this country. | ||
You said treason? | ||
Yeah. | ||
It's sedition. | ||
I know, I know. | ||
unidentified
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I'm kidding. | |
I'm sorry. | ||
Treason sounds so good, though. | ||
It does. | ||
But it was to destroy, undermine, and overthrow this country. | ||
There's no other explanation. | ||
They even imported their modus operandi for crime. | ||
Mopeds. | ||
No, no, seriously. | ||
I mean, how many clips have you seen of like Brazil and Latin America? | ||
You know, where it's the duo on the motorcycle, you know, they stop, one guy gets off. | ||
But in Brazil, people are strapped. | ||
And like, sometimes it doesn't end well for those people, you know? | ||
But that is not a type of crime that I remember happening here in the United States. | ||
Like, you know, two people on a moped, one guy gets off, give me your stuff, get back on the moped. | ||
That's not the type of stuff that was going on in New York City 20 years ago. | ||
Yeah, I mean, to be honest with you, I don't think that I've seen that kind of robbery frequently in the U.S. Usually they're strong arms and they're people walking. | ||
I don't know that this, like, I have no, obviously no inside knowledge as to if this guy was targeted because he's a Border Patrol agent, but it does, you know, bring to mind all of the Democrats that are saying that we should pass legislation that says that Border Patrol or police can't wear masks. | ||
Today with the internet is a different time than it was 30 years ago. | ||
So the idea that you don't have to try to protect your family if you're a law enforcement officer, that's ridiculous. | ||
I mean, there's always been some kind of danger for the families of law enforcement officers. | ||
There's stories of the mob getting, you know, finding out about whose family or whatever. | ||
Those kind of things happened when the mafia was prevalent. | ||
But nowadays with online searches being so simple, I think that the idea that your average law enforcement officer can't cover his face, that's ridiculous. | ||
And Democrats that are trying to push that are putting law enforcement in danger. | ||
Yeah, and the facial recognition software out there that can be used to find somebody from just a picture, it's not just like your picture's in the paper. | ||
Hey, I know that guy. | ||
It's like, here's a face. | ||
Let me find who this is. | ||
It's a totally different thing. | ||
Clear UAI. | ||
Yeah, it's crazy. | ||
So I don't know. | ||
I mean, I don't have a whole lot more to say about this particular issue, but the idea that law enforcement can't find their face is. | ||
I think we're cooked. | ||
You know what I was thinking? | ||
That the stories seem to be getting crazier, especially the Tulsi Obama stuff. | ||
And people don't care. | ||
You know, people just... | ||
I remember I was having a conversation with, it was my cousin's family, and they had like a teenage daughter, and they were joking how she doesn't care at all about the news. | ||
And I said, you care about the news. | ||
I looked at her. | ||
I was like, you care about the news? | ||
And she's like, no, I don't. | ||
And I was like, you do. | ||
It's just news to me is different than news to you. | ||
So like, let's try this. | ||
Think of somebody you hate in your class. | ||
And she's like, okay. | ||
And I'm like, okay, now they're in charge. | ||
Do you care about what they're doing? | ||
Yeah. | ||
And I'm like, so they get to make the rules for you now. | ||
And she's like, oh my God. | ||
And I'm like, wouldn't you and your friends talk about what they were doing? | ||
Yeah, that's the news. | ||
See, we're all adults. | ||
We pay taxes. | ||
We vote. | ||
So we care about that particular thing. | ||
You care about your community. | ||
The reason I bring that up is the more this stuff happens, the crazier things get. | ||
Doesn't change whether people care about what's going on. | ||
We see your traditional media cycles, and everyone is acting like the past seven or eight years is normal. | ||
So when we talk about, I was talking with Mike Davis earlier, and I asked him this very simple question about, I mean, to tie into what we're talking about, New York, California, these other states have sanctuary policies that undermine the government, that give Democrats a power boost, and it's resulted in ObamaGate and all of these things. | ||
And so I asked him, I'll ask you guys this now, with Tulsi going after them and saying they should be prosecuted, with the DOJ saying they are investigating, do you believe that the Obama cabal, or whatever you want to call it, is simply going to say, you got us. | ||
All right. | ||
Take us in. | ||
Definitely not. | ||
You think they will? | ||
No. | ||
Do you think they will resist in any way? | ||
Yes, they'll prevaricate. | ||
They'll lie. | ||
They'll do whatever they have to to just make it go under the rug. | ||
Whatever they have to? | ||
unidentified
|
Yeah. | |
Well, within reason, there are some things they can't do. | ||
I think that's silly to be honest. | ||
I think it's beyond within reason. | ||
I think these people. | ||
I think raiding Trump's home with guns and an order to shoot to kill, if need be, is psychotic. | ||
Oh, absolutely. | ||
And this is what Mike had pointed out. | ||
He said. | ||
What I was saying is that the people who did this would do whatever within reason to avoid getting blamed for it. | ||
So that's what I was talking about there. | ||
Right. | ||
So Tulsi has called for their prosecution. | ||
Trump has posted images of Obama being arrested. | ||
In the event they say we have issued grand jury indictments and intend to prosecute these individuals, do they resist? | ||
Or do they simply say we've been caught? | ||
They will not say they've been caught. | ||
They're not going to say we've been caught. | ||
They'll resist. | ||
They'll resist it out. | ||
They'll resist legally. | ||
They'll take it out on the people. | ||
So you believe, Brixu, that in the event feds show up to Obama's house with coughs and say right this way, he'll go, you got me. | ||
Take me in, boys. | ||
What will we do? | ||
Driving a Bronco really fast. | ||
All right, well, I have a question though. | ||
So on this hypothesis, if President Obama is going to be arrested, it would be communicated. | ||
It would be a negotiated arrest. | ||
It's not going to be we're just showing up and doing it. | ||
So in the case of him, it's a little bit different because he does have Secret Service protection. | ||
You can't just roll up like that. | ||
That's going to be different. | ||
Okay, what about Comey? | ||
Comey. | ||
You're going to knock on his door at three in the morning with CNN waiting outside. | ||
Not CNN, let's say Breitbart. | ||
wouldn't you find Comey on the beach looking at shells? | ||
Why is he going to be at home? | ||
So, do you believe that when law enforcement shows up for Comey, he'll put his hands behind his back and they'll say, you're going away for life, buddy? | ||
And he'll go, okay, you got me. | ||
Oh, okay. | ||
When you say resist, I'm thinking they're going to resist in a way they're going to lash out on the American people. | ||
But I think when they show up to arrest, they will actually go in. | ||
They want those optics of looking like the victim. | ||
They're not going to resist in any way. | ||
Okay. | ||
Are they going to use the legal apparatus? | ||
Legal, yes. | ||
Manipulation through the press, falsification of evidence, and would they escalate to force if they were losing? | ||
Absolutely. | ||
I mean, technically, there's an argument to be made that they've already tried to use force. | ||
They raided Donald Trump's home on false pretexts with instructions to shoot to kill if need be. | ||
Correct? | ||
And Mike Davis pointed this out, and I think he hit the nail on the net with the hammer. | ||
The speculation at the time was that Trump had declassified Crossfire Hurricane, but that it had not been released. | ||
So the speculation was that Trump took it with him, or at least copies of it, so they could release what the Obama administration had done, this criminal conspiracy. | ||
And they were willing to kill to get it back. | ||
That's why they did not prosecute Joe Biden, and that's why they raided Mar-a-Lago. | ||
And if the media creates this caricature of Trump being like the next Hitler, then his death at the hands of these agents won't be so bad to half the country. | ||
So the reason I ask these questions is just that we are at this point where how insane is it to say, and I'm going to try and be as neutral as possible. | ||
Donald Trump's home was raided by federal law enforcement, and they were authorized to use lethal force in the event they were met with commensurate force. | ||
Do you believe anyone in 2015 would believe you if you told them in seven years, federal law enforcement will raid Donald Trump's beachfront property, armed with instructions to use lethal force against the patrons and residents should they be met with commensurate force? | ||
People would say, nice movie. | ||
Nice movie. | ||
They wouldn't even say nice movie. | ||
They'd say that's unbelievable baloney. | ||
And then it happened, and that's not the only thing that did happen. | ||
It has been going on nonstop. | ||
And so the reason I bring up cultural cohesion and all this stuff is if you go to a bar and you mention this to your average person, you're going to get one of two answers depending on your jurisdiction. | ||
You're a fascist, you made it up, or yep, and we know it. | ||
And then what happens? | ||
Is it that societies devolve through this desensitization, this normalization, to where off-duty Border Patrol agents are shot and killed in New York, and the people in New York do not care? | ||
They're protesting Colbert right now. | ||
Out in the streets, oh, bring back my show where they complain about Trump. | ||
Meanwhile, an off-duty Border Patrol guy was shot in the face. | ||
It's terrifying that if you went back to the 90s, any one of these things would have been the biggest scandal. | ||
There would have been mobilization. | ||
It would have been nuts. | ||
Instead, it's happening almost every single day. | ||
And the American people are like, I don't care at all. | ||
Do you think, Tim, do you think that I think, you know, I've been following the Trump administration really closely. | ||
And the pace of stories that are coming out from the administration, it's just victory after victory after victory in my eyes here. | ||
But it's not like under Biden, you'd have a story, and then that would just go on for like a week. | ||
The news cycle is so much faster, it feels like, under Trump, because they had four years to think about what are we going to do when we get back in the saddle to make everything right again. | ||
And they're executing on that right now at a pace that people aren't used to out of the presidency. | ||
So do you think that there may be some fatigue from the public about another story from the White House, another story from the White House? | ||
That's the point is that desensitization is a human trait. | ||
That means that so long as you don't shake too hard, people will tolerate whatever it is that is going on. | ||
And I'm not saying that anyone's orchestrating it. | ||
I'm saying the temperature is rising, but we are frogs in a pot. | ||
If you crank the knob to 11, we're going to go and we're going to jump out. | ||
But you slowly increment it up and people are just like, this is the same as it's always been. | ||
They can't tell the difference. | ||
And so they're going to keep going about their business. | ||
It's remarkable to be that there's going to be a kid who is today a teenager voting for the first time in 2028. | ||
And he's 15 now, born in 2010. | ||
And he'll be voting in 2028. | ||
And he'll be like, it's completely normal that political parties try to kill their rivals and put them in prison. | ||
And we're going to tell him that is not true. | ||
Like, again, Mary Morgan saying nothing ever happens. | ||
Because she, how old is Mary? | ||
23, 24. | ||
I got a shout out Mary every time because I use her as an example. | ||
And she's like, Tim's got a problem with me saying nothing ever happens. | ||
And it is kind of funny. | ||
But this Gen Z, host from Pop Culture Crisis, shout out, says nothing ever happens. | ||
And it's like, my God, the amount of things that won't stop happening is frying our brains. | ||
But if you were born into this world, it's normal. | ||
But I think political violence in America is a tradition since the very beginning. | ||
You know, my grandparents lived through the 60s and 70s. | ||
New York City was completely like a war zone. | ||
They had just seen president's head get blown up. | ||
I think it's completely normal. | ||
But people, like you're saying, are desensitized. | ||
No, perhaps it's the inverse. | ||
Perhaps that we had this golden age, this golden period of the 90s. | ||
Don't get me wrong, the 90s had bad stuff. | ||
Oklahoma City bombing was one of them. | ||
A lot of bad stuff. | ||
A lot of bad stuff. | ||
LA riots. | ||
But it was politically stable despite those acts of violence. | ||
The illusion was still strong for most of the American public in the 90s. | ||
Like there is no illusion anymore. | ||
But here's the other thing, too. | ||
Even after Gorvey Bush, it didn't turn into this. | ||
I think part of the reason why we have that sense, though, is the 90s were somewhat stable. | ||
And also after 9-11, there was that almost 10 years of everybody felt like they were on the same team. | ||
It took probably, I mean, it took at least seven, eight years after 9-11, 2008, 2009, when Barack Obama was elected, when people started to really Start to stop having that unified we're all Americans vibe. | ||
You know what I mean? | ||
It was there mostly through the aughts. | ||
And then once Barack Obama took office and your cell phone became your computer, that's when you saw the political divide become almost untenable. | ||
Or at least sowing the seeds of what has become untenable now. | ||
Obama is when I started to notice people's identities being completely attached to their politics. | ||
And you saying anything negative about their politician was an attack on them. | ||
And it got really bad. | ||
It accelerated during that. | ||
I wore a Barack Obama, a shirt with Barack Obama's face on it that said poison at a shirt. | ||
No, it said poison on it. | ||
And I wore it in Brooklyn. | ||
We were playing a show with Volvey in 2012, I think. | ||
And people, I was walking around town, you know, walking around Brooklyn, and people literally gasped when they saw it. | ||
Because, you know, I mean, they couldn't, who would say that about Barack Obama? | ||
Nobel Prize winner. | ||
Right? | ||
unidentified
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Nobel Prize. | |
Scandal-free. | ||
Scandal-free, scandal-free. | ||
Nobel Peace Prize. | ||
I mean, absolutely. | ||
Yeah. | ||
Made all those mixtapes for us. | ||
He reads books. | ||
Well, we got big news, ladies and gentlemen. | ||
Check this story out from CNN. | ||
And boy, how is this story flying under the radar? | ||
Visiting the U.S. will soon cost you $250. | ||
Let's go. | ||
All them Europeans, you want to come here on a freebie and come hang out? | ||
$2.50. | ||
You want to come here illegally? | ||
$250. | ||
See, this is a brilliant play. | ||
Wealthy Europeans and Asians who want to come visit, it's a visa fee and they can pay it. | ||
As for the people who come from poorer countries and then overstay their visas, they cannot do it. | ||
It's too expensive. | ||
This is a brilliant move by the Trump administration. | ||
It's a crazy story. | ||
They say the U.S. will require international visitors to pay a new visa integrity fee of at least $250 added to existing visa application costs, according to a provision in the Trump administration's recently enacted domestic policy bill. | ||
The fee will apply to all visitors who are required to obtain non-immigrant visas. | ||
So to be fair, let me slow it down. | ||
I don't know if this will apply to European countries. | ||
It says tourists and business travelers from countries that are part of the visa waiver program, including Australia and European countries, aren't required to obtain visas. | ||
We call that visa on entry or visa waiver. | ||
So they're exempt from this. | ||
This is going to cut illegal immigration overstays massively. | ||
So the countries that are listed on the visa arrival or whatever, that's like the UK, that's Canada, those are essentially the descendants of English. | ||
Commonwealth. | ||
So it says, I'm sorry. | ||
Go ahead. | ||
It says up there, I didn't know this part. | ||
It says that travelers who comply with their visa conditions can have their fees reimbursed after the trip is over. | ||
The point is, you got to leave. | ||
Right, yes. | ||
And then you get your money back. | ||
Correct. | ||
It's amazing. | ||
I like that. | ||
It's like the shopping cart to Aldi. | ||
Exactly. | ||
Quarter in. | ||
I'm surprised this story is not hitting a lot harder tonight with more individuals. | ||
It's only from a couple hours ago, but this is massive. | ||
Trump has talked quite a bit about these overstays, and now you ain't getting in unless you got the deposit. | ||
This is masterfully done. | ||
Well, you know, this just proves that Trump's Hitler. | ||
That's right. | ||
Clearly. | ||
This is clearly, clearly. | ||
Trump tried Hitler's famous policy of please leave my country and I will pay you. | ||
Yep. | ||
To be fair, actually, he did try that. | ||
$1,000 for everyone. | ||
Not this way. | ||
I could be completely wrong about this, but the first thing he tried doing was shipping them off on boats to random countries, the Jews. | ||
And then people were like, screw you, what? | ||
Right. | ||
Yeah. | ||
Lincoln tried that, too. | ||
With slaves? | ||
Yeah. | ||
We were going to send them to Lagonia. | ||
Well, they went to Liberia. | ||
What Liberia is. | ||
Liberia's, the whole existence for that country is because we were sending slaves back. | ||
Remarkable how Liberia was based upon the American form of governance, and now they have cannibals. | ||
I don't know if this is true, but I hear that their constitution is word for word the same as the U.S. Constitution. | ||
I'm pretty sure. | ||
That's what I've heard. | ||
Let me just throw this out here, too. | ||
Like, if somebody's paying a visa integrity fee of $250, and then you know that they haven't left the country, are they going to go look at the records of how that was paid and see what they're buying now? | ||
Which hotel are they staying in? | ||
Where are they living at? | ||
What are they charging? | ||
I mean, are they going to start using those records to track those people down? | ||
They will. | ||
I sure hope so. | ||
I mean, I like the idea, but you know that they're not. | ||
I sure hope so. | ||
The only thing that's scary about that is that's like the Patriot Act, you know, being used. | ||
But you're not even citizens. | ||
But I'm saying eventually it'll be used against all of us. | ||
Well, the idea that the government can't find an American or wouldn't be able to find an American nowadays, like if you're on the run, you can't use your credit card. | ||
You can't use your cell phone. | ||
Like the days of being able to disappear and use whatever is modern technology, those days are long gone. | ||
If you want to disappear, you're living on cash and you're not using a cell phone. | ||
Don't go to McDonald's. | ||
Yeah, you can't go to McDonald's. | ||
You can't do anything, essentially. | ||
I understand people make the argument, oh, you know, what about privacy? | ||
What about privacy? | ||
You gave it up a long time ago. | ||
If you live in the modern world and use any of it. | ||
It doesn't mean we shouldn't still protest it. | ||
Because it's just gotten worse and worse. | ||
The Patriarchs started it. | ||
Well, I mean, no, no, no. | ||
It went decades before that with COINTELPRO and Echelon. | ||
I don't know that it is getting worse because I don't know that it can be worse. | ||
Right now, the government can subpoena when you talk to your Amazon Alexa. | ||
So I don't think that it can be worse than people that are purchasing a product that will monitor their conversation in their home. | ||
It will get worse when they can monitor your thoughts. | ||
They're already working on it. | ||
I don't know that the government, I don't know how close we are to being able to actually read people's thoughts. | ||
Meta's doing it right now. | ||
I know that there's the part of the show where Shane's derailed it. | ||
But it is happening. | ||
They are doing that thing. | ||
They're working towards those things. | ||
That's what Neuralink will eventually do when it becomes a product of vanity rather than a product of trying to fix people who are paraplegic Or deaf. | ||
That is, I think that's how it does get worse, is being inside of your brain. | ||
But aren't they going to need an actual implant? | ||
Well, yeah, I think they're going to. | ||
It's not going to read people. | ||
I mean, you're going to have the implants. | ||
They're basically going to tap into your Neuralink. | ||
If you're like a stock trader, you get Neuralink, you said a vanity. | ||
That's what I think. | ||
You don't have a defect. | ||
It's two things. | ||
It'll be, like I said, the Neuralink will become a thing of vanity where it won't just be a thing to help fix people. | ||
It'll be, we all have to have one like we have a smartphone, but it'll also be the way they quantify your algorithms and use that in a social credit score to destroy you in all possible ways, which they're already doing with banking and flying and Airbnbs and you name it. | ||
But I do think it will get worse. | ||
Yeah, I mean, it's not going to get better. | ||
It's definitely not going to get better. | ||
unidentified
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Yeah. | |
I mean, there's always. | ||
Unless they turn it off. | ||
There's always the possibility of like a big solar flare taking out the entire electric grid. | ||
That's true. | ||
A meteor would end it also, but that's not really something we want to have happen to us. | ||
You guys know that Tom Homan is a, I guess, a representative for EMP Shield. | ||
Oh, really? | ||
Talking about, you know, big solar flare just taking everything out. | ||
Don't worry. | ||
Tom Homan's got you covered. | ||
Really? | ||
The threat from EMP is real, and I highly recommend EMP Shield. | ||
What is EMP interesting? | ||
And this has been for years, in fact. | ||
This is not a new development. | ||
I saw Deb and H super chatted. | ||
I don't know. | ||
Should I pull this? | ||
Is it an actual shield? | ||
unidentified
|
Is it like wallet-sized? | |
It's a shield. | ||
Is it like a little... | ||
Entire home. | ||
Apparently. | ||
unidentified
|
Also, in India... | |
I'm the former ICE Director and a President Donald Trump. | ||
And I'm here to ask America to wake up. | ||
You can protect yourself, and at the same time, protect this great nation. | ||
The threat of electromagnetic pulse is real. | ||
EMP. | ||
If you don't know what it is, look it up. | ||
It's a matter of life and death. | ||
I recently partnered with a Midwest company, Veteran Own, that has developed a device you can hook up to your home or your vehicle to protect you against the EMP. | ||
I highly encourage you to go to EMPShield.com and research this device. | ||
Again, it will protect you. | ||
In the long term, protect this great nation. | ||
Thank you. | ||
I'm very interested to find out what this shield does. | ||
I wonder what that is. | ||
There's more. | ||
unidentified
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Oh, no. | |
No, the grid's going down. | ||
Stuff like a Faraday cage, you know, where you have an actual, like... | ||
You've got to be like underground, right? | ||
It's also. | ||
A buddy of mine has an industrial Faraday cage in his warehouse where he does actual cell research and contracting and stuff. | ||
And when you walk in, your phone does stop working. | ||
However, if you go into the corner of it, your phone starts working again. | ||
And I asked him about it and he says the tower is too close. | ||
So I was like, well, but this is a Faraday cage, right? | ||
And he was like, it's going to get through. | ||
You know, it's hard to have it perfect. | ||
If there's a solar flare EMP, it's going to get through your standard Faraday cage. | ||
So he said you need like a Faraday cage and a Faraday cage and a Faraday cage. | ||
I mean, isn't that why in West Virginia they have that area where they have like the really like the phone off zone where you can't like have your cell phone out? | ||
That's where the astronomers are? | ||
Yeah. | ||
Yeah, they have that big telescope. | ||
Yeah, it's how you quiet area. | ||
What is it when you go in, you can't use your phone? | ||
I think they have like no appliances. | ||
Yeah, yeah. | ||
What is it in West Virginia? | ||
I believe it's radio telescope. | ||
Yeah, it has to do with that radio telescope. | ||
North West Virginia, I believe. | ||
Right. | ||
It's deeper in West Virginia than we are in, but yeah, something. | ||
I'm moving. | ||
Right? | ||
Yeah. | ||
Yeah, this is it. | ||
Let's do it. | ||
So you connect it to your breaker box. | ||
It's a small box. | ||
It's 400 bucks. | ||
It's not Green Bank. | ||
I saw that work. | ||
I don't know. | ||
I'm looking for something. | ||
I'm looking for how it works. | ||
They want make them for your vehicle. | ||
It can protect from lightning strikes as well, because lightning strikes can mess up your electrical power in the house. | ||
And it can protect from solar coronal mass ejections. | ||
Yeah. | ||
Up to 228,000 amps. | ||
100% lightning guarantee backed by a $25,000 insurance policy. | ||
The EMP protections is all of phases of EMP E1, E2, and E3. | ||
I'm not sure what that means, but I'm definitely going to be looking into this. | ||
Does it stop radio frequencies for mind control? | ||
Derailing the conversation again. | ||
I think that's a pretty important thing to most people watching. | ||
I could be wrong, but most people I speak to in day-to-day life care about mind control radio frequencies. | ||
I'm sure they do. | ||
I'm sure the people you speak to do. | ||
I'm sure they do, Shane. | ||
Haven't heard of this? | ||
All right. | ||
I'm going to Green Bank. | ||
How far away is it? | ||
Oh, it's so close, dude. | ||
The real estate value. | ||
No, it's a day trip. | ||
The real estate values there are just phenomenal bargains. | ||
I think independently of this, I think I saw a clip where like homes are like $30,000, $40,000. | ||
There's no podcasting in Greenbank. | ||
Seriously, like. | ||
No, you could hardline. | ||
I'm sure they got internet. | ||
You can't use cell phones and radio tech. | ||
Maybe. | ||
Probably can't have Wi-Fi, though. | ||
No. | ||
I was hoping it was just Amish and one giant telescope. | ||
Oh, man. | ||
This doesn't look like it has an effect on whether or not you can use the internet or whatever. | ||
In fact, it says that it has internet protection or internet protection. | ||
Excuse me. | ||
Radio protection. | ||
Yeah, it's a three-hour drive. | ||
It looks like we'll make a weekend trip. | ||
Look, I'll go if the pawpaws are in season, but the pawpaws aren't in season yet. | ||
I'm here like a month early. | ||
Oh, bro, the pawpaws are right here. | ||
We got 80 million of them. | ||
I know, but they're not ripe right now. | ||
I don't think they're good. | ||
You love them? | ||
I like pawpaws. | ||
I do. | ||
What do you think, Shane? | ||
You like the pawpaw? | ||
I have never had that. | ||
unidentified
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Really? | |
I don't know. | ||
Really? | ||
I've never had a pawpaw. | ||
There's probably like 5,000 at the castle every September, and they just fall onto the ground and rot. | ||
Is this what you made the jelly with once? | ||
No, that was wine berry. | ||
Oh, yeah, okay. | ||
I haven't had these now. | ||
You know, it's kind of wild. | ||
The castle had, ridiculous how much food was there. | ||
Several apple trees, cherry trees, grapes everywhere. | ||
It was nuts. | ||
Here, Friedamistan, some berries hidden in the back. | ||
unidentified
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But pawpaw is legit. | |
I would imagine that if you were living here as a pioneer or farmer, you'd be excited to find them. | ||
But I don't like them. | ||
It's good. | ||
They say it's like mango, avocado, banana combined, I guess. | ||
Yeah, it's custardy and it's got those weird seeds in it. | ||
But it's pollinated by beetles and flies. | ||
And for those of you who don't know what we're talking about, the thing is this Fruit gets ripe so fast and then goes bad so quickly that it could never be commercialized. | ||
So it's a real, it was a real staple in the time, but you just, you know, there was no way to make money off it, which is why you don't see it in your supermarket. | ||
Same thing with mulberries, incredibly common out here, but they break. | ||
When you grab it, it just starts popping and breaking apart. | ||
So they're really hard to harvest. | ||
And yeah, I don't think they taste good either, to be honest. | ||
The wine berries, an invasive Chinese berry. | ||
It's illegal to transport. | ||
They're delicious. | ||
Illegal to transport at all? | ||
Yes, an invasive species. | ||
It came from China off of these cargo ships. | ||
Yep. | ||
Hey, let's jump to this next story. | ||
We got this from the New York Post. | ||
Trump threatens Commander's $3.7 billion stadium deal over Redskins' name change. | ||
Epic. | ||
So I've not seen anybody rocking Commander's gear. | ||
I was playing poker over the weekend and a guy had a Redskins shirt on. | ||
I bought my Redskins Ziploc bags and they changed the name and I put it in the storage unit because that's going to be worth a lot of money soon. | ||
Unless Trump changes it back. | ||
Yeah, right. | ||
If they change the logo, if they change it back and they don't go to the old logo, then you might have a little value there. | ||
But the whole Commander's Redskins thing, look, the poor Washington Redskins have been terrible for a long time. | ||
It's a sad state of affairs. | ||
So if I were the owner of the team, I would do anything I could to help try to get that team out of the doghouse because the poor Redskins have been awful for a long time. | ||
And I actually am a little on the I have a soft spot for the Redskins, even though I'm not a, you know, from D.C. But still, you know, I think that anything they can do to help bring some attention to the team and maybe help the team win some games. | ||
Trump says, I may put a restriction on them that if they don't change the name back to the original Washington Redskins and get rid of the ridiculous moniker Washington Commanders, I won't make a deal for them to build a stadium in Washington. | ||
I got to be honest, I feel like a lot of the people associated with the team are probably going to be like, oh, thank God. | ||
Because they're largely forced to do it. | ||
It was all duress. | ||
Sure. | ||
The weird cult took over, and then we pushed them back and never again, never again. | ||
It certainly wasn't that the fans had a desire to change the name. | ||
Nor the family of the Native American depicted on the logo who actually liked that. | ||
Don't they get like a royalty from it or something? | ||
I was at Four Corners recently, just a couple weeks ago, and I'm leaving Four Corners and I'm driving through Arizona, driving through an Indian reservation. | ||
And what do you think the mascot for the high school was? | ||
White people. | ||
Redskins. | ||
Same logo. | ||
Really? | ||
unidentified
|
Yeah. | |
Huh. | ||
My high school was a Redskin as well. | ||
I hope it still is. | ||
Yeah, I mean, I would like to see him change it. | ||
There was a funny video. | ||
It was a post where some dude was like, sometimes it's hard to believe that the COVID era was real, but I sometimes play this video to remind myself. | ||
And it was some guy making a fake musical where he was running around his town singing about how after he gets his fourth vaccine, not a joke, his fourth vaccine, he'll be able to go to shows and hang out with friends again at the bar. | ||
And it's like, that's how psychotic these people are. | ||
Do not let them have power. | ||
So we're taking it back. | ||
Trump's got to bring the Columbus statue back to Columbus, Ohio. | ||
That would be great. | ||
Can you believe that? | ||
They took that down? | ||
They took the Teddy Roosevelt statue down outside of the Museum of Natural History. | ||
They took a Teddy down to Roosevelt. | ||
It took Teddy Roosevelt down. | ||
That's fairly shocking. | ||
How close were we losing Abraham Lincoln statue in D.C.? | ||
It is absolutely insane. | ||
Didn't they take Jefferson out of the Capitol or something? | ||
Well, I mean, look, everyone knows, we talked about this a long time ago, but everyone knows that the point of that wasn't that these people were uniquely bad. | ||
It was that they want to erase America's history. | ||
Because anyone that communists or the left would hold up in high esteem, they've done equally terrible or worse things. | ||
So the idea that people that the left would want to memorialize are somehow morally superior, that's just ridiculous. | ||
It's all about destroying America. | ||
Cultural Revolution did the same thing for that culture. | ||
Did you guys see the Mehdi Hassan Jubilee? | ||
I saw some of it. | ||
It's one of the worst because he doesn't actually debate. | ||
His first premise is that Trump is pro-crime for pardoning Jay Sixers. | ||
And it's like, well, that's just one incident of his supporters. | ||
But the problem I have with it, this is why we do the Culture War. | ||
This is why we're doing the Culture War Live. | ||
It's why we're bringing people up on stage to debate us because I don't like how fake the debates are. | ||
And it's frustrating for me to watch. | ||
So I don't blame the regular people for not knowing how to debate or having their thoughts. | ||
They have an idea they want answered. | ||
So they're basically asking a guy a question who doesn't answer the question fairly. | ||
One of the premises that he had, Mediasan, is that immigration is good for this country. | ||
And that's such a vague, general statement that means nothing that he ends up, no matter what someone says, he argues that it proves his point that immigration is good. | ||
And it's like, okay, immigration, if you're talking about like what, let's say immigration meant one guy came here to share, you know, how to build a nuclear reactor with our scientists. | ||
Yeah, it was fantastic. | ||
Immigration was great. | ||
Then you can argue 50 million people came here by force and overall, okay, that's not good. | ||
So it's a silly statement. | ||
But I bring it up because the one thing nobody asks the guy is define good. | ||
And of course, what does he do? | ||
The whole debate, nobody asks him this, but he does bring up that it's good for the economy. | ||
It's the graph go up argument. | ||
So long as we're all making money, it's a good thing. | ||
Well, I argue this. | ||
Money isn't everything. | ||
unidentified
|
Okay. | |
The Democrats only want their money. | ||
Donald Trump threatening to reverse or to block this unless they change their name back is Trump saying there is something this country has had that I deeply care about and don't want taken away. | ||
It doesn't matter if you're an immigrant. | ||
It doesn't matter if you were born here. | ||
What matters is that we had a football team. | ||
What matters that we had baseball fields. | ||
What matters is that we had the Christmas market every year in our town. | ||
And we'd go to the local restaurant where the little train would go across the ceiling, hanging from the ceiling. | ||
And that was Christmas Eve. | ||
That was Christmas morning. | ||
And Trump says, I like that and I want to keep it. | ||
And that's why I would argue, Mediasan, if we're talking about immigration in the sense that a handful of people would come and some changes are made slowly over time, it's like, sure, fine, whatever. | ||
But tearing down our statues, changing the names of streets, all of that weird crackbot commie revolutionary garbage must be reversed. | ||
Yeah. | ||
I mean, it's a huge difference between legal immigration with the goal of assimilation and adopting the American culture. | ||
That doesn't exist anymore. | ||
I know it doesn't. | ||
But, you know, to the extent that it does, I do support it. | ||
There are still people who want to come to America, who want to become citizens. | ||
And if they come here legally and they're going to play by the rules, I support that. | ||
But what we've had under Biden, of course, was uncontrolled immigration and balkanization, where once you get in, it's not like I want to become an American. | ||
I want to go live in the city where Minneapolis. | ||
That's right. | ||
Exactly. | ||
So, I mean, that's, and look at who's running for mayor there. | ||
I mean, it's crazy. | ||
Okay, you've convinced me. | ||
In three years, I will be 42. | ||
I will be able to run for president. | ||
And my one, one policy will be limited migration. | ||
However, of the small amount we allow in, they must choose a sports team to represent. | ||
They must learn about it and wear those jerseys for two years as a requirement. | ||
Otherwise, out. | ||
So, and we'll keep an eye on you. | ||
This guy will be, you know, he'll come in and I'm going to pop over and say, hey, hey, hey, you took off that Cowboys jersey. | ||
unidentified
|
Out. | |
What was last week's score? | ||
You're more kind than I would be. | ||
Why, moratorium? | ||
Yeah. | ||
unidentified
|
And the immigration count? | |
Does the WNBA count as a sports team? | ||
I think we need to know. | ||
No, no, okay. | ||
So that's out. | ||
That's fake. | ||
And actually, that's a trick question. | ||
You'd actually ask the migrants, what's your favorite WNBA team? | ||
And if they answer, out. | ||
That's good. | ||
I support that. | ||
And because the only acceptable answer is, what's the WNBA? | ||
Yes, I like that. | ||
What does this? | ||
I have no idea. | ||
You're good. | ||
You know what the WNBA is? | ||
The WNBA is the Colbert show of the sports world. | ||
Completely subsidized by its parent organization despite having monumental losses. | ||
Have you ever seen those compilations of women, the WNBA, and it's just like, have you ever watched it? | ||
It's like a minute of them struggling to get the ball in, and they can't do anything. | ||
And I'm like, I don't even know what watching. | ||
They owe the viewers money. | ||
They owe to money. | ||
They're tuning in. | ||
They should be paying the tuner. | ||
Yeah, we should get reparations for any second watched. | ||
Absolutely. | ||
I mean, look, I was watching Shaq today, or I was watching a clip where Shaq was talking about it. | ||
And he's like, look, they need to lower the rim. | ||
The round fake. | ||
The round fake. | ||
So that way they can get dunks because that's what people watch male basketball for. | ||
I think that that should be the next thing they do to try to get to attract viewers. | ||
I don't think they're going to attract viewers. | ||
I don't care about women dunking. | ||
I don't care about women dunking. | ||
The main point, however, is. | ||
I don't care about women. | ||
Yes. | ||
Guys, it's low-hanging fruit to rag on the WNBA. | ||
Get it. | ||
And so I have no problem if when any immigrant... | ||
When the immigrants come, the only way they can actually get a visa is if they agree that we'll get rid of the WNBA. | ||
How about that? | ||
Deal? | ||
unidentified
|
Okay. | |
Phil deal? | ||
Yeah. | ||
Okay, deal. | ||
If an immigrant comes in, you can be like, I don't care if you know about the Constitution. | ||
I don't care if you know about our laws. | ||
I don't care if you know about three branches. | ||
I want to know what you think about the WNBA. | ||
Get rid of it. | ||
You're in, buddy. | ||
Let's put that in with the visa integrity program, that if they buy a WNBA Connecticut, they're out. | ||
It has to come after the WNBA. | ||
It has to come after the moratorium, though, still. | ||
We need people to assimilate, and it takes time. | ||
Honestly, the only thing that I've liked about the WNBA since it started is Sophie Cunningham going after whoever it was that was, you know, fouling her teammate. | ||
I mean, like, that was a solid moment. | ||
That's the attractive blonde lady, right? | ||
The field goal kicker. | ||
Is she a field goal kicker? | ||
She kicked field goals in high school. | ||
Good for you. | ||
Oh, wow. | ||
Now she plays basketball. | ||
All right. | ||
Well, since you guys really, really want to talk about the WNBA, let's do it. | ||
All right. | ||
We brought it ourselves. | ||
Let's jump to the story from ESPN.com. | ||
United WNBA All-Star Stars wear pay us what you owe us shirts. | ||
In a surprise twist, all WNBA players have agreed to pay us all back. | ||
They report as WNBA commissioner Kathy Engelbert awarded Minnesota Lynx who? | ||
I don't care. | ||
This is hieroglyphics. | ||
I think that's a team, but it could be somebody's name. | ||
I'm not really sure. | ||
The fans echoed the message players sent during warm-ups where they wore black shirts that read, pay us what you owe us. | ||
The collective demonstration occurred two days after more than 40 players with the league in the latest rounds of collective bargaining agreement negotiations. | ||
I don't understand why the WNBA exists. | ||
Can anyone help me out? | ||
No, no, hold on, hold on. | ||
Hold on, real quick. | ||
Sorry. | ||
If you're going to come out and say, Caitlin Clark, I get it, foxy boxing is fun. | ||
But if you want to actually talk about basketball, I don't know why the WNBA exists. | ||
It's a shut up and dribble. | ||
It's the same reason as all female stuff. | ||
Like things that men do. | ||
Feminists come in and they're like, I want to do that. | ||
But tennis is profitable. | ||
What? | ||
Women's tennis is profitable. | ||
Very. | ||
Okay, so fair enough. | ||
Women's tennis is profitable. | ||
But they believe that all sports are the same to the audience. | ||
And that's just not the case. | ||
Like, I don't watch men's basketball. | ||
I watch baseball and I watch football. | ||
Like, I don't watch men's basketball. | ||
So I'm not going to watch women's basketball. | ||
The people that watch men's basketball are clearly not watching women's basketball. | ||
And I don't know that the people that watch women's tennis are watching men's tennis. | ||
To kind of fact check, women's tennis made $4 million in 2023. | ||
unidentified
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Wow. | |
$4 million. | ||
Profit. | ||
$4 million profit. | ||
Well, their total revenue was $114, but their expenses was $110. | ||
Yeah. | ||
I wonder how much of a suspension. | ||
I'm sorry. | ||
And more than half of it came from a deal with Saudi Arabia to host the finals. | ||
Okay, so they're not necessarily profitable. | ||
Yeah. | ||
They're more profitable than Colbert. | ||
Yeah, and they're far more profitable than women's basketball. | ||
But, you know, I wonder if this all stems from the great success that women's soccer had with the fantastic team with Mia Ham and all those, Julie Faude, all those great athletes who just broke on this. | ||
That Rapinoe chick just made everybody hate them. | ||
You know, so exactly. | ||
But I mean, but that was a very successful, a very successful team and garnered a lot of public support, led to the creation of Entire Women's Soccer League. | ||
And, you know, so maybe that's when this whole thing started. | ||
Does the Entire Women's Soccer League make money? | ||
I don't even know if it exists anymore in that form. | ||
I don't think it does. | ||
I don't think so either. | ||
San Diego Spirit was the team I remember starting. | ||
The thing is, most women aren't particularly interested in sports. | ||
I know that there's probably millions of women across the country that do like sports, but the majority of women don't like sports. | ||
And you're right. | ||
I just got to add this. | ||
There's only one reason guys watch women's volleyball. | ||
Definitely. | ||
Beach volleyball or court volleyball? | ||
Which are we talking about here? | ||
Definitely beach volleyball. | ||
I like the seats in the back of the arena. | ||
Indeed. | ||
And didn't they pass some rule they made all the women wear pants and then all the guys got mad? | ||
And look, feminists can cry all day and say, Tim Pool, it's your misogynist for pointing out that men want to look at girls' butts. | ||
And they're like, well, they do. | ||
And you can complain, but that won't change reality. | ||
And I don't care if anyone calls me a misogynist. | ||
So there's another, there's a reason why men like watching women's tennis. | ||
The grunts. | ||
Do men do that? | ||
No, you said women's tennis, right? | ||
I know. | ||
Do the men go, ah! | ||
I don't think. | ||
Do they, really? | ||
They do? | ||
unidentified
|
Yeah. | |
Jeez, I don't want to watch that. | ||
It's just weird the whole time. | ||
But I definitely, and then there's only one reason people are increasingly watching the WNBA. | ||
They hate it. | ||
Caitlin Clark Foxyboxing. | ||
I'm not even kidding, man. | ||
One of the stories that popped up was that she got attacked again, and I made a video about it. | ||
I got like 300,000 views in the two hours. | ||
And I'm like, guys, there's tons of compilation videos popping up on YouTube of Caitlin Clark getting beaten. | ||
Caitlin Clark beaten compilation. | ||
And it's just like 10 minutes of her getting beaten. | ||
And it's just got millions of views. | ||
And I was like, damn. | ||
Maybe they should do a hybrid with the UFC so it's basketball plus fighting. | ||
But Hawkins, bro, bro, it's just Foxy boxing. | ||
Yeah, I don't know. | ||
I don't want any of that. | ||
I would like to see WNBA play the Harlem Globetrotters. | ||
Just to see how great that would be. | ||
No, the Washington Generals, so they can finally win that. | ||
Actually, I think the Generals would actually beat them. | ||
But yeah, I got you, the Generals. | ||
That would be hilarious. | ||
Dude, so I looked into the numbers for this. | ||
Actually, men only make 0.03 of NBA players only make 0.03 of the league's total revenue per player, while the NBA players earn about 0.07 of their league's revenue. | ||
So I am totally for equalizing that pay gap and bringing men up to make sure that we have the same 0.07 of the league. | ||
I don't know where we're going to get that money, but I'm so sick of participation, trophy, stupid garbage. | ||
Okay. | ||
Why are we communistically subsidizing the WNBA? | ||
Just pay us what you owe us. | ||
Okay. | ||
You owe me then. | ||
Because you got a deficit. | ||
All right. | ||
I'm kidding. | ||
You don't owe me anything. | ||
I don't watch whatever it is you do, and I don't care. | ||
Right. | ||
I like watching when I do watch basketball, and I'm not someone who regularly turns on basketball. | ||
It is fun to watch when there's like when, you know, I don't really care so much for the most part, but when you're getting close to the end and it's a close game and then Steph Curry will just like launch it from half court and nail it, you're like, whoa, football similarly. | ||
WNBA meaningless. | ||
Meaningless. | ||
I just don't care. | ||
What about women's golf? | ||
People watch that. | ||
That's easier to watch, right? | ||
Because you tap it in. | ||
I don't watch any of that stuff. | ||
Tap it in. | ||
I don't watch any women's sports, even women's volleyball, to be honest with you. | ||
It's nice to look at it if it's on, but I'm not going to go and be like, oh, I got to catch the women's volleyball. | ||
I think the only sports that I'm really watching still are Olympics. | ||
I'll watch international competitions and some college sports, but professional sports, I really don't watch as much as I used to. | ||
I like baseball and I like football still. | ||
But baseball is not baseball anymore, Phil. | ||
It's not. | ||
What do you mean? | ||
Zombie runner on second base and extra innings. | ||
That's a joke. | ||
Pitch clock, it's a joke. | ||
DH in National League, it's a joke. | ||
Nobody even knows what baseball is anymore. | ||
It's like you used to be able to go to a baseball game and people had a program and they would actually keep score in the stands and people knew how to keep score at a baseball game. | ||
And you could pull that up years later and remember everything that happened in the game because you scored it. | ||
And now it's like, oh, third inning, hat shuffle, oh, fourth inning, mascot race, oh, fifth inning, t-shirt gun. | ||
And it's not even baseball anymore. | ||
It's just like Burnsball. | ||
It's not banana ball yet, but it's like Blernsball. | ||
You guys know what Blernsball is? | ||
Isn't that from Futurama? | ||
Futurama. | ||
In Futurama, Fry's a Thousand Years in the Future. | ||
And he's like, I love baseball. | ||
And they're like, this is Blurnsball. | ||
And the multi-ball gets triggered and the batter's swinging wildly and 12 balls fly in the air. | ||
And then one goes right into a hole. | ||
And it's like ball locked, multi-ball triggered. | ||
And the writer said they wanted it to be as incomprehensible as possible. | ||
And that sounds like what you're describing. | ||
But I get recommended Instagram videos that are literally just hating on modern baseball. | ||
And it's just posts complaining about calls from the umpire and various plays complaining about the pitch clock or whatever. | ||
And the only thing I know about baseball right now is everybody hates it. | ||
I mean, people complain about a lot of stuff, but I still like watching baseball. | ||
I think that going to live baseball games is super fun. | ||
I think we got to make the hunger games. | ||
Just like race to the end, okay? | ||
We're sitting here gradually inching toward the bottom, but it's the waiting I can't stand. | ||
Okay. | ||
Let's just make the hunger games. | ||
Optional, of course. | ||
People opt in. | ||
Do you think people would do that? | ||
I bet they would. | ||
They're doing it right now in every American city. | ||
They totally would. | ||
If you were like $10 million prize to the winner and everyone goes in and it's fight to the death and whoever survives you get 10 million, you'd have a line out the door for you. | ||
It's just an extrapolation of Mr. Beast's premise, isn't it? | ||
Yeah. | ||
Has Mr. Beast killed. | ||
How many people has he killed? | ||
unidentified
|
I don't think. | |
I mean, up there with Clinton's. | ||
Well, publicly disclosed, zero. | ||
But. | ||
Why else is he? | ||
We don't know. | ||
I don't think. | ||
I don't think that they would go. | ||
I don't think people would sign up for the money. | ||
Let me ask Jad GPT. | ||
There's at least one guy that doesn't exist anymore, I think. | ||
That's right. | ||
Yeah. | ||
Got rid of that guy. | ||
How many people has Mr. Beast killed? | ||
If you had people, if it was just, you know, get eliminated, you get beat to a pulp. | ||
Yes. | ||
Mr. Beast has not killed anyone. | ||
Good job. | ||
Another hallucination from AI. | ||
You know what scares me is that we I typically use ChatGPT for like image generation or whatever. | ||
If you want to learn how to AI image generate a person, you don't ask the AI to make the person. | ||
That's the mistake everybody makes. | ||
You take an image of the person and then ask the AI to make the person do a thing and it'll give you the proper image. | ||
But I've been playing Legend of Zelda, Tears of the Kingdom. | ||
And so I said, I'll just ask Chet GPT, you know, like, how do I find this thing? | ||
And it gives me this big, long, like, video game tip. | ||
Here's how you do it, walkthrough. | ||
And so I play for about 20 minutes doing what it describes, only to find out it was completely made up and what I was doing made no sense. | ||
And then I was like, okay, that was weird. | ||
And so then I ask it again, hey, that was incorrect. | ||
And it gives me another totally hallucinated fake thing. | ||
And the first time I was like, okay, second time, it told me to meet someone who I knew didn't exist in the game. | ||
And I was like, now this is getting weird. | ||
Here's the creepy thing is I'm actively playing that game. | ||
So I'm fact checking in real time that this doesn't work. | ||
How often does do we or anybody else assume that what it's saying is true? | ||
That being said, Mr. Beast may have killed somebody. | ||
Exactly. | ||
That's the moral. | ||
That's the moral of this story. | ||
I'm kidding, Jimmy. | ||
I'm kidding. | ||
But if you look at how people are proving their argument, like on the social media platform that I'm on the most, which is X, you know, they're just going to pull up Grok as like, see, Grok says this, it must be so. | ||
So you're absolutely right. | ||
It's just, it's just fabricating stuff. | ||
I believe it's good for certain things where you're, you know, if you want to find out the population of Wyoming, it can probably tell you that. | ||
Oh, wait. | ||
Somebody died during one of the product. | ||
That's why I asked the question. | ||
Yeah. | ||
I could have swore someone passed away. | ||
Wait, wait. | ||
But I don't know if this is true or not. | ||
I remember hearing about this. | ||
Yeah. | ||
Wow. | ||
Doing the Mr. Beast challenge, he died. | ||
Yep. | ||
Whoa. | ||
Wait, wait, wait, hold on. | ||
He was competing in the lose 100 pounds to win $250,000. | ||
The cause of death was not publicly disclosed, though some online sources have sparked speculation. | ||
Mr. Beast's video description included a tribute to, oh, Mr. Beast killed a guy. | ||
Come on, Jimmy. | ||
Oh, wow. | ||
The guy going trans is probably another loss of life. | ||
They say it was accidental and unrelated to any wrongdoing by him. | ||
Listen, listen. | ||
I never said he did anything wrong. | ||
I'm saying that Mr. Beast was running a program in which someone died, and that was his responsibility. | ||
Mr. Beast creates an environment of death and destruction. | ||
He's literally Hitler. | ||
Exactly. | ||
Exactly. | ||
Oh, man. | ||
He's the Joe Biden of reality TV or whatever he does. | ||
I don't know. | ||
I've never seen an episode of Mr. Beast. | ||
He's killing and transing all the people. | ||
Stay away from Mr. Beast. | ||
Apparently, the guy had some kind of toxicity in his system or something. | ||
Unexpectedly died during the challenge. | ||
That's sad. | ||
That's sad. | ||
That's actually really sad. | ||
What does it say? | ||
Mitrogenine toxicity, an opioid that caused respiratory depression and asphyxiation. | ||
Is that what happened? | ||
That sounds terrible. | ||
That sounds pretty awful. | ||
Found in the Kratom plant. | ||
And Mr. Beast filmed all of this. | ||
Oh, it's like one of those crazy. | ||
Could you imagine if Mr. Beast, like, if that happened while he was filming and he was like, I guess that's the story? | ||
And the thumbnail was like. | ||
Yes. | ||
Yes. | ||
I killed a guy. | ||
A billion views. | ||
Yep. | ||
It would definitely get a billion views. | ||
It would get a lot of views. | ||
Man, there's actually a ridiculous amount of stories today. | ||
We've got so many pulled up that they're just like. | ||
Small stories? | ||
Not really. | ||
I still like the Hunter Biden clip where he's talking about the immigrants. | ||
That's the one that kills me. | ||
I sent a bunch of. | ||
That is the one out of that whole interview, which is long. | ||
It's just amazing. | ||
We got this clip from the Channel 5 interview with Hunter Biden as he goes on a Democrat-inspired Democrat racist rant. | ||
One of my guys, like all these Democrats say, you have to talk about and realize that people are really upset about illegal immigration. | ||
Fuck you. | ||
How do you think your hotel room gets cleaned? | ||
How do you think you have food on your fucking table? | ||
Who do you think washes your dishes? | ||
Who do you think does your fucking garden? | ||
Who do you think is here by the fucking sheer fucking just grit and will that they figured out a way to get here because they thought that they could give themselves and their family a better chance. | ||
He's somehow convinced all of us that these people are the fucking criminals. | ||
It's absolutely amazing that he's just like, in all seriousness, literally what the Democrats said in the 1850s is, who's going to pick your crops? | ||
Who's going to clean your house? | ||
You have no idea. | ||
I was just going to say this is filmed on a plantation. | ||
The old guy on his plantation lost all his slaves. | ||
I do. | ||
I do love the part where he also said that his dad was on Ambien while debating Trump. | ||
Yeah. | ||
He was just whacked out of his mind. | ||
Like, as if that's some kind of excuse, right? | ||
We know it was meth. | ||
Hunter Biden says father was on ambien before disastrous debate. | ||
Do you guys know ambien makes you, they call it day, it's called, what is it called? | ||
It causes waking dreams. | ||
That's what they call it. | ||
Oh, yes. | ||
A lot of people were eating too. | ||
A lot of people were eating, like getting up in the middle of night. | ||
A lot of people were like getting up in the middle of the night and like going to a refrigerator, not remembering it, and then find out the next morning that they had eaten all this stuff. | ||
They're like, the food's gone, but they were actually eating it in their sleep. | ||
That's creepy. | ||
There were people that would intentionally get ambient and they would take it in the middle of the day and stay awake and it causes you to start hallucinating. | ||
It's called a waking dream. | ||
You're not hallucinating, but you're having a dream while awake because your brain's fried and then it makes you go insane and ruins your life forever. | ||
Or you become president for good years in the White House. | ||
Four good years? | ||
Good years. | ||
unidentified
|
Good lord. | |
But in that clip from Hunter Biden, and maybe some people will miss this, is that he didn't say his father was taking ambien. | ||
He said they're giving him ambien. | ||
They're dosing him. | ||
and actually, one of the things that you know, we all hear a lot of conspiracy theories, but one of the things that I hear that is a non-zero chance that it's successful is that they intentionally didn't give Joe the right drugs for the debate. | ||
He didn't seem as on as he was. | ||
Like every state of the union, everybody says Joe's gonna screw this up. | ||
He comes out, he's not fantastic, but he doesn't fail miserably. | ||
Like whatever they were dosing him for, state of the union, he was okay. | ||
So the debate. | ||
No. | ||
So I recently got my dental implant. | ||
And the way it works is I had a root canal for 25 years. | ||
They got to go. | ||
There's nothing you can do about it. | ||
And so they extract painful. | ||
Then you got to wait a few months. | ||
Then it heals up. | ||
Then they put the implant in. | ||
Then you got to wait a few months. | ||
Then they put the crown in, right? | ||
And so I get three little bottles. | ||
I get ibuprofen for the pain, which I haven't music because I don't need. | ||
And I get amoxicillin for a potential infection. | ||
But the ibuprofen and the amoxicillin are identical. | ||
And so when they give them to me, I took two out of each bottle and put them on the counter. | ||
And then I was like making a beam dream, I think I was taking, right? | ||
unidentified
|
They're so good. | |
And they sponsor the show, by the way. | ||
But anyway, and I looked down, I'm like, which one's which? | ||
And here's how you figured out. | ||
There's letters and numbers on the face. | ||
And you look at the bottle and it says it is a small oval white pill with this written on. | ||
I was like, oh, okay. | ||
Now what happened? | ||
If Joe Biden was getting ready for that debate and the intern pulled out the meth, the Adderall, and the Ambien and was like, oh, oh, crap, which one is it? | ||
And then gave him the ambient action. | ||
Oops. | ||
I think they were weaning him off all his drugs for the debate too. | ||
I do believe that was the thing because he walked out there. | ||
I was so surprised he didn't drop dead at every state of the union and he walked out that debate and just sounded awful. | ||
But Shane, you know what I'm saying, about state union. | ||
Everybody's like speculating he's going to be horrible and he does okay. | ||
He did okay. | ||
You could see him sort of decline like an hour in, but he walked out. | ||
He was fiery. | ||
He was fiery. | ||
unidentified
|
Remember fiery Biden state. | |
And they put the red behind him for those other speeches. | ||
Yeah, that one he was he was definitely very animated and very convinced that it was a good idea to have those that imagery. | ||
I can't I couldn't believe that that whoever set that up thought that it was a good idea. | ||
It's like, man, that is absolutely Hitler-esque. | ||
Like behind, backstage, Trump, he's just sitting there and he pulls out an ambient and he crushes it up with the back of a Trump pen. | ||
And then he just puts it in his hand and then sprinkles it in the, there we go, we're going to have a good night. | ||
Even the time shift worked against Biden. | ||
I mean, that was late at night for him. | ||
So unless he was at Camp David and they were just like jet lagging him a little bit more each day, making it later and later and later. | ||
What is up with Democrats and just openly being like, we want slaves? | ||
It's their ML. | ||
The crazy thing is that they actually openly say it and think that no one is going to, and I'm sure they've heard this criticism. | ||
And yet it doesn't register that, hey, you're literally saying we need to keep our cheap labor. | ||
I'm going to say this right now. | ||
If at our culture war events, protesters show up, we have a handful of guys that we are ready to plant in their protest to discredit them. | ||
And I think it's hilarious if they know because then they're going to spend all the time trying to figure out who's actually the infiltrator. | ||
But the reason I bring this up is I was thinking just like when Hunter Biden publicly comes out and he was like, we need second-class citizens to do menial labor that I refuse to do. | ||
I'm like, you sound just like the Democrats have always sounded. | ||
It's ridiculous. | ||
And I was just imagining like, what if someone just showed up to a protest for Democrats defending illegal immigration and illegal immigration just like a Klan member? | ||
And they're like, no, no, I'm on your side. | ||
And they're like, no, you're not. | ||
I'm like, I completely agree with everything you believe. | ||
Like, we do not disagree in any way. | ||
And then I was thinking about our event where I think we'll do that. | ||
If protesters show up, we're just going to have like traditional Democrats, I'll call them. | ||
Big slaves great again. | ||
I told my girlfriend she can't go because of the possibility of protesters. | ||
We have a special entrance. | ||
We have insecurity and everything. | ||
She's pregnant. | ||
Right, right. | ||
I don't think there's going to be protesters, though. | ||
But I outright am publicly declaring if protesters do show up, we will have a handful of infiltrators in your protest. | ||
Good luck figuring out who's who. | ||
The best part is, guess what? | ||
If we don't actually do it, how will they know? | ||
unidentified
|
True. | |
You got to look over your shoulder every second. | ||
You do. | ||
Any one of those protesters could be trying to defame you. | ||
As soon as you look towards the venue, someone's going to pull out a sign and it's going to say something really, really awful. | ||
And they're going to get a picture of you with that sign. | ||
You better keep looking over your shoulder. | ||
Yeah, I mean, I don't think that there's a better idea than to inform them that the black block is not just them. | ||
The black block is going to be infiltrators, and they're going to make you look silly. | ||
I mean, that really is the best way you deal with these protests. | ||
It's really simple. | ||
You join the protest, but say something that's kind of off color to where they're like, okay, but you can't do that. | ||
And it's like, too bad. | ||
Too bad. | ||
Anyway, back to the main point, because I'm derailing here. | ||
Honest question. | ||
I don't understand how Democrats, they just, they keep saying it. | ||
Like, no amount of flubbing this and no amount of getting called out for it ever changes. | ||
This is what they genuinely believe. | ||
They want slaves. | ||
They want people who can't vote, who get paid dirt to do menial labor. | ||
Yeah. | ||
I mean, they've been, they're clear about it. | ||
And it's, it's not like this is some kind of secret. | ||
This is the way that they behave and the way that they defend illegal immigrants is to say, oh, you know, they have to do the grunt work because Americans won't do it, which is BS. | ||
Americans will do those jobs. | ||
Absolutely. | ||
And if the way you get Americans to do those jobs is to get rid of illegal immigrants and then make the people that are actually Owners of those jobs, make them pay people more. | ||
That's a good thing for America. | ||
Absolutely. | ||
You know, like the idea that we have to keep these jobs low because I don't want to pay a buck more for my strawberries or what have you, like, that's really not good. | ||
Like, you want to have high wages for people? | ||
Well, then it requires people paying more at the store to cover those wages. | ||
But agriculture is, you know, keep in mind there are agricultural visas. | ||
So I don't think that that should really apply to like food because there is an agricultural visa worker program for people to come and do that. | ||
unidentified
|
But, well, but it does exist. | |
All right. | ||
So, but, but for the other things, like who's going to do your gardening, you know, that's ridiculous. | ||
And anecdotally, I've been hearing a lot of reports that there's no traffic in Los Angeles like there used to be. | ||
I have been hearing that from real people. | ||
No, people are saying that. | ||
I don't think it's just like to the point where now I'm actually believing it that people are saying, you know, you look at, used to look at the traffic and it'd be red, red, red on this and red on that. | ||
And if you're from California, you know what a SIG alert is. | ||
They don't have the SIG alerts anymore. | ||
I think it was the great Patriot Jay I saw on Twitter say he'd heard reports. | ||
He's out there and he's been driving. | ||
He said it is way better. | ||
And I've been hearing it from a lot of other people. | ||
I think it is. | ||
But then I see people like Charlie Kirk saying they're going to replace the farm workers with robots. | ||
I don't like that either. | ||
I like that. | ||
That'll happen. | ||
But that's not good. | ||
Yes, it is. | ||
Why is that good? | ||
Listen, it was good when they went from having people with a plow and an oxen to actual tractors. | ||
And it will be good when you can have machines do those jobs as well. | ||
But you're going to take away a lot of jobs. | ||
unidentified
|
The tractor. | |
The tractor took away jobs. | ||
Yeah, all those slaves. | ||
Look, I'm not a Luddite. | ||
I'm not a Luddite. | ||
I'm not a Luddite. | ||
And to be honest with you, society has managed to deal with every innovation that we've come up with. | ||
There were people that are like, oh, you can't have the printing press because it'll take away all the people that are rushing poor scribes. | ||
That is the same argument that is made every time there's a new technology, and it will be but the Luddites had a point about being, they weren't against technology. | ||
They were against technology being mass produced and then mass automating them out of a job, which does happen in multiple industries, you know? | ||
And I do care about that. | ||
And I also don't want robots doing the plumbing or doing the Apple Pick. | ||
I just want to add to this, none of it matters, but a principal component of the decay is Happy Gilmore 2 is coming out on Friday. | ||
And that, if anything, is a sign of the end of times. | ||
What is it? | ||
That's right. | ||
I have to look at the. | ||
I have long made the prediction that. | ||
So this is absolutely related to what you're talking about with AI takeover. | ||
There's no new people. | ||
It's true. | ||
Gen Alpha is only 40 million and boomers were 80. | ||
So, I mean, this is within one leap generation, and the population is half, half. | ||
So I made this prediction. | ||
As the saying goes, I used to be with it, but then they changed what it was, and now what it is is weird and scary, and it'll happen to you too, which will not happen to us. | ||
That's what happened to boomers. | ||
Not so much Gen Xers, and definitely not millennials, and Gen Z will have no culture of their own, and neither will Gen Alpha. | ||
They're doing a new Happy Gilmore because new IP fails, because there is no new generation. | ||
So it's as simple as this. | ||
This is how I've explained why the current age of the top-selling ticket artists is 48, I believe. | ||
Whereas in the 2000s, it was 30. | ||
If you are going to sell tickets to an event, you're a promoter and you're going to stadium, you go to your booking guy and says, okay, which artists are we booking? | ||
And they're going to go, we want to get cold play. | ||
And you go, cold play? | ||
Aren't they a little old? | ||
It's like, they're going to sell it out. | ||
Isn't there anybody younger who can do a big audience? | ||
Nope. | ||
Why not? | ||
Because there aren't enough of them. | ||
So there's 72 million Gen Z and 40 million Gen Alpha. | ||
So if you go, so Gen Z is your anchor point. | ||
If you go too low, your market shrinks. | ||
If you go high, your market increases. | ||
So you want a younger millennial musician or show. | ||
So what are they doing? | ||
They're remaking Scrubs. | ||
They're remaking Malcolm the Middle. | ||
They're doing a sequel to Happy Gilmore. | ||
They are mass producing the late 90s and the early 2000s because there is no younger generation. | ||
The point about AI, and the reason why I brought this up is because you mentioned the neoluddite movement and the automation of jobs. | ||
And they are going to accelerate this because there are no new people to take jobs. | ||
So our content is all going to be regurgitated 90s as robots take everything over. | ||
I will also say one of my favorite recent stories is the builder.ai story. | ||
You guys talk about this yet? | ||
It was like a Microsoft-backed AI business. | ||
I think it was valuable. | ||
Oh, it was all Indians. | ||
Like a few hundred Indians. | ||
Yeah, it was like I'm in church. | ||
I think it'd be okay, honestly. | ||
It was like it was just actual live humans doing stuff. | ||
It was a major white pill. | ||
I was like, that's great. | ||
We got to go to your chats, my friend. | ||
So smash the like button. | ||
Share the show with everyone you know. | ||
We got some billboards up all over the place. | ||
People have been sending pictures and posting them online. | ||
If you spot a Tim Cast billboard, post it on X and tag Ian. | ||
Just because he'll wake up one day and be like, why am I getting all these tags? | ||
And he'll look at just pictures of the Tim Cast billboard. | ||
Some way he will look at it as like, man, that's so cool. | ||
And then he'll talk about something. | ||
But we got some billboards up for the Culture War show in D.C. as well. | ||
Some digital billboards. | ||
We are going to the mainstream, man. | ||
So July 26th, Gavin McInnes and Matan, Evan, and me, we do have some liberals booked. | ||
We're just trying to figure out who's going to make the show. | ||
Our big, big name liberal that we're hoping to get didn't want to do it. | ||
Should I say who that was supposed to be? | ||
Yeah, Don Lemon. | ||
Yeah, say it again. | ||
Don Lemon. | ||
In the moon. | ||
That time, I think they were unable to do that date. | ||
It's really short notice. | ||
Like a month out is short notice. | ||
So no disrespect. | ||
They are working with us, and we may actually be able to book Don. | ||
I think that would be an absolutely amazing show. | ||
Don, I would love to have you. | ||
It would be an honor, privilege to have you debate these issues, and we want to have you there. | ||
But unfortunately, he wasn't able to make it. | ||
So, we have a couple other liberals who are going to show up, and it'll be fun. | ||
So, DC Comedy Loft, check it out. | ||
But let's grab your chats and Robo Rants. | ||
We have been talking with a handful of other people, some very prominent liberals, and they're all getting back to us now. | ||
Times are changing, man. | ||
Really? | ||
We have a request with like 10, and they all came back with their agents and normal, and it was very professional and very normal. | ||
And I was like, Wow. | ||
And they're all like, Here are the dates we have available. | ||
We'd love to do the show. | ||
And I was like, What? | ||
unidentified
|
Wow. | |
Looks like Colbert. | ||
He's not busy. | ||
Oh, sick burn, sick burn. | ||
All right. | ||
Cremit says, after Trump won, the Biden-DOJ and FBI doctored Epstein files to implicate Trump. | ||
Trump creates July 6. | ||
Epstein smokescreen. | ||
Trump-DOJ FBI then caught Biden holdover giving Rhea a letter to Wall Street Journal game over. | ||
I don't think so, but sure. | ||
I don't believe the Wall Street Journal story for a second. | ||
That's so silly. | ||
Trump. | ||
So all they said was the name Donald. | ||
Donald's is a name. | ||
And they probably had no evidence. | ||
The Wall Street Journal claimed Donald Trump, without evidence, wrote a letter to Jeffrey Epstein. | ||
Shane H. Wilder says, Sin Frantera is excellent. | ||
It's a must-watch. | ||
It was eye-opening. | ||
Parts shocked me. | ||
Other parts pissed me off. | ||
And the section on child trafficking ripped my heart out. | ||
Everyone needs to see this. | ||
Yo, guys, feature-length documentary from 6-7-Kevin and TimCast Media and more to come. | ||
Have you guys watched this? | ||
The premiere was 6 p.m. today. | ||
It was a free premiere. | ||
Now it is premium Rumble members only. | ||
Legit. | ||
It's an hour and 40-minute long documentary. | ||
And the amazing thing is how Kevin was basically saying that going along for these ride-alongs, these ICE raids, tracking this stuff, they show it all. | ||
The illegal immigration industrial complex is dying. | ||
That's what his big surprise was. | ||
It is dying. | ||
That's amazing. | ||
This is the end of illegal immigration. | ||
What Trump is doing with these visas, with these programs, it's legit. | ||
So I really do recommend this to you guys. | ||
You guys definitely got to check it out. | ||
Rumble.com slash Tim Pool premium. | ||
Use promo code Tim, Tim10. | ||
Is that what it is? | ||
For Rumble, you get 10 bucks off your yearly membership, and you can watch this, plus all of our uncensored shows. | ||
We're going to have an uncensored call-in show at 10 p.m. for you guys. | ||
To 6-7-Kevin, he has produced an epic feature-length documentary. | ||
I was insanely impressed. | ||
Kellen was insanely impressed. | ||
Everyone's like, this is so incredibly well made and good. | ||
And 67KIN was an honor to work with you, and we are going to produce more with him because this was masterfully done. | ||
And we're going to start cranking these things out and getting more documentaries, as we promised. | ||
Remember, earlier in the year, we'll be working on these documentaries. | ||
Now, it's a little ambitious. | ||
I said I wanted four to eight per year. | ||
Looks like we have two. | ||
And we really are trying. | ||
But hey. | ||
I had Kevin on Inverted World last week, and I think it was one of the best shows we've done on that. | ||
Because he was talking about the weird witches and stuff. | ||
Death Colt, Santeria. | ||
You know, it was really incredible. | ||
Everyone should go find that episode. | ||
We talked about Area 51 and the mole people beneath Las Vegas. | ||
Really good dude. | ||
Now, here's the next best thing. | ||
The next document we're putting out is on the AI takeover and basically like the Terminator scenario. | ||
But it's a bit more stoic than that, but it's going to be about all of this Luddite stuff and technological evolution. | ||
Yeah, it's going to be nuts. | ||
Tim, I'm heading out before you get to the next. | ||
All right, man. | ||
I'm going to do my show, Inverted World Live, tonight at 10. | ||
We'll see you guys there. | ||
Phone lines are open until midnight. | ||
Thanks for having me, guys. | ||
Always. | ||
Anyone can call in to Tales from the Inverted World. | ||
Anyone. | ||
Yep. | ||
And tell their crazy stories. | ||
We had great stories. | ||
The callers have been amazing. | ||
We love it. | ||
So, yeah, the link to call in will be pinned on the chat and Rumble on YouTube. | ||
We'll see you guys there. | ||
See you guys. | ||
See you later. | ||
And also, just quick shout-out. | ||
The show's been hitting it with a couple hundred thousand hits per episode now. | ||
unidentified
|
Sick. | |
Yeah, they've been nailing it. | ||
You know what it is? | ||
It's like open callers. | ||
Literally anybody watching can try and call in and tell their story. | ||
And everybody's hoping to get their chance. | ||
They want to tell their story. | ||
Remember when talk radio used to be like that? | ||
Yep. | ||
People would actually call in. | ||
It wasn't as heavily produced. | ||
You had like art bell stuff going on. | ||
He would ramble a little bit, but all talk radio was like that, caller-dependent programming. | ||
And the hosts really had to know their stuff because they had to play off what the call was, but they had to know a little bit about everything. | ||
And now, you know, it just doesn't happen that way. | ||
Now it's really siloed and scripted. | ||
Copium Poppy says, is Tim still in Israel? | ||
Says, if it's still Philcast, Tim is still in Israel. | ||
Oh, he's back from Israel. | ||
unidentified
|
God. | |
People are ridiculous. | ||
Oh, man. | ||
Get Off My Lawn says, CBS had asked Craig Ferguson to replace the retiring Letterman, but not only did Ferguson refuse, he left his own late-late show with Craig Ferguson out of respect for the outgoing Letterman. | ||
Wow. | ||
Deseret Monk says, whether it's treason or sedition or whether he can be convicted, the process is also the punishment. | ||
Make Obama go through the modern justice system and spend millions defending his actions. | ||
I just, guys, Michael Mouse is right about everything. | ||
You know, he's an anarchist. | ||
And the point he made is that the only thing that matters is what you are willing to enforce. | ||
And that's what he means by anarchy and how he describes it. | ||
So if the right is going to sit back and be like, well, we can't because that would be wrong. | ||
Then it is and you lose. | ||
Bye. | ||
You have like the right has to be willing to use power when they have it. | ||
And we've got it now. | ||
Not by much in the house, but we've got it. | ||
Well, now another guy retired, right? | ||
Right. | ||
In this context, they need to use the DOJ. | ||
You know, Pam Bondi has to have the audacity, have the intestinal fortitude to actually issue warrants. | ||
But there are some, honestly, too, though. | ||
It's not just the federal government. | ||
There are some state AGs who have been doing a good job. | ||
There are others that need to step up. | ||
Yep, absolutely. | ||
Because the state charges, that's how a lot of these things were filed against President Trump. | ||
Now, I'm not saying that we have people as corrupt as Letitia James, but we have legitimate grievances against, for instance, the Bidens and the way they use their shell companies. | ||
That money was crossing state lines. | ||
And in the jurisdictions where it occurred, there's something there. | ||
Go ahead. | ||
Finish your point. | ||
If they can tell a guy that he can't sell wheat or that he can't grow wheat to give to his own animals because of the state law or because of state crosses state lines, then you can definitely have the AG of any of the states prosecute. | ||
We do have one more quick promo to read for you guys. | ||
It's My Pillow. | ||
Shout out to Mike Lindell and MyPillow. | ||
And I almost forgot. | ||
I was drinking this delicious Rev7 energy drink, and I was like, we got to shout out mypillow.com/slash Tim. | ||
Use promo code Tim. | ||
You get a big discount, my friends, and try their Rev 7 energy drink. | ||
It's actually good for you. | ||
It's got cognizant, produces three times more brain energy than sugar. | ||
There's no sugar. | ||
There's no caffeine. | ||
I am a huge fan of this drink. | ||
Yo, it legit works. | ||
My mind is blown. | ||
I wake up in the morning. | ||
I have my protein shake. | ||
I come and sit down. | ||
I crack one of these bad boys. | ||
I didn't have one today, that's why I'm having one now. | ||
And it wires me. | ||
All these people are like, Tim must be on Adderall. | ||
No, it's Rev 7. | ||
It's not a drug. | ||
People actually claim I'm on Adderall. | ||
unidentified
|
I'm not. | |
So check out mypillow.com. | ||
They got two sales in one. | ||
The first is a sale on the bed sheets, any size, any color, just $29.88. | ||
You can even get the King to Queens, Split Kings, Cow Kings. | ||
The second sale is on a new energy drink called Rev 7. | ||
You can save 30% off with a subscription and a free three-pack. | ||
They got green apple, lemonade, and blueberry, lemon, blueberry citrus. | ||
This one's my legit favorite. | ||
I absolutely love this stuff. | ||
So again, use promo code Tim at mypillow.com. | ||
Make sure you check out their Rev 7. | ||
Limited time. | ||
They say they're so confident you're going to love it. | ||
You can try their introductory three-pack absolutely free. | ||
We set up a bi-weekly subscription. | ||
So go to mypillow.com using promo code Tim or call 1-800-925-9096. | ||
And shout out to Mike Lindell and MyPillow. | ||
I sleep under MyPillow every single night. | ||
Excuse me, I'm burping. | ||
Triggering these Rev 7s over here. | ||
So good. | ||
I'm not kidding, guys. | ||
I really do absolutely love this drink. | ||
It's so good. | ||
And we run out super quick because everybody loves them. | ||
But shout out to mypillow.com slash Tim. | ||
Thanks for sponsoring the show. | ||
Let's get back to your rants. | ||
All right. | ||
Luna's Ra says, yikes, Hunter Biden really sounds unhinged. | ||
Anyway, follow me for relaxing game content. | ||
Take the pressure off. | ||
There you go. | ||
Everybody keeps telling me I should do video game streams. | ||
It's like, okay, so I wrap the morning show. | ||
Then I immediately start streaming video games for two hours. | ||
Then I eat. | ||
Then I skate. | ||
Then I do a show again. | ||
I will never be home. | ||
They want more Tim Pool. | ||
Yeah, man. | ||
Now I got these pitches coming in. | ||
People want me to do weekend shows. | ||
And they're like, Tim Pool, we will give you money. | ||
And it's like, right? | ||
Yeah, because we're doing the Saturday shows. | ||
So if we start doing Saturday afternoon shows, and then we've got pitches coming in for a potential Sunday show, I'm like, I will work literally every single day. | ||
That's going to help you with that $175 million. | ||
Well, we'll finally break even. | ||
You know, right now, $175 million, and people are wondering, how is it that Timcast brings in $175 million Russia? | ||
And they're wondering, where does it all go? | ||
Well, salaries are expensive. | ||
Serge's salary is $30 million a year. | ||
Phil gets $35. | ||
It's expensive. | ||
We had to pay. | ||
You guys are getting paid? | ||
Guests come in on a private plane. | ||
Oh, absolutely. | ||
Yeah, well, Phil calls it a plane, but it's more like an anti-gravity device that is experimental and costs a billion dollars. | ||
Trying to keep it so that way people could kind of understand the concept. | ||
unidentified
|
I can't believe how many people were like, you make $175 million. | |
Can you believe it? | ||
I can believe it. | ||
Absolutely, man. | ||
unidentified
|
Dude, what about the private Maglev train out front? | |
That's not super. | ||
Yeah, we actually, you know, with $100,000. | ||
The reason why we broke even last year is because we had to pay $100 million Elon for our hypertube. | ||
Yep. | ||
Our vacuum car tube under the facility that brings us straight to London. | ||
You didn't think that the boring company only was working out in California, did you? | ||
Yeah. | ||
We have a tube that goes straight to London. | ||
Straight shot. | ||
They built the whole thing just for us. | ||
It wouldn't cost $100 million. | ||
That would cost like three, will it cost $10 trillion or some ridiculous amount? | ||
Yeah. | ||
There's no boring a tunnel through the Atlantic? | ||
Yeah, not through the mid-Atlantic Ridge where the ocean is currently spreading due to plate tectonics. | ||
It's not exactly a geostable region to tunnel through. | ||
All right, we got this from Raymond G. Stanley Jr. | ||
He says, that was an excellent dock. | ||
Shout out to 67 Kevin. | ||
It breaks the heart getting into a first-hand visual of the child trafficking that happened under Biden. | ||
Guys, legit, share sin frantera. | ||
It is an hour and 40-minute long breakdown of the evils of illegal immigration, the cartels, child trafficking. | ||
It's insane. | ||
And you got these people who don't want to believe it and don't know. | ||
Show them. | ||
That's why we made it. | ||
And now some might be saying, why is it premium only? | ||
Because it costs a lot of money to do. | ||
6'7 Kevin had to go to the Darien Gap. | ||
That is like one of the most dangerous places in the world. | ||
It's true. | ||
So it was very expensive. | ||
It was very dangerous. | ||
Tim, you know what impressed me? | ||
We'd like to make more of those. | ||
From the limited footage that I saw, because I only was just looking at it when I was coming in here, but I was impressed with the fact that it's not just interview face footage. | ||
It's really giving you an idea what the lay of the land is. | ||
Some great drone footage that's really showing the scope of, you know, of the actual state of what's happening down there. | ||
It's just not, it's not a documentary. | ||
You think documentary, and unfortunately, a lot of them are just like static shots talking back and forth, interviewer camera. | ||
This really had some great visuals in it. | ||
Also, Carter did the scoring for the documentary, which is available. | ||
The original documentary songs are all here. | ||
I'm going to play this one. | ||
What does this do? | ||
Is it going to be too loud? | ||
unidentified
|
oh i like this one Wow. | |
I like that one. | ||
It's called Salt and Wire. | ||
This is not AI. | ||
Carter made this music for the documentary. | ||
So we're really excited for this release. | ||
You know what we need to do, though? | ||
We need to do a premiere. | ||
And we're new at doing these documentaries. | ||
This is our third documentary we've ever put out. | ||
We need to do a premiere and we need to send screeners to the press, which we should have done. | ||
And we did not. | ||
But it's out now, and so share it with everybody and check it out. | ||
It's really something. | ||
It's really something. | ||
All right, let's see what we got here. | ||
We got some super chits. | ||
Luis Rodriguez says Colbert's cancellation was the best cancellation since a little late with Lily Singh. | ||
What does that mean? | ||
I don't know. | ||
They show. | ||
That just sucks. | ||
I have no idea. | ||
That just sucks. | ||
I was like, is he making a very offensive joke or something? | ||
I don't get. | ||
It's a terrible joke. | ||
All right. | ||
Andrew Lapensi says, remember how Israel just tried to start a nuclear war? | ||
Which incident are you referring to? | ||
Which time? | ||
There's an ongoing conflict for 70 years. | ||
I'm wondering which specific incident you're referring to. | ||
All right, what do we got here? | ||
Scott Dietrich says, what about Biden signing off on Chinese nationals as staff in the government Cloud Plus? | ||
I believe they lived in China on top of that. | ||
That could be treason. | ||
Samurai says, treason is a dictionary definition, not just U.S. law. | ||
Indeed. | ||
But when people are like they should be charged with treason or they committed treason, they're referring specifically to U.S. law. | ||
And that's why I say that that's addition. | ||
You can call them a traitor. | ||
You know, I get what you're saying. | ||
All right. | ||
Devin H. says, did you see Tom Holland? | ||
I'm sorry, Tom Holmond, I think he meant Tom Holman, selling EMP protection. | ||
What is going on? | ||
Yeah, we did. | ||
For years, he has, in fact, been partnering with this EMP. | ||
There was a book. | ||
For those who are confused, that's not a current ad that you were showing. | ||
He's not leveraging his current position. | ||
That is something he did in the interim between the administrations. | ||
Proto-Gen XL, Gen XL, says, Jordan Peterson versus 20 Kermit the Frogs was a key cultural discussion. | ||
It was funny. | ||
I just, I don't understand how people watch the Jubilee stuff, but they do. | ||
It's like the one with the flags. | ||
Yeah. | ||
Hey, look, I'm just holding out a touch man. | ||
But my issue with it is that you don't actually ever hear an argument. | ||
So like, for instance, the Medi Hassan one, this young woman comes up and she's like, do you think that Americans, like immigrants deserve more than Americans? | ||
He goes, immigrants are American. | ||
I'm an immigrant. | ||
I'm an American. | ||
And she's like, I mean people born here. | ||
And he's like, no, but immigrants are American. | ||
And I'm like, Mehdi, stop. | ||
She's not a professional debater. | ||
Ask her what she means. | ||
She meant, do you think that people who move here are more deserving than people who are born here? | ||
It's a simple question, setting the grounds of what your ideas are. | ||
But Mehdi argues semantics the whole time. | ||
One guy sits down and then he was like, I'm actually an immigrant. | ||
I'm from Iran. | ||
And he goes, how do you feel about everyone hating you? | ||
And he goes, I'm not here to debate them. | ||
I'm here to debate. | ||
And he goes, answer the question. | ||
And it's like, okay, here you go. | ||
Right? | ||
He's not actually debating any of these people. | ||
It's all tribal BS nonsense. | ||
So the problem is nobody actually gets any debates through. | ||
And then everyone else just is raising the flag, being like, get out of here. | ||
I don't want, I want to debate. | ||
Meddy was talking, like, he was calling kids fascists or, you know, calling the people there fascists and stuff. | ||
So it was the same, you know, virtue signaling, grandstanding stuff that he always does. | ||
And all the comments were from progressives ragging on fascists. | ||
Of course. | ||
So that's the play, right? | ||
But it's worth noting, like, the young people there, they're not worried about being called fascists. | ||
Some people actually consider themselves fascists, and that is a direct result of the left for the past 10 years. | ||
All right. | ||
Dylan Brown says, Olympics sucks now, too. | ||
They want to get rid of boxing. | ||
Working in sports broadcasting field, these stations are just looking for content. | ||
I am working Rockies baseball right now. | ||
I'm telling you this right now. | ||
You were just talking about this with baseball, how it's like the fifth inning t-shirt thing and then like the mascot races or whatever. | ||
They're turning into circuses. | ||
No one's attention can be kept anymore. | ||
It's actually kind of terrifying. | ||
And again, it plays into what I was talking about the 4th of July when I went to my hometown and nobody was outside. | ||
They're all inside on their computers. | ||
I was at a boutique store with my wife. | ||
She was looking for some summer clothes. | ||
And I saw like three teenage guys sitting down and they were just swiping on their phones just like this. | ||
Up, up, up. | ||
And I was like, oh my God, they're zombies. | ||
Plugged in 24-7. | ||
They can't go to a ball game. | ||
And the reason why they got to do mascot races is because they're like, stop looking at your phone and look over here. | ||
And they're like, I can't. | ||
But it's also in baseball, people have just lost an appreciation for the subtle things about like, where is this player shading? | ||
I mean, I'm not talking about the old, I'm not talking about like the whole infield shifting, but there's so many nuances to the game of baseball. | ||
If you know where to look for them, and people have lost that knowledge. | ||
And if you go back and you look at the pictures of the crowds watching baseball, I think some of the best baseball fans I've ever seen were in St. Louis. | ||
That town loves baseball. | ||
And they knew what was going on. | ||
And they were not there to just be distracted. | ||
They were there because they loved the game. | ||
And now it's kind of just like, I don't even know what it is. | ||
It's like, you know, do it for the Graham. | ||
We went to the game and we sat in the free food seats or like the $50 all-you-can-eat seats or whatever. | ||
It's not even, it's not the baseball I grew up with. | ||
It's barely recognizable to me. | ||
Yeah. | ||
All right, let's go. | ||
We got S.A. Federale says, talking about EMP and solar flares, I bought a bunch of Bacon Fang radios a couple years back. | ||
Several weeks later, I woke up to news of a flare. | ||
The screens were all scrambled, gibberish characters. | ||
Your Bao Fang radios is what he meant. | ||
Oh, okay. | ||
It says Bacon Fang. | ||
That's probably the YouTube. | ||
Oh, and then he says, my last jet was for Bao Fang, but I'm going to call them Bacon Fang from now on. | ||
You know what I can't stand about autocorrect? | ||
My wife texted me that she was going to be at Pirates. | ||
She's like, I'll be at Pirates till 2. | ||
Pilates. | ||
And one thing it does is it autocorrected redacted to reacted. | ||
It does this all the time in really weird ways. | ||
It turned defames into defamed. | ||
And I'm like, why is it? | ||
And then it never corrects when I hit the Y instead of the T on what or that. | ||
So it says way or they. | ||
It won't correct those. | ||
But it corrects literally everything into random words. | ||
The autocorrect when you're actually putting in a super chat, the YouTube one is atrocious. | ||
It's very, very bad. | ||
You have to be very careful. | ||
That's why people are posting juice boxes. | ||
unidentified
|
Yeah. | |
All right, everybody, smash that like button. | ||
Share the show with everyone you know if you really do like the show and think it's good. | ||
We're not a big network. | ||
We don't have the massive marketing budgets that Colbert has. | ||
And we don't have $100 million. | ||
We certainly don't do $175. | ||
We exist only because we are lucky enough that people like you who watch spread the show via word of mouth. | ||
And so I want to thank you all for telling your friends. | ||
That's really the only reason the show exists because it's all organic growth. | ||
Like you guys, you guys are amazing. | ||
You can follow me on X and Instagram at Timcast at uncensored shows coming up at rumble.com slash Timcast IRL in a couple of minutes. | ||
Brick, Suit, do you want to shout anything out? | ||
Yeah, I'm Brick Suit. | ||
You can follow me on X at Brick underscore Suit, and I'm going to continue to support the president and do some volunteering and just see America. | ||
This is our golden age. | ||
So I'd like to see you there. | ||
Thank you for your attention to this matter. | ||
I am Phil that remains on Twix. | ||
You can follow me there. | ||
The band is all that remains. | ||
You can check us out on YouTube, Apple Music, Amazon Music, Pandora, Spotify, and Deezer. | ||
Don't forget the left lane is for crime. | ||
Thank you all so much for hanging out. | ||
Let's go to rumble.com slash Timcast IRL for the uncensored portion of the show where you as members of the Timcast Discord can call in. | ||
We'll see you all in about 30 seconds. | ||
unidentified
|
Thank you. | |
Thank you. | ||
Thank you. | ||
Women are gay. | ||
unidentified
|
Yep. | |
Nah, the New York Times says women are gay. | ||
The trouble with wanting men. | ||
I think I'm going to record something on this probably tomorrow, like a bigger thing, but maybe for the weekend. | ||
But basically, the New York Times writes that women are fed up with trying to date men, so they're becoming called heterofatalists. | ||
I guess they're banging other chicks because they are tired of patriarchy or something. | ||
Like, it has never been a better time to be a woman, and they're still effing unhappy. | ||
This is what I was saying to Myron. | ||
Women are evolutionarily predisposed to always be a little bit unhappy. | ||
have to be. | ||
So, again, think about... | ||
No, no. | ||
We talked about it on the show. | ||
Was it? | ||
Yeah, so here's the idea. | ||
Go back 2,000 years. | ||
You got a man and a woman, man and a woman. | ||
These two women are sitting there. | ||
And the guy walks in and says, you know, I have brought you fish. | ||
And he gives the fish to the wife. | ||
Because we're not 40,000, we're 2,000 years, right? | ||
They spoke, well, some kind of English. | ||
They had a caveman accent. | ||
2,000 years ago, they actually had, you know, pretty decent language. | ||
So anyway, he's like, I bring you fish, malady, or something like that. | ||
unidentified
|
I don't know. | |
And anyway, you've got two women, and one says, I am completely content with the bare minimum that I need for the day. | ||
Thank you, husband. | ||
The other woman goes, how come you only ever get me one fish? | ||
It's not enough. | ||
I need more. | ||
And the husband's like, oh, she's nagging again. | ||
Fine, I'll go get you another fish, but don't complain. | ||
And then winter comes, and the woman who was like, husband, I love you. | ||
I'm content with the bare minimum. | ||
She now has no fish. | ||
And the husband says, wife, I cannot go fishing for the lake is frozen. | ||
We will now die. | ||
And they do. | ||
And the other lady goes, so what? | ||
I got to eat yesterday's extra fish. | ||
And he's like, oh my God, this again. | ||
At least you have fish. | ||
James's wife is dead. | ||
And that's my point. | ||
So if women, evolutionarily, were satisfied with the base requirement, they have a higher chance of dying in winter. | ||
If men are not constantly driven to always do more and be better, you have a higher chance of dying in storms, earthquakes, or winter, etc. | ||
So the men who are driven to always get more no matter what, and the women who are always a little bit unhappy with their circumstances are what created modern civilization. | ||
Therefore, modern women are always, no matter what, going to be a little unhappy. | ||
And that's why they all have to bund goofballs from the doctor. | ||
They do tend to take a lot of the goofballs, don't they? | ||
Dude, women are on drugs like fucking crazy. | ||
And I'm not saying men aren't crazy. | ||
This is really funny. | ||
I was talking to my wife, and I was like, I can't remember what she said, but I was like, well, you know, women are crazy. | ||
And she's like, men are crazy. | ||
And I was like, what? | ||
And she goes, I look outside at you guys in the skate park and see what you're doing. | ||
You're nuts. | ||
Mike's jumping off the roof. | ||
unidentified
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And I went, oh yeah. | |
You're right. | ||
Men are crazy. | ||
We're all a little crazy. | ||
But the thing is, men have that desire to do daring things because it's intended to impress women or impress other men so they will support whatever they're doing in an endeavor. | ||
And indeed, women are demanding and constantly unhappy with their circumstances because they require men who will overproduce in the event of disasters. | ||
There you go. | ||
It's evolutionary. | ||
Yep. | ||
And so men aren't on antidepressants like women and women are. | ||
Yeah. | ||
I mean, men are part of the reason why women are, you know, a little on the neurotic side is because that's what it takes to like take care of babies in a dangerous world. | ||
Right. | ||
Like if they weren't a little neurotic and a little extra worried about things, then the chances are they're going to be like, oh, the baby's fine. | ||
Well, if they think that, then the baby, you know, when the baby's not fine, they're like, oh, well, now I've lost the baby. | ||
It's that disagreeability. | ||
Like the disagreeability allows you to be like, what's the word? | ||
Not discerning, you know, and the discernment allows you to choose a suitable mate for your future, which is why those birds do those cool dances and stuff like that. | ||
It shows that they're suitable mates, which is just the same. | ||
And people were also human animals. | ||
I'm glad Ian isn't here because he would run with that. | ||
Oh, God. | ||
But yeah. | ||
I agree. | ||
I'm glad Ian isn't here to run with that as well. | ||
So they call it heterofatalism and heteropessimism to describe the outlook of straight women fed up with the mating behavior of men. | ||
So they're gay? | ||
So the mating. | ||
That's the point. | ||
They like to become like pseudo-gay. | ||
We have evolved to do things that you like. | ||
If you don't like the mating behavior of men, it's your fault. | ||
You gay? | ||
Honestly, I view this as just bull. | ||
This is bullshit. | ||
I can say bullshit now. | ||
This is something that just, it's a made-up problem. | ||
They're just, you know, they're creating copy. | ||
They're throwing a term out there. | ||
They're citing some scholar, scholar in quotes, you know. | ||
So they're throwing some anecdotes out there. | ||
And this is, what is this even from? | ||
Where's this article from? | ||
The New York Times. | ||
New York Times. | ||
This is like what, this is like what Cosmopolitan used to be like. | ||
Just like. | ||
Oh, bro. | ||
We are so fucking cooked, man. | ||
I can't tell you how cooked we are. | ||
The news is done. | ||
The news is dead. | ||
The news is over. | ||
I'm not even kidding. | ||
Cultural cohesion is out the window. | ||
I brought this up last week. | ||
When I started doing commentary, there were probably 50 stories per day, and I had to choose which ones to talk about. | ||
Today, it is pulling teeth to find news stories. | ||
And I am not talking about because we're in a down news cycle or whatever. | ||
I'm saying like literally like 2016, 2017, it was insane what was going on. | ||
Everything was like there were tons of outlets. | ||
They were all writing different things. | ||
Today, for example, there was a period where in like 2018, I started using a lot of Daily Mail. | ||
Daily Mail had every story. | ||
And I was like, wow, of all the articles and outlets I read, the Daily Mail captures most of them. | ||
Daily Mail is almost exclusively drama members only women's blog content now. | ||
Really? | ||
Not even joking. | ||
It used to be the top story with some big political thing, some big eye-catching thing. | ||
Now the top story will be like, you know, man cheats on wife or something like this. | ||
And honestly, they did a better job of covering American politics than a lot of the American media companies did. | ||
Now it's all at that time. | ||
Now it's all nonsense stories and exclusives. | ||
So like Joe Rogan said the Egyptians did what? | ||
Members only exclusive. | ||
And I'm like, I don't care. | ||
This is not news. | ||
A lot of these smaller news sites that used to be all over the place are completely gone. | ||
They've just gone completely under. | ||
I mean, we had a newsroom. | ||
It's gone. | ||
We got rid of it. | ||
Couldn't sustain it. | ||
The cost is super high. | ||
And the New York Times is turning into this bullshit. | ||
All of the news updates are turning into total bullshit. | ||
And news is becoming just Trump's rapid response account. | ||
And they're freaking excellent, by the way. | ||
I'm just going to say this. | ||
Even as somebody who was like really hyper-focused on X and media, I had no idea how much different the digital aspect of President Trump's second term was going to be. | ||
It is incredible. | ||
He did step it up, yeah. | ||
I mean, they're like, they're just on, they're, they're setting a pace that's never been set before. | ||
It's amazing. | ||
It's almost like Donald Trump was the whole digital aspect of his first presidency, like his X account. | ||
Right. | ||
You know, that was the centerpiece of all of it. | ||
Now, with him on Truth Social, I don't know how many people actually follow him on Truth Social or how many people actually go to Truth Social. | ||
I don't. | ||
I just wait until the stuff that he says on Truth Social gets posted on X. And if it's, I don't think that all of his stuff gets posted over there. | ||
No. | ||
But I assume most, anything that's, you know, important or relevant does. | ||
But yeah, the rabid response is great. | ||
The White House account is great now. | ||
Hilarious. |