| Speaker | Time | Text |
|---|---|---|
| It's a story that actually happened several weeks ago. | ||
| A young woman leaving work got onto a train minding her own business, looking out at her phone when a black man, for seemingly no reason, pulled out a folding knife and murdered her. | ||
| It took a while for people to notice the story, but eventually it started to go viral. | ||
| People asking why the media wasn't covering such a brutal and grisly murder. | ||
| Begin the biggest story in the country, and one of the biggest stories in the world over the weekend as the biggest story on X, and that is worldwide. | ||
| And to this day, the media has still not covered the story except to insult the right, to call them racist for daring to bring it up. | ||
| It is evil, I guess. | ||
| As of right now, I even have on Google their AI, Gemini, says, still, the New York Times has not written about the story. | ||
| In fact, on Wikipedia, the editors are trying to get the story deleted, despite the fact it's a national story. | ||
| People asking the question, how could this individual arrested 14 times for various crimes be let go and this horrific crime be allowed to take place? | ||
| And you know what else, my friend? | ||
| Another story from this weekend. | ||
| A professor in Auburn, Alabama, went out to walk her dog, a 59-year-old woman, and she was also brutally murdered by a black man. | ||
| Now, there are many stories that do go viral. | ||
| The George Floyd killing, of course, went viral. | ||
| And this is what people have been pointing out across social media, that those stories will get national attention in the corporate press. | ||
| But when it's the other way around, when it's black on white violence, they won't talk about it at all. | ||
| Fact on CNN, Brian Stelter accused people on X of being racist. | ||
| Incredible. | ||
| So we'll talk about that. | ||
| Plus, Operation Midway Blitz is underway. | ||
| Ice going to Chicago. | ||
| And this is what they're calling Midway Blitz. | ||
| There have been some protests, big ones, big protests. | ||
| Relatively uneventful. | ||
| Not a lot of rioting, not a lot of violence. | ||
| I mean, it's a good thing, but pretty low energy, I might add. | ||
| We'll talk about that. | ||
| We've got a bunch of stories to break down all throughout this stuff. | ||
| The Wikipedia one really does, it really is creepy to me. | ||
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| So smash that like button. | ||
| Share the show with everyone, you know, joining us tonight to talk about this and so much more. | ||
| We got Wade Miller. | ||
| Thanks for having me on. | ||
| I appreciate it. | ||
| Who are you? | ||
| What do you do? | ||
| Well, I'm the Senior Advisor at Center for Renewing America. | ||
| That's the think tank started by Russ Vogt, who's President Trump's Office of Management and Budget Director. | ||
| Before that, I was a chief of staff for Chip Roy. | ||
| Before that, I was a political director for Ted Cruz. | ||
| Before that, worked at Heritage Action with Russ Vogt. | ||
| And then before that, Marine Corps. | ||
| Right on. | ||
| Well, that should be interesting. | ||
| Thanks for joining out. | ||
| We got Producer Tate. | ||
| What's up, guys? | ||
| Tate Brown here, uh, holding it down. | ||
| Guess I'm like a backup host of Tim Cast, and I'm holding it down for Brett this week on PCC. | ||
| So come hang out this week on PCC. | ||
| And uh, yeah, I am Shane Cashman, and I'm going to be running out of this studio at 9:40 tonight to host Inverted World Live. | ||
| We go live at 10 p.m. | ||
| It's a call-in show. | ||
| If you've got a weird, strange, twisted story you want to share, give us a call. | ||
| We're going to talk about that aggressive probe that's flying towards Earth right now. | ||
| Every week, there's a new story about it. | ||
| The newest one is that there's many probes on the bigger probe. | ||
| So, we'll talk about that in a lot more. | ||
| Hi, Phil. | ||
| Welcome back from the Netherworld Shane. | ||
| Hello, everybody. | ||
| My name is Phil Abonte. | ||
| I'm the lead singer of the heavy metal band All That Remains. | ||
| I'm an anti-communist and a counter-revolutionary. | ||
| Let's get into it. | ||
| Here's a story. | ||
| We got it from the Daily Mail: Trump's gut-wrenching reaction to seeing Ukrainian refugee murder video as he slams Democrats for ignoring it. | ||
| Indeed, they're now some starting to come out and say maybe we need to deal with this crime. | ||
| But let me just stress this as we pull up. | ||
| ALX as the ALX on X has the statement directly from the president. | ||
| I'm just, I'm sick and tired of Democrats ignoring the problems, having strongholds in these cities where the problems have persisted for generations in Chicago, for instance, over 100 years. | ||
| And then they have the nerve to tell us who've suffered under this crime, we are wrong and we should not be afforded the protection from the federal government. | ||
| Spare me. | ||
| Here's what Trump had to say: I have seen the horrific video of a beautiful young Ukrainian refugee who came to America to escape the vicious war in Ukraine and was innocently riding the metro in Charlotte, North Carolina, where she was brutally ambushed by a mentally deranged lunatic. | ||
| The perpetrator was a well-known career criminal who had been previously arrested and released on cashless bail in January, a total of 14 times. | ||
| What the hell was he doing riding the train and walking the streets? | ||
| Criminals like this need to be locked up. | ||
| The blood of this innocent woman can literally be seen dripping from the killer's knife. | ||
| And now her blood is in the hands of Democrats who refuse to put bad people in jail, including former disgraced governor and wannabe Senator Roy Cooper. | ||
| North Carolina and every state needs law and order, and only Republicans will deliver it. | ||
| Additionally, where is the outrage from the mainstream media on this horrible tragedy? | ||
| Vote for Michael Watley for United States Senate. | ||
| He won't let this happen again. | ||
| This guy was arrested 14 times. | ||
| It's absolutely insane. | ||
| And I'll just say, these well-to-do liberals, they debate me on the issue. | ||
| They argue with me on X, don't live in these areas, don't see the crime, have not had friends of theirs killed or in gangs or dying from drugs. | ||
| And then when I say, actually, I think it's good Trump wants to send in federal law enforcement, they say, but that's fascism. | ||
| So it's not. | ||
| It's literally not. | ||
| But I'm supposed to live under the boot of gang bangers because they don't like Trump. | ||
| Spare me. | ||
| I mean, it's ridiculous. | ||
| This is, I think, the biggest part of the story, at least as far as I'm concerned, is how slow the mainstream news was to catch on. | ||
| And then their initial reaction was, oh, Republicans pounce. | ||
| Like this kind of story, like this type of story is something that the media covers all the time. | ||
| And everyone knows why they didn't want to cover this because it makes the argument that the conservatives have been making about crime and stuff that makes it more pressing. | ||
| It makes people more aware of it. | ||
| And so they didn't want to get into it because it's a total loser for them. | ||
| Their whole narrative is basically destroyed by this. | ||
| So I don't, I mean, I don't know what the solution is. | ||
| I don't know that having the National Guard is going to do anything about this. | ||
| Like the guy, you know, there was no warning or anything like that. | ||
| Even like Daniel Penny, though, he wouldn't have been able to do anything or he wouldn't have, him being on the same train wouldn't have fixed anything because the guy just out of nowhere stabbed the girl. | ||
| If you see the videos, I'm so sick. | ||
| Sorry. | ||
| So sick of seeing people who've been incarcerated so many times performing these brutal acts. | ||
| You know, it's like every violent crime we've seen lately. | ||
| It's like he was on our radar. | ||
| We've had him in the system. | ||
| And it's just a consequence of how defunct the justice system is, how defunct policing is right now. | ||
| To your point about the justice system, one of the things that I, my first initial reaction was, hey, I know that this is, we can't do this now, but we should in the future make it so that way judges that allow people like this to go free, there's repercussions. | ||
| If you, as a judge, say, okay, we're going to lower your bail or we're going to let you off in, you know, for a short, you're only going to have to do a short amount of time or whatever reason, that some kind of, all right, look, this is this is on you if it goes bad. | ||
| Some kind of, you know, something, whether it be like my gut reaction was, you know, the judge should be brought up on manslaughter charges, which obviously is not going to happen now because it's not legal now, but there should be changes to the law. | ||
| So that way there is negative repercussions for a judge if they say, well, we're just going to let this person go because right now there's no reason not to. | ||
| Here's the big debate for everybody. | ||
| The killer is on camera. | ||
| Everyone's seen the video of him murdering this young woman. | ||
| Capital punishment. | ||
| Yay or nay. | ||
| I don't agree with it. | ||
| With that, a death penalty? | ||
| I hate the death penalty. | ||
| I don't think the government can be trusted with anything. | ||
| I want him locked up forever and rotting. | ||
| I just don't trust capital punishment. | ||
| I actually want the death penalty, but I agree with you. | ||
| And this is the challenge. | ||
| I think emotionally and logically, we are all sitting here saying, clearly, this career criminal who had been arrested numerous times for violent offenses against individuals and then murdered someone is not going to be rehabilitated. | ||
| He is clearly mentally broken and he is going to kill again if released. | ||
| And I think he had actually just been released previously, like shortly before this. | ||
| And then he did. | ||
| And so my gut reaction is: okay, we've seen enough. | ||
| What do we do? | ||
| However, my concern is, of course, creating a system by which the government has the authorities to kill people now. | ||
| Do you want it? | ||
| Do you want capital punishment as a deterrence for crime or justice? | ||
| Like, how do you see it? | ||
| It prevents more crime. | ||
| Do you think it happens? | ||
| I don't think it's a problem. | ||
| I don't think it does. | ||
| It prevents them from repeat offending. | ||
| It prevents individual deaths. | ||
| Dead crime. | ||
| Yes. | ||
| Dead people don't kill people. | ||
| Well, I am for the death penalty. | ||
| I think there should be higher evidentiary standards. | ||
| I think that it's maybe applied too much. | ||
| The real problem, though, is as AI gets better, I don't like, I don't trust video increasingly. | ||
| Exactly. | ||
| In this case, is that the video? | ||
| I'm sure it is. | ||
| But this is systematic of a social justice narrative by the left to just not enforce the law at large. | ||
| And so what they're doing is, they have been basically substantiating the ability for the Trump administration to come in and under various authorities. | ||
| In fact, we wrote about this with authorities that the president would have to do this three years ago, anticipating just this type of moment. | ||
| What happened in the last Trump administration is during the BLM riots, I think the president wanted to act. | ||
| He wanted to secure these communities. | ||
| And I think, I don't know, but I think he was given bad legal advice. | ||
| And so part of what we wanted to do is make the argument going into this administration that if the left tries to redo that, that the president actually can. | ||
| I think his lawyers this time are advising him much better and advising him that he does have the authority to go in and secure these cities in certain circumstances under certain conditions. | ||
| And sending ICE to Chicago, for instance, if we start seeing violence against ICE, will be the predicate then by which the president can send National Guard in to protect ICE and to help them enforce the law. | ||
| Yeah. | ||
| Well, and like we'd be remiss to not point out, I mean, Will Kane was discussing it on Fox News earlier because the reason this story specifically is animating so many people, why people are so fired up, is because of the race, races of the individuals that were involved. | ||
| Did you have a black man and a white woman? | ||
| And people are pointing out the massive discrepancy in crime where they're saying, well, black men specifically are committing a very disproportionate amount of violent crime. | ||
| And people are really, this is starting a conversation that I think the left has not wanted to have for years. | ||
| Oh, yeah. | ||
| I mean, it's wild. | ||
| I've been talking about the pendulum swing on Instagram, where it's not even the question of the facts of the matter, but on X seven years ago, if you posted FBI crime stats, it's the ban. | ||
| Just literally, the FBI says a thing happened. | ||
| You're like, oh, hey, look at this. | ||
| They got you. | ||
| You're banned. | ||
| Not anymore. | ||
| Not anymore. | ||
| I made this post a moment ago from Grok and Chat GPT. | ||
| And let's break it down. | ||
| This is just the stats on interracial crime, black on white versus white on black, to which I asked ChatGPT about this. | ||
| They responded in 2022, there were 543,480 black-on-white violent incidents compared to 96,550 white-on-black incidents, according to the Bureau of Justice Statistics National Crime Victimization Survey, table 14. | ||
| This represents a 462.8% increase in black-on-white incidents versus white on black. | ||
| When adjusted for population, a black individual was about 26 times more likely to attack a white individual than the reverse, based on the 2022 U.S. Census population data estimates. | ||
| It then provided me with a summary list of sources. | ||
| Now, this is just an image. | ||
| Someone asked Grok, are these stats accurate? | ||
| To which Grok responded, yes. | ||
| The stats match the Bureau of Justice stats NCVS 2022 report, estimating, again, 543,480 black on white versus 96,550 white on black. | ||
| 462.8% higher raw count and 26 times population adjusted likelihood align with the data. | ||
| These are survey-based estimates with some limitations like victim perceived race. | ||
| The point is, nothing that I am saying is intended to slight someone based on their race. | ||
| I am simply showing the data right now. | ||
| And the reason why I did this, there's two big reasons why I looked this up. | ||
| I was curious. | ||
| And I think it's important that people understand what is happening right now culturally as to why this story about Irina Zadutska is going so massively viral. | ||
| Now, they're trying to delete it on Wikipedia. | ||
| They're saying it's not news. | ||
| The corporate press is saying it's racist and it's not news. | ||
| And these people are insane. | ||
| And because of their lies and manipulations, you're actually breeding racism. | ||
| It's actually making, you are not getting legitimate journalism. | ||
| You are not breaking down what is going on with crime in this country. | ||
| And it is just resulting in people saying you can't trust the press and going to other sources where you're going to get data that's less than accurate or otherwise. | ||
| Banning people doesn't solve the problem. | ||
| It never did. | ||
| And now people are asking questions about why doesn't anyone care? | ||
| And you know what? | ||
| Even I think people, I don't know, even Nick Fuentes has a video going viral that Instagram is promoting to millions and millions of people where he outright says he's not saying individual black people are doing bad things or whatever, but he's pointing out these stats. | ||
| And then when you get the media covering it up, you get this question of, you get the cultural question of why is the media lying about it? | ||
| What is their angle on this? | ||
| And what are the actual causes that we're not getting able to discuss because you'll get banned or censored? | ||
| Now, I was saying the pendulum is swung the other way. | ||
| We can actually talk about these crime stats. | ||
| And I'm not going to sit here and tell you that you're going to judge an individual based on the color of their skin. | ||
| In fact, quite the opposite. | ||
| But there's a reason why this story has gone viral and it's because people are tired of being lied to about it. | ||
|
unidentified
|
Yeah. | |
| Well, I mean, like, you just have to ask people that grew up in Chicago or Memphis or these, like, we've, we've noticed these sorts of things happening, but you're supposed to just ignore your lying eyes and the media refuses to report on it. | ||
| I mean, I don't know. | ||
| It makes it makes whatever implications there are. | ||
| It makes you suspicious of like why there's such an all-out blitz. | ||
| It's an agenda. | ||
| Right, exactly. | ||
| Let me pull this clip up. | ||
| We've got this post from ALX on X. | ||
| He says, CNN's former palace eunuch Brian Stelter on X on X was just covering the murder of Irina Zaritska in Charlotte. | ||
| The open racism on sites like X Today is eye-popping. | ||
| Okay, let's roll tape. | ||
| Really, over the weekend, Elon Musk, Charlie Kirk, other Trump-aligned figures succeeded in making this senseless death a symbol of big city crime. | ||
| We heard President Trump asked about it yesterday when he was heading home from New York City. | ||
| He didn't seem to know much about it. | ||
| He said he would get briefed. | ||
| And then today, Trump did know all about it. | ||
| That's exactly what has happened here. | ||
| This story has trickled up from local news to social media and now to the president's attention. | ||
| And it's being used, as you said, Brianna, as a political symbol with MAGA media calling for more forceful punishments and more incarceration. | ||
| I have to say, some of the replies to Musk, some of the comments around this story are baldly racist, stoking fear of African Americans because this man attacked a white woman. | ||
| The open racism on sites like X Today, it's eye-popping. | ||
| But there are also legitimate questions about this so-called career criminal, someone who had been a repeat offender. | ||
| And those questions, I hope they're not lost amid all of the cesspool kind of comments on social media. | ||
| You see what they do. | ||
| I'd love to see a highlight reel of stelter from the Floyd days. | ||
| Uh-huh. | ||
| What he was saying about cops. | ||
| Well, yeah, and like the racism that he's talking about, he's not talking about like the far-right people who are like seizing on this and spouting whatever. | ||
| He's talking about people like, yeah, like Will Kane or Timpool that are just posting data. | ||
| I said, Charlie Kirk. | ||
| Charlie Kirk, right? | ||
| Like, and he's saying open racism is like it's racist to like data. | ||
| I understand he's pointing out that there are going to be replies to these posts. | ||
| The problem I have with it is, guy, an anonymous person, an anonymous account on X, which is probably originating in India or Turkey, is not indicative of what Charlie Kirk or Will Kane think about the issue. | ||
| Interestingly, however, I was having dinner with the family watching Will Kane, as I do every day at 4 p.m. | ||
| Shout out to the Will Kane show. | ||
| And he brought up the crime stats, which is why I had that post from Grok. | ||
| I saw his show and he mentioned the interracial crime stats from 2023 and how you are more likely to see black on white violence than white on black violence. | ||
| I'm not going to look at that and then be like, I have a negative feeling towards someone based on this. | ||
| Not at all. | ||
| Not at all. | ||
| But I think it's fair to say, hey, look at the crime stats. | ||
| Maybe we can dig into this and figure out how we solve for this problem and actually repair the damage of racism, whatever it may be. | ||
| By obfuscating and covering it up, they've made it worse every step of the way. | ||
| I think that's the intention of the Democrats. | ||
| And if you flip the map on this and you say, okay, 462.8% increase, and let's just concede, even though I think most of them are false, let's just concede their arguments on over-policing and bias and policing and all these things. | ||
| It doesn't pass a smell test that that's 462.8% of the reason. | ||
| And so this gets to what's actually going on. | ||
| There's a big problem in the culture of African-American communities. | ||
| Not everyone. | ||
| It's not a genetic disorder. | ||
| It's not inherent in their genes. | ||
| There's a problem. | ||
| And the left doesn't want to talk about why, because that gets into what does it take to actually fix this problem. | ||
| And it would help the black community. | ||
| It would help all of America. | ||
| The left doesn't want to have that conversation. | ||
| And they want to call anyone who wants to have an honest conversation about that racist. | ||
| I think it's because you want a victim narrative. | ||
| You can go to these neighborhoods and say, it's not your fault. | ||
| Vote for us and we'll fix it. | ||
| It's them. | ||
| They're demagoguing. | ||
| And so I had a great interview with Christian Maxwell. | ||
| She's running in Illinois CD1. | ||
| She's a conservative running in a D plus 18 district, agreeing with Trump, saying we need the National Guard. | ||
| And she's talking about how they're lying to everybody. | ||
| They're saying that the National Guard's going to come in and start rounding people up and going. | ||
| That's not at all what they're going to do. | ||
| They're going to come in and provide assistance to the local governments, freeing up resources for police. | ||
| Police can get back to doing their jobs. | ||
| When you're talking about the problem of the culture, I'll tell you this. | ||
| I'm from one city and everyone knows I'm from Chicago. | ||
| I've been screaming about it. | ||
| But forgive me, Trump is talking about sending in the National Guard. | ||
| And I'm here to say I agree as someone from Chicago. | ||
| And I will tell you this. | ||
| There are many neighborhoods in Chicago that, and they're all segregated by race for the most part. | ||
| There's white areas, Hispanic areas, black areas. | ||
| And when you look at a lot of the high crime areas, guess what? | ||
| Predominantly black. | ||
| However, when you look at Hyde Park, it's got double the national average, more than double the national average of the black population and lower than average crime. | ||
| The issue, the black families that live there are well off, educated, just like any other lower crime neighborhood, you're going to see higher rates of successful professionalism. | ||
| And I think we have a cultural issue that 100 years of Democratic rule has entrenched intentionally. | ||
| The issue is not the race. | ||
| The issue is not genetic or anything like that. | ||
| The issue is there is a culture that I've personally experienced where they tell the kids in the neighborhood, don't act white and you have to be hard. | ||
| They tell them things like, I swear, I'm hanging out with some of my friends in the South Side, and it's three black kids. | ||
| We were going skateboarding. | ||
| And when they were talking, one of them said, well, I haven't been to jail yet, but, and I'm like, whoa, bro, bro, don't go to jail. | ||
| Like, why are you talking like that, man? | ||
| Because that's what they're told in their neighborhood. | ||
| You will go to jail. | ||
| It's going to happen. | ||
| That's the way it goes. | ||
| As if they're telling these kids, if you want to go hard and you don't want to act white, you will do things that will put you in jail. | ||
| And I'm like, man, you guys got to get out of that stuff. | ||
| Make money. | ||
| Get paid. | ||
| One of my favorite stories ever was this black dude in my neighborhood who sold t-shirts. | ||
| I've told the story a million times. | ||
| Forgive me, but for those that didn't hear it. | ||
| And he was ragging on the drug dealers, saying you make more money selling t-shirts than selling dope. | ||
| And then he told this story about how, not a story, but like what literally does. | ||
| He said, he calls the local venues for the weekends, asks, he figures out who the bands are. | ||
| He calls the bands and says, do you have merch? | ||
| And if they don't, I'll make merch for you and I'll give you 20% of everything I sell. | ||
| And he was like, bro, I make like two, three grand a week working two days a week. | ||
| He's like, I go to the print shop. | ||
| I literally just put the band's graphic, their own graphic on a shirt. | ||
| I go to their show and I sit there and I sell it. | ||
| I give the band 20%. | ||
| I make a couple grand. | ||
| And he was like, why you selling dope, man? | ||
| It's because the people in the neighborhood are telling them that's the way you do it. | ||
| Even though they didn't make that much money, they put themselves at risk. | ||
| And then the problem is when I say stuff like this, when I point out the high crime rates, it's people like Brian Stelter and the corporate press who say, you're racist. | ||
| The actual reality is the cops are doing it on purpose. | ||
| And I'm like, dude, you're not going to tell me that the gangbangers in the Leclerc courts where I was growing up in Chicago were oppressed. | ||
| And that's why they came to my neighborhood and robbed all my friends. | ||
| That's the stupidest thing I've ever heard. | ||
| Yeah, well, and it's like kind of what you're hitting on is specifically the cultural component is we shouldn't be surprised at all that there's this huge disparity. | ||
| Because I mean, within the black community, but broadly in America, there's just, there's a huge anti-white rhetoric going on. | ||
| And it's like, you shouldn't be surprised when whites are demonized. | ||
| You're going to get an increase in violence towards them. | ||
| I mean, everyone's scratching their heads. | ||
| It's also a high rate of fatherlessness and a lot of nihilism because they're generationally, you know, they have no meaning because they're seeing what's around them. | ||
| And it's a lot of drugs and gangbanging. | ||
| And so they don't have any life to live for. | ||
| A lot of these young kids, and they'll die young because of it. | ||
| This is what really blew my mind in, you know, I don't think I've ever had any kind of like traditional red pilling. | ||
| You know, like Dave Rubin was a liberal and then he was like, holy crap, something's wrong. | ||
| I was always kind of middle of the road when I was young. | ||
| I was a little bit left, but I'll tell you, in the 2010s, I did a documentary on St. Louis, Ferguson, and I can tell you all about how the structures that were set up during the segregation, during the period of segregation resulted in a systemically racist circumstance. | ||
| That is, the cops in the St. Louis jurisdictions are not inherently racist. | ||
| Like the white cop doesn't say, oh boy, I'm going to go pull over a bunch of black people. | ||
| What happens is there's like 99 different jurisdictions. | ||
| So if you have a busted taillight, you have to drive through five towns to get to work and you're only driving five miles. | ||
| You get pulled over five times. | ||
| You get five tickets. | ||
| You can't afford it. | ||
| These jurisdictions in St. Louis were intentionally set up as enclaves for white people who are leaving the cities because of, it's very, very complicated, but I mentioned Pruitt Igo, one of the first project housing systems set up in the United States. | ||
| It was left underdeveloped. | ||
| They didn't take care of it. | ||
| It fell apart. | ||
| Then crime started to take over and then it fell apart. | ||
| Then you ended up with this heavily impoverished area living in a giant slum. | ||
| White people leave. | ||
| They created smaller townships. | ||
| Now you've got all these different police jurisdictions and you've got pockets of black neighborhoods that are still struggling to get out of that cycle of poverty. | ||
| But what the left will tell you, it's the white cop is racist and hates black people. | ||
| I'm like, no, no, no, the white cop literally has no idea. | ||
| He's just like, I don't know, man, your taillight was out. | ||
| You can't do that. | ||
| You got to get it fixed. | ||
| But what happens when you've got a whole bunch of small jurisdictions? | ||
| So in places like Chicago, you had redlining and blockbusting. | ||
| And that's where the real estate market negatively impacted black families, made it harder for them to generate wealth in their properties. | ||
| And it did create these weights on these communities. | ||
| But I'll tell you this. | ||
| The solution to it is not what the left is offering up. | ||
| And that's where it got confusing to me when I'm like, hey, guys, like when we talk about redlining, that's where the real estate company, like the, would it would collude to be like, only sell to black people in these neighborhoods to keep them out of the white neighborhoods. | ||
| When they would do something like that, you create impoverished neighborhoods. | ||
| And when I would talk to the left about this, they'd be like, no, no, no, no, don't bring that up. | ||
| Just bring up the racist cops. | ||
| And I'm like, this would solve the problem. | ||
| Like we can address the problem and make this problem go away. | ||
| No, they don't care. | ||
| They didn't care. | ||
| And that's the thing is that everyone admits it historically and even until relatively recently, there were hurdles as a community that they have faced. | ||
| But the problem is, is that the answers the left have been providing clearly aren't working. | ||
| The data is showing that it's not working. | ||
| And so we have to admit that before we can have a conversation as to why it's not working and be able to have that conversation in a setting where you're not being called a racist or canceled or fired from your job. | ||
| And if we can do that, then we can actually find some answers to this problem. | ||
| But again, I don't think that the left politically wants to solve this problem. | ||
| There's too much for them to lose. | ||
| They'll lose votes. | ||
| They will lose their cult narrative. | ||
| Let's jump to this next story. | ||
| Let's get them. | ||
| I have an article from Wikipedia. | ||
| This is titled The Wikipedia, Articles for Deletion, Killing of Irina Zarutska. | ||
| Now, why would this be nominated for deletion? | ||
| So the article discussing Irina Zarutska's killing was nominated for deletion. | ||
| And up until just now, it was facing deletion until users came in and said, what the? | ||
| No, you can't delete this. | ||
| This is absolutely wild. | ||
| So the way it works, for those on a familiar on Wikipedia, is that you'll go in. | ||
| It's a nomination for deletion. | ||
| And then you will add your two cents. | ||
| Keep the article you'll write keep. | ||
| If you want to delete it, you'll say delete and explain why. | ||
| What's absolutely amazing about this is that while there are many people saying keep, it's kind of ridiculous to delete a massive news story. | ||
| Here's one. | ||
| Let me read this. | ||
| Delete. | ||
| There may be a case for a very small mention under Link's blue line controversies, but this is a standard wrong place, wrong time story that if it was a regular Charlotte resident would have the standard short arrest arrayment trial and sentencing check-ins by Charlotte's local news and no more. | ||
| The document, Every Crime Ever Side of Wikipedia, really needs to make better judgments. | ||
| There are numerous delete unless significant notable coverage is derived outside of a generic run-of-the-mill crime content. | ||
| This is blah, blah, blah, delete. | ||
| There is zero indication that this specific article is anywhere near getting the requirements for WP an event, national event. | ||
| There are people in social media and other venues are trying to make this into something far greater than it really merits. | ||
| Let me just tell you what they're saying. | ||
| What they're saying by trying to delete this article is, if the people, if the people say this story is massive, delete it until the corporate press agrees. | ||
| They're basically saying, you, the people, don't have a right to decide what matters to you and what is worthy of entrance into the archives. | ||
| When the New York Times writes it up, whether anyone cares, it gets its own article. | ||
| Quite literally, a guy at the New York Times can write the stupidest article about things you don't care about, and they will say, national event. | ||
| But when tens of millions of views, hundreds of thousands of retweets, conversations for days at the national and international level are hitting social media, they say, yeah, but CNN didn't write about it, so delete it. | ||
| That's the narrative machine right there. | ||
| That right there is the story. | ||
| The non-story is part of the story. | ||
| The fact that it's so big online, and then there's radio silence on mostly all the major platforms, that is a huge thing. | ||
| It's not like this is just a one-off thing for the dude. | ||
| Like I said earlier, a guy was arrested many times and he was saying he was a totally schizophrenic guy saying he had man-made implants in him. | ||
| His mother was saying that he should be, she put him away. | ||
| Right. | ||
| And his mother was like, he shouldn't have been out. | ||
| Right. | ||
| It's a huge story. | ||
| Like, no matter who writes about it or not. | ||
| But the reason the reason the left doesn't, or one of the reasons why the left doesn't want to cover it is because of how many of their narratives it destroys. | ||
| Oh, yeah. | ||
| Right. | ||
| The right wants to see more mental institutions. | ||
| It wants to see better ways to take care of violent people, whether they be criminals or whether they be just in some kind of mental institution, for lack of a better term. | ||
| And this plays right into that. | ||
| And so the left doesn't want to talk about it. | ||
| The right says that there's an epidemic of crime. | ||
| There's too much crime. | ||
| The left says, no, it's fine. | ||
| This plays right into it. | ||
| The right says that we need DAs and we need judges that are actually going to put people away. | ||
| And the left says, no, we don't. | ||
| We need restorative justice, et cetera. | ||
| This plays right into the right. | ||
| The left doesn't want to touch this at all. | ||
| And the reason is because it literally blows up all of their narratives. | ||
| It would be like a parent who trans their kid trying to accept that that was the bad thing to do. | ||
| Yeah, that's true. | ||
| Because they've been selling this narrative the whole time. | ||
| And look how quick these ghoulish journalists are willing to stand on top of any other corpse, right? | ||
| But this one they'll just ignore until it goes away. | ||
| But it won't. | ||
| Yeah. | ||
| Hopefully. | ||
|
unidentified
|
Yeah. | |
| Well, I mean, it's just a huge containment breach, like you're saying, because, I mean, for the longest time, like you were saying, is anytime you would start sniffing around, you know, data and these sorts of things, they would just shout you down and call you racist. | ||
| Brian Steltzer comes out and does the whole song and dance. | ||
| But like it's gotten to the point now where, yeah, I mean, Fox News are having to cover this. | ||
| I mean, it's like, it's time to have a conversation. | ||
| Will Kane show doing a here's interracial crimes thing. | ||
| Yeah. | ||
| I'm like, wow, pendulum swing. | ||
| Three years ago, you get banned like as an anon for. | ||
| Hey, do you, do you think that Gen Z is intimidated by being called racist anymore? | ||
| I feel like there's not a lot of people in Gen Z that care. | ||
| I mean, there's a lot of people on the right that are kind of over it and just like, I don't care what you call me because you're going to call me that anyways. | ||
| You know, if you if you if you can get called accused of being a racist for wearing the wrong kind of hairstyle, you know, it kind of has diluted the accusation almost totally. | ||
| And I think that part of it's that, but also because Gen Z has nothing to lose because of how broken the institutions are, where like if you're older and you get fired from your job or, you know, socially ostracized, like that's going to wreck your life. | ||
| But Gen Z is already unemployed and socially ostracized. | ||
| So part of it too is just they feel like they have nothing to lose. | ||
| They understand what the weight of the racism label means, but to a large degree, they're like, I don't care. | ||
| I care about truth. | ||
| I'm not worried about Brian Steltzer calling me a racist. | ||
| But you do have nothing to lose. | ||
| Gen Z women don't want to have kids. | ||
| Not going to own a house. | ||
| Good luck finding a job. | ||
| Population's collapsing. | ||
| We got the last chapter out of non, buddy. | ||
| Yeah. | ||
| Real. | ||
| Yeah. | ||
| So it's so we shouldn't be surprised. | ||
| And then, yeah, the media, you know, everything, it's like, no, we go to Twitter for information anyway. | ||
| Like, I'm not, whether or not there's a Wikipedia article, it doesn't mean anything because I don't use Wikipedia for information. | ||
| It's like you're looking at the discussion on Twitter in real time, and it's very important, people, as well. | ||
| It's not just like random anons like it used to be. | ||
| I have a question for everyone around the table: who do you think is worse? | ||
| The moderators on Reddit or the people that are writing Wikipedia articles? | ||
| Ooh, that's a really good question. | ||
| That's a trick question. | ||
| They're the same group. | ||
| Same people. | ||
| But you're probably right. | ||
| It's the hall monitors have grown up, and that's what they're. | ||
| Oh, dude, Reddit is just absolutely hilarious. | ||
| Reddit is taking down posts about this like mad right now. | ||
| If you comment on certain subreddits, even in opposition, and like there are certain gaming subreddits where you'll say something like, I'm not a fan of this game, you'll get instantly banned from a whole bunch of other on it, like just non-political subreddits because the moderators are like anybody on the right or who interacts is unpersoned. | ||
| That's how insane and stupid Reddit is. | ||
|
unidentified
|
What? | |
| Good riddance. | ||
| Yeah, I mean, you're seeing black people who are like, we should have a conversation as a community about how bad violent crime is getting. | ||
| You're seeing them get banned. | ||
| And they're like, they're the ones that are saying, no, we're saying we need to have an internal conversation about what's going on. | ||
| So it's like they, it's literally just shut this down, get this out, get this out of the news cycle, whatever we have to do. | ||
| It doesn't even matter if you're banning like left-leaning black people for having the conversation. | ||
| This was, I think, like the first time one of the major national liberal outlets wrote about it. | ||
| Yeah. | ||
| Stabbing video fuels MAGA's crime message, to which their principal argument is the video is easily shared or leaked and can instantly pollinate across social media, a visual counterpoint to statistics showing crime decreases. | ||
| So let me just point out real quick: when these corporate news outlets decide if something is a story and write about it, they did not have a grassroots bubbling up of a story. | ||
| This stabbing happened several weeks ago, and it took a while for people to notice, get mad about it, start sharing it, start saying to each other, like, hey, guys, we should be talking about this because it wasn't coming from the principal large corporate disseminators of information. | ||
| But the fascinating thing about this is, Axios, how about this? | ||
| I go to Axios. | ||
| Let's see what they think is worthy of news. | ||
| Coming soon, the Axios show. | ||
| Okay, to be fair, telling people who read your website about your own news show is something. | ||
| But I'm going to make this argument. | ||
| I'm going to play the same game as Axios. | ||
| That's not news. | ||
| Axios is leveraging their website to profit off of an audience trying to find out information on a murder. | ||
| The funny thing is when they write that MAGA is using and sharing videos. | ||
| What? | ||
| Yes, it's called the news. | ||
| Yeah. | ||
| And they're acting like Trump supporters. | ||
| It's not even just Trump supporters did something wrong for being like, I am concerned about this murder. | ||
| Yeah. | ||
| Well, it means the Republicans pounce when you don't have, you know, when the story blows up your narrative so badly, the only thing you have left is to say, look, the Republicans are bad for talking about this. | ||
| Here's what they think is bigger news. | ||
| Kushner joins Witkoff to meet Netanyahu's advisor on Gaza. | ||
| Super big news. | ||
| Sure. | ||
| I mean, it's not news, but my point is this: a woman is brutally murdered for no reason, and the man has a blade dripping with blood as she dies in front of a crowd. | ||
| And they're like, but, but advisors are meeting. | ||
| And that's the game. | ||
| I'm not saying that this is not important news. | ||
| Of course, it's important news. | ||
| But the idea that Axios would play the game, that individuals sharing video make something that shouldn't be news news, you just arbitrarily decide when you think something should be on your front page, you hypocrites. | ||
| I also think to your Gen Z point, that the reason this really jumped off is in an era where everything is racist, nothing is racist, and they just don't care. | ||
| It's kind of impressive seeing this newer generation. | ||
| They just don't care. | ||
| They see that. | ||
| They know something's wrong. | ||
| And so they just push it out. | ||
| It's great. | ||
|
unidentified
|
It's the syndrome meme. | |
| When everyone is racist, no one will be. | ||
| And that's Instagram right now. | ||
| I'm telling you. | ||
| Like Gen Z on Instagram is just as racist as they could possibly be. | ||
| I've never seen it in a more racist generation. | ||
| Five years ago, they were told they were racist for not posting a black square on Instagram. | ||
| So it's going to go the other way. | ||
| I think part of it is the fact that the Black Lives Matter narrative has been so utterly destroyed, right? | ||
| Whether it be the results of having police have body cameras all the time. | ||
| You see so many interactions with police where you know the person would be saying, oh, you know, I was, I was, you know, it was, they were racist, blah, blah, blah. | ||
| But you see, no, these interactions with the police, the police are doing their best to do their job and they get attacked. | ||
| And that was supposed to change the game. | ||
| We were supposed to know, because now they have these body camps. | ||
| The data didn't change, even though they all now have these body camps. | ||
| Sean Fitzgerald had the best take on this. | ||
| He said, this is the ultimate monkey's paw wish because Black Lives Matter said, we want to get body cams. | ||
| We know we'll prove these cops are racist. | ||
| We'll prove these cops are tracking down young black men and killing them, blah, blah, blah. | ||
| They got exactly what they wanted, and it proved the exact opposite of what they said. | ||
| And it's something that everyone has known for a long time, or at least the statistics, the FBI has known, the statistics have been there. | ||
| Basically, it's about 12 to 15 unarmed black men are killed a year when interacting with the police. | ||
| Now, that doesn't mean that they were doing what the police says. | ||
| It doesn't mean that they were complying with the orders. | ||
| It just means that they were unarmed and they ended up dead with an interaction with the police. | ||
| I'd like to say that the ultimate monkey's paw wish was the leftists taking the pawn saying, I wish that this country had a racial awakening. | ||
| Yeah. | ||
| And then 10 years later, a whole bunch of white people are like, let's have a conversation. | ||
| This is exactly what the argument that we were making when, or at least I was making when people were talking about CRT. | ||
| CRT, critical race theory literally awakens a critical racial consciousness in the people. | ||
| When you teach people, there's going to be that kind of mindset to see the world in that way. | ||
| There's going to be a certain percentage of the people that are going to say, okay, I see this, and I don't care. | ||
| I don't feel bad. | ||
| I'm not a bad guy. | ||
| I'm not going to hate myself or my friends or my family because they're the wrong color. | ||
| I want to point this out real quick. | ||
| On Google, I searched New York Times, Irina Zarutska, AI overview. | ||
| As of September 8th, 2025, there is no evidence the New York Times has published a story specifically about Irina Zarutska. | ||
| This has become a point of controversy and criticism with some media commentators and conservative news outlets. | ||
| Others outside have covered the story. | ||
| New York Times doesn't care. | ||
| They could write it up. | ||
| They just don't care. | ||
| It's remarkable. | ||
| What they're telling you is they decide what the narrative will be, not you. | ||
| Well, I think we're winning this one. | ||
| We're changing the game. | ||
|
unidentified
|
Yeah. | |
| Well, like, Philip, it's like we were talking about where you're seeing with Zoomers our reaction to this. | ||
| It's like, because we grew up, I mean, I'm 24, so I grew up, you know, the Michael Brown, all that stuff happens. | ||
| I'm a teenager. | ||
| And then as I'm matriculating into adult life, the BLM riots are going on in 2020, and you see that. | ||
| But then you live somewhere like Memphis, you look around and see where the violent crime is happening and by who. | ||
| And you're sitting there like, okay, who's being victimized here in American society? | ||
| Is it black men by police officers? | ||
| Or is it like white men and women just trying to ride the train? | ||
| And it's like, you're supposed to, you know, you're not supposed to believe your, you know, your lying eyes or whatever. | ||
| And it's like, yeah. | ||
| And then you get on Instagram and people are expressing like, no, I think, I think who's being victimized by who is completely, the priorities are completely out of whack. | ||
| I mean, the stats we ran at the beginning of the show, you know, 500 and something thousand white people are victimized by black people and something like 92,000. | ||
| 92,000 black people. | ||
| 462% higher black on white than white on black. | ||
| But we're burning cities down for like, what, 12? | ||
| It's white liberals doing it. | ||
| Yeah, that too as well. | ||
| We got this story from the New York Post. | ||
| Ladies and gentlemen, with the story about Irina Zarutska going viral, on Saturday, another story, Auburn veterinary professor hacked to death by fiend while walking her dog in the park. | ||
| This woman went to the park to walk her dog when a man allegedly stabbed her to death and for seemingly no reason. | ||
| The worrying thing is that these stories happen quite a bit. | ||
| Quite a bit. | ||
| In 2022, the number was 542,000 black on white crimes and 96,000 white on black crimes. | ||
| I normally don't care to pull these stats up. | ||
| I got to be honest. | ||
| You know, the Will Kane show pulled them up. | ||
| I don't normally care because I'm like, listen, people shouldn't be allowed to be violent. | ||
| I don't care about your race. | ||
| The cops should arrest them and we should have a right to defend ourselves. | ||
| And I don't know if it matters for me as an individual walking down the street, the race of the individual who's coming to cause harm to me. | ||
| What matters in that moment is, can I protect myself and defend myself? | ||
| In Democrat-run cities, the answer is no. | ||
| If I call the police, are they going to help me? | ||
| In Democrat-run cities, the answer is no. | ||
| Certainly, there is a sociological element where we can say there's an interesting phenomenon where black-on-white crime is 462% higher than white on black crime. | ||
| Certainly, that's not going to protect people in the immediately short term. | ||
| These stories are happening and they're picking up steam. | ||
| And the arena Zarutska story is going viral. | ||
| And this story is now starting to go viral because people are tired of one being lied to by the left about police brutality. | ||
| And I'll tell you this personally: Chicago is tired of 100 years of Democrat supermajority with nothing being done about the crime. | ||
| Nothing. | ||
| And so when Trump says National Guard, now he said Chicago is going to learn why we call it the Department of War. | ||
| Okay, I get it. | ||
| It's not very delicate, Trump, but I don't care. | ||
| I say, Trump, send in the troops. | ||
| And I got these liberals to me like, you really want National Guard on your trains? | ||
|
unidentified
|
Yes. | |
| It's wild. | ||
| I tweeted, if there was one National Guard member on that train, this wouldn't have happened. | ||
| And I get these liberals being like, and now you want National Guard members on trains? | ||
| And I'm just sitting here thinking, like, I've been on the train with the National Guard before. | ||
| I have been in cities during riots where National Guard was deployed and they're on the trains. | ||
| And you know what happens? | ||
| It's going to terrify you. | ||
| I say, howdy, and they go, how's it going? | ||
| And then I get off the train. | ||
| What do they think is going to happen? | ||
| I'm going to get a cheeseburger. | ||
| I know it's bothering me. | ||
| If I can't carry my gun on the train, I would like a National Guard member with a rifle loaded, please. | ||
| I'm going to push back on that one. | ||
| I don't like the government telling me I can't carry my weapon and then sending in troops with guns. | ||
| That's how they get you. | ||
|
unidentified
|
Sure. | |
| However, that being said, this is a jurisdictional issue where Chicago causes problems for gun owners. | ||
| And Trump, the federal government says we're going to put a stop to what they're doing. | ||
| In fact, the Supreme Court at the federal level made it. | ||
| It was 2010, McDonald v. | ||
| Chicago, where the Supreme Court was like, you can't stop people from carrying weapons outside the House of Illinois. | ||
| And they were pissed. | ||
| And they put a bunch of signs all over all the city buildings with big, like, no gun with a line through it. | ||
| Like, you can't do it. | ||
| Well, Supreme Court, the federal government came to protect us from the tyranny of the Democrats in Chicago. | ||
| Right now, they're stopping us from defending ourselves. | ||
| So in this capacity, I say, send to the National Guard. | ||
| Armed or otherwise, I literally don't care. | ||
| I would rather be on a train with 50 National Guard doing jumping jacks and hoo-rahing or whatever than one gangbanger. | ||
| I think it would be better if, not, look, I know that Chicago's got problems. | ||
| There are plenty of cities that have problems. | ||
| It might be a better idea for the Trump administration to send the National Guard into blue cities in red states. | ||
| He'll get less pushback from the governments. | ||
| From the governors, he'll see real, tangible results. | ||
| And then you can blame the Democrats for why there are blue cities and red states that have less crime than the blue cities in the blue states. | ||
| But they're not really. | ||
| That's the problem. | ||
| Red states, their cities are slightly smaller. | ||
| And when they do have bad crime, it's not anywhere near as bad as Chicago. | ||
| Chicago, look, shout out to Baltimore. | ||
| Baltimore is bad, but Chicago is in terms of crime, in my opinion, Chicago is the capital of the country. | ||
| I'll tell you why. | ||
| It's not the highest murder rate per capita. | ||
| I think it might have the overall highest murder rate in general. | ||
| But the issue with Chicago is the institutionalized criminal activities, the corrupt politicians. | ||
| It's been that way since the forever. | ||
| I'm like, bro, it's been 100 years. | ||
| Prohibition. | ||
| 100 years of Democrat rule in Al Capone. | ||
| That was the crime area. | ||
| It never stopped. | ||
| There's been gangs and gangbangers and crime in Chicago forever. | ||
| So it's not just murder. | ||
| It's organized crime. | ||
| You've got the cops operating black sites and torturing people. | ||
| It is miserable. | ||
| Trump, just send in the feds, take it over, shut it down. | ||
| All right. | ||
| They are not abiding by the Constitution and protecting the rights of the American citizens who live there. | ||
| And as someone who is from there, I wish I didn't have to leave. | ||
| I like Chicago. | ||
| But I always tell people it sucks. | ||
| And it sucks that I have to say that. | ||
| I think Chicago's at the best food. | ||
| That's how I feel about New York. | ||
| You know, I had to leave New York because of how crazy it was when we were living in Brooklyn and going to Manhattan a bunch and getting threatened on the trains all the time. | ||
| I got to say, though, I think this problem is beyond even the National Guard. | ||
| I think there's so much nihilism in these criminals and mental illness. | ||
| I don't even think seeing a guard is going to stop a lot of them. | ||
| They might be taken down immediately. | ||
| But like in terms of NYC, Hochul put the National Guard in the subways. | ||
| And you can go look up how many insane things have happened in the past 10 years. | ||
| When she did that, where the Democrats are all pissed off now, but she did it. | ||
| Come on. | ||
| And good, do it. | ||
| So I'll tell you this. | ||
| If in Chicago, I can only speak for my neighborhood. | ||
| And I know, you know, I'm telling Shane this. | ||
| You guys already know this. | ||
| I talked about this morning. | ||
| My neighborhood, we had 47th Street north of 47th, was all black. | ||
| It's called the Leclerc Courts. | ||
| It's been demolished by the Democrats. | ||
| They just flattened it along with, you know, they installed all the other black neighborhoods in Project Housing. | ||
| Black teenagers, men and women, boys and girls, would come across south into the predominantly white and Hispanic neighborhood where I lived and just mug you. | ||
| This flash mugging. | ||
| Five guys surround you, frisk you and take everything and then break and they're gone. | ||
| Everything you have is gone. | ||
| Cops wouldn't do anything about it because they were like, if we were to come here every time, we'd be arresting so many black people. | ||
| They call us racist. | ||
| So we just, we won't do anything about it. | ||
| You take two unarmed National Guard, you put them in the park, it stops immediately. | ||
| These, like, I guarantee it. | ||
| And so I grew up like 10 minutes from Newburgh, New York, and it was one of the most, it's one of the most dangerous cities around. | ||
| I think maybe top 50. | ||
| It's really bad. | ||
| And the feds came in after it was declared to be one of the most dangerous cities. | ||
| And it didn't really change anything. | ||
| They had the feds around. | ||
| They had the things that Baltimore has, the things that go off if they hear a gunshot and they alert the feds. | ||
| And it's still just not great. | ||
| There's parts that are great, but the city is still a mess. | ||
| Because I think it's so deeply in the DNA of the city. | ||
| The violence won't go away. | ||
| I think the problem we have right now is that we have to request National Guard to deal with the crime. | ||
| And the left not policing their own cities sets the legal foundation for Trump to do this. | ||
| So all Trump has to do legally, there's a lot of different authorities that the president can use. | ||
| But if the president says that because of the conditions in Chicago or whatever, I am unable to fully enforce federal law, then that's the predicate. | ||
| That's the only predicate he needs. | ||
| He can send in the National Guard to facilitate allowing federal agents within the city to be able to enforce federal law within the city. | ||
| That case would not, that would the predicate would not exist if these dim governors and dim mayors would simply just make their city safe. | ||
| Is it a sustained occupation of the cities by the National Guard? | ||
| Because, like, once you pull out, if it does, if it does help, which hopefully it would, once they leave, does it just go right back to where it was? | ||
| So, it's different. | ||
| Yeah, I mean, perhaps, but I do think that politically it's important to point out that these cities can be safer. | ||
| It is an actual decision to make these cities unsafe. | ||
| It's not that just crime is existing, it's that they're deciding they're actually deciding to allow it to happen. | ||
| I saw Giuliani do it to the city where I was living. | ||
| Kaylee demonstrated that crime is completely optional. | ||
| And, like, if you're a citizen of Chicago, the message you're receiving from the government is your life is expendable and we hate you because you're just saying, Okay, can I have a firearm to protect myself from crime? | ||
| No. | ||
| Can I have the National Guard here to protect me from crime? | ||
|
unidentified
|
No. | |
| And it's like, so the message is, we are conducting an experiment here. | ||
| Your life is expendable, and it's simply a cost of enacting this experiment. | ||
| That's what the government is telling their people. | ||
| I've been hearing that from the government my whole life. | ||
| Yeah, no matter what. | ||
| At every possible angle, there is a war on all of us. | ||
| And the crazy thing is, we have a condition here where the left is doing this on purpose. | ||
| And then, when the president uses actual legal statutory power, constitutional and statutory power to try to alleviate and fix this for citizens in their own communities, the left then says that we're fascists. | ||
| Is it like, well, you know, self-fulfilling prophecy. | ||
| Yeah, exactly. | ||
| You know, just enforce the law. | ||
| Yeah. | ||
| Maybe they're able to call him the thing they've been calling him forever and now they have proof, quote unquote. | ||
| I just wish we didn't have to rely on federal National Guard deployments to deal with crime and that Democrats actually bothered to deal with the root of what's causing the crime without instead of lying and playing politics to cover it up. | ||
| I think we talked about this just a moment ago with the narrative on racism from the left and not talking about the cultural issues affecting the black community in our major cities. | ||
| That's not the only source of crime, but it is a large factor in it. | ||
| And instead, the Democrats play this game where they want to keep a voter base entrenched and locked in with the Democratic Party so they never solve the problem. | ||
| So they have a permanent issue. | ||
| Don't get me wrong. | ||
| Republicans have been accused of this when I think it was what was it, 2012? | ||
| I can't remember when Republicans had the ability to overturn Obamacare. | ||
| Maybe 2014. | ||
| I can't remember. | ||
| We had on one of the Freedom Caucus guys who told us. | ||
| Leadership came to him and said, You're the deciding vote on overturning Obamacare. | ||
| Vote no so we can keep the wedge issue. | ||
| So we can keep yelling on TV about it. | ||
| This is politics in America. | ||
| They don't actually care to solve our problems. | ||
| I mean, look at James Fry. | ||
| Just the other day, he told people those two children were murdered in that church, right? | ||
| He went out and said, Don't pray. | ||
| We don't need to pray. | ||
| Same dude who was kneeling at George Floyd's gold casket crying, putting on that whole performance. | ||
| We just had stelter on the screen. | ||
| Same channel that was telling us it was mostly peaceful riots. | ||
| It's a war on reality. | ||
| It's a war on you. | ||
| And yeah, I don't know how it stops. | ||
| These people live in a completely different dimension. | ||
| Let's jump to this post. | ||
| We got this from Right Angle News Network. | ||
| Earmuffs for the kids. | ||
| Graphic language. | ||
| They say this gang member is issuing a warning to President Trump stating not to send troops to Chicago, warning that the gangs will beat the National Guard. | ||
| Check this out. | ||
| Hilarious. | ||
|
unidentified
|
Do not send the National Guard to Chicago, man. | |
| I repeat, do not do it. | ||
| You are a different fucking breed out here. | ||
| We are not Los Angeles. | ||
| We are not Washington, D.C. | ||
| This is Chicago, nigga. | ||
| The niggas go fight back. | ||
| I'm telling you, the niggas go fight back, gang. | ||
| Whatever. | ||
| I don't give a fuck what you're talking about. | ||
| Them young niggas got switches, gang. | ||
| They're not going for that shit, bro. | ||
| I know a bunch of y'all finna say, oh, it's the switches. | ||
| They can't do anything about it. | ||
| They must go in Chicago. | ||
| Nigga, do y'all know that it's more bad people than good people, bro? | ||
| There are over 100,000 gangs in Chicago by the city. | ||
| You know what, though? | ||
| He's like, he's not wrong about Chicago. | ||
| I wouldn't be surprised. | ||
| He's literally making the argument for the National Guard. | ||
| First of all, second of all, switches do not compare to fully automatic belt-fed machine. | ||
| You can have a switch on your Glock, but no one cares when you're taking a 245, you know, 245. | ||
| It's not even that. | ||
| They have helicopters. | ||
| Come on, dude. | ||
| He's actually largely right. | ||
| What I would say he's wrong about is telling Trump not to send the National Guard because I'll fight back, bro, like logic, my friend, he's got to logically assess. | ||
| He's right. | ||
| The gangs may fight back. | ||
| I don't think they will. | ||
| They may. | ||
| They do got switches. | ||
| They are crazy. | ||
| Chicago is very hard. | ||
| It's harder than Los Angeles and New York. | ||
| Chicago gangs, they are, they don't mess around, man. | ||
| That being said, this is what I was saying this morning to this guy. | ||
| I don't think this guy's actually a gang member. | ||
| They say he's a gang member. | ||
| Bro, I'm going to tell you, the leaders of the gangs, in most cases, will not tolerate you bringing heat on the gang. | ||
| If the National Guard comes to Chicago and gang members decide to go fight the National Guard, the leaders of that gang are going to be like, why are you putting me in the poorhouse? | ||
| How are we going to recruit and sell drugs if you are getting Trump to send troops into our neighborhood? | ||
| If the troops come into our area, we go to a different area. | ||
| You get into a fight with National Guard and now you're out of business. | ||
| Why would you do that? | ||
| He did post a follow-up to this. | ||
| I saw. | ||
| I haven't shared it or anything, but I saw that he actually was saying, yo, I'm not in a gang. | ||
| He was kind of walking it back because. | ||
| Yeah, that's why I said they call him a gang member. | ||
| I'm like, this is not a gang member, dude. | ||
| I know many gang members. | ||
| Not really. | ||
| It's been 20, some odd years since I've been. | ||
| I left Chicago 16 years ago. | ||
| In my neighborhood, half the people were in the gangs. | ||
| The gangs were all over the place. | ||
| They were hanging out at the park. | ||
| They were selling dope. | ||
| When the cops would show up, they'd leave. | ||
| They'd be like, I don't want the heat. | ||
| Bro, I don't want to go back to jail. | ||
| I want to fight. | ||
| I agree with you. | ||
| I tend to think that they would not mess with the National Guard. | ||
| And if they did, it would be the dumbest thing that they could possibly do. | ||
| Because if they do that, they are now, the Trump administration could fully invoke the Insurrection Act at that point. | ||
| And you'd have DEA, you'd have ATF, which should be abolished, but you'd have ATF there. | ||
| And you'd have all of these federal agencies plus active duty military on the streets if they decided to go that route. | ||
| So I agree with you. | ||
| I think that they are smart enough to know that this is probably a temporary thing. | ||
| Stay out of their way. | ||
| The word would get sent out. | ||
| Part of me is like, bro, I dare you, man. | ||
| If one National Guardsman gets a graze from a ball from a gang, the Chicago gangland narrative is over permanently. | ||
| I'd like to talk big game on this one, but I actually don't know if Trump would do it. | ||
| But in the event something catastrophic happened to the Guard and Trump says that's it, the Marines are going in next, Chicago gangs will cease to exist. | ||
| So in reality, if a National Guard member got wounded or something in a fight, I don't think Trump would escalate to the end of the world. | ||
| But if the gangs actually decided to go full scale on this one and go to war with the National Guard when they came in and Trump did respond, give it a year or two and there'd be no gangs in Chicago ever again. | ||
| Well, let me say, as a Marine infantryman, I'm 47 in a shell of what I used to be, but they would be chomping at the bit to get at that one. | ||
| It would be not even a contest. | ||
| Well, these are National Guardsmen that have a chip on their shoulder because they would be presumably from Illinois and they've seen what Chicago's inflicted on the rest of the state. | ||
| So A, they'd be going with a chip on their shoulder. | ||
| And then B, like you said, they even look at a National Guardsman the wrong way. | ||
| Trump's going to make like Bukele's crackdown look like a little birthday party. | ||
| Like it would be everyone in, every agency you've never even, three letter agency you've never even heard of would be in there. | ||
| Nobody would take their side, right? | ||
| Like if the National Guard is there and some dude zips, bro, Democrats will take their side. | ||
| Democrats are going to be like a local Chicago daycare worker, and he's like a gangbanging sex trafficker. | ||
| Was brutally attacked by police after accidentally tripping and dropping his switch and unloading on a bunch of National Guardsmen. | ||
| Right. | ||
| I could see the politicians there. | ||
| They're spraying love slugs to the air. | ||
| I can see the politicians actually being upset that the gangs are gone. | ||
| After 100 years, you'd have to think they want the gangsta. | ||
| 100%. | ||
| They're in the gangs. | ||
| I'm going to go ahead and assume that Brandon Johnson got V'd in and never left, and he's been in the gang since the beginning. | ||
| Yeah, I mean, look, if you see, if Americans, most Americans, at least real Americans, see, you know, some 20-year-old, 21-year-old private get zipped up by, you know, a gangbanger and get sent home in a box. | ||
| It's over. | ||
| It's over. | ||
| Part of me doesn't really believe Trump would go hard on Chicago because look at 2020. | ||
| He didn't send in the troops. | ||
| But I actually would lean more towards not 100%, but greater than chance probability. | ||
| If something did happen to a National Guard service man or woman, Trump would probably go nuclear because the risk to the military, if not protected and defended by the president. | ||
| One of the biggest priorities that they had, especially with Hexeth coming in, was trying to figure out how to recruitment back, getting the DEI out of the military and telling the brave men and women in this country, we got your back. | ||
| You sign up, you join up. | ||
| We got your back. | ||
| We're going to make something that's going to make you stronger, something to be proud of. | ||
| If a guard member got shot and Trump was like, no, no, no, no, that's going to be terrible for morale and it's going to make Trump look like a pussy. | ||
| There's no doubt that Trump will defend law enforcement and he will defend, he will go hard in the paint to defend law enforcement. | ||
| But I think that the point is that none of us actually want this to go in this direction. | ||
| I don't think any of us love the idea of the military going into, it would be way better if the left would just secure their cities, police their cities, put career criminals in jail for a long time. | ||
| But they refuse to do so and they're forcing Trump's hand. | ||
| This is what he has to do. | ||
| And if they go that route, Trump will respond very strongly. | ||
| I have no doubt in my mind that he will. | ||
| I mean, the police departments in all these major cities, they could stop this tomorrow. | ||
| They're just not allowed to. | ||
| Like you speak to any of these police, like you speak to NYPD officer. | ||
| They know the names and the friends and family of all the troublemakers in the neighborhood where they patrol. | ||
| Again, I've said it before. | ||
| Crime in 2025 in a modern society is completely optional. | ||
| The Democrats are just allowing it to happen because they're conducting this blank slate experiment, et cetera, et cetera. | ||
| Like Bukay has demonstrated, you just literally just decide, actually, no more crime. | ||
| And crime goes away. | ||
| It's not rocket science. | ||
| These police officers know exactly what to do, exactly who the problem is. | ||
| And again, overnight, it'd be done. | ||
| Just the Democrats have to take the handcuffs off. | ||
| I just, the idea in my mind of going to Chicago and having all of this stuff taken care of, it should be like the greatest thing ever. | ||
| Because, you know, we were in, I was in New York. | ||
| The riots were kind of bad. | ||
| And I'm like, man, I don't know if I want to live in the city. | ||
| It's expensive. | ||
| Then some dude murdered two cops right in front of my apartment. | ||
| This was in, I think this was Bush, was it Bushwick? | ||
| I can't remember. | ||
| It was near Myrtle and Nostrand. | ||
| So if you want to look that up, two cops sitting in their cars. | ||
| A guy walked up and just executed them both. | ||
| And this is because of the BLM narrative stuff. | ||
| That was outside of my apartment, outside of my apartment and just to the end of the block. | ||
| And so I was like, I'm going to leave. | ||
| Then two bombs got planted, Jersey City and Manhattan on, I think it was like 26th Street or something. | ||
| And then I was like, geez, man, it's expensive and it's getting crazy. | ||
| So I went, I went to, I was on the Jersey side. | ||
| I went to Bayong. | ||
| Then I went to South Jersey. | ||
| We were trying to figure out where to go. | ||
| You know, I was talking to my wife about it. | ||
| Like, maybe we can go to Chicago. | ||
| It's a travel hub. | ||
| So it's really easy to bring guests into Chicago. | ||
| I think that's, you know, Barstool recently set up headquarters there. | ||
| And then we were like, the corruption and the crime is too much. | ||
| The properties we looked at, I was like, not only do we have to worry about the gangs who are going to know, because we do a show, that we've got expensive equipment and we'll get robbed in two seconds. | ||
| We've got to put up, no matter what neighborhood we're in, then we've got to worry about corrupt city officials too. | ||
| They're going to come and they're going to shake us down all the same. | ||
| Just stay away from Chicago. | ||
| That's sad, really. | ||
| Well, yeah, I mean, you're seeing, especially with like young people, this huge demand for walkable cities and that sort of thing. | ||
| And they're having to build these like master plan communities out in the rural areas. | ||
| And I'm like, these cities do exist. | ||
| They're just off limits. | ||
| Like if you're a young person, you're not allowed to live in Chicago because it's just like a total, like basically a form of suicide in a lot of ways because it's like these cities are just so out of control. | ||
| And so for young people and just people, everyone of all ages, like massive chunks of your country with really otherwise nice real estate is just completely off limits because of violent crime. | ||
| And it's totally unacceptable. | ||
| I just want to wake up on Christmas morning with the snow falling and the Christmas tree set up and, you know, the sun is just rising and the kids are running for the Christmas presents and not have to worry about bullets flying and gangbangers and crime and women getting stabbed in the train. | ||
| And it seems like Democrats in all the major cities want the opposite of that. | ||
| They want me to wake up instead of seeing a Christmas tree. | ||
| They want me to see shattered glass in my living room with trees and pine fragments just trailing out and I can see it going to a car that speeds off with all my presents. | ||
| That's living in Democrat cities. | ||
|
unidentified
|
Yep. | |
| Well, they're prioritizing the rights of extremely violent criminals over the rights of 99% of the population that just wants to live their lives. | ||
| It's weird. | ||
| They want the whole country to be destroyed. | ||
| That's why they had the borders open. | ||
|
unidentified
|
Yeah. | |
| Wide open. | ||
| I just don't understand it. | ||
| I feel like it's, you know, we hear these stories about private equity firms that will buy up a company, sell off all its assets for a profit and just destroy it. | ||
| And it's like, you know, there's a play there, right? | ||
| The company makes a million dollars a year. | ||
| Not a very big company. | ||
| But if you buy the company for $5 million, sell off all the machinery and all its assets, you'll make $500,000 all the assets sell for $5.5 million. | ||
| So you buy for $5,000, make $500,000 and destroy the business. | ||
| That's what it seems like Democrats do politically. | ||
| They say, instead of long-term success and growth, gut the system, extract as much as you can from the taxpayer, burn it down and run. | ||
| The left did that in New York City during lockdowns. | ||
| All these small businesses were destroyed. | ||
| Everyone left and they bought up all the buildings and they took over the hotels and put illegals in them and gave them debit cards. | ||
| Let's go to that next story from the DHS press release. | ||
| ICE launches Operation Midway Blitz. | ||
| You guys know why I love that name because I'm from Midway. | ||
| And so when I saw that, I was like, really? | ||
| Are they going to my neighborhood? | ||
| Today, the Department of Homeland Security announced Operation Midway Blitz in honor of Katie Abraham, who was killed in a drunk driving hit and run car wreck caused by a criminal illegal alien, Julio Kukul Boll in Illinois. | ||
| This ICE operation will target the criminal illegal aliens who flock to Chicago and Illinois because they knew Governor Pritzker and his sanctuary policies would protect them and allow them to roam free and American streets. | ||
| Wow. | ||
| They say below are just a handful of the worst of the worst criminal illegal aliens, including gang members, drug traffickers, kidnappers, and rapists who were released because of Governor Pritzker's sanctuary policies. | ||
| And they're going to mention this guy, 47-year-old battery, aggravated assault, DUI trespassing. | ||
| This guy, domestic violence assault, drug position, drug manufacturing, procuring prostitutes, aggravated unlawful use of weapons. | ||
| I mean, this is crazy. | ||
| I'm going to say it again. | ||
| I don't know who these people think they are. | ||
| There's one video where a guy says there's going to be a civilian uprising against ICE. | ||
| And I'm just sitting here thinking like, I don't know who these people think they are. | ||
| But you know what I think happens? | ||
| Illegal immigrants come to this country, they move to Chicago and then say, We will fight you. | ||
| We're staying. | ||
| And me and my friends are all like, dude, we don't know who you are. | ||
| We have no problem with federal law enforcement walking around. | ||
| Literally, nobody cares. | ||
| When I asked my buddy from Chicago, which would you prefer, the crime, gang violence, or a couple of National Guard walking on the street, they laugh because it's a retarded question. | ||
| What? | ||
| Literally, nobody would even flinch if National Guard are walking on the street. | ||
| If ICE shows up in where I grew up and they were doing an operation on a street corner, literally none of them might, they're going to be walking back from the grocery store with their milk, bread, and eggs, and they're going to be like, oh, I don't know. | ||
| I don't care. | ||
| Yeah, well, and you saw the left, the left's perception of the National Guard is totally ridiculous. | ||
| Like it was the Pisco was on the show in the Culture War show, and he was like, they're sending killing machines in New York City. | ||
| Murder machines. | ||
| Murder machines. | ||
| I'm like, have you ever met a National Guardsman? | ||
| Like, they're very normal, nice guys. | ||
| They're literally reservists. | ||
| They're literally the same people that you run into working at a store. | ||
| They're calling weekend warriors. | ||
| Yeah. | ||
| Well, I mean, yeah. | ||
| You know, usually it's a little bit. | ||
| It's one weekend a month and then two weeks a year. | ||
| They're normal Americans that do normal American jobs. | ||
| Maybe they work, maybe they're a mechanic. | ||
| Maybe they work at an HVAC repair guy. | ||
| They're normal Americans. | ||
| So to say that they're just killing machines is absolutely ridiculous. | ||
| That is insane. | ||
| He said they were murder machines. | ||
| And then I'm like, oh, okay. | ||
| I was like, very few. | ||
| What is the percentage of combat infantry? | ||
| Do you know the percentage of like all people? | ||
| It's small, right? | ||
| In the Marine Corps, it's probably like 7% to 9%, roughly. | ||
| They're all, I was like, the guy working on computers and doing IT stuff is not a murder machine. | ||
| They're trained. | ||
| They're physically fit. | ||
| They know how to handle weapons. | ||
| But Phil is physically fit. | ||
| He knows how to handle weapons. | ||
| I wouldn't call him a murder machine. | ||
| Never murdered anybody in my life. | ||
| Yeah, I think of who the murder machines are. | ||
| It's the people we just saw in that video. | ||
| Like, there's a lot of murder machines just on the streets running around. | ||
| It's like, hello. | ||
| There are probably more murder machines in Chicago than there are in the National Guard. | ||
| We're tying two of these stories that we've already talked about into this one. | ||
| So if one of our arguments on the left is going to be, you know, in terms of like black crime, is that we have a lack of opportunity. | ||
| Well, I can't really think of much that is better for opportunity for African Americans in Chicago than deporting a whole bunch of illegal aliens. | ||
| A lot of jobs are going to open up. | ||
| A lot of, you know, rent's going to become cheaper. | ||
| Housing is going to become cheaper. | ||
| The rent. | ||
| Yeah. | ||
| Like these young liberals don't get it. | ||
| When you remove the illegal immigrants who are entering Chicago, they're putting up. | ||
| So this is really, really funny. | ||
| I was talking to my friend about Leclerc Courts. | ||
| 2009, they bulldozed the black neighborhood because of the gangs. | ||
| When you go there now, it looks like, and I could be wrong about this, but it looks like an illegal immigrant camp. | ||
| I think that's what they set up, is big white tents. | ||
| We drove past over the fourth. | ||
| And I'm like, I think this ended up in a legal immigrant camp. | ||
| You get rid of those people. | ||
| There's a guy. | ||
| There's one guy. | ||
| And he owns a three-story building in Chicago. | ||
| And he rents out the bottom two floors and lives on the top floor. | ||
| So he's charging $2,000 for the second, $2,000 for the first. | ||
| You know why? | ||
| Because when he posted on Craigslist, he got 500 emails saying, I want it. | ||
| And so he goes, $2,250. | ||
| Then he waits. | ||
| He gets 20 emails. | ||
| He's like, wow, 25. | ||
| He gets seven emails. | ||
| And he goes, 3,000. | ||
| He gets three emails. | ||
| And he's like, 3,000? | ||
| It's yours. | ||
| You deport the people who are here illegally. | ||
| And then all of a sudden, people stop emailing. | ||
| And he says, man, I can't rent out for 3,000 anymore. | ||
| Nobody's emailing. | ||
| Because now there is a large supply of available units to live in, releasing the tension and making it easier and cheaper to live in these apartments. | ||
|
unidentified
|
Yeah. | |
| I literally spoke to a used car dealer in Virginia who was saying that he's finding it really, really difficult to move inventory. | ||
| Now he sells like very, very low-end used cars. | ||
| And it's because there's a huge supply now. | ||
| It's like if you're young and you're just trying to get to school or whatever, it's like, oh, you can actually buy it. | ||
| Because I don't know if any, I mean, people out there know the used car market went crazy during COVID, totally out of reach for young people that are just trying to get to school. | ||
| And now we're freeing up inventory. | ||
| And it's the same thing with housing. | ||
| It's the same thing with jobs. | ||
| Like everything in your life gets easier and better because of mass deportations. | ||
| Yeah, we have 55 million visa holders. | ||
| And then, you know, anywhere between, my guess is 30 and 50 million illegal aliens in the United States, all over the place. | ||
| That's a lot of demand. | ||
| A lot of demand. | ||
| You erase a significant amount of that by moving those people out. | ||
| The argument they're making is, yeah, but those people buy food and that sustains the economy. | ||
| And I'm just sitting here being like, you know, Democrats, you advocated for abortion and some of the fertility rates in the gutter, told women to be girl bosses, not to have families, and then opened the floodgates and let tons of illegal immigrants in the country who are low-skilled labor and can't replace our managerial class or expert level class. | ||
| That's just literally burning the country down. | ||
| It's insane. | ||
| And also, as an aside, I don't know. | ||
| We'll get to the story in a second. | ||
| Gen Z doesn't even want to have kids anymore. | ||
| So we cooked. | ||
| Well, I mean, Gen Z women, right? | ||
| Gen Z. | ||
| I think it's all everyal men and women. | ||
| Like cities are not child-friendly anymore. | ||
| Cities. | ||
| That's because there's no kids. | ||
| There's no families. | ||
| But again, we'll get in a couple of minutes. | ||
| For now, let's just wrap up the question for you guys is there are going to be businesses that shut down because of this. | ||
| We're talking about reducing demand, which will make cheap, rent cheaper, houses cheaper. | ||
| But it does also mean it's going to be harder for you to find certain goods and certain products. | ||
| I don't care. | ||
| That's fine. | ||
| Yeah, I literally don't care. | ||
| We have chickens. | ||
| I get my eggs from our own chickens, and we're looking at buying a mini cow. | ||
| Because I think mini cows do like, what, one or two gallons of milk per day? | ||
| Nice. | ||
| Like a real cow, like a regular old cow does like 12 gallons and drink that much milk. | ||
| My girlfriend's going to want to come over to meet your cow. | ||
| Cows are great. | ||
| She's like, I want to get a cow. | ||
| And I'm like, we're not getting a cow. | ||
| We have a townhouse here. | ||
| I saw this. | ||
| There's a really great viral video where there's a cow bloated with methane. | ||
| And so it's just on the ground sideways. | ||
| And there's another cow just staring at it. | ||
| And the farmer walks up and he jams the thing in it to release the gas. | ||
| And the cow just watches. | ||
| And he's just like staring at the other cow. | ||
| And I'm like, dude, cows are great. | ||
| They're great. | ||
| Have animals, be a little bit more self-sufficient. | ||
| It would be good for everyone in this country if they were a little bit more reliant. | ||
| I saw this viral post. | ||
| They said Steve Jobs wrote himself an email. | ||
| And it was something like, he was like, I eat food that I don't grow. | ||
| I live in buildings I did not build. | ||
| And it was something like that. | ||
| But I'm like, it's a really great point to make. | ||
| 100 years ago, or maybe like 150, we mostly ate food that we grew. | ||
| Like there was a certain percentage of our diet that was our own diet. | ||
| The average family owned one cow. | ||
| They had animals. | ||
| They had chickens. | ||
| And you'd supplement some of the things you couldn't get. | ||
| Now we literally produce nothing for ourselves. | ||
| The average person in this country does nothing for themselves. | ||
| It's crazy. | ||
|
unidentified
|
Yeah. | |
| Well, I mean, the illegal immigration thing is just another example of basically one generation getting the benefits, which was like the cheap labor, like a 20-year window where it made labor cheap, made it a little easier to run a business and that sort of thing. | ||
| And in exchange, they just sold the country's future out. | ||
| And it's like, it's a great example of Americans where you need to be weaned off of this hyper-consumerism. | ||
| Like you're saying with the food, it's like we've gotten fat and happy and we don't even realize how, like, where our food even comes from, these sorts of things. | ||
| Oh, bro. | ||
| I love the story when I was arguing with a socialist on X, and he said, food comes from the grocery store. | ||
| God. | ||
| And I was like, well, when you buy it, it does, but how does the milk get there? | ||
| Where does it come from? | ||
| And they're like, what do you mean? | ||
| It's at the grocery store. | ||
| And I'm like, who brings it to the grocery store? | ||
| And where did it come from before then? | ||
| It was like, what are you talking about? | ||
| It's at the grocery store. | ||
| And I'm like, oh, my God. | ||
| Dude, communists think money is food. | ||
| They genuinely, they're like, I mentioned that PBD debate. | ||
| And the woman's like, how much money do you need to feed every person in the United States? | ||
| It's like, what's the average calorie of a dollar bill? | ||
| Yet no amount of money will feed anybody. | ||
| You're talking about labor, labor from another human that you want for free. | ||
| Yeah, it's not going to happen. | ||
| Yeah, well, they're just completely removed from the entire circle. | ||
| Like, the same thing when you're debating people on illegal immigration is like, yeah, but the GDP is going up. | ||
| And you're like, yes, but you're like selling out a generation. | ||
| You're inflating rent prices, food prices, vehicle prices, these sorts of things. | ||
| Yeah, no, but the GDP is going up. | ||
| I'm like, yes, because you're pumping more people. | ||
| And so they're spending more money and the GDP will go up. | ||
| But they're just totally removed from how things actually work, how these mechanisms actually function. | ||
| Well, let's jump to this next story I call the apocalypse. | ||
| From NBC News Decision Desk Poll, Steve Kornacki says they asked Gen Z adults, 18 to 29, what they consider important to a successful life. | ||
| The combination of gender and politics produced two very different set of priorities. | ||
| Men who voted for Trump, their number one definition of success, having children. | ||
| That is correct. | ||
| That's the correct answer. | ||
| Women who voted for Harris, their number one, 51% is fulfilling job and career. | ||
| The lowest, having children. | ||
| Women who voted for Harris do not believe having children makes you successful. | ||
| And that is disgusting. | ||
| Now, to be fair, women who voted for Trump, also a low priority. | ||
| For women who voted for Trump, number one was financial independence, then fulfilling job, then owning own home, then being grounded spiritually, then having money to do the things you want to do, and then having children. | ||
| Yeah, I tag. | ||
| Wild. | ||
| Now, liberal men, men who voted for Harris, having children, not the bottom, but only 9% considered to be indicative of success. | ||
| So Gen Z is cooked. | ||
| Gen Alpha is already half of Gen Z, and Gen Z doesn't want to have kids, and millennials didn't have kids. | ||
| So Gen Alpha at 40 million. | ||
| I'm willing to bet, I think they're calling it Generation Bravo because nobody wants to be called Generation Beta. | ||
| Bravo is going to be 13 million. | ||
| Probably not. | ||
| It probably should be like 27 million. | ||
| But we're over. | ||
| I watched this video where they said it was like a mini doc thing. | ||
| No civilization has ever recovered in the history of humanity from 1.3% or less fertility. | ||
| Well, the good news is there will be artificial womb factories filled with 30,000 artificial wombs that they're developing right now. | ||
| So if you do want kids, you can put it in a robot. | ||
| My bet is that the future is trending towards the people will say, we don't want to have kids, but we need to have kids. | ||
| So they will vote for the government to create human growth facilities where humans will be cloned in artificial wombs. | ||
| Just like Bill Gates is making butter out of thin air now. | ||
| He's going to do it. | ||
| Oh, man, I saw that. | ||
| Disgusting. | ||
| They literally fuse hydrogen and carbons to make fake butter. | ||
| And then they put salt in it. | ||
| They make them eat it. | ||
| The news reporters eat it on air and pretend like it tastes good. | ||
| Swirl in the drain. | ||
| Bill Gates, fake butter. | ||
| I saw a study about a week or so ago, and it said the variable that actually correlates most to women being happy is being married. | ||
| And so, like, what we're seeing out of these is that women are being culturally taught to do the opposite and want the opposite of what is actually in their best interest. | ||
| And I'm not going to tell any woman what she should or should not do or any other man. | ||
| This is for every person to make up. | ||
| But culturally, we have a big problem, and the wrong signals are being sent to women. | ||
| And, you know, I've got a daughter. | ||
| I want to make sure that a big part of her life is understanding that having children is the most fulfilling aspect of being an adult. | ||
| And getting married is the, you know, the most important thing of being an adult because you're hanging out with your best friend all the time. | ||
| And women aren't taught that now. | ||
| I think we should be telling them that. | ||
| I know. | ||
| Like, we should be instilling it in them all the time, like how important that is and having that anchor at home through the chaos of the world. | ||
| Yeah, I tapped the circle. | ||
| I tapped my schizophrenic historian friend when the story broke. | ||
| And I was like, Has there ever been a moment in human history where men wanted kids more than women did? | ||
| And he's like, No, this is unprecedented. | ||
| This is the first time in human history where men want families and kids more than women. | ||
| Well, you know what's going to happen once we have designer babies? | ||
| There will never be a woman again. | ||
| I think women will fall to like 10% of the population. | ||
| And the reason is there's two narratives. | ||
| The right's probably not going to do this. | ||
| So if we actually go into artificial womb future, I actually think the future that's more likely to happen is liberals just end up eradicating themselves through not reproducing. | ||
| Conservatives have lots of babies. | ||
| In the event liberals' worldview wins out, nobody has babies, and they go to artificial wombs. | ||
| Liberals are going to say this to each other. | ||
| They're going to go, but because of the patriarchy, we don't want to have a baby who's going to have an unfair disadvantage. | ||
| So we should just have a boy. | ||
| They're better off. | ||
| If they're choosing traits, they're going to choose guys. | ||
| That's what Orchid's doing right now. | ||
| You know, it's one of the bigger IVF eugenesis type companies. | ||
| They're just picking boys. | ||
| I don't think they're picking boys, but you can pick whatever China. | ||
| Yeah, look at China. | ||
| Exactly. | ||
| When it came down to it, and they'll get off one kid, they were like, abort the women, the girls. | ||
| You can whittle it down to whatever this is. | ||
| To this day, they're 55% male as a country. | ||
| Well, who needs women when Elon's making all that anime for him? | ||
| True. | ||
| Hey, hey, nationally, strip clubs are going out of business. | ||
| Around here, there are a bunch of places where it'll be like, I'm not going to call any of them out specifically, but it'll be like so-and-so's. | ||
| And there's a big white bar, and that says club. | ||
| And you're like, I know what word was under that big ball, like that big white slab you put on the sign. | ||
| And you go in, and I already did mention one images. | ||
| We used to drive, you drive past it on 340 when you're out in West Virginia, and we always drove past. | ||
| That's a strip club. | ||
| Like, none of us want to go there until Richie Jackson one day texted us saying, Hey, I'm at Images. | ||
| It's not a strip club. | ||
| And we were all like, Richie, were you looking for a strip club? | ||
| No, it's the bar. | ||
| It's great. | ||
| They got wings and food, and it's really nice, actually. | ||
| But the stage has mirrors. | ||
| And so we went there and did karaoke, and it was awesome. | ||
| And the karaoke guys were up there, and everyone was singing. | ||
| Everybody was in their late 40s and 50s. | ||
| And the stage where we sang karaoke has mirrors on it for obvious reasons. | ||
| Old people don't care as much about going to the strip club, I guess. | ||
| There's not enough young people, and the boobs are free online. | ||
| Strip clubs are gone. | ||
| And also, no one has cash anymore. | ||
| No one has dollar bills to you. | ||
|
unidentified
|
Oh, yeah. | |
| They don't think that's a good idea. | ||
| Now, the strip club, the women are wearing square readers. | ||
| You tap your card and then you got to tap the five and then it asks you for a tip. | ||
| And you're like, tip, I just gave you money. | ||
| That's what the tip is. | ||
| Yeah, what's it called? | ||
| It's called end tipping. | ||
| Is that what it's called? | ||
| I don't know. | ||
| Where like literally everything asks for a tip now. | ||
| No matter where you go. | ||
|
unidentified
|
Everywhere. | |
| It's like I'm at the grocery store and they're like, we're going to give me a tip. | ||
| Walgreens, Petco. | ||
| Everyone wants a tip. | ||
| The casino is my favorite because the cashiers have tip jars. | ||
| I always tip the cashiers because, you know, I try to be nice to everybody and they know me there. | ||
|
unidentified
|
But I do that. | |
| That I put, I do find it fascinating that you tip your dealer, you tip your server, when you win a slot machine, you tip the lady who comes to the slot machine to cash you out. | ||
| And then when you go to the cashier to get your money back, you got to tip the cashier too. | ||
| And you can Venmo the treasury now. | ||
| If you want to help take care of the debt, oh, yeah, whoever it's the IRS will take a Venmo as well. | ||
| Yeah, Trump should like, if he like throws out a banger truth socially, you throw a little tip in there. | ||
| It's like, that was good. | ||
| Dude, it is, it is. | ||
| My theory on why women don't want to have kids is because they're more social or socially oriented. | ||
| And so society says, be a girl boss. | ||
| So when they're asked, they don't want to, they don't want to be ostracized. | ||
| They want to fit in. | ||
| So when they're asked, what do you want? | ||
| They go, to be a girl boss. | ||
| And then look around. | ||
| I think they're lying in those surveys. | ||
| I think they actually want kids. | ||
| I think they're lying about not wanting kids. | ||
|
unidentified
|
Yes. | |
| I think that's denying nature. | ||
| As I'll defer to Shane. | ||
| You have more kids than I. | ||
| I do. | ||
| And for longer. | ||
| But when we go walk around, I've said it before, women act to my baby like people act to celebrities. | ||
| Yeah. | ||
| Like we're walking down the street and women were like, oh my God, I want to see your baby. | ||
| Can I see your baby? | ||
| And I was in an elevator and some old lady goes, let me see your baby. | ||
| And she like leans over and I'm like, women love babies. | ||
| Just walking by them on the street. | ||
|
unidentified
|
Yeah. | |
| Got the baby in the stroller. | ||
| Well, it's like, but like women, just by nature, like they have to be led. | ||
| So it's like as a society, until you prioritize children and say, no, this is what we need to be doing, they're never going to actually decide to have children, even if they desperately want them. | ||
| And they'll just keep lying to surveys. | ||
| Like I was with men, I mean, everyone's really hammering on the women for their responses in the study. | ||
| And it's like, yes, as you should. | ||
| But even with the men, it's not great that the number one thing they're prioritizing is getting married and having kids because that is really great. | ||
| But that should come naturally. | ||
| That should be naturally happening to men. | ||
| That shouldn't be a goal. | ||
| That should be something that happens. | ||
| So that just shows you how fundamentally broken society is. | ||
| That's like the man's most lofty goal is getting married. | ||
| It's a goal because it's like unattainable. | ||
| Exactly. | ||
| So it's like, that's also a really terrifying thing. | ||
| And I think to a degree, men are just looking for stability. | ||
| They're like, okay, well, I know a family is going to provide stability because they can't find stability anywhere else in society because everything, they're getting the rogue pulled out from them all the time. | ||
| Liberals are going to buy Neuralink alpha. | ||
| Elon's going to come out and he's going to be like, I have the Neuralink chip and it doesn't really work that well and it could melt your brain. | ||
| And then all Gen Z is going to be like, I'll take 10. | ||
| Oh, yeah. | ||
| And he's going to be like, well, it's got a 93% chance of killing. | ||
| Don't care. | ||
| Just plug it in. | ||
| And if it works, let's go. | ||
| Yeah, everyone's going to take the buyout. | ||
| The buyout. | ||
|
unidentified
|
Oh, yeah. | |
| Like, look at what we're facing. | ||
| And then it's like the, there's like the goon machine. | ||
| Yeah. | ||
| They're going to take the buyout. | ||
| There's no question about it. | ||
| The goon machine. | ||
| Yeah, yeah. | ||
| Yeah, but what I think is going to happen is I actually, this is funny because there's the meme where women are like, men only want one thing. | ||
| And it's discussed. | ||
| I'd be willing to bet large sums of money that if Elon Musk did come out with a Neuralink device and said harem simulator or Noble Knight Dragon Warrior Quest, they'd choose Noble Knight Dragon Warrior Quest. | ||
| And I mean that somewhat facetiously. | ||
| If he said, in this version, you will be a leader respected by your peers, accomplishing great things, and you will go on great missions and great quests and seek adventure and you will eventually find love. | ||
| This one, you'll be in a room with dozens of naked women who will do whatever you say. | ||
| Most guys are going to choose the adventure quest success and goal stuff. | ||
| That's already present at a micro level because men know, like the data is out, the cat's out of the bag that pornography does destroy your willpower and that sort of thing. | ||
| So men are making that decision every day already, choosing to watch pornography. | ||
| I agree with those stats, but I don't think that's why men would ultimately choose the ultimate quest. | ||
| I think this is why while porn is a massive industry, AAA games tend to be straightforward, adventure, mission-oriented. | ||
| And we don't see the $3 billion release being Harem Quest. | ||
| Those games exist. | ||
| Guys do buy them. | ||
| But I think Like your average guy probably looks at porn or something, but the games they play are not solely focused on those things. | ||
| Guys get dopamine releases when they feel like they've reached level two. | ||
| It's the origin of video games, it's the origin of sports. | ||
| When they feel like they've upped their stats, when they've broken a new record, they get a massive dopamine release. | ||
| So I think that's where they'd actually go. | ||
| And like young women will be like, but guys only want sex. | ||
| I actually think women care more about sex than guys do. | ||
| But it's, it's, I'll put it this way. | ||
| If you were to zoom out to outer space like an alien, you'd probably find out that men and women care about sex basically the same. | ||
| However, when you zoom in, women think guys who are always like looking at naughty magazines or whatever obsessed with sex. | ||
| But there's an inversion of this. | ||
| In a guy's day-to-day life, they care about finding the end of that tunnel, solving the maze, defeating the dragon. | ||
| And women gossip with each other about men. | ||
| So it's pretty equal. | ||
| Men and women were humans, so they're all basically the same, but it's macro versus micro. | ||
| Guys, passively will be like, yeah, sometimes I'll do this. | ||
| Whereas women are, look at earmuffs for your kids. | ||
| Do you guys know about this new best-selling novel? | ||
| The Minotaurs thing? | ||
| Oh, yeah. | ||
| You've seen it. | ||
| You've seen it. | ||
| I'm in close. | ||
| What is it called? | ||
| Milking Farm Minotaur something? | ||
| Yeah, something like that. | ||
| One of the best. | ||
| Degeneracy, Tim. | ||
| It's called Degeneracy. | ||
| So you remember 50 Shades of Gray? | ||
| And this is my point. | ||
| The best-selling novel for women was BDSM Erotica, porn for women. | ||
| And like, what's like the best-selling media for a guy is GTA or like some video game or Fortnite. | ||
| Yeah. | ||
| Like, I guess Fortnite's in a quality. | ||
| You don't buy it, but you're buying into it. | ||
| There's a new book going viral. | ||
| It's not super new. | ||
| It's a couple years old. | ||
| That's got like 60,000 reviews, five stars, all women buying it. | ||
| It is about a millennial woman with college debt who is desperate and about to lose and get evicted. | ||
| So she goes to work on a glory hole farm for Minotaurs, where she's a hooker for gigantic bulls, human anthroporphized bulls. | ||
| And there was this one excerpt that I hope is not real. | ||
| But it was a pair, like I saw this go viral in X. One of the scenes in the book is the woman is on a dinner date with one of the bulls who she milks in milking sessions. | ||
| And they order dinner. | ||
| And when the bill comes, the Minotaur grabs the check from her and then looks at her and says, Listen, I know you're a strong woman and you have the money to pay your own half of this bill, but we are at different points in our careers and I can easily afford to spoil you. | ||
| And if I can, I will. | ||
| To which she says, at that moment, if he wanted me to, I would have on the spot. | ||
| That's what they're reading. | ||
| Oh my God. | ||
| I'm looking at the cover right now. | ||
|
unidentified
|
Looking at it. | |
| The cover is crazy, dude. | ||
| Reading this kind of stuff and they're unwinding to like murder documentaries. | ||
| It's like, women, is everything okay? | ||
| No, nothing is okay. | ||
| What's going on? | ||
| Nothing is okay. | ||
| Meanwhile, Gen Z guys are like, I want to have a family. | ||
| Yeah, we're like, we want a family. | ||
| We're hopping on Fortnite with the squad. | ||
| Meanwhile, the ladies are up to. | ||
| What's going on over there? | ||
| Can we just do an honorable mention and play this video real quick? | ||
| Yeah. | ||
| Smells and tastes like the butter we're all familiar with, but without the farmland, fertilizers, or emissions tied to that typical following. | ||
| It's happening right here in Batavia. | ||
| In the middle of an industrial park in a suburb west of Chicago, something unprecedented is happening. | ||
|
unidentified
|
So you're using this gas right now to like cook your food. | |
| And we're proposing that we would like to first make your food with that. | ||
| The company is called Fever. | ||
| And you better believe it. | ||
| Their pioneering tech uses carbon and hydrogen to make the stick of butter you see on this plate. | ||
| Is pretty novel to be able to make food that looks and tastes and feels exactly like dairy butter, but with no agriculture whatsoever. | ||
| That lady was also made a long ingredient list the average person can't pronounce. | ||
| It's really just our fat, some water, a little bit of lecithin as an emulsifier, and some natural flavor and color. | ||
| How? | ||
| Fats are made up of carbon and hydrogen. | ||
| The goal here, replicate those chains without animals or plants. | ||
| And they did it. | ||
| They tell me to simplify, they take carbon dioxide from the air and hydrogen from water, heat them up and oxidize them. | ||
| The final result? | ||
| It looks like a wax, like a candle wax at first. | ||
| But they're fat molecules, like the ones in beef, cheese, or vegetable oils. | ||
|
unidentified
|
Sustainability is why we are here. | |
| It's all done removing the body. | ||
| I feel like the people who eat this, their kids are going to come out like sloppy. | ||
|
unidentified
|
We're like not at full capacity in this facility yet. | |
| And even though we're staying in the future, in addition to the carbon footprint being much lower for a process like this, the land is like a thousand times lower than what you need in agriculture. | ||
| I know what you're thinking. | ||
| I think we need to taste this. | ||
| I would love for you to text this. | ||
| It's all women, too. | ||
| Where's your slop stick and your slop water? | ||
| So I'm going to take that. | ||
|
unidentified
|
Eat it. | |
| Shut up. | ||
| I wouldn't. | ||
| Admittedly, surprisingly like butter. | ||
|
unidentified
|
Cheers. | |
| Oh, no. | ||
| I'm sorry, but it would have been funny if she goes like butter. | ||
| Like the next show. | ||
|
unidentified
|
That's the reason they say this impact. | |
| No palm oil. | ||
| A true significant contributor to deforestation and climate change. | ||
| That's not all. | ||
| Of the 51 billion tons of greenhouse gases emitted every year. | ||
| No seed oils. | ||
|
unidentified
|
What's that? | |
| So when could you get a taste yourself? | ||
| Oh, boy. | ||
| Right now, they're working directly with restaurants, bakeries, and food suppliers, releasing these chocolates made with their butter in time for the holidays. | ||
|
unidentified
|
Savor butter in either its current manifestation or with our partners. | |
| We expect that to be on the shelves kind of more like around 2027. | ||
| Their teams here in Batavia, Illinois, and their home lab base in San Jose, California, backed by Bill Gates, who wrote in his blog, quote, the idea of switching to lab-made fats and oils may seem strange at first, but their potential to significantly reduce our carbon footprint is immense. | ||
| Believing can make a difference. | ||
| Ian was saying that what's going to happen in the future is now he was wrong about the why. | ||
| He said that we're going to be pulling carbon out of the atmosphere to make graphene because he's obsessed with graphene, and he's wrong. | ||
| That being said, they're pulling carbon dioxide out of the air, fusing it with hydrogen from water to make fake fat. | ||
| I guess to make actual lipids. | ||
| If this scales to mass production, they will be pulling carbon dioxide out of the atmosphere to mass produce butter. | ||
| And you won't know if you're eating this at some point. | ||
| You're going to have to be on top of this. | ||
| This is the same guy, Bill Gates, who's got the appeal thing going on with all the fruits where you don't know. | ||
| You might not know if it's wrapped in this clear coating to cheddar stuff in. | ||
| It's weird. | ||
| You know what a cheddar is? | ||
|
unidentified
|
Yeah. | |
| You ever have a cheddar? | ||
| Cockroaches, isn't it? | ||
| Cricket. | ||
| Cricket. | ||
| So my assumption is they realized if they put cricket on a back of an ingredients label, you'd be like, I ain't eating that. | ||
| That's gross. | ||
| So they call it a cheddar protein. | ||
| Well, here's my question. | ||
| So we've got sustainable butter and we've got Minotaur glory holes. | ||
| To liberal women, which one is more pornographic? | ||
| I think they're taking both. | ||
| It's just the future. | ||
| It just helps the other. | ||
| You get your glass of slop water. | ||
| You got your cheddar. | ||
| This doesn't sound too bad, guys. | ||
| Come on, you know? | ||
| Digital children. | ||
| And then like her explaining the ingredients list, like she rattled, she rattled it a little too quick. | ||
| Like, yeah, it's just like water and gas and like the blood of a virgin and some salt. | ||
| And you're like, whoa, whoa, whoa, whoa, whoa. | ||
| Next to the slop water is a woman held up on chains screaming. | ||
| Literally. | ||
| Yeah. | ||
| So, yeah, I will not be drinking the slop water. | ||
| We'll not have the slop stick. | ||
| I'm not doing it. | ||
| Bill Gates. | ||
| RFK needs to ban this immediately. | ||
| What is we raid him? | ||
|
unidentified
|
Yeah. | |
| Bill Gates. | ||
| What is I don't know what slop water is. | ||
| When I, when I, when I, hold on, hold on. | ||
| Flint water. | ||
| Hold on. | ||
| I'm not kidding. | ||
| When I Google searched slop water wiki, what do you think the, what do you think him up? | ||
|
unidentified
|
Okay. | |
| Okay, hold on first. | ||
| Water slope, a type of canal inclined plane is the first one. | ||
| Well, that's not what I meant. | ||
| The second one is oil discharge monitoring equipment. | ||
| It says ODME is based on a measurement of oil content in the ballast and slop water. | ||
| Okay, well, what is slop water? | ||
| The third search term, fallout wiki. | ||
| Then it's slop definition, followed by the vault fallout wiki. | ||
| So for some reason, when you search for slop water, the first search is fallout, the video game about a post-apocalyptic dystopia where the country and planet was wiped out nuclear war. | ||
| Yeah. | ||
| I don't know what slop water is. | ||
| I'm sure someone's like, oh, yeah. | ||
| Slop water refers to contaminated water mixed with oil, drilling fluids and other waste primarily generated during offshore oil and gas drilling. | ||
| At least they're making use of it. | ||
| Yeah. | ||
| Yeah, make it butter. | ||
| I mean, look, if this were like a healthier version of butter, I feel like there might be some validity to its existence. | ||
| But if it's just, you know, so that way you're not using milk to make butter, I don't really see the point to help Bill Gates do the cow genocide that he wants to do, clearly, and block the sun. | ||
| Clearly. | ||
| Yo, check this out. | ||
| Check this out. | ||
| They said, this is very interesting. | ||
| One thing I will say that probably means something entirely different, but watch the video and pause at 138 and tell me what you read in the tank in the upper left. | ||
| It says T905 slop water. | ||
| Yes, it says slop water. | ||
| I don't know what slop means, but it's definitely an editing oversight. | ||
| Slop water is contaminated water byproduct generated during oil and gas drilling operations, particularly with oil or synthetic-based muds. | ||
| It contains hydrocarbons, chemicals, and solids, which prevent its overboard. | ||
| I'm going to be honest. | ||
| I think they're recycling petroleum byproduct waste. | ||
| Oh, very possible. | ||
| And they're not saying it because nobody would want it. | ||
| So they're like, hey, you know, from this drilling and this fracking, you have this sludge. | ||
| What do we do with it? | ||
| And they're like, what if we extracted the carbon and made fat with it? | ||
| And then people ate it. | ||
| Someone in the suburb, they call it soil and butter. | ||
| Like, as far as I'm concerned, like in principle, if you can have a company that can actually manufacture things that are chemically the exact same as things that occur in nature, I don't have a principle. | ||
| I don't have a principled problem. | ||
| You don't believe the moon is real. | ||
| It's not. | ||
|
unidentified
|
Okay. | |
| It's not. | ||
| But let me finish my sentence then. | ||
| I don't have a problem with that in principle, but I don't, as far as this goes, I don't see the point of being like, oh, we have this manufactured. | ||
| We managed to create it out of, you know, however the means they do. | ||
| I don't see the point because generally, like, unless it's trying to limit the amount of factory farming there is, maybe that might be legitimate. | ||
|
unidentified
|
But I don't even think it's for people. | |
| I think that's to get people prepared to eat other things that are fake. | ||
| I just think it's time I become king because I would just go in and arrest these people. | ||
| I just don't, I'm sorry. | ||
| I'd be like, ma'am, I don't, you're under arrest. | ||
| And she'd be like, but I just want to add, it's quiet. | ||
| Jail, please get in the vehicle. | ||
| There's no trial. | ||
| You are making slop butter, soyent butter. | ||
| All of you, news reporter, you go to jail too, just because all of you, not right to jail, believe it or not. | ||
| I think it's an inside joke with Bill Gates where he's like, what can I put on these tanks and people, these idiots will still eat it? | ||
| You're right. | ||
| Put slop butter. | ||
| They fell for it. | ||
| They're still eating it. | ||
| This is slop. | ||
|
unidentified
|
It's right there. | |
| Look at this. | ||
| It's right there. | ||
| Yeah, they put T905 to make it extra ominous. | ||
| That's the technical term for slop water. | ||
| The future is disgusting. | ||
| Bill Gates is an evil man. | ||
| Yeah. | ||
|
unidentified
|
He's like, what's wrong with eating the slop butter? | |
| I like cows. | ||
| They taste good. | ||
| But you're carbon. | ||
| Yeah, as a means to limit carbon, I'm not so down with that. | ||
| I don't, I'm not buying that there's a massive problem with global warming. | ||
| I know that there is a slight increase, but it's something like it's been projected to be like two or three degrees over the next hundred years or something. | ||
| My entire life, I've been listening to people doom cast about how by the year 2000, the seas are going to rise. | ||
| By the year 2010, the seas are going to rise. | ||
| By 2020, I mean, it was Al Gore that was saying in 2006 in the movie, An Inconvenient Truth. | ||
| He was saying that all of these catastrophic things were going to happen by 2020. | ||
| That was five years ago. | ||
| Nothing has happened. | ||
| Not one. | ||
| In fact, there was an increase in ice on the globe last year. | ||
| So I don't buy any of the global warming BS at all. | ||
| I'm not a scientist, so I can't definitively say one way or the other, other than I agree with you. | ||
| But I can say this definitively: that fake butter is not going to solve the problem. | ||
| No, it's not. | ||
| If there is one, it will not be part of the solution. | ||
| I'm not a scientist, but what I can say is offering mortgages on Miami beachfront property should be fraud based on the narrative from the government. | ||
| If Miami is going to flood and sink or whatever, then it's fraud when these banks offer loans on properties and insurance as well. | ||
| They're all criminals. | ||
| So, you know. | ||
| Why did Barack Obama buy beachfront property on Martha's Vineyard or was it Nantucket? | ||
| It's Oceanfront property on Martha's Vineyard. | ||
| Yeah, Martha's Vineyard. | ||
| He bought a decade or 15 years ago. | ||
| I don't buy it at all. | ||
| I'm not buying it. | ||
| Well, what you understand, Phil, is that Barack Obama is such a great leader. | ||
| He's so confident that we will overcome climate change that he knows it's worth it because we'll win. | ||
| My favorite is the picture of the Statue of Liberty in 1901 and a picture of it in 2025, and it shows the waterline. | ||
| And it's exactly the same spot. | ||
|
unidentified
|
Exactly. | |
| We're going to fix it. | ||
| It's all one glass of slop water at a time. | ||
| Indeed. | ||
| We're going to go to your chat. | ||
| So smash that like button. | ||
| Share the show with everyone you know and join us at Timcast.com. | ||
| Get in that Discord server. | ||
| What is that? | ||
| It's a chat room. | ||
| We're actually working on getting the Discord chat on the front page of the website. | ||
| So anybody who goes to the site will see your chat. | ||
| So it will always be running alongside the show on the website. | ||
| We want to keep your conversations deeply involved, and we want you to join the conversation. | ||
| And I probably shouldn't say this, but I'm going to say it anyway. | ||
| We're thinking VIP Clubhouse, October. | ||
| Probably wrong, but it is now being handled by top men. | ||
| Top men. | ||
| And so it's actually like nearly done. | ||
| I'm actually super surprised. | ||
| So we're really, really excited. | ||
| We're going to be doing events, Friday night shows, games, private VIP stuff for our members at Timcast.com. | ||
| Very, very excited. | ||
| But get your super chats and rumble rants in right now. | ||
| Don't forget the uncensored portion of the show is coming up in about 20 minutes, and we will take your calls as members of TimCast.com Discord. | ||
| But you got to join Rumble Premium. | ||
| All right. | ||
| Dr. Dickhead says it's time to remove qualified immunity for judges and DAs. | ||
| Agreed? | ||
| Yep. | ||
| Agreed. | ||
| Quanti says, How do you respond to pushback that Republican states have higher violent crimes with this? | ||
|
unidentified
|
And I don't know. | |
| If I say, like, hey, National Guard should stop all the murders in Chicago because it has a high density of murders. | ||
| And they go, yeah, well, red states have more crime. | ||
| I go, okay. | ||
| Your point? | ||
| There's also a higher rate of red states complying with and submitting their crime data. | ||
| And we're not seeing this in California and other states. | ||
| They're intentionally not submitting it. | ||
| It's just, I'll tell you this: here's the pushback. | ||
| Chicago is a hyper-concentration urban region where a lot of the crime happens in a very tight space where a small amount of federal law enforcement and National Guard can put a stop to it. | ||
| Red states with high crime, it's largely spread out over hundreds of square miles, which would be extremely difficult to police. | ||
| It is a challenge with rural areas. | ||
| So by all means, be upset there's more crime in there. | ||
| Sure, but why should we why? | ||
| Hey, you can't come in here and stop crime because there's more crime in that state. | ||
| Okay, we'll stop the crime there. | ||
| We'll figure it out. | ||
| We'll stop the crime there too. | ||
| What's the argument? | ||
| There's no argument. | ||
| Andrew says the left profit off the crime gaining money, power, and control. | ||
| They don't care about crime. | ||
| They use it for their benefit. | ||
| Agreed. | ||
| That's why I love this. | ||
| The IRS, it says they don't care how you get the money, you owe your taxes on it. | ||
| You are legally required to report income from ill-gotten gains. | ||
| Did you commit a crime to get the money? | ||
| Just report it because we want our cut. | ||
| That's what they went after Al Capone with taxes. | ||
| All right. | ||
| McBeefrod says, Thank you for fixing the YouTube playlist issue of clips being in the podcast. | ||
| You are all very handsome. | ||
| Oh, well, thank you. | ||
| Wow. | ||
| Just what does it say? | ||
| Just as just a stupid glazier. | ||
|
unidentified
|
Okay. | |
| The people that say the justice and mental health system failed him will also say that he must be released back into the public so as not to continue to victimize him. | ||
| Yeah. | ||
| Everybody's saying death penalty. | ||
| And the argument is like he's on video doing it. | ||
| You can see it. | ||
| There's no question here. | ||
| And functionally, emotionally, individually, I understand. | ||
| You can't release this guy. | ||
| We know he did it. | ||
| He's even a danger to other people in prison. | ||
| So why are we going to spend money to keep someone who has done such evil things? | ||
| The challenge is not the individual level, which I understand. | ||
| The challenge is the machine is saying we justify, we grant the state the right to execute. | ||
| And the problem there is Kamala Harris will kill you. | ||
| When I did that story about catching pedophiles, I, in the story, imagined a lot of things happening to them that would take their lives. | ||
| And I can't let the state have that ability. | ||
| I think we can't trust him to do it. | ||
| I want this guy. | ||
| He can't be in polite society. | ||
| He needs to be removed from society forever. | ||
| The island. | ||
| Put him on El Salvador. | ||
| Put him on the island. | ||
| Yeah, there you go. | ||
| I mean, this is what's crazy. | ||
| What's preferable? | ||
| If you came to me and said, Tim, we are not going to pay the bills for this criminal. | ||
| He's a threat to even other prisoners. | ||
| So death penalty. | ||
| And you say, Tim, no death penalty. | ||
| Then I say El Salvador. | ||
| And the Democrats are like, no. | ||
| And I'm like, if the option is death penalty or El Salvador Supermax, I say El Salvador, let them deal with it. | ||
| Exile. | ||
| Exile them. | ||
| Put him on one of Elon's space rockets. | ||
| I mean, there's no easy answer, to be honest. | ||
| Like in this capacity, it's one of the greatest examples of the challenge in this question. | ||
| Again, he's a repeat offender, career criminal, violent, attacked others before, will attack again, attacks for no reason. | ||
| You put him in general population in a prison, he will attack them. | ||
| So he's going to go in solitary. | ||
| And then we got to pay the bills to lock a guy up forever in a box where he can't do anything, even though we know he's evil and we can't like, that's a difficult question. | ||
| North Carolina does have the death penalty. | ||
| Oh, yeah, there are plenty of states. | ||
| I think 25 states. | ||
| Democrats are going to argue that this poor man is a victim of the system or something stupid. | ||
| Michael Malice made a great point one time. | ||
| He said, Look, I never understood. | ||
| Well, this is one of the many that Michael Malice has made. | ||
| But he was talking about the death penalty and he was saying, you know, I never understood how in the U.S., people say you can't give him the death penalty because he's mentally ill. | ||
| And he's like, I always thought that that was the best reason, right? | ||
| Which sounds horrible on the face of it, but like if someone is not going to get better and they don't understand that what they did was wrong, it's actually better for society if they're not allowed to be in society. | ||
| And you can make the argument that the death penalty is more humane than putting someone that doesn't understand why they're in a cage, in a cage for the rest of their life. | ||
| Let's always say with like the court system, and they're like, he pleads insanity. | ||
| He's too insane to stand true. | ||
| I'm like, isn't that the best reason to put someone in jail? | ||
| Oh, but the insanity plea, this is what I love about you go to prison forever. | ||
| Right. | ||
| When you plead insanity, you get life. | ||
| And the trope in movies is that you get away with it. | ||
| Like you murder someone and say, well, by reason of insanity, we're going to release them to medical care for a year. | ||
| No. | ||
| You murder someone and you don't know right from wrong. | ||
| They say you're going to a medical facility forever. | ||
| So 20 years becomes a life sentence. | ||
| The British had the right idea with Australia. | ||
| We need asylums. | ||
| I'm going to run Tim. | ||
| Thanks for having me. | ||
| I'll see you guys later. | ||
| Head on over to Inverted World Live on YouTube and Rumble. | ||
| We'll be live at 10 o'clock. | ||
| Phone lines will be open. | ||
| We'll see you all there. | ||
| Anyone can call in. | ||
| Anyone can call in. | ||
| Tell us a crazy story. | ||
| It'll be fun. | ||
| And we've got Y2K 2.0 coming up tonight that we're going to talk about 2038. | ||
| And Sasquatch did it. | ||
| Sasquatch was through a portal doing it. | ||
| And we'll talk about all that later. | ||
| See you guys. | ||
| Moon's Real Shane. | ||
| All right. | ||
| What do we got here? | ||
| Andrew says, 1989 Crips versus 15 Ranges. | ||
| Rangers. | ||
| I know he's a typo. | ||
| In L.A., the Crips lost. | ||
| Yep. | ||
| Yep. | ||
| That's not a surprise. | ||
| Yeah. | ||
| D42992 says, I vote for Phil as governor of Mississippi. | ||
| No. | ||
| I'm never going to be a public servant. | ||
| David Flores says, Shy-town gangs will follow DC and move their activities into the suburban area more than they are. | ||
| Ask PG and Moco in MD right now. | ||
| Mark my words. | ||
| Gangs are fluid. | ||
| And they're not stupid. | ||
| I mean, they may not be like rocket scientists, but they run businesses, man. | ||
| They sell drugs. | ||
| They have distribution. | ||
| There are people who are management. | ||
| There are people who are lower level. | ||
| And if the National Guard comes in, the bosses are going to be like, hey, no, we don't sell in that area because we're going to get too much heat from the National Guard. | ||
| Just move over here. | ||
| That's what's going to happen. | ||
| And it's going to be a game of whack-a-bowl, but I think the National Guard can do some do some good. | ||
| KMX says, my farmer husband was 30 years National Guard, retired now in Illinois. | ||
| Regular central Illinois dude in a Chicago unit. | ||
| Most National Guard are pretty chill. | ||
|
unidentified
|
Yep. | |
| Indeed. | ||
| Yeah, they're the bros. | ||
| They're good guys. | ||
| They're bros for sure. | ||
| T-Bomb85 says, got to love it. | ||
| Tim comes back, tells everyone he worked so much he almost died, then proceeds to tell everyone he has a new channel. | ||
| And I'm recording an additional half an hour every day. | ||
| Something's wrong with me, I guess. | ||
| I don't know. | ||
| Subscribe to youtube.com/slash at Tim Pool. | ||
| The goal for this channel is going to be more random cultural commentary and maybe even some vlog stuff, just kind of random. | ||
| Today I commented on this viral video of a cop who was accused of being high. | ||
| So whereas like Timcast News, my morning show, and it's like the news articles and cultural issues that are relevant at the time, the Tim Poole channel is just whatever I feel like. | ||
| And so there's a viral video of a cop who was accused of being high. | ||
| And I don't think he was. | ||
| And I talked about it. | ||
| I think he was dehydrated and probably sick. | ||
| And the guy screaming in his face, you're going to get fired. | ||
| You're high on the job. | ||
| And like, I don't think he's high. | ||
| I don't think he's high. | ||
| One evil chef says, crazy, no one has mentioned this. | ||
| Did you know that the Marines, since they began, by law, are directly controlled by the president in the original bill. | ||
| That's why it takes an act of Congress to go to war, but Trump is able to send Marines. | ||
| Interesting. | ||
| They're the president's 911 forcing. | ||
| Do they communicate that to you guys? | ||
| No. | ||
| Well, I was an enlisted infantry guy, so they basically just say, go shoot at that stuff over there. | ||
| And we follow those orders. | ||
| But presidential authority is interesting. | ||
| That's why I think the president often relies on National Guard and then Marines for various reasons. | ||
| The missions you went on, were they almost always you were going to shoot? | ||
| Or what was the balance of you're securing an area, you're not in active combat? | ||
| Most, so I was in Iraq three times, and most of that was just us walking around waiting to be shot at or blown up. | ||
| Just a total waste of time. | ||
| I'm fairly anti-Iraq war, pro-killing Islamic radicals, but anti-Afghanistan war, anti-Iraq war for that reason. | ||
| We were just walking around and being very reactionary to and targets. | ||
| That's kind of why I asked because I figured even if you're infantry, it's not like every day they're saying, okay, here's your list of people you're going to go kill, go kill them now. | ||
| No, and you'll walk around for two weeks and not see a thing. | ||
| And then all of a sudden you'll have an IED go off. | ||
| And that's why they always say complacency kills because you'll go out on these patrols and after two weeks of nothing, you start not paying attention. | ||
| You start not seeing things. | ||
| You start not looking around corners as much as you should be. | ||
| And then boom, they get you. | ||
| I heard stories where like there'll be a convoy and then a little kid will walk in front of the convoy with a bomb on him, things like that. | ||
| Yeah, that happens a lot. | ||
| And for whatever reason, the Muslims over there love to hit vehicles and less so people. | ||
| So our solution to that was just stay out of vehicles. | ||
| I mean, it sounds ridiculous, but we just would walk everywhere all over Iraq. | ||
| We were walking because it was safer to walk somewhere, to walk five, 10 miles somewhere than to get into a Humvee because they wanted to blow up the Humvee. | ||
| They like doing monetary damage, at least in that war. | ||
| Maybe it was different in Afghanistan and elsewhere. | ||
| So yeah, just stay out of the vehicles. | ||
| What do you do if you're driving in a truck and some little kids 50 feet ahead of you just stands in the middle of the road? | ||
| Does like the convoy stop or like? | ||
| Yeah, I mean, generally speaking, if it's a child, yes, they would stop. | ||
| And if they saw something like a bomb was strapped to them, then they'd have to make a real moral choice at that point of protecting themselves or taking the kid out. | ||
| I never saw a situation like that, but I do think that the RO rules of engagement would allow you to take out an enemy combatant, even if it was a child, if they were approaching you with a bomb. | ||
| And that's just, as a dad, like that tears me up. | ||
| But you have, at the end of the day, you have to protect the man on your right and left. | ||
| I've heard these stories. | ||
| They know that we have rules and they know that Americans don't want to kill kids. | ||
| That's right. | ||
| And so I've heard stories like this. | ||
| I don't know. | ||
| That's just insane, man. | ||
| Brutal. | ||
| All right. | ||
| What do we got here? | ||
| John Ruff had a question for Shane, but Shane's gone. | ||
| He says, why don't you trust the people with the death penalty, but you do with 2A? | ||
| Well, I can answer for that because Kamal Harris. | ||
| You know, it's like it's an easy answer. | ||
| But she, like the story is there are people who were supposed to be released from prison, but she kept them for slave labor. | ||
| There was a guy who was on death row and there was exculpatory evidence that she blocked from, you know. | ||
| So certainly, I think we can all agree there are dangerous people. | ||
| And for the protection of society, I know there are people who make the moral argument that retribution matters and someone who kills should be killed because it's retribution. | ||
| That's all that matters. | ||
| I don't think that way. | ||
| My question is: are we safe? | ||
| And with someone like this guy who killed this woman, no, not with him. | ||
| Then there's a question of we know he did it. | ||
| He's on camera. | ||
| He did it. | ||
| He's going to do it again. | ||
| He did it before. | ||
| You put him in jail. | ||
| He's a threat to the prisoners. | ||
| They're like, what do you do? | ||
| And then it comes down to this. | ||
| Do you want to create a system by which when you are complacent, two weeks later, Kamala Harris now has a kill switch? | ||
| That's the challenge I have, where I'm like, dude, I get it. | ||
| Evil people must be stopped and they can't be rehabilitated and we have to protect the innocent. | ||
| But what happens when Kamala Harris is handed that kill switch? | ||
| We're all focused right now on this one guy and there's evidence. | ||
| We see the video and we're like, this is the time where we say death penalty. | ||
| Two weeks from now, we're going to be talking about taxes or tariffs or something. | ||
| And whoever that person was who was handed that button in California, it was Kamala Harris. | ||
| It literally was. | ||
| She's going to be like, quick, no one's paying attention. | ||
| And she's going to just start killing people, man. | ||
| That's what freaks me out. | ||
| Not an easy question. | ||
| Not an easy answer. | ||
| Let's see. | ||
| We'll grab some more. | ||
| There we go. | ||
| Mauricio 91 says they left all the kids to single mothers. | ||
| That's what's wrong. | ||
| Do you guys see that viral video from Charlie Kirk? | ||
| And there's a black man who's arguing with him and says, you claim that two-thirds of black men abandon their kids, but 54% of black men don't even have kids. | ||
| And Charlie's like, yes, and of the black men who do have kids, two-thirds leave their wives. | ||
| And the guy didn't understand that. | ||
| Many such cases. | ||
|
unidentified
|
Yeah. | |
| That's why these street debate things are funny. | ||
| Joe Spinel says, Congress can put a stop to these judges by removing their own self-imposed judicial immunity that originated from English common law. | ||
| Oh man, this is a big story that actually we pulled up, but we didn't get to. | ||
| Melanie Oma says, is the story about Greta Thunberg's boat getting attacked by a drone real? | ||
| Well, according to all the reports I've seen, yeah, Greta Thunberg's flotilla was struck by a drone. | ||
| I don't know. | ||
| That got sent to me. | ||
| I thought it was a joke. | ||
| Is that real? | ||
| I found like seven or eight different sources all saying it happened. | ||
| Oh, yeah. | ||
| But what was it? | ||
| Like a small drone? | ||
| Yeah, I mean, the boat was still floating and stuff. | ||
| Yeah, it was a little fire. | ||
| A drone. | ||
| It was a small drone that came above it, released a bomb. | ||
| That doesn't sound like Israel. | ||
| Yeah. | ||
| Did Greta Thunberg get bombed by Palestinians? | ||
| They labeled it. | ||
| Is that the first time that the left did something to capitalize off of the, you know, and then if it was play the victim card? | ||
| If it was the Jews, they would have sent a paid. | ||
| She said they were bombed in Tunisian territory. | ||
| So why are they blaming the Israelis? | ||
|
unidentified
|
I can't stand these psychotic retards. | |
| They're in Tunisia and they got bombed by a small commercial drone and they're like, Israel did it. | ||
| It was the Jews. | ||
| I mean, maybe, maybe. | ||
| But it's just like, yo, what? | ||
| You don't know who bombed you? | ||
| You're in Tunisia. | ||
| And also the Jews. | ||
| Like, if it was Israel, they probably would have sunk the boat. | ||
| Like, Israel's good at. | ||
| Why would Israel take it? | ||
| It just doesn't seem like they're operating reality. | ||
| I just want to point this out. | ||
| I just want to point this out for you guys. | ||
| Okay. | ||
| Here's a map. | ||
| Here's Israel. | ||
| You see Israel over here. | ||
| You'll move the mouse. | ||
| Here's Tunisia. | ||
| Tunisia is where they are. | ||
| So Israel traveled 2,000 miles to drop a commercial drone firebomb on their boat. | ||
| Yes. | ||
| And missed. | ||
| Okay, maybe, maybe Nanyaho's sitting back there. | ||
| He's like, I think what we got to do is use a commercial drone from Best Buy and drop a firebomb on her flotilla in Tunisia so we can claim it wasn't us, but get her all angry so she blames us. | ||
| And then we can say she's crazy. | ||
| Like, sir, wasn't she just in Israeli waters? | ||
| No, but it'd be funnier in Tunisia. | ||
| What is even the max distance on these like low-end commercial drones? | ||
| Like 50 miles? | ||
| Yeah, no, half mile. | ||
| Yeah. | ||
| Half a mile, half a mile with clear skies, if you're lucky. | ||
| Okay. | ||
| Yeah. | ||
| That's not a half mile. | ||
| To be fair, they can be GPS programmed and launched, but I really don't think a small commercial drone is going to fly that far. | ||
| Sounds like it was launched from Tunisia. | ||
| Yeah, if I had to take a stab. | ||
| Yo, this is crazy. | ||
| The quote is: The Israelis have attacked the flotilla main boat in Tunisian territory. | ||
| Game of Thrones star Liam Cunningham said that. | ||
| What proof do they have that Israel used a small commercial grade drone to start a fire on their boat? | ||
| You just need to feel it. | ||
| It's vibes. | ||
| It's all vibes. | ||
| It's all vibes, base. | ||
| It is. | ||
| This is crazy. | ||
| An investigation. | ||
| You don't even know. | ||
| The Tunisians, they're just pranking. | ||
| That's all it was. | ||
| Jeez. | ||
| Psych. | ||
|
unidentified
|
Yeah. | |
| Then you, then we also get into the stupid Trump letter they published. | ||
| I don't believe it, by the way. | ||
| Do we have that one pulled up, actually? | ||
| I thought I did. | ||
| I guess not. | ||
| Wait, oh, here we go. | ||
| Here it is. | ||
| This is the image allegedly that Trump's poem did Epstein, which is signed Donald. | ||
| And it says Donald J. Trump had signed Donald. | ||
| Yeah. | ||
| He has signed things in the past, just Donald, but I don't believe whatever this weird thing is. | ||
| I'm sorry. | ||
| It's just too weird. | ||
| It's just too weird. | ||
| And it's not evidence of anything. | ||
| Yeah, that's why I don't care because it's not evidence of anything. | ||
| They were friends at that time. | ||
| Maybe he did send it. | ||
| It doesn't matter because this is the opposite of news. | ||
| It's not evidence of anything. | ||
| No. | ||
| Hey, if Trump's on the Epstein list, I want the Epstein files released. | ||
| But liberals, you're not going to play stupid games. | ||
| I don't even know what this is. | ||
| Oh, they're going to try. | ||
| I'm just not saying they're not going to play with me. | ||
| I don't care. | ||
| They can come and be like, take pull these. | ||
| I don't care. | ||
| If Trump's on the list, release it. | ||
| I said it over and over again. | ||
| You know, yeah. | ||
| And the women that were at the press conference or whatever last week threatening to compile a list of their own. | ||
| Where's the list? | ||
| Please release it. | ||
| Like, put it out. | ||
| Everybody was like, ooh, they're going to do this. | ||
| Like, no, they're not. | ||
| They're not going to do anything like that. | ||
| And at this point, I don't even know what the list is. | ||
| Is the list just people who have known Epstein? | ||
| And if so, that's not actually also evidence of anything. | ||
|
unidentified
|
I don't know. | |
| I'm with you. | ||
| I want the clients. | ||
| Like, there's a picture of Prince Andrew with Virginia Jufre. | ||
| So right now, the Epstein client list is Jeffrey Epstein, Prince Andrew. | ||
| Then they said the DOJ is like, no, no, he was just trafficking to Epstein. | ||
| Okay, what about Prince Andrew? | ||
|
unidentified
|
Yeah. | |
| That's what I want. | ||
| The people that we know interacted with these young girls, I want that list. | ||
| I don't want a list of people who have known Epstein at some point in their lives. | ||
| I want that list. | ||
| Right. | ||
| Like, even as far as it pertains to Bill Gates, if all Bill Gates did was fly with Epstein and that was it, whatever. | ||
| Bill Gates is not a guy I like. | ||
| Was Bill Gates, is he implicated in the underage girls? | ||
| Oh, then release all of that. | ||
| So I think Thomas Massey and Rokano's bill is good. | ||
| You know, I'm like 60% on it. | ||
| I think they are working on releasing the documents. | ||
| I don't trust them to do it. | ||
| That's why I'm kind of like, yeah, well, you know, we'll let Massey cook on this one, but release it. | ||
| However, it is weird now. | ||
| They're saying that Trump was an FBI informant. | ||
| That's interesting. | ||
| Whatever that means. | ||
| We'll see. | ||
| All right, what do we got here? | ||
| Jump Danny says the left will somehow simultaneously justify using IEDs on Tesla dealerships and ambush federal officers and then become surprised Pikachu face when the salty sergeant first class gets deployed to deal with their insurgency. | ||
| That's a good point. | ||
|
unidentified
|
Real. | |
| All right, my friends, we're going to go to that uncensored portion of the show over at rumble.com/slash Timcast IRL. | ||
| If you want to call in, you got to join the TimCast Discord at TimCast.com, sign up, and you can actually call in and talk to us and our guest. | ||
| And we're going to be putting the Discord chat on the front page of the site so it'll be simultaneously running with that show. | ||
| Very, very cool stuff. | ||
| You can follow me on X and Instagram at Timcast. | ||
| Wade, do you want to shout anything out? | ||
| Yeah, my name's Wade Miller, of course. | ||
| Wade Miller underscore USMC on X. | ||
| And you can find our organization's website at Americarenewing.com. | ||
| That's Americarenewing.com. | ||
| Cool. | ||
| Yeah, come find me on X and Instagram at Realtate Brown. | ||
| Come watch Pop Culture Crisis this week. | ||
| I'm co-hosting with Mary. | ||
| She's allowing me to talk, which is, you know, maybe a terrible thing. | ||
| Tagging on her judgment. | ||
| I don't know. | ||
| But yeah, come hang out. | ||
| It's going to be a good time. | ||
| I am Phil That Remains on Twix. | ||
| The band is all that remains. | ||
| You can check out the band on Apple Music, Amazon Music, Pandora, Spotify, YouTube, and Deezer. | ||
| Don't forget the left lane is for crime. | ||
| We will see you all at rumble.com slash Timcast IRL in about 30 seconds. | ||
| Thanks for hanging out. | ||
| Greta Thunberg's Gaza boat firebombed in drone strike off North African coast. | ||
| She's a retard. | ||
| All of the people are retarded on her boat. | ||
| They are cognitively deficient, and I have no fucking idea how they get this shit funded. | ||
| But let's just tell you the story. | ||
| The Freedom Flotilla caught fire after a drone attack off the coast of North Africa, activists said. | ||
| The family boat has been officially attacked. | ||
| A drone came right above it, released a bomb, and exploded, and the boat was on fire. | ||
| The pro-Palestinian demonstrator then swiftly labeled the drone strike an attack against Gaza. | ||
| They have bombed a boat with civilians on it in Tunisian territory. | ||
| Game of Thrones star Liam Cunningham declared the Israelis have attacked the flotilla main boat in Tunisian territory. | ||
| Source I've never wanted to just punch someone in the face harder than this fucking retard. | ||
| I'm sorry. | ||
| I take that back. | ||
| Like, obviously, I don't, I'm never, I don't want to hit anybody. | ||
| I'm just saying, like, the sheer retardation of this, just, just, bro, just, I don't know. | ||
| Choose group you don't like and blame them for literally everything. | ||
|
unidentified
|
Tate is, how dare you? | |
| The blacks are the reason why you're sitting here now. | ||
| Like, oh, I'm just going to, something happened. | ||
| I'm going to ascribe it to a group that's not here. | ||
| Right. | ||
| Tunisia is thousands of miles from Israel, but these people are fucking retards. | ||
| That's just it. | ||
| I'm just, holy shit. | ||
| There is something to be said about you just pick one group and then everything goes wrong. | ||
| You just blame it on them. | ||
| But Jews is so popular now. | ||
| It's like it's kind of lame. | ||
| You should beech. | ||
| Yeah. | ||
|
unidentified
|
I don't know. | |
| Like, blame everything like that. | ||
| Burmese. | ||
| Yeah, like these Burmese. | ||
| Can't get a girlfriend. | ||
| The Kazakhstanis. | ||
| These Kazakhs. | ||
| All these girls won't talk to me. | ||
| It's these Lebanese people. | ||
| Bro, everybody knows that Georgia Georgians control the world. | ||
| That's true. | ||
| I can prove it. | ||
|
unidentified
|
Yeah. | |
| I can prove it. | ||
| Are we talking Sale George? | ||
| Do you know how you say the word for mom in every single language? | ||
| How? | ||
|
unidentified
|
Every single language. | |
| What's the word for mom in every single language? | ||
| Mother. | ||
| No. | ||
| Mother is Germanic. | ||
| It's ma. | ||
| Except ma. | ||
| Okay. | ||
| So even in Japan, mama. | ||
| And where it deviates, it's ama. | ||
| But it is always some ma, ama sound. | ||
| And it's because babies just go, ma, mama, dad, in every single language. | ||
| Dad. | ||
| Because babies go, dad, dad, dad, dad, dad, dad. | ||
| And it's just a sound they're making. | ||
| Literally, the words ma and pa or da literally just come from babies saying that noise. | ||
| And then humans went, they're talking about me. | ||
| Except fucking Georgia. | ||
| Makes no sense. | ||
| What's the word? | ||
|
unidentified
|
Notice Georgia. | |
| The word for mother in Georgia, dada. | ||
|
unidentified
|
Whoa. | |
| The word for father in Georgia, mama. | ||
| Whoa. | ||
| Now, hold on. | ||
| Most languages do have a formal word for mother. | ||
| We say mother, but that's a specific formal word. | ||
| In Japan, it's like okasan. | ||
| There are specific words for this. | ||
| But when we say mommy or mama, every language has mommy or mama except for the Georgians. | ||
| They flipped it. | ||
| That proves they're the singular group of people above everybody else. | ||
| And we all live in backwards world and they switch the words on us to confuse us so they control us. | ||
| That's it. | ||
| We're going into Atlanta tomorrow. | ||
| We're figuring this out. | ||
| Vladimir Putin is just trying to stop the evil Georgians. | ||
| Atlanta. | ||
| Stalin was a Georgian. | ||
| We're going down to Savannah and we're getting to the bottom of this. | ||
| Figure out what the hell. | ||
| What these Georgians are up to. | ||
| I think you're trying to trans us by me now saying and insisting that I'm actually mama. | ||
| Oh, yeah, the Georgians. | ||
| When you go to Georgia, they're going to be like, hello, mama. | ||
| And you're like, stop, no. | ||
|
unidentified
|
Right. | |
| They probably call slop water water. | ||
| Of course they do. | ||
| He's free. | ||
| Of course they do. | ||
| Rondy, Georgia. | ||
| Gigantic slop water fan in Bill Gates' fake butter fat. | ||
| So on the note, it has to be a bit. | ||
| Bill's like, dude, it's going to be hilarious. | ||
| No, leave it up. | ||
| It's going to be so funny. | ||
| I got to post a picture of it. | ||
| You will drink the slop art and you'll be happy. | ||
| You'll eat your cricket sandwich with your slop butter. | ||
| Achetta. | ||
| Sorry. | ||
| Achetta. | ||
| Achetta sandwich. | ||
|
unidentified
|
Yeah. | |
| I mean, if you put cheese on it, I guess. | ||
| I don't know. | ||
| A little slop cheese. | ||
| Well, I mean, made with the slop butter, I guess. | ||
|
unidentified
|
I bet the Georgians are doing it. | |
| Slop. | ||
| It's disgusting. | ||
| Third, third black sea access. | ||
| I don't know. | ||
| What's worse? | ||
| The Ochetta and Slop water butter sandwich or the bull porn. | ||
|
unidentified
|
How dare you? | |
| They have bombed the boat with civilians on it. | ||
| That's a tough. | ||
| That's like a gay son thought. | ||
| Daughter, would you rather? | ||
| Like, I don't know where. | ||
| It's not tough. | ||
| It's pretty tough. | ||
| It's not tough. | ||
|
unidentified
|
So I love how Greta was like, the climate is so fucked up. | |
| And then everyone was like, we don't really care about that anymore. | ||
|
unidentified
|
It's like, oh, free palace. | |
| The Jews. | ||
| The Jews. | ||
| The water levels are rising because there's so many boats. | ||
| So the Tunisians are trying to get her boat out of the water. | ||
| And they're trying to lower the sea level. | ||
| And then all of a sudden, she's got a problem with that. | ||
| It's all virtue signaling because there's so much food going in there. | ||
| I saw it myself. | ||
| I was just there. | ||
| You've been? | ||
| I just got back from Israel. | ||
| I just got back. | ||
| In fact, the drone was me. | ||
| No, I just got back from there. | ||
| There's so much food going in there. | ||
| So I don't even know why they're going to there other than to just virtue signal and get clout on social media. | ||
| Wouldn't it be funny if this. | ||
|
unidentified
|
We just got hit. | |
| The vessel is on fire. | ||
| Our vessel is on fire. | ||
|
unidentified
|
We've been hit by what appears to be a drone. | |
| We've been hit by what appears to be a drone. | ||
| We're on the flotilla vessel off the coast of Tunisia. | ||
| Bro, get a fucking firefly. | ||
| They're flying the Palestinian flag. | ||
| That's not particularly smart. | ||
|
unidentified
|
No one else is picking either. | |
| He's like, bro, there's a fire and he's running around filming. | ||
| Get a fucking fire extinguisher. | ||
| He's a fucking retard. | ||
| Oh my God. | ||
|
unidentified
|
It was a massive explosion. | |
| A massive, massive explosion. | ||
| Couldn't have been that massive. | ||
|
unidentified
|
We've been hit by what appears to be a drone. | |
| The vessel is on. | ||
| Captain! | ||
| I'm here! | ||
| We've been hit! | ||
| Is he like, did you put the fire out? | ||
|
unidentified
|
No! | |
| What are you doing? | ||
| I'm filming. | ||
| We forget. | ||
|
unidentified
|
We've been hit. | |
| What are the odds that this is just some Tunisian teenager that dropped a cherry bomb on him? | ||
|
unidentified
|
Hilarious. | |
| I think there's good odds, actually. | ||
|
unidentified
|
Where's the fire extinguisher? | |
| It took me a minute and a half to figure out he needs a fire extinguisher. | ||
|
unidentified
|
The vessel is on fire. | |
| We are off the coast of Tunis. | ||
| It was a loud explosion. | ||
| I was on the top deck. | ||
| Stop yelling. | ||
|
unidentified
|
The police are arriving. | |
| Police are here. | ||
| Yeah, you're all dry. | ||
| You're all combat veterans now. | ||
| What do you think the Tunisian police are? | ||
| Who do you think they're going to attribute this drones? | ||
|
unidentified
|
Look at it. | |
| Wait, are they deboarding onto light drops? | ||
|
unidentified
|
Guys, we have been attacked in what appears to be a drone attack. | |
| The vessel is on fire. | ||
| I repeat, the vessel is on fire. | ||
| We're on the family boat. | ||
| Dude, it's like not even that big of a deal. | ||
| A loud explosion came. | ||
|
unidentified
|
The boat is on fire. | |
| He's crapping his pants because a teenager dropped a firecracker probably. | ||
| No, I'm going to say, maybe it was a bigger explosion than it was. | ||
| It may have been. | ||
| But the reason why I don't believe him for two seconds is that he didn't actually try to put the fire out. | ||
| He just ran around back and forth screaming, we're hit. | ||
| Well, yeah, I mean, it's, it's, you know, he can get attention and make a YouTube video. | ||
|
unidentified
|
Captain, I'm here. | |
| I'm here. | ||
| Save the slop water. | ||
| I'm here. | ||
| The channel's gone. | ||
| It's going under. | ||
| He starts filming before telling the captain the boat is on fire. | ||
|
unidentified
|
Right. | |
| Yeah, like, what are we doing here? | ||
| Clout, this is like if you played Sea of Thieves, this is how these lobbies are. | ||
| Yeah, some people are chatting. | ||
| It's fake. | ||
| I don't believe it. | ||
| I'd be willing to bet they faked it. | ||
| They did it themselves. | ||
| You know, to be flat out honest with you, I just don't care. | ||
| I don't care. | ||
| I don't care if it was real. | ||
| I don't care if it was fake. | ||
| I don't care if your boat is floating. | ||
| I don't care if your boat is sinking. | ||
| I just don't care. | ||
| All right. | ||
| Let's go to callers. | ||
| We got attorney Meme Jen. | ||
| What is it? | ||
| I can't. | ||
| Shane H. Wilder. | ||
| When you guys make big names, it doesn't show us. | ||
| It just says dot dot dot. | ||
|
unidentified
|
Yeah. | |
| Once again, blame Mary for that. | ||
| She gave me the nickname. | ||
| By the way, with the boat on fire, can someone remix that to the tune of the roof is on fire? | ||
| Oh, I could do this. | ||
| Bro, I could do this right now. | ||
| Our vessel is on fire. | ||
| Our vessel is on fire. | ||
| We've been hit by work. | ||
| I got this. | ||
| We're doing this right now. | ||
|
unidentified
|
While you're doing that, I'll go out and get my question out because it's a bit of a long one. | |
| The Lynns keep complaining about how the cost of goods will go up if legals are kicked out. | ||
| At least here in Texas, they're starting the call for bringing back the Bracero program, which was started in the 40s as a way to have someone to tend the films while the men were away fighting in World War II. | ||
| It was not sunsetted at the end of World War II like it was supposed to because the Baqueros could be paying next to nothing. | ||
| It was ended in 1964 because of a combination of output from slave wages and inhumane treatment, particularly Vaqueros when they came into the country to tend the films. | ||
| The first thing that was done to them is they were sprayed down with DDT. | ||
| When it ended, there was a fear prices would go up. | ||
| Instead, Americans were able to take on the jobs for decent wages. | ||
| And we witnessed quick technological advancements that not only made the jobs easier, meaning less people needed to tend the films, but gave the workers new skills and explaining how much we could be harvesting, keeping prices down. | ||
| Since the Lynns don't understand history, and if they were somehow to bring back the Vaquero program, how much of a detriment would it be not only to the Vaqueros, but to the agricultural industry as a whole? | ||
| And they basically have this right now. | ||
| So there's an uncapped visa for ag workers. | ||
| I believe it's uncapped. | ||
| If it's not, it's a massive top line on how many you can bring over. | ||
| So the reason I think this whole ag argument is completely fake is because right now there exists a program for these farmers to bring in agricultural workers through the visa process. | ||
| So the Bracero program essentially is in effect under that. | ||
| So anyone that's arguing this, they just don't understand the law and they have this opportunity to bring these in. | ||
| More importantly, what genre did you want the remix to be in? | ||
|
unidentified
|
I would just say do it over, if you can, over like the original Rockmaster Scott and the Dynamic 3 song. | |
| What genre would that be? | ||
|
unidentified
|
It was more of a dance, hip-hop type song. | |
| Dance, hip-hop. | ||
| All right. | ||
| I also already asked to make bubblegum metal. | ||
| There you go. | ||
| Let's give it a listen. | ||
| You guys ready? | ||
| Yeah. | ||
| I hope it's not too loud. | ||
| We just got hit. | ||
| I'm so much like Carl from Earth Crisis. | ||
|
unidentified
|
Let's go. | |
| We just got hit. | ||
|
unidentified
|
Our vessel is on fire! | |
| It's very experimental. | ||
| The other one hit by whatever! | ||
| The other one's actually really good. | ||
|
unidentified
|
It is. | |
| We just got I paid 99 cents for this one. | ||
| Go, go, go. | ||
| It's a bait. | ||
| It's gonna be a bait. | ||
| Can I make a music video for this? | ||
| How do you do that, create? | ||
| Isn't there a way to like make a video? | ||
|
unidentified
|
We're on the family boat at about 11:30 p.m. | |
| A loud explosion came! | ||
| Dude, that is a banger. | ||
| That was a thumper. | ||
| Let's go. | ||
| I'm gonna publish that right now. | ||
| I just want to, I gotta figure out how to make a video on it. | ||
| Anyway, Shane, do you want to add anything or share that? | ||
|
unidentified
|
No, I'm just happy I could think of something random and it popped into my head while I was waiting. | |
| I'm like, I just kept thinking the roof, the roof, the roof is on fire. | ||
| We don't need no water and let the motherfucker burn. | ||
| We don't need slop water. | ||
| We don't need slop water. | ||
|
unidentified
|
There we go. | |
| But I'm going to shout my shit out. | ||
| I'm on everywhere, Shane H. Schwilder. | ||
| You've got the memes, you've got the shorts. | ||
| I'm currently working on like three or four scripts all at the same time. | ||
| Only other thing I want to shout out is I can't remember her last name. | ||
| First name is Sophia. | ||
| She's a 16-year-old girl that was at the Catholic school. | ||
| She is still in ICU after taking a bullet to the head. | ||
| And she's actually doing better. | ||
| She's conscious that they had to remove part of her skull to release the pressure. | ||
| And it looks like she might make a full recovery if she can get out of the ICU, but it's going to be a long road to hope for her. | ||
| So any prayers and well wishes, definitely, you know, keep them out there. | ||
| Absolutely, man. | ||
| They generated a video for me. | ||
| Oh, man. | ||
| I'm uploading this to X right now. | ||
| Any prayers that people can give to Shane? | ||
| I made a remix of our, what does he say? | ||
| We've been hit. | ||
| We've been hit. | ||
| Our vessel got hit. | ||
| We just got hit. | ||
| We just got hit by the Freedom Flotilla and Greta Tunberg. | ||
| Let's go. | ||
| Here we go. | ||
| Let's just upload this. | ||
| You think they're going to get mad at me? | ||
| There we go. | ||
|
unidentified
|
And it shows a boat on fire. | |
| Dude, that song's fun. | ||
| I like it. | ||
| It's a banger. | ||
| Yeah. | ||
| All right. | ||
| It's impressive. | ||
| All right, let's go to the next caller. | ||
| Thanks for calling in, brother. | ||
| We got Panda-ish. | ||
|
unidentified
|
What's up? | |
| Hello, Candy. | ||
| Yeah. | ||
|
unidentified
|
All right. | |
| So my question is about the judges. | ||
| So, should the judges who allow these career criminals be charged as accomplices to the correct criminals who continue to commit these heinous crimes, especially if it's the same judge that keeps on releasing the same criminals? | ||
| Say that one more time. | ||
|
unidentified
|
So, basically, should these judges be basically charged as accomplices to these career criminals? | |
| So, they have they have well, they have uh they have immunity now. | ||
| That is that's something that I have uh brought up. | ||
| And also, someone else, who was it that made the comment? | ||
| Musk was talking about it on X earlier today. | ||
| He retweeted someone that said something about it. | ||
| And I think that, like my opinion about like my opinion about what should happen when it comes to companies that hire illegal immigrants or people that rent apartments, | ||
| the illegal immigrants, the ramifications have to go beyond the person that is actually doing the illegal action to the people that are actually helping empower the people to do illegal action. | ||
| So, if when it was found out that was it, Hyundai had the company had brought like 300 illegals into this into the country and they were working at a plant. | ||
| I think something should happen to Hyundai as well as deporting the 300 people. | ||
| I think they should be some kind of legal ramification. | ||
| So, I don't know for sure what it should be, but I do think that there should be some kind of legal ramifications for judges that do this kind of stuff. | ||
| Every state's different, but to the degree that they can, if there's a specific judge who has a train of abuses of sorts of bad decisions that are leading to really bad outcomes, a lot of these state legislatures can't impeach them. | ||
| Yeah. | ||
| They can take action that way. | ||
| Republican Representative Randy Fine is calling for judges to face consequences of violent refeat, repeat offenders say they release go on to commit new crimes. | ||
| And I don't know what it is. | ||
| I don't know what it should be. | ||
| My first gut emotional response was that the judge should be charged with manslaughter. | ||
| That might be a little too harsh, but there should be something, there should be repercussions for releasing a violent criminal into society to commit more violent crimes, just like there should be repercussions for the company that hired the Indian that didn't actually, that had cheated to get his CDL and couldn't speak English and then ended up killing three people in Florida. | ||
| Like they're the people that empower these people and put them in situations where they are able to break the law and hurt other people and damage other people's lives or end other people's lives, they should receive consequences as well, in my opinion. | ||
|
unidentified
|
Well, for me, I mean, at minimum, it should at least be for egrieous negligence on the judge's part, at least a disparate and relieved of their position. | |
| Yeah, look, I'm not against that idea. | ||
| I do think that if that were the result, I'd be fine with it. | ||
| But, you know, as of right now, there isn't generally there isn't anything that can happen because they have the diplomatic, or they have not diplomatic, they have immunity. | ||
| No, no. | ||
| It's the same thing that police have. | ||
| Qualified immunity. | ||
| Yeah. | ||
| And that's, you know, that there will have to be legislation to end that. |