| Speaker | Time | Text |
|---|---|---|
| For the first time ever, antifa individuals have been convicted of terrorism. | ||
| So movement is happening. | ||
| I know a lot of people are expecting a lot more from the Trump administration, but things are happening. | ||
| And we call it a C-plus. | ||
| Good, not great, but there is a bunch of other news. | ||
| And of course, you know, I can't resist. | ||
| The corporate press has two articles up talking about how Americans are gearing up for a civil war. | ||
| Hey, hey. | ||
| Maybe it was because yesterday Donald Trump referred to the actions of Democrats as seditious, warranting death. | ||
| And Senator Chris Murphy then called on people to pick sides. | ||
| Oh boy. | ||
| So we'll talk about that. | ||
| And then, ooh, a real fun story. | ||
| The Somali refugees in Minnesota and other places have been sending the welfare money they receive from the government to terrorists. | ||
| You think they're in the CIA? | ||
| To terrorists, indeed. | ||
| They're taking money from the United States and giving it to terrorists. | ||
| So that's, you know, how's it going? | ||
| It's not looking good, right? | ||
| Welcome, everybody, Tim Castaro. | ||
| Before we get started, we got some great sponsors for you. | ||
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| And ladies and gentlemen, it has arrived. | ||
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| Share the show with everyone, you know, joining us tonight to talk about this and so much more. | ||
| We have Paul Danz. | ||
| Hey, I'm Paul Danz. | ||
| Former director of Project 2025. | ||
| I am the true American, first uh conservative running to primary, the swamp critter and warmonger, Lindsey Graham. | ||
| So follow us. | ||
| This is going to happen. | ||
| Go to PAUL Dans.com, support us uh, chip in and follow us on twitter at, at PAUL DANS for Senate, Dance for Senate, right on. | ||
| And race car extraordinaire is back. | ||
| I'm back again. | ||
| I just keep showing up. | ||
| You know, I told people you were sleeping under the table. | ||
| Yeah, who are you? | ||
| What do you do uh? | ||
| I go in circles uh, for a living. | ||
| I also do uh youtube at Camelot331 and Camelcast off on x and uh, just trying to get better every single day. | ||
| So, and of course, your name is Cody Dennison. | ||
| That's me, Cody Dennis, Cody Mascar Driver. | ||
| There you go. | ||
| Cody's still here because to get out of here, you have to take a right. | ||
|
unidentified
|
Every day. | |
| I see Tim's face. | ||
| Ian is here. | ||
| Hi everyone Paul, I just got to know i'm not going to ask you in the intro but like, how are your feelings about military domination through force in the Middle East, the United States? | ||
| You don't have to answer the question now, but since you're running against Lindsey Graham, i'm fascinated with the uh the, the concept uh, Philabanti. | ||
| I'm Ian Crossly, by the way, happy to be here. | ||
| We got Phil. | ||
| Hello everybody, my name is Philabonte. | ||
| I'm the lead singer of the heavy metal band. | ||
| ALL THAT Remains, i'm an anti-communist and a counter-revolutionary and I can take right turns. | ||
| Let's get into it. | ||
| Here's a story from the post Millennial BIG NEWS, ANDY NO reports the first Antifa terrorism convictions in U.s history. | ||
| Massive five far left extremists have admitted to being Antifa members and terrorists in federal plea deals stemming from a coordinated ambush shooting on a U.s Immigration AND Customs enforcement facility on the 4th of july. | ||
| Wait a minute. | ||
| I thought Antifa was just an idea. | ||
| How could individuals admit to being a part of Antifa in a plea deal? | ||
| Certainly this can't be true. | ||
| They're not lying, are they? | ||
| Or maybe now, when faced with real criminal charges, they admit it. | ||
| There was that guy several years ago. | ||
| You remember this? | ||
| He went to the ICE facility in uh it was like uh Spokane, I think and he firebombed vehicles and started shooting at the, at the cops there, at the agents there, and he had a manifesto that said he was Antifa. | ||
| And so we put it to people like hey, these guys align with this, this ideology, and are part of these cells, and the Democrats just go. | ||
| There's no Antifa, they don't exist. | ||
| One of the one thing about this that I think is is universally good for, for people that are in this space particularly, is the fact that the left loves to say well, Antifa isn't real, it's just an idea, etc. | ||
| Now you can point to this particular case and say look, these guys admitted. | ||
| You know they. | ||
| They admitted so that way they they could get a reduced sentence or whatever. | ||
| They made a plea deal. | ||
| This is a real thing, this is an actual organization. | ||
| You can no longer say that it doesn't exist, that it's just an idea. | ||
| This is a. | ||
| These people are actually out there. | ||
| They're looking to do harm to, in this case, ice agents or law. | ||
| You can just say law enforcement, and it essentially disassembles the argument the left has had for ages. | ||
| It's very silly, because there's so many different organizations which their. | ||
| Their excuse is, well, you can't buy a membership, you can't use like some kind of currency to enter into an agreement with Antifa, but that that actually goes for every organization. | ||
| There's Many different organizations that they like to slam that you can't buy a membership to, and that was their biggest, their biggest, you know, excuse. | ||
| We can't buy a membership, you can't buy a membership to tons of these different, you know, quote-unquote names or acronyms that are floating around everywhere. | ||
| But they love to throw heat at those every chance they can get. | ||
| So it's always been silly to me since the first time I heard that. | ||
| Well, it's a start, but it's about 10 years too late. | ||
| Yeah, honestly, we finally got in at it, but you know, this was a sign of the effectlessness of Attorney General Bill Barr. | ||
| This is a sign of effectlessness of Lindsey Graham. | ||
| Senate Republicans could have brought this to the fore and really educated the American population on what's going on here. | ||
| And now we're gaslit for years to be told there is no such thing. | ||
| And we watch cities being taken over. | ||
| So, look, I'm not going to get overexcited. | ||
| This is what should be happening every day, but at least it's a little bit of forward motion. | ||
| It's a little better because we're so used to conservatives being more reactionary than actually taking action like we were talking about yesterday. | ||
| There's all these situations where we were like, please just do something. | ||
| Do something. | ||
| Because as soon as the left is in power, they're throwing everybody in prison. | ||
| They don't care what anybody thinks. | ||
| They may be the party of morality and good feelings, but they'll throw you in jail in two seconds. | ||
| And then when conservatives get in, it's all about angry emails. | ||
| We're going to send a very stern email. | ||
| And it's like, we need action. | ||
| Yeah, like this is a five-person plea deal 11 months in. | ||
| Where are the bulletin boards all over the country? | ||
| The dragnet they did for J6 that could have rolled out like within the first two months of the Trump administration. | ||
| So look, it's all over the states. | ||
| This is a first nick at the problem, but let's get going. | ||
| Yeah, it feels good, but at the same time, really, we're essentially just giving them kudos for doing the bare minimum of their job, right? | ||
| These people are terrorists. | ||
| These people attack law enforcement. | ||
| They're trying to kill law enforcement. | ||
| It was an organized attack. | ||
| I think these are the guys that went after they attacked the Bortak guys, which is like the direct action Border Patrol guys. | ||
| That's a really dumb idea in the first place. | ||
| But, you know, it's good that this is happening. | ||
| But again, you shouldn't get kudos for doing the bare minimum. | ||
| Didn't you guys hear that the Republican Party in the House just condemned socialism? | ||
|
unidentified
|
I was just going to talk about getting it done. | |
| That's right. | ||
| Now, these anti-fuck guys are running around committing acts of terror, but we need to make sure everyone knows we don't like it. | ||
| It's the kerfuffle, I think. | ||
| Phil, you mentioned it's not just an idea because anti-fascism is a concept. | ||
| It's an idea. | ||
| Now there's little organizations that name the organization anti-FA. | ||
| That doesn't mean that they're explicitly anti-fascism. | ||
| You can call your organization Democratic, the Republican Party, and not be a Republican, not uphold a republic, and still call yourself whatever you want. | ||
| So just it's the organization of funds that really make this the problem. | ||
| It doesn't matter what it's called. | ||
| Yeah, I mean, that's a great point. | ||
| And to your point, you know, no one thinks that the Democratic, the Democratic People's Republic of Korea is democratic. | ||
| Like everyone knows that it's not, but yet that's what they call it. | ||
| And there's the Republic of Iran, the Iranian Republic. | ||
| It's a theocracy. | ||
| Yeah, I don't know anything about Iran to say what type of government. | ||
| The theocracy. | ||
| Well, I understand that, but I know that the Republic. | ||
| The Moolah or whoever's in charge, the Ayatollah, he's actually the guy in charge, but I don't know what the government structure is like. | ||
| They promised the Republic. | ||
| And then just like the communists, they say it's communist, but it's not. | ||
| It's Vanguardist. | ||
| If it was communist, the people would own the government. | ||
| They don't. | ||
| Communists always talk about democracy, but it's got to be true democracy. | ||
| No, only the people that have the right information and the awakened consciousness. | ||
| We've been over this before, Ian. | ||
| But you have challenged me again. | ||
| Tim, don't say it. | ||
| No, it's not worth it. | ||
| The thing I would add about the communist stuff is the people do own it. | ||
| It's just who administrates it. | ||
| And so the question of ownership becomes nonsensical. | ||
| How can everyone own the same thing? | ||
| I mean, like, bro, that jacket looks stunning. | ||
| I own it and you own it. | ||
| So who gets to wear it? | ||
| And then you need someone to basically adjudicate the claim of who gets to own what we both own. | ||
| Gets access to the and then you get at the administrator and he says, you're stupid, shut up, shut up, I get to own it, you know. | ||
| This is why it's impossible for communism to exist, because how do two people drink the same lemonade they both own it doesn't make sense, not possible. | ||
| We should back up and say, why are we even talking about this in the first place? | ||
| Is because feckless Republicans in Congress, you know now, condemn socialism. | ||
| Why don't you condemn unaffordability? | ||
| Why don't you condemn the fact that their American dream has been taken away for the last, this next generation? | ||
| That's the reason why people are even thinking about this stuff. | ||
| So um, that you know, giving things labels and and getting into the actual political debate of what is socialism should never even be in our sphere. | ||
| To start with um, we have this great land of liberty with all these resources, and the fact that people are being crowded out and even entertaining this is a travesty. | ||
| In the first place, do you think it's? | ||
| Um, like a? | ||
| Uh, what are they called a red herring they're trying to focus on? | ||
| Like yeah socialism, although it could be a serious problem, but it's like corporatocracy that's bankrupted our country through the Federal Reserve, and but they just don't want to mention it. | ||
| Is it corporatocracy that's bank? | ||
| Well, they're using corporations like the Federal Reserve, a quasi-public private organization. | ||
| We need a word for what this is. | ||
| Is there a word for this? | ||
| Because the Federal Reserve system that bankrupted us is not corporatism or capitalism. | ||
| It's like federal reservism yeah, and the BANK FOR International Settlements, technically it's owned by its shareholders, so it's private, but they govern themselves. | ||
| It's like no government has any authority over them. | ||
|
unidentified
|
Centralized bankism, yeah, it's above nationalism, like it. | |
| They're trying to create a corporate governance system. | ||
| You know obviously, ESG is explicitly a statement of, we want a corporate government and then, so I think that's what the Federal Reserve is, that tentacle in the United States of the corporate government. | ||
| It's a private club at the end of the day yeah, it's that's who controls the money supply and and you know, it's kind of anathetical obviously, to the basis of our, of our participatory democracy. | ||
| So that's what really stands out. | ||
| This, the eternal tension with the Federal Reserve. | ||
| I don't, I don't think we have a democracy or or republic or anything like that. | ||
| I think we've. | ||
| You know, we had an interesting debate earlier on the culture war about this rift in the right, and um Joel Berry had made the point that the woke left wants a revolution. | ||
| The woke right wants a revolution and I said, but so do you. | ||
| The the, the mega conservatives are calling for a revolution of the liberal economic order. | ||
| You know, I thought I heard you say that and I thought, maybe our system, the United States government, is sort of self-revolutionary with you can amend laws and you can put new people in power through voting. | ||
| But, bro Bro, this type of revolution, changing forward to overthrowing the liberal economic order is a revolution. | ||
|
unidentified
|
It would be. | |
| But dismantling the international monetary fund banking system and how we operate as the United States with foreign intervention, it's a revolution. | ||
| And that's why they oppose Trump to the degree they do. | ||
| And I would stress this, Antifa are the useful, idiot foot soldiers of that machine. | ||
| You could repeal the Federal Reserve Act, which would be a legal, peaceful form of revolution against the banking order, but it wouldn't solve the problem. | ||
| It would just take away one of the poison pieces that's holding up the jenga puzzle. | ||
| Any any member of Congress who had a real shot at passing a bill to repeal the Federal Reserve Act would find himself Accidentally shooting himself twice in the head or taking his own life by shooting himself three times in the face. | ||
| I can say the very thought of surfacing that would probably cause an electronic financial cataclysm. | ||
| That's how strong the impulse is that anyone get near this third rail live of the Federal Reserve, even intoning audit or more transparency on the organization. | ||
| Look, they're very real big, collusive financial powers that will shock the system and really put pain just for the very threat of reform. | ||
| Like foreign systems that go, well, now's our chance to bankrupt the U.S. and they will tell everyone they brought it on themselves by repealing the Federal Reserve. | ||
| And then they'll beg us to create another Federal Reserve Act. | ||
| Like they'll pull all their funds, they'll pull all their international support, and then we'll be stuck with fiat, like recreating a new currency based on what? | ||
| All our gold that we sold to China. | ||
| I don't know what's our gold status. | ||
| Our money is based on faith in the system. | ||
| And confidence. | ||
| If they fall back on crypto, we're equally screwed. | ||
| Bro, Bitcoin is dumped. | ||
| Well, I just bought a bunch. | ||
|
unidentified
|
I know. | |
| I was at 2,000 or something. | ||
| 84? | ||
| 84? | ||
| Wild. | ||
| From 120 stock markets. | ||
| It was generated too. | ||
| It went down 30%. | ||
| So it's all something happened in the last two weeks. | ||
| It means the dollar is doing well. | ||
| If everything goes down, the dollar's doing better. | ||
| I hope. | ||
| Maybe Trump has succeeded. | ||
| Crossed. | ||
| Yeah. | ||
| Well, okay. | ||
| So if we did, if there's a threat on the Federal Reserve and then, like you said, it would caught a chain reaction and a cataclysm on the economy. | ||
|
unidentified
|
Yeah. | |
| Is there any like short-term five-year plan that we could reinvigorate American economy? | ||
| Well, one, I think you have to have Federal Reserve governors and the board more receptive to having political appointees within it. | ||
| We need more transparency, and that's what part of the Secretary Besson and President Trump should push for. | ||
| That ultimately people need to see through those windows and the goings on. | ||
| It's really a kind of a group of macroeconomists who come right out of the academy and basically are superintending life for us. | ||
| So first getting to know what's going on in the building would be a first cut. | ||
| And then ultimately, yeah, auditing it, getting some understanding of the numbers will go a long way. | ||
| But removing it without having something in place is going to be really difficult. | ||
| And even having this debate, like I say, you get marked. | ||
| It's no one on Wall Street. | ||
| Look, we were talking earlier about how who's going to replace Trump, right? | ||
| Trump is gone in two years after the midterms. | ||
| And where does our movement go? | ||
| In my case, I'm fighting for America first. | ||
| It should never get handed over to Lindsey Graham. | ||
| That's a guy who, if he had his way, there never would have been a Trump. | ||
| There never would have been America first. | ||
| But, you know, things like the Fed, many of these politicians have to get the money. | ||
| It costs a billion dollars plus to run for president. | ||
| And that money is going to come from those big corporate Titans, is coming from Wall Street. | ||
| Do you think that there's a possibility? | ||
| So the left is really moving away from that kind of the establishment Democrats, at least the bases, right? | ||
| They tend to feel more affinity for people like Bernie Sanders or for AOC. | ||
| Do you think it's possible for someone like that to raise the money necessary to run? | ||
| Or do you think that you still need the big establishment donors, at least on the Democrat side? | ||
| Well, I'm running for small dollars. | ||
| I'll remind everyone to go to pauldance.com. | ||
| Prove me right. | ||
| Look, that's our only hope, really. | ||
| And that the Democrats have been able to do it with the AOCs and the Bernies. | ||
| And then on our side, you see that with MTGs and Thomas Massey and these others who are really fighting the system. | ||
| I think they can. | ||
| They're very good at the small dollars and obviously the mind control whipping people into a frenzy. | ||
| You know, there was, in my case, I was the architect of Project 2025, but I can't imagine how many millions, if not billions, they raised off of fearmongering on that. | ||
| Is Trump adhering to your vision? | ||
| About 80% of what they're doing in the first 11 months, I guess, is coming out of our work. | ||
| You know, it was, look, it was always, it was a repackaging of what Trump had done in the first term, but it was also kind of a plotting of points. | ||
| It was never supposed to be the agenda, but certainly a reference guide, a resource. | ||
| And the fact that we had these policy and personnel modules ready to go day one, that's how he was able to come out of the gate wave after wave after wave. | ||
| Now, the question is, like, are we actually going to get things to stick? | ||
| Are we getting the execution of it? | ||
| And that's where we're getting bogged down. | ||
| Yeah, Doge particularly, man. | ||
| Elon got just booted by both sides of both parties because he's getting too close to the big money. | ||
| Yeah, I mean, look, I salute what he did. | ||
| This was a real first cut at it. | ||
| I really feel like Doge was a concept car. | ||
| Well, you know, Project 2025 was the concept car, and Doge might have been like the first production model. | ||
| And it was cooler in some ways than the actual concept, which is kind of unusual. | ||
| But, you know, the way he moved out on it, bringing private sector techniques, really the accounting, these lessons learned from X that you could actually remove 80% of the workforce and the things still kind of hum along is important. | ||
| Let's jump to this story from the Independents. | ||
| Most Americans believe the U.S. is on the path to another civil war. | ||
| Shocking new poll finds. | ||
| Majority fear polarizing nature of modern politics leading to irreparable social division. | ||
| Survey finds. | ||
| And then there's a picture of Joe Rogan. | ||
| Because it gets clicks. | ||
| Thank you. | ||
| Independent. | ||
| You know, that's what we needed. | ||
| They say the survey from the Leadership Conference on Civil and Human Rights conducted between October 30th and November 6th asked respondents which issues they felt strongly about with 57% saying they feared a new war between the states. | ||
| And you know what's really funny is that this survey concluded well before Donald Trump said Democrats should be put to death or hanged. | ||
| So to be fair, it's Democrats who called for the military to engage in rebellion against the United States. | ||
| And so here we are. | ||
| You know, the funny thing about interpretation of statements is that a lot of these organizations are not running with that line Trump calls for execution. | ||
| Democrats are. | ||
| But I think that's pretty obviously what Trump did when he said seditious behavior, punishable by death, and then reposted a guy saying hang them, George Washington would. | ||
| He's saying they should die for what they did. | ||
| Now, the thing is, the Democrats are saying take sides, but they're not going to admit that when they told the military to defy illegal orders, they were instructing the military to revolt, to rebel against the chain of command, because they have already claimed Trump is engaged in giving out illegal orders. | ||
| He's not. | ||
| But this is what they're doing. | ||
| Hey, look, that order from Trump is illegal. | ||
| Defy illegal orders. | ||
| You're like, okay, you just said don't take that order from Trump to defy it. | ||
| So they're calling for insurrection. | ||
| Trump's calling it sedition and treason. | ||
| And the polls are coming up being like, even before this happened, people thought civil war was coming. | ||
| So am I right or am I wrong? | ||
| I think you're both. | ||
| Right and wrong. | ||
| Yeah, question. | ||
| First question is how many people were polled? | ||
| A couple thousand maybe. | ||
| And usually the people that answer polls like this are enraged anyway. | ||
| Well, not usually. | ||
| Oh, it just links to Axios. | ||
| That's funny. | ||
| It's like they buried under. | ||
| It says a poll of 336 million Americans, including the babies. | ||
| Look at that. | ||
| Everybody got a chance. | ||
| Everybody. | ||
| The neural net for it. | ||
| I remember when they asked me, remember? | ||
| I would have. | ||
| They didn't ask you. | ||
| They just looked at your YouTube channel. | ||
| We know what Tim Poole thinks. | ||
| American 1,103 likely midterm voters. | ||
| Okay, so it's 1,100 people. | ||
| Small segment. | ||
| Obviously, the people that answer polls tend to have a certain proclivity. | ||
| But that aside. | ||
| They tend to be normies who don't pay attention and are quite dumb, and they're all scared of civil war. | ||
| That might be because MSNBC might have you think it. | ||
| MS Now. | ||
| MS Now. | ||
| MS Now, they've rebranded Fortunate for Them. | ||
| MS No One Watching. | ||
| I think that American citizens have been so distanced from actual military action, especially on the home soil. | ||
| We haven't tasted it for 170 years, that ordering your military commanders to defy the president's order might seem like a soft command or a soft issuance. | ||
| In reality, when it's life or death on the line and you're trying to get the generals to betray the commander, you may as well be trying to kill everyone in the country. | ||
| Like that, that mindset, I think, needs, people need to understand the actual, the reason why it's considered seditious to do that kind of thing. | ||
| Now, I agree. | ||
| Not all laws are good. | ||
| Some laws do need to be defied. | ||
| And sometimes authoritarian governments will do illegal things. | ||
| So there is that argument can be made, but it's not a soft command to get to tell the gov, you know, the military to defy the president. | ||
| I don't know if it justifies calling them seditious traitors and hang them or any of that. | ||
| I start believing in civil war, Zean. | ||
| You're in it. | ||
| Talk about a great movie. | ||
| I know. | ||
| They've kept me in the dark because they want the citizens to just blindly pay their taxes and go along with it. | ||
| They kept you in the dark because they fear what you might do if you learn the truth. | ||
| You. | ||
| That's right. | ||
| Fear me not, great ones. | ||
| You better fear me. | ||
| I'm here to help. | ||
| Look, I don't think we're on the edge of a civil war, but I do think that we're looking at kind of a reprise of the oppression that happened under after J6 in the fallout. | ||
| I mean, it was only five years ago, you know, where we were being told if you didn't take the jab, if you didn't, you know, have the right group think online, that you'd be kicked out of polite society, debanked, deplatformed. | ||
| So now they're not in power right now, but their same urges are realizing they can do it in other spheres of power, California, wherever some state control. | ||
| You don't. | ||
| But they're beginning to kind of foment this. | ||
| And I think part of the problem is that on our side, we haven't gotten the accountability. | ||
| We've had a lot of hand waving. | ||
| We've had 11 months. | ||
| And now people like Lindsay and the rest of the gang are moving on without actually like Fauci should be in leg irons. | ||
| Okay. | ||
| People who debanked people like General Flynn, the folks who went after these people should be marched out of the FBI. | ||
| And it's a good reason to explain why we are on the path to a civil war. | ||
| Fauci lied to Congress. | ||
| It was reported by Newsweek that he lied to Congress. | ||
| There's been no accountability. | ||
| And people are getting frustrated and fed up because elections aren't solving any of these issues. | ||
| But I don't know if they actually, you know, what is civil war? | ||
| It's more like kind of we're more verging on people just completely becoming apathetic and going away. | ||
| But Civil War was never about the general population. | ||
| It was always about the elites. | ||
| Yeah. | ||
| So this is where the phrase the three percenters come from, the American Revolution. | ||
| Only 3% of the American population actually fought. | ||
| Most people just did not care. | ||
| They were apathetic. | ||
| The apathy opens the door to the revolutionaries when people feel detached. | ||
| So what I see is Donald Trump calling the actions of Democrats seditious, punishable by death. | ||
| Sedition is not punishable by death, by the way, but Trump said it. | ||
| And there's actually a funny tweet we have from Matt Walsh where he said, leaning reports that President Trump does not want to execute members of Congress, White House says. | ||
| And Matt Walsh said, most disappointing flip-flop of all time. | ||
| Clint Russell responded, I was nearly back on the Trump train. | ||
| The point is, you've got the military being deployed from state to state. | ||
| The states are defying it. | ||
| A couple Illinois National Guard said that it feels illegal. | ||
| Democrats have called on these servicemen women to defy Trump's orders that are illegal, which of course is an interpretation of the individual. | ||
| And then Donald Trump responds as he did. | ||
| Not to mention, you have the terror attacks on Tesla across the board over this past year and the murder, assassination of Charlie Clinton. | ||
| I'm not trying to discount how serious this is with those six folks. | ||
| Let me just ask this then. | ||
| Sorry. | ||
| But my point being, with all of these things that we can iterate ad nauseum, we are now looking at, as you mentioned, Fauci should be in leg irons, but he's not. | ||
| And what are we getting? | ||
| Letitia James mortgage fraud, which is like, come on. | ||
| We know what they did in New York to Trump with his fake charges. | ||
| We know what Adam Schiff did over Russia Gate, and we know what Fauci did because the Fauci one's cut and dry. | ||
| We watched him lie to Congress and Newsweek reported it. | ||
| If we are not going to get actual law enforcement, what do you think people in this country are going to do? | ||
| Just say, I guess we're ruled by tyrants? | ||
| Well, this is, I can tell you, as someone who served in the Trump 45, the impulse is always like, oh, you guys have to look ahead. | ||
| You can't go back and kind of even the score for what happened in the past. | ||
| And that's where, you know, people are being led off the hook, you know, with respect to Fauci, but also, you know, Barr and all the way down the Joint Chiefs of Staff, Milley. | ||
| Basically, what he did was sedition, in a sense, calling China and saying, hey, don't pay attention to the treason. | ||
| That's treason. | ||
| That is treason. | ||
| Well, yeah, I mean, treason technically, I think, has to be during a wartime, but certainly, you know, it seems that it's on that road and they are close cousins. | ||
| Here with the sedition, though, these folks are intelligence officers. | ||
| It's like you don't walk away from that life and they know exactly what they're doing. | ||
| They're very sophisticated. | ||
| They're the ones who perfected all this behavioral science stuff. | ||
| So, look, you need to meet out reprisal for them immediately. | ||
| These folks, and they're hiding behind some sort of congressional debate protection. | ||
| They believe they're, but that's not the truth. | ||
| You know, this is calling for dismantling of the rule of law and in a complete kind of invasion of the executive branch. | ||
| He is commander-in-chief and kind of using coded language to tell our army and our armed forces to stand down from direct orders is the beginning of insurrection. | ||
| I felt very. | ||
| So it's not war, but there's an interesting point in that the treason charges are about adhering to its enemies. | ||
| And that's defined in U.S. law as a foreign power or group that is engaged in hostility against the United States, even without a formal declaration of war. | ||
| If we determine that China is an enemy of the United States, and I think most Americans probably would, then Millie calling China outside of the chain of command to who knows what he was trying to do is treasonous. | ||
| Well, we're 11 months in. | ||
| Again, my point, like, why hasn't that been, you know, and when you when you let this spanse of time go, justice delayed, is justice denied, you only empower these people to try again. | ||
| And this is why Trump's going to lose, or is losing is a better way to put it. | ||
| But the argument is about the ascendancy of Nick Fuentes. | ||
| He's been popping up in conversations over and over again. | ||
| We had a debate about him on the culture war earlier today. | ||
| And there's a lot of traditional conservatives that are very upset about it. | ||
| But I keep pointing out, it's because you are weak, because the Republicans are weak and could not be weaker. | ||
| Anthony Fauci, according to Newsweek, lied to Congress. | ||
| This is not even like maybe we can get an indictment. | ||
| No, no, no, no. | ||
| Newsweek said he did it. | ||
| And that is a crime. | ||
| And Bannon and Navarro went to prison for contempt of Congress. | ||
| And we can't even get perjury charges on this guy. | ||
| Okay. | ||
| What's going to happen is the younger generation, they can't buy houses, they can't find jobs. | ||
| They are going to say there's only one path and it's not elections. | ||
| And that is terrifying. | ||
| But you know what? | ||
| Boomers, you get so much of the blame. | ||
| But this, Not all boomers, you know, not all boomers, but too many of them are just like, we got to slow down there, you know, take it slow. | ||
| And the young people are like, you have destroyed my future and I will get revenge. | ||
| The boomers, they're like, if we play ball, we'll be able to own our house when we're older. | ||
| But the thing that we need to avoid is turning on each other as Americans because, well, in my belief, it is foreign corporations that are bankrupting our country through the Federal Reserve system. | ||
| Okay, hold on there, Ian. | ||
| Like, you're going way far out there. | ||
| I got some questions for you first. | ||
| Do you agree with child sex changes? | ||
| Agree in what? | ||
| Do you think they should be legal? | ||
| No. | ||
| Do you think that an individual should be allowed to meet a child online and drive them across state lines and into Oregon for a sex change? | ||
| No. | ||
| Okay, well, see, you have a very, your worldview is very, very at odds with the left. | ||
|
unidentified
|
Maybe, yeah. | |
| And you're saying you don't want to turn against those people while they're actively doing as I described. | ||
| There's a problem. | ||
| I was talking about this earlier, too. | ||
| Sometimes the enemy of my enemy, I'll ally with that person. | ||
| I don't have to agree with your behavior, Joseph Stalin. | ||
| If the Nazis are invading Russia, you're on our side for now. | ||
| The point of that conversation was there is a line. | ||
| Yeah, but when you're up against global tyranny through economic slavery, I'm willing to turn a blind eye to someone that wants to have their kids' sex changed. | ||
| Like, whatever. | ||
| I don't want starvation of the system. | ||
| That's what I'm trying to avoid. | ||
| Or the same people who are opening the borders so the global elites can gut and destroy this country. | ||
| You're not going to align with these people. | ||
| There is a problem in this country you cannot align with. | ||
| I think also we have to watch dividing into two camps. | ||
| And I think it's more a global thing. | ||
| And I hear this on the campaign trail, but I believe it too. | ||
| It's we're engaged in the good and evil, a spiritual battle, really. | ||
| And, you know, there's travelers on both sides of the divide here. | ||
| Look, one thing that always unites these people, and you saw that the Dick Cheney funeral last yesterday, you know, war. | ||
| They love killing, basically. | ||
| And like Lindsey Graham, look, his idea of the Republican Party, we're killing all the right people and we're cutting your taxes. | ||
| And, you know, there you're seeing him fist bump with Kamala. | ||
| So obviously there is a commonality there with the left that they're going to be able to find common ground. | ||
| Here, you know, when I talk to the younger generation on the campaign trail, they are dead set against foreign intervention, you know, particularly in the Middle East, people, you know, kind of championing foreign powers over what's happening on the ground in South Carolina. | ||
| So I agree. | ||
| Like we can get together with people on the left, even the youths. | ||
| Like everyone can't afford this. | ||
| Everyone's paying the same price at Chipotle and seeing the sandwich go up double or whatever the case is, getting that medical bill at the end of the month and going, this is insane. | ||
| So I do think if we focus on affordability, we can begin to get our way out of this. | ||
| Regarding the Middle East, and you said people want non-intervention. | ||
| I think a lot of Nick Fuentes' audience, since he came up earlier, is anti-intervention. | ||
| They want to stop foreign wars. | ||
| How do you do that if we were to stop funding Israel and basically give up control of the Suez Canal? | ||
| I think a lot of the Middle Eastern control is to maintain trade routes from Europe to Asia and profit off of it. | ||
| So if we give the Suez to the Russians or the Chinese, basically, because we're like, we're not, then would that not destroy our country economically? | ||
| No, I think we'd save money. | ||
| In the short term, perhaps. | ||
| You know what this country needs to function? | ||
| It's manufacturing. | ||
| So there's a. | ||
| Egypt controls the Suez. | ||
| I don't want to spoil. | ||
| There's a documentary I watched, and there was an interesting point made where in what's the name of that white enclave in South Africa? | ||
|
unidentified
|
Irania. | |
| Irania. | ||
|
unidentified
|
Right. | |
| That's a thought. | ||
| This guy gets interviewed and he says, we don't allow any outsourcing of labor. | ||
| We have to do it within the community. | ||
| And the reason why is once you start outsourcing cheap labor, you're giving away your resources and your skills. | ||
| This is what the United States did. | ||
| So, our manufacturing goes overseas and within a couple of generations, you have no economy. | ||
| People can't do work. | ||
| The argument from the liberal economic order was that we'll just be fat and rich and do nothing. | ||
| It's the stupidest global communism garbage. | ||
| It doesn't make sense. | ||
| So, with the Suez Canal, with the petrodollar, with the liberal economic order, Americans will do nothing, and then we'll just have money because we point guns at everybody. | ||
| And then eventually, you have a bunch of retarded citizens who can't maintain that system. | ||
| Yeah, I just want to- I just want to point out the Suez Canal is controlled by the Suez Canal Authority. | ||
| It's run. | ||
| It's Egypt that's controlling it. | ||
| It's not Israel at all. | ||
| Well, Israel's got the nukes pointed. | ||
| Well, Israel has nuclear weapons, but that doesn't mean that Israel is in control of the Suez Canal. | ||
| And then we give Egypt a bunch of money so that they do. | ||
| It's Saudi Arabia. | ||
| That's why we're there. | ||
| But like I said, the SCA manages the canal, and obviously it has to answer to the rest of the world because the United States is essentially the enforcer of international law when it comes to trade on the seas, but it has nothing to do with Israel. | ||
| That's foreign intervention. | ||
| We're intervening in Israel, in Egyptian and in Saudi Arabian politics by giving them tons of money to uphold our hegemony. | ||
| It's not our hegemony. | ||
| The United States is the global hegemon. | ||
| So it makes sure that all the countries in the world can use the seas, the oceans, as a means to transport because they're international. | ||
| It has nothing to do with Saudi Arabia. | ||
| It has nothing to do, or it has nothing to do with one individual country. | ||
| It's the whole entire world that looks to the United States because we have the largest, most powerful Navy in the world to make sure that all countries can operate in the seas. | ||
| I think that maybe this is what Tim's saying. | ||
| That model might have worked pre-digital, pre-internet, but now those borders that were able to enforce such a thing, you know, just the pure might of the U.S. Armed Forces projecting that abroad. | ||
| Look, other powers can move capital across borders instantaneously. | ||
| And the fact that we can't build anything or make anything, look, we had these supply shocks five years ago. | ||
| You want to see things break down? | ||
| Let the grid go off for two weeks and people can't get their food. | ||
| This thing is going to really implode very quickly. | ||
| So that's how you get to this kinetic situation at home. | ||
| I want to jump to the story from Politico. | ||
| In culture war backlash, Democrats sweep school boards. | ||
| Here we go. | ||
| From Texas to Pennsylvania to Ohio, Democrat-backed candidates ran successful campaigns from the nation's largest school systems and in political battlegrounds. | ||
| They emphasized test scores and bus safety over debates about which bathrooms transgender students use and banning books from school libraries. | ||
| The result was a set of election results at the local level that accentuated the punishment meted out against Republicans by swing voters earlier this month. | ||
| Those results were accentuated by Democrats' strong showing across the nation as Americans issued a stinging repudiation of the party in power. | ||
| Pennsylvania Democrats flipped at least two dozen school board seats per an ongoing tally from Progressive Recruitment Group Pipeline Fund. | ||
| The under the radar trend was enabled by voters increasing awareness, wariness, with the culture wars that helped the MAGA movement engineer school board takeovers and generate hyper-local interest in politics as the COVID-19 pandemic raged. | ||
| What I would argue is that I think it's a fair point to make, but it's that the culture warriors grew stale saying the same thing over and over again, and they didn't understand you needed to forward the line. | ||
| So when you told parents, hey, there's weird books with like adult content in it, they got mad. | ||
| Then five months later, you said, remember those books? | ||
| They go, yeah, we talked about this already. | ||
| They needed to then say, okay, well, the next issue is this. | ||
| Instead, I got to be honest, this is why the political space right now is drowning. | ||
| It's because it's boring to hear about tariffs for the 78th time. | ||
| Nothing has changed on it. | ||
| Democrats are saying garbled nonsense. | ||
| Republicans are responding with the exact same responses. | ||
| And regular people are saying, this doesn't impact me. | ||
| I don't care. | ||
| So now Democrats have what they've desperately needed and wanted with controlled school boards. | ||
| They are going to put this stuff back in the schools and they're going to dail your kids. | ||
| People have really, really short memories. | ||
| And that's something that they didn't, for some reason, remember. | ||
| So the Democrats are going to completely change their rhetoric going in. | ||
| These people with short memories, which is a lot of people, are going to completely memory hole everything that was worrying them a couple of years ago. | ||
| Then they get re-elected. | ||
| They sweep all these board seats and then suddenly they're putting all the things that we were marching against back into order. | ||
| The books, the bathrooms, the sports. | ||
| Everything's going to be reintroduced secretly and quietly. | ||
| And people have short memories, and then you're going to have to fight against it every four years. | ||
| Yep. | ||
| I think also it's a function of how good the left is at political organization. | ||
| Look, they do this all the time. | ||
| I can tell you as the architect of Project 2025, what set them off is I borrowed their model. | ||
| I was able to get 100 groups together, not do the circular firing squad. | ||
| Right now, the rights doing the circular firing squad. | ||
| Meanwhile, this is happening with the school boards. | ||
| Look, I'm a dad of 4.5 kids. | ||
| My wife's expecting number five. | ||
| And I go to vote and the school boards, I can't figure out who to vote for. | ||
| They camouflage their rhetoric. | ||
| They never put the Republican or Democrat label behind them. | ||
| And they're able to kind of win these things because they're on it all the time. | ||
| Look, we are going to only win this through grassroots. | ||
| It's by people listening here, going out and working with the school board, standing up to do this, having coffees with like-minded parents and working towards it. | ||
| But the left right now, they have outflanked us. | ||
| This also, I think, uncovering problems and identifying problems is one thing. | ||
| But if you don't actually solve the problem, then just put a band, like with the, you know, sex change, like books of like gross sex stuff in fifth grades. | ||
| We're like, yeah, get it out of there. | ||
| Okay. | ||
| We identified the problem. | ||
| We put a band-aid on it. | ||
| But unless we actually solve the schooling system itself with like, I think it's homeschooling and like online education with Jordan Peterson's online college, which we should probably be. | ||
| The point is then you need to keep talking about that stuff and keep pushing it and pushing it and pushing it. | ||
| But like a lot of people's role is just identify the problem, move on to the next problem. | ||
| I think that one, there are groups like Moms for Liberty that are moving out on this. | ||
| And look at how much fire they take the second they stand up. | ||
| But our movement, look, unfortunately, the public school system, and I'm a product of a K through 12. | ||
| I went on to MIT and got two degrees. | ||
| Had it not been for these public school teachers, I never would have gotten there. | ||
| My mom was a public school teacher. | ||
| My mother-in-law, I believe in the system, but it's completely co-opted now. | ||
| And we have four kids, and we spend half of our time deprogramming them when they come home. | ||
| And, you know, my little daughter's a third grader and I have to tell her, no, honey, we're never going to eat the bugs. | ||
| Okay. | ||
| You know, I don't care that we are humans. | ||
| That was not meant for us to eat. | ||
| And she's based enough that she writes these things down and says, yeah, look what they tried to tell me today. | ||
| But it's a long-term thing. | ||
| And honestly, you're right. | ||
| It's got to be multiple schools. | ||
| Homeschool. | ||
| We're homeschooling, but it's also charter schools. | ||
| It's this whole mix. | ||
| And battling back to get control of the public school. | ||
| Get the right principal in. | ||
| You can do this. | ||
| It just takes a lot of labor. | ||
| And it takes people going after work to kind of give that extra incremental devotion. | ||
| Everybody's so hyper-politicized right now. | ||
| I was so reactionary. | ||
| I've never seen a time. | ||
| And I'm only 35, but I've never seen a time where every single person is so politically driven, a lot of them very uneducated about what they're talking about. | ||
| They just repeat headlines. | ||
| And then you have teachers who 20 years ago, 30 years ago, I had the best teachers in the world. | ||
| I never heard anything, anything that would even resemble some kind of strange ideology growing up. | ||
| It was not even anywhere near our schools. | ||
| And then I leave school. | ||
| But now it's not enough to just teach the next generation. | ||
| They have to impart their own personal ideology because they feel personally responsible because they're so hyper-politicized. | ||
| I think it's a religion. | ||
| I think it's a cult. | ||
| Yeah, yeah, 100%. | ||
| Just adhere or be exercised. | ||
| You think people are groomed into being an occult by being raised on the internet? | ||
| Because I think the teachers, the reason I ask the question is, is this is the first generation of people that were raised on the internet, probably with pads in their hands, and now they're teachers. | ||
| Were they groomed into becoming cultic? | ||
| Yeah. | ||
| You know, disposal of the people. | ||
| So there's a book called The Pedagogy of Education by Freire is his last name. | ||
| And that is Palo. | ||
| Yeah, Paolo Freire. | ||
| And that is the base. | ||
| He's a Marxist, and that is the basis for how the schools of education teach teachers. | ||
| So the schools that teach teachers are teaching teachers Marxist literature and teaching them to teach kids to be basically Marxist. | ||
| And so you have all the teachers that believe this stuff because they're the ones that went through the education schools and then that gets brought into the classroom. | ||
| So 30 years ago, they'd have to do that under the radar and it'd be real difficult because they could get arrested for seditious, like you're espousing communism. | ||
| There's a law against that. | ||
| So first of all, because they don't use economic models, or you're not talking about like vulgar Marxism, you're talking about like basically like for lack of a better term, race Marxism, race communism. | ||
| And that's the foundation for all of the education that happens in the U.S. now. | ||
| And it started in like the 80s. | ||
| So Paulo Freeri, the book that the pedagogy of education started to make its way into schools in the 80s. | ||
| And then by the time, and I'm talking about the schools of education, not regular schools. | ||
| So they were teaching the teachers this stuff in the 80s and early 90s. | ||
| So the teachers that, the people that learned how to teach in the 80s and 90s started making it into the schools that teach children in the late 90s and the early aughts. | ||
| That's why you see, that's part of why you see all this kind of ideology start to really take hold in late 2000, late aughts, early teens in conjunction with the age of the internet. | ||
| Technical factors, obviously, the internet was able to take kind of what would have normally been kind of a cluster type of thinking and pipe it out. | ||
| And certainly it would be out there. | ||
| So it would be click-driven. | ||
| People are drawn to it. | ||
| You know, kind of the radical teaching of a Bank Street education that maybe only a New Yorker might be dosed with is now, you know, somebody in Alabama can pick it up and learn about it. | ||
| Secondly, the Department of Education, right? | ||
| That's why it's really important to dismantle that. | ||
| That reinforced this from Washington with the money. | ||
| So you had a bunch of kind of Marxist apparatus file into the federal government and push this stuff down locally to the point where, you know, they're using federal law to basically punish people if they don't adopt a kind of a regimen. | ||
| Do you think it's that the funny question to ask, but it's a little rhetorical. | ||
| Do you think that the idea of Marxism is more engaging or addictive than the idea of like capitalism? | ||
| And that's why it's so fervent in the system? | ||
| Or is it that there are foreign entities forcing people and tricking people into thinking it's more effective? | ||
| Or maybe another thing. | ||
| I don't know if it's either one. | ||
| I think there are a good handful of people who are just really dumb. | ||
| And I think a lot of people are just going, listen, I don't care if it works or not. | ||
| Just take his money and give it to me. | ||
| Yep. | ||
| Mamdani is like, listen, that guy's rich. | ||
| I'll take his money, give it to you. | ||
| And then when you go to them and say, that doesn't make sense, even if you text every billionaire at 100%, you'd fund the government for six days. | ||
| And they go, yeah, I don't care. | ||
| I just want his money. | ||
| Screw him. | ||
| It works like a religion in that to be a Catholic, you don't have to get one specific person teaching you how to be a Catholic, right? | ||
| Teaching you Catholic doctrine, doctrine. | ||
| It's something that all Catholics know and you can learn from a bunch of different Catholics. | ||
| And so that's kind of the similar idea, similar situation with like the kind of the education system. | ||
| It doesn't matter that the people that are on the ground at protests and stuff don't know who Paulo Freire is. | ||
| They still learn the stuff that Paolo Freire taught. | ||
| It's not about the man. | ||
| It's about the ideas. | ||
| I thought that, and part of it is the way they learned it in these schools, right? | ||
| You go, college is four years, you're sitting around, someone's giving you three meals a day, they're cleaning up the bathroom for you, and you get a kind of experiment and all these thoughts. | ||
| You're not in the real world. | ||
| How many people do you know who went to college who paid their way through it working at night are espousing the Marxism philosophy? | ||
| Very few. | ||
| But this availability of this debt trap they put everybody in, now they're loaded with $100,000 of debt. | ||
| What other choice do they have than to kind of get the government job and push this down? | ||
| Dude, they go to college for free because they get money. | ||
| They get free loan. | ||
| They sit around. | ||
| It's basically the life of what you would think ideal communism is. | ||
| Everything is free. | ||
| I mean, not free, but everything's on your card, paid for. | ||
| I can go anywhere I want. | ||
| I can say whatever I or do things as long as I adhere to the orthodoxy of the church being the school. | ||
| And then they, and then they get out and they're told the Marxism, like, hey, the reason that you're suffering, you can't get a job is because of the people in power. | ||
| And so they've already kind of experienced what it could be like if it was just communist, you know? | ||
| Oh, everyone's cool. | ||
| Everyone can college commie training. | ||
| Yeah, free loans, you know? | ||
| And then they give them the heat when they're like, and now the real problem is the bankers, which I do believe banking industry can be a big problem, but I don't think the solution is an upward revolution of violence. | ||
| Let's jump to this next story. | ||
| Speaking of communism, Zorhan Mamdani has no idea how he's going to fund free buses in New York City. | ||
| I love this. | ||
| You don't say. | ||
| He gets asked about it by this reporter. | ||
| He's like, how are you getting that $700 million to make the buses free into the MTA if she's not for raising taxes? | ||
| Let's play the clip. | ||
|
unidentified
|
And the other one talking about fast and free buses in your meeting with the governor, I've heard you talk about many times that you don't want to take money away from the MTA. | |
| You want to put money back in. | ||
| It's something that she agrees with, right? | ||
| We don't want to take away money from the MTA. | ||
| How are you getting that money, the $700 million to make the buses free, into the MCA if she's not for raising taxes? | ||
| You know, I think that the two clearest ways to raise that money is through the raising of the state's corporate tax to match. | ||
| Which is in New Jersey. | ||
| I think that a lot of this is still a case to be made. | ||
| Whether it's the corporate tax, whether it's the personal income tax on those who make more than a million dollars a year or more, I think that these are the clearest ways. | ||
| I've also said that if there are other ways to raise this funding, the most important fact is that we fund it. | ||
| Not the question of how we do it, but that we do it. | ||
| Yes, that's right. | ||
| I don't have the money to buy the TV, but it's important that I buy the TV. | ||
| Not how I buy the TV. | ||
| I'm just, this guy's snake oil all the way down. | ||
| Okay. | ||
| He's like, well, the tax on the people who make a million dollars or more. | ||
| That is statements like that are intended to trick stupid people. | ||
| I try to make it very, very clear to anybody who lives in New York. | ||
| If I lived in New York City, the moment he won, I'd be moving out of New York City. | ||
| You are not taxing me. | ||
| It's not going to happen. | ||
| Could you imagine if he was like, we're going to tax people that make $100,000 or more? | ||
| And you're like, well, I only make $70,000 and they're like, we're raising the minimum wage. | ||
| Now you make over $100. | ||
| That's exactly the play, though. | ||
| Over a long enough period of time, they keep saying the tax is only on, we're only taxing people who make more than $250,000. | ||
| That inflation hits and 20, 30 years later, that's the equivalent of someone at the time who's making 80. | ||
| That's what they always do. | ||
| In fact, when they make that argument about the gilded age or the 50s or whatever, where taxes were so high. | ||
| Let me just put it like this. | ||
| If we keep saying the threshold is this large sum of money, you will meet that threshold in a couple of decades. | ||
|
unidentified
|
It's how they slowly tax everything from the poor. | |
| And to that point, not only is inflation part of the problem, but if you look at the income tax, initially when it was sold to the American people, it was like only 1 or 2% on the most the top earners, only the people that make the most money. | ||
| It's basically they were saying it's a billionaire tax. | ||
| And now everybody pays 30 to 40%. | ||
| Everybody that makes money pays 30 to 40%. | ||
| So it's at least half the country pays 30 to 40% of that. | ||
| Unless you're a morbidly obese snap recipient. | ||
| Then we pay you. | ||
| So whereas I understand what you're saying, but it always turns into, once you set the precedent, it turns into they take a little more and take a little more and take a little more. | ||
| Hilariously, unemployment tax, you pay unemployment tax. | ||
| And then if you become unemployed, you receive the money, but you have to pay taxes on your own. | ||
| It's supposed to be an insurance payout that you're getting, but you have to pay taxes on your insurance payout. | ||
| It is crazy. | ||
| It's crazy that people that work for the government have to pay taxes. | ||
| But, you know, they can't find $700 million in a budget of $100 billion. | ||
| Okay, this city is already built on this underclass, basically. | ||
| Remember, all the illegals flooded into the place. | ||
| And the first thing they do is give them an app that tells them 34 government programs to sign up from, many of which are being funded through federal mandates. | ||
| So this is what happens when you start giving free away all the time. | ||
| It's a slippery slope. | ||
| With the bus situation, though, look, they probably weren't even paying for the buses in the first place, half these people. | ||
| The reality is that most of that city already packed up and left during COVID. | ||
| And if they haven't already, like Tim says, they realize they're on their way out. | ||
| A lot of this work can be done remotely. | ||
| And people are just leaving on that. | ||
| It's funny because there's these memes where the leftists are like, $20,000 extra when you make a million a year. | ||
| You think people are going to be bothered by that? | ||
| And then there's like this viral budget where he's like, he's like, here's my budget for the year with my million dollar salary after 35% taxes. | ||
| I have $650,000. | ||
| And oh, no, now I'm not going to get to spend that extra weekend in Aspen for my private jet. | ||
| And then I'm just like, buddy, if you told me that you were going to take $20,000 out of my pocket right now, I'd be like, that $20,000 can help me move. | ||
| I can give it to you or I can use it to move. | ||
| Everybody only sees things from their perspective and they don't have the ability to perspective take it somebody that has the means to do so. | ||
| Like people aren't willing to give up money. | ||
| I know I'm not one of them. | ||
| My property tax is, it increases every single year so substantially that it's getting hard to outpace it. | ||
| And, you know, a few years ago, it was $1,100. | ||
| Now it's $8,000. | ||
| And it just keeps going up and keeps going up. | ||
| But that rhetoric works every single time. | ||
| Every eight to 12 years, you'll hear the candidate comes out and he's free everything, free everything. | ||
| Just don't worry about it. | ||
| We're just going to punish people that are successful, wealthy, through their own means. | ||
| We're going to punish those people and give you the money. | ||
| And then eventually, suddenly, you're getting hit with it and you're only making 60 grand a year. | ||
| UBI, I don't know if it's inevitable. | ||
| Some people say it's inevitable. | ||
| AI, probably. | ||
| Yeah, AI and UBI. | ||
| And that's like, where's that? | ||
| But I don't even, I don't want to derail into a post-economic economy, you know, post-money economy where it's really about goods, trade of goods. | ||
| You know, we can have this universal basic income system so long as the income is coming from slaves, right? | ||
| So if the United States enslaves the rest of the world, we can live like the capital city in the hunger. | ||
| Or robot slaves, like just even your computer has a master and a slave drive. | ||
| Like you have segments of machinery that just do tasks. | ||
| They're considered slaves. | ||
| We need massive technological advancement first. | ||
| And there are still going to be jobs that humans have to do. | ||
| So the problem is if you, right now, the EBT class of people don't work and they get stuff from us. | ||
| They basically lord over us. | ||
| We have to work to pay them. | ||
| This system will not survive. | ||
| And the emotions that I get when I think that is Marxism. | ||
| I'm like, why do I have to work for these people? | ||
| Why are they in charge? | ||
| Like, why do they get my money for free? | ||
| And they have a 20% higher obesity rate. | ||
| What's going on, man? | ||
| Yeah, dude. | ||
| But we also have to remember we don't want work taken from us. | ||
| There's a dignity in work. | ||
| And this goes all the way back to the Bible, the sweat off your brow. | ||
| So, you know, when you lose your job, you lose your identity. | ||
| But, you know, there's something to be said after a hard workout, you know, re-going and then realizing you're stronger the next day. | ||
| That's what kind of keeps us. | ||
| And I think, you know, when I was listening to your shows the other night, the pastor was right on, but we're building the Matrix right now, guys. | ||
| I don't know if you realize it with these data centers. | ||
| You watch the Matrix movie and you're like, how did the machines ever get in control? | ||
| And like, at some point, the humans started building the whole thing. | ||
| Well, to that point, then, are you anti-AI? | ||
| Because there's a bill that's being presented now about standardizing AI regulation because different states are talking about regulating AI differently. | ||
| And if you do that, everyone's going to basically build their AI to the worst regulations. | ||
| And the example that I hear a lot is the car industry in California, right? | ||
| So California made these standards about emissions, and it had a massive effect on the whole car making industry. | ||
| Yeah, I'm not for federal preemption of AI regulations. | ||
| Do you think that it should be left packed? | ||
| Well, you know, there is certainly some realm that has to be preempted. | ||
| But look, AI, we're duking it out left and right on the beach, and AI is this tidal wave coming for all of us. | ||
| And, you know, maybe it's already on us. | ||
| Maybe, you know, they've already been using this for 50 years. | ||
| You know, those were chatbots all along that you thought you were interacting with. | ||
| But the reality is we built a federal system here. | ||
| And, you know, maybe California over-regulates in the past, but certainly with AI, it's something I'd rather go a little slower. | ||
| I don't buy the big tech argument that we're going to fall behind to these other foreign powers. | ||
| And, you know, the reality is that, like I said, this portends just a complete change in human interaction. | ||
| You have to be human first about it. | ||
| I think less about like we need to keep up with the enemy's use of AI, which, you know, you could argue it's like the Manhattan Project in a way, but it's more that there's going to be a materials revolution in the United States, a carbon-based materials revolution, nanomaterials, carbon, nanotubes, graphene, graphite, synthetically formed. | ||
| We're going to recycle rare earth minerals. | ||
| A lot of that's going to be driven by, we're actually recycling rare earth minerals right now, cobalt. | ||
| And it's going to be driven by AI. | ||
| And people are going to ask for it. | ||
| They're going to want it because it makes life easier. | ||
| They're not going to ask for it. | ||
| AI is going to do. | ||
| When we hit singularity, the AI is just going to start restructuring our economy without our realizing it. | ||
| And I think, Ian, you have a very singular human point of view on the carbon advancement. | ||
| The AI singularity is going to advance past that faster than you realize. | ||
| Totally possible. | ||
| We're sitting here talking about graphene and they're going to be like after the singularity point is when the AI is exponentially improving upon itself and it's going to go, wow, you know, I understand why humans were into graphene. | ||
| Well, it took me 0.3 nanoseconds to discover a better material. | ||
| Morphine, Goldeen, it's the hexagon itself that's the value, not the carbon, but carbon's phenomenal. | ||
| And then they're going to, it's going to be like, why would I ever not want this? | ||
| Food is cheap. | ||
| Everyone's at peace. | ||
| There's global stability and it's all administrated by this machine overlord. | ||
| But what, remember what it used to be like? | ||
| How these savages fought each other? | ||
| They killed each other? | ||
| Like, that was insane. | ||
| Plug your brain in and go to the magical realm of graphene, Ian. | ||
| You can live any universal life. | ||
| My opponent doesn't understand me. | ||
| I can find that movie. | ||
| The first Matrix crashed because it was the perfect world. | ||
| It was too perfect. | ||
| And, you know, that's not the human condition. | ||
| But look, right now you have to say every month we got a bill. | ||
| It's called our electric bill, and it's we're paying for it. | ||
| That rise that you know, it's taking power right off. | ||
| We're getting the AI search results, and our brains are beginning to slowly atrophy. | ||
| You're not searching yourself to try to get the answer, you're relying on your AI results. | ||
| So, like, we're already atrophying, and we're paying for it right now. | ||
| I'm not saying it's not a good thing in some measure, but look, we need people who are going to be thoughtful about this and people who are just beholden to big tech, getting the checks. | ||
| Like, and I'll get on the talk about my opponent, Lindsey Graham. | ||
| You know, that man is not going to think through life, he has no stake in the future. | ||
| He doesn't have kids, you know, he's spending 300 billion in Ukraine. | ||
| What's he going to do when the question comes before him for AI regulation? | ||
| He's going to take the biggest pot of money, put in front of him. | ||
| And right now, that is these guys with big tech. | ||
| They can move first, and that's not necessarily a great thing. | ||
| These are oligarchs grabbing. | ||
| It's a gold rush out there. | ||
| And we're going to have, if you think it's oligarchic now, wait till you're basically plugged into a pod. | ||
| And there's just one person, like Tim was saying, who owns the whole McDonald's, and that's where all the return goes to. | ||
| Yeah, it'll be like people are starving, and they'll be like, I'm desperate. | ||
| They're like, okay, drink this solution that AI has formulated. | ||
| And they drink, and they're like, oh, I feel good. | ||
| They're like, okay, I'm still starving. | ||
| And they're like, okay, now just bathe in this solution. | ||
| And then they're going to be like, now just exist in this solution and plug your brain in. | ||
| And that's what was in the matrix. | ||
| They come out of this fluid. | ||
| It's not just that. | ||
| They're going to be like, rent is too expensive. | ||
| So instead of renting a big apartment, get the pod. | ||
| When you go into the pod and plug your brain in, you live in a mansion. | ||
| You'll be able to do work from remote, from your pod. | ||
| All you got to do is tube up your butt so that when you poop, it just sucks it right out. | ||
| Put the tube in your throat with the roach paste to keep your nutrients coming in. | ||
| And then you go in the pod, but in your mind, you're the king of the world. | ||
| Or the pod makes you stronger with electrostatics. | ||
| Like it makes your muscles twitch so you come out ripped out of the pod. | ||
| And then some people won't be able to afford that function. | ||
| They're just going to waste away, but they're okay with it. | ||
| But other people will be coming out transformed. | ||
| Like, how would you ever not use this technology? | ||
| People are going to be like, you know, I work at GameStop and I don't get paid a lot of money. | ||
| So I just like to go home and chill out. | ||
| And they plug their brains in, and they're the great knight who fights dragons all, you know. | ||
| One thing. | ||
| I mean, I don't even think your body type, you know, think about it in the old days in the 18th century, people got fat, right? | ||
| The kind of Boucher model with these guys in the royal court, they were very voluptuous. | ||
| And, you know, that was because you didn't have to be doing physical labor. | ||
| That would make you kind of buff, right? | ||
| So now in an area where we have modern society, people work out because they don't get the same physical work every day. | ||
| You see, look at a picture, these colorized versions of what life looked like on the street in the 1920s. | ||
| How many obese people did you see back then? | ||
| Zero. | ||
| So, like, I don't actually know what life in the pod is going to look like in 50 years. | ||
| Maybe the new aesthetic is going to be a skeleton because no one's going to actually remember what life was like. | ||
| Will you? | ||
| Let's do a couple questions. | ||
| If Neuralink was released to the public and it required a 30-minute procedure to surgically implant it, and it would allow you to wire into any universe and you could experience being anything you wanted. | ||
| So it's like you want to play Skyrim, you're in it. | ||
| You want to play podcast host? | ||
| You're in it. | ||
| Would you get the implant? | ||
|
unidentified
|
No. | |
| No, I'm not going to. | ||
|
unidentified
|
Anybody? | |
| No. | ||
| What if it was not invasive and it was just a little thing that just clicked inside of your head and transmitted? | ||
| You could totally do it. | ||
| I tested it out. | ||
| I don't know if I keep using it. | ||
|
unidentified
|
Sure. | |
| Yeah. | ||
| You should show the world. | ||
| But for all I know, it could be tricking. | ||
| It could be doing things to me that I didn't understand unless I have the code. | ||
| Was it riding your brain? | ||
| Yeah, it might be. | ||
| But I would test it. | ||
| Yeah, I said no to that. | ||
| It was called 2020. | ||
| It was the jab. | ||
| I mean, basically. | ||
| But if it's just like a thing, like you put a headset on, like a video game, and then you get to experience whatever you want, but it's not invasive. | ||
| You can take it off. | ||
| That movie's called Total Recall, if I remember. | ||
| Yeah, I mean, it might rewire your brain. | ||
| You brought up a really, really good point that I think a lot of people completely gloss over is the fact that depression's at the highest rate it's ever been. | ||
| SSRIs are at the highest rate they've ever been. | ||
| People are searching for fulfillment. | ||
| They're searching for passion. | ||
| They're searching for interest. | ||
| They're searching for some sort of personality that a lot of people are lacking due to social media kind of sucking everybody in. | ||
| So, you know, when I was growing up, I was learning guitar, learned how to skate. | ||
| I started writing music. | ||
| There was all these things I was just putting my time into. | ||
| And that kind of takes me away from being radicalized to a certain point. | ||
| I mean, if I ever get frustrated or I need to let out some stress, I'll do these things. | ||
| And people are struggling with that sort of fulfillment. | ||
| You see it every single day. | ||
| People are marching instead of learning guitar because that's what they learned to fill their personality up with because their circle of friends did. | ||
| And when the more AI comes in, the more job opportunities go away, the more music goes away, the more all these things that people dive their passions into goes away, the depression rates are going to get higher and it's going to make people have less fulfillment, like you were saying, leading to just an overall less quality of life. | ||
| More alienation because you could hang out with people across political spectrum in your guitar group, right? | ||
| Or, you know, your knitting circle, whatever the case would be, because you have these hobbies and interests. | ||
| You're car collectors. | ||
| And yeah, I think that that's a breakdown of us going online and really losing human contact. | ||
| That part of it was the Marxists came and said, look, you are either with us or against us. | ||
| You have to have a polarized environment. | ||
| And like, for example, my wife's this famous ballerina. | ||
| She runs a company and she always wanted politics kept out of the space. | ||
| This ballet beautiful. | ||
| And then she started getting hit by these people. | ||
| Pick a, you know, throw up a square with black on it or you're, or we're just going to X, you know, and that's, that's what we have to push back. | ||
| That's one thing that I think the Trump admin has done well with really putting away the DEI and this kind of massive kind of social either with us or against us mentality. | ||
| I want to jump into the story from Fox News. | ||
| This one's really funny. | ||
| Tennessee Democratic candidate caught saying she hates Nashville, country music and resurfaced clip. | ||
| This is quite literally a Democrat running for Congress. | ||
| And audio has been released where she says she hates Nashville. | ||
| This is the problem of Democrats. | ||
|
unidentified
|
I hate country music. | |
| I hate all of the things that make Nashville barely. | ||
| And its city to the rest of the country, that I hate it. | ||
| I've been heavily involved with the Nashville mayoral race because I hate the city. | ||
| I hate the bachelorettes. | ||
| I hate the pedal taverns. | ||
| I hate country music. | ||
| I hate all of the things that make Nashville barely. | ||
| And its city to the rest of the country, but I hate it. | ||
| Yeah, I'm that girl at the airport that all these bachelorettes are giddy walking out in their two-tuned colored pant pink shirts. | ||
| And they walk out and I'm like, oh my God, Nashville. | ||
| So this is, we were talking a moment ago about the schools and how Democrats are winning. | ||
| And Paul, you were mentioning that you can't even figure out who to vote for because they hide their politics. | ||
| Republicans will come out and be like, here's what I think we should do. | ||
| And Democrats will lie to you like Zoe Randall. | ||
| Some of the Republicans are lying. | ||
| Of course, of course. | ||
| Instagram for one. | ||
| He hates people at home. | ||
| So we've got this from Call She, and this is actually kind of funny. | ||
| The reason I bring this up, one, shout out to Kalshi. | ||
| Thanks for sponsoring the show. | ||
| The Republican Party in Tennessee's 7th, this has popped up as a big market because of these leaks. | ||
| 87% chance to win. | ||
| Now, why do I highlight this? | ||
| Because in response to this audio, this is Katie Briefs, the campaign manager for Afton Bain for Congress, told Fox News Digital in a statement, Republicans are panicking. | ||
| And in a last ditched attempt, they're distracting from the fact that Washington Republicans and Matt Van Epps are raising costs on Tennessee families and ripping with their health care. | ||
| While Afton Bain will lower Tennessee families' costs and make groceries more affordable by eliminating the state's grocery tax. | ||
| I want to say this. | ||
| You are losing. | ||
| The audio is damning. | ||
| You hate the city you live in. | ||
| We get it. | ||
| This is what you do. | ||
| But I also want to just add the cookie cutter garbage response you made annoys me more than saying you hate the city you represent because it is the most inauthentic thing they can do. | ||
| But I'm not surprised her whole campaign's a lie anyway, right? | ||
| I just want to say I love Nashville. | ||
| Nashville is so great. | ||
| And also like Nashville. | ||
| That's why I'm offended. | ||
| Nashville is not just like country, country music. | ||
| It's called Music City for a reason. | ||
| Like there's a lot, like a significant part of the music industry is based in Nashville. | ||
| A lot of it's because people got sick and tired of living in LA and all of the things that come along with all the sprawl and the population. | ||
| So they moved to Nashville. | ||
| But like my music lawyer is based out of Nashville. | ||
| Nashville is awesome. | ||
| I mean, I think Nashville isn't just the, Nashville is most of the country, quite honestly. | ||
| You know, that the same kind of music and lifestyle is actually what the heartbeat of America is. | ||
| So look, she has the typical liberal disdain for the common man and woman. | ||
| And she was caught on tape, but at least now we know. | ||
| But people, obviously, Lindsey Graham, he says he, you know, at J6, he made this famous speech, I'm done with Trump, right? | ||
| And he got out there. | ||
| Well, the first line to that is, my state, South Carolina, is oftentimes the problem. | ||
| So, you know, people like him, so many people in Washington are just fake. | ||
| Yeah. | ||
| Oh, look at this. | ||
| Pool water. | ||
| They have come in. | ||
| They have arrived. | ||
|
unidentified
|
Cool. | |
| It's so simple. | ||
| There you go, everybody. | ||
| Amazing. | ||
| Pool water, man. | ||
| This is the solution. | ||
| It's things like this. | ||
| Build your own companies, man. | ||
| Oh, yeah. | ||
| Pool water. | ||
| 100% pure Artesian water. | ||
| That's right. | ||
| If Casper got started is hilarious. | ||
| Started because Tim was beefing with liquid death. | ||
| Indeed. | ||
| That's great. | ||
| It's funny. | ||
| I often jump in the pool, and I'm one of those guys that have to hold my nose. | ||
| And if I don't, I just inhale everything. | ||
| Breathe out your nose. | ||
| I'm excited. | ||
| When you hit the water, go, I do. | ||
| I've tried it for years, but I just keep sucking up some pool water. | ||
| It is crisp and refreshing. | ||
| There's significantly less chlorine in this pool water than most other pool water I've experienced. | ||
| It's not even. | ||
| When I'm thirsty, I reach for an ice-cold glass of pool water. | ||
| Bottled at the source by Virginia Artesian bottling company. | ||
| Often mistaken for being Tim's bathwater. | ||
| That is not the case. | ||
|
unidentified
|
No, this is the only pool water. | |
| Well, I can tell you as a dad, for the bigger problem, the bigger war is the kids relieving themselves. | ||
| So hopefully we're clear of that. | ||
| No, that's not 100% confirmed yet, but I don't taste it. | ||
| Only 1% acceptable by the FDA. | ||
| Paul, we were just, I do feel like I interrupted your flow right there. | ||
| I wanted to hear what you were saying. | ||
| I just think that half of these people in Washington are phonies, and it's not just confined to the Democrat side, particularly where they're concentrating always on foreign objects, where they're essentially extolling whether it be in Israel or Ukraine running over there, genuflecting in front of that dictator. | ||
| And now they're moving down to Venezuela or whatnot. | ||
| It's a common theme that they don't care about life back at home, you know, and to actually get somebody on tape, it's refreshing to see the honesty. | ||
| But we know this, that just contempt. | ||
| My question about honesty, this is kind of like a tangent sort of related. | ||
| It says that she, oh, no, okay. | ||
| I thought it said that I hate Nashville in quotes. | ||
| I guess I was wrong. | ||
| I read that. | ||
| She says she hates everything that makes Nashville a hit. | ||
| I hate the city is what she said. | ||
| She hates the taverns, the music. | ||
| And keep in mind, like what Paul's saying, that if you've, I travel a lot for racing, and it's always kind of rural America. | ||
| Rural America does resemble places like Nashville. | ||
| Maybe not in the gaudy way like a lot of people like to call it in Nash Vegas. | ||
| It is, it's because it is pretty wild. | ||
| But I mean, if you just dial it down a few notches, go to any place in rural America, it resembles the, I mean, every bar is going to have your live music. | ||
| They're going to be playing similar music. | ||
| Everybody's having a good time. | ||
| It's a lot of brotherly love. | ||
| People know each other, which is the heartbeat of America, which we've got away from when you were talking the other night about how the gun violence, you take away a couple cities. | ||
| We're like 128th on the list or something crazy like that, right? | ||
| So the rural America is what makes America great. | ||
| And that's where every place should be like it, to be honest. | ||
| I live in rural America. | ||
| I love it. | ||
| And that's what Nashville is. | ||
| So her, I mean, I'm not saying that she said this, but she's kind of essentially saying, I hate everything about America. | ||
| Yeah. | ||
| I feel like every big city in the United States has some kind of entertainment crux, whether it's sport. | ||
| A lot of them are sports. | ||
| They have their sports team. | ||
| Some of them have movies like LA. | ||
| It's movies. | ||
| And New York has business, but Nashville has music. | ||
| And so does Austin. | ||
| These are like two notoriously musical cities. | ||
| I think maybe she's just complaining about she hates big cities in general, but she's like explicitly saying it's the country music thing. | ||
| I mean, I don't know if she explicitly said country music, but literally country. | ||
| And she's running for office in the city. | ||
| Is that right? | ||
| Yeah, she's running to be the congressional representative that represents Nashville. | ||
| And she said she hates basically everything about freaking the people. | ||
| That should just disqualify her. | ||
| Like they should be like, all right, you're done. | ||
| The first thing I thought about. | ||
| Well, she's responded, of course. | ||
| She has a statement she put out. | ||
| And here you go. | ||
| State Representative Afton Bain here, the Democratic nominee for the seventh congressional special election in Tennessee. | ||
| For those of you just joining in, I often record segments in my Jeep Wrangler called Wrangling Time. | ||
| Yes, there is a theme song, and no, I will not be singing it today, but yes, I will bring it back because I know a lot of you miss it. | ||
| And you've said I sing well. | ||
| So I look a little rough. | ||
| I have bags under my eyes because the Republican eye of Sauron has finally shifted towards moi. | ||
| And I'm sure you've seen the commercials. | ||
| I'm sure you've seen the onslaught of ads. | ||
| And then today, the Republicans decided that they're going to start this narrative that me, the state representative who represents downtown Nashville, doesn't like the city. | ||
| Now, I always want Nashville to be better, right? | ||
| I want Nashville to be a place where working people can thrive, right? | ||
| But sure, I get mad at the Bachelorette sometimes. | ||
| I get mad at the pedal taverns, right? | ||
| And you're talking to someone who has cried no less than 10 times in the country music hall of fame. | ||
| The girl that just goes to the Ryman to hang out. | ||
| No, no, we're not, we're not even going to go. | ||
| We are so close to winning. | ||
| This is panic. | ||
| That's interesting things that she said. | ||
| Exactly. | ||
|
unidentified
|
You know, she's like, yeah, you know, I said these things about that. | |
| Like, yeah, you hate Nashville and you're only there because what these people do is they move to places they can infiltrate, destroy, and take over. | ||
| Called carpetbaggers. | ||
| She said carpetbaggers. | ||
| She said the eye of Sauron was on her. | ||
| I'm like, well, she picked up the ring, man, and she put it on and she said the thing intentionally. | ||
| And she's like, oh, sometimes I hate the bachelorette. | ||
| Do you really want if you're if you're in Nashville right now watching this, okay, do you really want to elect Regina, a mean girl? | ||
| Like, no, I don't want the mean girl in office. | ||
| I'm wondering, I don't know, but the wrangling theme that she's not playing in this video, could it be country music based? | ||
| I'm just thinking around. | ||
| Yeah, right. | ||
| The Eye of Sauron's a good because like there's a difference between carrying the ring and wearing it. | ||
| She put it right on. | ||
| Wearing it is deceiving people. | ||
| The ring is the ultimate deceptive technique. | ||
| You go invisible. | ||
| Yeah. | ||
| That's when you lie, you will accrue the Eye of Sauron's wrath. | ||
| And that's what's happening. | ||
| She was caught in a lie. | ||
| Well, I mean, yeah, but what she's trying to do is she's trying to essentially convince people that the Republicans are making things up. | ||
| I'm getting their attention because I'm doing well and et cetera. | ||
| And this is all just a big nothing burger. | ||
| But I mean, the videos out there where she specifically says these things. | ||
| And then in this video, like I said, she references the things that she said. | ||
| She referenced two of the specific criticisms that she had. | ||
| And so to sit there and make it out, like, oh, I didn't say this, or it's not really a big deal. | ||
| This is totally damaged. | ||
|
unidentified
|
Yeah. | |
| And what kind of name is Afton anyway? | ||
| Huh? | ||
| Yeah. | ||
| You know what I really like about glass? | ||
| It gets cold with the water and it keeps the water cold. | ||
| Plastic's so oily. | ||
|
unidentified
|
Yeah. | |
| Yeah. | ||
| Thanks. | ||
| You know what's really strange? | ||
| The fact that she, you know, her being a Democrat, I wouldn't be surprised if she said, oh, I wasn't talking about that in Nashville. | ||
| What other Nashville's we're talking about? | ||
| I noticed that. | ||
|
unidentified
|
Yeah, yeah, yeah. | |
| This girl. | ||
| She has a hard time with stillness and being calm. | ||
| She gets like. | ||
| She's talking about Nashville, Indiana, dude. | ||
| She says he cried 10 times in the Hall of Fame of country music. | ||
| Yeah, it's because you hate it. | ||
| It's bad. | ||
| Just because you got drunk and you cry when you get drunk doesn't mean that you love Nashville. | ||
| Is it out of form to ad hominem attack this woman? | ||
| Like criticize her personality? | ||
| Yes. | ||
| Okay, then I won't do it. | ||
| No, no, it's not out of form. | ||
| Go right ahead. | ||
| Well, she doesn't know how to be still and calm and silent. | ||
| She seems to always go like this when she's decided what's next. | ||
| Or and then going to the next, like, dude, sometimes you can have two moments where you're neutral. | ||
| I think you're on to something, Ian, about these, these women who don't know when to remain silent. | ||
| Of course. | ||
| You got to remain. | ||
| It's not just women, Tim. | ||
| Oh, no. | ||
| There's an argument that when you're doing radio, when you're doing radio, that you don't want dead air, but that doesn't mean when you're doing an Instagram video, like you're not. | ||
| I mean, maybe there's the argument that the way that she's talking is very stereotypical woman stuff, right? | ||
| Like it doesn't sound, and I'm not saying that all women talk like this, but the way that she's presenting herself is very much like what you consider an awful lot of people. | ||
| So Cal. | ||
| She sounds like a SoCal Valley girl, just like Hassan. | ||
| Maybe it's more of a feminine trait because I see men do it too, like neurotic men. | ||
| It's more of like a neuroses thing where you don't know. | ||
| It's like, am I discomfortable with myself that I can't be still? | ||
| Women. | ||
| AOC knockoff. | ||
| Yeah. | ||
| I ad hominem this woman enough without her in the room. | ||
| I'd have to do it to her face to get her. | ||
| I know that she did it enough. | ||
| And to be honest with you, you really weren't making ad hominems. | ||
| You were describing her mannerism. | ||
| To try and dissuade people from voting for her, but I don't know if it works that way. | ||
| I mean, were you trying to dissuade people or I don't want that in charge with someone that hates their own city? | ||
| That's crazy. | ||
| I mean, fair enough, but it's not like you're her constituent. | ||
| Well, she lost Ian. | ||
| I don't know how she wins now. | ||
| No, she can always win. | ||
| Ian defends communists. | ||
| Sure. | ||
| I'm like John Adams. | ||
| I'll defend the British. | ||
| I will. | ||
| Yeah, I mean, everyone needs a public defender or they need defense in court, but she's not in court. | ||
| So I think it's perfectly acceptable for you to criticize her. | ||
| Yeah, that's well, the first thing I thought was, is it a deep fake when they play the audio of her? | ||
| Because it's about to be in two years. | ||
| Yeah, I mean, that's a really valid thing. | ||
| One, we're always being recorded. | ||
| Wherever you go, there's always almost a live mic or a camera. | ||
| And, you know, the fact that we got a real glimpse of her when the majority plan of hers is apparently to just act the whole time in Washington. | ||
| But, you know, their response to it is exactly that. | ||
| You're not even going to believe your own eyes. | ||
| No, that video is not real. | ||
| That's AI generated. | ||
| And then they're going to make your brain receive that code differently. | ||
| Even if you see it, you're going to go right to your impulse. | ||
| Oh, that's not real. | ||
| I just saw a video yesterday of a wolf using a net to catch fish. | ||
| And it's the first documented video of a wolf using a tool. | ||
| But I'm like, is it AI? | ||
| I've been deep fake. | ||
| I made a video. | ||
| I made a video of a cat competing in the X games. | ||
| It was fake? | ||
|
unidentified
|
It was. | |
| Yeah. | ||
| It wasn't real. | ||
| No, it was Tim's cat. | ||
| Oh, it was real? | ||
|
unidentified
|
Yeah. | |
| It was. | ||
| I don't know what to believe anymore. | ||
| We have Seamus 3 now, but Allison won't let me take him in. | ||
| He's too wild. | ||
| He just walks around the property and he chills. | ||
| And then somebody saw him was like, who's this guy? | ||
| And I'm like, oh, that's Seamus III. | ||
| Just killing rats. | ||
| All the cats again named Seamus. | ||
| I had that same feeling where I saw it and I was like, wolves are, I was going to call them elves. | ||
| Wolves are evolving and they're learning like monkeys. | ||
| You finally got the stick in the hole to get the honey out. | ||
| But then I was so disenfranchised by maybe it's a deep fake. | ||
| I've just, and I was like, I can't believe, I won't, I don't believe anything, anything, anything. | ||
| Like, I obviously want to, but there's part of me that's like, that might have been a deep fake of that girl. | ||
| She didn't say it was. | ||
| So it's very likely not. | ||
| I mean, again, you still have that, you're like born free in Zion. | ||
| You still have a little bit of the human blood left in you where you can relate to what life was like pre-digital, pre-AI. | ||
| But that's the worry going forward. | ||
| You know, people don't even know what the baseline is for what reality. | ||
| You know, you're walking around with your VR on the whole time and you just, yeah, cats do not use tools. | ||
| They never have and they never will. | ||
| That we know of. | ||
| Cats using tools. | ||
| We have a cat at home. | ||
| I want to apologize. | ||
| I'm telling you, I got a video of a cat competing in the X games and you can't tell me otherwise. | ||
| Technically, that board was a tool. | ||
|
unidentified
|
That's right. | |
| Man, he used it. | ||
|
unidentified
|
All right. | |
| Well, thanks for letting me talk about deep fakes. | ||
| I know it's not the most everything. | ||
| Every time a thing comes up where we play a video, I'm like, deep fake. | ||
| Well, there's the deep fake. | ||
| We got to jump to this story. | ||
| I have to blur it. | ||
| This is from the New York Post. | ||
| X-GOP aide paid fetish artist to mutilate her and claimed it was an anti-Trump attack, according to court documents. | ||
| So we can't actually show the photos. | ||
| I'll show you the picture of the woman without the brutal photos. | ||
| But this is her Natalie Green arrested and charged with staging the violent attack. | ||
| This is the rights Jussie Smollett. | ||
| It happened. | ||
| And I have to blur it because she sliced herself up like crazy and wrote Trump whore on her stomach. | ||
| But apparently they say it was all a hoax. | ||
| A former New Jersey GOP aide allegedly paid a fetish artist to carve dozens of cuts into her skin and had a pale scrawl Trump whore on her stomach in order to claim she was the victim of a politically motivated violent attack, according to shocking new court documents. | ||
| Apparently she then had herself zip-tied up. | ||
| She claimed she was zip-tied by the phantom assailants during the alleged bogus assault. | ||
| It's funny because a lot of people on the right are pointing out all she had to do was go to an ice rate, like an anti-ice rally wearing a MAGA hat. | ||
| And it would have actually happened to her, so why stage it? | ||
| But I guess the only thing that we can give her credit for is she didn't claim they screamed, this is Pelosi country or something. | ||
| Isn't it so startling to see people get to this level of like hysteria? | ||
| And also because, you know, it's an attention-seeking thing for sure. | ||
| It's to create some kind of huge drama that the entire world will have their eye on. | ||
| It's like, I want all this attention, and I'm willing to hurt myself in a really dramatic way to get it and maybe cause some kind of political strife. | ||
| And it's kind of gross and it's weird to see it get to this level, you know, starting with the juicy smole and stuff. | ||
| People just keep doing things like this to try to influence politics and also bring attention to themselves and better their career. | ||
| That's a big thing. | ||
| The difference, because I keep thinking about the Arab Spring. | ||
| I asked this before we went live too, and I'll ask you again that the guy who lit himself on fire, I think it was it to hear, I don't know if it was to hear Square Word. | ||
| Do you know exactly where he was when he lit it? | ||
| That's Mohamed Wazizi, I believe was Tunisia. | ||
| And I wonder, Tunisia, if it's like mental illness or they have no hope. | ||
| Like that guy obviously couldn't afford food, so he had given up, but like, or is it both? | ||
| And this woman, like you said, it's maybe will improve her career. | ||
| She didn't kill herself like that guy did. | ||
| But is it mental illness? | ||
| Is it desperation that why someone would do something like this? | ||
| Like they have no hope for the future and they feel like the only, we need some radical change. | ||
| No, I think this is the social media era where people are desperate and they'll do anything for attention. | ||
| We saw this with YouTube in the early days where people would do shock content where they'd harass people, threaten them. | ||
| You've got these TikTok ding-dong ditch pranks, which is not. | ||
| There was this one prank they were doing where it's breaking to people's homes. | ||
| Some people in London were going up to houses and walking in the front door and doing whatever they wanted because it generated shock content for them. | ||
| I used to see videos of people squirting ketchup on their head. | ||
| I feel like that's the slippery slope to things like this. | ||
| Or leaking the ice cream. | ||
| That was one where they would lick the ice cream. | ||
| And then he goes so far as there was people stealing people's cars or breaking into their homes and are pretending to rob them at ATMs. | ||
| One guy got shot, I'm pretty sure, stabbed as a result of that. | ||
| And apps should have an absolute no allowance policy at all. | ||
| If anything like that comes about, you're permanent banned. | ||
| I'd be banned forever. | ||
| Again, I would, what Cody was saying earlier, draw back and say, well, why are people desperate for search and meeting? | ||
| And it's, in my mind, alienation from God. | ||
| 100%. | ||
| And this is what Charlie was telling us. | ||
| Like, if you have God-centered life, you're not going to do this. | ||
| You're loved by God. | ||
| And it's painful to see this kind of, and I said, you know, there's spiritual warfare going on out there. | ||
| Some people are very susceptible to it. | ||
| Look, I pray to put on the armor of God every day, Ephesians 6. | ||
| But, you know, if you're not centered there, it's very easy. | ||
| And this AI, maybe people talk about it being the Antichrist, but certainly the Internet brings us down to this base human, and I'm using base in a different term than based, but our base instincts really as animals in a way. | ||
| And this one constant one-upsmanship to shock value. | ||
| I don't know how we get around it other than turning focus towards God. | ||
| And I'm God, country, family. | ||
| That is why I'm standing up. | ||
| But the more we take it out of the government sphere, the further people get alienated and they're just acceptable tools. | ||
| In 2000, before the internet, really internet video, it was for me, it was theater. | ||
| It was something greater than myself. | ||
| And I was agnostic, wholeheartedly agnostic at the time. | ||
| And there was a godliness to producing something with a group of people that was greater than ourselves and the sacrifice of 70 hours of rehearsal and then letting other people be the star and making sure that someone else is adulated over you. | ||
| That's your role right now. | ||
| And that when the internet came around, it was like all my theater friends, they basically started getting very hyper. | ||
| A lot of them were hyper political because that's their creative outlet now. | ||
| It was like, I can make a video. | ||
| I still get the claps. | ||
| I still get the, but you're not with a group of people creating a greater message. | ||
| That needs to be revitalized somehow. | ||
| And man, the damn internet keeps us, it doesn't keep us separated. | ||
| But the nature of the internet is I can talk to you across the pond and we can have a great conversation and satisfy a lot of these human urges without still completing that like what's called pragma in Greek love. | ||
| It's a type of love. | ||
| It's pragmatic love that you develop with people through overcoming obstacles together. | ||
| Absolutely. | ||
| It's esprit de corps. | ||
| It's the essence of our society, why we group together and overcome, you know, man versus nature. | ||
| But, you know, the family unit is the number one. | ||
| That's why we go back to the family as the centerpiece of American life. | ||
| You know, you are a family ultimately protecting yourself, pushing everyone better for it, sacrificing for your kids. | ||
| And then you get to be part of a community of families doing the same. | ||
| And then we get to a state, then we get to a country. | ||
| And that's what we have to remember. | ||
| It's like when we start breaking down these borders, the country goes down, the states go down. | ||
| Ultimately, the attack is on the family. | ||
| And we end up, you know, people just completely adrift. | ||
| Dude, the internet shocked the liberal system so hard. | ||
| The way that your little kid can be getting warped, their brain is warped on the internet, sitting next to you at the table, and you don't even know it if they have a device. | ||
| I don't know, like, if we're, this is the step of human evolution where now we're becoming tech homotechnis, and some of us, and then the rest of us are going to become, we're going to be like, no, no, we don't want it. | ||
| And then we're just going to subserve to this human-borg mind construct thing. | ||
| Or if, or if somehow AI will be like, it's unhealthy for humans to be separated from each other. | ||
| We need to reinvigorate the family and the community. | ||
| I think we have to commit to ourselves personally. | ||
| Only you can make this difference. | ||
| And I mean, you know, I feel good to see books on the table. | ||
| Really, you have to turn off the phones at some point and kind of go back to analog living. | ||
| Obviously, you can't do that all day, but you need to commit to either reading the Bible in hard copy or, you know, spending time reading to your kids or something you're doing that's just completely phones away, you know, that you can put it away. | ||
| And because just the constant, we don't know. | ||
| The mind is such an incredible organ. | ||
| We have no concept of really how it works. | ||
| And the radiation. | ||
| Oh, sorry to interrupt. | ||
| Radiation. | ||
| The kids' brains are still forming. | ||
| Our brains are still forming and they can still be changed. | ||
| But like the kids, that's what's the real threat that the kind of the progressive era went after the kids and they were in kind of the embryonic stage of actually developing these people. | ||
| In the early 80s, I was obsessed with video games as like a four-year-old. | ||
| Our cat died and I came in and I started playing Atari and I was like, I'm not sad anymore. | ||
| If I'm ever sad, I can turn on a computer and I won't be sad. | ||
| Like, what a horrible thing for a child. | ||
| But it was true. | ||
| And I just learned to become obsessed with the computer, like love the computer. | ||
| Love is such a weird word, but obsessed, obsessive love, mania. | ||
| That's a kind of love is manic love for this machine. | ||
| And that was any just video game off the internet, no internet yet. | ||
| It was just the TV, the video game, the constant learning and problem solving. | ||
| And I'm not punished if I fail necessarily. | ||
| It doesn't hurt to fail anyway. | ||
| Well, now the child, and I guess it's happening all over, the one who is killed through AI, essentially, you know, developing a relationship with a chatbot. | ||
| Look, addiction is real. | ||
| It's not just substances. | ||
| It's obviously our brains are wired in a way that we want to suppress bad thoughts and kind of concentrate on positive ones. | ||
| And they know that and they build it in a way to make it as addictive as possible. | ||
| Yeah, I've had this thought process for a long time where the internet, although it's a useful tool, it can be inherently negative almost all the time. | ||
| Sometimes I'll stream, I'll do my podcast Monday, Wednesday, or Saturday, and I'll be doing it. | ||
| And the content I'm covering will be almost overtly negative. | ||
| And I'll notice that after a couple of streams, and it starts to wear on me mentally. | ||
| And I tend to think I'm pretty good. | ||
| I'm pretty stoic mentally, but it'll start to wear on me. | ||
| And at the end of the year in December, I always go to Seaberville, Tennessee in the mountains next to Gatlinburg, and I don't use my phone. | ||
| I unplug everything and I go out and I'm hiking in the woods. | ||
| I'll go to the moonshine tasting thing. | ||
| And it's just, it completely resets me. | ||
| It's a very interesting thing. | ||
| And then I come back and I'm back on the internet. | ||
| I'm more inspired. | ||
| I'm ready to go. | ||
| And it kind of carries me for a little while. | ||
| You say you spend one week without the device? | ||
| Is it roughly one week? | ||
| How long after that are you refreshed? | ||
| How many weeks? | ||
| Oh, it's, I mean, the burnout comes fast, but it's a few months. | ||
| I was talking with my wife. | ||
| I had this idea. | ||
| I think it's a really great idea. | ||
| I was saying, you know, with these pre-records we're doing on Friday, we're done around 4 p.m. | ||
| What we should do is we should schedule a dinner and then everyone has to put their devices away and spend family time together. | ||
| And then from sundown on Friday until sundown on Saturday, you're not allowed to do any kind of work, touch any kind of buttons. | ||
| Bro, you're never beating the allegations. | ||
| You're never beating the allegations. | ||
| Never beating the allegations. | ||
| And then I said, we'll call it Shabbat. | ||
| Good idea. | ||
| It actually is a really great idea. | ||
| I don't know about the Friday at Sundown scheduling stuff, but the idea that you set aside time for your family and community for, you know, once a week, I think is extremely important as a church is supposed to be. | ||
| So whatever it is you do, it actually is a great idea to have a dinner once a week with your community. | ||
| This is why we're being fragmented, broken apart, and at each other's throats. | ||
| Why people are going insane is because we don't connect with each other anymore. | ||
| It should be not everybody on one. | ||
| If everybody does it on a Saturday, it's a vulnerability for foes to attack on Saturday. | ||
| So maybe have it whenever your community wants, any day of the week, but pick a day. | ||
| I don't know. | ||
| I feel like if the Jewish community was going to be attacked, Saturday would be the day. | ||
| Because they can't press buttons. | ||
| Yeah. | ||
| They're not at their computers. | ||
| They don't know what's coming. | ||
| I'm pretty sure the rules are that they can defend their lives. | ||
| Oh, yeah. | ||
| All bets are off under attack. | ||
| Look, nobody can get around rules made by God like Jews can. | ||
| They have entire schools of theologians that just read the Talmud and they say, well, you know, we can put this string up and that makes the outside inside or all kinds of stuff. | ||
| You can't turn on the light, but someone else can turn on the light for you. | ||
| Like have a machine. | ||
| If you accidentally trip and fall and press the button, it wasn't intentional. | ||
| Yeah, right? | ||
|
unidentified
|
Whoops. | |
| Oh, that's good. | ||
| That's what a Shabbos goy is. | ||
| It's a Gentile or a Goyam that lives with the Jews or helps with the Jews and he'll do all the stuff that the Jew can't do. | ||
| So the Jew will be like, oh, can you turn on the lights for me? | ||
| And the Goyam will go turn on the lights. | ||
| That's actually Goya singular. | ||
|
unidentified
|
Okay, the gory image there, yeah. | |
| Okay, so the Goy. | ||
| Fair enough. | ||
| I don't speak Yiddish. | ||
| Let's do Friday dinners. | ||
| That's a good idea. | ||
| We're planning on doing Friday night gaming nights at Mamba Collection. | ||
| Yeah, dude, we are. | ||
| And it's looking good. | ||
| The challenge is security. | ||
| It'll be all closed. | ||
| The whole place will be closed. | ||
| What time, though? | ||
| 10. | ||
|
unidentified
|
It's late. | |
| Then it closes. | ||
| But the idea is we wanted to set it up so that members can come and hang out, too. | ||
| Everybody brings a rifle. | ||
| It's West Virginia. | ||
| Yeah, we can't. | ||
| Maybe 8 p.m. We can shut down the shop earlier. | ||
| See if we can pay. | ||
| Maybe what we do is it's like the member gathering at like from 8 to 10. | ||
| And then from like 10 and on, it's closed VIP only. | ||
| And then we have the VIP members in Timcast. | ||
| So they would have access. | ||
| That's so awesome. | ||
| And it's just because it's largely about vetting. | ||
| I always hate gating things by money, but there's like, how else do you do it? | ||
| Yeah. | ||
|
unidentified
|
So. | |
| That's reasonable. | ||
| And then we want to do the show. | ||
| We want to do D ⁇ D. | ||
| I would like to do an amalgam of shows. | ||
| D ⁇ D is number one right now. | ||
| Got it. | ||
| DD, where the scenario is you're playing Magic the Gathering. | ||
| In the game, there's like a, what do they call that? | ||
| A sub-game in the game. | ||
| You come into a dungeon and the evil wizard says, you must play magic. | ||
| That's how Final Fantasy VIII was. | ||
| You had a card game in the game, and it was awesome, actually. | ||
| So maybe the characters can, I mean, you can obviously gamble in the game, but I used to play Commander Keen on DOS. | ||
| Remember that? | ||
| And then I would just go into the mini game on his watch and play Pong mini game. | ||
| You're playing DD with, you have to roll like a 20-side die to see what card you draw. | ||
| Oh. | ||
| We create our own game. | ||
| Or actually, it's 60-card decks, so maybe 100 card single things. | ||
| 3D20. | ||
| Oh, 100 cards. | ||
| All right. | ||
| You could just roll a D100 and anything over a 60, you just ignore and re-roll. | ||
| Yeah, D100s just roll for a while. | ||
| You have to make a D60. | ||
| We have to make D60s now. | ||
| Let's make a D1000 and just see how long it rolls for. | ||
| D1 million. | ||
|
unidentified
|
What? | |
| It's a beach, Paul. | ||
|
unidentified
|
It's just fear. | |
| It's just fear. | ||
| Perfectly smooth. | ||
| It just doesn't stop. | ||
| Paul, gaming, I don't know if you're gaming is a huge at the very beginning of the whole Dungeons and Traction thing. | ||
| I mean, I was, I hate to say, you know, now I've got the young kids. | ||
| When you're talking about board games, I'm concentrating on them not throwing the board over. | ||
| That's the level we're at right now. | ||
| So we're checkers in Candyland. | ||
| Have you ever played Mafia? | ||
| You know, years ago, I kind of moved out of that. | ||
| You know, the lawyering thing kind of took over. | ||
| Oh, obviously. | ||
| But I'm glad to see the board game coming back. | ||
| You know, this is really a key way for people to get together again. | ||
| Yeah, it's like theater. | ||
| Yeah. | ||
| Especially D ⁇ D, because it's not an actual game you're trying to win. | ||
| You're putting on a play with you and your friends. | ||
| You're creating a story. | ||
| It's entertaining, and that's all that matters. | ||
| You can be an idiot. | ||
| You can fail as long as you're fun. | ||
| Yeah, we grew up playing board games at home, playing cards as a family, and it's kind of gravitated to only that one week. | ||
| You got to go on family vacation. | ||
| Ian talked about playing mafia, but what he really likes is Secret Hitler. | ||
| Same game. | ||
| Secret Hitler has cards. | ||
| Mafia's all in your mind. | ||
| Secret Hitler is you're trying to enact fascist policies. | ||
| And the funny thing about it, you can be one of two things, a liberal or a fascist. | ||
| There's nothing in between. | ||
| Yeah. | ||
| It's freaking hilarious. | ||
| All right, everybody, we're going to go to the backstage pass for questions, comments. | ||
| So, guys, if you're hanging out backstage, get your questions in now. | ||
| And for everyone else wondering, whoa, whoa, what's this backstage thing? | ||
| It is, my friends, when you join the Discord server at Timcast.com. | ||
| You go to Timcast.com, you click join us. | ||
| You get in the Discord server. | ||
| You can hang out as we do pre-production. | ||
| So it's not just the show you're watching now, but it's the full hour beforehand, where in fact, there was a debate happening, which was pretty dang funny. | ||
| And it was fun and funny. | ||
| It was about the rift and the right. | ||
| We did this in the culture world, but it extended well into the behind the scenes. | ||
| And then there was some talk of family and holidays. | ||
| As a member of the Discord community, you can now submit questions. | ||
| So if you want to get involved, you got to join us, support the work that we do. | ||
| And we will grab your questions. | ||
| Although I think it may have frozen. | ||
| Wait, there it is. | ||
| Warm it up. | ||
| Let's go. | ||
| It's all it's a settle stuffling says, Uncle Tim is talking about me. | ||
| Oh, Coslomo was put on. | ||
| Okay, it all just jumped at once. | ||
| Where are we at? | ||
| Okay. | ||
| IMake Parts says, Cody, come up to Wisconsin International Raceway for the Dixieland 250 so we can see the Timcast super late on track. | ||
| Oh, that'd be a good time. | ||
| It'd be a good time for sure. | ||
| Did you choose all your own races? | ||
| What was that? | ||
| Do you choose your own races? | ||
| No, it's all basically a set schedule by NASCAR or something to that nature. | ||
| So yeah, it just depends. | ||
| Basically, the more funding that happens, the more you can do, right? | ||
| So it's just like you can start lining stuff up and lining stuff up. | ||
| And the goal always is to run full-time. | ||
| And then there's a lot of people that will go run late models and super late models and stuff as well as package deals. | ||
| So yeah, you can do pretty much anything. | ||
| What are late models? | ||
| Late models are like they're a lighter, like stock car. | ||
| They're much lighter. | ||
| They're shaped kind of like funky. | ||
| They're shaped more, I guess, aerodynamic. | ||
| They're really cool looking. | ||
| They're really quick on short tracks, really fast on short tracks. | ||
| Just kind of a different kind of car, but just very, really light. | ||
| I was surprised to find that in the NASCAR video game, you can ram other vehicles without penalty. | ||
| Yeah, you can go ham. | ||
| I enjoyed it. | ||
| Last saw you was killing everybody. | ||
| You could not do that in NASCAR. | ||
| Am I wrong? | ||
| No, no, definitely not. | ||
| Oh, you can do it once. | ||
| And then they'd be like, all right, you're done. | ||
| But like, if you said you did it on purpose, they'd be like, you're done. | ||
| Oh, for sure. | ||
| But if you're like, it was an accident, they'd be like, we get it. | ||
| It depends on how egregious. | ||
| But if it was really obviously intentional, and you got this look on your face and you're like, ah. | ||
| And they have all this data hooked up to your car. | ||
| They can see when you take your throw out a lot. | ||
| They can see how many degrees of wheel you turn. | ||
| So if you're right here and they see you do that, they know. | ||
| That's a maneuver. | ||
| I thought if you weren't rubbing, you weren't racing. | ||
|
unidentified
|
Well, a little bit different than rubbing and, you know, murder. | |
| How do I find that video of the dude who pulled that maneuver that got banned? | ||
| Oh, yeah. | ||
| You just top in Ross, Ross Chastain Wall or something. | ||
| How do you spell his last name? | ||
| C-H-A-S-T- There it is. | ||
| Oh, there it is. | ||
| And then wall, probably. | ||
| I might have seen this new video of the guys on the wall. | ||
| It's not new, but it's a secret technique he pulled where he just slammed the gas and rid the. | ||
| Whoa, that's live footage, by the way. | ||
| That's that's not sped up, man. | ||
| Whoa, did he end up winning the race? | ||
| No, he advanced to the next round of playoffs because he gained like seven positions. | ||
| Wow, so you don't get negatives depending on how damaged your car is when you come? | ||
| No, no, and uh, doesn't slow you down. | ||
| Sponsors get pissed. | ||
| This is like if they it's this generation car, it's the way he did it. | ||
| It was like a one in a million shot, and he was like, I'm just gonna do it because it's my only option. | ||
| If you would have done this in one of the older cars, like the pre-generations, these are way tougher. | ||
| The older ones would have just stopped and wrinkled, right? | ||
| But this car is more rigid and it made its way around there. | ||
| And he did what he had to do, and then NASCAR immediately made it illegal. | ||
| How did they not stop? | ||
| How did he not get stopped by it? | ||
| That's wild. | ||
| It was the last corner, and he just, yeah, the car just was sustaining it. | ||
| So he wouldn't be able to go another corner. | ||
| Oh, for sure. | ||
| Yeah, that car is done. | ||
| But he only had one more corner. | ||
| He had one more and he did it. | ||
| And he bumped back there. | ||
|
unidentified
|
All right. | |
| All right. | ||
| We got Ander. | ||
| He says, I got a question. | ||
| Cody, how has your health improved as a result of race car driving, considering how healthy you have to be in order to maintain? | ||
| I've actually been doing mass gaining and cut cycles for the last 11 years. | ||
| I've been in the gym for the last 11 years. | ||
| And during my cut cycle, I take vitamins. | ||
| I eat grilled chicken, egg whites, a little bit of shredded cheese. | ||
| I drink protein. | ||
| I eat really, really clean. | ||
| And I get in pretty tip-top shape right before the race season. | ||
| And then I'll kind of keep doing that and maintain a little bit and then get looser and looser until I kind of fall apart in July. | ||
| I'll start drinking a little bit, a little bit of white claw. | ||
| You know, that's my thing. | ||
| Love it. | ||
| And I'll start eating a little bit. | ||
| And then by the time October hits, it gets real bad for two weeks. | ||
| And then I go right back on my diet. | ||
| So it's restructuring, you know, redoing things. | ||
| I'm definitely healthier than I ever was prior to my like mid-20s. | ||
| Before that, I can't imagine where I was. | ||
| But I started that when I was 24 and I've been doing it ever since. | ||
| And yeah, racing helps with that. | ||
| Plus, there's a thing you can't prepare for, and it's when you're in the car, it gets really hot. | ||
| It's like a different kind of hot. | ||
| It's not like you're, it's the sun's out, right? | ||
| We were racing in Michigan last year and 160 degrees, 140, 150 in the car. | ||
| You have lit, you have fluids, you have AC, does not matter. | ||
| I was, I couldn't even, I didn't even, I couldn't even tell what lap we were on. | ||
| Checkered flag flew. | ||
| I went to the pit road, fell out of the car. | ||
| Little small little golf cart ambulance came and got me. | ||
| I was in the care center hospital for two hours. | ||
| Do you practice in the sauna then? | ||
| No. | ||
| Well, I mean, you just acclimate over the course of like a year. | ||
| And then by the time you get there, you'll be racing with new guys and you'll be telling them, hydrate, man, hydrate, hydrate, hydrate. | ||
| And they won't listen. | ||
| And 20 laps in, they're getting out of the car. | ||
| And I don't even feel, I don't feel anything anymore. | ||
| I get out. | ||
| I'm like. | ||
| Salt water, too. | ||
| Like put a little salt in the water. | ||
| Yeah, I use, I use liquid IVs. | ||
| I'll drink several of those. | ||
| Sauna's good. | ||
| The more I'm in there at 160, the easier it becomes. | ||
| Yeah, you just got to acclimate. | ||
| And once you acclimate, it's almost like you, it's trial by fire. | ||
| You just do it. | ||
| There's these weird muscles in your wrists and stuff. | ||
| You just acclimate. | ||
| All right. | ||
| We'll grab this from Olivia. | ||
| She says, Michigan's State Education Board passed new standards for sex ed, including LGBTQ education. | ||
| There was over three hours of debate, and over 100 citizens there asking them to not pass these standards and they didn't care. | ||
| Opinions on how to stop this from happening when we can go to these meetings and they don't listen. | ||
| I have no idea. | ||
| What I can say is, because as a professional complainer, I can look at things, point at them, and say, that's bad. | ||
| I imagine things like this are what's fomenting the idea of civil war. | ||
| When parents are showing up and saying no, and we've seen dozens, if not hundreds of these videos go viral where parents jump at meetings or it's town hall meetings and they're like, stop, don't do this. | ||
| And they go, we're going to do it anyway. | ||
| You wonder what their motivation is and why they're doing it, even though the people are saying don't do it. | ||
| Sooner or later, people snap and say, it doesn't work. | ||
| There's an idea called a pressure release valve. | ||
| There has to be a moment at which you let some of the pressure out, otherwise it explodes. | ||
| It seems like these jurisdictions intentionally want people to go insane, to feel like there's no way out and the system doesn't work. | ||
| Because that's where I feel like a lot of people are. | ||
| Either intentionally, they want them insane or they just don't care. | ||
| And it's collateral damage. | ||
| It works on a big scale too. | ||
| I mean, there's several policies in Washington that 80% of Americans are all agreeing on, and it makes no pace, no grounds, doesn't get any better. | ||
| Yeah, I mean, this is a long time coming. | ||
| The bottom line is it's not going to change overnight. | ||
| It's all your own will. | ||
| So, you know, get together with your group, look to like a moms for liberty, start a chapter, start getting direction from them, go after a few of these people who are the worst offenders on the school board and flip it. | ||
| But it's going to take constructive work to get that back. | ||
| But it's criminal that this is happening. | ||
| There's other mechanisms. | ||
| Obviously, some in the court, you may not get any sort of relief. | ||
| Other politicians making the mayor or whoever answer for this stuff. | ||
| But it comes down to community organizing. | ||
| 100%. | ||
| Indeed. | ||
|
unidentified
|
All right. | |
| Let's see what we got here. | ||
| We got more. | ||
| Brian says, Tim, have you seen that video of the woman beating the hell out of her 12-year-old? | ||
| What are your thoughts on corporal punishment? | ||
| That video was her just mercilessly beating the kid, right? | ||
| I think spankings are fine. | ||
| I don't know. | ||
| I don't know if I agree with spankings. | ||
| Maybe a bop on the head or something, which funny because I'm sure a lot of people would be like, that's worse than a spanking. | ||
| And it's like, I'm not saying mercilessly beat your kid, not at all. | ||
| But I don't know that I don't know what spanking does, creates fear of the child, of your authority. | ||
| I mean, you can literally just grab your kid if they're doing something bad and they can't do anything about it. | ||
| You don't need to hit them. | ||
| I'm not opposed to it for the most part. | ||
| It's funny because when you look at spanking as an adult, it's so weak. | ||
| It's like you're putting almost nothing into it. | ||
| But to the kid, it's like the worst pain they've ever felt. | ||
| It's because they're small and they're weaker. | ||
| That video, that lady was just beating that kid. | ||
| You guys see this one? | ||
| No. | ||
| She like grabbed him by the hair and like whipped him up and she was like smacking him. | ||
| Like that was just her being angry. | ||
| And like as a parent, I'm not a parent right now, but I would imagine one of your roles is you're the safety zone that the kid can run to if they ever get bopped in the head. | ||
|
unidentified
|
Yeah. | |
| Yeah. | ||
| Well, I think, I think it's more shame than it is pain. | ||
| Like when you're getting spanked, it's like a light spank, like Tim was saying. | ||
| It's more shame than it's pain. | ||
| I think I'm for it. | ||
| And because I experienced that growing up all the time. | ||
| I get bad grades. | ||
| My dad would wear me out. | ||
| And I think it made me, I feel like it made me a better person. | ||
| And it also, I mean, it made me fear my father at those times, but it made me respect him a lot, especially nowadays as a 35-year-old man. | ||
| Did you get better grades? | ||
| I did. | ||
| Yeah, I did. | ||
| But then I dropped out of school in ninth grade. | ||
| But yeah. | ||
| Go ahead. | ||
| No, go ahead. | ||
| Well, like, I recall like getting hit by my mother, getting spanked by my mother. | ||
| I don't recall ever getting spanked by my father, but my mother would spank me and I would still keep doing whatever it was that would upset her, whatever, pissed her off. | ||
| But then she'd be like, wait till your father gets home. | ||
| And that's when all the games ended. | ||
| That was, dude, that was when my mom would say, wait till your dad gets home. | ||
| I would get quiet and go hide under my bed for hours. | ||
| And like I said, I cannot remember my father ever disciplining me like that. | ||
| It was always the same boat there. | ||
| I mean, when we were little kids, our mom, you know, I think it's what you're saying, the fear of laying down your parents. | ||
| And one of my mom used to have saying, like, I don't know if you can change, but I can. | ||
| And we were always like, she's going to stop loving us. | ||
| She would call us in the kitchen and she'd like take the kitchen spoon and she'd be like going right before she sent us off, you know, and like she would slap it down and we'd like go running out of the place. | ||
| But sometimes she like hit it so hard that the spoon broke. | ||
|
unidentified
|
Yeah. | |
| And then she laughed a little bit later. | ||
| But that kind of ended the spanking stuff. | ||
| But yeah, I think that raising your children is your domain as a parent. | ||
| And we don't have to reinvent something that's been passed through millennia that said, you know, a lot of these pernicious kind of new age ways of parenting are ushering in this, you know, that leads to that poor woman. | ||
| We had it in my school. | ||
| I got paddled all the time at school. | ||
| Really? | ||
| Really? | ||
| Yeah, like the end of the day. | ||
| The riding with your left hand? | ||
| Yeah. | ||
| No, I had a teacher. | ||
| He was, we called him Coach Ball is his name. | ||
| And he held like the home run record at LSU baseball. | ||
| Dude was just a monster. | ||
| And he'd be like, you would, and it was crazy because this was definitely not okay. | ||
| Okay. | ||
| I'm not in agreeance with this, but he, if you missed three questions on your homework, three, you would get a paddling. | ||
| So paddling. | ||
| Paddling right. | ||
|
unidentified
|
Yeah. | |
| And he would say, it's honey time, Dennison. | ||
| And I'm like, no. | ||
| So he'd take you out in the hallway right beside the door. | ||
| Everybody could hear it. | ||
| And an LSU home run guy would just wear it back and just knock you just three licks. | ||
| And I, and that was, my dad would spank me. | ||
| You know, it was more shame. | ||
| You know, he'd give me some good licks. | ||
| It was more shame when Coach Ball hit me. | ||
| I could, I left my body and I could see myself screaming. | ||
| Kids that are being abused do. | ||
| They beat their body. | ||
| It causes generational trauma. | ||
| I think that guy, that ball in prison for doing that kind of thing. | ||
| Oh, he died. | ||
|
unidentified
|
That's a pedaling. | |
| Looking out the window. | ||
| That's a peddling. | ||
| Staring at my handles. | ||
|
unidentified
|
That's a pedlin. | |
| Paddling the school canoe. | ||
| Oh, you better believe that's a pedal. | ||
| They've done it all. | ||
| That's literally Coach Ball, yeah. | ||
| Or in elementary school. | ||
| In the school canoe or elementary school principal. | ||
| He had a paddle on the wall, but they never used it. | ||
| It would be like, we've retired it, but this is what they used to use here. | ||
| I remember it real distinctly. | ||
| All right. | ||
| Let's grab more. | ||
| I love when Discord hides the name. | ||
| We got Tiny Treehands. | ||
| He says, question for the panel. | ||
| Since 2018, we've known of a communist infiltration in the U.S. military. | ||
| Spencer Rapone. | ||
| Since we've had NCOs and other high-ranking officers openly pushing against defying Trump and his actions agenda, how do we rectify the situation? | ||
| Have we reached the point of no return? | ||
| P.S. If you haven't subscribed to the Boonies HQ, you kind of suck. | ||
| Oh, you got to do it. | ||
| Thanks for having the kids, Tim. | ||
| You've created four new skaters. | ||
| Wonderful. | ||
| I got to say, they tried doing the inverse. | ||
| When under Biden, they were trying to purge pro-American military service members. | ||
| They said the Gadsden flag was a hate symbol. | ||
| That's the Virginia flag. | ||
| South Carolina, that's Charleston, South Carolina. | ||
| That you can buy license plates with it. | ||
| And so they were trying to purge these people from military. | ||
| Yeah, we are in a really dangerous spot. | ||
| I don't got any good answers for you. | ||
| Well, you know, here you have to respect the chain of command. | ||
| And hopefully that person's in the military. | ||
| He or she's going to be running those people up to their superiors. | ||
| And if not, the inspector general. | ||
| We need politicians who are going to stand up and back our servicemen and women from this sort of thing. | ||
| I think the Secretary Heg Seth has got the Department of War right now on the right footing. | ||
| But what happened needs to be accounted for. | ||
| The people were forced to take the jabs and run out of the armed service. | ||
| Those people need to be welcomed back in, back pay, and also some accountability for the people who never granted and really terrorized them. | ||
| So, when in until kind of the terrorists, if you will, who did this sort of thing get their comeuppance, this is going to keep happening. | ||
| Yeah, and remember, Paul, though, remember, we were never forced to take the jab. | ||
| You were just going to lose everything if you did. | ||
| You know, totally, totally not forced. | ||
| You just couldn't fly, couldn't do anything. | ||
|
unidentified
|
And it's true. | |
| I mean, you look at the number of flag officers and Trump's moving to move this down. | ||
| They famously had that big meeting of everyone, but just the great inflation, if you will, in the military. | ||
| And many of these folks have never actually fought in a war or at least won one, if you will. | ||
| So it's like cutting, reforming the military. | ||
| Right now, we have the big budget is coming up in December for renewal. | ||
| And it should be put front and center to make sure that not only would that budget come a passage, but actually an accounting of what happened. | ||
|
unidentified
|
All right. | |
| We got Garrett Targaryen. | ||
| He says, question for the guest. | ||
| I see a lot of people talking about, quote, we need babies and keep making more children. | ||
| And that is about the next generation. | ||
| As a father, I too look to see my daughter's future and look to ensure it's a good one. | ||
| But as I see AI taking over jobs and continue layoffs, I worry for all our children's future and how they will be able to work. | ||
| So I ask you, Paul Danz, as a senator, how will you ensure that our future generation will not be taken over by AI? | ||
| Look, I worry about the same things. | ||
| It's right at my heart as an MIT guy, but also a dad now four and soon to be five. | ||
| That's the whole reason I'm running for the Senate. | ||
| I'm trying to make this very human-centric because this is why we exist. | ||
| God put us on this earth to love us and be happy and one day seek eternal life. | ||
| That said, you know, we have to be internally vigilant with these forces. | ||
| I do not believe we should ever be in a position where you're saying, I can't have kids because I'm afraid what AI could do to them. | ||
| But I even back up. | ||
| We shouldn't be in a position now where people say, I can't have kids because I can't afford it. | ||
| That's something y'all should be very upset about. | ||
| That's your birthright to live in this country, and it's your birthright to pass it on to the next generation and the next generation. | ||
| So we start by actually focusing on America first, putting politicians in who are going to make life better for the people back home. | ||
| Stop with the foreign wars. | ||
| Stop with this, you know, killing Russians, best money we ever spent. | ||
| No, the best money we're ever going to spend is actually investing back here at home. | ||
| And you should have your kids. | ||
| Go ahead and have them. | ||
| We will face that brave new world. | ||
| But look, that's where the true enjoyment is going to come from, too. | ||
| That's where you're going to get your meaning from your kids. | ||
| It's going to draw you closer to God. | ||
| It's going to make you live a richer life. | ||
| So I encourage everyone to do the, to do your, you know, like Charlie said, you know, go to church, get married, have kids. | ||
|
unidentified
|
All right. | |
| Romanation says, Tim, what's your opinion on the failed censure of Stacey Plaskett and what does this mean for the future of holding congressional members accountable for high crimes and misdemeanors? | ||
| It was actually to remove her from her committees as well. | ||
| Well, Republicans cut a backroom deal for Corey Mills. | ||
| I think it's scummy. | ||
| And this is, again, it's a part of the same line of voting isn't changing things and people are ready to burst. | ||
| Donald Trump has done a lot of great stuff. | ||
| I'm happy a lot with it, but people feel unsatisfied. | ||
| For whatever reason, you might argue, you know, he's done well. | ||
| He's not done well enough. | ||
| Doesn't matter. | ||
| People feel like the pressure isn't getting released. | ||
| And, you know, in my lifetime, my view has been that the purpose of the left-right politics shift was that the Republican Party was the pressure release valve. | ||
| They were the Washington generals to the Democrats, Harlem Globetrotters. | ||
| Democrats would set everything on fire. | ||
| Republicans would put out 70% of the fire. | ||
| People would feel like, oh, finally some relief. | ||
| But then Republicans would lose power while the fire was still raging and Democrats would burn way more down. | ||
| And then Trump came in and reversed that quite a bit. | ||
| But it doesn't feel like he's actually stopping the machine. | ||
| He's just putting a hold on it. | ||
| How do you get rid of 20 million illegal immigrants? | ||
| They've so far, what, around 3 million are gone and only about 600,000 came through direct action. | ||
| So it's worrying that Stacey Plaskett was bought by Epstein, a puppet of Epstein, at being controlled by Epstein, and they couldn't even slap her on the wrist. | ||
| People are going to explode, man. | ||
| People are tired. | ||
| They're tired because, you know, in the 80s, 90s, or whatever, you generally could live your life. | ||
| You could focus on politics. | ||
| You could kind of keep aware of it. | ||
| You could turn on mainstream media news. | ||
| You could do all these things. | ||
| But the corruption, everybody, there was people, some people knew, but now it's on a grand stage where anybody with a cell phone can just see that these elites that are in control of us can pretty much do anything, get away with anything. | ||
| And they are legitimately above the law, let's be honest. | ||
| Whereas somebody like me would go to prison for 15 years for some minor offense, you can almost kill somebody if you're in office. | ||
| And depending on who you are, you can get away with it with like backroom deals, like you said. | ||
| And everybody can see it, not just people that are hyper-focused or directly involved in it, which is making everybody, everybody just fatigued over it. | ||
| They're tired of seeing it. | ||
| They're tired of watching one of their family members go to jail over a minor, a minor infraction or have a huge fine and watch politicians pretty much get either pardoned or just have zero accountability levied on them. | ||
| Yeah. | ||
| Gonna go for it. | ||
| I was gonna change the subject. | ||
| Josh just told me that Mom Dami and Trump are live right now. | ||
| The show's gonna air later tonight. | ||
| I don't know if they're live. | ||
| I think they wrapped the meeting already. | ||
| Yeah, yeah. | ||
| We have the clips, of course. | ||
| That's good. | ||
| It was funny. | ||
| He said the only thing we have in common is we want the city to do well. | ||
| I congratulate him for being married. | ||
| He ran an incredible race. | ||
| Did they talk to each other? | ||
| That was a meeting they had, a public meeting? | ||
|
unidentified
|
Yeah. | |
| And what I'm seeing about so far was like, okay. | ||
| It was amicable. | ||
|
unidentified
|
Yeah, yeah. | |
| Trump wasn't looking to just beat up on him. | ||
| And apparently, Omdani didn't go in there and just sit there and say, Trump loves news. | ||
| If there was something, I would pull it up. | ||
| But Trump being like, nice to meet you, I don't think is worth interrupting. | ||
| Sorry. | ||
| All right, we got to jump to Pilgrim Serge Vibes. | ||
| Says, Cody, what's your favorite car brand and why is it Toyota? | ||
| I don't know. | ||
| I know a lot of people catch heat. | ||
| If we're talking like American-made, I'm going to catch heat. | ||
| I mean, I guess Toyota is technically American-made in most aspects nowadays, but I would probably say Ford. | ||
| I know a lot of people hate that, but I just, I love old 67, 68, 71 Mustangs. | ||
| I love the 2015 17 Mustangs. | ||
| I just love them. | ||
| I know how to work on them. | ||
| I've built a ton of the old vintage ones. | ||
| So if I had to go that route, as far as American Made, I would choose Ford. | ||
| Anything else, I really love Audi. | ||
| I know I've had a bunch of them, and there's always issues. | ||
| I had an R8, and it was my favorite thing I've ever driven, bar none, not even close. | ||
| So I think that would be my favorite international. | ||
| Does NASCAR use electric cars yet? | ||
| No. | ||
| Would they win if they were participating? | ||
| Batteries wouldn't last long enough. | ||
| Yeah, that's pretty wild. | ||
| How many times do you refuel? | ||
| A couple times. | ||
| It depends on the race. | ||
| It can be anywhere from two to six times. | ||
| Could they swap out batteries mid-race? | ||
| They do that in Formula E, or they used to do that in Formula E. | ||
| So, like, they would, a driver would come in and, like, pit and just get out and get in another car. | ||
|
unidentified
|
What? | |
| Same looking and take off. | ||
| Yeah, that's what they used to do in Formula Range. | ||
| Well, that's electric for you. | ||
| Yeah. | ||
| This could theoretically work is they pull in and then they just pull the battery out, put a new battery in. | ||
| Yeah. | ||
| Yeah. | ||
| But I think as far as it's an American sport, it's a spectacle. | ||
| People, you know, we're drinking in the stands. | ||
| You want it to be as fast, as loud, and as obnoxious as possible. | ||
| And I don't think going electric will benefit it. | ||
| Not to mention, I think there's a lot more danger to the gigantic lithium batteries in Iraq. | ||
| Yeah, you need lithium sulfur. | ||
| They're experimenting with those too out of rice university in Texas. | ||
| Lithium sulfur doesn't explode at low temperatures. | ||
| What they should do is, you know, how the buses in Seattle have that thing that attaches to the power lines and that's how it powers them? | ||
| That's what the race should be. | ||
| Yeah. | ||
| Oh, yeah, like those old, like those old slot cars. | ||
| It could get to a point where they go so fast that it becomes a liability, I guess. | ||
| Yeah, yeah, you could. | ||
| No, Ian, the buses have like this big San Francisco, they do that too. | ||
| They're like the wire and then like the bus driver will get up with a big stick and like try and reconnect it. | ||
| Think about New York. | ||
| I'm like, how can you make the buses cheaper, electrify them all and connect them to a grid? | ||
| Yeah. | ||
| I make Bart says, Tim Kess, my mom would tell me, I brought you into this world and I can take you back out. | ||
| I heard that when I was younger too, and I always thought it was the law. | ||
| It's just like, mom chooses. | ||
| She's like, off to the nether world with ye. | ||
| Yeah, even Genghis Khan. | ||
| All right. | ||
| Settle stuffing station says, question for the panel. | ||
| We'll get one last one in here. | ||
| What role should government regulation play in shaping AI's development and deployment in America? | ||
| How can policymakers balance innovation with security and accountability? | ||
| I have no good answers. | ||
| I can only explain to you that if we don't do it, they will. | ||
| And whether or not you like that statement, it is true. | ||
| And the direction the U.S. has taken then is full bore, no holds barred. | ||
| Who cares? | ||
| We don't want to be on the back end. | ||
| That's, yeah, I kind of hold it. | ||
|
unidentified
|
Good luck. | |
| I hold that opinion. | ||
| I think it's something that it's so hard to regulate. | ||
| And it's like stopping the horse. | ||
| It's like making more taxes on automobiles in the early 20th century because we have our horse and buggy economy that's driven and we're going to try to stifle this new technology. | ||
| And I just don't think it's possible. | ||
| And in my opinion, I think we should go full bore because I'm not exactly afraid of it. | ||
| I think there's a lot of bad things that can come of it, but I also think there's a lot of good tools that can come of it if we choose to utilize it correctly. | ||
| I just, I have to jump in because Mom Donnie just called Trump a fascist in the Oval Office. | ||
| Phil was like, it's not his confident fascist. | ||
| He heard you. | ||
| He felt your presence, Phil. | ||
| Hold on. | ||
|
unidentified
|
He asked about your comment calling the president a fascist. | |
| And your answer was, but President Trump and I have been clear about our positions and our views. | ||
| Are you affirming that you think President Trump is a fascist? | ||
| I've spoken about that. | ||
|
unidentified
|
Okay, you can just say it. | |
| Yo, wow. | ||
| That's one for the age. | ||
| Trump just knows how to do it, man. | ||
| That's okay. | ||
| You can just say yes. | ||
| It's easier than explaining it. | ||
|
unidentified
|
I love that guy. | |
| Wow. | ||
| I think to answer that super chat or that question, I think that we could use the U.S. government to build and sustain an artificial intelligence that software code is completely open and that it can become the best AI on the planet that everyone uses that overrides all these garbage corporate proprietary AIs that will be competing for dominance and turning on their masters. | ||
| And that might be like the freedom that the world needs. | ||
| All right, everybody. | ||
| That about does it for us. | ||
| Smash that like button. | ||
| Share the show with everyone you know. | ||
| Stay tuned. | ||
| There's always more to come. | ||
| We're back throughout the weekend with clips. | ||
| And then, of course, next week is Thanksgiving, but we will have two shows. | ||
| We're going to have Monday and Tuesday. | ||
| Now, I know we've always tried to do Wednesday before Thanksgiving, and it's always been a disaster. | ||
| People canceling at the very last minute. | ||
| Everybody's like, I need to drive and fly. | ||
| And we are like, no, no, no, good point, good point. | ||
| So just two days next week. | ||
| However, I will be here and will probably be working because I don't know what else I would do if I wasn't working. | ||
| As I've pointed out before, I'm not going home for, I'm not going to Chicago anymore because of how violent, dangerous, and political things have gotten. | ||
| And so we're going to be, I'm going to be having my family Thanksgiving out here. | ||
| And then for the week, we're just here. | ||
| So again, smash that like button. | ||
| Follow me on X and Instagram at Timcast. | ||
| Paul, do you want to shout anything out? | ||
| Hey, I appreciate everyone's support. | ||
| We can get rid of this warmonger, this 70-year-old childless crook. | ||
| I am running against Lindsey Graham in South Carolina for the next generation, for even our existing generations that need help. | ||
| So go to pauldans.com. | ||
| Donate if you can. | ||
| Follow us online. | ||
| Push out the message. | ||
| Send your prayers. | ||
| We are really climbing in the polls right now. | ||
| Lindsay is the most vulnerable U.S. Senator. | ||
| Liberation Day is next June 9th, 2026, the Republican primary. | ||
| So follow us online. | ||
| Get behind us. | ||
| Send 20 bucks. | ||
| If you can, send 100. | ||
| But, you know, this is part of how you get back your democracy, putting in real America first people. | ||
| And happy Thanksgiving. | ||
| It's not a holiday. | ||
| Just wish people happy Thanksgiving. | ||
| Right on. | ||
| Come follow me on Camelot331 on YouTube at Camelcast Off on Twitter and X. Please give me some love on there. | ||
| I could definitely use it. | ||
| And happy Thanksgiving to everybody. | ||
| It's a holiday that I cherish that I don't get to celebrate much anymore because my family is kind of fragmented, a lot of deaths. | ||
| So we don't really get together anymore because there's not many of us left. | ||
| So I'll be streaming on that day like I always do every year. | ||
| So you can join me on Camelot 331 on YouTube. | ||
| And y'all have a good holiday. | ||
| Thank you. | ||
| Please do. | ||
| Give thanks and appreciate what you got because that's the essence of kindness. | ||
| It's a virtue. | ||
| If you want to be Christ-like and embody Christ, be kind, which means appreciate what you have. | ||
| The opposite of that, the sin is envy. | ||
| Envy is when you wish that it was better. | ||
| You know, it's just, I have it. | ||
| It's just so bad. | ||
| Me, the problem, like you need to appreciate these things, the people and the things you have around you. | ||
| And you'll find that that leads you to utilize them and to improve upon it. | ||
| So kindness, thanks. | ||
| Thank you, Phil. | ||
| Cheers, man. | ||
| I am Phil That Remains on Twix. | ||
| The band is all that remains. | ||
| We just did a collab with Puck Hockey. | ||
| You can go to PuckHockey, P-U-C-K-H-C-K-Y.com to check it out. | ||
| There's a bunch of hockey jerseys, basketball jerseys, all that remains style. | ||
| So you can check them out at puckhockey.com. | ||
| You can check out all that remains, 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 throughout the weekend. |