Drug Lord & Ex Olympian CAPTURED, FBI Says Ryan Wedding CAUGHT | Timcast IRL
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I don't know if it was directed energy weapons that lit that fire in Maui, but there's a lot of blue roofs that were from the fire with an Oprah said the fire.
From ABC News, Ryan Wedding, former Olympian turned FBI most wanted fugitive, was arrested.
Ryan Wedding, the former Olympic snowboarder, investigators said has been leading a major drug ring, has been arrested.
U.S. officials announced on Friday.
The 44-year-old Canadian was on the FBI's top 10 most wanted list in connection with the indictments that allege he's responsible for tracking multi-ton quantities of cocaine from Colombia to Canada and connected with several murders for hire in Canada and Mexico.
At my direction, Department of Justice agents and FBI have apprehended yet another member of the FBI's top 10 most wanted list, Ryan Wedding.
The one-time Olympian snowboarder turned alleged violent cocaine king.
The U.S. Attorney General Pam Bondi said in an ex-post, Wedding was flown to the United States where he will face justice.
Look, I don't, I just found out about this story.
We were doing the culture war earlier.
But again, is the DOJ an agency that we can rely on?
It seems like they've been putting some effort into doing stuff after a year of basically a year of false starts.
But then as a justice maker, you can't just go off of emotions and appease people and give them the bloodthirst, you know.
So then you end up looking like the bad guy and your mistakes get blown out of proportion and your successes go under the radar sometimes when you're doing the right thing.
It's the curse.
You know, it's a curse of being a good person in life a lot of times.
Yeah, I mean, look, the people that the people, most of the people, not everybody, but most of the people that seem to be most wanted by the internet, it is really based off of emotion.
They want to see their political enemies or people they deem as the bad guy.
They want to see them wrapped up regardless of whether or not there's enough evidence.
And look, if you're going to make the argument, well, they went after Donald Trump and there was little evidence or they created a situation where Donald Trump was guilty of things or they could say that Donald Trump was guilty of things.
I'm right there with you.
I totally think that most of the stuff that they went after Donald Trump, actually probably all of the stuff that they went after Donald Trump for was fabricated or somehow engineered to make it look like it was worse than it was.
Like the 34 felonies, like all that stuff was BS.
They changed the laws so that way Donald Trump could be indicted on the Gene Carroll stuff.
So I'm right there with you.
I agree.
But that doesn't mean that the right should go or this DOJ, more to the point, should be trying to fabricate stuff to get people.
I think that there's enough evidence of actual wrongdoing where they can legitimately say, look, the people that we're arresting, they're either guilty or we have enough evidence to believe they're guilty of crimes.
There's a lot of like illegal immigration and organizations, NGOs that are tied to those people that they can pull strings on and find out, well, who paid who, paid who, paid who.
And they can go to the top of the top and then they can give it to the executive branch and be like, maybe they were Mexican cartels.
Like, so there's a lot of people that want to see, you know, Antifa wrapped up.
They want to see arrests of Antifa members and stuff.
And because what I'm hearing is that they're looking at RICO cases, those kind of cases take a long time to tie together.
You can't just say, oh, we think all these people are connected because they all wore black block, or they were in black block or all they wore black to a protest.
You actually have substantial ties to make a RICO case stick.
And the last thing the DOJ wants to do is arrest people and not have things stick because that's not going to make anybody happy either, right?
Like if they were to go and arrest a bunch of people and say, well, you guys are all Antifa, right?
The DOJ doesn't follow through or they're not able to put people in jail.
The people that are up in arms right now, it'll only inflame those people.
They're only going to say, well, we can't trust the government.
We can't trust the judges.
So now you'll end up having people starting, even you'll have more people saying that we need to go to extreme measures and we need to take things into our own hands.
And that's not something we want at all.
Drugs, Adrenaline, and Complicated Behaviors00:15:33
Now, what I also find interesting is that from the outside, looking at it, I would think that anyone who's an Olympian and crushing it is not going to need to move cocaine and drugs across state lines.
And so I'm curious how much of this is, hey, you get all this celebrity notoriety clout and your lifestyle increases and now you got to maintain this status so then you get into shady stuff.
Or if this dude was always into shady stuff and it just all amplified as he became more high-profile.
No, but I mean, I imagine he had sponsorships, he had a lot of notoriety and stuff.
So I'm just thinking that, like, again, this is just, you know, I'm just imagining this, but like he's after the adrenaline.
And a lot of people that end up in, you know, doing any kind of criminal activity, a lot of times they're, they're after the high of getting away with it, you know, and the money is nice, obviously, if you're, you're moving that much cocaine, you know, you're making a boatload of money.
But like, I'm wondering, is it, was the motivating factor of the money or was the motivating factor like, I'm beating the law, you know, they can't catch me.
I think the adrenaline's part of it, but also, and you saw with the NBA story, it's the same thing.
It's like these people have connections.
You know, the higher you get, the more famous you become.
You are connected to people with money and influence and stuff.
And, you know, you start doing a little bit here and there.
You have people, you know, the people that have the connections.
They want the product.
And, you know, so to your point, Phil, I do think there's a little bit of the adrenaline, but also it's, he's in the right place at the right time and he knows the right.
As a former libertarian, I personally don't find that argument compelling anymore.
And a lot of the reason is not that the DOJ and the government doesn't spend a lot of money trying to enforce the drug laws.
It's the results of having drugs very accessible.
You look at places like California, basically the whole West Coast, right?
Portland, Oregon, Washington State.
You can see the homeless population and you can see the absolute havoc that those drugs have wreaked on the homeless population.
There's a lot of people that if they didn't have access to drugs, if they didn't have the ability to shoot up wherever they wanted, or not wherever they, well, basically wherever they want, on the street, if they didn't have the ability to do that, they would be more inclined to do the things necessary to have a house.
If you can stay in Southern California, live on the streets where it's basically always nice, you don't have to worry about getting shelter from snowstorms.
Yeah, you're not going to worry about it.
Like if you're in San Diego, you get a nice jacket and even the chilly mornings, you're fine.
And you can shoot up drugs without the police coming and telling you you got to move along, without having to worry about the government trying to enforce drug laws on you.
There's a lot of allure to that.
There's a lot of people that are like, I will choose to do drugs.
Whereas if you constantly are getting told, you got to go, you can't do that here.
You get arrested and thrown in jail and you have to deal with all that stuff, that will make, that does, not just will, but that does make people decide that they don't want to live that lifestyle anymore.
Okay, I got 28th here, 2002, which is a long time ago.
Second, I took an oceanography class when I was in high school still, and I live in San Diego.
I live in North County.
And one of the things that oceanography class talked about in the class was talking about because the climate is so neutral where we live, that there has been documentation.
I don't know how much of this is prevalent now, but definitely in the 90s and early 2000s where other cities would ship us their homeless people.
And like what I've kind of seen, like since weed is like one of them where it's been legalized, I've seen people who would normally seek it out are seeking it out less because they can kind of get it anytime.
And the cool factor has gone away.
It's like when you tell people they can't have something, it gives it that oomph of like, oh, now I'm really going to go get it because you're telling me I can't have it.
But when you tell them they can have it, it's like kind of like alcohol.
I think if the kids trust the parents, because the parents create a really comfortable and warm and loving environment, they'll listen to them.
Because I was told, don't smoke pot or drink alcohol.
But I didn't do it until I was 23.
I didn't want to do it.
I knew it was poisonous and I thought it was problem is when you start to learn about what drug, like drug, it comes from the word meaning dried herb, basically.
It's such a vague term for thousands and tens of thousands of chemicals.
And it's the hyper addictive ones that you don't want to make legal because you just get a little taste and then it's like you're thinking about it and craving like that is crazy dangerous, especially for like people other than the Carl Hart, the doctor that you were talking about earlier, Carl Hart, who wants to be able to do that.
Yeah, most of the most of the people that are that are using drugs that are living on the streets, like there's usually a correlation between drug use, mental illness, if you're living on the streets, right?
The two things tend to be the Venn diagram is almost a circle.
I assume there are people that can recreationally use just about any drug.
I don't think that it's something that we want to say, oh, hey, it's actually okay to use heroin.
It's way too easy to overdose.
Something like heroin or any other drugs that are like opiates and stuff, you can stop your heart if you use them and stuff.
So I think that, granted, this guy, Dr. Hart, he did use heroin and it was recreational.
And he survived.
And I don't think that he's on it now anymore.
He was on Joe Rogan and talked about his experience.
He wrote a book about it.
And so that's all well and good.
But I don't think that the average heroin user does have that ability.
Look, I used to drink a whole ton.
I used to drink as much as any other alcoholic that you'd know.
And I just stopped.
It wasn't like it wasn't some, it wasn't an actual issue for me to stop.
That being said, that isn't the case for most people.
If you're drinking a lot, wake up, get drunk till you pass out, get up again, get drunk.
Doing that consistently, most of the time that ends up killing people.
That's the biggest part because I have a coca leaf where they like in South America, they'll put a little tobacco in like a leaf and they'll stick it up in their lip and they'll just kind of suck on it and you get the buzz, but you also get the tobacco.
Because they have like cocoa tea that I think is way less potent to cocaine.
Because they're adding like gasoline and all kinds of weird stuff to cocaine.
I remember I went down this rabbit hole with cocaine specifically.
I think the deeper issue is that there's a meaning crisis and a purpose crisis.
So when people lack purpose and meaning, they resort to vices.
And then, yes, it's probably a degree of genetics where you're more predisposed to being an addict.
And so if you're already predisposed to be an addict, but you don't have anything to redirect that to something constructive, productive, music, art, building a business, then you can slide into seasons of addiction.
See, I think that's probably the best argument for keeping it illegal.
Because there's a lot of people, especially nowadays as we have this crisis of meaning, like people really, without, there's, you know, religion is on the rise here in the United States, but I don't think that there's ever been a time in human history where there have been more people that are agnostic or atheist.
Right.
And without that kind of, without family, without the kind of things that religion offers, without the things the community offers, you end up with a lot of people that kind of don't have a lot of meaning.
And I think that if you were to introduce, if you legalize drugs, specifically drugs that are very dangerous for you, I think you end up with more bad results than you do good.
Nowadays, you see kids, a lot of young guys that are just kind of retreating from society.
They're going into playing video games, smoking pot all the time, watching too much porn.
And I think you'll only see those kind of behaviors compound if you were to have something like heroin being illegal.
Well, I think in California, weed is basically legalized.
And we've definitely seen spikes of petty crime, spikes of these sorts of things when you decriminalize something.
And I understand.
I don't want people going to jail for decades for weed.
Like, that's stupid as well.
At the same time, though, when you destigmatize something, then you're totally right.
Then the young person who doesn't quite understand that success and starting a family and building a business and having a stable income and having a purpose takes decades and not weeks.
What are they going to do?
They're going to wake up, smoke weed, play video games, hang out, and waste away their most crucial years of their life, which is 18 to 25.
When you should be building the foundation, you're getting stoned and playing video games all day.
I'm using very broad generality, but there is something to that.
And so in California, the weed now, because of the dispensary, is more potent.
And you start seeing the correlation between weed use with people who might have schizophrenia tendencies in their line.
And I personally know multiple people that cannabis use triggered schizophrenia because they were predisposed to it genetically.
Yeah, they started changing weed over the last couple of 20 years or something where it's like 29% THC and they strip all the CBD out of the leaf or whatever.
And it's like, bro, the CBD, the cannabinol, is like the healing aspect of the plant.
If you remove that and you just give them the hyperstimulant, the psychoactive stimulant, of course they're going to have like heart palpitations and psychotic breaks and shit.
So like that's that.
So it's almost like a different plant at that point.
Well, what it did was it put weed and heroin and cocaine all together.
So when you find out weed is like a kind of a gentle psychoactive plant, and then you're like, whoa, are they lying to me about all these other ones?
And then that's the gateway.
But if you can educate people about marijuana, the plant, and it's a completely different thing than cocaine and heroin, like opium and all these crazy fentanyl, it's like, dude, this.
Look, I have never done cocaine and never done heroin or anything like that.
And I've been around plenty of that stuff in my life, touring in a band.
You see basically everything that you could possibly want.
I've had offered to me and been around.
And I never did.
I mean, I can't speak for anyone else.
I can't speak for, you know, what anyone else's life is like.
But, you know, just because you're around it doesn't mean that you're going to do it.
And again, I think particularly to your point, if you feel like you have a fulfilled life or you have a goal in your life, something that you're after, you're far less likely to do that kind of stuff.
And I would also say that in my own life, I experienced SA as a kid, and that did a number on me in terms of pornography and all that sort of stuff.
The way addiction, the most linear way to fight addiction is twofold.
One, you remove it by creating friction, and two, you replace it with something better.
And so I understand, I understand what you're saying.
And I used to believe it, but I think when you remove as a society, we're embracing this thing and we're making it cool and we're making it more potent.
The more friction you can create for general people, I actually think the better.
But you have to give them something better.
You have to give them something to replace that meaning, purpose, God, career, something to replace that.
And that's the issue.
And so for me, if I'm looking at my own struggles and having experienced that, I have to have friction on my phone so I don't access stuff that I shouldn't be looking at.
And I'm constantly trying to create friction for the bad things.
Don't have junk food in the house.
Don't have snacks in the house and create easier pathways for the good things.
I got a gym in a tough shed.
I got access to the Bible all the time.
I have access to accountability and friends.
So I think that's the balance with addiction as a whole.
Breaking anti-ICE agitators bring U-Haul van with shields and gear to Minneapolis federal building, attempt to impede feds, ICE ERO head.
A top ICE official revealed in a Friday press conference that the agitators have descended upon Minneapolis Whipple Federal Building in an effort to impede immigration enforcement activities.
Marcos Charles, the acting executive associate director of ICE Enforcement and Removal Operations, has said, moments ago, a group of agitators, a U-Haul van filled with shields and gear decided to come over here to the Whipple building and block traffic.
They are currently trying to impede us from getting out of the building and going to do our mission.
Look, this is not new behavior from basically Antifa, right?
Like we saw this during the George Floyd riots.
You would see a whole U-Haul full of gear and stuff.
This stuff is coming from somewhere, right?
There is someone funding this kind of stuff.
Now, whether it be activists or NGOs or what have you, I think this speaks to our conversation earlier about the federal government trying to build RICO cases.
Whoever's supplying this stuff, that's who the federal government should be going after, as well as the people on the ground that are fighting with the feds.
I think both sides in this, I would love to see some degree of de-escalation.
I had Pastor Jack Hibbs on, who's friends with the Trump administration, and I asked him specifically about the ICE raids and riots.
And I'm going to take a very nuanced position.
You guys may hate me for this.
I think most people want the criminals out of this country.
I think most people want to get the criminals out.
I don't think most people signed up to get the Buelas out, to get the folks that have been here for decades out.
And I'm talking about people without criminal records.
I'm talking about people without any issues.
And so what seems to be happening is there's a sweeping.
And according to Pastor Jack Hibbs, it's twofold.
One, the people that are getting swept up that don't have criminal records, according to him, are being cut loose.
And people aren't catching wind of that.
So they'll sweep up a bunch of illegal immigrants, people that aren't supposed to be here.
These people are getting cut loose.
They're going back in, but that's never being televised.
The second thing is Trump is trying to make this law and order statement that we're going to go in.
And now, according to the sheriffs in Minneapolis, they're saying they're pulling over police officers and asking them for papers.
Like that, this seems like a bad game of chicken on that side.
We're going to escalate the use of force.
We're going to look more strong and brave.
Why?
Because we're trying to send a signal and we're trying to show who's in charge.
That's one side of it.
And then you have, to your point, this weird Antifa, possibly George Soros, whoever's funding this sort of stuff, that's now making it more and more intense and impeding on these actual investigation where I'm seeing people pull up and they're saying, hey, we're here to take out this PDF file.
You're impeding on our investigation.
And it's like, that's stupid.
And so I just feel like it's this big game of chicken to show who has the biggest balls.
And at some point, like, this is all going to hit the fan.
And I think we're only seeing a slither of what's possible when Antifa, you got the Black Panthers out in Philly that got guns on them.
Well, I think it's an interesting take, and I'm sure the chat's going nuts right now because I do think the sentiment against immigration has changed.
You know, when you say, oh, we want to go after the criminals, obviously everyone agrees with that.
But the whole get the Abuelas out, that actually is where a lot of people are right now because the Abuelas and the people that are here illegally are taking away opportunities from the younger generation.
You know, they're taking away employment opportunities.
And I actually had a really good conversation with a couple of the guests this week on this.
We're in Florida and there's a lot of construction that's going on out here.
And I thought I was going to see kind of more American labors out here.
And out here, guess what?
It's all Mexican laborers, right?
And, you know, so I was kind of talking to some of the local people about this and I was kind of surprised about it.
But like, unfortunately, what, you know, them being in those positions, A, it's like there's a whole domino effect with like how the economy works and like how the people that employ illegals and low-labor immigrants can literally price out the competition.
But even beyond that, the positions that they're in are they're they're taking those away from like the young kids, the 20-year-olds, the, you know, the 18-year-olds, the 20-year-olds, the people like these are the jobs where you cut your teeth, you meet the people, you get the networking, you learn the skills.
Like everyone, when they're younger, they have to be in these shit jobs.
And with the immigrants being in these jobs, those kids don't have that accessibility.
They don't have those opportunities.
So I think, you know, I could be wrong, but I think the position on immigration has changed because the younger generation is seeing that these people are taking away the opportunities from themselves.
Yeah, I just don't know if I buy that the Abuelas and the folks that have been here for generations and generations are taking opportunities from young men.
I don't know if I believe that.
And furthermore, didn't Trump have to flip his policy on hospitality specifically in Florida because he started getting calls saying, hey, you can't just get all these people.
To your point, Trump changing his stance on, say, migrant workers or what have you.
That's not representative of the base.
That's Trump playing to the people that are employing people.
Well, no, not the populace.
The base and the populace, the young Trump voters, they actually are upset with Trump because he's not doing enough.
The young guys are like, look, we wanted more deportations.
And they're they're a vocal, probably minority of the right.
But they are grown.
They are a growing minority and they're the ones that are going to be they're the ones that are going to be, you know, looking to be activists or involved in the the the administration.
I do think that the average person will say, yeah, I think we should probably send illegals out.
Now, I understand you bring up grandparents and stuff like that.
And fair enough, they're not high on the list of people to get.
And if the Trump administration is cutting people loose, if they don't have violent criminal records, that's something that the media is not going to cover because the media wants to see the sensationalism.
They want to see the confrontations because it gets clicks.
And of course, to Ian's point, there are international entities, NGOs, and stuff like that that have a stake in this as well.
But I do think that the the average Trump voter would say, yeah, we should we should send illegals back.
I would just say optically, like optically and pragmatically, you're not persuading anyone by having ICE pull up on kids, on grandmas, on police officers, but to say, show me your papers.
Again, I would just say, I think if we're talking about who's deciding the elections, if we're talking about that group in the middle, not the far right, not the far left, that whatever amount that Trump had to flip, right?
I don't think those people are looking at, not, again, not getting the criminals out, just optically.
I don't think they're looking at this and going to the bottom of the business.
I would agree with you that the 20 million that came over illegally bad policy, catch and release in America versus catch and release in Mexico, terrible, terrible.
I'm not talking about those people.
I'm talking about DACA recipients.
I'm talking about folks that have been here for decades and decades and decades.
Oh, am I?
Again, my post on it, I would say I don't think people are pumped on that.
I think there's a huge young Gen Z base that is very conservative, that supports MAGA and Trump.
And I think they're looking around saying, hey, we don't have any opportunities.
And these landscaping jobs, these construction jobs actually do pay very well.
They're supposed to at least.
And they have good benefits and they're not available because people that shouldn't be here are in those positions and we're able to pay them less to do the job.
Yeah, I guess I would say I don't know how many young people are lining up to do landscaping and construction and are having these opportunities taken from.
So TaskRabbit is an app where you can go on, you can sign up, and you can provide skills like assembling IKEA furniture, painting houses, you name it.
It's a contact.
From plumbing all the way to electrical stuff, right?
I know multiple people that are getting on TaskRabbit that are pursuing.
I got a buddy of mine.
He's the number one guy in New York.
He's a comedian in that scene, making well over six figures on TaskRabbit, owning his labor, going direct to consumer and building out an amazing network of people that he keeps going back to, whether it's painting, whether it's handyman stuff, whatever.
And he owns work.
And TaskRabbit takes a small percentage like Uber or Lyft or whatever.
So I know people are going to like, but I want the construction job that you had 20 years ago.
And I go, or you can get your butt on TaskRabbit and go build that out and actually make more money, make 10, 15 grand a month by doing this sort of thing.
My father was a, he owned his own business for most of my life.
And one of the things that when he was about to start the business, one of the things my grandfather said was, don't do it.
He's like, don't.
You need to get a job.
You need to have that job security.
You know, you're going to have to, you're going to need to make sure that you're going to have a job next week and the week after and blah, blah, blah.
There are people that not, that don't want to live in the pod.
My grandfather, you know, he was a member of the greatest generation.
You know, like he wasn't a guy that was like, oh, you know, I wanted, want to have this easy life or whatever.
He was very familiar with working.
But the idea of working for yourself is not appealing to everybody.
Are sitting around their house and they're waiting to get a job offer from somebody that a job that they think doesn't exist because grandma is 80 years old and listen to me for a second.
Like, unfortunately, the economy that we're in right now, like, you're filling out hundreds and hundreds of applications and you're doing dozens and dozens of interviews before you're even given a job.
The argument here is that because we have illegals in these positions, those opportunities are not even available.
And so what I'm saying is, though, sitting back and complaining about the Jays, about the immigrants, taking your opportunities is not going to get you directly to what you actually want.
Yeah, you can, that's, again, you're talking about whether or not there is opportunity versus what basically boils down to people's feelings about immigration.
And the argument that some immigration does take jobs, that's just true, right?
Whether or not you think that that's justification for deporting people.
But the people that, when it comes to actual deportations, it's more than just, oh, an economic factor or job factor.
There are people that are like, look, I want to live around people like me.
And whether you agree with that or whether you think that's moral or think it's okay to have that opinion, there are a lot of people that are like, look, the people that we're bringing in, the people that have immigrated here, they're actually changing what America is.
And so it's a multifaceted topic when it comes to immigration.
The point that I'm making is the U-Hauls of Weapons were at the George Floyd riots because those are leftist agitators looking to destabilize the country.
The optics are something they should always think about.
Yes.
But the idea that these kind of things are causing the left to do things, that's not the case at all.
The left is doing things because the left is taking advantage of the situation.
So even if ICE was completely benign and they were very gentle about it, and say part of the reason actually is because the Minneapolis Police Department doesn't turn people over to ICE.
And that is part of the plan.
The Minneapolis police say, no, we're not going to turn them over.
We're a sanctuary city, so ICE has to come in.
And then the leftists have the opportunity to say, see, look, the DOJ, Trump's a Nazi, blah, blah, blah.
It is not that the left is an effect of this stuff.
But to Phil's point, to Phil's point, what he's saying is Trump can come out and say the water is blue and the left's going to use that to try and tear on the company or the country.
I completely agree.
And to your point, Ian, no, maybe ice isn't the way.
But like what needs to happen is like the consumer itself.
Like we have to look at, you know, when we're hiring landscaping, are they using mostly migrant workers?
Maybe we have to pay more to hire the landscaping company that uses all-American workers.
Maybe we have to buy the product that's made with all-American parts.
Like there is something that the consumer can do to push back on this that will then create opportunities in America.
You just have to get people to understand like how important their dollar is.
The point was the people that are marketing and hustling that are coming around and saying, hey, we'll do this thing for you.
I don't, they don't, they're not Americans.
Now, again, I'm not saying they're all illegals.
That's not my argument.
I'm saying the folks that are doing this sort of work generally seem to be Hispanic and laborers and I understand because they know they can price out the competition.
I've never even had the opportunity for someone to come door to door and say, hey, I'll do this thing for $1,500 that this guy is going to undercut me for $1,000.
We're going to jump to the related story here from the post-millennial.
Tim Walz begs for donations to his legal defense fund after DOJ subpoena over obstructing ICE.
Minnesota Governor Tim Walz has started raising money for a legal defense fund after the Department of Justice subpoenaed Walls, Minneapolis, Mayor Jacob Fry, and others for allegedly conspiring to impede law enforcement.
This also comes as there has been a massive fallout from a fraud scandal that has plagued Minnesota.
In a message sent out to supporters, Walls said, Tim Walz here, last week, the federal government opened an investigation into me.
This comes just weeks after a federal ICE agent fatally shot Renee Goode in Minneapolis.
Now, that is pretty gross.
The fact that he's bringing up Rene Good's death as a way to raise money.
Unleashing chaos across our city.
Rather than taking accountability and working to turn down the temperature, Donald Trump and his administration are fanning the flames by targeting me for demanding transparency and answers.
That's not true at all.
Let me be clear.
Weaponizing the justice system and threatening political opponents is a dangerous authoritarian tactic, and I won't let it slide.
This whole thing is BS.
This whole thing is intended to inflame.
If Tim Walz and Jacob Frye really wanted to turn the temperature down, they would have the Minneapolis Police Department actually arrest or turn over illegal aliens when they're arrested and turn them over to ICE.
But they don't because they're a sanctuary city.
They want to have those people there and they want to use this as a means to essentially blame Donald Trump and the administration for being the Gestapo.
And now he's trying to raise money off the death of Renee Good, which wouldn't have happened if they were turning the illegals over to ICE.
None of this would happen if it wasn't for the fact that Minneapolis is a sanctuary state, or I'm sorry, a sanctuary city, and Tim Walz was not.
I mean, I don't know that he's benefiting from the Somali daycare schemes, but he's definitely running interference for it.
I don't know if you can bring that up, Serge, but yeah, there's this whole Calci market up to like $2.5 million or whatever on when he's going to resign.
If he would just put money down and resign, he doesn't have to beg for money.
Yeah, I mean, look, he's as the governor and he's made it clear that Minnesota is a sanctuary state, you know, and so that means, and what a sanctuary state means is we don't cooperate with the federal government when it comes to deporting people.
I got to ask you, Rusalan, how do we, I mean, you seem like you see both sides pretty clearly or different directions you can pivot and see around in 360.
Like some people seem to think just being here makes you a criminal.
Like you were saying earlier, we have to get the criminals out.
You were indicating violent criminals, like rapists, murders, things like that.
But some people do believe if you're here illegally, you must be out.
You must get them out.
Other people are like, this area is for those people if they're peaceful.
I think every person who comes over illegally takes a risk and they know they take a risk.
And that's not just folks from South America.
I've gotten rides from folks that are here illegally that are here fleeing the war in Russia that are like Russians and I connect with them.
I've all kinds of encounters.
Every single person understands that there is a risk that you're taking here.
Who should we deport?
How should we deport them?
Doing it in an orderly way that doesn't cause more chaos.
I think that is the deeper conversation that you're pointing to.
And I think when you're impeding federal investigations, man, especially when there are criminals, when you do have criminals in custody, like, so these guys that get picked up by the Minneapolis PD, I'm assuming they didn't just get picked up for being, they did something to get arrested and then to then not hand him over to ICE seems like, again, another game of chicken.
Now we're just going to make this thing worse and throw more fire, more gasoline on the fire.
So yes, it's a tricky middle ground.
So this is the tension I deal with.
It's like, I can embrace someone's dignity as a human and the person that came over here illegally to flee the war in Russia and yet they have kids and a wife back home and they're trying to figure out how to get a lawyer.
I could have the humanity and compassion for that person in the moment while also holding the tension of, you shouldn't have done that.
I wish you hadn't done that.
I wish you would have gone through a legal process to figure out a way to get over here or found a sponsor.
That's an interesting position because it's like, even, you know, let's say Tim's right and there's a civil war here, right?
I'm not going to go to Canada.
I'm not going to go to another country illegally, knowing that I'm there illegal, lie to the authorities, take advantage of their citizens, take an opportunity from someone else.
Like you, unfortunately, you have to take care of your own.
And, you know, when you're looking at Minnesota, it's funny.
The Somali fraud that's going on there is indicative of these people that are coming over here and they're just treating it like their country and they're defrauding us.
I mean, it's insane.
So it's like, you know, I understand, you know, it's really nice.
you're Christian and you want to like see the good in these people and stuff, but they know what they're doing.
They've come here illegally and they shouldn't have.
United States invading Mexico, for instance, trying to take Canadian and Canadian territory.
I mean, look, when it comes to the United States, it's a really tough hypothetical to even entertain just because the United States, the military power that the United States is, it would be a totally different thing than what is going on in the Ukraine and Russia, right?
With Russia, like they are largely seen to be a paper tiger.
People were saying that it was going to take a few days or a couple of months before they would take Ukraine.
And because of funding from the U.S. and other European countries, Ukraine's really been able to stand up.
And it's turned into disgustingly hard trench warfare.
And it's awful, right?
And I understand why a Russian would be like, I'm getting the hell out of here.
It makes sense to me.
I understand why Ukrainians are like, no, I'm going to go fight because it's their country.
To make that same allegory to the United States is really, really difficult.
So if another candidate became president and they were like, yeah, we're escalating in the Ukraine and we're issuing a draft, we're going to send you to Ukraine tomorrow.
Again, I don't think you can't abandon your own home and you can't break into someone else's house.
And it's interesting with the Ruslan because you are an immigrant and typically the people that come here and do everything right and illegally and stuff, they're actually the most upset about illegal immigrants because they have completely cut the line.
They've taken advantage of the whole process.
I mean, how long was your process that you have to go through?
Yeah, often, and I don't want to speak with too much certainty on this, but often, at least the Russians that I know that are coming over, come over, get an attorney, and try to go through some sort of legal process.
And again, I don't know the particulars, but I know it's they're not, there's a plan in place because they're like, hey, I want to bring my wife and kid over.
And a lot of the illegal immigrants that really rub people the wrong way, rub Americans the wrong way, they have this concept in their head of they're working here and they're sending money back, right?
So, as opposed to I'm here and I'm trying to build a better life for me and I'm going to bring my family, actually, I'm just here to work and I'm going to send money back home, which is wealth extraction.
And I think, I mean, there's a connection to Somalia, Somalian money being sent over that went on to fund terrorist organizations.
So I think that's terrible.
I think perhaps the broader question, the deeper question is the type of immigrant that's coming over, are they coming to assimilate to Western values, to Western culture, to learn the language?
We came over and we all learned a language.
And you guys are like, you can't even tell an accent on me.
So we came over, we assimilated.
I am an American through and through, right?
I'm a citizen.
But I understand that there are going to be people that come over from cultures that are not congruent with Western values.
And to your point, I think that that's one of the things that most Americans have a problem with, right?
Like if you come to the United States and you become an American, you leave the old country behind, you assimilate.
Like most Americans, the vast majority of Americans are like, that's fine.
That's cool.
Whether or not there are some people on the far right that are like, no, we don't want to have any immigration or whatever.
And even though I have a pretty hardline stance on immigration and on future immigration, the whole point is to get the people that are here, or at least from my perspective, the whole point is to get people to assimilate, become Americans.
If you become an American and stop thinking of yourself as a member of the culture you came from or the home that you came from, and you actually internalized our values and you really do believe in the things that make America the country that it is and have put us in the position globally that we're in, then I'm fine with it.
So when I worked at an after-school program years and years ago, and I've met multiple people like that that have been here since they were babies, that are America.
You would meet them and you would not know that they were undocumented or whatever.
They've been here since they were babies.
They're American through and through, right?
Some of those people, when the DACA thing was trying to get overturned, were getting swept up in this.
So when I'm talking about folks that have been here 20, 30 years, again, I'm not talking about the 12 to 20 million that came over here illegally from who knows where, with what, who knows what agenda.
I'm specifically talking about folks that have been here for a while.
So when I'm saying obuelas, I'm saying she's been here 20, 30, 40 years.
And also, to your point, I think the fact that you are calling them obuelas as opposed to grandmas, that colors the imagination of people.
If they're here and they've been here a long time, and they're still speaking Spanish, there are Americans that are like, well, have they really left the old country behind?
You know, we talked about optics a little bit and earlier about the optics of ICE.
And I think that the thing that upsets people is the optics of, you know, Minnesota's changed their flag.
You know, the protests in Southern California recently where they were waving a Mexican flag.
That kind of stuff doesn't endear you to the immigrant people.
And it's really, really bad.
So when you see politicians that are siding with the people that are waving foreign flags, you see, again, politicians that'll change the state flag to represent a community in there.
So you understand my position is more pragmatic, though.
I'm talking about the folks that voted for Biden, that flipped and voted for Trump, those folks in the middle that you need to win an election, whether we want to acknowledge them or not, right?
MAGA people are always going to be the MAGA people.
Well, yeah, and the point that I'm making is, you know, Ian was alluding to this being an escalation or you know, I would agree.
And so it isn't just that, you know, one side is, you know, the bad guys in it.
Neither side wants to give up any ground.
And if you've got people in the country that are waving foreign flags, you're never going to have even the people that are a little squishy on it that are that go back and forth.
If they consider themselves Americans, they're not going to say, yeah, those people are the good Americans.
And granted, the people that are that are DACA recipients or people that have been here for 20, 30 years, they're not the ones out there protesting, waving foreign flags, but that they're representing the people that, whether they like it or not, they're representing the people that are here illegally that are just trying to keep their head down and go to work or what have you.
So this, the escalation on both sides, it's a bad thing for the DHS to be heavy-handed, but largely, to your point earlier, they're letting the guys that are non-violent go.
If that's the case, then the problem actually isn't that DHS is too heavy-handed.
It's that the way it's being cast in the media, and I would say the left-leaning media, but they're the ones that are trying to disagree.
So, back, seeing as we're talking about Waltz, Waltz went on in his statement, he said, My job is to defend Minnesotans and the rule of law, and I'm sure as hell not backing down.
But the road ahead is long, difficult, and expensive.
If you're with me, please rush a donation to our legal defense fund and help ensure we can keep fighting for accountability, transparency, and justice, he added, then offering a donation link.
So, I mean, look, this whole thing, right?
This is all about Waltz trying to raise money to defend himself against legitimate charges, which I don't, I mean, they haven't come yet, but I think Waltz and Jacob Frey are going to face charges.
I think just the fact that Minnesota is a sanctuary state is enough, in my opinion.
I think that personally, I mean, I'm a little hardline on this as well.
If you're a sanctuary state, I think the federal government should shut off all funding until you come in full compliance with federal law about immigration.
Yeah, I mean, look, if that, if, if he is in any way, you know, complicit or, you know, if he's been taking any money from that or making any money off it, I mean, toss the book at him, you know.
And I think that everyone's probably in agreement here.
I don't know that Elhan Omar is.
I think that her, I think crimes that she may have committed are totally separate from the Somali.
You know, I mean, look, if she's been involved in it, then I'm completely fine with throwing the book at all of them.
And to be honest with you, any American that hears this, that if they're found to have been fraudulent and taking money, especially in the quantities that you're talking about, I can't imagine how any American could actually say, yeah, they shouldn't be put in jail.
Like, that's the most ridiculous position to take.
These people are defrauding the taxpayer.
They're inhibiting the federal government from executing laws that were voted on in a bipartisan fashion.
There are no new immigration laws.
Like nothing's been passed through Congress at all regarding immigration.
And so these laws are the same laws that were in place during Barack Obama's term.
The same laws that Hillary Clinton swore up and down that she believed in.
I mean, you can go and Google up videos of Barack Obama talking about illegal immigrants.
And if you came here illegally, you have to go.
And Hillary Clinton saying, if you're here illegally, you have to go.
So these ideas are bipartisan.
And only now, recently in the past few years, has it become verboten for the Democrats to deport people.
No, well, not only that, part of the reason why the numbers were high is because people that would come to the border, when they turned them away, they would count those as deportations.
And, you know, again, we talked about this the other night.
The administration is offering $2,600 to anyone.
that says, I'm going to get the app for my phone and I'm going to self-deport.
Give them $2,600.
And that's because that's less money than it takes for ICE to go and round them up.
So not only are they, you know, is the government deporting people and trying to get people to the people that are criminals that are illegals, they're also trying to incentivize people that are here illegally to leave.
And they say, look, just leave and then you can file the paperwork and you can come back.
If you get picked up and found to be here illegally, then you can never come back.
You know, it is, to be completely honest, the effort that the federal government is putting in to deporting people and doing it in a humane way really is above and beyond any other country on earth.
The federal government is trying so hard to be gentle with the average, to your point, the people that are here illegally, but that are not criminals.
They're really putting a lot of effort in.
And again, I point to the fact that the left is doing everything they can to demonize the administration, demonize the rule of law, and say, look, they're trying to hurt people.
They're the Gestapo.
You hear this all the time.
Trump's a Nazi.
The ICE agents are Nazis.
They're the Gestapo, blah, blah, blah, blah.
And it's like, look, man, they're literally offering people $2,600 to leave and the opportunity to come back.
Like, you're here illegally.
We'll give you money to leave so that way you can buy a flight.
I think they might even pay for the flight too.
They do, yeah.
In addition to the $2,600.
Give you some money so you can hire a lawyer or start the paperwork or at least get yourself set up when you're back in the old country.
And then you can file the paperwork and still come back.
Like you, there is no more altruistic country on earth than the United States at all.
It's just not.
There's just not at all.
The government is being incredibly generous and it's still being treated as if they're this monstrous, horrible thing.
And it's all because the left wants this discord because it's literally an attack on the United States.
That's what I think about foreign because no president ever was okay with illegal immigration until Biden because he wasn't really the I mean, technically on paper he was, but he was just signing stuff that they were telling him to say.
He was saying stuff they were telling him to say.
I mean, the guy was like rolling, barely able to walk by the end of his term.
And then, and they use like, Trump was like, let's build a wall, which was actually, in retrospect, a pretty cool idea if you're trying to, but then some external force seems to have been like, we need to, we need to make it seem okay.
We're going to jump to this story and Ian, get ready for it.
The Department of War says, yes, the Department of War has direct energy weapons.
Yes, we are scaling them.
All right.
From the New York Post, the U.S. used powerful mystery weapon that brought Venezuelan soldiers to their knees during Maduro raid.
Witnesses account.
The U.S. used a powerful mystery weapon that brought Venezuelan soldiers to their knees, bleeding through the nose and vomiting blood during the daring raid to capture dictator Nicholas Maduro, according to a witness account posted Saturday on X by the White House press secretary.
In a jaw-dropping interview, the guard described how American forces wiped out hundreds of fighters without losing a single soldier, using technology unlike anything he has ever seen or heard.
We were on guard, but suddenly all of our radar systems shut down without any explanation, the guard said.
The next thing we saw were drones, lots of drones flying over our positions.
We didn't know how to react.
Moments later, a handful of helicopters appeared, barely eight by his count, deploying what he estimated were just 20 U.S. troops in the area.
But those few men, he said, came armed with something far more powerful than guns.
They were technologically very advanced, the guard recalled.
They didn't look like anything we fought against before.
Look, the guys that are in First Special Forces Operational Detachment Delta, those guys have the most state-of-the-art stuff.
They have an unlimited budget.
They've got night vision with thermal overlays.
They can see in the dark like no one else can imagine.
They've got the thermal in there.
So not only can they see in the dark, anything with a heat signature is put in there, they have connectivity between the whole group with these radios that are that are basically networked.
Like that's just the dudes.
Never mind the fact that all the training that they do.
And then these directed energy weapons that they're talking about, these kind of things are basically they just debilitate you.
I guess they've been tested on like crowd control and it will just make you know it makes people very uncomfortable.
It feels like they're burning.
But apparently the technology has advanced to the point where they can shoot them with these weapons and it'll make people vomit and make people's nose bleed and make you effectually totally incapacitated.
They'll have like the, like the manliest men from the army or whatever standing out in the field and, all of a sudden, like they'll walk into the field and they can't walk any you know any further because they have like a space, you know, weapon that's, that's shooting down, beaming down on them and yeah, it sounds like they're getting better.
I guess the question to you Ian, is where this technology come from where yeah, probably in some lab in China no, I don't know, some underground base in Colorado or something.
No, they're not government contractors, totally private.
Yeah, that's one of the.
That's the thing that Andrew's doing.
They're private and they want to be able to create weapons that the government will purchase, as opposed to the government saying we want to develop this weapon and then dumping a boatload of money into it, because he says that it's a much more efficient way to to to produce weapons.
If you, if you listen to some of the interviews that he does, he's like, look the way that we worked in World War Ii was we were able to change all of our manufacturing over to making tanks.
Well, you know, the Ford plant went from making Fords to making tanks and all of these different companies, this industrial base that we had, made it possible for us to just build weapons super fast.
Nowadays, if the United States were to get into a conflict, in the example that he used, if the United States were to get into a conflict with China, we're out of missiles in six days.
He's like, there is no way that we can do this.
So what Andrell's goal is, he's like, we don't want to be the weapons manufacturer for the government.
We want America to be the gun store for the world.
And they're looking to build weapons and advanced weapon systems, but he uses existing technology.
So instead of saying, oh, you have to have a special circuit board that needs all these things and it has to be built in a special plant, I want something you can go to Radio Shack and buy.
And obviously, Radio Shack doesn't really exist, but the point that he was making is I want to make these weapons out of things that currently exist.
So that way, if we get into a conflict, we can say, look, we can build these things right now and we can build 10,000 of them in the next month.
I mean, fair enough, I suppose that that could be an issue.
But when it comes to the mission statement of Andrew, his point is, I want to supply the U.S. government with the ability to defend the American government.
So I brought him up because along with other cool tech you're talking about, he said, I think he says that now the troops are networked with their head visor.
So if you see an enemy through over there, now all of a sudden he shows up on my screen and I can see him.
That's eagle eye, and it's not, it hasn't been deployed.
The guys that, the stuff that I'm talking about is it's night vision stuff that's been around for a little while and thermal stuff that's been around for a little while.
It's just that the ability to integrate the two is kind of the if it is deployed, they'll tell us it hasn't been deployed until it's really they find.
Well, if it was, if it, if it, if Palmer Lucky actually had has had sold that to the government, I don't think he would have been on Joe Rogan talking about it.
That's a totally different topic, by the way, I will say, peace through strength seems like a logical pathway in this sort of stuff.
So if we all know mutually assured destruction, we just all wipe each other out.
So I personally am for building up strong governments, building government militaries, all these sorts of things.
Uh, increasing the spending on this that might be controversial.
Uh, because I think the more weapons we have, the the more, the more your enemy is strapped and has ars, the less likely you are to try and break into his house or pick a fight with us, especially the more modern weapons you have.
You know the Russians in 35 or 38 had the most garbage tanks on the planet, which is why the Germans plowed through.
And then the T41.
Was that the tank they built?
But like what i'm interested, like to your point, Sean is lasers.
Now we may run out of missiles in six weeks days, but if we have laser weapons, which apparently we do, I was so scared that drones were going to destroy the world.
That drone warfare, swarm warfare would obliterate humanity, AI onboard drone war.
Now we have area denial lasers, so you won't even see it, but it'll knock every piece of machinery out of the sky.
Are you familiar with what the evolution of drone warfare in the Ukraine war?
So when the war started, right, they were using drones that were remote control, right?
They were all wirelessly controlled.
If you look now, there's so many drones that are actually run by fiber octave cable.
You basically get a spool that's like five, ten kilometers of fiber octave cable, and they they send the drones out connected because connected to a cable in the sky?
Tiny, tiny little filament.
No, I swear to God, bring up a picture of these crazy.
Well, what's happened is now there are videos that Serge is going to pull it up, but of just a whole landscape covered in what looks like cobwebs because they have all these drones that had the fiber optic filament.
And that's directly because you have jamming devices.
So now the idea of drone swarms coming from a ship to mainland U.S. See, that's kind of like what it looks like.
Yeah, so the fiber optic cable is actually where the controls come from.
So you can't jam them because what was happening is you could see pictures and videos of dudes with these big old backpacks with a bunch of antennas on them.
They're out at the front, and those are jammers, so that way the drones couldn't receive signals from the base.
Well, I mean, that kind of idea, I don't think that that's practical personally, just because of the fact that if you have a mothership, that's a vulnerability.
A missile would take that down.
Or interceptors, you've got, you know, the F-22 is an extremely capable interceptor.
Again, I mean, it's possible, I assume, but at this point, getting that kind of weaponry into the air is difficult.
And look, man, an F-15 shot a missile and took out a, this is in the 80s, shot a missile into space and took out a satellite.
So even being in low Earth orbit, high enough to be in orbit, but low enough where you could actually get something from orbit to the ground without burning up.
Like, how is that about seizing the capital without a sort of if the goal is to help the Iranian people, the Persians and the Iranian people, to dethrone their government, a nuclear bomb kills way too many people?
We're going to spend, you know, okay, so that's a totally different topic.
There's no reason to believe.
There's no reason to believe that the United States, if there were to be military action in Iran, there's no reason to believe that we're going to do some kind of nation building, particularly when there's the former Shah of Iran or his kid that's in the United States that set up a website that the Iranians can access talking about, you know, he wants to come back.
If the U.S. were to be able to take out the Mullahs or whoever's in charge of Iran, the goal would be to put the Shah back in charge or allow the Shah to get back in control of the country.
You don't need to wipe out everybody in the country to do that.
But again, your hypothetical is it's dragging on and on and on and the U.S. is involved.
That is a different subject than taking boots on the ground.
That is a different subject or a different goal than what I'm talking about, which is if the U.S. is trying to help free the people of Iran from the existing theocracy and they have a leader that they want, which would be the former Shah or his kid or whatever, if that's the goal, then there's not American boots on the ground forever.
If the Iranians were attacking, I would take your argument.
Seriously, if the Iranians were attempting to invade the country, if they were arming against us, for sure, nuclear weapons are not off the table, but it's not the way to win the hearts of the Iranian people.
I'm just saying anybody that advocates to use billions of our dollars constantly over decades and destroy our future generations has to explain to me why we can't just take care of it in one day.
From S.F. Campbell, he says, Trump created the International Board of Peace and appointed himself chairman for life, which is hilarious and the most Trumpian thing I've seen.
And the chairman chooses his successor.
About 35 nations have already committed to participate.
The left will obviously never tolerate DJT having enduring global influence after his presidency.
So what would be their most likely retaliation if, when they accomplish federal power again?
I mean, they would do whatever they can to disassemble it.
And I think that goes for just about anything that Trump's done, right?
Like, so the Department of War, should a Democrat win, the Department of War will be the Department of Defense 15 minutes after he's inaugurated as the president, whoever the next guy is.
As for, I mean, I don't know that there's going to be retaliation beyond just taking apart everything that Trump did.
Look, even Trump's positive, even the good things that Donald Trump did, like the remain in Mexico policy, right?
They took that away right away and Biden was like, no, we got to bring all the immigrants in.
And now we've got, you know, all of the problems that came along with totally unfettered illegal immigration.
People were just running into the country.
All you had to do was get to a port of entry and say, oh, look, I want to be, you know, I'm here for asylum, regardless of the actual laws and rules surrounding seeking asylum.
So I don't know that there's going to be retaliation, but they will definitely do their best to take it apart.
Like, if the left gets in and they expand the court and do all the things that they want to do and make at-home voting a thing, and maybe they make an app where you can vote from your app, which is a horrible idea.
I know.
I'm not so convinced.
If it's a fair election where people have to go to the polls and it's a one-day thing, if the Republicans can actually pass the Save Act and make these changes to make sure that the elections are actually secure and it's a one-day thing, then I think that I would agree with you.
I don't think that she can win.
If it's a situation where the Democrats can say, look, we've created this app and you just download it and you can vote from there.
And, you know, we're going to go and mail ballots out and we're going to do ballot harvesting.
And if the Democrats are in control of the election the way that they were in 2020, I don't believe for one second that a woman cannot win.
Look, if men don't get along, men might get into a fistfight.
There's always an underlying possibility of violence.
And then after the fight, they can settle the score and just be like, all right.
Because what the fight does is it figures out who's actually on top, right?
The physical fight, it's like the guy that loses the fight kind of is like, all right, well, that guy's kind of, you know, in charge.
And this goes back to before we were even humans.
Women have to do things like they need to de-escalate.
They need, because they're not physically powerful, they use control, they use manipulation, they use, and this isn't trying to say that women are bad.
This is just what evolution has done.
Women are going to use social things to discredit other women.
Well, both of them have a belief structure, but the left, because of the way that the left operates, they're going to say, well, we can't attack these minorities, even if they become a majority.
And that's what has to happen to your point, or to push back on your point.
They have to be close to a majority before they actually confront the left.
Yeah, but I think that so at least in the hypothetical that was presented, just because the left wins the next election doesn't mean that that's the point where the left starts fighting with the religious.
And then these two conservative movements, like everyone started pointing their guns at each other and attacking each other on the conservative side because why?
We won, you know?
And when you win, people are terrible winners.
They start attacking each other instead of keeping their eye on the price.
I think that's part of the problem with partisanry, is it's so much about you and your group that, even if you have other groups with you that have a common enemy, split away like big TENT.
Are you ready to amalgamate or are you still partisan?
Actually, I think you need to make it painful for them, and part of that is taking away their underclass, their slave class, forcing them to have to pay more for the services and the things that they you know.
This is just my opinion, but I don't think that the slave underclass is going to be a thing far into the future, because I really do think that the point that i'm making is I think that robots are actually going to become so, so they're going to be ubiquitous.
I mean, people don't realize how many robots.
They they interact with and see nowadays and like we were talking last night about, you know the you get Amazon deliveries by a robot.
Now you get, you can get food deliveries by robots and I think that there will be some you know some amount of of human beings doing menial labor in for the next few years.
But honestly, I do think that once they perfect Optimus and and the human humanoid robots, and once they start getting Into society, And again, these things are not going to be expensive.
Right.
And when I say not going to be expensive, I mean they're not going to be prohibitively expensive.
They're not going to be so expensive that only the super rich have them.
You're going to have to be.
No, no, because the reason I'm saying is because these things will cost between probably $25,000 and $35,000.
And you'll finance it at 5% because the banks are going to love to give you that money.
So that way they can make the interest payment on it.
So you get that.
People will forego the second car because you can have a robot for the same thing.
And the robot will go and get your food and go to the grocery store for you and save you all this time.
And the robot will fold your laundry.
And you can actually say it's a better investment to have the robot than to have a second car.
So there are times where driving is inhibited by weather, but that doesn't mean that a robot, like a humanoid robot inside the house is inhibited in the same way.
But those, like, it's not very far off where AI will be able to do, because they have the ability, they have the mobility, they have the articulation necessary, but it's a matter of getting the AI to be able to do that.
And AI is, I mean, look at, I bring this up a lot.
I just, I hope you guys are right, but I, you know, after being in kind of like manufacturing and the corporate world, like the nuances in any process are so like, like, there's so many little things, like even in the smallest process of like watering the plant or whatever, like from office to office, like there's all these nuances.
I keep picturing these robots with like tool belts that have all these different, like an egg beater and a knife and a spoon, and then they can go zing and they roll their hand off and they put the egg beater on.
If the grips are good enough, because like Sean's saying, process, I don't know if the hands are going to be, robot hands are going to be good enough for Google for the real specifics.
Mr. Sambra Joe says, for the panel, I understand Abuela looks bad, optics.
But if we don't deport illegals, what will the message be for everyone looking to come here to the USA?
I also believe we need to start going for landlords, companies, and corporations using illegals for cheap labor or get some economic advantage over the U.S. American citizens trying to do everything by the book.
I completely agree.
I want to go after landlords.
I want to go after employers.
Currently, the government can go after employers.
I think that they should be doing more of that.
And I would love to see you.
I would love to see people going after landlords.
If you're knowingly renting to illegals, you should face some kind of criminal charges or something.
What do you guys believe Vance would do if Trump is impeached or arrested?
Go scorched Earth and declare sedition or sit back and wait his turn.
I mean, I think that he would, I mean, he will, first of all, he would take the office of the presidency and then he would, you know, probably direct the DOJ to look into it.
I mean, I'm not sure how you would get Trump arrested without the DOJ, but if he was impeached and removed from office by this, you know, impeached by the House and removed from office by the Senate, which is a long shot because the Republicans control the Senate and likely will control the Senate after 2028 as well.
I think that he would probably direct the DOJ to look into it and see.
We're going to be out with Born of Osiris and Dead Eyes.
You can get tickets at alltheremainsonline.com.
You can check out the band All That Remains at Apple Music, Amazon Music, Pandora, Spotify, YouTube, and Deezer.
Keep an eye out for Timcast IRL clips all weekend.
Make sure you check out the Culture Award.
We did that this morning.
It was a really good show.
We're talking about scammers and how you can protect yourself and what's going on with scammers on the internet and how they're using AI and it's all a scary, scary thing.