Elon Musk Says Vaccine Made Him Feel LIKE HE WAS DYING, Youth Stroke And Heart Attacks ARE UP
Elon Musk Says Vaccine Made Him Feel LIKE HE WAS DYING, Youth Stroke And Heart Attacks ARE UP. Stroke Season And Heart Attack Seasons are REAL but something is causing a major spike in both outside of normal fluctuations.
Elon Musk responded to Scott Adams discussing antivaxxers by telling of his negative experience with the Mrna covid vaccines.
#elonmusk
#covid19
#vaccine
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In our first story, Elon Musk on Twitter says his second vaccine made him feel like he was dying and that someone he knew got a very serious case of myocarditis.
All this while doctors warn we're heading into stroke and heart attack season and strokes and heart attacks are way up among young people.
In our next story, Antifa terrorists shoot out with cops and the media calling it peaceful once again.
In our next story, the child of one of the top Democrats turns out to be an Antifa terrorist arrested for assaulting a cop.
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Now, let's get into that first story.
Several stories are sending ripples across the internet.
First, Elon Musk says he felt like he was dying after he got his second vaccination.
And in line with this story, people are pointing out that in the media they're reporting it is in fact heart attack and stroke season.
This is shocking to many people.
Even I tweeted, what?
Seriously?
Stroke season?
I've never heard of this.
Just the other day at dinner, we were talking about how we'd overheard people saying that it was now stroke season, and you're going to be seeing a lot of strokes.
So I decided to dig into these stories to figure out what's really going on.
And of course, the reason why these stories about stroke season, heart attack season, and Elon Musk's statement on the vaccine are in the same space is that's the conversation that's happening on Twitter.
And while many people may say they believe there is a direct correlation, I'm not so sure.
Don't look at me.
I'm not a doctor.
But I do have a ton of information to show you to help you make the decision for yourself.
When you go and talk to your doctor and you ask them, make sure you have the right questions to ask.
I don't exactly know what's going on, but I can say a few things right off the bat.
Stroke and heart attack season are real.
This is surprising to me because I don't know anything about it, but I actually pulled up old archived studies and articles.
In fact, they do see an increase in stroke and heart attack in the winter months for a variety of reasons.
The stress of travel, overindulgence, and the cold.
Surprising?
Not really, actually, if you think about it.
I mean, inclement weather, difficult times?
You are going to see people suffer stress-related heart attacks?
Now, that being said, There's still a large increase in strokes among young people and heart attacks.
That's not adequately explained just by the season.
So while people may be saying, you're going to see a lot more strokes and heart attacks, it's that time of the year.
No, actually something else is going on.
There is an increase.
Of course, the media says that it's likely COVID.
COVID with spike proteins.
Can cause strokes, clots, and all of these things, and myocarditis.
But we'll have to dig into that one and break this down.
The Wall Street Journal reported that excess deaths unrelated to COVID among young people were more, I think it was more than half of all excess deaths during the pandemic.
So there are real questions about what's going on and what's causing this.
And there's a lot of things that could be contributing to an increase.
For some reason, okay, and you guys comment below, there are people who want to immediately attribute this to the vaccine, which I honestly don't quite understand because, well, to be honest, COVID itself may have caused this.
We watched videos pre-vaccine of people collapsing in the street, young people just slumping over, unable to breathe, cardiac arrest, things like that.
Could that be the case?
Could it be that the alpha strain of COVID was intense And it was causing a lot of people to collapse.
And as it's weakened over time, only some people, look, I'm not going to say I know for sure, but the other component is the Wall Street Journal reporting on the lockdowns and how you take away purpose from someone They die.
It's not that extreme.
I don't want to exaggerate or anything like that.
But I have read that the most likely time of death for an individual is right after they retire.
Losing a sense of purpose.
If you've ever watched that documentary about people who live to be over 100 years old, what are they, centenarians or whatever the word is?
One of the things that they share is purpose.
There's like a video of like a 90-year-old guy chopping wood and they're like, why don't you have someone younger do it?
Younger?
If I don't do it, no one will.
I have to do this.
I have to save my family.
I have to support them.
Locking everybody down, taking away social interaction, and giving them a mundane garbage existence, and you don't just get people losing purpose.
You get suicides.
You get health.
You get people's health failing.
They're not exercising.
They're getting no sunlight.
They're falling apart.
I don't know.
And I am not telling you what to believe.
I want to show you the news and break it down, and then you can talk to your medical professional about what makes the most sense.
Because I gotta be honest, man.
You know, I gotta take more vitamin D. In winter, I realize this.
Like, everybody gets sick in winter and they say it's because it's cold.
It's like, actually, it's because you're not getting sunlight anymore and your body's not producing enough vitamin D.
Makes tons of sense, doesn't it?
Maybe.
I don't know.
Not a doctor.
But let's read the news!
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Let's read the story from the Daily Mail.
Elon Musk claims he had major side effects from COVID booster shot that left him feeling like he was dying, and claims his cousin was hospitalized with inflammation of the heart.
Elon Musk took to Twitter on the weekend to share his experience.
Musk51 shared his experience on Twitter.
Share his experience of the COVID vaccine in response to a retweet of a poll that said 7% of adults claimed they experienced major side effects from the COVID vaccine.
Now, the question is, how do you define major?
I don't know if the Twitter thread did, but that's an important question.
Because we could be talking about people who could be downplaying something more serious.
Or they could be hyping up something less serious.
Again, I'm not telling you what to believe.
There's a lot of people who want to believe it either is or isn't.
Let me just give you the information.
So here are the tweets from Musk.
He said, He was responding to Scott Adams.
second booster shot felt like I was dying for several days.
Hopefully no permanent damage, but I don't know. And my cousin who is young and in peak
health had a serious case of myocarditis had to go to the hospital. He was responding to Scott Adams.
Scott Adams is going viral right now for saying the anti-vaxxers were right again. I
don't know.
You know, Scott Adams was very, very pro-vaccine and all that stuff, and there have been some studies, but I'll put it this way.
As I often point out, and I know a lot of people don't like it, but I think this is a valid, valid point.
There are people that still tell me to this day that they believe COVID was a bioweapon manufactured in a lab that was either accidentally or unintentionally released And I say, okay.
I mean, look, the Wuhan Institute of Virology is right there, where they claim the virus came from, at the wet market or whatever.
So the lab leak seems to make a lot of sense.
Was it a bioweapon?
Eh, that's semantics.
Gain-of-function research was happening.
Peter Daszak was funded by the NIAID by Fauci, and then he used that funding for gain-of-function research.
Here's my point.
If COVID really was gain-of-function research, doesn't it stand to reason that all of this craziness you're seeing all at once is due to COVID?
Here's a potential theory.
Well, I'll say it first.
A lot of people are coming out and saying, oh, the vaccines, oh, the vaccines, oh, the vaccines.
And I'm like, yeah, maybe, but I don't know.
And look, I'm not a doctor.
I've read studies.
And there are some studies saying one thing, some studies saying another thing.
And I wish I could come out and just tell you I know for sure.
So, sure, consider the Utopia-style conspiracy.
The other issue, the other potential, is that COVID was accidentally leaked from a lab, it was horrifying gain-of-function research, and the reason they rushed out a vaccine as fast as possible is because they may have accidentally just destroyed the planet.
You know, it's funny, I'm like, pick your conspiracy theory, man.
Tell me which one you think is more plausible, and I mean it genuinely, I don't know.
That's why I'm just like, bro, look, I don't know anything about this.
I'm not the guy to tell you how to live your life or what to believe.
I'm just here to talk about... I'll put it this way.
When I have someone come and tell me, well, I think that it was manufactured as a weapon and was released, it's like, okay, well then...
Why think the vaccine was what's killing people or causing strokes or whatever, when it could literally just be COVID?
Because we have videos of people collapsing in the street pre-vaccine.
Some people are like, all this stuff didn't start happening until after the vaccine.
I'm like, that's not true, man.
In the first few months of the pandemic, there were tons of videos of people just falling down and just slumping over.
Maybe it's COVID, maybe it's a spike protein.
I can't tell you, man.
I really don't know.
And I'll tell you this, here's another conspiracy theory.
Because I've heard them all, and this is why I'm just kind of, I'm Milk Toast Fencer, you pick.
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We've heard this from a lot of mainstream journalists.
That was never a justification for the lockdowns.
I certainly don't think they should have locked things down.
I think that should have been someone's choice.
I don't think they should mandate anybody get medication.
But think about it this way.
The economy is on the verge of collapse.
The lockdowns have persisted for a long time.
What if...
The real conspiracy was, they said, guys, COVID's still rampaging.
But if we stay locked down any longer, then there's not going to be anything left to save.
Reopen.
And then some scientist is like, you fool!
If you reopen now, COVID will start killing people.
We'll see blood clots and strokes and myocarditis.
And they're like, yeah, well, I'm not losing another hundred million this year.
Reopen the country.
I don't know, man.
Tell me what you think in the comments.
Because a lot of people, especially when you look at the global elite opinion on you will own nothing and you will be happy, it seems like they'd probably like the fact there are less human beings, so it's hard to know what to believe.
Anyway, when asked why he had gotten the second booster, Musk said that it was not his choice, but because it was a requirement to fly to Germany.
It is unclear which trip Musk is referring to, yada yada.
I gotta be honest, I don't believe him.
Look, I like Elon Musk, but I don't believe him.
I don't believe him because, you know, man, I know billionaires, all right?
And they tell me when they fly places on PJs, there's no requirements for anything.
They don't even check their passports.
Now, maybe Germany's much more strict, fine, so maybe I shouldn't say I don't believe him, but I just think it's kind of suspect the richest man in the world is like, I was trying to fly there and they had a mandate.
It's like, bro, I know people Who... Like, I've had people personally tell me they own private jets, and they're like, no, we don't do any of that stuff.
You fly into a private airport, you fly from, like, you know, the Emirates into Europe, and you land at a private airport, ain't nobody asks you any questions.
You land, and you just walk out.
No passport stamp, nothing.
I don't know, but maybe Elon Musk flies commercial, or maybe they were very strict.
He said he had COVID before any vaccines were made available, which he described as a mild cold.
I'm gonna go out and say, not in my case, um, I don't know, maybe it was because I weighed 200 pounds, a little heavier.
Whatever the reason, and part Asian.
But when I got COVID, it was like, it was bad.
It was the worst illness I've ever experienced.
I remember I had the flu.
COVID was bad for me.
I'm not saying it's bad for everybody, it was just bad for me.
He says, then had the J&J vaccine with no bad effects, except my arm hurt briefly.
First mRNA booster was okay, the second one crushed me.
Wait, so you mean Elon got three shots?
I mean, that's a lot.
I don't know about mixing and matching or anything like that.
Apparently, that's what he did.
Let me show you some of the stuff that's causing, that's lighting things up.
I don't want to stick just to this whole... You've heard me make the arguments a million times about the various conspiracy theories.
Look, man, I just don't know, and I'm not here to tell you to believe anything.
The smartest thing I think you can do is what, like, Joe Rogan and I did.
You find a doctor who you can ask these questions to.
They answer it.
If they don't have the answers to basic medical questions, you need to find a good doctor.
Here's a tweet from Viva Frye.
I think you should hear this.
This is interesting.
This is interesting.
unidentified
So what is the sling between influenza, infection, and stroke?
Yeah, I didn't know about this either until last year, but it turns out that after flu season, about three or four weeks later, there is a stroke season.
The fact that we're seeing more makes me ask these questions.
WebMD says COVID vaccine and myocarditis.
They say as efforts to improve the U.S.
COVID vaccination rates move forward, one of the side effects gaining attention is an inflammation of the heart called myocarditis.
They go on to say that it's the inflammation of the myocardium around the heart and it can be caused by drug reactions or viral infections.
It can happen to anyone.
They say it can range from mild to severe, chest pain, shortness of breath, heart flutter, rapid abnormal heart rhythms, swelling of your ankles if it's more severe, feet, fatigue.
I think the swellings in your ankle is because your heart's not pumping enough and the blood's starting to pool or something.
Again, I don't know.
I'm not a doctor.
And in children it could be fever, fainting, a hard time breathing, rapid breathing.
WebMD says yes, but experts aren't sure what the link is.
Only about 1,000 people have gotten vaccine-related myocarditis.
So far, it seems to occur in adolescent and young adult males 16 or older, after the second dose of one of the two mRNA vaccines, within several days after getting the vaccine.
So maybe that's something that happened to Elon Musk?
Again, I don't know.
And look, WebMD?
They're NewsGuard certified.
So I don't have to tell you.
YouTube?
You got problems with it?
I don't have to tell you.
This is in the news, okay?
We also have this from Heart.org.
Deadly type of stroke increasing among younger and middle-aged adults.
This is from February 4th, 2022.
They say, new cases of a debilitating and often deadly type of stroke that causes bleeding in the brain have been increasing in the U.S., growing at an even faster rate among younger to middle-aged adults than older ones new research shows.
The finding shows an 11% increase over the past decade and a half in intracerebral hemorrhage strokes.
From a public health perspective, these results are troubling and indicate risk factors are not being well managed in young adults in the US, said Dr. Karen Fury, Chief of Neurology at Rhode Island Hospital and Chair of the Department of Neurology at Brown University's Warren Alpert Medical School in Providence.
Fury was not involved in the research.
Earlier onset of this disease is very alarming and indicates we need to be more aggressive with primary prevention.
They say ICH strokes occur when blood vessels in the brain rupture and bleed.
They are the second most common type, accounting for 10 to 15 of the estimated 795,000 strokes each year.
18.9 million people had an intercerebral hemorrhage, according to AHA's most recent heart attack and stroke report.
They are more deadly and more likely to cause long-term disability than other types of stroke.
I'm just gonna come out and say it.
It could be COVID causing this.
I don't know.
Don't take my word for it.
Ask a doctor.
From Seattle Times, U.S.
heart attack deaths jumped sharply among young adults in second year after pandemic.
This is what has people thinking it's the vaccine.
That we weren't seeing heart attacks pre-vaccine.
We were seeing people collapse.
No idea why.
No idea why.
You make your own determinations.
Talk to a doctor.
As the number of COVID-19 infections surged during the pandemic, deaths from heart attacks rose sharply as well, with adults ages 25 to 44 experiencing the most significant increases, according to new research from scientists at Cedars-Sinai Medical Center in Los Angeles.
The dramatic rise in heart attacks during the pandemic has reversed what was a prior decade-long steady improvement in cardiac deaths.
We are still learning from many ways by which COVID-19 affects the body, regardless of age, gender, ethnicity, or race.
Of course, the establishment narrative is that heart attacks are what's causing, I'm sorry, are being caused by COVID.
COVID is what is causing these heart attacks.
While other infections, such as the flu, are known to lead to a slightly increased risk of heart attacks, the Cedars-Sinai Research Center could find nothing that compared with a jump in deaths linked to the COVID-19 pandemic, among their findings published in the peer-reviewed Journal of Medical Virology.
U.S.
deaths attributed to heart attacks or acute myocardial infarctions are, as they are typically known, shot up 14% in the first year of the pandemic.
That's the first year of the pandemic.
That's pre-vaccine.
By the second year of the pandemic, the dramatic increases in heart attacks blew apart the models used to predict how many people would lose their lives to these events.
Fatal heart attacks among adults ages 25-44 soared 29.9% over what was predicted.
29.9% over what was predicted.
Deaths from heart attacks climbed by 19.6% for adults aged 45 to 64 and by 13.7% for
ages 65 and older.
These excessively higher rates of heart attack-related death have persisted throughout the pandemic,
the Cedars-Sinai research found, including the possibility that COVID-19 could trigger
or accelerate coronary artery disease.
The scientists said more research has to be done to pinpoint risks.
Again, make your own decisions.
I want to play this video that Election Wizard posted.
Australia sees a 17% increase in deaths from heart attacks.
Experts are done.
unidentified
It has helped fuel a rise in the number of fatal cardiac arrests across the country,
according to a new report. Let's bring in today's Ashlyn Krukeles in Brisbane for us
morning, Ashlyn, what a health expert saying.
Jane, they say the data is concerning, and that's because it shows within the first eight months of
2022, more than 10,200 Australians died due to heart related disease. And that number is considered
17% higher than what would be considered normal.
In this report this morning, health experts say quite simply the pandemic increased risk factors.
They include the virus itself.
Some studies show That some people have a higher likelihood of heart disease or stroke after COVID-19 infection.
Then there's the fact that some people delayed medical treatment and therefore delayed going and getting their usual health check-ups and getting diagnosis and then treatment.
And then to a lesser extent there's the fact that hospitals were extremely busy during this time.
Perhaps reassuringly though the Heart Foundation says 2022 also led to a surge in people getting heart checks and Jane that is certainly something they recommend everyone do.
I really want to just understand what's going on so I can be healthy so that you can know what's going on.
And that means talking about all of these stories and what people think.
But fair point.
Hospitals being, not all of them, but some of them being overwhelmed.
I do think the media lied about a lot of the hospitals being overwhelmed because there were people going around filming hospitals that weren't overwhelmed.
But there were hospitals that we've seen the videos of.
Now the weird thing is they kept using that same hospital from Italy over and over again and they kept getting called out by fact checkers.
But I have seen videos of some hospitals being overwhelmed, and we know that with these Democrat governors, they were taking COVID patients, and instead of using the comfort, like the naval vessels that have hospitals in them, or the Javits Center, they put them in nursing homes, leading to more people dying.
It stands to reason that with some of these hospitals being jammed up, You're not going to be able to go to the hospital.
That's what they were saying.
So let's say you're a dude who like had a heart attack and they rush you to the hospital and say, we're full.
Well, now you're in trouble.
But again, I don't know.
I don't, I don't know.
I'm just going to keep saying that.
I love this.
This is from NPR.
Doctors warn that heart attacks spike this time of year.
We get it.
We get it.
But this is from 2022.
So here's what I did.
WebMD says strokes may follow gender and seasonal patterns.
This is from 2004.
Yes, stroke season is real.
Winter holidays bring more heart attack deaths than any other time of year.
Now this story is from the American Heart Association, but I do have a study.
This is from AHA Journals, American Heart Association Journals.
This one goes way back.
What's the date on this one?
This one is 1999.
And it points out that December.
December is stroke and heart attack season.
That's a fact.
Okay.
That being said, they're still saying we are seeing an increase.
Entirely possible the increase is due to stress or who knows what.
Who knows what.
We have this story from October.
COVID-19 surges linked to spike in heart attacks.
I don't see why that's not a plausible reality here, considering many people think this thing was leaked from a lab.
I would not be surprised.
COVID-19 infection poses higher risk for myocarditis than vaccines.
This is reported by the American Heart Association as well.
So while WebMD is saying, yeah, you can get myocarditis, COVID's more likely to cause it.
I don't know why that one's controversial either.
I'm not saying the vaccine does or doesn't cause it.
You can believe what you want.
But if the issue is the spike protein, then why wouldn't COVID be causing some of these problems as well?
Entirely possible, I think COVID is what's actually causing all of this.
The Wall Street Journal's opinion, however, is that it may have been the lockdowns themselves.
I want to just say this.
You know, anecdotally, what we're hearing from a lot of people is that they suffered extreme side effects after vaccination.
And we saw that documentary, Died Suddenly, where they say, you know, that guy goes like, they've got these strange blood clots, and then you find out they're vaccinated.
And I'm like, are you checking people if they aren't vaccinated?
Like, I'm genuinely curious.
If you are getting, for this documentary, if you're getting a bunch of corpses to embalm and you're pulling out white fibrous clots and you're like they're all vaccinated, are you doing a correlation causation thing?
Because like 70% of people got vaccinated and more than once.
That's the challenge.
How many people came in Had these clots, were you able to do a control?
Were you able to take 50 people who died who were not vaccinated confirmed, 50 people who did, who vaccinated confirmed, so not vaccinated, vaccinated, and then actually check for clots?
Because otherwise, it's just like, dude, most people got this.
So, we have a problem of spurious correlation.
And I think it's important, too.
Nobody should be forced to be medicated.
And that's, I think, why people are so distrusting of this.
The Wall Street Journal talks about Americans under 45 and the excess deaths.
They say, for Americans under 45, there were more excess deaths without the virus in 2020-21 than with it.
Now some of that is pre-vaccine.
Take a look at this chart.
The blue is COVID deaths and the gold yellow is non-COVID deaths.
Among 18-44 year olds, the majority of excess deaths were people who did not have COVID.
So why?
Did we see excess death?
It's as simple as, you know, choose your conspiracy theory, to be completely honest.
I mean, there's also the coincidence theory, if you want to go with that one.
Somebody ate a bat soup.
Coronavirus was in the bat, because bats have coronaviruses.
And then they got sick.
They spread it around.
Everybody got it.
It was particularly intense when it made the first leap from bat to human.
That's possible, I guess.
And now what we're seeing is excess death without the vaccine is due to environmental or structural changes that damaged or destroyed people's lives.
What really matters, in my opinion, Hey guys, Josh Hammer here, the host of America on Trial with Josh Hammer, a podcast for the First Podcast Network.
Look, there are a lot of shows out there that are explaining the political news cycle, what's happening on the Hill, the this, the that.
There are no other shows that are cutting straight to the point when it comes to the unprecedented lawfare debilitating Is that you hear all of this.
There are a bunch of people, I mean, I think most of the right is very anti-vax.
And I don't mean blanket like they oppose all vaccines.
Subscribe and download your episodes wherever you get your podcasts.
I'm not an anti-vaxxer because I said, yeah, I don't think I need that one.
That's the stupidest thing ever.
It's like the idea that just because COVID's going around and you don't get vaccinated, all of a sudden you're an anti-vaxxer.
But that's the slur they've chosen.
It's like, a lot of people are very much in favor of vaccines.
I think vaccines are an amazing technology.
I got no issue with them, man.
I go to doctors I trust.
That's the only thing I can really say.
Because I brought this up during the pandemic, too, when the vaccine was coming out.
I'm not here to say Scott Adams is right or wrong.
I'm not here to say any of that, because I don't know, okay?
I always just take the, bro, I will never pretend to be an expert and just assert I have knowledge when I don't have it.
But the one thing I brought to people when they were like, my doctor, you know, I don't know if I trust my doctor, it's like, bro, look, I go to my doctor, and then I'm like, you know, uh, oh, I got this, uh, you know, hurt my knee.
And he's like, here, take this pill, methylprednisolone.
And I'm like, I got no idea what that is!
Methylprednisolone.
This was a long time ago.
I hurt my knee, doctor gave me that.
Apparently it's like a steroidal anti-inflammatory or something.
And it made my knee feel better.
But I had no idea what it was.
I'm like, I trust you, doc.
I'll put whatever that strange chemical is in my body.
And so that's how I feel about a lot of this.
There are people... Scott Adams basically came out.
He said, And I'm like, yeah.
No, for sure.
Like, I don't trust big corporations.
They monetize symptoms.
They don't cure diseases.
Sometimes they cure diseases.
No, I get it.
It's not all evil, whatever.
But they really do monetize symptoms.
The government?
The government seeks to preserve itself.
So, good.
But in the instance of trust, you shouldn't trust or distrust anybody outright.
You know, you trust but verify, I guess.
In the instance of the government, I think we're safe to say not to trust them.
In the instance of corporations, I think it's safe to say, like, we hold distrust.
But what I mean to say, let me try and clarify what I'm saying.
If the government comes out and says everybody should, you know, oh, DDT is good for me or whatever, you can be like, my default position is not trusting you.
I'll look into it, though, because I want to make sure, you know, it's right.
If a fire truck's zooming down the street, that's an element of government.
I think it's safe to say there's probably a fire.
It's possible there is no fire, but I'll take their word for it, you know what I mean?
In this instance, let me tell you.
I go to my doctor.
I ask questions.
Not so much when I was younger.
I fell, hit my knee, my knee was swollen, and he took a look at it and said, there's no break, there's no tear, you just screwed it up, take these pills.
And he gave me methylprednisolone or something.
Something like that.
I think that's what it was, I could be wrong.
Some steroidal anti-inflammatory.
I said, fine.
And it worked, I guess.
And I was like, oh, whatever.
It worked.
Now that I'm older, I've been given prescriptions in the past few years, and I've looked up about them and been like, yeah, I'm not taking that stuff.
So I did a trip to Mexico several years ago, and I got what's called Montezuma's Revenge.
You guys know what that is, right?
Yeah.
There's a bug in the water, but there was a concern because I had traveled so much for Vice and all that, you probably got parasites.
It happens to everybody.
And so doctor prescribes as like, Look, you're traveling around all these places, probably a good idea to, you know, take some medicine in the event that you did get some parasites.
Turns out it wasn't, I don't know, I don't remember exactly what happened a few years ago, but the doctor asked me about one medicine, and I googled it, and I'm like, yo, that, I'm not taking that, those side effects are crazy.
And they're like, okay, then don't.
And I was like, okay!
And that was it.
And then I didn't have anything, you know, fortunately.
But this is the thing, too.
Do you trust your doctor?
When I got sick with COVID, called the hospital.
Hospital said, do nothing.
Good luck.
And that's why when they're like, people are delaying treatment.
I'm like, dude, I did not delay treatment.
I got bad.
I called.
I said, Hey doc, help.
Like it's getting worse.
Fever shakes.
Couldn't breathe.
Hyperventilating.
I'm like, I do not want to end up on a ventilator.
So I do what any smart person would do.
And I called the only person you can, Joe Rogan.
No, but what really happened is I called the hospital, and they just said, look, go to bed, lay down, and it's a virus.
And they were like, look, the survival rate for someone your age is like 99.9, so I wouldn't worry about it, just chill out, take your vitamins, blah, blah, blah.
It started getting bad, called Joe, and I texted him, and I was just like, I know you talked about it on your show, was it really bad for you?
Because you're a fiddle, man.
And then he was like, look, we talked, he's like, call a private doctor, Ask them about it because they'll figure out a regimen for you of like even vitamins.
A vitamin drip and nicotinamide adenine dinucleotide, which is NAD, NAD+.
I think Joe recently mentioned on the show he doesn't do that anymore.
I think it's basically like a B vitamin derivative.
Your body takes in B vitamins, it makes NAD, it helps with cellular regeneration or something like that.
Boom, I was cured overnight.
Not really cured, but I instantly felt better.
And I think it was the monoclonal antibodies, to be honest.
But the doctor also prescribed ivermectin.
The ivermectin, uh, we didn't get it until a few days later and I said, look doc, I feel completely fine.
I don't want to take anything.
I don't have to.
Never been a big proponent of ivermectin.
And the doctor said, I'm your doctor.
I prescribed you this treatment and I want you to take this.
And I said, okay.
That's it.
I mean, the doctor said, look, there's no, there's, you're going to be fine.
It's, it's a one-time thing and I just want you to take it.
And I said, look, I'm not here to argue with the doctor.
I'm not, I talked to him.
They gave me a treatment.
I felt a lot better.
Then they said, take this thing.
And I was like, I guess.
My opinion on it is still lukewarm.
I'm not here to tell you what to believe or what to do with your body.
I can certainly tell you this when it comes to your body.
I did really well cutting out sugars and exercising more.
I was exercising a lot, exercising a lot now, cutting out the sugars.
Weight just seems to come right off.
It's fantastic.
I felt better than ever.
Seriously, you forget how good it feels when you start gaining, like when you gain some weight, you lose that weight.
You're like, man, I always felt like this.
I'm going to try avoiding that whole weight thing again.
Well look, that was me.
My point is this.
The media, YouTube, everybody was banning you if you talked about ivermectin.
And they'd ban people if they even slightly talked about it.
I've never been a big proponent of it.
I think a lot of it's dubious.
I really do.
And what I don't like about this whole story is the tribalism.
I'm not about to ever advocate for mandatory medication.
Not gonna happen.
I don't even like Floyd in the water.
People gotta choose.
People gotta be informed.
But that being said, you gotta watch out for the tribalism.
I'm not gonna sit here and sit for big corporations who are getting multi-billion dollar guaranteed contracts off vaccines, but I'm not going to come out and just outright be like, I think everything is the vaccine, simply because that's what one faction of the culture war is saying.
I'm gonna say this.
Do not expect me, in certain areas, to be the leader.
I'll tell you a quick story.
We play, uh, we play The Division.
You ever play The Division?
Good video game.
I explain leadership to people with this game.
You're in a, you're in a fi- like, what do they call it?
Like a fire team or something?
No, that's Destiny or whatever.
I don't know.
You got, you got a team.
You got four people.
And you're going on a mission.
The Division game is like a third-person shooter.
And if I'm playing, I'm like, come with me, I'll tell you what to do, because I know how to do this mission.
I'll be like, okay, there's gonna be a guy here, all right, get up on the roof, do this, do that.
If I fail, I'll be like, I don't know, does someone else want to take point?
Because, you know, I can't get this one.
And it's like, we're just, we trust each other in different areas.
There are certain things I feel strongly about.
Free speech, I can tell you all about it.
I can talk to you about foreign policy and war.
I'm not a doctor, man, I can't talk to you about this stuff.
So you can listen, I hope it's informative, and I hope everything you heard from this segment, you Google search, You double-check, you Bing search, you DuckDuckGo, and then you go to your doctor and you say, tell me about these things.
Like, what's this all about?
Let them tell you.
And as I always say, if you find a doctor who can't, then maybe you found a bad doctor, and find a good one.
Because Joe Rogan certainly did.
I'll leave it there.
Next segment's coming up at 6pm over at youtube.com slash timcastnews.
Thanks for hanging out, and we'll see you all then.
This weekend in Atlanta, we saw insurgency, insurrection, as far left anti-terrorists wreaked havoc in the Atlanta area, smashing windows, throwing explosives, setting police vehicles on fire, and calling outright for the assassination of police.
I'm not going to pretend like these Antifa guys are marching out in the tens of thousands.
It's like a small handful, but it's terrorism.
This is a group of people that in Atlanta have been, as I mentioned, calling for the death of police.
Their associates, and maybe some of the same people, were trying to occupy this area, this wooded area, to prevent a police training center from being built.
They came across state lines with guns.
One of these individuals shot a cop, putting him in the hospital.
Now, I'm sure all these leftists are like, yeah, well, the cop was a pig, and like, what did the cop do to deserve it?
Like, what did the cop instigate?
Yeah, there's a video right now, uh, Libertarian, uh, uh, uh, the Mises Caucus guys posted, I'm not sure which one, I saw the tweet, and it's like, cops screaming, come out of your house, the guy walks out of his house, and they start shooting him, and they put bullets in his chest.
And it's like, dude, I get it, man.
All right?
This is not the same thing.
Okay?
This is an innocent guy in a truck.
They're driving through the area.
They firebomb it.
Local houses are being built.
They firebomb them.
They're threatening the lives of innocent people.
Yeah, I don't like when the cops shoot people and it's unjustly done or wrong or negligent.
Criminal charges.
But you think I'm gonna give you a pass, you crackpot terrorists?
Because cops are bad or something?
You think some cops are bad, therefore these cops deserve to get killed?
Antifa terrorists crossed state lines with semi-automatic weapons and shot a cop, putting him in the hospital.
The cops returned fire, killed the Antifa guy.
In response, Antifa called for the assassination of police and then started attacking Atlanta.
Here's what I love about the media.
What do you think happens if you search for, like, Antifa terrorists or insurrection?
Do you find anything about this?
Nope.
Nope, you don't find anything about it.
You don't find anything about it.
I got a, I got a, uh, during Timcast IRL, we, uh, opened with one of the stories and it, and, uh, Postmillennial referred to it as, like, Forest Antifa Group or something like that.
I don't remember what you guys said.
And I made the joke, I was like, Libby, what are you doing?
Libby Evans, editor-in-chief, she comes on the show every so often.
And I'm like, what are you doing?
Antifa protesters?
Like, terrorists, you mean?
And I get a text from Jack Posobiec, and he's like, look, you know, we don't know, blah, blah, blah.
I'm like, I'm kidding, calm down.
But Post Millennial says, media portrays Treehouse Antifa riot as mostly peaceful protest as they set police cars on fire.
Look man, I don't, I don't, I'll put it this way, I don't interfere in TimCast.com editorial.
I want the TimCast news crew to write the news as they see it, but I do provide some guidelines if I think, so like, I'm basically like, um, I don't want to say fact-checker, sometimes I will fact-check if I know something's wrong, but usually I rely on them to do the work, to frame it, and then I try and be hands-off because I do the opinion commentary stuff.
However, that being said, I do give, you know, if I feel there's an error, a violation of journalistic ethics, and I don't think it's ever intentional because the TimCast.com news crew does a good job, I'll just say, what do you think?
Here's what I think.
So in this instance, the New York Post is running a story, Atlanta Mayor Andre Dickens labels anti-police riots domestic terrorism.
New York Post, why aren't you labeling it domestic terrorism?
Post-Millennial.
You know, you run this story.
Media portrays Treehouse Antifa riot as mostly peaceful protest and set police cars on fire.
Yeah, that's a better headline.
But what about media portrays domestic terrorist incident or Antifa domestic terror as mostly peaceful protest?
Why call it a riot?
And here's my point.
At this point, I won't call it a riot, guys.
This is not a riot.
These are far-left extremists who came from out of state with weapons, shot a cop nearly killing him, and are trying to steal land, and then are calling for assassinations and going around firebombing the city.
Yo, that's an insurgency.
That's an attack.
That is sustained terrorism.
It's not a riot.
You want to know what a riot is?
Let me show you what a riot is.
Mail online with adding insult to injury.
Cowboys fans get into wild brawl after watch party outside Dallas AT&T Stadium following playoff loss to San Francisco 49ers.
Everybody's always like, oh, they're complaining about Antifa, but what about when sport events?
These are riots.
They're bad.
Okay?
There's like videos of like people brawling in the street and they're fighting and you've seen it and knocking garbage over.
I was in New York when whatever New York team won the Super Bowl and people were just throwing garbage bags.
You know, that's a riot, okay?
When you have a group of political extremists making a political demand, no-build police training center, who have shot a cop and put him in the hospital, directly attacking them, get killed, then go on a rampage through the city, you ain't dealing with a riot, you're dealing with war!
Here's the, but let's look.
Post-Millennial, you know, you guys write your thing.
They do call out CNN for calling it peaceful because this one's absolutely amazing.
It's one thing for me to be like, Libby, you gotta call in terrorists.
Come on, what are you guys doing?
And it's another thing when CNN's like, they're mostly peaceful.
Mostly peaceful protest.
Let me see if I can get the audio on this one.
Jack Posobiec saying, holy, holy schlitt.
I don't know if YouTube still counts that as something negative.
Okay, I can't get the audio.
I gotta turn the audio on, it's not playing properly.
Is it not?
Oh, I'm sorry, I had it muted.
That's my bad.
There we go.
You know what?
Whatever.
I'll read it because I gotta get the audio set up.
I gotta do that every morning and then we always switch it and I forget.
Post-Millennial Rights.
On Saturday night, Antifa members took to the streets of Atlanta to throw rocks at and light fires outside of the police foundation and set a police vehicle ablaze as figures in the media played down the violence.
I just, I think it's funny that I'm saying like Post-Millennial should go harder than they are.
Left wing writer David Peisner appeared on CNN and said, quote, I do think that if you keep using these words violent, violent, violent, violent, and it gives you the impression that the only acts of violence against people that I saw were actually police tackling protesters.
The antiva violence came after the now suspended Atlanta Forest Twitter account called for a night of rage following the fatal shooting of one of their members, 26-year-old Manuel Esteban Paez Terran, a man who crossed state lines with a semi-automatic weapon and shot a cop.
Terrorist.
Well, I think that there's a real blurring of the lines in the use of the word violence.
Is property destruction violence?
To some people it certainly is, Peisner added.
Yo, by definition, it literally is.
Violence is defined as physical force meant to harm or damage a person or thing.
It's the desperate, desperate attempts.
But you know this idea that breaking windows or other acts of property destruction are the same as actual violence against humans.
It's kind of a dangerous and slippery concept, he continued.
ALX tweeted, Don't worry.
The media is calling it mostly peaceful again, along with a clip of Fox 5 reporter using the phrase to describe the antifa violence.
So it was a largely peaceful protest where they just wanted what they're calling justice, the local news reported.
The riots are happening in response to the death of 26-year-old Manuel Esteban Paez-Teran.
Okay, let's just clarify this here.
So a guy tries to kill police, crossing state lines with a semi-automatic weapon, and then when he's killed in self-defense, the police are defending themselves, then they come out and they say, now we need to protest.
You know, I'm just, these people are psychotic.
That's the only way I can put it.
They're absolutely psychotic.
Footage from the riots shows the Atlanta Police Foundation being smashed, local businesses being vandalized, and police cars being set on fire.
Amazing.
They mentioned the shootout at the Atlanta Police Department training facility.
In addition to smashing up businesses, Andy Ngo reports, cars and the ATL Police Foundation, far-left extremists came with arson supplies to set an Atlanta police vehicle on fire.
The riot was organized as revenge for their gunmen dying in a shootout at the Autonomous Zone.
Florida Governor Ron DeSantis' campaign rapid response coordinator, Christina Pasha, pointed out the irony of CNN being headquartered in Atlanta.
Doesn't CNN still have its headquarters in Atlanta?
Maybe the terrorists are holding them hostage.
Someone should check on them.
Someone absolutely should.
Absolutely.
It's terrorism.
It's terrorism because they're charging these people with terrorism.
Let me see if I have the tweet here from Andy Ngo.
Breaking!
One of the suspects arrested at the Atlanta attack by Antifa is Francis Carroll, who was out on bail for domestic terrorism from an arrest last month at the Autonomous Zone.
He's been charged with terrorism again, arson, and more.
He's from a multi-million, uh, multi-million Maine family.
You mean multi-million dollar?
Okay.
Postmonial, my friends.
When Andy Ngo himself is like, they arrested the guy for terrorism.
He has been arrested for terrorism again.
You can put terrorism in the headline.
You can say terrorists.
You know, okay, fine.
Innocent until proven guilty.
And I'm not going to take the cop's word for it.
The general idea that the story as we know it, they were in the forest, cops showed up, dude shot the cop, cop shot back.
Do I just believe the cops outright?
No.
I want to see the evidence, because we all know about the Bundys.
There was that one dude, they're driving in the car, the police start shooting into the car, dude jumps out, they're shooting at him, he reaches into his jacket, they shoot and kill him.
Now, I think what M and Bundy said was he wasn't reaching for his weapon, it just, that's what they claimed, and it looked like that, but he wasn't, he was trying to put his hands up, I don't know.
All I know is the police could shoot this guy and then come out and be like, actually, he shot at us first.
And it's like a, it's like a Han Solo moment where they're like, oh, he dodged Guarido's blaster and then he shoots him.
Do you guys know that reference?
Whatever.
Look at this.
Francis M. Carroll, 22, came all the way from Cannonbunkport, Maine to allegedly commit domestic terror acts at the Autonomous Zone in South Atlanta.
You know, did he bring a gun?
Did he cross state lines with a weapon?
These people aren't from Atlanta.
So what's the deal, man?
What's going on?
I did a Google search for Antifa terror.
Nothing comes up.
The Georgia Bureau of Investigation, one month ago, that's one of the things that comes up.
Five arrested for domestic terrorism charges at site of future, you know, the police training facility or whatever the name is.
And then below it, Trump says he's naming Antifa a terror organization.
Trump tweets Antifa will be labeled a terror organization, but experts believe it's unconstitutional.
All of these stories about Antifa and terror years ago, two and a half years ago, you mean to tell me that after all this time, no one has balls To just say when Antifa groups commit acts of terror and are arrested for acts of terror and are on crime with political demands, firebombing buildings, y'all can't just say Antifa are terrorists.
I just absolutely love the current state of where we're at politically.
Oh look, you can get Insurrection put in the news 867,000 times.
More than that, probably.
Let's do this.
Let's search for Insurrection.
And 3.25 million results.
You've got Brazil, Portland.
It's all talking about January 6th.
Got a lot of Brazil stuff.
Oh, Insurrection, you say.
And what's happening in Atlanta is not insurrection.
A group of people from outside the state trying to stop government facilities from being built, trying to kill people.
That's not insurrection.
They're attacking government agencies, not insurrection.
Fine.
Fine.
I'll call it terrorism.
They got a political end.
They're using violence.
It is what it is.
Why is it so hard?
Shout out to the Atlanta mayor, Andre Dickens, who is the only one with the balls to call it domestic terror, because even News Out ain't doing it.
Atlanta Mayor Andre Dickens on Sunday denied reports that the widespread protests seen were peaceful, and said that six people who allegedly traveled into the city with explosives will face domestic terror charges.
Dickens gave an update on the destructive Saturday night protests that followed the fatal shooting of a 26-year-old environmental activist while speaking on a panel discussing crime in American cities on CBS' Face the Nation.
Activist Manuel Esteban Perez Teran was shot and killed last week by Georgia State Patrol troopers.
We know, we know, we know.
Tehran was asked to move out of the woods Wednesday morning, where the protest was taking place, but instead shot at the troopers wounding one patrol officer.
Law enforcement returned fire and fatally shot Tehran.
Tehran's death sparked a wave of destructive protests.
New York Posts, they're arresting these people for terrorism.
I don't understand why you're calling them Treehouse Antifa riots when they're being arrested and charged on terrorism charges.
They're making political demands and they're burning things down.
They're shooting people.
I'm just sick of it, man.
They stream insurrection, they raid people's homes, Ray Epps is walking around, ain't nothing going on with that guy, and not even the Post Millennial guys?
Like, I'm gonna text, I was jokingly saying, I'm gonna text Libby and be like, what's going on?
No, I'll just call her and be like, yo, I'm gonna bring Libby on the show.
We got a big show tonight on Tim Castellaw.
I'll bring Libby on.
Tomorrow, I'll say, Libby, hey, editor-in-chief of the Post Millennial, call them terrorists.
Alleged terrorists?
I don't care.
You can call them alleged terrorists, but this is beyond protesting.
It has been years of political violence for political ends.
Now they're traveling across state lines with guns to kill people.
Isn't that funny too?
Kyle Rittenhouse never traveled across state lines with a gun.
He lived in this metropolitan area.
But because he lived within like a mile of the border, they're like, he crossed state lines with a gun, which wasn't true.
He didn't cross state lines with a gun.
Now you have, quite literally, people from all over the country descending on Atlanta, crossing state lines with guns, shooting a cop, nearly killing him, and y'all can't even say terror.
The mayor did.
We're actually looking at a mayor of a major metropolitan area now calling out Antifa terrorism.
And y'all can't even do it.
I'm not just trying to single out the post-millennial.
I'm saying anybody.
I don't even know what TimCast.com wrote about it, but I'm gonna be like, bro, this is not a protest.
A protest is when a bunch of hippies are marching down the street, waving signs, being like, we reject this.
We demand.
A riot is when a group of people run around smashing things.
And terrorism is when a group of people make a political demand, shoot a cop, start burning, set fire to police vehicles, call for the death of police, and then ransack the downtown area.
Hard core terrorism.
I suppose.
This is why the things that we see keep happening.
Because, look, I'm not trying to come down too hard on the Postmillennial or the New York Post, but when even the staunchest critics of Antifa are unwilling to say that people charged with domestic terror are alleged terrorists and that they were arrested in commission of terror, It's just, the narrative, the culture, the Overton window will shift further and further left to where the far left can literally shoot a cop and put him in the hospital.
It was a protest.
It was a protest?
Shot a cop, put him in the hospital.
Protest.
Riot.
It was a riot?
When they shot a cop, put him in the hospital, called for the death of more cops, and then started firebombing police vehicles?
Nah, I'm sorry, dude.
You're not getting that one out of me.
We've got to call it out for what it is.
It's back, baby.
And this is the big question for 2023.
Is this the resurgence of the Antifa extremism that we saw over the past several years?
Every winter, I hear people say, ah, you know, there's not going to be a civil war.
Things are calming down.
And I'm just like, you know, winter is the best season for viewership and for advertisements.
Rates go up and everything, because people are indoors.
They're watching more.
But it's the worst time for trying to explain to someone that things are actually getting bad.
Because in winter, the extremists, they hide.
It's cold.
They don't want to go outside.
If it rains, they won't protest.
I'm not kidding.
So now that we're getting through the winter, it was actually fairly warm, we're starting to see the year kick off and Antifa is going nuts.
I mean, Atlanta is fairly warm right now.
My question is this.
Are we now going to recognize exactly what it is that's going on and where we're headed?
Maybe it won't be so bad.
Maybe we are not headed towards a wave of domestic terror and civil war.
But I have not seen de-escalation.
You can't call the winter season a de-escalation.
And that's the concern.
Is it going to get worse?
I kind of feel like it is.
I don't want to be a Debbie Downer.
Negative Nancy.
Blackpilling, y'all.
I'm just saying.
This is Atlanta.
They've had an autonomous zone there for a while now.
I don't even know how long.
I think over a year.
Where they've been living in the trees.
They don't live in the Atlanta area.
They're not even from the state of Georgia.
And the police, trying to stop them, are getting shot at.
Innocent people are having their vehicles torched.
This is an escalation of what we've seen over the past few years.
We saw in Portland, they shot and killed some teenagers.
There were a lot of deaths.
But to shoot a cop and put him in the hospital is a dramatic escalation.
And the media won't call it out.
So, so long as they don't, people are going to hear this and they're going to say, oh, it's just another riot.
I remember the riots two years ago.
They were bad.
If the media outlets came out and said, riots upgrade to terror as far left extremists shoot police officer, put him in the hospital, make political demands, and then ransack downtown Atlanta.
Maybe then people might be like, wow, we really should do something about this.
Things are getting worse.
But ain't nobody does.
Ain't nobody does.
Maybe TimCast.com will.
And look, fair point.
I've gone through the news over at TimCast.com.
I don't know what we've written about this over there.
Maybe our language is also light.
And if so, I will go and I will say, guys, it's terror.
At the very least, this video will appear on TimCast.com of me stating that case.
We are looking at the rise of insurgency terror.
It is getting worse.
But the night is always darkest before the dawn.
And if Antifa overplays their hand, it may cause a backlash in the other direction.
But will it matter?
Come 2024, the only thing that matters, in my opinion, is ballot harvesting.
Because, of course, regular people are sick and tired of the riots.
No question about it.
The question is, can a Republican win an election with ballot harvesting?
If they do not start chasing and harvesting, they'll lose no matter what the average person thinks.
Now I'm looking forward to the demise of CNN for their garbage, where it's like, well, it is a peaceful protest, you know, people— No.
It's not even that.
It's not even a riot.
It's worse than all of that combined.
What we're dealing with is insurgency terror.
I'll leave it there.
Next segment's coming up at 1 p.m.
on this channel.
Thanks for hanging out, and I'll see you all then.
I'm sure it'll be no surprise to you to hear that the child of House Minority Whip Catherine M. Clark turns out to be an antifa, anti-police, extremist, terrorist, whatever you want to call it, a far-left extremist.
House Minority Whip Catherine M. Clark, she represents a congressional district out of, I believe, Massachusetts, and she is a very high-ranking Democrat.
Now, the story isn't just about the fact that Democrats and their children are aligned with far-left extremists.
It's also that the world is bifurcating before our eyes.
I have for you a story from the post-millennial.
We'll try to figure this one out, but it caught me and was surprising.
Son of Democrat, House Minority Whip, arrested for assaulting cop during Boston Antifa event.
Well, that's a political scandal in and of itself.
The son of a Democrat.
Well, strangely, if you go over to the Daily Mail, it says, House Democratic leader's daughter is arrested after spray painting, all cops are, if you know where that one goes, on monument and assaulting officer during Antifa protest in Boston.
Catherine Clark's daughter was arrested at an Antifa protest on Saturday night.
The deconstruction of language is an element of the deconstruction of society.
If you cannot adequately convey information to another person, how can you make determinations on how your country or world should function?
And herein lies the story.
Was a young woman spray-painting and then arrested by the police, such as to play to our biases as it pertains to men and women?
That is, when a woman strikes a man in public, people go, hey, what are you doing?
When a man strikes a woman in public, they tackle him to the ground, they beat the crap out of him, or they, you know, pin him and call the police.
There was a social experiment that was done once where they have a guy screaming at a woman in public and like raising his hand to her and then people be like, hey, hey, whoa, whoa, what are you doing?
You don't hit women, man!
And then they did the same thing where the woman is smacking the guy actually hitting him and people are laughing.
Now a lot of people came out and said, that's the sexism against men.
That men are strong, men can't be hurt.
Yes, perhaps.
And some people would say, that's wrong, we want equality, right?
But the reality is, human beings do not fear for the safety of males in the same way for a variety of reasons.
So take a look at this story, which of course is about a biological male, who I guess some people are identifying as a young woman.
You see, right here, you have an important factor in the cultural breakdown and decay that we need to talk about.
It is not just, as I mentioned, that a high-ranking Democrat's child is a terrorist, whatever you want to call him.
But it's also that we're having trouble actually conveying information to each other to explain what's going on.
And thus, for the Democrats and for the left who hear daughter, they will default assume it was a small young woman who was being arrested by the police.
And they're going to say, assaulting an officer.
Is that really necessary?
Instead of the fact that it was a violent terrorist male.
And that's the challenge.
I'm not here to pass judgment on an individual for being trans, nothing like that.
I'm here to point out we have two different News Guard certified news outlets, both telling us something different.
A son was arrested, a daughter was arrested.
Which is it?
If you want to actually understand reality, you'd have to say male child.
But that's making it harder to communicate.
And that's the game.
I'll talk more about this, the bifurcation of society, but first, let's read this story and learn about this crackpot Democrat's kid.
Post-Millennial Reports.
The son of Democrat House Minority Whip Catherine M. Clark was reportedly arrested during an Antifa riot in Boston, Massachusetts after allegedly vandalizing personal property and was charged with assaulting an officer while resisting arrest Saturday night.
According to the Boston Police Department, at about 9.30 p.m., officers responded to a protest at the Parkman Bandstand Monument located in the Boston Commons.
Upon arrival, officers observed an individual defacing the monument with spray paint.
The tagging read, No Cop City and ACAB.
Authorities stated the frays are commonly utilized by anti-police Antifa activists, including the ones rioting in the Atlanta Autonomous Zone.
Look, I'm done playing games.
Terrorist.
The child of minority wit, Catherine Clark, is a TERRORIST.
I'm gonna say it again, because I'm done playing games.
For the past ten years, technically longer.
We have seen people waving the banner with a symbol on it, mercilessly beating people, actually having killed people, and now carrying weapons across state lines into Atlanta, shooting at cops and threatening them with assassinations.
If this, if this woman, Katherine Clark, if her kid was marching around, say, with a group of people that were flying swastikas, would we be like, no, no, no, they're not, they're not Nazis, you know, it's just, nah, sorry.
I'm not playing stupid games.
When that, when that dude showed up in Portland, that, I can't remember his name, yelling the N-word and carrying a swastika flag, they kicked him out.
They said, get away from us.
These Antifa people don't kick each other out, they're aligned with one another.
So I'm not going to play these stupid games anymore.
Catherine M. Clarke's child is a terrorist.
And look at this.
You know, I find this fascinating.
There's a photo.
Antifa Watch tweets, it appears that the child of Democrat House Minority Whip Catherine M. Clarke was arrested for assaulting an officer.
Jared Riley Dowell, allegedly graffitied Stop Cop City.
Look at this photo.
If you can see, it's kind of small.
They do this thing where they, like, tilt their heads down and look up like, like a villain from a cartoon show.
Peter Strzok did it, Blasey Ford did it, and now you have this person doing it, low camera angle, looking up like, like, that's the villainous expression from cartoons.
Why?
It's just so weird.
I got chickens, my friends.
You know I have chickens.
We got two Uh, Bard, what was it, Plymouth, Bard Rock, Bard, Plymouth Rock, whatever.
They look like zebras.
Anyway, there's two of them.
One's name is Vanessa, and one is Dorothy.
Dorothy has big, bright, round eyes and looks kinda doughy and silly.
And Vanessa has a furled brow, walkin' around all with, like, an angry-lookin' mmm.
Here's the funny thing.
They're chickens, alright?
Here's my point.
Dorothy has sons, and Vanessa has sons, and the eyes are in the children.
It's so crazy.
You look at the rooster boys, and you can see the angry eyes, and you can see the doughy eyes.
Here's the funny thing.
Dorothy, with her doughy eyes, is very docile.
And Vanessa, with her furled, angry brow, is really aggressive and mean.
And I thought it was funny that that was the case, because, like, the eyes are like... And I'm like, even in chickens, they're little chicken personalities.
Here's my point, okay?
For one, I like talking about chickens, as most of you know.
But the other thing is, these people who are intentionally trying to emulate villainy, You gotta wonder if their real intentions are good or bad.
And I'll tell you this.
Having known many of these Antifa people, I will say outright their intentions are bad.
The story I'd like to tell is about a New York Times reporter, former, who I was in a conversation with about nihilism and basically said, based on science and facts and what I can discern from the universe, I can't tell that anything really matters.
Thus I understand nihilism.
However, that just means that we give meaning, as people, to the universe that we are in.
It's a sandbox video game.
It only has the meaning that you ascribe to it.
So let's generate a positive message, positive meaning, and build things in a way that makes people feel good, And makes things generally better.
Get rid of bad stuff, keep good stuff.
Like, you know, disease is bad, it hurts people, let's get rid of that.
Going to space is good, let's do more of that.
We love people, let's make more people.
What I was told by this Antifa woman was, if nothing matters, who cares?
It's just fun to shake things up and watch it burn!
That's right.
Some people just want to watch the world burn.
They don't care about growth.
They don't care about positivity or negativity.
They, for some of these people, just want to have an impact.
They want to know that they hit the fabric of reality and it rippled.
Me?
I feel like you accomplish that by making things better.
But we see it.
We see it with mass shootings.
Many people who feel like they don't matter deciding that was their path to having an impact, doing something psychotic and dangerous and harmful, hurtful, murderous.
And that's, that's pathetic.
You want to matter?
Why?
Don't you want to mean something?
When you go off and do stuff like this, like these crackpot Antifa people, you don't mean anything.
You matter in the sense that you've impacted society to the negative.
And it matters in the sense that we must deal with it.
You know?
It doesn't matter if a guy is doing backflips on the lawn.
It doesn't matter.
It does matter if Antifa is throwing Molotov cocktails.
We gotta stop them.
We have to take that seriously.
But why not mean something?
And by that I mean, like, I don't know, you helped homeless people, and then someone built a statue in your honor, and they're like, this person really tried to make everyone's life better.
I don't know, man.
I don't know, but this is the story.
Clark later tweeted that the child was her daughter.
Now this was interesting.
Catherine Clark says, last night my daughter was arrested in Boston, Massachusetts.
I love Riley, and this is a very difficult time.
I think this is intentional lying.
I certainly understand that there are people who are trans.
Totally get it.
I certainly understand they would refer to themselves in the feminine pronouns or adjectives.
However, in this instance, I feel like they're trying to make it seem like this violent biological male is just like a young, angry woman.
There is something in our biases.
The average person hears the story and thinks daughter.
They do not think large man.
They think small woman.
Changing the context of what really happened.
I also wonder if Catherine Clarke has a daughter and then it's like You know, look, if someone's looking at your family and they see two males and one female and you're like, my daughter got arrested, they're gonna be like, that daughter is gonna be like, dude, you know?
Like, you're making it sound like it was me.
But I think she has three male children, so.
According to an online biography for Rep.
Clark, a Jared Dowell was listed as her child.
During Dowell's arrest, a group of about 20 protesters surrounded the officers while screaming profanities through megaphones, said the department.
This was still taking place on a public street, causing traffic to come to a standstill, according to the statement.
While interfering with the arrest of Jared Dowell, an officer was hit in the face and could be seen bleeding from his nose and mouth.
BPD added that after Dowell was successfully placed under arrest, he was charged with assault by means of a dangerous weapon and destruction or injury of personal property and damage of property by graffiti tagging.
Dowell is expected to be arraigned in Boston Municipal Court.
And I'm going to mention on Saturday night, Atlanta Antifa terrorists were doing terroristic things.
So let me just point this out.
I saw the story from the Post Millennial.
I saw the story from the Daily Mail.
Both are different stories.
The average person does not understand gender ideology.
I'd say only maybe 10 or 12% of people do.
Thus, when they read this news, they don't know what really happened.
Imagine if I started a campaign to redefine coffee into milk.
And then I started saying to people, like, coffee is milk.
They're both drinks.
And milk can be served hot.
Hot milk at night.
And, you know, hot milk in the morning.
And so coffee and milk are the same thing.
It's just, you know.
And then I started saying, like, I spilled my milk.
And then someone's like, but it's coffee.
That's what they're doing.
This is what they're doing.
Now, let's take it to the next step.
We have this tweet from Libs of TikTok.
PA State Senator Steve Santosiero, a Democrat, was listed as a sponsor for this queer prom for kids as young as 13 years old.
The program included drag shows, and kids received a gift bag containing condoms, lube, and info from Planned Parenthood.
Lube?
This is the thing.
It's kink education.
They're not doing sex education.
They're not teaching kids about the birds and the bees.
They're teaching them about kink.
And they're advocating for really awful things.
But I'm not here to talk about that.
I'm here to talk about society.
I saw this video from Libs of TikTok, and apparently there's nothing controversial about it, I guess.
According to the left, everybody's cheering as this person does... They're doing some dance from some movie or something.
I forgot which one it is.
But they're all cheering, there's like a drag performance going on, and they're all waving little sticks and going, And you know what I realized when I watched this?
We already live in two different realities.
The people here are laughing.
They're having a good time.
They're cheering and waving their little sticks.
Woo!
And for most of us, I mean, who watch this show, we're like, hey, that's really inappropriate for kids.
You shouldn't be giving kids those things.
But then I saw this, and then when I read that story about that Democrat's child, son or daughter, I thought, yeah, we're already in two different realities.
But of course, the anti-establishment is the more correct reality.
I'll put it this way.
You know, me personally?
I got no problem with preferred pronouns.
I won't use neopronouns.
I mean, that's just, sorry, I'm not gonna remember whatever that is, and that's for you and your friends.
You can do whatever you want.
I ain't playing the neopronoun game.
But like, Blair White?
Blair's super cool.
She, her?
Don't know, don't care.
I will use female pronouns for Blair.
Blair is biologically male.
But, you know, even Ben Shapiro pointed out, look, when I'm talking about someone in public, like, it's a lot easier just to say she because you look at Blair and the first thing you think is woman.
So I got no problem with that.
But where we're at now, a news story says son was arrested.
Well, it was a millennial biological male, or I think Gen Z.
Daily Mail says daughter, Democrat says daughter, and that is not expressing accurate information.
It's ideological semantics.
The people on the left who do not Google and do not question and believe whatever they hear are going to be thinking the wrong thing.
And where do we go from here?
ChatGPT, my friends, the bifurcation of reality and the dark days indeed.
Jack Posobiec's got an interesting, uh, Twitter, uh, some interesting tweets about ChatGPT, the AI chatbot program.
He asked it, has Joy Reid or Rachel Maddow ever been, ever been accused of spreading misinformation?
And it said, no, they're respected journalists.
He responded, but they, they said X, Y, and Z about the vaccine that turned out to be not true.
And it said, well, they didn't spread misinformation, but they did admit to making mistakes.
And therein lies the point.
The AI that will likely control the world is being programmed on a woke internet.
The people who are running the machine, and the woke know this, have excised moderate worldview.
Regular old normal person.
And they've made sure that the only thing that goes uncensored is wokeness.
And this spells apocalypse, my friends.
Really does.
I want you to imagine a world where cars are driven by AI under woke ideology.
And I'm sure the woke people are thinking that this will be great!
Everyone will be holding hands!
Here's what'll happen.
You'll take your phone, and you'll go to your rideshare app, and you'll be like, need a ride for me and my friends?
And then it'll be like, please list your friends.
And you'll go, Tim, Jordan, Nathan, Ricardo, and then it's gonna be like, Jordan and Ricardo.
Black Latino.
And it's going to be like, we provide safe spaces in our vehicles.
A second car will be arriving for your black friend.
And you're going to be like, we're cool to ride together.
And it's going to be like, no, white people should not take up black spaces.
The left won't admit it.
And it's probably because they're in a cult.
But the segregation stuff is legit.
It's real.
It's happening.
Okay?
It's bad.
It is nightmarish.
It needs to be stopped.
But it is happening.
They've done it in Michigan.
They've done it in Seattle.
They do it all the time.
I've seen it happening for the past 10 years.
I've seen it at protests.
I can't believe it's been that long.
Since, I mean, I mean longer than 10 years.
I mean, Occupy Wall Street, they were doing it.
The AI is going to be built on that.
And they're going to say things like this.
Civil rights dictates it's discriminatory to do X, Y, and Z. And then these companies are going to say, look, it is safer and easier to have a restaurant that only serves, you know, it protects the black community.
And it's not for non POC, because then we can't be accused of being racist because we gave a special area.
Just for different minorities.
And it's like, bro, that's just segregation with a different name.
It's the same garbage.
But these people, these critical race theorists, the ideology that's dictating social media, they've outright advocated for this.
Derrick Bell.
He has outright said people should have, he thinks that, what was it?
Was it Plessy v. Ferguson?
He thinks people should be, or Brown v. Board of Education.
He thinks Plessy was right and Brown v. Board was wrong and he thinks that people should be segregated and that's the craziest thing I've ever heard.
It's just, if that ideology persists, and it is, then we're gonna have a messed up future because here's the challenge.
It may be too late.
The AI has already been programmed on this stuff.
JetGPT is woke.
So when you look at this video, and you see everybody just cheering and clapping as they give sex toys to children, and they are!
You're gonna be like, what is wrong with these people?
And then, you know what you really, my friends, you really gotta read I Am Legend.
The graphic novel.
The movie, I thought, was bad.
But the graphic novel.
It's been a really, really long time since I've read it, and I could be getting this wrong, but my general understanding is that I Am Legend is a reference to he's a vampire hunter.
He's going around during the day killing vampires.
Eventually, he's the only human left.
He gets locked up, he's arrested.
And he's looking out the window, and everyone's a vampire, and then he says, I am the creature that lurks while you sleep, that kills you, that is immune to the sunlight, that doesn't need to eat blood.
He was the legend.
The point was, if everyone's a vampire, and you're not, you are the monster.
You are the equivalent of the vampire to them.
Really, really interesting concept.
And think about what that means as wokeness persists.
You, if you do not stand up for what you believe in, one day will find yourself shaking your head saying, why are there children walking around with strap-ons?
That book is basically It's about a woman who is sexually aroused at the thought of being a man and being perceived as one.
She says it in the book.
That's the scandal right there.
And I'm surprised that conservatives didn't even read it!
That's the crazy thing.
Ian bought it and I was like, I don't know.
I don't give this person money.
Because we knew it had explicit images.
We knew they were going to get to kids.
And then I read it and I said, it's the story of a woman who was brutally abused by her parents.
I've said it before, I'll say it again, peeing in the yard, not learning to read till 12, and wearing crusted, used pads covered in blood, like, wow, talk about the abuse.
But in the end, she talks about her kink, which is to be viewed and to see herself as a man.
It is, she says, autoandrophilia.
She is aroused at the thought of being a man.
So when she demands you view her as such, she is seeking sexual gratification.
It's not an exaggeration.
This is what they are bringing to children.
And if you don't stand up and speak up, and simply just say not interested, one day you will be standing in a room as they're all talking about how they agree with it, and you'll be thinking, how did it come to be that I'm the one person saying no to this?
You know, conservatives don't want to speak up.
I'll leave it there.
Next segment's coming up at 4 p.m.
over at youtube.com slash timcast.
Thanks for hanging out, and I'll see you all then.
You may have seen this viral video.
We got Clown World on Twitter reposting the video of a young woman who is working out at a gym filming herself.
And she says this is how not to approach girls at the gym.
And she goes off saying this dude who was looking at her was a creepo.
And I think there's a lot of interesting things to talk about here.
Everybody's giving their two cents on this clip.
Basically, it's a woman working out at the gym.
A guy glances over a couple times.
Doesn't really stare or anything like that.
And then eventually walks over and asks her if she needs help, like, re-racking the weights or something.
And she goes off on him.
So let me play this clip for you.
Minute 47, so you can see for yourself.
It's not the full video.
The full video is, I guess, like, five minutes.
But I want to talk to you about this thing.
And let me just start right off the bat by saying that the craziest thing to me is that In our society, in our culture, women are shocked that men are attracted to them.
I'm not saying that men should be creeps to women, but yo, a dude looked at you.
That's what guys do.
And I don't understand.
I don't understand this.
Okay?
Look.
Women should be able to wear whatever they want.
But it's kind of like, if you dress provocatively, people will look at you.
Now I understand, this is why they have curves, they have like the lady gym, because women don't want to wear like a niqab when they go exercise.
But the reality of the world is that when you're an attractive young woman, men are attracted to you.
But the thing is, You've got these people who are influencers.
They make their living off of the internet.
And this is really what I want to get into.
Because I agree, dudes shouldn't be creeps.
But I see this stuff, and there's an interesting parallel between the social value of men and women, and how they experience similar things in very different ways.
And that is to say, society, and I'm not saying it's right, values women based on their appearance.
And it values men based on their status.
So if you are an attractive woman of no status, people will be coming up to you all the time.
And if you are an unattractive man, or otherwise, of status, people will be coming up to you all the time.
I just find it interesting.
The people who come up to you all the time are attracted to you, and essentially, in society, stating you have value.
So there's a lot to break down on that, but let me play this video for you, and then we'll talk about this chick.
I think this chick wants attention, and she wants to find a reason to get attention.
And there's this dude over here, he's working out, and he glances over a couple times.
First of all, if you're an attractive female and a guy glances over at you, bro, he's not saying anything to you!
He's not bothering you!
And you're not even looking the same direction.
That's the crazy thing.
But also consider this, ladies filming herself in the gym doing hip thrusts.
Now, somebody might just be like, I wonder what they're doing.
They put the camera down, they're filming themselves, like what's this all about?
And she goes on to assume that this guy is like, what's he creeping on her about?
He walks over, grabs a wipe, hesitates.
He asks her if she needs help or something.
She says, that's not okay.
What does she say?
She's got some like red text pop up.
You don't do that.
That's not okay.
You want to put it on.
He was only working out behind me to go up to me because at a squat rack all the way in the corner of the gym to avoid weirdos like this blah blah blah.
Dude.
I'm just gonna tell you.
People are allowed to walk up to you.
And that's it.
This is the craziest thing.
You guys remember that 10 hours of walking through New York as a woman video that went viral?
I'll tell you.
If you're a woman and you're walking down the street, if you're a guy, I don't care who you are, and someone says something like, ooh, yeah, look at that big booty, blah, like, okay, that's creepo stuff, man, like, we don't need none of that.
The funniest thing is when I hear, like, women criticize dudes who catcall.
Like, a car pulls up and the guy's like, sup, girl, what up, you lookin' good, and it's just like, does that work, dude?
I mean, maybe it does for some of these guys, that's why they do it, that's the thing.
People are like, either these guys are getting their moves off, like, a movie, Or it actually works for him, I guess.
I'm gonna shout out, uh, King of the Hill. You guys ever watch King of the Hill?
One of my favorite bits from the show, King of the Hill, is Hank asks Boomhauer
to teach Bobby how to pitch woo. All right?
If you don't know about King of the Hill, I don't know what to tell you. All right? So anyway,
they go to a shoe store and then Boomhauer is like, I'm gonna teach you Bobby.
He doesn't say it like that, he talks real fast.
Like, I'm gonna teach you, Bobby, I'm gonna get you a girl, you know, I'm gonna go on a date, you know what I'm saying?
But, uh, anyway.
So he walks up to a woman, he's like, damn, girl, looking pretty good, let me get you that number, I'm gonna go sometime.
And then he says that, like, ten times in a row, and then, like, women are slapping him, and then finally a woman hands him her number.
And then Bobby's like, that's the secret?
You just ask every woman?
And then Boomhauer's like, shh, come on, man, it's a secret, you know?
It's a secret.
It's not a secret, but it's funny.
Look, you're a guy.
This dude's working out in the gym.
He sees an attractive girl he may be interested in.
In almost the least possible effort way ever, he tries to interact with her, and she loses her mind over it.
I'm sorry, dude.
Toxic femininity right here.
So let me talk about societal value, right?
Many of you may know that I run several YouTube channels.
I have millions of subscribers.
It's kind of crazy how that happened, to be honest.
Skating in Chicago, making videos, and then I think about it sometimes, like, over time, all of a sudden, I go from like 100k to like a million on three different channels and this big website, subscribers, a castle, employees.
It's crazy how that happens.
But because of that, a lot of people know who I am.
Because of that, almost everywhere I go, people know who I am.
Imagine what it would be like if... Okay, I'll tell you this.
I was at a casino.
We were in, like, Harrisburg or something.
And we went to the Hollywood Casino.
I think it was Harrisburg.
I can't remember.
There's, like, two of them real close.
And as we're walking in, it's, like, me, my brother, my girlfriend, and some other people.
There's two people sitting, and then, like, they pull out a camera and take a picture.
And then someone was like, hey, that guy took a picture of you.
And I was like, yeah, you know, it's probably a fan or someone who knows who I am.
Like, I'm not going to cry about it.
I'm not going to complain about it.
I understand that people know who I am.
And then, you know, but to like my friends, they were like, whoa, why did that happen?
And I'm like, they saw somebody they knew.
We played some games.
We had a good time as I'm walking out.
They came by and they were like, we are huge fans.
It was so cool to see you.
And I was like, dude, thank you so much.
I really appreciate it.
I know they snapped a photo.
I don't care.
That's great.
I mean, like you guys are paying the bills.
It's crazy to me.
I mean, look, I don't know what this chick does.
I don't know what she does for a living.
I'm not saying that, you know, like this guy walking up, he's not going to pay the bills.
I guess technically, if you want to take out to dinner, you should get a free meal.
When someone comes up to me and they're like, hey, or I see someone staring or whatever, I'm like, I get it, man.
This is, this interest, this like, people looking at me, knowing who I am, it's what literally makes the machine work.
It is social value.
I know a lot of people hate me.
I know there's negative social value too, things like that.
There are weirdo guys who hate attractive women because they're jealous or they feel rejected.
But my point is this.
There are women who are frumpy and ugly and they wish guys were interested in them.
There are people who are poor and they wish they were rich and famous.
And then there are celebrities who are absolute dicks to regular people.
And that's... I just never get that.
Your story's about some celebrity, and someone's like, hey man, my son and I are really big fans.
Excuse me, I'm at a restaurant right now with my family.
Can you not?
I would never do that.
I'm sitting down to eat, and we're at, man, we're at another restaurant.
And two people walk over as we're sitting down, and they were like, we're really sorry to bother you.
We're just really big fans.
He's like, my brother, I wanna get a picture, I wanna show him he's a big fan.
And I'm like, thank you so much.
Dude, we are eating at this restaurant because you guys like the work we do enough to actually come over and say what's up.
I really appreciate that.
I don't feel threatened.
We went out and did the DC thing, no big deal.
But I get it, look.
I'm not saying it's the same thing.
Obviously it was different.
There's no, like, sexual connotation in someone saying they like my work.
Right?
For women, it's like, you gotta fear violence and stuff.
But also, I gotta fear political violence.
I am not saying it's one-for-one.
I'm saying, I find it interesting that there's a similarity.
It's very different.
I know, I know, you know.
I'll throw it to the Young Turks.
They'll probably clip this and then make some stupid response video.
But, uh, because they always take things out of context.
I'm just saying it's interesting that there's some similarities in that regard to how people come up to you.
The only thing I'm trying to say is, When I saw somebody take a picture of me, or I didn't see it, but when someone took a picture of me, and it's happened a bunch, or when someone recognizes me, I've mentioned this before, we don't know if it's because they want to kill me or because they like me.
No idea.
I hear that from women, it's like a guy's following you and you don't know if he's gonna try and do something to you and I'm like, yeah, that's interesting.
I feel a similar thing, it's different.
You know?
It's similar but different.
I'm not saying it's the same level of egregious behavior.
Like, I wouldn't want creepos hitting on me and wanting to do weird sex stuff.
You know what I mean?
Like, having someone say they like my YouTube videos is very very different.
My point is just this.
This video, to put it simply, Homeboy didn't even do anything, man.
Like, come on, save the anger for when, like, a bunch of jockbros come up and are not giving you space, are really saying inappropriate things to you.
But if a guy politely says, can I give you a hand?
And you're like, how dare you?
Come on, grow up.
That's that 10 hours in New York thing.
Cause there's like a guy and he's like, hi.
And then she's like, ah.
She doesn't actually do that, but that's like the gist of the video.
One, one guy's on the phone and you hear him go, nice.
And it's like, he's talking to somebody on the phone, dude.
It's not about you.
Now there's creepy stuff in that video where like a guy walks next to her for like three blocks.
Totally agree.
Creepy stuff.
Don't do that.
Like if I'm walking down the street and some guy started following me, I'd be like, get out of here, dude.
I don't care for what reason.
But there's some where it's like, how do you do, ma'am?
And, you know... Morning!
Are y'all seriously offended by that?
That is toxic femininity, right there.
Toxic masculinity is like some jock bro going up to a woman as she's trying to exercise, being like, so girl, you like the guns?
And then saying really inappropriate things to her.
Regular masculinity is a guy who glances over a couple times, says, you need any help with this?
Have a good day, and then leaves.
That's it.
Toxic femininity is when a woman's walking down the street and a guy says, howdy ma'am, and she goes, how dare you?
Regular ol' femininity is like, how do you do, sir?
That's it.
Anyway, look, I don't know.
Some people are saying she's got OnlyFans or something like that.
I don't know if that's true.
I'm not gonna dig into her life.
But I do want to mention the paradox of women making millions of dollars on OnlyFans.
Not all of them, but some of them.
And then women being offended that guys are like, hey, and looking at you.
It's like, dude, you're filming yourself for a reason.
You're doing hip thrusts on camera from a low angle.
Someone's gonna look at that and be like, yo, what is this?
Toxic femininity.
Calm down.
The world's not perfect.
It's tough sometimes.
I get it.
And there are creepy guys out there.
But this is just toxic femininity.
I'll leave it there.
Next segment's coming up in a few minutes.
Stick around, and I will see you all shortly.
Cenk Uygur of the Young Turks put out this tweet.
My wife used to work at Monterey Park, where the mass shooting took place.
No one is safe.
Republicans are constantly spreading fear about immigrants, crime, and drag queens, but the number one thing that makes us and our children unsafe is their favorite thing in the world, guns.
You know what stood out to me with this tweet was the, no one is safe, and then criticizing Republicans for fear mongering, for constantly spreading fear.
And I'm just like, my friend, Cenk, I mean, you're kind of doing the same thing, right?
Look, let's try and be reasonable people.
In a large urban setting, it can be scary if everybody's armed and not trained properly.
But you know what?
They have a right to keep and bear arms.
You may disagree.
I respect your opinion, your right to have it.
I disagree with your opinion.
And if you want people to not have the right to keep and bear arms, you must amend the Constitution.
And that requires a lot of people in this country agreeing.
But what I find really fascinating is how wrong he is.
Guns are the things making us unsafe?
That's not true.
It's just fundamentally not true.
Notably because California is the Democrat anti-gun bastion of gun control and this is where a mass shooting took place.
Chicago.
Also one of these places.
I can't remember which state it was, but I remember, uh... I remember reading about... There's a certain jurisdiction.
It might have been, um... It might have been, like, Wisconsin or Michigan.
They ban guns to a certain... They did some kind of, like, weapons ban.
And then crime SKYROCKETED!
And then they're like, QUICK!
Repeal the weapons ban!
Crime is getting worse!
It's like, hey, think about this for a second.
Here's what happens.
I'll give you a scenario.
And then we'll read the stats where they say, you know, Cenk is basically wrong about this.
Well, let's actually just, we'll pull up some of the stats and then we'll talk about guns and crime and all that stuff.
We have this from Nuance Bro.
He says, California ranks the top of states that gun control organizations list as the most ideal.
I find that truly fascinating.
Here's Everytownresearch.org.
California is the best.
Then New York, Hawaii, New Jersey, Connecticut, Massachusetts, Illinois, and Maryland.
Maryland is eighth?
Get out of here.
Maryland's garbage.
Maryland is not, like, it's funny, they're like, national leaders, Maryland, you know, Maryland should be higher on that list.
Maryland's one of the worst.
But what's funny is, these states, these are like the worst for your rights.
Now what makes us unsafe?
You know, I'll tell you.
You know, having grown up in Chicago, I never thought guns were the problem.
You couldn't have them.
Criminals somehow still did!
We never understood it.
Everyone in Chicago was walking around and they'd see a guy pull out a gun and they'd be like...
But how is this possible?
Reality was ripping apart right before our eyes!
Guns are illegal!
People couldn't have them!
But somehow, some way, these gangbangers would rip through the fabric of reality and manifest a gun despite the fact the law said they couldn't have one.
Or a night crawling with some friends.
That's when you listen to the police scanner and then drive around.
Man, in one night, like five dead people?
It's crazy.
One story I told is like they shot up the front of a house because it was like a drug deal gone bad and they killed the wrong people or something like that.
Look, we know where they get their guns from illegally.
They get people in Indiana who are residents who can buy because the laws are more lax.
Then they drive down the street somebody you know or they drive into Illinois illegally and then someone takes all the guns and boom now you got quote-unquote illegal guns in Illinois.
I don't think it's fair to call them illegal guns, unconstitutionally legislated or sanctioned weapons, because the Constitution says right-keeping firearms shall not be infringed, right?
But we know what they do.
They bring the guns in, and then it's very, very obvious to anybody who knows anything about anything, if you're walking down the street, and you don't have a gun, and it's illegal to have a gun, and you're not breaking the law, The guy who is willing to risk going to prison for a very long time thinks about it and says, If I approach this person unarmed and say, give me your money, what happens?
They run, I get nothing.
They fight me, I get subdued, I go to prison.
I go to jail.
Okay.
This guy's thinking now, if he's gonna risk jail, he might as well minimize his risk.
It's a wager.
It really is for these guys.
They approach you with no weapon.
I've had it happen to me.
And say, they do this trick where they're like, hey, let me have the money you have on you.
Let me have that money.
Because they're trying to make the argument that they were begging and not mugging.
But if they don't have a weapon, the police tell you when someone comes and demands money, just give it up.
Just give it up.
So here's what happens.
You're walking down the street.
Some guy says, Hey man, you know, let me get the money that you got.
Let me, let me get the money that you have.
And then they go, Oh yeah, yeah.
And they pull out their wallet, hand them cash.
And he goes, thanks man.
I really appreciate it.
And then when that person reports a mugging, you'd be like, I asked him for money.
I was begging.
I'm panhandling, man.
I didn't, I didn't threaten him.
No weapons on you.
No threats.
There you go.
Not a mugging.
It doesn't always work.
They might be like, nice try buddy.
But this guy might be thinking.
If I can't get the money, if this person doesn't give in, I lose everything.
So let's talk about mitigated risk.
If you threaten someone, if you say, do it or else, or else what?
Now you committed a crime, are you gonna actually be able to get that money off that person?
This is why they have guns.
Because they hold the gun, and they say, give me your money.
I mean, these people are nuts.
They point it at you, finger on the trigger, and say, give me your money, give me your money.
Take it, man!
Because they're thinking this.
They're not going to get caught.
They never get caught.
You're going to comply instantly with a gun in your face.
And they know you don't have any way to defend yourself.
But I've seen the videos out of Brazil.
I've seen the videos where Some guy walks in, or we had that one recently in Texas, waving a gun around, and then some dude, boom, shoots the guy, threatening someone else's life.
And that's the reality of crime in California and New York and Illinois.
Isn't it funny that the places with some of the highest crime, Baltimore, They're the national leaders on gun control.
You kidding me?
New York crimes skyrocketing.
California just had that mass shooting.
Tons of crime and homelessness and drug abuse.
Hawaii?
Okay, I think Hawaii might be the exception here.
Isolated island, kind of hard to get to, not so sure.
New Jersey?
Don't even get me started on Jersey, man.
There's a reason nobody wants to live there.
Connecticut I find interesting, too.
Connecticut's a bunch of uppity rich people, so they get a pass.
Massachusetts does have some crime, but Illinois and Maryland?
I mean, you look at this list, and you got all the worst crime.
Illinois and Maryland, that one's fascinating.
You got Chicago and Baltimore.
Two of the worst cities in the country for violent crime, and they say that is a good thing.
Ranking state gun laws, California.
Look at that.
Where's Maryland's number seven?
People out here, they call Maryland one of the evil seven.
That's what they call it.
Why would rural Indiana do this?
That's right.
No one is crime.
The favorite thing in the world, guns.
It's just funny to me that these people don't pay attention to the laws around them.
There's seemingly no logic.
And that explains so much.
So much about modern politics.
I mean, come on.
We're talking 2 plus 2 equals 4.
If people who obey the law don't have guns, and people who break the law don't care about breaking the law, how does the law stop them from having guns and then shooting you?
And on top of that, we'll throw it back to our good friend Cenk Uygur's tweet itself.
No one is safe because of guns!
They're fear-mongering about people!
You know what I'm not scared of?
A gun.
I'm not scared.
I got a bunch.
I got guns and gun saves.
I've got guns ready to go.
I got a gun not too far away from where I'm sitting.
And not doing anything.
Just sitting there.
You know what I am scared of?
Bad people.
I talk about this all the time.
I'm not scared of Antifa, because I can predict what they'll do, and I can protect against it.
I'm scared of the crackpot crazy person who thinks I stole all of his spoons and put them on the moon, as I often say.
The gun ain't do nothing.
Gun's sitting over there, you know, just sitting there.
Not gonna get up, not gonna move around, not gonna just levitate in the air and then load itself.
Not gonna happen.
A person.
A person could walk past my gun, pick up a guitar off the wall, and start bashing people with it.
It's the person.
Now hold on there a minute.
If I'm holding the gun, and the person grabs the guitar off the wall to swing it, and I have a gun, guess what?
They won't.
It's possible they're insane people, because that happens too.
It's unfortunate.
Crazy people do crazy things.
But this is the reality of the world, man.
Being an armed society is a polite society.
But I'm not gonna come here and just lie and whisper sweet nothings into your ears.
If everybody had a gun, there would be more accidental gun discharges.
There'd be more accidental death.
That's a reality.
But I prefer dangerous freedom over peaceful slavery.
I prefer the right to defend myself from a crackpot who wants to come at me.
In my previous segment, I talked about that lady at the gym.
I'll say this.
If you're a lady and you're worried about creepos coming up on you, buy a gun.
Legally, of course.
And then, if you feel threatened, you can pull your gun out and say, this, the Great Equalizer, will make sure you don't touch me.
No creepo is gonna lay their hands on you when you can end them if they try to end you.
We don't want violence.
I certainly don't.
But I don't think it is incumbent on the victims.
So I'm not here to fearmonger about immigrants or drag queens or anything like that.
Crime is bad.
I'll talk about crime being bad.
And then you blame the guns for it?
Bro, in Chicago you can get mugged with a rock!
You can get mugged with a fist!
It's ridiculous.
Anyway.
Shoutout.
I'll leave it there.
Next segment's coming up in a few minutes.
Stick around and I'll see you all shortly.
It ain't no joke.
Japan is literally on the verge of collapse.
They only had, I think the number is 800,000 babies last year.
Japan's Prime Minister says his country is on the brink of not being able to function as a society because of its falling birth rate.
Birth rates are slowing in many countries, including Japan's neighbors, but the issue is particularly acute in Japan, as life expectancy has risen in recent decades, meaning there are a growing number of older people and a declining number of workers to support them.
Oh, man.
Here's what's gonna happen.
We're going to see a whole bunch of 67-year-olds unable to work, needing some kind of social assistance, and there ain't going to be any kids.
So there ain't going to be anyone doing the work.
You ready, America?
It's coming here.
All these childless cat ladies and woke bros, they're going to be 60-70 with no kids, and they're going to be going to the government, like, Yeah, the government should be giving me money!
I'm an old man!
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And the government's gonna be like, we're old men too and there's no one working!
I'm familiar with the video game, I never played it.
Part 2, I guess, did stupid wokeness, but the first one's apparently like a masterpiece or something like that.
Anyway, the show's pretty good.
There's two episodes, I think.
And anyway, I bring it up because it's this new show, it's post-apocalyptic.
If you're not familiar with it, basically, the cordyceps fungus evolves to survive within humans, and then humans start getting infected, basically become zombies, and then bite you, and then you become infected with the fungus.
But anyway, 20 years goes by, civilization is destroyed, skyscrapers are falling over, and there's zombies all over the place.
Mostly collapsed.
And it's funny because I'm watching this show thinking to myself, like, what would cause that post-apocalyptic scenario?
And then it's like, oh, it's not going to be zombies.
It's not going to be World War 3.
To throw it to our good friend Albert Einstein, I think, who said, I know not what weapons World War 3 will be fought with, but World War 4 will be fought with sticks and stones.
Now, you know, that quote was particularly apt at the time.
We're talking about the atomic bomb.
We're talking about the invention of nuclear explosions, radioactive waste, nuclear winter fallout, the end of days.
And so this quote represents, after we go to war in World War III and blow each other to smithereens, the next war we're going to fight is going to be throwing rocks at each other.
It's funny.
It's funny because it's still true despite the fact it's true in a very different way.
I don't know what weapons World War 3 will be fought with.
I think it'll probably be drones, social media, and psychological manipulation.
But I'll tell you this, World War 4 will be fought with sticks and stones because of population collapse.
You ain't gonna have nuclear weapons if you don't have people who can build every component required.
A dude could barely build a toaster on his own.
When population collapse happens, it's gonna be interesting.
So I went to the horse track this weekend.
I had a blast.
Normally, I bet on the goofy ones.
You know, the crazy names.
This time, I bet three races on the favorites.
All the favorites won.
It was great.
I won like a hundred bucks.
It was awesome.
It was more fun to watch your horse come around and then go, yeah!
Horses!
Over at Charlestown Racetrack in West Virginia.
But I bring this up because there's no restaurant.
There used to be a concession stand.
You'd go hang out, you'd get a hot dog, you'd get sandwiches, or there was a restaurant you could eat, there's food, and you're watching the horse races.
Man, that sounds like a blast.
But the restaurant's closed.
They said, apparently, I don't know if it's true because I haven't talked to any employees, but they've been trying to reopen the restaurant, but they can't find any employees.
There's a viral video now of some guy jumping up on a counter, ripping his clothes off, and being like, I quit!
And he's like, wearing a bra and panties or something.
People don't want to work.
And there's just not enough workers to maintain the system we all know and remember.
So here's the vision of the future I see.
It's possible the future is conservative.
I think it's extremely likely the future will be very conservative.
If we do enter any kind of post-apocalyptic scenario, with abandoned buildings and overgrowth, quarantine zones, it's not gonna be because of COVID, it's not gonna be because of cordyceps or the T-virus or whatever.
It's going to be because this area was reclaimed by nature and abandoned.
And it's a quarantine zone because this area, there's not enough police to sustain safety and to control the wild animal population.
In The Last of Us, they're in the Boston quarantine zone.
And it's like a military dictatorship, basically, because humans are struggling to survive.
I get that.
And then outside, it's chaos.
There's zombies, there's scavengers, there's banditos, there's slavers, etc.
It'll be like that in the future.
I mean, 800,000 is insanely low!
A population of 125 million, they only had 800 million babies?
That's crazy.
I mean, you should at least expect that you're gonna get 30 million babies.
No, no, no, no, nothing.
And I'm saying 30 million, because the population, you cut off half the population for kids, now you got 65 million, then you cut that in half because two people makes one baby, and that's a perfect birth rate.
Let's put the estimate at like 40 million people are within 20 years of death.
So you got like 80 million.
But they're only having 800,000 per year.
So that means within 20 years, you get 800,000.
We're looking at, I'm not gonna be able to do the math fast enough, you're looking at 16 million people in 20 years.
So you're gonna go down in 20 years from 125 million to, let's just call it 100 million.
Let's just call, well, let's say 40 million go down, you get 85, you add 16, we're looking at 101 million.
But, during those 20 years, the population will continue to decline.
There's going to be accidental deaths.
There's going to be disease-related deaths.
With the decline in population, there's going to be a crisis of maintaining these systems.
As we fail to maintain these systems, there will be a further decrease in population.
Right now, we have crap tons of farms.
Can't find anybody to work?
Farm produces less food.
Less food?
It's a downward spiral, my friends.
It is the collapse.
Not because of a meteor strike.
Not because of World War III.
Not zombies.
Not a tsunami.
Not an alien invasion.
It is the end of days due to the limitations of human economics and growth.
And then what happens?
I don't know, to be honest.
Maybe the population falls down over the span of 50 years to about a billion people.
Maybe it falls back to 500 million.
Maybe it's all intentional.
Certainly think there are powerful interests that don't want there to be more humans.
But these countries are panicking over it.
So I can't really say for sure.
I can't really say for sure.
Japan is freaking out saying they're on the brink of collapse.
And the reason is, that 40 million, let's say there's 20 million elderly who can't work at all.
They're only alive right now because the system takes from the young to give to the old.
I'm fine with that to a certain degree.
You know, young people work really hard, and then when you get older, you say, look, I worked really hard to support the system, I now ask that you do something similar for me.
You have kids, your kids take care of you.
No, the problem, I suppose, is the state replaced the family.
And now it's all going to come crumbling down because people with no kids are incentivized.
There's no reason to have kids.
There's another big component.
It used to be you had kids because you had to have kids.
You needed the help.
You're going to get old and someone's got to take care of you.
And then when they get old, they do the same.
Their kids do the same for them.
But then we said, don't worry, the state will do it.
All that really meant was that the government would go to other kids and take from them to give to the older people.
So a lot of these people started saying, I don't gotta have kids, there's no reason.
If I'm older, I'll just get government assistance.
The government assistance was just extracting from young people.
So what happens next?
In the next couple of generations, it's gonna get really interesting.
Factories will be abandoned.
Products will no longer be made.
And it's gonna be like, you know, I'm watching in The Last of Us.
Ellie has like a book, billboard songs.
And she's like, she was born after the collapse.
It's a really interesting thought.
Thinking about what it must be like between these two people.
You've got one guy, Joel.
He was in his 30s.
He was 36 when the collapse happened, if you watch the show.
And so he lived a normal life like we all do.
Cell phones, work, jobs, cars, gas, flying on planes.
Collapse happens.
Four years later, Ellie is born and she never experienced life before the collapse.
No internet, no cell phones, none of that stuff.
No going to the shopping mall.
The whole world is just in decay.
This person won't know what these luxuries are and they won't seek them.
And this is what you need to understand about population collapse.
A 20-year-old kid who has never seen the inside of an airplane will not want for something he doesn't know or care about.
You as the older person will be like, if these kids would only work on this, we can get air travel back.
Of course, the older generation does dictate to a certain degree.
But young people will not be interested in the same things.
They won't be interested in things they've never heard of or seen.
Now, of course, they'll know planes existed.
Some will be passionate.
Some kids like classic rock.
Some kids like, you know, Victorian-era music, whatever.
But most kids don't.
Most kids go to trends.
So when the population breaks, You're gonna have a bunch of young people who are gonna be like, I think farming is so cool because they have to.
They don't farm, they die.
And then you're gonna say, you know, we used to be able to get from New York to London in only a couple hours.
I mean, it's like four or five.
Isn't that crazy?
Now it's three months.
You know, we still have the technology, but the planes are only gonna be used by like powerful government officials.
That's where we're headed.
It's gonna be very, very difficult to maintain this system.