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Aug. 13, 2025 - Tim Pool Daily Show
01:01:07
Trump Brings ORDER Back To DC Streets, Left Says Takeover Is RACIST
Participants
Main voices
c
connor tomlinson
20:54
t
tate brown
36:33
Appearances
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karoline leavitt
01:16
Clips
b
beto orourke
00:30
| Copy link to current segment

Speaker Time Text
tate brown
Good afternoon, Rumblers.
How is everyone doing?
As you can see, not Tim Poole.
It's Tate Brown here, Producer Tate, holding it down.
It is a beautiful, beautiful, sunny day here just outside of our newly liberated nation's capital.
We are going to get into the DC Liberation Liberation Day.
DC is finally safe again.
You can finally go for a stroll without worrying about being knocked over the head.
It's a beautiful thing.
Let me center my camera here.
See, we play it loose here.
This is Rumble.
We can kind of do what we want.
We can adjust the camera.
We can move around a little bit.
It's a great thing.
But yeah, we're going to get into it.
We got the DC liberation.
That's going to be huge.
We'll dive in.
We'll get into the data.
And we also have Beto O'Rourke freaking out, going on a profanity lace tirade.
There's a lot to unpack there.
We're going to get into that.
And we'll also be joined later by Connor Tomlinson to discuss all things Britain.
There's some pretty hilarious...
There's some pretty hilarious...
So we're going to get into that.
It's going to be great.
But yeah, let's get into our sponsors first before we start the show.
First here, we got Cass Brew Coffee.
It's our in-house coffee brand, and it is delicious.
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It was actually, it's a, you know, a legacy skateboard brand had this logo for a long time.
I think it's the independent brand.
And yeah, the people said it was racist.
They said it was this, you know, this horrible thing.
And so over the last 10 years, it's become kind of taboo.
Well, I don't know if you saw who won the last election, but we're a little sick and tired of cancel cultures.
Tim is taking back, the boonies are taking back the board, taking back the logo.
It's the uncancelable board.
Head over to shop.boonies.com and get you a board.
And I'm joined today by producer Surge.
We're switching up.
We got Surge in the cut.
So unfortunately, the camera's gone.
We don't know what happened.
We think maybe there was some sort of LA crack had gotten to the studio.
We don't know for sure what happened.
So we don't have a camera.
The camera's down, but you got to trust me that Surge is here.
Let's get into the first story from the New York Times.
Trump's show of force begins to take shape as guard troops deploy in DC.
National Guard troops began to deploy in Washington on Tuesday evening as President Trump's plan to use the federal government to crack down on crime in the city started taking shape.
About a dozen members of the National Guard appeared in five military vehicles near the Washington Monument as the sun set, a stark juxtaposition to the peaceful evening scene of people jogging by with headphones and walking their dogs.
An Army official said the troops were continuing to gather at the DC Armory and were expected to deploy around national monuments and near a U.S. U.S. Park Police facility in the Anacostia neighborhood of southeast DC.
Mr. Trump on Monday, it's President Trump to you, New York Times, the paper of record.
President Trump on Monday described the nation's capital in apocalyptic terms as a crime-infested wasteland.
A description that ignores the extent to which crime has been falling in the city over the last two years.
But it remains unclear whether the eventual show of force will match the president's rhetoric.
Is this an op-ed?
Like, this is reporting.
This is reporting, apparently, in 2025.
But they're like live, you know, giving their take on everything Trump said.
Like, what are we doing here?
Quote, we just did a presence patrol to be amongst the people to be seen, Master Sergeant Corey Baroff said as he stood near a Humvee.
That's so sick.
I want to be quoted next to a Humvee at all times.
That's so sick.
Quote, of the people for the people in DC, he added.
He said he did not know where they would be headed next.
And look at this picture.
This picture is incredible.
Like, the left is making it sound like, you know, we're rolling in like Tiananmen Square style into DC.
And then here you get these lovely tourists on their segues just chopping it up with the National Guard because it's a beautiful thing.
People want the National Guard to be there.
Certainly the tourist.
I mean, if you're walking, if you're going around on a Segway, you're an easy lick, right?
Like you're just a target on wheels.
Like if I'm, look, I'm not, but if I were a delinquent, when I see a segue, I see an opportunity, right?
Like that's an easy lick.
So they're loving it.
The segue, the segue people are loving having the National Guard presence.
Carolyn Levitt, the White House press secretary, said Tuesday that the administration's campaign was just beginning.
Quote, over the course of the next month, the Trump administration will relentlessly pursue and arrest every violent criminal in the district who breaks the law, undermines public safety, and endangers law-abiding Americans, she said.
So the left's response is a little ridiculous over the top.
This is not a surprise.
This is how they react to Trump in every which way.
Right here, we have Muriel Bowser, the mayor of Washington, and Pamela A. Smith, her police chief, met Tuesday morning with A.G. Pambondi and other administration officials.
City officials emerged from the meeting saying that they were focused on how to make the most of the federal support.
And Mrs. Bowser, which is a great, great name, said she wanted to make sure that the federal force was, quote, being well used in an all-out effort to drive down crime.
You know, Bondi went on X yesterday and she was saying this was a productive meeting.
You know, they came to, you know, they're on the same page, et cetera, et cetera.
But then Miss Bowser, Mrs. Bowser, took a bit of a different here.
We got it right here.
But Mrs. Bowser struck a far more forceful tone by Tuesday night, calling Mr. Trump's actions a quote authoritarian push and a, I got to say end quote, quote, end quote, anyway, quote, intrusion on our autonomy, end quote.
In a live town hall on social media, she denounced the frightening characterization of Washington that Mr. Trump had promoted, saying that seeing homeless encampments, quote, triggers something in him that is him believing that our beautiful city is dirty, which it is not, end quote.
So you can just lie, I guess.
I mean, you're allowed to lie.
We have the First Amendment, right?
There's free speech and whatever.
We fought some wars for that.
So I mean, you're allowed to lie.
But if you're, you know, we do have eyeballs.
We can't walk around Washington, D.C. and see that it's like disgusting.
This is great.
Quote, we are not 700,000 scumbags and punks.
We don't have neighborhoods that should be bulldozed.
We have to be clear about our story, who we are, and what we want for our city.
Actually, no, they do need a lot.
We need a lot of bulldozers, actually, for Washington, D.C. I'm not saying all 700,000 are scumbags and punks, but a good chunk of it are.
That's actually a fair categorization.
Yeah, so they do this thing where they try to downplay.
This is a classic left leftist tactic where they downplay the crime.
They emphasize like equality and tolerance above everything else.
And it's at the expense of literally people's lives because people die all the time from violent crime.
They're downplaying the crime.
They keep doing this thing.
It was up here when they were fact-checking Trump.
Where was it?
Anyway, yeah, to the extent which crime has been falling in the city over the last two years.
Well, they do this weird thing, right?
So you have your 20-year homicide trend.
It's actually a bit, it varies a bit.
So they actually had some good years, 2010 through 2015 or 2014.
It was in the low hundreds, even the high 80s.
2013, there was a terrorist attack.
So that spiked the numbers a bit.
But over the last 10 years, I mean, it's been like open season in D.C. I mean, it is out of control, the homicides.
Last year was 187.
2023 was insane, 274.
And the way that police reporting, so we had the story, we covered it a few times here on Timcast last week of there was a police commander in DC that was falsifying violent crime data.
So he was effectively downplaying downplaying the data, the actual volume of violent crime in the city.
The thing is, homicide, you can't really cover up, right?
You can cover up violent crime, like you can cover up, you know, burglary, you know, assault, robbery.
There's ways to make those go away if you're crunching numbers.
Homicide, you can't, That's just not how policing works.
It's very hard.
That's why you see the kind of the bait and switch instead is like swapping the race around on the offender.
That happens all the time.
But as far as making these numbers go away, it's very, very difficult for police, police departments to do that or, you know, homeland security, whatever.
Anyway, so you see here the homicide, it's actually pretty steady, high 100s, low 200s.
And then obviously 2023 was insane.
And then you go here, you look at 2023 to 2024.
They're saying violent crime is down 35%.
Okay, possibly because the homicide rate did go down.
But this is 2025 as of August 13th, 2025.
We already have 100 homicides in the city through eight months.
Compared to last year, it's 113.
So it's down 12%.
Would you say it's a massive reduction?
Well, that's because it's America.
We're used to a lot of violent crime.
But they're saying violent crime is down 26% total.
So the idea that criminals are still going, they're still going ham on the homicides, but they're taking it easy on everything else.
Like this number here, particularly kind of jumps out.
It's down 50%.
It's very, very hard to believe.
I mean, typically when you look at these crime statistics, the violent crime, the rate that it changes up and down, tracks very closely with homicides.
And like I said earlier, homicide is the one data point that's actually pretty difficult to kind of fake, so to speak.
So it's very hard to believe.
And even then, even if let's just say, oh, it's only 100 homicides, 100 homicides in our nation's capital in the wealthiest country on planet Earth is unbelievable.
That's unacceptable.
This would, no serious country would tolerate that at all.
At all.
That's absolutely absurd.
I mean, this was like a day ago.
This was Allison Papson tweeted this.
Man shot on the 1200 block of 12th Street, Northwest at 7 p.m.
That's the address right here with the red pin.
And then here's the White House.
This is less than a mile away from where the president lives.
And people are getting shot.
I mean, like, what are we doing here?
What kind of country allows this?
I mean, this is absolutely absurd.
And Trump, thankfully, is just embarrassing, really.
I mean, Trump's done a few of these state visits.
He did these visits to the Gulf, the Gulf states.
I mean, I've been to Doha.
Doha is a lovely place.
I mean, it's very hot.
It's not, you know, my, you know, pigmentation gets a little rough with the sun, but it's a very safe place.
You feel very secure while you're there.
He did a few other state visits.
He visited the UAE, the Saudis as well.
And you walk around those countries, you walk around their cities where they have extreme wealth, like we do.
And I mean, you're not even going to see panhandlers, let alone people getting shot, like, you know, a few blocks away from the Royal Palace.
So, I mean, Trump has been very aware of the crime thing, but I have to think that doing these state visits really, it really hits home how out of control the situation is.
And frankly, it's sad, but how used to it Americans have gotten to the point where it's almost a joke.
I mean, right.
Anyway, so Trump does something about it.
And go figure, DC.
Here's like, I'll just read the headline from the AP.
It's already just ridiculous in and of itself.
Trump's rhetoric.
This is from the AP, Trump's rhetoric about DC echoes a history of racist narratives about urban crime.
So here we go.
This is a quote from Trump.
This is Liberation Day in DC, and we're going to take our capital back.
Based on Trump Promise Monday.
Trump's actions echo uncomfortable historical chapters.
I'll just read here.
As DC, the National Guard arrived at their headquarters Tuesday.
For many residents, the prospect of federal troops surging into neighborhoods represented an alarming violation of local agency.
To some, it echoes uncomfortable historical chapters when politicians use language to paint historically or predominantly black cities and neighborhoods with racist narratives to shape public opinion and justify aggressive police action.
Here's a quote from April Goggins, just some lady, right?
That grassroots organizer.
Okay, so you're a scammer.
Got it.
Anyway, quote, we have to be vigilant, said Goggins, who had court has coordinated local protests for nearly a decade.
Regardless of where you fall on the political scale, understand that this could be you, your children, your grandmother, your coworker who are brutalized or have certain rights violated.
Now, out of context, this quote sounds like she's talking about the crime in DC because the crime in DC That's where someone you love could be brutalized or have certain rights violated.
I have the right to walk around the street and not get robbed, right?
That's a very basic right that's not being granted to me or the people that I love, my children, grandmother, coworker.
But no, no, that's not what she's talking.
She's not talking about the violent crime.
She's not even worried.
She's not even, she says accusing DC of having violent crime, if reading crime statistics, just by reading it, that's racist.
That is the claim she's making here.
And she's saying the actual threat is the police doing their jobs.
That's the threat.
Well, I'll tell you what rights are being violated here.
It's stories like this.
Like every, like round the whole, I mean, this is non-stop.
It was actually difficult trying to pick a story.
This was mother of DC murder victims from the postmillennial.
Mother of D.C. murder victim praises Trump for cracking down on crime.
Tamara Tarpinian Jatcham, sorry, it's a little tricky name.
Watched Trump's Monday announcement and cried, the Washington Post reported.
Quote, Eric, you did not die in vain, the mother recalled saying.
Her 21-year-old son, who was working as an intern for Ron Estes, was struck and killed by a stray bullet over the summer in downtown D.C. Quote, if we would have known that the city was so dangerous, we wouldn't have let him go, she told the outlet.
He paid with his life.
That's the rights being violated.
That's why Trump is doing what he's doing.
And enough.
And enough.
A 21-year-old going to work in the nation's capital, work for a representative, and he's got to worry about getting hit with a stray bullet in America.
I mean, we're used to it.
It's like the frog in the pot where it's gotten so bad for so long, we're just used to it.
No, this is ridiculous.
These are the rights being violated as normal Americans that just want to peruse around their capital city.
They can't.
So, you know, here's a quote from Melissa Velasquez, a commuter.
It's like a band-aid to a gunshot wound.
I feel like because there's been an increase of racial profiling and stuff, and so it's concerning for individuals who are worried about how they might be perceived as they go about their day-to-day lives.
Really?
That's the problem in DC.
The problem is how people might be perceived.
I mean, are we serious right now?
People are getting shot less than a mile away from the White House, and we're worried about perception, how the police might perceive you.
No, sorry, we're not playing these games.
Trump's done.
American people are done.
We're liberating the city.
And honestly, I made the case on IRL and I got some flag for it.
I don't think Trump should stop at DC.
I mean, I think Bukele kind of set the tone of how you actually handle these cities that are out of control.
Let's take a look at the rankings of cities by homicide rate.
So you're seeing a lot of the, you know, they're playing the hits here.
You got Mexico, Ecuador, South Africa, Brazil, Jamaica.
These are countries that are notoriously violent.
Terrifying.
I've been to South Africa.
I've been to Mexico.
I've been to Jamaica.
Very terrifying countries.
You have to be very careful where you go, Hades in the mix.
So these are horrible, horrible places to be, to live.
I'm sure they're beautiful, I'm sure.
But as far as being alive for purposes of being alive, it's a pretty grim situation.
28th place, New Orleans, 30th Memphis, my hometown.
And we're in the mix with like Natal, Brazil, Chihuahua, Mexico.
Actually, we're worse than these cities.
Johannesburg.
Johannesburg, South Africa, which if you know anything about Johannesburg, it literally, I mean, Serge, I'm preaching to the choir with Serge right here.
I mean, Johannesburg looks like Mad Max.
I mean, it's ridiculous.
There's entire skyscrapers that are just massive squatters camps.
There's like fires everywhere, trash everywhere.
You can't leave the house past like eight because these people will set spike strips out in the road and carjack you.
And it's safer than New Orleans and Memphis.
Let that sink in for us.
I mean, this is America.
We went to the moon.
I mean, what are we doing?
I mean, this is not complicated.
It is not hard to solve crime.
Bukeley has demonstrated that it is.
It's not rocket science.
The police know what to do.
Go talk to a police officer.
They're going to tell you that the problem with their job is all the red tape.
I mean, their hands are tied behind their backs.
They know what to do.
You go to the Memphis Police Department.
You walk around the police station.
You ask the guys there, you know, if you were king for a day, how would you clean up the city?
They'd say, really?
Just let us do our jobs.
And the DA would actually, you know, actually charge these people.
It's not complete.
This is embarrassing.
Embarrassing that Johannesburg is safer than Memphis and New Orleans, which are very beautiful cities.
Completely unacceptable.
And maybe we should take a look at a country with a comparable GDP, a comparable level of wealth per capita, Japan.
Here's what they, Japan, if you miss the train, they're not dead, don't worry.
They're sleeping.
This is from Business Insider.
The businessman, if they miss their train, the last train there runs at noon, they just nod off in the street.
It's not a big deal.
I mean, they're just, they're just having a nap.
And you can do that in Japan.
You can just sleep out in the open.
I mean, it's not, you know, it's not, you know, great you missed your train.
That sucks.
But this is a country with a comparable level of wealth to us.
I think America, the GDP per capita in America is probably higher than Japan, actually, matter of fact.
And these dudes are just sleeping in the street.
There's not any worry of being mugged.
You want to do this in Memphis?
I mean, make it 20 minutes and your kidneys will be missing.
I mean, it's ridiculous.
Your car can't even sleep in Memphis.
It's on cinder blocks.
And, you know, you're sitting in a drive-thru.
You're like at a Long John Silver's.
And by the time you get your food, you look down, your car is on cinder blocks.
It's like a NASCAR pit stop the way they swap everything out.
I mean, it's totally out of control.
And then you go over to Japan and these dudes are just, yeah, just napping.
They're just having a great time.
I mean, it sucks.
They work a lot, so they have to sleep in the street.
That's not the point.
That's neither here nor there.
Ridiculous.
And you know what else is really bad about DC?
The homeless.
I mean, the crime.
You thought the crime was bad?
I mean, it looks like, you know, they're releasing a Harry Potter book on every block.
And I mean, it looks like Bonner.
I mean, it's crazy.
It looks like, you know, Burning Man or something.
I mean, it's absolutely ridiculous.
Trump's had enough.
Carolyn Levitt, she's going to break it down.
Let's watch the video, the homeless situation and how they're going to address it.
karoline leavitt
The Metropolitan Police Department, with the support of the new federal agencies who have been surging on the streets of the District of Columbia, are going to enforce the laws that are already on the books here in Washington, D.C. For far too long, these laws have been completely ignored, and the homelessness problem has ravaged the city.
So DC Code 221307 and DC Municipal Regulation 24100 give the Metropolitan Police Department the authority to take action when it comes to homeless encampments.
So homeless individuals will be given the option to leave their encampment, to be taken to a homeless shelter, to be offered addiction or mental health services.
And if they refuse, they will be susceptible to fines or to jail time.
Again, these are pre-existing laws that are already on the books.
They have not been enforced, which is part of the reason for this nationalizing of the federalizing of the National Guard to bring in this assistance for law enforcement.
While we are targeting criminals and trying to remove criminals off of the streets, we also want to make DC safe and beautiful.
And that involves removing mentally disturbed individuals in homeless encampments as well.
So we will be using these regulations and code that already exists.
tate brown
Did you catch that?
It's a little thing she said.
They already exist.
These laws are already on the books.
So it's not even like Trump is, you know, reinventing the wheel here.
I mean, that'd be great.
He probably could if he really wanted to.
Like a nice gold wheel or something.
I don't know.
But listen, these laws are on the books.
It's not like DC has always been this way.
It hasn't.
We have the, we have the mechanisms required to clean these cities up.
We don't have to do anything.
We don't have to like, you know, suspend the Constitution or anything you just enforce the laws there's code you can't sleep on the street you can't pee on the street you know you can't shoot up wherever you want i mean it's not like it's not we're not you know we're not like making them do push-ups or anything like this is very simple stuff and we have that we have penalties for them we have fines or jail time if you if they refuse to comply i mean the reality of the situation is you don't you don't have the right to sleep on the street The streets
are for the public.
It's not a hotel.
If you want to sleep and you're not at home, you get a hotel.
Or if you're homeless, you go to a homeless shelter.
And the dirty little secret, which a lot of people don't want to tell you, but if you speak to people that work at these homeless shelters, I mean, they'll be the first people to tell you, is the majority of the people that are on the street don't want to go.
They don't want to go into the shelter because you have to get clean to go to stay in these shelters.
You have to get clean from drugs.
That's just a requirement.
And there's no alcohol.
I mean, it sucks.
I mean, I know we have this idea that the homeless are just down on their luck or, you know, they got laid off and they're just having a rough time.
I mean, I wish.
I mean, I wish that we, you know, there was just, you know, we just, you know, tweak a few things and get them off the street.
That's not, but that's not what's going on.
I mean, the majority of these guys are mentally disturbed, drug addicted.
I mean, this isn't helping them.
This isn't kind to leave them on the street.
This is evil to leave them on the street.
This is evil.
We're unbelievably wealthy.
We're dripping in wealth as a country.
You can get a, you go to Best Buy, you can get like a 70-inch flat screen for like 150.
If you get a floor model, like 120.
And I mean, and we can't enforce basic code.
Like, I mean, this is absolutely, and this is our, this is our capital city.
I don't know if this was like Portland, maybe you can tolerate.
It's a faraway place.
I mean, it sucks for the Portlanders, but I mean, we have dignitaries visiting us.
You know, tourists love foreign, you know, foreign tourists, international tourists love DC.
It should be pristine.
It should be pristine.
That's how Tokyo is.
That's how probably the majority of capital cities are because it's a reflection of the country.
And we have homeless people everywhere.
I mean, even if you just drive, I mean, like, we had a live event.
I mean, Tim was talking about this.
We had a live event in the DuPont Circle area Saturday.
And just to drive in, I mean, yeah, I mean, it looked like a campsite, you know?
I mean, it looked like I felt like I was in an REI.
I mean, it was crazy.
People had sleeping bags.
They're like, you know, like tailgating.
I mean, it's crazy.
The amount of infrastructure the homeless have built.
I mean, really, I mean, it's almost, you know, it's almost kind of amazing sometimes.
I mean, there's videos of them like soldering wires out of a, you know, light bulb post or whatever.
So I'm just so thankful that we're setting the tone in DC.
I think this is kind of a warning shot to the rest of the country, to the rest of these city leaders, to get their act together because Trump is not playing around.
I was in DC last night, actually.
We're an hour and some change outside of the city, but I do go into DC a lot.
I was there last night.
The police presence is noticeable.
There's been a massive increase.
And honestly, the civic life, nothing's really changed.
People are still going about their business.
You don't feel like you're in some sort of dystopia.
You know, what felt like a dystopia was like following, you know, J6.
That's when it felt kind of wild was when there's, you know, fencing everywhere.
You felt like you're, you know, like a barnyard animal or something.
No, now there's police everywhere.
It's actually, it's quite nice, really, to know that you can walk around, you can have a stroll and not get knocked over the back of the head for your watch, you know, and this isn't even a nice watch.
I mean, imagine if he had a nice watch, you'd be cooked, and I'm worried.
So totally ridiculous.
And, you know, like, I mean, we're used to it.
The left gets mad over these things.
But Beto Arourk seems, you know, he's a dirt.
He eats a lot of dirt.
So he's fired up.
He probably has some like weird, you know, weird bacteria in his body.
He's kind of always been this way.
He's a bit of a crash out merchant.
Let's see what Beto has to say, right?
That's what you're all wondering.
It's the golden question.
What does Beto have to say?
Let's take a look.
beto orourke
In a basketball game right now, if you'll excuse the metaphor, where the refs have left the arena and the other side is just clobbering the shit out of us.
It's punching us in the face, kicking us in the nuts.
And we're kind of throwing our hands up and we're asking the crowd, the people of America, hey, do you see what's going on here?
This is unfair.
This isn't the rules that we agreed to play by.
Well, who cares about the fucking rules right now?
Punch back, kick back, dunk over their heads, and win some fucking power.
Oh, no way, dude.
tate brown
The left is getting mad.
They might start using the law to come after us.
I think Beto should be very...
They've I mean they don't they don't know what's coming.
I mean this is like just a friendly disagreement at a bar.
What's going on right now?
I don't think Beto and his cohort realize how angry the American people are.
I had a whole lot prepared here on the state of our country.
Here is just one thing that I caught.
Nathan Habersad actually sent this over to me to demonstrate how angry Americans are and they just get used to this crap.
Oracle layoffs.
There's been talks here.
Could be up to 10%.
And then look, boom, five new Oracle jobs.
H-1Bs.
And these guys, these Beto guys, they don't understand why people are actually okay with Trump taking the fight to these freaks.
Seriously?
This is what Obama's library looks like.
People have the right to be angry with how ugly America is getting.
Because this is what America, this is the same city, Chicago.
This is what it used to look like.
This is what was taken.
This was what was taken away.
And this is what they're replacing it with.
Like a G-mod building.
I mean, this is like disgusting to look at.
Everything in this country is becoming disgusting to look at.
So sorry, Beto.
We have the right to be a little angry.
I'll close with this tweet.
This kind of sums up why I think people are so fed up because this is the state of the average American, I think.
I think this is great insight into the life of the average American.
This is a tweet from this lady.
She's a psychologist, you know.
Anyway, five-year-old, what are those pills?
Me.
My birth control, so I don't accidentally have more babies.
Five-year-old, don't take those.
Have 100 babies.
Five-year-old, what are those other pills?
Me.
My focus medicine to help me work.
Five-year-old, don't take those.
Play with me.
This is the state of adults in America.
Like, pills, popping pills, disturbed.
This is one of the most disturbing tweets I've ever read.
And this five-year-old has better insight on how to correct, correct her life.
I had a whole lot here.
A lot of, you know, a lot of data points.
You know, hours people are spending alone.
That gap is growing.
Americans, really, people in the Anglosphere at large, they're starting to lose faith, the idea that hard work is a reward of success.
People are taking pills to like not think, and their five-year-olds are begging them to play with them.
I mean, things are getting bad.
We're swirling the drain.
So, yeah, sorry, Beto.
We're a little angry.
And you should be very thankful that this is how our anger is being transmitted, right?
You should be very happy that this is how power is being wielded because it could get a whole lot worse.
Like I said, this is just a friendly little bar fight.
So anyway, we're going to wrap up that segment here.
We'll be back.
It's for Timcast IRL at 8 p.m.
Thank you for hanging out.
And coming up at 4 p.m. on the Culture War channel, we do have an interview with Connor Tomlinson.
You will not want to miss that.
So we'll see you there.
Thanks for watching.
For everybody else, we got some UK action.
I know you guys are really into that.
It's the motherland, so to speak.
We had this hilarious, if you know Tom Skinner is, you understand how monumental this link up is.
This is a beautiful thing.
Thomas Skinner linking up with JD Vance, the Veep.
Beautiful thing.
Bosh.
We love to see it.
Vance, of course, is in the Cotswolds.
There's these really cringe protests.
I wanted to bring Connor Tomlinson in to discuss this.
I'll just give you a quick little peek here at the protest.
This is hilarious, hilarious stuff.
unidentified
Every roads have been blocked.
Peace are sort of everywhere.
Chipping autonomous, you rarely even see one police car, but we're seeing bands.
We're seeing loads just dotting past.
And it's all for this man who slags off our country in one breath and then wants to holiday here six months later.
I think it's just hypocrisy.
He's on his holiday.
I normally wouldn't protest against people on their holiday, but there's clearly a political angle to this.
he spent the weekend with our foreign secretary.
And so I think that means that anything goes really.
I think he has to be respectful of people, but at the same time, he's here.
He's carrying out political business and it's appropriate to carry out a political protest.
Shame on you!
JD Botts!
Shame on you!
JD Botts!
Shame on you!
tate brown
Yeah, so the protests, like they're using a lot of our classic American protest, you know, hits.
And they don't sound the same with a British accent.
They don't hit the same.
So, yeah, this is a beautiful thing.
Oh, is Guardian locking me out here?
There was cake and music.
The weather is perfect at a glance.
It could have been a joyful community gathering in the sun-dappled Cotswolds Villages Park, but the placards gave the game away.
This is just cringe.
So I want to bring Connor Tomlinson in.
We're having an issue here with the link.
Let me see if I can whip this up real quick.
I had to send it to him directly.
See if that works.
Let's see.
Let me see.
I'll try and set it up here.
I don't know if he's in the room.
We're having some technical.
You know, without Tim, sometimes we have some of these problems.
Yeah, I think he's missing his link.
But we'll see.
We'll try to get him in here.
In the meantime, let me see.
connor tomlinson
Okay.
tate brown
In the meantime, let me see.
Let me see if I can read some chats.
Do we have any Rumble Rants all at Surge Drive here?
Oh, wait, no, we got Connor.
He's here.
Connor, can you hear me?
connor tomlinson
Magic, I can, sir.
I can't see you, but I can.
tate brown
The virtual camera, Surge.
We have to start the virtual camera.
connor tomlinson
Are we just going to have to blame Surgeon?
tate brown
Yeah, yeah.
I think, like, it's, I think it's because he's there.
connor tomlinson
We go.
Magical.
Boom.
tate brown
I'm doing well.
connor tomlinson
I decided to copy my glasses.
I didn't, I didn't realize we were going to.
One of us is going to have to change.
tate brown
Yeah, I mean, I guess I could throw him off and go raw here, but then I can't see anything.
Dude, how are you?
What's up?
You want to tell the people?
connor tomlinson
I'm fine, despite being under the iron curtain of censorship in this country.
Though I've enjoyed watching JD Vance absolutely mob David Lamy for the last week.
Even his children caught more fish than David Lammy is like living proof that somewhere a village is deprived of its idiot, and he's been serving as our foreign secretary for about a year now.
tate brown
Yeah, I mean, it's really fun watching.
We were watching the video of the protesters and the Cotswolds protesting Vance's little vacation.
And they're kind of rehashing a lot of our American.
You know, there's always a lot of the MLS fans catch a lot of crap because they try to use like English soccer chants and it sounds really weird when it has like an it coming out of an American.
It's kind of the other way around where they're saying like, hey, no, hey, our streets, who streets, our street, but like in an English accent, it doesn't sound right.
Who are these people and why do they care so much about a foreign vice president?
connor tomlinson
So on the copying of American tactics, don't forget that we had a Black Lives Matter movement over here after George Floyd, you know, took one too many speed balls and died beneath the knee of David Derek Chauvin.
And we have next to no deaths in custody in this country.
And when they are, they're white.
So we don't really have a mass epidemic of black people dying at the hands of the police.
Neither do you, by the way, but obviously per capita is an eternal Sisyphian hill up which people of color struggle.
So yeah, we just copy American culture at all times.
I'm happy to have a decolonial movement and evict every single McDonald's from my high street and replace it with a chip shop instead.
However, these particular protesters, as you noticed in your preamble that I was watching on Rumble because I'm a loyal fan, they weren't quite as energetic as most of the protesters that are standing on street corners in America's full contact sport democracy.
And that is because if they bust a blood vessel, the NHS waiting list is about a year, so they won't get attended to.
They'll instead probably be offered mate, considering we've just passed it assisted dying in our country.
But these people are often astroturfed and Soros funded.
One of the people there is Zoe Gardner.
She's this insufferable smug leftist who keeps showing up on broadcast networks as a migration expert.
Basically, what she's done is she's done an undergrad in languages and then a PhD in migration studies, which means that borders are racist and we should let in infinity Bamalians until the heat death of the universe.
And she went on a media training camp for left-wing influencers funded by the Open Society Foundation.
So most of these protests, as is like patriotic millionaires that run these billboard vans around London, saying actually we should tax the rich even more, even though we've had 16,500 millionaires flee the country in the last year, taking millions in taxes with them to Dubai and America as well.
Soros continues to funnel money into these astroturfed protest movements to roll out for the cameras the impression that Vance, Trump are hated and the Labour government are beloved.
By the way, some polling done by the Telegraph, I think it was late last year, might have been early this year.
Among Gen Zers, English Gen Zers, they're more likely to vote for Trump than they are for Nigel Farage.
So actually, among the people that you ask, especially the Zumas who are very plugged in, like you and I, to social media, they rather like Trump and Vance.
And if you poll the British public without saying that Trump's policies are associated with Trump, they overwhelmingly support all of his policies on energy immigration and kicking transactivists and sexually confused people out of women's sports locker rooms and toilets.
So yeah, the idea that Vance isn't welcome, or the idea that Vance would even be offended by these memes when he's tweeted them out himself and finds them hilarious, utterly pathetic.
unidentified
Yeah.
tate brown
I mean, there's kind of something, there's an interesting juxtaposition, right, where you have the picture that I was showing earlier of Thomas Skinner and who's a legend.
I mean, I don't know.
I don't know how ubiquitous he is.
And I think if you're plugged in in American politics, you kind of get the idea of who he is.
He's just this lovable dad over in Britain.
He says bosh a lot.
He loves having a supper.
I mean, it's a beautiful thing.
And he's linking up with JD Vance.
It's all smiles.
It's a really wholesome moment.
And people are loving it.
People are sharing it everywhere.
They're just having a lot of fun.
And then it's like flash.
You go to, you know, probably a half a mile down the street and you have these nasty looking people protesting.
I mean, it looks like the bar scene from Star Wars over there.
It's a really horrifying thing.
I mean, what is the dynamic there?
It seems like the fun and the energy is with the Tom Skinners of Britain, kind of the older guard, the representative of the older guard.
I mean, can you break down that dynamic a little more?
connor tomlinson
Okay, so as far as the protest goes, yeah, it looks like Arkham Asylum allowed most of his patients out.
A lot of the time, this is funded by the UK Home Office.
You get groups like Stand Up to Racism and the Socialist Workers' Party who receive kickbacks from the government because the British government, under the Conservative government, this was made even worse with the 2011 Charities Act, but they are demanded to allocate a certain portion of government funds to charities that advance the goals of diversity, equity, and inclusion or community cohesion.
Basically, a leftist communist agitation.
Some of these patron networks got their funding dried up because USAID was obviously funding them for some time.
And as the head of that particular snake has been cut off, the Hydra has slightly less bite for the time being.
But without government funding, without my tax money going straight to these freaks, they wouldn't have the ability to get out in the street with their pre-printed placards.
As far as Thomas Skinner goes, though, I mean, you're right, the organic support for men like him, men like Vance, is apparent.
Skinner, for some background, was on a UK version of The Apprentice.
And he was, even though he didn't win, he was very popular because he seems like a down-to-earth market stall holding family man.
And he does these great videos on social media where he is the avatar of the Anglo.
He's basically like, if you read that passage from when Roman soldiers rocked up to Britain and saw all of the sort of Celtic people painted in blue woad up to their neck in a bog, just shouting abuse at them, that's Thomas Skinner's face is what those Roman legionnaires saw when they first set foot on British soil.
He recently, the reason why he's sort of stepped into politics a little bit is one, he's rumored to be running for London mayor to unseat the odious and unpopular Islamist dwarf Sadiq Khan, who relies on immigrant client groups to vote him in perpetually because the English have been chased out of the capital city, London and all the other major cities in the UK are now minority white British.
But on the outskirts, there are still thriving English diasporas like myself who live in small enclaves, having been chased the periphery of our historic homeland.
And Tom Skinner could probably galvanize them all to vote out this Fabian fifth columnist who's been running London like his own personal fiefdom for some time now.
And the reason people like Skinner is because he is unapologetically, almost unself-aware and romantically English.
So he appeared at the now in the England conference.
There's footage of this on the Spectator YouTube channel.
I had a bit of a bust up with one of the panelists, Robert Toombs, who is a historian who said that he almost cried when he saw girls in headscarves reciting Rudyard Kipling poetry, and it made him believe that you could learn to be English.
He said that English has had nothing to do with ancestry.
You know, tell that to the settlers who descended the gangplank of the Mayflower and set up the United States.
There's a pretty big difference between them and Somalians.
But Thomas Skinner actually gave a speech at that conference and he wasn't an academic or an author or even a politician, but he gave the most romantic, relational version of what England means to him.
It's where he grew up.
It's his family.
It's his ability to be a market school stool trader.
It's a pint in the pub on a Friday night.
It's a pie.
It's the fact that there is all these creature comforts and all these familiar things that you couldn't get anywhere else.
And you don't need to rationally justify them.
It's just ours and we love it.
And for that reason, he's become a bit of a social media sensation and a darling of the British right because he exists as the kind of man that we want to have live a happy life unmolested by mass immigration and multiculturalism.
And J.D. Vance, considering he has a fantastic Twitter feed, you know, I've got some mutuals with him, like Charles Cornish Dale.
He actually is a fan of Thomas Skinner and they had a mutual friend in my friend, James Orr, who brokered their introduction.
I do know for a fact that Vance wanted to visit Jeremy Clarkson's pub the other day because Tom Skinner was actually there yesterday.
But as far as I understand it, Jeremy Clarkson, all boomers have a limit on how base they can be.
And he is still not a fan of Trump and Vance.
So I don't think that meeting went ahead.
But Vance did have a barbecue with Skinner.
I know he met Nigel Farad for breakfast.
I think it was this morning.
He had a meeting with Robert Jenrick, who was the favorite to take over the Conservative Party before he was beaten out by Kemmy Badenock, who is kind of trying to save face because Vance didn't actually meet with her.
Instead, she was busy serving ice cream on the Isle of Wight.
And she's just saying, oh, it's a scheduling conflict, which, you know, I think if the vice president said, can we meet for coffee?
You'd drop literally everything.
So I wonder if he just sees the writing on the wall and she's going to be kicked out and Jenrik's going to be installed instead.
I think we're just grateful, frankly, that JD Vance is here to unite the British right, knock some heads together and give everyone a stern talking to.
It's just a shame he didn't meet with Rupert Lowe while he was here for a few days.
tate brown
Yeah, I mean, it is a beautiful.
I mean, kind of going back to the Skinner thing, and it's the energy around the Trump movement is it's a really important idea, which is the side that's having fun is going to beat the side that's miserable.
And you do see the kind of the stuff that's going on, even though the right in the Britain, I mean, in Britain, we've talked about it previously, is in a bit of a bad state.
There is a bit of disunity.
There's moments like this where everyone's just having fun, everyone wants to be around that, that energy.
I mean, that is a beautiful thing.
And I think that's what Trump represents in the United States, is he is able to kind of bring people in just because of his vibe, his aura, so to speak.
Maybe you could explore a little more sort of the division on the right right now in the UK.
Because I mean, like here, things are pretty united.
Trump is pretty good at reeling people in and out.
Obviously, there's a lot of concerns so far in the administration, but it's nothing like the UK where, I mean, it's really difficult to see who's in charge, who's the leader.
I mean, where people are at.
So maybe you could break down the situation on the right in Britain a little more.
connor tomlinson
Yeah, so the Royal is attracting lots of young men because for years, the ruling woke hegemony, which ideologically captured both the governing Conservative Party and then all of the parties on the left, like Liberal Democrats, Labour, the Greens, and now this emerging splinter party that's headed up by former leader Jeremy Corbyn, who has attracted a bunch of Islamists and communists into one coalition.
They're being nicknamed Jez Boller because he once said that Hezbollah is his friend.
So all of that morality has captured politics for so long that now there's a kind of mutually reinforcing right-wing arms race spurred on by young men who have gotten onto the internet, realized they're public enemy Number one, and just thought, well, I have nothing to lose by being unapologetically patriotic and actually enjoying insulting these fat freaks who aren't going to reproduce anyway,
who counter characterize the marginalized constituencies on the left who are just demonstrating their naked anti-white hatred at Glastonbury Festival when a rap act called Bob Villain decided to gloat that heard you want your country back.
No, shut the F up.
Live on the BBC with a bunch of middle-class professionals, some of whom were English, cheering him on.
So, you know, chickens cheering on KFC, setting up a branch in their back garden.
So, as for the splintering on the right, you have the Conservative Party, if you can call them on the right these days.
It's the oldest and most successful political party in the world.
But, well, other than today, when they've slightly bumped up in the polls a little bit because of Robert Jenrick's social media activism, he's currently in the south of France getting threatened with a knife by migrant gangs filming on the ground how they're crossing over in boats breaking into Britain via the English Channel.
Thousands of them, 150,000, 180,000 since 2018, 50,000 since Kirstan became prime minister, that we're paying £145 a day each to put in four-star hotels.
We're paying their medical, dental, we're giving them new iPhones, spending money, everything.
He's filming that.
And so he's rocketing up the charts in terms of people that politicians that people like.
But the Conservative Party is currently led by Kemi Badenock, who has just had a reshuffle.
She identifies as Yoruba Nigerian.
Although she's recently come out and said she doesn't feel Nigerian anymore, she feels British.
But that's only after some pressure because last December, she gave an interview in the well, we call it the right-wing spectator magazine, but its new editor, Michael Goh, the former government minister, actually endorsed Kamala Harris in the election last year.
So there you go.
He's been pieing Kemi ever since she got into politics.
But she actually said that she's a Yoruba Nigerian and other Nigerians are her ethnic enemies.
So she's probably going to use the nuclear deterrent on Boko Haram if she ever wins an election.
She's probably going to be kicked out by November because, well, her party absolutely hate her.
And all she ever does is doom scroll through negative comments on social media and it's really getting to her, apparently.
She's also late to every single meeting.
Like she runs on joke, what my wife joked because she was slightly late down the aisle.
She said she was running on Kemi time.
That's not quite funny.
So she's going to be gone, probably replaced by Robert Jenrick.
The Conservatives are fighting for their life at the moment.
And the best they can hope for maybe in 2029 at this rate is an electoral pact with reform.
Reform UK are top of the polls.
They are the legacy party from UKIP, then the Brexit Party.
They're headed by Nigel Farage.
Nigel Farage, as I explained on Timcast when we were lost on about a month ago, was that Nigel Farage has felt the need to soften his rhetoric as of late.
Now, after I explained that, he has since said that he's going to deport foreign criminals to El Salvadorian jails.
He has doubled down on mass deportations, but he has replaced his former special services mayoral candidate, Ant Middletown, a proper military hard man, with a Muslim mum of seven.
So we're going to have the Muslim labor mayor versus the Muslim reform mayor.
This is your right-wing populist party, ladies and gentlemen.
Handpicked by his former Muslim chairman, by the way, and lots of Muslim donors.
Even though the British public are now polling, I think it's 53% in favor of saying that Islam is completely incompatible with Britain.
That taboo has been broken.
And it's because we've had loads of Muslim migration.
We don't like actually having pro-Hamas parties in our parliament.
We don't like having to eat halal meat.
We don't like having loads of women walking around like ghosts wearing burkers on our high street.
But hey, Presto, we're still getting anyway.
So reform are probably going to win, but at this rate, they're schizophrenic.
Rupert Lowe is a man without parties.
He's currently got the Restore Britain movement.
He was Reform's former MP before he was kicked out because the police was called on him by the former Muslim chairman for saying some hearty words and they stole his shotguns in the middle of the night.
He would be a fantastic Trump-like figure if he had any path to power, but at the moment he is exiled from all party politics.
So he's one to watch.
And then there's a new party that's been started up that Tommy Robinson has joined.
Tommy Robinson is hosting a massive rally on the 13th of September featuring Jack Pesobiac, Jordan Peterson, Eva Le Dingerbrook and the like called Unite the Kingdom.
He's just come out of prison, obviously, for showing a film that, well, I can't actually talk about the contents of because there's basically a legal embargo in our country to talk about this.
Even we don't have free speech in Britain, basically.
And he has joined a party called Advance UK, which is headed up by another former member of reform, the former deputy leader of reform, Ben Habib, who is a half English, half Pakistani chap.
He's a very nice guy, very patriotic.
The problem that they have is that because there is such an abundance of marginal parties on the right and reform is sucking all of the air out of the room at the moment, they're not really registering in polls and they're not actually a formal political party.
But who knows?
They could gain momentum in the coming years if Majil Farage continues to drift leftward.
At the moment, it looks like there's going to be a reform majority government.
Given that they don't have a strong foundation for their policies, they could screw it up and be more like Trump term one than Trump term two.
And we really don't have another five to ten years to mess around because Muhammad is the number one baby name in this country.
And by 2063, white Britons are going to be a minority and the country is going to be at least 20% Muslim.
And I don't see a future for the UK in those circumstances.
tate brown
Yeah, I mean, I think that's sort of the thing that people don't realize is that there's a hourglass and it's rapidly running out of sand on the top end.
I mean, there was kind of some controversy recently.
Ann Coulter came out and said that she actually believed that the British right was in a better position than the United States.
And I think her main argument was the demographic situation.
But I mean, the United States has kind of a unique ability to assimilate migrants in a rapid way that doesn't exist in the UK because English is such a distinctive ethnic origin.
Obviously, there's a debate in the United States now over what is an American, right?
I mean, if everybody has the potential of being an American, it's not special.
But that being said, you know, there is a noticeable, you know, change when you go from American identity to English identity where English identity really is a strict, you take a DNA test and you find out if you're English or not.
Yeah, so that was kind of an interesting observation by Anne Culture, but I don't know if I agree because you look at the numbers over there and it's like, I mean, the English themselves are rapidly losing their homeland.
I mean, how noticeable is this?
I know you're not, you know, in London.
I mean, I've been to London quite a bit and it's I do live in London.
connor tomlinson
Not central, central London, but I was born in London and I live on the outskirts of London.
So I'm about 20 minutes from the center of London by train.
And I can tell you, man, it's like the refugee camp.
It's horrible.
I really don't like going there.
I've advised a friend of mine who wants to set up a new media enterprise not to build a studio there just to minimize the amount of time that people are going in.
People are fleeing by the droves.
It was in 2021 that the 2020 census came out.
This was before the Boris wave of post-Brexit migration when we had legal migration running at 1.2 million a year.
That's the same level of legal migration that America gets as a country.
Obviously, we are a country the size of New York State.
So you can only imagine the level of demographic and thereby cultural and economic change that is felt in the big cities.
I met Anne a couple of weeks ago at a dinner that we were both at.
Very nice.
I think she's completely misguided.
She's correct that Muslim immigration is a major threat to the UK.
But I must say, man, when I landed in Washington Dollars to come on your show last time, what the hell is going on there?
The passport queue is like Islamabad.
But you guys are actually letting in the people that are going to prove to be the complete destruction of your nation.
The fact that they've got giant monkey god statues now being erected in Texas, that self-governing enclaves, Muslim enclaves are being put up in Texas, in Dearborn, Michigan.
There's little Mogadishu in Minneapolis.
These people, as much as America can assimilate people, what matters is numbers and cultural proximity.
It has assimilated people in the past because they've been largely from Western Europe and the Anglosphere.
Don't forget, like in the 19th century and the early 20th century, yeah, 19th century, there was serious worry about whether or not large waves of German immigration could be integrated.
So you guys are way far from Bradvers and Bladerhausen.
You've got hijabs and homer killings springing up in Washington State now.
So get a handle on it.
It's going to be a real problem for you guys.
But as far as the UK, yeah, demographics are pretty bad.
I mean, Muhammad has been in the top 10 baby names for a number of years now.
It's never number one in England.
It's rising in Wales.
We've got, I think, a quarter of all babies are born to foreign parents.
47% of all sex offenses committed in London are from foreign nationals.
Now, that's not non-British ethnic people because that's not even recorded.
That's just people who do not have British citizenship.
So the number is way higher.
We are number one in Western Europe, number two in all of Europe, and I think 18th in all of the world for crimes committed by foreign nationals.
So, we are just battery farming sex offenders at the host population's expense.
We're literally just packed to the rafters with foreign rapists now.
And this is government policy.
It's not going to turn around anytime soon.
They're not going to repeal any of the laws that keep these people here that allow Pakistani paedophiles to appeal on human rights grounds to stay in the country because it says that it would depress his children if he were deported.
Pedophile, by the way, these cases are just never ending.
And we still haven't uncovered the depths of depravity for the actual grooming gang scandal.
We know that it's happened in 50 towns and cities across the UK.
We know thousands of girls have been victimized.
We know that they've been branded M for Muhammad, had their tongues nailed to tables, been doused in petrol and set alight.
Multiple girls have been killed either for ODing on heroin, have their homes set ablaze with their families inside, run over by cars.
There have been police officers who went to be whistleblowers that have seemed to have been killed before they can come out and speak about this.
We've had police officers, as of a couple of weeks ago, actually charged with participating in the rape gangs themselves.
So the rot goes right through Parliament, the House of Lords, local councils, police officers.
Every institution is completely corrupt in this country.
They are all culpable for this mass, unwanted, unprecedented demographic experiment run on the British people.
And so the idea that we're going to turn this around very quickly is looking pretty daunting because so many people's hands are smothered in blood that most people just don't want to admit what they've done.
tate brown
Yeah.
I mean, it's grim.
That's like, yeah, you look at the US, like you said, like you look at what nativism was in the 19th century and they were like concerned that what the Irish drank too much.
That was like the big concern.
And then now the people coming in are like eating dogs and we're like, hey, can you not do that?
Are they eating cats?
connor tomlinson
Oh, wait, we had a video of some Somalians abducting geese from a park the other day.
So we started having the Haitian phenomenon.
And I tell you what, I posted on X a couple of days ago.
So Roork Nationalist puts out similar things.
It's like all of these geese, all these ducks, all these donkeys, everything, they are worth way more than entire nations.
Like, I will happily ban every single foreign national from select countries just to keep our dogs, geese, and donkeys safe.
tate brown
Yeah, yeah.
There's, I mean, the very beautiful geese.
It's really a shame to see Somalians not pursue.
I mean, that's kind of the big, I think that would be the big, that should be the big immigration question if you're trying to decide who can come in, which honestly, we need net zero immigration.
But maybe at a certain point.
connor tomlinson
Net negative, man.
Net zero just means replacement.
tate brown
Right.
Yeah.
Yeah.
Zero immigration.
Yeah.
Negative.
I mean, re-immigrant, re-migration.
That should be the test.
It should be, do you view geese as friend or food?
I mean, that's like very simple.
There's the other test, which is when you eat a bacon cheeseburger, that's a great test to see who's permitted into the country as well.
connor tomlinson
Well, that's that's why the Spanish have tapas, right?
They often need wine and pork.
Yeah, it's a test.
tate brown
It's a good filter.
So yeah, I think, I don't know, maybe we should pursue something like that.
But yeah, I mean, look, it is really encouraging when you do see a lot of guys on the right in England that are high queue that are promising, that love their country, and most importantly, are actually getting involved.
Because, I mean, there's a lot of these people out there.
It doesn't take many.
It doesn't take many to flip a country on its head.
It really doesn't.
So it's really encouraging to see in England, you are starting to see this emerging.
I don't know what to call it.
Maybe like an ELE, maybe?
I don't know.
We need like a cool name.
connor tomlinson
We're basically just sort of like dubbing ourselves the new right at the moment.
Because I know like 10 to 15 people who I would include in this.
And we're a very small batch of actually quite virtuous people as well.
Like I think this is one of the great observances that Aristotle made is the only dividing line between monarchy and tyranny, aristocracy and oligarchy, mob rule and democracy is how virtuous the people are.
This is John Adams' famous observation that the Constitution is only made for a moral and religious people.
If you replace the people or you replace the religion, then you don't have constitution anymore because the constitution, as Joseph D'Amaestro observed, is just the codification of the sentiments that are already written on the hearts of men.
And so if those men's hearts are different, the sentiments mean absolutely nothing.
The only problem is there are lots of very bright, virtuous, engaged, and involved young right-wingers, but they're being gatekept out of institutions.
They're being constantly dismissed and denigrated.
Lots of them aren't being published by the existing right-wing infrastructure.
And we don't have the same level of capital or institution building that the Americans did.
Like, we don't have an American moment.
We don't have as many publications springing up as you guys did.
I've got an ear to the ground.
And, you know, they're quite large, so it's quite easy to do as to whether or not people are actually trying to build this sort of stuff.
And people are, but it's only, They're only building it because they've been ignored for so long.
And the existing establishment institutions think if they just ignore this growing right-wing energy who are more interested in questions of identity, immigration, and belonging than they are just raw economics and logistics, they just think they'll go away.
But instead, what they don't understand is we're actually way more annoyed and autistic than you guys are stubborn.
So it just means that we're going to put our energies in the same direction, just down a different avenue, and we're going to be a continual stone in the shoe of your containment attempts.
And I can only be optimistic, or not optimistic.
I can only continue pressing on in the face of adversity because I know that a few other people are doing this.
And because if I didn't, it would be like that first world war poster where the guy's got his kids around his feet and on his knee.
And they say, Daddy, what did you do during the war?
Like, if I look my future kids in the eye and just say, Yeah, I basically did nothing and handed the country over to becoming a caliphate, then I've just got no excuse, have I?
tate brown
Yeah, that's base.
Very bass.
Connor, dude, I appreciate it.
Do you want to, where can people find you?
connor tomlinson
They can find me at Con underscore Tomlinson on X. They can find me at Connor Tomlinson on Substack and YouTube.
I do most of my writing for Courage Media and I also co-host Deprogrammed over at the New Culture Forum on YouTube.
And you will be able to find me on Timcast early next month.
So I'll see you in person, sir.
tate brown
Let's go, dude.
Well, I appreciate it, Connor.
Till next time, man.
connor tomlinson
Pleasure.
tate brown
Alrighty.
Well, that was Connor Tomlinson.
I love that guy.
He's a friend.
He's a great.
Look, you know, I know I go a little negative on the show sometimes, but there is some promise.
And seeing guys like Connor in the fight, I mean, it really does.
It warms the heart.
It's a beautiful thing.
I do.
I am generally an optimistic person.
I do think that we're going to win.
I trust Trump.
I think he's doing some great things.
I think we're going to come out on the other side.
I really do.
Mainly because we want it more than they do.
And that's really what it comes down to.
And like I said earlier, the side that's having fun will always beat the side that is miserable.
And if you look at the right, we're having a lot of fun.
We're having a good time.
You look at the left, wow, you've seen the videos.
So with that, I wrap up here.
We will be back tonight at 8 p.m. for Timcast IRL.
Might be a fill cast tonight.
We'll have to see the situation.
I want to shout out Serge for holding it down in the producer chair.
Andrew's been clutching up, but Serge is taking the saddle here.
So shout out to Serge.
With that, yeah, we'll be back for Timcast IRL.
You can follow me on X and Instagram at RealTate Brown.
Give me a follow there.
I'll keep you updated on what the play is.
Maybe if I'll be on tomorrow, I don't know.
We'll see what happens.
But yeah, follow me there.
We'll hang out and see you guys tonight.
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