Speaker | Time | Text |
---|---|---|
Ladies and gentlemen, Trump has done the improbable. | ||
He has gotten a ceasefire across the finish line. | ||
Can you believe this? | ||
Can you believe this piece in the Middle East? | ||
Unbelievable. | ||
Unbelievable move by Trump. | ||
It took him like what? | ||
Just a few months to do what Biden couldn't do in years. | ||
Save Palestinian lives. | ||
You know, Gaza and Genocide. | ||
unidentified
|
What? | |
I don't even know what you're talking about. | ||
Trump ended. | ||
Whatever was going on there. | ||
Trump has mopped it up. | ||
He has saved the day. | ||
That is right. | ||
There's a ceasefire. | ||
A ceasefire has been agreed to between Israel and Hamas. | ||
And we will now see the hostages freed. | ||
You know, it's going to be a beautiful thing. | ||
So uh look, that's gonna be a big story. | ||
We're gonna we're gonna get into it. | ||
We're gonna break it down. | ||
This is hot off the press. | ||
This is Tate Brown here holding it down for Tim Poole on this lovely Thursday. | ||
It's very nippy, it's a very nippy uh Thursday here just outside of our nation's capital. | ||
Um I think I got a little sick or something, because I, you know, I was sleeping my windows open and uh the temperatures dropped precipitously overnight. | ||
I don't know what's going on, but um, yeah, I don't know. | ||
Al Gore's wrong. | ||
That's all I can say. | ||
Al Gore has been emphatically rejected, his his little theory about global warming because it is freezing. | ||
Um, other than that, we are keeping I'm keeping an eye on uh Trump's gonna hold a cabinet meeting here soon about the uh government shutdown. | ||
We are entering day eight of the government shutdown. | ||
Um they're gonna have a vote, they're gonna vote again today. | ||
Uh this will be the seventh vote, the last six, uh, no shot. | ||
So uh we're we're kind of expecting that again. | ||
I don't think I think we're gonna go into the weekend uh with the government shutdown. | ||
So it's gonna get interesting. | ||
The military needs to get paid uh by the 15th. | ||
I mean, they are due to back pay. | ||
Um they are due for back pay by law, but um, they're gonna not gonna be happy, happy campers if they miss paychecks. | ||
So uh that'll be interesting. | ||
We're gonna keep an eye on that. | ||
I have that over here, so I will flash to that um if the if that cabinet meeting does start and we'll see what Trump has to say. | ||
Uh we have Antifa potentially being declared as a foreign terror organization. | ||
This has been discussed a lot on the show. | ||
People have been clamoring for this. | ||
They're saying, well, you know, if a week or two ago when Trump got up and declared uh that Antifa would be designated as a domestic terror organization. | ||
A lot of, you know, legal experts, Will Chamberlain came on the show, and uh unfortunately that doesn't really do much as far as you know giving the government extra tools. | ||
It's more about like reorienting focus. | ||
Uh, but a foreign terrorist organization designation, that changes everything. | ||
That puts them in the same ranks as Al Qaeda, the Taliban, you name it. | ||
So uh look, he he mentioned that it seemed like it was a little bit offhand. | ||
Well, we'll we'll check his comment out, we'll see what he had to say, and we'll break that down to see what we got there. | ||
Um a few other stories. | ||
If we have time, we'll get to uh Katie Porter, uh, you know, she is uh hopeful. | ||
Uh she's a elect election hopeful in the state of California for governor. | ||
Um caught on a mic hot mic, uh berating one of her workers. | ||
That's just uh grim look inside the mind of these politicians. | ||
Uh what's going on behind closed doors? | ||
So we're gonna take a look at that. | ||
It's been all over the place. | ||
And uh, we also have a interesting story. | ||
Um in the Financial Times, Ari Emanuel, he's a uh billionaire investor. | ||
He's betting that AI will boost leisure time with a three-day working week. | ||
Um Matt Walsh disagrees emphatically. | ||
He's he's he's dooming. | ||
Um, and I think they both have interesting cases. | ||
So we're gonna take a look at that if we have time. | ||
Beyond that, we have a special special guest. | ||
You guys are really in for a treat. | ||
It's the captive dreamer, uh, Martin. | ||
He is he's a legendary Twitter poster. | ||
Um, one of the best around. | ||
Um if you remember during the election, the uh they're eating the dogs, they're eating the cats uh during the debate. | ||
That wouldn't have happened without the captive dreamers. | ||
We're gonna ask him about that story specifically, what his role was in that. | ||
And um, I want to get his thoughts on Hassan. | ||
There's these accusations that his son is electrocuting his dog like Emperor Palpatine. | ||
It's very interesting. | ||
So um we'll ask the captive dreamer what he thinks about that. | ||
He's he has a bit of an interesting insight on these sorts of things. | ||
But with that, we're gonna get first before we get into our stories. | ||
We're gonna take a look here at our lovely sponsors. | ||
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Get you some boards and swag and bumper stickers. | ||
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It's just some really fantastic stuff. | ||
We've got the 28th Amendment board if you're into that kind of thing, and the chickens, it's a great option for you. | ||
Um, we got some t-shirts, we got the uh be gay and don't be gay board. | ||
Um, so you can you know make an option, you know, make a call there, you know, uh however you're feeling. | ||
I don't know. | ||
Um depends on if you had breakfast that morning or not. | ||
Anyway. | ||
I digress. | ||
Let's get into this first story from Truth Social, the actual paper of record or the website of record. | ||
This is from Donald J. Trump, the president of the United States. | ||
He uh put this truth post up uh yesterday afternoon into the evening, and I will read here for you what he had to say. | ||
I am very proud to announce that Israel and Hamas have both signed off on the first phase of our peace plan. | ||
This means that all of the hostages will be released very soon, and Israel will withdraw their troops to an agreed upon line as the first steps towards a strong, durable and everlasting peace. | ||
All parties will be treated fairly. | ||
This is a great day for the Arab and Muslim world, Israel, all surrounding nations, and the United States of America, and we thank the mediators from Qatar, Egypt, and Turkey who worked with us to make this historic and unprecedented event happen. | ||
Blessed are the peacemakers. | ||
President Donald J. Trump, President of the United States of America, so true. | ||
Blessed are the peacemakers. | ||
Trump is a peacemaker. | ||
You know, when he was when he was um campaigning, he was saying he would have this wrapped up in like 24 hours. | ||
You know, I think we all knew that was a bit of hyperbole. | ||
That's kind of a that's a kind of a Trump Trumpism. | ||
But it was pretty quick. | ||
I mean, what that was nine months. | ||
That was that's not too bad to end a like a full-blown uh war between uh Israel and Hamas. | ||
And not just that, it's not just a ceasefire. | ||
I mean, if all the hostages are getting released, I mean that kind of was the victory term for the Israelis, at least their stated victory term was was um getting the hostages back, and uh and they they've obviously took taken out a lot of Hamas's leadership, so I think they'll be quite happy. | ||
Uh first, let's flash. | ||
Let's flash here. | ||
We got Trump for the cabinet meeting. | ||
I this uh this is important, so we're gonna take a look here. | ||
We're gonna see what he has to say. | ||
Maybe. | ||
Oh, I have the tab. | ||
But uh, we are getting the hostages back on uh Tuesday, Monday or Tuesday, and uh that'll be a day of joy. | ||
I'm gonna try and make a trip over. | ||
We're gonna try and get over there, and uh we're working on the timing, the exact timing. | ||
We're gonna go to Egypt, where we'll have a signing, an additional signing. | ||
We've already had a signing representing me, but we're gonna have an official signing. | ||
Uh and the amazing thing is all of the countries over there from Qatar to Saudi Arabia to UAE to all of them. | ||
I mean the rich ones, the less than rich ones. | ||
They've all come together. | ||
Something which is amazing, actually. | ||
They've all come together for this, and they're really uh probably the best relationships they've ever had. | ||
So it's been really something incredible that nobody thought it was possible to get it done. | ||
And very importantly, the hostages are coming back. | ||
The uh, as you know, uh they consider them hostages. | ||
They talk about them as hostages, but there are approximately 28 uh dead people, mostly young, mostly men, but uh and boys, I mean boys. | ||
Uh the one woman talked about her baby. | ||
Her baby's 25 years old, but you know, to her, it's her baby. | ||
We're we're bringing them home, getting them to get everything. | ||
And uh To those parents, the the dead young man is just as important as though it were as though this person were alive. | ||
It's amazing. | ||
I've never seen anything quite like it. | ||
I've been very much involved. | ||
I've never seen anything quite like it. | ||
But it's uh it's really peace in the Middle East. | ||
And uh you remember October 7th was terrible, but also uh from the Hamas standpoint, they probably lost 70,000 people. | ||
That's big retribution. | ||
That's big retribution. | ||
But at some point that whole that whole thing has to stop. | ||
And we're going to uh see to it. | ||
Gaza is gonna be slowly redone. | ||
You have tremendous wealth in that part of the world by certain countries, and uh just a small part of that what they what they make will do wonders for for Gaza. | ||
All right. | ||
So that we he's he's he's uh he's cooking there. | ||
We're gonna let him continue to cook. | ||
We're let's get into a little more of the peace plan, then we'll flash back and we'll see um you know what he's up to. | ||
But uh I wanted to get into this. | ||
This was from NBC News. | ||
Israel and Hamas agreed to truce and hostage release. | ||
Now, look, obviously, you know, I I led in with little chest beating. | ||
Look, there still is there the rightfully so. | ||
There's people that are are quite skeptical that this could fall through. | ||
Um, unfortunately. | ||
We I mean we did have a ceasefire not too long ago that fell through. | ||
But I I do personally think, and a lot of a lot of you know, mainstream pundits and military experts do agree is if the hostages are released. | ||
I mean, that that really is makes terms for peace a lot more likely to stick. | ||
Um obviously all the hostages are being freed. | ||
Celebrations broke out throughout Gaza and Israel. | ||
Um Hamas put out a statement. | ||
President Trump, the guaranteor states of the agreement and various Arab Islamic international parties to compel the Israeli government to fully implement the agreement's requirements. | ||
Um and then Benjamin Netanyahu acknowledge an agreement had been reached on X saying it's a great day for Israel. | ||
Tomorrow I will convene the government to approve the agreement and bring all of our dear hostages home. | ||
I thank from the depths of my heart President Trump and his team for their mobilization for the sacred mission of releasing his hostages. | ||
Um and then he said his office had spoken with Trump and invited him to address the Knesset. | ||
So that would be that would be pretty pretty funny. | ||
I mean, look, Netanyahu's allowed to address Congress, so Trump should go over there and cook a little bit. | ||
I think that would uh only be fair. | ||
Um, but we'll see. | ||
Uh with that, I do want to break down a little bit or at least get some insight onto what exactly has been agreed here. | ||
Because um, you know, I think everyone's like, oh, agreement, agreement, agreement. | ||
But what what is what exactly makes this agreement different? | ||
What exactly makes this different from the past ceasefire? | ||
Why is the US and our partners so excited about this? | ||
Well, the BBC did a good breakdown here. | ||
Um I'll read. | ||
Uh once this agreement is formally approved as expected by the Israeli cabinet, a ceasefire will take effect. | ||
Uh reports in Israeli media suggests that this will happen immediately, although a spokesperson uh for the Prime Minister's office said that it would take it would begin within 24 hours of the cabinet's approval. | ||
The Israeli military will withdraw to a line that will leave uh leave it in control of about 53% of the strip. | ||
A spokesperson said, Um, according to a map distributed by the White House last week, this is the first of the three stages of Israeli withdrawal. | ||
Now currently, Israel is in control of about 80% of the Gaza Strip. | ||
So um this would be a sizable withdrawal. | ||
And the other 20% they could probably seize somewhat easily, if if needed, maybe not easily, but they could seize potentially. | ||
Um but currently they're in control of about 80% of the strip. | ||
And uh that's partially why Hamas with the uh with the um with the hostages, uh the hostages that have passed passed away, they they actually claim they don't know where they are because they are um out of the uh territory that is controlled by by uh by Hamas. | ||
So that that would explain it, I suppose. | ||
At least that's their explanation. | ||
I'll keep reading here. | ||
Uh the Israeli military said on Thursday that preparations were underway to transition to adjusted deployment line soon. | ||
And then after this, a 72-hour countdown will begin during which Hamas must release all 20 of the hostages believed to be alive. | ||
The return of the 28 bodies, deceased hostages would follow, although it is not clear how long that could take. | ||
Um they're not entirely, they don't know like where these a lot of these hostages' bodies are, uh, because they claim that it's in the parts of Gaza that are controlled now by Israel. | ||
Again, who knows? | ||
But um the the alive hostages being returned is obviously a game changer. | ||
Um Israel would then release about 250 Palestinian prisoners serving life sentences in Israeli jails, and 1700 detainees from Gaza. | ||
A Palestinian source told the BBC. | ||
Their identities are currently unclear, but a list submitted by Hamas before the agreement was reached, including high profile figures serving multiple life sentences for deadly attacks on Israelis. | ||
One of the most high-profile prisoners, Marwan Bar Barakhouti. | ||
I think I've said that correctly. | ||
I don't know. | ||
I might have just cast a spell. | ||
Uh will not be released as part of the swap, according to an Israeli spokesperson. | ||
And uh Israel will also return the bodies of 15 Gazans for the remains of each Israeli hostage, according to Trump's plan. | ||
And then in here, there's a lot of humanitarian aid that's kind of you know boring, boring. | ||
We want to hear about the hostages, but uh yeah, so it's really promising, really promising stuff. | ||
Uh, there was some commentary here from Fox News when this this news broke. | ||
Trey Yinx kind of described the situation on the ground. | ||
So um let's take a look here and listen. | ||
Yeah, Sean, good evening. | ||
It's a historic moment in the Middle East. | ||
President Trump announcing that both Israel and Hamas have signed on to the first phase of his 20-point peace plan to end the war inside Gaza. | ||
This means that 20 living hostages will be freed from Hamas captivity. | ||
They'll be exchanged for nearly two thousand Palestinian prisoners, and Israeli forces will have to withdraw from certain lines inside Gaza. | ||
They will still stay within the enclave, but they will pull back a bit. | ||
All of this came together just a few hours ago. | ||
President Trump sending his Middle East envoy Steve Whitkoff and his son-in-law Jared Kushner to Sharm el Sheikh, Egypt. | ||
They were joined by Turkish officials and Qatari officials to try to hammer out the final pieces of this agreement and bring it across the finish line. | ||
Then President Trump got that information from Secretary of State Marco Rubio, ultimately making the announcement on Truth Social that a deal was reached for the first phase of his agreement. | ||
This is going to alleviate suffering for Palestinian civilians. | ||
It is going to reunite the hostages with their loved ones, and it's going to enter into a chapter where the Middle East can work to formally end the war inside Gaza, bring that conflict to an end, and ultimately open up the door for more peace agreements between Israel and its Arab neighbors. | ||
I can tell you have covered this story for more than seven years, Sean. | ||
This is the first time that I can remember where Israelis and Palestinians were celebrating the same thing. | ||
Sean? | ||
There you go. | ||
They were celebrating the same thing. | ||
So good news. | ||
That is good news to hear out of Israel, uh, Palestine, etc. | ||
etc. | ||
So great news. | ||
With that, let's get into our next story here. | ||
This is uh via Tim Cast News. | ||
Uh they got the clip here. | ||
Jack Pasobic, uh Patriot, encourages President Trump to designate Antifa as a foreign terror organization, as a left-wing terror group has foreign links all across Western Europe and the Middle East. | ||
Let's take a look what Trump had to say. | ||
Let's take a look. | ||
Go ahead. | ||
Who are you with? | ||
Who are you with? | ||
Uh the center square. | ||
unidentified
|
I was I had the honor of asking you um originally if you would designate uh Antifa a terror organization. | |
And I stand here before you today and I'm echoing what uh Andy said over here. | ||
Are you going to work with your administration as the Secretary of uh states here? | ||
Are you going to work with your administration to designate it a foreign terror organization? | ||
You mean uh it a terror? | ||
Antifa foreign terror organizations. | ||
Well, has that been done? | ||
Pretty close, right? | ||
Would you like to see it done? | ||
unidentified
|
Yes, Mr. President. | |
Do you think it would help? | ||
unidentified
|
They have foreign landscape. | |
I think it's the kind of thing I'd like to do if you'd like to. | ||
If you agree, I agree. | ||
Let's get it done. | ||
Okay, let's get it done. | ||
Marco, we'll we'll take care of it. | ||
unidentified
|
Mr. President. | |
That's international, you mean sounds good to me. | ||
Four terror organizations. | ||
Uh are you okay with it? | ||
Oh, Stephen Miller. | ||
unidentified
|
Yes, it's true. | |
There are extensive foreign ties. | ||
And I think that would be a very valid step to take. | ||
I think so too. | ||
unidentified
|
Yes. | |
Good. | ||
I think it's a good point. | ||
I just this is what's so funny from Trump. | ||
He just pulls the room. | ||
unidentified
|
I don't know. | |
Is this a good idea? | ||
What do you think? | ||
Jack obviously speaks up. | ||
Jack Pasobic could potentially take credit here for getting Antifa declared a foreign terror organization. | ||
That's that's freaking hilarious, dude. | ||
We're so back. | ||
So um with that, I think Antifa, look, we've been covering it quite extensively. | ||
I think they know the the hammer's coming down. | ||
Obviously they obviously know this, but um, this is from the Washington Examiner. | ||
This is a good example that Antifa kind of knows that uh there's a new sheriff in town from the examiner. | ||
Antifa leaders flee America as Trump cracks down on domestic terrorist networks. | ||
Several ho uh sorry, several hoes. | ||
Well, that two, several of these hoes. | ||
Um several high profile Antifa leaders have fled the county or the county, the country. | ||
I gotta lock in, guys. | ||
Several high profile Antifa leaders have fled the country or are actively making plans to abscond overseas. | ||
I don't know, we actually just roll at the initials. | ||
Several hoes are leaving the county. | ||
What's up with that? | ||
What's with these hoes leaving? | ||
That's very that fits too. | ||
Anyway, I digress. | ||
News of their escape comes after Escape. | ||
News of their escape comes after President Donald Trump designated Antifa as a domestic terror threat and directed federal authorities to dismantle terrorism networks operating within the United States. | ||
Mark Bray, uh a financier of transnational Antifa operations and Antifa's foremost thought leader in America, announced he is fleeing to Europe, settling in Spain specifically under the pretext of safety concerns following negative media attention. | ||
Before his departure, Bray issued an apparent call to action urging widespread militancy. | ||
Only mass anti-fascism, legal or not, can save us. | ||
Bray declared on Blue Sky. | ||
So obviously, there's these just these bozos. | ||
They're all skipping town. | ||
Uh but this one is interesting down here, further down the article. | ||
Um independent reporter Christian Peterson recently found the leaders of Rose City Antifa, the most notorious American Antifa cell, hold up in Europe. | ||
Caroline Victorin, uh her uh maiden name is Gauld, if that's relevant to you. | ||
Uh one of the founding members of the Portland-based Antifa faction, was discovered this week hiding with her husband, Johan Victorin, a Swedish-born activist and another Rose City Antifa architect in the coastal town of Varberg, Sweden. | ||
Together, as co-founders of Rose City Antifa, the oldest known Antifa chapter in America, the Victorans reportedly had helped import the European model of anti-fascism extremism into the United States. | ||
Um I would recommend this video is kind of long, so I don't want to play it, but um Christian Peterson did a great job kind of blowing up uh the situation here. | ||
Um so yeah, head on over and uh head on over to his his Twitter and uh and take a look at that. | ||
There's really fantastic stuff. | ||
Um this was a quote from the uh from the video. | ||
Uh you are a citizen of the United States, are you afraid of being convicted of conspiracy yourself? | ||
And uh Victor refused to comment. | ||
But uh this line right here, um the Victorians reportedly had helped the European model of anti-fascist extremism in the United States, really does allude to the fact that yes, this is an international operation, and it always always has been. | ||
And so the foreign terrorist organization designation makes total sense here. | ||
It totally fits. | ||
Not to mention the fact that they're hiding in Sweden. | ||
I mean that again, that just tells you what kind of moment we're in, and that the Trump administration, even if you there's a lot of people on the right that are nipping at him saying they're they're not effective enough, they're not cracking down hard enough, but certainly a lot of Antifa seems to think so. | ||
Um the backers are moving to Spain, the uh sort of the OGs of these older chapters are fleeing to uh Sweden. | ||
So a lot of great, a lot of great signs. | ||
Um Rose City Antifa, you've probably heard of them before, they're quite prevalent. | ||
Again, they're the one of the oldest chapters. | ||
Umtifa, a sophisticated organization with strict recruitment practices, has gone underground in fear of conspiracy charges, according to Antifa expert Andy now. | ||
So look, they're obviously afraid of probably Rico. | ||
I think Rico could potentially be deployed against against them here with their extensive um network. | ||
Uh yesterday, Richie McGinnis was on the show, and he did a great job breaking down um a lot of the intricacies, a lot of how Antifa operates. | ||
And um something in particular is that they have a lot of names, they scatter things around, they make it really difficult to trace, and everything goes without a trace. | ||
Um look what the new Trump admin and the and the uh the intelligence community being reoriented, the three-letter agencies coming down there, breathing down their necks. | ||
It's gonna be a lot easier to use intel against these people, and it's gonna you have a lot more resources able to trace uh where these people are going. | ||
And so Kirsty Gnome obviously had spoken up. | ||
Um because look, there is this flyer that I this is this is a this shows they're terrified. | ||
Um there's this flyer that did the rounds. | ||
No and ice agents submit info, so they're trying to dox ice agents. | ||
And on Blue Sky, the Antifa Network said today's statement about fighting back against Antifa violence from the DHS contains a false conspiracy theory about our member crew, Ro City Antifa. | ||
RCA Roe City Antifa has not doxed any ice agents. | ||
A fact confirmed by going to the URL DHS conveniently censored from their photo. | ||
They are petrified because they're denying that they're like fighting back and and like with doxing. | ||
They're they're absolutely petrified because they're so committed to fighting vi they're fighting fascism, they're convinced there's fascism, but no, we didn't dox, we didn't do that. | ||
Uh uh, that wasn't us. | ||
That's a fake flyer. | ||
They're they're gaslighting us. | ||
Um hilarious. | ||
That just that just really demonstrates the moment we're in. | ||
Homeland's uh uh homeland gosh, there's a lot of words. | ||
Homeland Security Secretary Kirsty Gnome promised to pursue anyone involved in illegal doxing efforts against ICE officers. | ||
We will prosecute those who dox ice agents to the fullest extent of the law. | ||
These criminals are taking the side of vicious cartels and human traffickers. | ||
We won't allow it in America. | ||
So really fantastic stuff. | ||
They're still going. | ||
Like the videos uh we talked to Sorter on Monday, Nick Sorter, and we um we also talked to uh we also talked to uh well, we talked to a lot of street journalists. | ||
Um we talked to James Klug, obviously about this, and then also Richie McGuinness. | ||
And um, they did say that Antifa they might be emboldened by the Fed's crackdown. | ||
We saw this folder go or this uh folder, we saw this poster getting circulated. | ||
Um, to effectively just shine lasers at helicopters, um, law enforcement helicopters. | ||
So um yeah, clearly, clearly they're still at it, and clearly there's still a lot of room. | ||
This is why the National Guard getting getting um deployed would just really change everything because it would really free up a lot of these federal agents to uh crack down on this on this crap. | ||
So um, yeah, that's the update on Antifa. | ||
We're gonna still be covering this because the we the time as the time goes on, it's probably not going anywhere. | ||
But uh encouraging to see that these people are fleeing and that Trump could declare them a foreign terrorist organization because that would put them in the ranks of like Al Qaeda. | ||
And um Yeah, Tim Tim has made the point that uh like you can you can actually celebrate political violence if it's against a terrorist organization. | ||
Like nobody nobody got in trouble for celebrating when because you know Solomani was was was killed or when Osam bin Laden was killed. | ||
Um so that's the sort of environment that surrounds these foreign terrorist organizations, and so Antifa would not be absolved of that. | ||
I don't imagine they uh there's a lot of anger from the base, rightfully so. | ||
I'm very angry, um, at Antifa. | ||
And uh yeah, designated him as a foreign terrorist organization would break them fundamentally, would break them. | ||
We could like go full patriot act on them, and it would be super based. | ||
So we love to see that. | ||
We'd love to see Steven Miller at the end um going at it. | ||
You know, he's been he's been cooking, he's the uh kind of the sixth man of the year. | ||
But uh with that, well, I think we have time for this story. | ||
Uh yeah, we got five minutes. | ||
Um, this was just a bizarre one. | ||
So Katie Porter, um, here we have Katie Porter, you know, interesting lady. | ||
Um, she's currently uh a congresswoman. | ||
She's uh member, she was was a member of the House of Representatives. | ||
She uh uh her term ended uh in 2025, so the beginning of this year, uh, because she was uh running for U.S. Senate in 2023. | ||
Um, so that's why she didn't bother running for re-election. | ||
But now she's running for governor, and um yeah, odds she was doing quite well in the polling. | ||
She's running against uh former senator or Senator Alex Padilla. | ||
Um, and then yesterday took a complete nosedive. | ||
What happened here? | ||
What on earth? | ||
Why is Rick Crusoe spiking in the polls? | ||
Rick Crusoe obviously ran against Karen Bass for governor or governor, mayor of Los Angeles. | ||
Um he's kind of more of a moderate, and um he was he was beat by Karen Bass very unfortunately because um she's just mishandled everything, she's a very incompetent and terrible, terrible woman. | ||
Um, but you know, Rick Crusoe spiking people. | ||
So we gotta ask well what happened here. | ||
Well, this video hit everyone's timelines yesterday. | ||
This is a wild video. | ||
Just take a look here. | ||
And the state could lose out of my fucking shock. | ||
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I want to tell me that that's actually incorrect. | |
It's it's not that it's electric vehicles, it's that if we don't need a commitments on your Paris climate report. | ||
Okay, it does okay. | ||
unidentified
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You also were in my shop before that. | |
Stay out of my shot. | ||
unidentified
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Okay. | |
I'm gonna start again with um electric vehicle savings money. | ||
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Perfect. | |
I'm just That's awesome. | ||
And the fact that she did that. | ||
And the fact that she did that while she was like knew she was being taped is insane. | ||
First of all, that just shows you how emboldened Democrats are. | ||
They feel like they can operate with impunity in front of the press. | ||
Because like I've had very limited, very limited interactions with elected officials. | ||
I'm not like a big timer at all. | ||
But I've had some limited interactions with elected officials, Republican officials, uh, pretty much entirely. | ||
And even around like even around us, like people that are openly conservative, they're very um careful what they say. | ||
They're always kind of looking over their shoulder, they're a bit guarded. | ||
And it's totally fair because they're always worried about you know being getting their words twisted by the press. | ||
You know, next thing you know, they're having an expose. | ||
They're very careful, very cautious because the media is just waiting, waiting for an excuse to come down on them. | ||
Meanwhile, Democrats, they're in it, they're they're uh being taped for an interview, and they're like spurging out and crashing out and screaming at their workers because they just know that for the most part they can operate with impunity. | ||
They know that they can just say, Oh, that was off the record, by the way, and that will stay off the record. | ||
Um I don't know what who she who she pissed off for this video to get leaked because this is a few years old. | ||
I believe this was like two years old. | ||
Um, so I don't know what happened, who she pissed off. | ||
She must have said something to the wrong person because this video dropped. | ||
And uh, yeah, now she's cooked. | ||
Now she's uh she's tanking in the polls. | ||
There is another video here. | ||
This lady's just a psycho, uh, Katie Porter. | ||
Also, I gotta say, what is what is going on with Iowa? | ||
You know, I know this this is about California. | ||
I have a lot of love for Iowa family that's was born in Iowa. | ||
Um, you know, it's uh it's a great state. | ||
There's a lot, there's a lot of great people from there. | ||
Um, the women are fantastic from Iowa. | ||
We love we love our Iowa women. | ||
But you gotta ask yourself, what is they're not sending their best. | ||
That's all I'm really gonna say here. | ||
They're not sending their best because Eric Swalwell is from Sack City, Iowa. | ||
It's got it's called Sack City. | ||
Are we being are we serious here? | ||
Gross name, disgusting. | ||
And he moves what is with these Iwans moving to California. | ||
What's going on? | ||
Maybe something wakens in their mind when they move to California. | ||
Katie Porter's also from Iowa. | ||
I don't remember which part, but something's going on because what do you say to the 40% of California voters who you'll need in order to win? | ||
Um, who voted for Trump. | ||
How would I need them in order to win? | ||
Man, well, unless you think you're gonna get 60% of the vote. | ||
You think you'll get 60% all the everybody who did not vote for Trump will vote for you. | ||
That's what you're saying. | ||
In a general election, yes. | ||
If it is me versus a Republican, I think that I will win the people who did not vote for Trump. | ||
What if it's you versus another Democrat? | ||
I don't intend that to be the case. | ||
So how do you not intend that to be the case? | ||
Do you do you are you gonna ask them not to run? | ||
No, no, I'm saying I'm gonna build the support. | ||
I have the support already in terms of name recognition, and so I'm gonna do the very best I can to make sure that we get through this primary in a really strong position. | ||
But let me be clear with you. | ||
I represented Orange County, I represented a purple area. | ||
I have stood on my own two feet. | ||
So this lady's obviously you can just see in her face, she's just a total psycho. | ||
So with that, I don't have much more to say about Katie Porter. | ||
Unless our guest isn't here, then I'll have more to say because I don't have that many stories lined up, and then I will have a lot to say. | ||
But uh, we're gonna be joined here by the captive dreamer. | ||
You've probably seen him, he's a prominent poster on Twitter. | ||
Um we're gonna see if he's in here or not. | ||
Uh I'm waiting on the team to update me, but um, we'll see what happens. | ||
We'll see if he's in here because we have a lot to discuss, a lot. | ||
So um, let's start it up here. | ||
Let's see if he's in the room. | ||
Hey, captive dreamer, how are you? | ||
Can you hear me? | ||
Yeah, can you hear me? | ||
Yes, sir, yes, sir. | ||
Well, hey, I mean, look, a lot of people are gonna know who you are. | ||
You're a prominent poster, but for the audience, people in the audience that maybe don't know who you are, maybe you could give a quick introduction to who you are, what you do. | ||
Uh yeah, I guess I'm just kind of uh an internet a notorious internet troll. | ||
Some of some may say uh an internet poster. | ||
I guess I've always kind of posted and I've enjoyed posting, but the thing that got me on the map was um the sort of the Haiti Springfield stuff that got picked up by the Trump campaign, which uh I'm pretty proud of. | ||
But that's kind of my my big uh claim to fame if you were my 15 minutes. | ||
Yeah, I mean, that was a beautiful, and that kind of really showed the power of posting. | ||
I mean, I for people in the audience maybe don't remember, um, The Trump administration or sorry, the Trump campaign kind of going into the 2024 election, it did feel like the energy was down a little bit. | ||
It's like we needed a little oomph. | ||
And then out of nowhere, this story comes out out of Springfield, Ohio, where these Haitian migrants that have just been dumped in the city of Springfield were eating cats and dogs inexplicably inexplicably. | ||
And uh it was in large part because the Captive Dreamer here was signing the spotlight on it. | ||
And then next thing you know, the we're watching the debate, it comes up, and then we're eating the dogs or eating the cats. | ||
So they're it was within within like three or four days, it had gone from just like a post on the internet to uh you know, right on the state presidential debate stage. | ||
So it was pretty they're betting on it on polymarkets, you know, you could bet on whether Trump was gonna mention it, so it was pretty cool. | ||
Yeah. | ||
Well, I wanted to bring you in specifically to talk. | ||
Um we're we saw yesterday really, really white pilling a moment where Trump, he's obviously meeting with a lot of prominent conservatives on a kind of a round table discussion. | ||
They're talking about leftist violence, um, Antifa, how we should deal with it. | ||
And um, I I can't remember the journalist that brought up asking him about designating Antifa as a foreign terrorist organization. | ||
And Trump kind of asks the room, he's like, What do you guys think? | ||
Is this a good idea? | ||
Obviously, Jack Pasobic, Patriot, he uh says, Yeah, it's a great idea. | ||
And Trump just kind of taps the room. | ||
That's really really exciting because I think that really opens us up to treating Antifa like Al Qaeda. | ||
I know you have a lot of thoughts on how Antifa should be dealt with. | ||
I mean, I was wondering what your reaction was to that yesterday. | ||
Well, it's good because the the important thing is to go after the these like networks behind the scene, right? | ||
I mean, you can't just go after the individual actors, it's really about this you know, the Soros funded networks that are that are bailing these people out that are getting them to go in and uh you know, riot and protest. | ||
And so this opens up a lot more tools to to go after because uh I don't know, I I posted about this recently, but you know, organizations like the Canadian government, they fund uh these sort of Antifa adjacent groups to do op-ed like research hit pieces on people. | ||
Uh, they did it on me too. | ||
But they're funded by the government, so this allows, you know, opens a lot more doors to countering that kind of influence, which is is notoriously difficult to uh to get to. | ||
Yeah, and it's like something when you really see these people get unmasked, you see a particular strain of human being that you don't really encounter in everyday, or maybe we do encounter in everyday life, but we don't see that side of them in everyday life. | ||
I mean, something that was really exemplifying this was um this video that's been circulating over the last day or two of streamer Hassan Piker, obviously uh friend of the show. | ||
Um this is alleged, so like I don't want to get like you know, I don't know, sued if you can get sued for this. | ||
This is alleged, obviously, but it appears that his dog had a shock collar on and he like moved from the designated wholesome camera spot that like looks really good on camera, and then he just zapped him, like like Palpatine or Mike Pence or something. | ||
Like it was really wild. | ||
I mean, does that just kind of exemplify what kind of people we're dealing with here or what? | ||
I mean, I know you have some thoughts. | ||
Well, it's what's funny too is that dog sits there. | ||
I mean, I've never watched this show, but someone did a time lapse and the dog sits there for like four hours straight, like in the one spot, and it was the one time it moved. | ||
But uh a lot of these people weaponize this type of uh empathy or whatever, political empathy that they go into like uh communism or socialism, whatever. | ||
But really what it is is it's like a a way for them to uh justify their sort of like resentment and their envy and hatred and turn it into something that makes it look less obviously negative. | ||
You know what I mean? | ||
Like so instead of saying, Well, I hate the world and I want to destroy everything, you can kind of couch it or you can kind of uh hide that behind a mask of of being good person, you know, being a heckin' good person, right? | ||
That's what we always hear from these guys. | ||
And you know, the same person saying be a good person is openly celebrating political assassinations and and making memes mocking Charlie Kirk, right? | ||
So that's the same type of person, the same personality is is there behind the scenes. | ||
And the Piker is a great example. | ||
Like he's like the example uh you know, the best example of that. | ||
Yeah, yeah, totally. | ||
I mean, because that's really where the pushback really has begun is like John Doyle makes this point all the time, um, Patriot, where he talks about how there's this tendency on the right to want to just go back to like the 1990s, right? | ||
The 1980s, 1990s. | ||
But he makes this point of like, look, if you really want to exterminate leftism, you can't just ratchet it back to like an earlier form of liberalism and not expect like the outcome to be leftism, because that's just going to be the case every single time. | ||
Um I think that's a great point. | ||
And that's what I kind of See with what we're seeing now with I think this strain of thinking, this ideology has or has existed for well over 50, 60 years. | ||
It's just now they're so emboldened, probably because they've accumulated so much institutional power that they feel like they're just allowed to say things like that. | ||
And I think people are finally seeing like, oh, this has been there the whole time. | ||
It's just now they're finally saying it out loud. | ||
It's like this, it's like the stuff with like the great replacement theory that they say, well, it's not happening, but then when you kind of show that it is happening, well, they say, well, it's actually good that it's happening. | ||
And so yeah, we have reached a period where there's been so little pushback for so long. | ||
And you know, every major social media platform has propped these people up, right? | ||
I mean, Twitch has basically stuck by Hassan Piker, interviewing terrorists, doing all kinds of stuff. | ||
Everyone, uh, you know, the left has been in control of of Twitter, of all these things for so long. | ||
And uh now it's just they're realizing, okay, well, you know, are we the bad guys? | ||
It's almost like they're having this moment where we've been saying this terrible stuff for so long and gotten away with it, and now there's this really big cultural pushback after, especially after the Charlie Kirk uh assassination that uh people are realizing, okay, these are actually just like really bad people. | ||
Yeah, yeah, totally. | ||
Well, something that's been really interesting to me in the aftermath of the Charlie Kirk assassination, uh is actually the reaction was almost more shocking to me, because I kind of expected leftists to react that way if I'm being honest. | ||
I mean, I know a lot of people were shocked because they knew some of these people personally. | ||
Um, so that's obviously, you know, I'm my heart goes out for those people because you think you know someone, that sort of thing. | ||
But I was a little bit more surprised at the reaction for people on the right. | ||
They seem to be so quick to let like the left off the hook for this. | ||
Like we have this opportunity to really finally break this that's been tormenting us for decades. | ||
And there was this tendency to immediately absolve the left. | ||
And I don't know if it was intentional. | ||
I don't know if they're saying I'm gonna sit here and I'm gonna make sure like the leftists don't get punished, but they immediately like looked for alternative explanations, like, you know, maybe Israel did this, or maybe it was an inside job, or you know, maybe Qatar did. | ||
You know, you're seeing all sorts of these explanations from people on the right, and that's what really surprised me. | ||
I don't know if you're seeing the same stuff. | ||
It's it's kind of an outgrowth of what happened during COVID, right? | ||
And COVID was uh very good in terms of shattering the um trust in the expert class, right? | ||
They kind of lost all of their credibility for for many reasons. | ||
And what that did is that opened the door to uh sort of democrat democratizing uh explanations for things, which led to conspiracies and all these things. | ||
And not, you know, not all conspiracies are wrong, but there's this tendency almost to want to go towards the most complicated possible, most convoluted explanation possible. | ||
And whether or not they intentionally were trying to uh to to sort of take away the blame from the left, that's the outcome or the effect of trying to say, well, no, it wasn't Tyler Robinson, no, he didn't, you know, it wasn't his tr you know transgender roommate, all this stuff. | ||
Whether that's the intent or not, that's the outcome and the that's the effect of it is to say, well, and and if you go into blue sky, actually, you'll find a lot of people on blue sky leftists who are who are saying the same same type of thing, right? | ||
Like that's Israel or the Zionists, or it was you know, this corrupt FBI hit job, and because they know that they can get away with uh you know deflecting the blame. | ||
Yeah. | ||
I mean, yeah, the Israel stuff seems exp especially kind of interesting to me because the the attack vector that people on the right are using, there's like a lot of fair criticisms of Israel. | ||
I mean, I'm I'm in no means an Israel shill. | ||
I'm I'm kind of like with Tim. | ||
I just kind of am fairly ambivalent on the issue. | ||
I actually kind of use Connor Tomlinson, he has a great line on it, and it's I totally agree. | ||
Is I just really want what Israel has, but for Americans. | ||
Like if we could just create an American version of Israel, I'd be okay with that. | ||
Yeah. | ||
But uh some of the like attack vectors people on the right are using uh are like leftist arguments, like they're talking about international law, or they're like saying, well, that you know, they're like appealing to like human rights violations and these sorts of things. | ||
And I'm like, okay, sure, but that's that that's just not really that's not a vector of attack that's threatening to the liberal world order in any meaningful way. | ||
Yeah, that's a that's an issue actually I talked about at length right after the October 7th attacks, and it gained me a lot of uh a lot of enemies on the internet right. | ||
But I was basically trying to say, like, you know, you you can criticize Israel without adopting the frame of the left, right? | ||
Without adopting this sort of language that's going to get you uh it's gonna get you allies in terms of like the third world or the Muslim world, but those are the same people who will then not give you uh like if you talk about crime or immigration, they're not going to be on board with you on that stuff at all. | ||
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Yeah. | |
And so that's that's kind of what I was warning people is like you can build a coalition with these people, but if you're an American patriot or European patriot, whatever, um, it's going to backfire spectacularly when it comes time to ask these people to give you uh you know some support on your issues of again of the border of immigration of these things. | ||
And and we've seen now that that's kind of exactly what's happened where uh they've been sort of cannibalized by the audience that they've cultivated. | ||
Yeah, absolutely. | ||
I mean, you're seeing that even with Americans. | ||
I mean, obviously, we we'll talk about it more in a little bit, like with the third world, but even with Americans, we had this really sort of delicate coalition going into the election of like the brocasters, I think is what the media is kind of termed, like you know, Joe Rogan, Theo Vaughn, Tim Dylan, and um they you know, they had their issues, Maha was really big for them, and you know, as it should, that's a really important issue. | ||
I mean, I I obviously am very Maha. | ||
Um and they were kind of like maybe there a little bit on legal immigration, they maybe hadn't thought about it that much. | ||
And then so as soon as these uh videos start coming out of um, you know, the more physical interactions ICE is having to have with the uh what the illegals are trying to deport and detain, they flake immediately and they freak out and they're like, This is easy, there's surely there's another way to do this. | ||
The the line I was here is do we really have to do the high school graduations? | ||
And I'm sitting here like, yeah, we kind of do. | ||
I mean, what did you think mass deportations looked like? | ||
Vibes, essays. | ||
Well, what's interesting is that you know, that's sort of televised in public and commented on, but what's not is uh, you know, I didn't I don't really remember Rogan, and maybe I'm wrong, or or Theo Vaughn talking about sort of the mass swarming of the border under Biden, right? | ||
The people like lining up at the border getting fed by these NGOs, getting brought in committing crime, you know. | ||
It's very easy to sort of pinpoint one specific event of like a nice guy who's you know tackled somebody. | ||
But uh, if you're if you're gonna do that, then I better have been seeing you for the past four years complaining about uh the the millions of people that flooded the southern border, which which I don't think they have. | ||
And so it seems a little a little sort of cowardly to me. | ||
Um I understand, you know, sort of the reticence that some of these people have, and especially like someone like Theo Vaughn, he's like, Man, he's like, I don't want to get shot. | ||
But that kind of shows you that there's this leftist that he's afraid of the left, right? | ||
There's this heckler's heckler's veto almost where he's he's willing to kind of make little snigh jokes about oh, Israel don't take me out, or the FBI don't take me out. | ||
But he's really afraid of uh, you know, of some sort of crazed leftist assassin. | ||
That's at the end of the day, that's what he's afraid of. | ||
So until that gets kind of under control, it I think you're gonna see people still try and have one foot in both camps and say, well, you know, I supported this, but I don't want the excesses, um, which which aren't really excesses, they're framed in a way that's tried to make them look bad, right? | ||
That's all it is. | ||
So that's a great point, actually. | ||
That yeah, he makes these like don't kill me, don't kill me. | ||
But he would never say, like, hey, Antifa, don't kill me, because it's like they would actually see that as like an imitation. | ||
An invitation or something, right? | ||
Yeah. | ||
Well, Tim, so Tim got caught a lot of flack for this position he took on the show um like a week or two ago. | ||
Where he was kind of criticizing the ICE agents' um propensity to mask, they often mask to protect their identities. | ||
But he made a point in this argument. | ||
I think it was actually a really good point that a lot of people missed because they were very upset with this point with this take, rather. | ||
Um, he said part of it is that it's so unacceptable that we're nine months into a Trump administration and we haven't sufficiently broken the left enough where Antifa officers still fear, like they should be able to operate with total impunity. | ||
And you kind of alluded to it with Theo Vaughn, like where he's afraid to kind of make jokes in that certain specter, is it really does show how entrenched this leftist power is and how everyone knows that they're willing to go there, they're willing to use political violence if they don't like what you have to say. | ||
Well, the mask thing too, like if you're familiar at all with like cartel country or stuff from Mexico. | ||
I mean, the federal police in Mexico will, you know, the the real heavy hitters will wear masks and and specifically it's for that reason, right? | ||
Because they know the cartels are gonna take out their family or whatever. | ||
So it does it does show uh they again that the threat is real, um, and we need to be, you know, nine months to me. | ||
I mean, I I'm a survivor of the Trump one, the Trump one term where we had all the expectations in the world and and everything kind of conspired against it. | ||
So I'm I'm a little more willing to uh to be patient just going forward, but it is obviously something that needs to be dealt with uh long term going forward for sure. | ||
So I would say I would consider you uh you'll you'll deny this because you're a humble man, but I would consider you like one of the more tastemakers, I would Say on kind of the right wing. | ||
Like I think a lot of people do, you know, look to your takes as kind of guidance on it's like um what's a style, a style chart? | ||
Is that what the AP sent uh sends out to the press? | ||
Oh yeah, yeah. | ||
But um and you you've emphasized the importance of like, okay, it takes a while to reorient a lot of these institutions towards the right, because they've obviously been used to what they've been weaponized against the right for so long. | ||
So it obviously takes a bit of time. | ||
Me as a Zoomer, um, I'm 24, so I was 14 when Trump came down the escalator. | ||
So I don't really remember an a GOP prior to Trump. | ||
So I don't know. | ||
Do you do you have maybe what's your what's your sort of I guess message to Zoomers that are kind of dissatisfied with the pace of Trump's policy implementation? | ||
Because it's very, very vehement on on the right. | ||
I just anecdotally in my circles, people are always complaining. | ||
It's totally understandable, but you have to remember at the end of the day that personnel is policy, right? | ||
And so personnel is is what you want to be replacing. | ||
And uh for so you know, Biden basically gutted these institutions and replaced all of all the patriots, you know, whether it was in the military or whether it was in the FBI or whatever, and and basically filled it with these leftist agitators, Democrat Party, you know, apparatus, whatever. | ||
And so you know, you can you can turn things around, but if you have people below you who are not willing to uh carry out the policy or will sabotage you, and I think I'll segue that back into the Trump one campaign or Trump one term because that was really what happened there. | ||
I mean, you had uh Trump won, but the GOP was still completely hostile to him, right? | ||
They were still stuck in this sort of Mike Pence, Paul Ryan, this old school, you know, cut taxes and big business. | ||
Like it was it was very boring, it was very hard to get excited about politics. | ||
I think that's why when Trump came down, you know, a lot of us were like, oh wow, finally, uh, you know, finally we're gonna get somewhere here. | ||
And then what happened was his own party sort of stifled him. | ||
Uh the Democrats, you know, put him under investigation the entire time. | ||
Uh, and so it was it was a disappointment, not because they weren't trying to do the right things, but I don't think they were prepared for the level of of how entrenched uh the interests opposing them were. | ||
And I think now with the second term, it does seem like they're you know, especially people like Stephen Miller, they're much more aware of getting the right people in the right places so that they can they can do what they want. | ||
And uh yeah, I mean I again I'm welling, I'm much more willing to be patient. | ||
It's I mean it's been eight years, it's been an eight long years since since that. | ||
But uh, you know, I'm I'm hoping for I'm cautiously optimistic. | ||
I'm I'm always consciously optimistic these days because the messaging is great. | ||
The messaging is is absolutely fantastic. | ||
And so THS could be a mutual for all anyone knows. | ||
Yeah, it's crazy. | ||
Yeah, yeah. | ||
Um something wanted, I mean, it's kind of the steer back to kind of how we opened up the conversation. | ||
Um what is it? | ||
I've been I've been kind of diving into this this the last few days on the show. | ||
What's specifically about ice is it that animates the left and these these hard left agitators? | ||
There's something specifically out of all the agencies that pose a threat to their life, their livelihood rather, not their life, but their their their lifestyle. | ||
Um for one HHS taking their seed oils and soy away would have massive implications on them. | ||
But you never really see much vitriol towards HHS beyond like kind of like little snippy comments. | ||
But something about ice specifically really motivates them to go all out and like literally risk their lives. | ||
What do you think? | ||
What do you think is going on there? | ||
That's a million dollar question, honestly, because they're not even that vitriolic towards the police or or even even customs and border patrol. | ||
Remember, there was that famous picture of the uh the guy lassoing the the migrant on a horse, right? | ||
That was just pretty keynote. | ||
Yeah, and there was they're they were angry about that, but they're not angry enough to go out and uh you know protest and follow their cars. | ||
Uh I think yeah, I think I think they're just so invested in mass immigration. | ||
I mean, really that is like this sort of the shelling, like that's that's what they're if you could really reduce down the left, it's like they're all in on mass immigration, mass migration, and there's and ice is like the one obstacle, you know, other than say the say it's people like Stephen Miller. | ||
That's the one obstacle to that. | ||
And I think that's just like their most important. | ||
They've decided that that is what they're all in on. | ||
And so they're threatened. | ||
I mean, I think they're genuinely threatened, and that's you know, the optics of picking people up off the street does kind of hit home. | ||
It kind of makes it more real, right? | ||
Like the police don't do that. | ||
The police, you know, they'll arrest uh you know someone in in the midst of a burglary or go talk to someone at the door, but there's something about ice just Like grabbing somebody and saying, you know, you don't belong, you don't belong here, right? | ||
Maybe that's what it is. | ||
You don't belong here. | ||
Right. | ||
And it's and it's so true. | ||
I mean, yeah, I because I I was talking to uh Richie McGuinness yesterday, total patriot, um, great guy. | ||
Uh, I was talking to him on the show yesterday, and we kind of came to this, we made this point about Portland, and he and he pointed this out is like it's the whitest city metro area in the United States by far. | ||
It is a very, very, very white city. | ||
And then it also is the point I made is it also happens to always be the hotbed of leftist activism. | ||
And um, you know, for whatever, I mean I don't want to get into like the uh anthropology of their like politics or that sort of thing. | ||
Richie actually did a great job breaking it down, but there is something kind of ir uh ironic about how Portland being the whitest city, it's almost like it's the hub or the the haven for anti-white or self-hatred because that ultimately seems to be what drives a lot of this vitriol against ICE is their sort of slavish devotion to mass immigration. | ||
They kind of want to get replaced in their own country. | ||
And you see this also in Britain, you see it in Germany, you see it in France. | ||
They just that that's the one thing that really seems to motivate them, and maybe that's why Portland, you have a you have a high concentration of sort of self-hating white people. | ||
It's gonna, they're gonna organize, they're gonna organize rapidly. | ||
Well, and with Portland, too. | ||
The very interesting thing is that they had like the let the most recent legacy, like with the Ku Klux Klan. | ||
So there is like a a pretty recent in recent memory, there's a history that goes back there. | ||
So I think a lot of it is this it's almost like a penance, right? | ||
This sort of self-loathing, this we have to atone for the sins of of our ancestors, uh, you know, a real or imagined, right? | ||
And then that manifests in, you know, the camp of the saints. | ||
I mean, the Vauban books re recently released that. | ||
It's a fantastic book. | ||
Everyone should have. | ||
Connor Tomlinson did a great review on it too. | ||
He did, yeah, yeah, he did. | ||
Actually, I did read that. | ||
And it's a it really does explain the sort of the psychology of the guilt behind all of this. | ||
And it's uh, you know, you you can't really you can't even really reason people out of it. | ||
That's the kind of interesting thing is it's just so ingrained. | ||
It's just it yeah, it's it's very bizarre. | ||
Portland is a hotbed, it's been like that for years and years, it's just now becoming uh sort of a national uh disgrace. | ||
Yeah. | ||
I mean, well, that's that's that's the thing. | ||
And it's it's a tough, it's a really tough kind of position to come to is kind of giving up on debate because that's what we've prided ourselves on. | ||
Like, I actually I think it's appropriate to give Ben Shapiro his flowers because he really is the one that made conservatives realize how important it is to engage in um polemics and like truth and debate and these sorts of things. | ||
So I want to give him his flowers because he was the first person that really brought that to the internet and like institutionalized that, and I think there's something there. | ||
Um but there's something kind of sad about giving up on the uh facts, don't care about your feelings sort of mentality, and kind of realizing like yeah, you're not really gonna out debate, you're not gonna debate an Antifa member and like convince them. | ||
It's just they're they want to kill you. | ||
Like I th people like that's really hard for people to accept and kind of um sort of conceptualize is like, oh no, he just wants to kill me. | ||
He doesn't he views me as like a belligerent, not uh like a debate partner. | ||
Well, you saw you we saw that with the reaction to the Charlie Kirk stuff, right? | ||
People started to see that okay, even the average sort of lib was like gleefully celebrating it or doing some sort of tongue-in-cheek, you know, mocking it, sort of this derisive mocking. | ||
And so it's you know, you I guess you can sort of convince people on the margins, and and the debate when you debate someone, it's always for the audience, right? | ||
I mean, yeah, you're you're always trying to win over the audience through you know, pathos and rhetoric and this sort of stuff. | ||
You're not really trying to convince the other person, uh, but so I so I think that's still effective. | ||
That's still a a good thing to do. | ||
You just have to realize that uh a debate can really only happen when there's some sort of common ground, and you know, and there's really no common ground between us and these kind of people. | ||
Yeah. | ||
Well, let's say let's let's kind of maybe give some projections to the next few months. | ||
What because there's this moment after after the Kirk assassination where a lot of people are actually comparing it to like the post-9-11 era, where it really feels like how Bush had a mandate after 9-11, is Trump sort of has a mandate after the shooting to clean this up to mop this up. | ||
Um we're seeing it with the foreign terrorist organization. | ||
What are some kind of things that you need to see from the Trump administration to really fully put a lid on the far-left political violence that we're enduring? | ||
I think the main the main thing and the most important thing is just going after the networks behind the scenes. | ||
Like it's not glorious, it's not flashy, you know, you're not gonna get those uh clipworthy scenes of arresting people, but what you're going to do is you're gonna take down the the financial incentives that these people have to do what they do. | ||
I mean, think about the average person going to a ride, like a protest, let's say, like say you're a like a 30-year-old guy, your family guy, you got a job, you know, getting arrested, uh, you could mean you'd lose your job, you can't go to work, you have to pay a lawyer, you get you could get a criminal charge, and now you're sort of a black spot on your record. | ||
None of these people seem to worry about that because they kind of know that they're gonna be taken care of at the end of the day, right? | ||
And I think that removing that sort of uh uh incentive for them is going to be uh huge going forward because you you're gonna get these people to start to be afraid to go out and afraid to get arrested and afraid to um you know get abandoned by their by their anti-fahandlers or whatever. | ||
And I think that's that's to me the most important thing. | ||
I mean, that kind of seems to be more important than even the successful implementation of policy is creating the environment. | ||
Like with immigration, it's almost like you just want to create the environment that anyone could get deported at any time, and that'll actually prompt self-deportation because like ultimately, even if you're like the most, you know, if you love watching the ice raids and these sorts of things, even that person, which there's a lot of us around, uh, would admit that self-deportation is the most preferable because it's just like at A, it's not on our dime, and B, you don't have a video. | ||
So it's almost like creating the environment is more much more important than the actual implementation. | ||
Well, by I mean, Biden created like the Biden regime created an environment where people felt very comfortable to come across the border and get everything they wanted, right? | ||
So it's just creating that reverse, like there was an incentive to come, right? | ||
There was this like huge incentive to come, knowing that you're gonna be paroled if you're on the TPS program, or these sorts of things, you're gonna be brought into uh you know, wherever in the middle of the country, whereas now the environment is like you're not welcome and you could be sent home at any time. | ||
And that that not only has a chilling effect on the people in the country, but that has a chilling effect across these networks where now people are not gonna be able to shill uh you know human trafficking as easily as they used to be able to, because it gets down. | ||
I mean, through you know, WhatsApp channels, through family channels, it gets down to these people that look, this is not as welcoming as it once was, and you shouldn't risk you know, your five thousand US dollars or ten thousand dollars to try and come across. | ||
Do you think that do you think this environment could get Hassan Piker denaturalized and deported? | ||
I mean, because that's ultimately the goal. | ||
That would be, I mean that would be a pipe dream. | ||
I would I would be uh I'd get a Trump tattoo on my back. | ||
I'll get I'll get a MAGA tattoo for sure. | ||
Yeah, if that happens. | ||
Yeah. | ||
But but he, you know, he kind of like so he's born of a so from what I understand. | ||
I I barely remember his background. | ||
His mother was like a professor here. | ||
Yeah, and then he was born here, like neither of the his parents, I don't think were citizens, and then they moved, so he got citizenship at his birth, and then they moved back to Turkey for most of his uh life. | ||
So like nobody thinks this guy's American. | ||
It's the sort of paper fiction. | ||
Yeah, paperwork American. | ||
The hope the hope is that if you're a paperwork American, the paperwork can just be revoked. | ||
So we'll we'll hope for that going forward. | ||
Yeah, he's kind of the epitome, like when you're making it a case to someone that's maybe unfamiliar with the issue. | ||
Timcast viewers are you know clued in on this kind of thing, but to people that don't know the anchor baby issue very well. | ||
I think you can just show them Hassan Piker as kind of an explanation for like maybe why birthright citizenship isn't the best idea. | ||
And then they can kind of just put the pieces together themselves. | ||
Like, oh yeah, yeah, we should probably like make sure that never happens again. | ||
It's just such an insane position to think that you could be born of two non-citizens, say like a your mother's not here on like a student visa, she's studying, and then your father's like on a work visa, and all of a sudden you're you've become American just by virtue of being born. | ||
You know, it's it's when you actually like frame it like that and you break it down like that, yeah. | ||
I think most people like got good faith mu people will be like, okay, that's you know, that seems like a broken system to me. | ||
Yeah, totally, dude. | ||
Well, Martin, dude, we're kind of we're kind of running out of time. | ||
I just want to say, do you have any maybe final thoughts and where people can find you to get more? | ||
Uh no, no final thoughts. | ||
I'm just an internet guy, just uh just an internet troll, just on on Twitter, I guess, on X. Yeah. | ||
I just dead named it, but uh yeah, that's what we do. | ||
That's what we do. | ||
We do we do a little dead naming, you know, it happens. | ||
But dude, thank you so much. | ||
Thanks for coming on. | ||
Um, I guess we'll catch you next time. | ||
Yeah, thanks. | ||
Have a good one. | ||
You too. | ||
All righty. | ||
Well, that was the captive dreamer. | ||
Uh legendary, legendary poster, obviously. | ||
I think uh in large part should get us flowers for getting the um getting the uh Trump administration uh you know, sort of reoriented. | ||
I we were describing it earlier at the beginning of the story. | ||
Like, yeah, I remember kind of going, I was like, oh, the energy's a little low for Trump. | ||
I mean, like, this is Trump here. | ||
He's it's so enigmatic in that sort of thing. | ||
And um, dude, yeah, that hate that hatey moment and they're in the debate. | ||
They're eating the dogs, they're eating the cats, and Kamala thought it was the most ridiculous thing. | ||
I've really cackled. | ||
And then you go and you look at what people are saying like on Facebook, and they're like, yeah, they are. | ||
Here's a here's a picture of it. | ||
Like they actually are doing that. | ||
And of course, all the press scramble to debunk it right away. | ||
No, no, no, no. | ||
No, he wasn't, he was kissing. | ||
He was kissing the duck. | ||
He wasn't eating it. | ||
No, no, no, no, no. | ||
So it was a beautiful moment. | ||
And it was, yeah, in large part, in large part due to um due to the captive dreamer. | ||
So uh let me see here. | ||
We're gonna raid. | ||
Um we we got a raid scheduled that I was uh informed about. | ||
Uh let's see. | ||
Uh Devorey Dawkins, I believe, we're raiding today. | ||
Um, I don't see I don't see his I don't see him have the live stream up. | ||
Oh, wait. | ||
Oh no, it says live on the thumbnail, but he's not live. | ||
So I don't know. | ||
I'll um I'll I'll link it in there if if it goes live here. | ||
But uh yeah, we'll be back tonight for Timcast IRL. | ||
We'll have a great show tonight for you. | ||
It's gonna be fantastic. | ||
So you'll want to be here at 8 p.m. on the on the nose. | ||
Um be ready for it. | ||
We'll have another guest host tonight. | ||
It's very exciting. | ||
Um with that, you can follow me on X and Instagram at real tape brown. | ||
Come hang out. | ||
Thanks for uh letting me hold it down this week. | ||
This I think we you know we got it across the finish line. | ||
We're we're slowly getting uh you know getting getting adequated. | ||
I I did the opening monologue yesterday. | ||
I don't know what you guys thought of that. | ||
Maybe you can give me some thoughts if you liked it. | ||
If you don't, if you want me to stick with more of the loose style, hey, that's what I'm here for for uh Tate Cast. | ||
It's it's audience driven. | ||
We're a family, you know, we're here, family, it's Olive Garden. | ||
Um, so yeah, follow me there, and uh, I don't know when I'll see you guys again, probably on on IRL. | ||
I think I'm on IRL Friday. | ||
So yeah, we'll see you there. | ||
Uh with that. |