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Donald Trump over the weekend has won in federal court. | ||
He will be allowed to federalize the Illinois National Guard. | ||
Now, strangely, the court also said he can't deploy the National Guard, which is kind of weird. | ||
But what does it mean to deploy and why would Trump not have the authority to do so? | ||
This is an interesting constitutional question. | ||
And everything's getting murky and muddy. | ||
I'd go ahead and say that if Trump can federalize the National Guard, he can deploy them all he wants. | ||
He's not telling them to go out and enforce the law. | ||
He's telling them to go deploy to a federal building, which he can do. | ||
Then if far leftists or anybody attack that federal billing, the Guard are allowed to defend themselves. | ||
I suppose if the argument they're making is Trump can't have them go walk the streets, we've got an interesting conundrum on our hands. | ||
But billionaire Ray Dalio says we have entered a new kind of civil war. | ||
It's not the first time he's made these comments. | ||
But even Vox.com has now published an article in the past day saying, Is America on the brink of civil war? | ||
Because they're so scared to say the words that nobody wants to say. | ||
You know, look, man, the past couple of weeks, I've been out of town, went to Phoenix to do some shows with the crew over at the Charlie Kirk Show and Turning Point USA. | ||
And we hosted Timcast IRL from the Turning Point HQ. | ||
It was really awesome. | ||
Shout out to the turning point crew. | ||
And then I went to Austin for a series of promotional uh videos. | ||
I don't I don't go on enough shows myself. | ||
I never do this, so I went out to Austin and joined Michael Mallis and uh Brian Callahan and Brennan Shaw, as well as played some poker For something that was totally apolitical. | ||
What I the reason I bring this up is, especially playing poker at the Lodge Poker, shout out to the Lodge Card Club. | ||
Man, that place is really amazing. | ||
I had so much fun. | ||
I'm sitting there with people who are not particularly political. | ||
One individual is fairly political. | ||
And uh we all had a laugh. | ||
We all had a good time. | ||
And it's moments like this that give people hope or keep people blinded. | ||
I'm not so blind to history and the current state of affairs in this country that I don't recognize what's happening in this country. | ||
And I think many of you are the same. | ||
The common critique that I hear is look, I go outside every day, everyone's getting along, everything's just fine. | ||
Here I am, I'm flying to Texas, and we're all getting along despite having disagreements on politics. | ||
What does it really mean? | ||
One example. | ||
A video out of Chicago where a man, I it was I saw it on Instagram, someone posted it. | ||
It's an illegal immigrant, allegedly, being detained uh by ICE and screaming, I Udemy. | ||
Help me in Spanish. | ||
And the people standing by do. | ||
They help. | ||
And the man escapes. | ||
The police give up. | ||
Ice gives up. | ||
That's kind of crazy to think. | ||
But what it really means is that the people, the bystanders in Chicago, watching this happen, do not fear nor respect federal authority. | ||
And that's where you get into civil war territory. | ||
Because California, Oregon, and Illinois are already saying no to federal authority. | ||
Where does that lead us? | ||
The people of this country, I mean, we voted for Donald Trump. | ||
We voted for this immigration law, these laws to be enforced. | ||
If people in these jurisdictions are aiding and abetting the criminals, they are telling you they care more about the people who break our laws than your vote to change it. | ||
And when you have a large portion of the population saying outright, your laws and your elections don't mean anything, nor do we fear your authority. | ||
That's where it starts getting wild. | ||
We don't know exactly what's gonna happen. | ||
I can only show you the latest examples of where we're currently at, which we will get into right now. | ||
So smash the like button, share the show with everyone, you know. | ||
Shout out to Steven Crowder and the mug club and the rumble morning lineup. | ||
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Let's talk about conflict crisis and where we currently are, my friends. | ||
I hope it's not as bad as it may be. | ||
But there's a lot to discuss all day, every day. | ||
Federal appeals court says Trump admin can federalize Illinois National Guard, but blocks deployment. | ||
The court ruled Saturday that Trump cannot deploy the Illinois National Guard within the state, but determined he's still permitted to federalize the guard. | ||
This seems like uh contradictory. | ||
What's the point of federalizing it? | ||
I think the court's playing a game. | ||
This is we uh the political gamesmanship phase of social breakdown. | ||
The courts are playing chess. | ||
If we say Trump can't do this, he appeals to a higher court. | ||
He still may. | ||
But they want to at least say, well, you know, he can, but we're not gonna let him deploy. | ||
Weakening his potential argument. | ||
Postmole reports, a federal appeals court ruled Saturday that President Donald Trump cannot deploy the Illinois National Guard within the state, but determined he is still permitted to federalize the guard, which means what? | ||
The Seventh Circuit of Appeals issued a brief order, largely upholding a temporary restraining order from an early from earlier in the week that blocked the Trump admin deploying troops to Illinois. | ||
Troops currently in the state do not need to return home unless ordered by a court to do so. | ||
Quote, pending a decision on the request for a stay pending appeal. | ||
The district court's order from October 9th is temporarily stayed, only to the extent it enjoined the federalization of the National Guard of the United States within Illinois. | ||
Members of the National Guard do not need to return to their home states unless further ordered by a court to do so. | ||
Now, what's interesting is that Trump's actually getting Texas troops to deploy to Illinois and other locations. | ||
So we are at the period where troops from other states are entering other states. | ||
Red to blue. | ||
On Thursday, U.S. District Judge April Perry, a Biden appointee, blocked Trump's deployment of National Guard units to Illinois, arguing that it was likely to lead to civil unrest, which is not a legitimate reason to actually block anything. | ||
Approximately 300 federalized members of the Illinois Guard, along with 200 from Texas, were deployed to Chicago last Wednesday. | ||
The troops troops have been activated for 60 days. | ||
U.S. Northern Command said the mission is to protect U.S. immigration and customs enforcement and other U.S. government personnel who are performing federal functions, including the enforcement of federal law and to protect federal property. | ||
Well, ladies and gentlemen, where we go next is anybody's guess, but we do have some indicators. | ||
The New York Times reports Trump has not ruled out invoking insurrection act to deploy National Guard, Vance says. | ||
From the New York Times. | ||
Vice President J.D. Vance said on Sunday, President Trump was looking at all of his options to deploy the National Guard in major cities, including invoking the Insurrection Act of 1807, which grants the president emergency powers to deploy troops on U.S. soil during major unrest. | ||
In an interview on NBC News' Meet the Press, Mr. Vance said Trump has not felt the needed, he needed to invoke the insurrection act right now, but he has not ruled it out. | ||
Generally speaking, the insurrection act gives the president the power to send military forces to states to quell widespread public unrest and to support civilian law enforcement agencies. | ||
Mr. Vance, echoing the president's arguments, claimed in NBC News that crime was out of control in major cities, pointing to violent attacks against immigration officers. | ||
I love this. | ||
We apparently had a report where a Latin King gang member, a high-ranking official in Latin Kings, put out a hit on the commander for DHS. | ||
Sounds pretty lawless to me. | ||
Governor Pritzker went downtown wearing armor and made jokes about war-torn Chicago because he is evil. | ||
I'm sorry. | ||
I was gonna say, evil. | ||
Listen, my friends. | ||
Hey, Pritzker. | ||
I'd like to see you walk around K Town without any armor or security personnel. | ||
Now, I gotta be honest. | ||
I actually don't want him to. | ||
I don't want him to, because I'm gonna be honest with you guys. | ||
The reason why I say politically, I dare him, you know what I mean? | ||
Is because he'd never do it. | ||
This is West Side territory, known for having some of the highest crime in the city. | ||
Though things have changed in the past few years, I'll give him that. | ||
The South Side, the West Side, take your pick, buddy. | ||
The Southwest side, even. | ||
Pritzker would never set foot in these neighborhoods because he'll catch a stray bullet. | ||
And that is a terrifying reality to living in these areas. | ||
But I gotta be honest. | ||
Pritzker walking around these neighborhoods is his life is at risk. | ||
So I don't want to see the man get hurt. | ||
Okay? | ||
Please don't do it, Governor Pritzker. | ||
But at the same time, how dare you walk around Chicago downtown in the middle of the day and act like everything's A-OK. | ||
Disgusting. | ||
That's the game he's playing. | ||
Now he's threatening Trump to arrest him. | ||
These people are insane. | ||
But yo, we're actually at a point where the governor is saying, come and get me. | ||
Dares Trump declared his threat, as Vance says insurrection act is on the table. | ||
Can I just take a pause for a minute for all y'all listening at home? | ||
I don't know what it takes to convince people of where we are in this country because they are so convinced by their own ignorance. | ||
I don't say that derisively. | ||
I mean in the literal sense of lack of knowledge, that everything is fine. | ||
No matter how many times you tell them to read the history of the French Revolution, or revolution, the Spanish civil war, the Bolsheviks, and those are only some examples. | ||
How about the Syrian Revolution or Civil War? | ||
Egypt. | ||
I posted pictures last week from my time in Egypt because some liberal guy who works for Newsom was mocking Katie Davis Scorch. | ||
Took a picture on top of the ice building. | ||
And it just looks like a city. | ||
And he says that looks like every war-torn place I've seen. | ||
I added the smoke. | ||
I didn't say that. | ||
He just was. | ||
I was in Egypt. | ||
And I watched a revolution happen before my very eyes. | ||
And it's nothing. | ||
It's literal nothing. | ||
Is it a group of a couple thousand people jumping up and down in the middle of the street? | ||
Nobody kicked in the door of the office and said, time to abdicate Morsey. | ||
And he was like, uh a blast. | ||
I've been overturned. | ||
Now, to an extent that did happen, but it's not what people see. | ||
The country went on as if nothing changed. | ||
What for you on the ground changed? | ||
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Nothing. | |
You went to McDonald's, the food was there, you bought milk at the grocery store. | ||
But in one part, this is what people don't seem to understand. | ||
I know you guys do, I say it a lot. | ||
We're at the point in our story where Donald Trump said that Pritzker and Brandon Johnson, the mayor of Chicago, should be in jail. | ||
Pritzker says, come and get me. | ||
Trump has deployed troops from another state into Illinois to enforce immigration law. | ||
Individuals in Chicago actually assisted illegal immigrants escaping federal law enforcement. | ||
They are now fighting over who has control of the military in these states, the National Guard. | ||
Welcome, my friends, to the next step. | ||
Hedge fund billionaire warns the U.S. is entering civil war. | ||
Well, it is a fact statement, in my opinion, that we're in civil strife. | ||
Why? | ||
Charlie Kirk was killed and crackpots tried to kill Trump like what? | ||
It's two or three times. | ||
One was a foiled plot that never got far. | ||
One was a guy actively taking aim at the president, and one was a bullet grazing Trump's head. | ||
Yeah, we're in civil strife territory. | ||
News reports. | ||
Hedge fund manager and billionaire Ray Dalio has warned the U.S. may be entering a new kind of civil war amid rising inequality in debt, as well as a breakdown in the global geopolitical order. | ||
An interview with Bloomberg TV, which aired this week, founder of Bridgewater Associates said that the forces which shape the world were all now being disrupted. | ||
We're in wars. | ||
There's a financial war, money war, there's a technology war, there's a geopolitical wars, there are more military wars. | ||
And so we have a civil war or some sort, which is developing in the U.S. and elsewhere, where there are irreconcilable differences. | ||
Dalio has this year issued several warnings about the risk posed to America's rising national debt. | ||
38 trillion. | ||
He ain't wrong. | ||
He's also highlighted the country's debt to income ratio of roughly 120%, potentially leading to a situation in which repayment sap government finances and trigger a Death spiral for the economy. | ||
Dalio's warnings have not been limited to glooby economic forecasts, nor solely to the U.S., whose political and economic difficulties he views as caused by rep by uh by and representative of a broader impending period of global strife. | ||
He's a smart guy. | ||
He's a smart guy. | ||
I think he's not wrong. | ||
I love this from Vox. | ||
Is America on the brink? | ||
An expert on political violence offers warnings and some hope. | ||
On the brink of what, Vox? | ||
On the brink of what? | ||
Well, you need only look at Google's cash to figure out they initially wrote, is America on the brink of civil war. | ||
And they removed it because they are scared. | ||
You'll sound so stupid if you actually say it. | ||
Silly. | ||
Tim Pools, the moron, who's warned of civil war going on eight years now. | ||
What an idiot. | ||
I have no fears. | ||
I have no complaints. | ||
I don't care. | ||
Well, I have a lot of complaints about this, though. | ||
I don't care. | ||
I don't care what you say about me. | ||
I don't care what you think about me. | ||
I literally do not. | ||
I will sit in my chair and complain on the internet about what I think is worthy of complaining about. | ||
This is a passion. | ||
And so when people came to me and said I was crazy and wrong, you know, I did think about it. | ||
I'm like, man. | ||
You know, I'll say it again. | ||
I went to uh Austin and played this uh heart rate monitor poker game last week, had a lot of fun, got absolutely crushed. | ||
It's not my fault. | ||
The luck distribution showed I just ran real bad. | ||
I had some good spots, clogged back a little bit, so it's okay. | ||
But the point is, I took this trip and I'm thinking to myself, you know, as I'm flying on this plane, buying uh some yogurt, landing in Austin, having barbecue every day of the week. | ||
I mean, it's delicious, but guys, please, everyone just made me eat barbecue. | ||
And I'm like, there is a stability to what we are seeing. | ||
And so as I sit down at this card club, knowing that there are people who probably don't like me in the building somewhere. | ||
It's not indicative of anything. | ||
And, you know, the point is when I enter this space, which is apolitical, there were some political jokes that were made, some crazy conversations were had. | ||
I thought to myself, this is why people think nothing can happen. | ||
And history repeats itself. | ||
Ah, you guys have heard this a hundred billion times from me, the Battle of Bull Run. | ||
Nobody thought civil war was possible, so they picnicked. | ||
We are experiencing the exact same thing. | ||
Now, I think in the modern era, people get their their world view from movies. | ||
They think silencers on guns go pew pew, but silencers don't actually exist. | ||
Suppressors do, and they go bang bang very loudly. | ||
But it does reduce the noise. | ||
They think that they should be walking through crumbled buildings. | ||
They think it's going to be people shooting each other everywhere, and that's never, never how any war ever has ever been. | ||
Aleppo was wiped out in in Syria. | ||
Tartus is largely been fine the whole time. | ||
And for most people, what did they see during these periods of war? | ||
Prices went up. | ||
Now in Kiev, the capital of Ukraine, buildings do get struck by rocket fire. | ||
But if you're in like Lviv or far to the West, you're seeing very little. | ||
Deep concerns, and there are there is a draft in actions like that. | ||
But for a lot of people, life goes on. | ||
They go about their business. | ||
Vox.com talked with Barbara F. Walter about the brink of civil war. | ||
They right after the killing of Charlie Kirk, the country didn't rally around a message of restraint. | ||
Instead, key leaders treated as ammunition. | ||
That shift combined with a rise in tit for tit attacks and the politics security apparatus, points to a more dangerous phase in our politics. | ||
I'm gonna stop you right there, you vile scumbags. | ||
But you know what? | ||
It doesn't matter. | ||
It doesn't matter because we get it. | ||
We are hyperpolarized. | ||
Vox doesn't care about what's true. | ||
NBC News. | ||
DOJ charges man with sending threatening letters to pro-Trump influencer Benny Johnson. | ||
Pam Bondi announced the charges at a news conference in which Johnson argued that violence had been mainstreamed by the Democratic Party. | ||
Democrat Party said, and he's correct. | ||
Um I have been in contact with the FBI over the past couple of weeks directly because of the threats we have received, And they are serious. | ||
And I also want to point out Benny Johnson made a point about this. | ||
NBC News had to really scrape the bottom of the barrel to find a picture of him looking menacing. | ||
Because he's always just smiling in all of his photos and videos. | ||
He makes a point of that. | ||
I think intentionally for this reason. | ||
But then, of course, they found a picture of Benny looking menacing. | ||
Here's the point. | ||
I sit here in this I don't know, warehouse building, I guess you can call studio building. | ||
It's a big building. | ||
And we built it and we moved away from the city because of the violence, the threat of violence, and the threat of conflict that we deal with on a day-to-day basis. | ||
You know, look, uh, I had a guy try to break into my house at New Jersey, told me I couldn't defend myself, went to Maryland. | ||
We've had uh 15 swattings. | ||
We had a guy show up in the past year, I think it was about one year ago now, wearing a dress, physically attacking one of the residents, because we don't live there and work there anymore. | ||
And so a guy showed up, went on the property, caused problems. | ||
When one of the residents came out to say get off the property, he got attacked. | ||
It's nuts, a guy wearing a dress and filming. | ||
It's insane. | ||
And we don't even live there. | ||
I own properties, man. | ||
It's crazy. | ||
The left doesn't deal with this. | ||
Hassan Piker is worried about threats, but he lives in an urban environment in a residential house in a residential neighborhood. | ||
The left does not have anywhere near the fear. | ||
Why? | ||
Because the left have always been the violent ones. | ||
You know, I hear this a lot when they say, but the right is responsible for more violence. | ||
You're not gonna give me to defend crackpot white supremacists. | ||
They're not a part of my political movement or party. | ||
It's a nonsense statement. | ||
The right, they're not with us. | ||
So screw them. | ||
But the guy who killed Charlie Kirk allegedly, shared political ideology with AOC, is motivated by the same exact ideology as the mainstream Democrat Party. | ||
When some crackpot white supremacist goes out, that is at odds with the mainstream Republican Party. | ||
You get the point. | ||
They're going to introduce Barbara Walter. | ||
They ask, We've seen a lot of political violence over the history of this country, and certainly there have been more violent periods than this one, but you've said this moment feels different. | ||
Why? | ||
She responds, there are three big different differences. | ||
The first is how our leaders are responding historically when tragedy struck, whether it was an assassination, terror attack, or bombing. | ||
The instinct among leaders is to unify. | ||
That's specially important in a place as diverse and heterogeneous as the U.S. After 9-11, Oklahoma City bombing. | ||
After assassinations in the 60s, Democrats and Republicans stand together, condemn the violence. | ||
This time it didn't happen. | ||
Within hours of Charlie Kirk's killing, key figures on the right use it as a political weapon. | ||
It's just so laughably insane. | ||
Figures on the right weaponized it. | ||
He had been killed by uh uh he had been allegedly killed by a leftist with a bullet that read Bella Chow, which is the antifa song, which we have been warning about for some time. | ||
Antifa is aligned with the mainstream Democrat Party. | ||
They actively defend it. | ||
CNN lies and claims there is no Antifa, despite the fact they fly a flag, have local chapters, and sell merchandise. | ||
They have email recruitment lists. | ||
They organize, they have meeting places, they have financiers, they have lawyers. | ||
These people on CNN and the Democrat Party are lying, but it doesn't matter because you know they are. | ||
They could come out right now and say, yup, we voted the whole time. | ||
We have financiers, we have lawyers, we have organizers, we have plans, we have chapters, we have meetup groups, and ain't nothing you can do about it. | ||
That may as well be their statement because they're lie, they're they're tricking no one at this point. | ||
When a liberal comes out like the Krasensteins and they're like, there is no antifa. | ||
Ask Hassan, ask Brian and Ed Krasenstein why they did not say I'm anti-vi. | ||
They said I'm anti-fascist. | ||
Because antifa is a specific proper noun representing a group of people. | ||
Anti-fascist is a generic term. | ||
So when Trump says they're terrorists, they know a group is being referred to, and they actually are concerned about it. | ||
She says, We saw people like Laura Loomer and Bannon go straight to civil war language. | ||
So are you, you moron? | ||
Is that why Vox deleted civil war from the title of his article? | ||
We're in a government shutdown right now. | ||
The reason is that Republicans don't want to extend benefits to AC ACA benefits, to Docker recipients, and people who came here illegally but later claimed asylum or refugee status and are pending adjudication. | ||
Democrats have argued that these people are worthy of ACA benefits. | ||
Now the Republican Party referred to them as illegal immigrants, which they are. | ||
They entered illegally and then said, Hey, can we get status? | ||
And we said, we'll figure it out later. | ||
Many of these people have orders for removal. | ||
The Democrats said none of these people are illegal because they asserted it, now they have pending status. | ||
The media then lied. | ||
Democrats don't want to give illegal immigrants benefits. | ||
Because if anybody enters the country illegally, but as soon as CBP says, aha, an illegal immigrant, they go, asylum. | ||
Ooh, rats, you said the words that now you're not illegal anymore. | ||
That's literally what Democrats are arguing. | ||
Now I can tell you this. | ||
This is the basis of both arguments. | ||
If you're of the Democrat opinion that simply by virtue of yelling out asylum, you're no longer here illegally. | ||
Just make the argument. | ||
But they don't do it. | ||
They just lie about it. | ||
And that's where we are. | ||
Civil war language. | ||
You mean when like Laura Loomer and Bannon said, holy crap, I think we're entering a civil war. | ||
Not prescribing, but describing you that attack them for it. | ||
That's insane. | ||
She says, violence entrepreneurs. | ||
That's what we're seeing. | ||
A single devants become propaganda. | ||
Instead of treating this as isolated crimes, political actors fold them into a broader narrative of an existential threat. | ||
They're about to get us. | ||
They're threatening to kill me. | ||
You know what? | ||
I'm not supposed to do this. | ||
I'm pulling this up. | ||
Because I've been talking with the FBI. | ||
And so I'm gonna I'm gonna read just a tiny portion of what I've been in contact with the FBI about. | ||
Um let's see. | ||
Let's uh you uh Tim, you will be turned into what Charlie Kirk became. | ||
I will drive to you and wait outside and come out with full auto. | ||
I'm paraphrasing some of this. | ||
I've killed many, I'll kill more. | ||
I'm not gonna keep reading. | ||
That's just one. | ||
These people are evil at Vox. | ||
They are fomenting this while we are begging them to stop. | ||
I don't want anybody to get hurt. | ||
I don't want this lady to get hurt. | ||
I don't want anyone at Vox to get hurt. | ||
I don't want Pritzker to get hurt. | ||
I don't even want the illegal immigrants to get hurt. | ||
I want them to be peacefully taken to a vehicle and given a ride home. | ||
They can pick the music. | ||
The Democrats have smeared Charlie Kirk's good name, justified his his killing as what happens when you preach hate. | ||
Over and over again in the media, we hear them say this. | ||
Well, Charlie Kirk should have expected action over what he was saying. | ||
What? | ||
You lied and made things up, radicalized people, and then got Charlie Kirk killed. | ||
AOC went on the House floor and defended these smears and these lies about Charlie Kirk. | ||
And then they point the finger at us. | ||
I'm a milktoast fence-sitting moderate. | ||
I'm not even a conservative. | ||
I guess by today's standard, I very much am because I like Christmas, I guess. | ||
That's crazy. | ||
And I get death threats. | ||
And I have to pay for crazy security as I travel this country. | ||
And they have the nerve to say it's our fault. | ||
We are, we are, this is where we're going. | ||
And you know it. | ||
Trump calls for jailing Illinois governor and Chicago mayor in immigration standoff. | ||
Well, he said they should be in jail. | ||
You should be in jail. | ||
Someone asked, I'm gonna address this, did you watch Rogan yesterday? | ||
I didn't, but um I will say this. | ||
Joe's a great guy, and I have tremendous respect for him, and I owe him a lot. | ||
But we reached out to Rogan's team, and this is like the first time I've ever formally asked to go on his show. | ||
I told him before I wouldn't do it. | ||
Uh, and we did, and he passed. | ||
And so we get like there's like a month and advance notice. | ||
We said, send I sent a message, said a DM, email like, hey brother, really would love to see you and and and come out and uh join the show if possible. | ||
And uh, you know, didn't happen. | ||
Uh was told by his team it's probably gonna be a pass because he knows, but he's not saying anything about it. | ||
I'm gonna say this with all due respect to Joe because I don't I'm not trying to rag on the guy or be disrespectful or anything like that. | ||
He says very nice things about me. | ||
He he still he still helps me out. | ||
He doesn't owe me anything, and he's never owed me anything for going on his show. | ||
Uh So I would just say, would have appreciated him just sending a message saying, hey, brother, look, we're just booked up. | ||
I'm, you know. | ||
But I do think there's something else. | ||
I think it has become patently obvious to everyone. | ||
Um, and not to single out Joe. | ||
I'm not trying to be a dick. | ||
Someone asked about it. | ||
Now I'm kind of being a dick, but I, you know. | ||
I think Joe is deeply concerned about being at the top of the mountain. | ||
Advocating for Trump, now seeing what Trump is doing. | ||
I warned about this. | ||
We're gonna start seeing the military come in, start arresting people, and and Joe's walking things back saying, get grant amnesty to these people who have been here for a long period of time. | ||
But we always knew this was going to be the case. | ||
And I don't think Joe was ignorant of this fact, and I said this a year in advance. | ||
When it comes time to deport, Trump's not gonna be able to use local police. | ||
That's what he told me in the interview. | ||
He said, local police, not gonna happen. | ||
It's gonna have to be military. | ||
You don't have the force to deport this many people. | ||
Now it's not been largely military, but National Guard has been called out because of this. | ||
The Democrats are then going to start highlighting this, saying it's just like Nazi Germany, which they are doing. | ||
The escalation is is is palpable. | ||
It is before our very eyes. | ||
The arrest of a governor, we can see where it's going. | ||
My personal opinion is that Joe is deeply concerned and trying to avoid some of these conversations. | ||
I don't blame him. | ||
Someone threatened to kill Benny Johnson. | ||
Someone well, more than one people. | ||
We're getting tons of death threats. | ||
I'm getting them. | ||
And I'd be I'd be willing to assess that Joe and many others are as well. | ||
And Joe's not a political guy, he's a comedian. | ||
I think Joe has decided, and again, I say this with respect. | ||
I think he decided to say, look, I just want to do comedy and talk to comedians, promote the mothership and focus on what he truly's passionate about and not stick his neck out into the political fray for which he is not as well versed as other people. | ||
But this is where it's going. | ||
That being said, if Joe wants to go on his show and say things like we should grant amnesty or defend Jimmy Kimmel, I think it only fair that he have someone on to challenge those narratives. | ||
But you know, whatever. | ||
Um, I have nothing but tremendous respect for the man, and he owes me literally nothing. | ||
Uh that being said, you know, I'm not gonna just kiss ass. | ||
I'll be as uh critical as I can, but I I have to fully recognize look, man, part of the reason I am where I am is because the dude, you know, lifted me up help and and and launched me up on his show. | ||
So I do respect it, and I am eternally grateful. | ||
It's not just that. | ||
He's a really good dude. | ||
He's a really good dude. | ||
So I'm not trying to, you know, I'm trying to be a little diplomatic because I owe him a lot. | ||
But with his show being as big as it is, I think it's important to call out areas where I think are um, you know, worthy of criticism. | ||
We're running a little long and we and we got to pull in our guest. | ||
So uh we're gonna jump to this next story, smash the like button, share the uh share the show with everyone, you know. | ||
Stay tuned. | ||
Uh we've got it, we got Arn McIntyre, I believe, who is uh uh uh set up to join us, and we're gonna talk about this. | ||
So thanks for hanging out. | ||
Oh man, I'm gonna sneeze coming on too. | ||
Worst worse the worst. | ||
Uh smash the like button, share the show. | ||
Interview will be up at rumble.com slash um I think it's gonna be the uh the culture war. | ||
Just search the culture war podcast and uh YouTube.com slash Timcast. | ||
Let's go. | ||
From Newsweek, hedge fund billionaire warns U.S. is entering civil war. | ||
And Vox.com asks, is America on the brink of civil war? | ||
Now they've removed of civil war from their headline now. | ||
And it's kind of funny because they brought on this woman, Barbara F. Walter, who then basically says, calling for a claiming that a civil war is possible is the problem itself. | ||
She says, people like Laura Loomer and Steve Bannon go straight to civil war language. | ||
So did Vox.com. | ||
The divide is clear. | ||
We are seeing people on the left defend Charlie Kirk's killing. | ||
I have got a death threat that I just read out a moment on the previous segment, at least a portion of I'm not gonna read the whole thing. | ||
I've been in contact with the FBI, and the DOJ has announced the arrest of a man who sent a threatening letter to Benny Johnson threatening to kill him. | ||
I have been in contact with the FBI about similar threats that we have received here at Timcast, and we are taking all of these threats very seriously. | ||
It is escalating. | ||
Donald Trump has called for the jailing of Governor Pritzer and Mayor Brennan Johnson, and Pritzker says, come and get me. | ||
Trump has sent in Texas National Guard into Illinois. | ||
Holy crap. | ||
It is escalating, my friends. | ||
Now, to get another opinion on this, we're gonna be joined by Aaron McIntyre, commentator. | ||
Let me uh pull up the room with uh here we go. | ||
Got it. | ||
And we'll get the camera going, boot it up. | ||
Hopefully it works. | ||
And it is currently loading. | ||
It's giving me the business. | ||
There we go. | ||
All right. | ||
Can you hear me? | ||
Hey, how's it going? | ||
It's going pretty well. | ||
How are you, sir? | ||
Doing well, doing well. | ||
So we've got uh I mean it's big news right now about Israel, Palestine that seems to be dominating the news. | ||
However, over the past weekend, we've seen an escalation of riots. | ||
Far leftists have descended on Portland. | ||
They've been in Chicago, and it's gone beyond the riots. | ||
There are, of course, weird scenes coming out of Portland of people dressed like animals, which I think is propaganda efforts. | ||
But in Illinois, there's something particularly interesting. | ||
A video where a man being arrested by ICE is helped by bystanders escape, and the ICE officers give up and let him go. | ||
This guy's yelling, Iutame, and the people obliged and let him go. | ||
Trump is sending in Texas National Guard into Illinois to assist with this immigration and with immigration enforcement, while the people of Illinois are actually fighting against uh fighting against ICE. | ||
And the governor says, come and get me, threatening Trump, daring Trump to actually arrest him. | ||
Now, Ray Dalio has said that we are entering a new kind of civil war. | ||
And even Vox.com today published an article, is the U.S. on the brink of civil war. | ||
I, of course, have talked about this for some time, but I'm curious your thoughts on uh what is currently going on. | ||
Well, I think when a lot of people think about the Civil War, they think about two sides, formal armies, uniforms, generals, you know, a command structure. | ||
They think of a separate government that's somehow been declared. | ||
And it's not civil war until you get to that point. | ||
If we're going by that definition, no, I don't think we're gonna probably see that anytime soon. | ||
However, most people don't remember that the American Civil War didn't start with two different sides and different uniforms and generals. | ||
It didn't even start at Fort Sumter. | ||
The American Civil War really started in the border states. | ||
A lot of people have forgotten the story of bleeding Kansas, where you have these different states that were territories, but they had to enter into the United States, and when they did so, they had to vote whether to be slave or free. | ||
And so both sides, the abolitionists and the pro-slavery side recognized that every state added to the union would put things on their side, right? | ||
It would tip the balance in Congress representation. | ||
So they all moved. | ||
A bunch of people from each side moved into places like Kansas. | ||
And once each side recognized that they were both artificially kind of boosting the ballot box by moving to these places and messing with the vote. | ||
We actually got running gun battles. | ||
We got actual full-on uh conflict between these two sides. | ||
They weren't paramilitary organizations. | ||
No one had a leadership, no one was assigned to any specific government organization. | ||
But this became so famous that again, we call this period now bleeding Kansas because of the amount of violence, uh, you know, just civilian on civilian, non-government uh authorized violence that occurred in these border skirmishes. | ||
And I think what we're looking at here is something similar. | ||
We're probably not gonna see the formal declaration of civil war anytime soon, but I think we will see escalating violence in what could be a pre-Civil War type of maneuver. | ||
Maybe. | ||
Um, I I agree with 99% of what you're saying. | ||
The reason why I think there's a possibility this could be different is uh digital communications, the speed at which communications travel. | ||
And so I've been thinking a lot about this, and you're absolutely right about bleeding Kansas. | ||
It certainly feels like we are in this period where you've got, I mean, one, the the killing of Charlie Kirk, the riots and the protests at federal facilities. | ||
However, Trump is sending in National Guard from Texas into other states already, which when you look at the history of the Civil War, we didn't really get that. | ||
Uh and the structure of government was a bit different. | ||
So it's after uh you know, Fort Sumter, they say was the beginning of the American Civil War, but it wasn't really even a thing. | ||
One person died, it was an it was an accident. | ||
Nobody was actually trying to kill each other. | ||
And then you had the Battle of Bull Run, where people still thought we were not going to be in a civil war. | ||
After that, four more states. | ||
I'm sorry, after that, Lincoln then says we're gonna rally a bunch of troops and send them into the South and quell the rebellion. | ||
Four more states then secede, and all this took kind of a long time, took Months. | ||
But with this the speed of communications, a judge's ruling is overnight. | ||
Trump responds overnight and the public reacts in an instant. | ||
So we're at a point now in this country where we may have entered bleeding, Kansas in the past couple of years when we saw, you know, Andrew Yang was saying, I'm going to move to Georgia to influence the election, as you described with these other states. | ||
So maybe these past several years with the with the Trump first administration can be described as that period of civil strife, violence in the streets. | ||
But with the movement of Texas troops into Illinois, it looks like we are on the precipice of something more serious. | ||
I think that's exactly right. | ||
I mean, ultimately, like you say, we have what we have basically collapsing decision space, right? | ||
The faster that information moves, the more that decisions are made quickly, the less likely they are to have any kind of public evaluation. | ||
We don't go through any kind of democratic process. | ||
We don't have a national conversation. | ||
It just feels like things happen, right? | ||
And momentum builds very quickly. | ||
And of course, the faster momentum builds with less time for people to have conversations, work things out, uh, you know, go through any formal process, then the likelihood of running into one of these calamitous, uh, you know, so someone fires around at the wrong time, you know, a national guardsman gets spooked, they get rushed, uh, some Antifa guy decides to get really violent and there's some kind of shooting in the crowd, these things can all spiral out of the uh out of control very quickly. | ||
But we also have to remember that at the same time, you know, Eisenhower and JFK sent, you know, the 100 first airborne in uh, you know, to southern states to force the issue of uh segregation, right? | ||
So it's not the first time that we've had a full-on, not just National Guard, but like army uh uh, you know, military deployed into the United States and forcing action on other Americans, uh, and that did not result in civil war. | ||
I do think you're right that this time is probably a little different, but it's not like tensions were exactly low during segregation and attempts to integrate uh in the South as well. | ||
So I don't want to jump to the end and say that this has to be radically different, but I will say that if if nothing else, we are at least at that level of tension and possible conflict, which is already extremely high at the time. | ||
Are you familiar? | ||
I talked about this this morning. | ||
Uh are you familiar with the graphic novel novel I Am Legend? | ||
I've seen the movie, but I never Oh, the movie's terrible. | ||
Just forget you even saw it. | ||
The general idea, and I'm probably gonna wrong it's been so long since I since I've read it. | ||
The general idea is you got a vampire hunter. | ||
He goes around during the day when the vampires in their coffins, he kills vampires. | ||
But the vampires are winning. | ||
By the end of the story, vampire society is all vampires, cities are all run by vampires, the government is all vampires, and he gets captured and arrested. | ||
And he's looking out of a jail cell, and there's a vampire citizen walks by and sees him terrified, this look of fear in his face. | ||
And that's when he realizes he is the monster of myth and legend that lurks while people sleep and kills them in their beds. | ||
The general idea is he is he his world is gone. | ||
The world that he was fighting for doesn't exist anymore. | ||
And so I use an example because what we're seeing right now with with Chicago, for instance, I watched this shocking and terrifying video. | ||
It's a man trying that ICE is trying to arrest him. | ||
And he's yelling iutume and resisting arrest. | ||
And people help him. | ||
What's terrifying about it is we recognize the authority of ICE and CBP. | ||
We voted for Trump to enforce immigration law. | ||
But in these jurisdictions, like in Chicago, not only do people not fear the authority of the federal government, they view it as illegitimate and come to the aid of the man who is resisting arrest and in violation of our laws. | ||
Zoran Mamdani vowed in his campaign in New York to defend his community from Trump's ice. | ||
What is he saying? | ||
He's saying, me and my people, we're not, we're not part of your country. | ||
What you voted for, what you seek to enforce, we are opposed to and will resist and reject. | ||
But what's scary about it is his statement is basically saying there is a voting block large enough in New York that believes we are a separate national entity to the federal government that our community must be defended from them. | ||
It's at this point, people need to realize there actually are factions. | ||
We'll call them whatever you want, but they are there in front of us. | ||
I'm curious if you see similarly. | ||
Yeah, I think, you know, if we if we think about how laws work, right? | ||
We we assume uh often people on the right conservatives will say, well, a law is written down. | ||
And if the law is written down, then people just have to follow it. | ||
That's just how it works. | ||
But of course, that's not how laws get enforced. | ||
We can't actually compel the vast majority of the population to obey the law all of the time. | ||
The reason that laws get in that ultimately work is that the majority of people agree with the law. | ||
They follow the law, they do it uh voluntarily, no one has to put a gun to their head. | ||
The spirit of the law uh goes along with their beliefs, their way of being, their tradition, their understanding, their morality. | ||
A few people have to be compelled because that's always the case, but you can't force it on everyone. | ||
And this is why it's really important that when you make laws, there you have a shared basis of morality and tradition and understanding how this should work, right? | ||
Because you can't force it down on everybody. | ||
When we had this situation again to make the comparison with the last civil war, you had, of course, a period of reconstruction after the civil war. | ||
And it's basically long-term military occupation of the South. | ||
And the reason they did that is, well, they did not trust the South to actually follow the law. | ||
They had they felt like they had to compel them at force to do this. | ||
And even after Reconstruction ended, we basically oriented our entire society, our system of laws, the way our the 14th Amendment, everything we did to the Constitution after, we oriented it to basically allow the North to force those things onto the South. | ||
Now, again, you might think that's bad, you might think that's good, but it is very instructive for us to now look at what we're doing here, right? | ||
Because even with all the force of the government, it took basically a hundred years for all of the things that the North wanted to kind of compel on the South to take. | ||
And even then, there's still conflict, right? | ||
There's still some kind of tension uh in ways between the South and the rest of the United States, which is why every Northerner's favorite joke is how dumb the South is, right? | ||
And so now you have the scenario where it's kind of the roles are reversed, right? | ||
We have troops from the South from Texas having to go to Illinois and compel them to follow these same rules. | ||
In some way, we are reconstructing these liberal uh areas. | ||
And that can only go on for so long, because like we said, that it's not usually successful unless you have the shared belief. | ||
So as long as people in Portland and in Illinois have these radically different beliefs, they must be compelled by force to follow the law because everything else about their society works against it. | ||
This is this is the free speech challenge. | ||
The idea of free speech only works in a society that is homogenous for the most part. | ||
I I've talked with a lot of people about the constitution and their belief in it, liberal, conservative or otherwise. | ||
And well, when when the First Amendment is ratified, blasphemy was still illegal in most parts of the country. | ||
You you go outside and blaspheme, you get arrested. | ||
You couldn't swear obscenity. | ||
I think a good example of uh legal breakdown uh is in, I know this sounds pretty gross and silly, but public defecation. | ||
You shouldn't, you know, the the joke is whenever you see a sign in a workplace, it means something happened. | ||
So if there's a sign saying, you know, like don't steal food from the fridge, it's because someone did. | ||
If the sign says don't take a dump on the floor, you're like, what? | ||
Why do you need a sign for that? | ||
So why do we need to write down a law that says do not defecate in public? | ||
The problem is over a long enough period of time, people began doing it. | ||
The problem we have now is when you look at San Francisco, they allow it. | ||
So there is a so that that is a silly way, uh, you know, it's kind of a gross and absurd way to look at it, but I think it really matters because it's something so incredibly basic. | ||
You can't drop trout in the middle of the street and just go off. | ||
But in Democrat-run cities, it's happening all the time and no enforcement happens. | ||
So there's already a distinct worldview, right? | ||
Like because we'd be like, that's ridiculous. | ||
But it is happening and they're allowing it to happen. | ||
Where it gets more serious is when we write a law saying you can't enter the country illegally. | ||
You have to go through a point of a port of entry. | ||
But now we're seeing in New York, California, Oregon, all these blue jurisdictions, not only are they saying, come here and we'll protect you, clearly showing a mirror image of the rule of law. | ||
In some instances, they're trying to grant them the right to vote. | ||
And so to go back to that, you know, I am legend scenario. | ||
We are talking about a military occupation. | ||
And I think people listening need to understand that it may not be explicitly stated, but the general functioning of government right now is that Democrats and Republicans are two distinct nations trying to occupy the Same space. | ||
So when Democrats in Illinois say Trump is in violation of the Constitution, Republicans then say, no, he's not. | ||
He's doing everything legally. | ||
That argument is meaningless. | ||
It's like trying to argue with France about their laws affecting our country. | ||
One way I put it is in the UK, they threatened to extradite and deport Americans for their speech. | ||
And we all left. | ||
You can't come and arrest an American. | ||
That's how Democrats feel about Trump right now. | ||
That he's trying to effectively do something so absurd. | ||
But uh with all that, do you see a possibility that this could de-escalate things? | ||
Like maybe Trump occupies these places as as a form, you know, as one way to describe it, and then over the period of 10 or 20 years, things calm down and we go back to normal. | ||
It's it's possible. | ||
Uh to piggyback back off your last point, uh, there's a thinker, Joseph De Maestra, and he said that no constitution is ever written by human hands, that all constitutions are written onto people's hearts by God. | ||
And constitutions aren't pieces of paper. | ||
They're literally the way that we are constituted as a people. | ||
They come from our traditions, they come from our beliefs, they come from our religion, they come from our folk ways. | ||
And when we write them down, we're really just capturing, taking a snapshot of what we believe and how we live our lives in the moment. | ||
So, like you said, if you know the original constitution was a snapshot of what our founders believed and how they lived the lives and the type of people they were. | ||
If we look at our current world, it simply does not align with that, right? | ||
The left does not believe those things. | ||
And that's why we get two radically different pictures of the constitution, because we're looking at it in a way that I think is closer to what the founders looked at it like, though we have still changed over time. | ||
But the left has a completely different understanding of the constitution. | ||
And so when they interpret it, that nothing has changed in the words, but the way they live their lives is so radically different that for them the constitution is the way they live their knives, not the words on paper. | ||
So you can't just wave it in front of them and say, hey, do this, because that doesn't mean anything to them. | ||
So I think it the difficulty with trying to de-escalate right now is how differently we see the the world, how fundamentally different our values, our identities, our uh everything about us is. | ||
And so as we saw again with the North, there are ways to compel people to do this, right? | ||
We did it to Nazi Germany after World War II in Japan, right? | ||
We went in and we occupy those nations and we force them to you know become uh you know, anti, we did the whole anti-fascism crusade. | ||
We forced all this out of kind of their their worldviews. | ||
Uh, we we made it illegal to have any reference to their histories or their beliefs. | ||
Uh, you know, we know how to do this, but none of it is very pretty. | ||
So can we do it? | ||
Maybe. | ||
Do we have the political will? | ||
Like, do the does does the MAGA right or do congressional Republicans really have the will to full on occupy these cities and force out these anti-fascist terroristic elements. | ||
Like, do they would the average Republican actually take a step like that? | ||
Because that's what would be necessary. | ||
Well, that that could actually escalate things, right? | ||
It could. | ||
So it's a rock in a hard place. | ||
You it's it's hard to map out your path. | ||
I think philosophically, I think um one of the challenges we have is educating what one thing we have failed to do in this country is educate people on philosophy, morals, and the morality of philosophy, right? | ||
So people on the left, they hear that Trump's going to uh deport a guy who's been here for 20 years, and they say that is wrong. | ||
And Trump, by doing so, is a tyrant and a dictator. | ||
When Trump is doing what is asked of him by his voters in the majority, or I should at least say the plurality. | ||
He won the election, he won the popular vote, he's got Congress, the will of the people be done, right? | ||
Trump isn't simply going up and saying, I know everyone hates me, I'm gonna do whatever I want. | ||
The issue is as it pertains to securing uh Illinois or Oregon or California, there is no reality where you simply walk in and say, would you kindly follow the law? | ||
Because if the law was something like you had to sacrifice children to Mallock, people are going to fight you to their bloody end to stop that from happening. | ||
And so there's a lot of people who don't get. | ||
We won't need, we wouldn't need any police at all if this country all shared the moral worldview of Charlie Kirk. | ||
Imagine literally every single person Believed what Charlie believed, there'd be no murder, there'd be no theft, there'd be no crime, there'd be civil courts because sometimes people have disputes. | ||
But as a society becomes more factionalized in their in their backing ideologies, their religion or otherwise, through the system created by the founding fathers, eventually you'll get dearborn Michigan with female circumcision in a country that makes it illegal, and people on the left defending the right to their cultural practices. | ||
So what do you do? | ||
If you don't want it in your country, you force people to stop. | ||
To those who are engaged in those practices that we ban, they'll say that's tyranny. | ||
unidentified
|
That's oppression. | |
Yeah, like you said, people live in a certain way. | ||
And it doesn't change because they stepped on American soil. | ||
There's nothing magical about the dirt in Michigan. | ||
If you take someone who doesn't believe in American values, isn't Christian, has a radically different way of life, and you move them there, they will just live that life unless you go through a truly authoritarian level of uh of demands to force them to do this. | ||
And this is the problem with multiculturalism. | ||
As you say, a homogenous population shares a worldview. | ||
They share an experience, they share a tradition. | ||
They might have disagreements inside of it, but it's much closer than ones that are radically different because they come from far different ways, have different religions, have different faiths, understandings, philosophies, all of these things. | ||
And so the farther apart the uh different people inside your community are, the more authoritarian the government has to become. | ||
So if you're asking, you know, the average person, you know, they're saying how well we can have a multi-racial, ultra, multi-ethnic uh country, right? | ||
Well, there are successful versions of this. | ||
You can look at something like Singapore, right? | ||
They have a high degree of diversity across the board. | ||
They also will kill you for dealing drugs, they'll cane you for spitting gum on the sidewalk. | ||
They know how to force everyone to behave exactly the same way so that civilization can run. | ||
That is an option. | ||
I don't know if that's the way I want to live, but if you're talking about a highly diverse highly uh uh population with all these different traditions, that tends to be the thing that wins out at the end. | ||
Well, this is this is the reality, right? | ||
Uh I don't have to worry about you nor anyone you know dropping trial in the middle of the street and taking a dump. | ||
And and so in a place like Singapore, when they say don't chew gum and don't spit the gum, gum is banned, you get caned for these infractions. | ||
There's public shame if you don't throw away your trash or don't flush a toilet. | ||
It's exaggerated, but when I went to Singapore, they said if you don't flush the toilet, someone will go in and check the stall after you leave and you'll get shamed. | ||
But they will mercilessly beat you for violating their rules. | ||
Here's the thing. | ||
Most of the people don't ever get beaten because they don't break the rules. | ||
They have this strict enforcement for the people who are outside of their worldview. | ||
It's it's it's easy to act like the perfect world is going to be this, you know, multicultural society where we all hold hands. | ||
But there are Islamic uh cultural norms that are completely at odds with the West that they will not tolerate. | ||
So as it goes for immigration, I'm curious if you want to elaborate on, you know, what we've what what we've been seeing with mass migration. | ||
Actually, let me say this, because you you you you you brought up a good point, and I think I'm looking at the world right now in a very interesting this divide in an interesting way. | ||
Democrats, when in power, are going to allow illegal immigrants into the country and allow them to stay permanently. | ||
They will traffic children. | ||
We saw it under Biden already. | ||
There is no more tolerance for this among the right. | ||
Sure. | ||
Would the right win, they will deport these people. | ||
Nothing is going to change the minds of either of these nations. | ||
They're two distinct nations at this point, trying to occupy the same territory or similar territories. | ||
This means, in my view, if the Democrats are to get back power, they will make an attempt to militaristically occupy right-leaning places to protect illegal immigrants. | ||
As we are seeing the inverse, it seems like the only outcome there is going to be violent resistance at some point to whoever's in charge. | ||
Yeah, I think that uh the mass immigration uh issue really highlights the existential nature, unfortunately, of the political divide. | ||
Uh, as you point out, uh, every illegal immigrant that a Democrat brings in obviously increases their eventual voting power. | ||
It increases uh their ability to give handouts to these people and secure power. | ||
It dilutes your vote. | ||
Uh, It ensures all of this different um, you know, ethnic enclaves that uh that uh kind of uh get erected in these areas and can be peddled to by different democratic politicians, as we now see people like Ilhan Omar promising to do what she can for Somalia, right? | ||
Uh the United States is just kind of a place you go uh to raid the treasury and get the benefits. | ||
It's not, you're not part of the country, you're not actually assimilating all of these things. | ||
That's now very common. | ||
And if that is allowed to continue to happen, then we can see the danger because Joe Biden brought in, you know, what, eight uh million people at least probably during his open borders scheme. | ||
And Trump, even if he goes just ham on the deportations, would be lucky to get half of those people out. | ||
So for every two Biden lets in, if we go absolutely to the wall on the issue, we might get half of them out. | ||
And that means that if we switch presidents every eight years, the Democrats are just on an inevitable winning streak, right? | ||
Yeah. | ||
And so this both sides recognize that if this is the game, then winning is everything. | ||
Uh because if you don't stop it, you don't use force, then they're gonna continue to do this, and the loss is inevitable. | ||
I wouldn't be surprised if we get to a point where you know, we we we've gotten Newsome fighting over control of the National Guard, Pritzker, same thing. | ||
I would be surprised if actually, you know what, I'm gonna pause my pause right there. | ||
I we're actually already here. | ||
Democrat, I was gonna say that Democrats would offer some kind of um amnesty or sanctuary to illegal immigrants if they aid in resisting the federal government. | ||
And then I was like, oh, no, they already do. | ||
And they've been doing it for decades with sanctuary policies that have expanded into sanctuary state policies. | ||
We're getting to the point now where run-of-the-mill people in the streets are fighting ICE officers to stop them from deporting people. | ||
This video I mentioned where the guys yelling, I Udemy and uh help me in Spanish, and the people actually do. | ||
So we're already there. | ||
Democrats are saying, stop the feds, you get sanctuary here. | ||
Now, to be fair, we're not formally in this period, but I do think we are dangerously close to a point where local we've already seen illegal immigrant police officers in places like Minnesota. | ||
I wouldn't be surprised if in the coming years we see a place like Illinois say, uh, if you help us repel ice and shut them down and obstruct them, we will grant you sanctuary, which ultimately could get exacerbated to the point where if we do enter a civil war, an actual formal war where maybe Trump has to federalize local police departments. | ||
He occupies Chicago and says we're in command now, and there's troops, there's Marines. | ||
Then you get Democrats saying, join us, undocumented, formally as fighters, and we will grant you citizenship when we win. | ||
I think that's a that that's the likely direction, should this go into full-scale civil war. | ||
Yeah, again, that's far from unprecedented when you look at again our first civil war in Lincoln bringing in plenty of Irish and sending them directly to the front lines, basically importing new troops to fight people in the South, right? | ||
But we also know that ultimately uh we we've seen this cycle of civilizations for things like the Roman Empire, where you have a large number of Goths who end up entering into the military leadership of uh of the empire, and that ends up being uh eventually the majority of the people who are actually in armed service. | ||
And very soon you have a situation where very few Romans are actually going to war for Rome. | ||
Uh, and this is increasingly true in the United States, whether it be in the military or in uh the police department, they're having trouble recruiting a lot of heritage Americans, to be frankly uh to be clear, uh often it's the most dangerous thing in the world to be a white cop on the beat because as soon as you bust somebody, you're gonna end up uh getting charged with racism and everything. | ||
It's much easier if you're a minority, though even then that doesn't necessarily stop you from uh getting uh criticized and getting civil rights lawsuits for different arrests. | ||
But ultimately we see that a lot of these military and police forces are drawing more and more on uh populations of either early immigrants or pop possibly even illegal immigrants in the case of law enforcement. | ||
And so I think it is entirely reasonable to worry about the idea that they could grant citizenship or extra benefits to foreigners who are coming in fighting for them. | ||
This is why we always point out that immigration is largely fighting age young men. | ||
It matters that they are military young men for the most part. | ||
They're not bringing most of their women, they're not bringing their children, they're not bringing their families. | ||
It's guys in their you know early 20s, uh, you know, or uh early 30s, they're the ones that are coming across the border with no jobs, no, you know, no way to pay for anything, no support network, and they are very, very vulnerable to different people who could offer them opportunities, be it pay or anything else if they would do what they're the fighting for them. | ||
You know, it's funny is I saw the story that a uh Republican bought Dominion voting systems. | ||
Uh I haven't read too much into it, but I'm seeing a lot of liberals sharing this story in panic. | ||
Because for the longest time, of course, the right uh are people on the right have to say argue that Dominion was rigging the election or something like that. | ||
Well, the left and liberals said that's not true, and you're lying and you're crazy and you're conspiracy theorists. | ||
Now there's a story they're all sharing where they say a Republican bought Dominion and they're going, oh no. | ||
Like, oh no, what? | ||
Oh, oh no, the implication is Republicans will rig the elections now, win everything, and just control this country from now on, creating some kind of American empire. | ||
But my response is just I thought Dominion didn't control elections. | ||
Why are they freaking out? | ||
I think it's fair to say though, based on the moves Trump is making, there's a major point being made in his in his m in his policies pertaining to the midterm elections and the upcoming presidential election to ensure every structural piece is in place that will guarantee a Republican victory. | ||
And uh, if Democrats are gonna have the argument the election's being stolen, I don't know what to expect. | ||
But uh Aaron, I appreciate you joining me. | ||
We're out of time. | ||
Where can people find you? | ||
Uh yes, I'm over on Blaze TV, of course the McIntyre show is on YouTube and Rumble and all your favorite podcast platforms. | ||
And of course, I'm over on Twitter at Orin McIntyre. | ||
Right on, brother. | ||
Thanks for hanging out. | ||
We'll uh we'll have to have you on again soon. | ||
Thanks for having me. | ||
Take care. | ||
Right on. | ||
That was the great RN McIntyre, of course, as we discussed a lot of these issues. | ||
Uh we could probably talk for another two hours on all of these issues. | ||
But I think we need to do like a deep dive, three or four hour discussion. | ||
I should read out a bunch of bullet points on issues of the Civil War, the American Civil War, um, possible civil war. | ||
These points about, you know, Democrats basically making the argument that Trump is gearing up to rig the election using Dominion is is why they're saying it. | ||
It's funny because they said you can't. | ||
Now they fear you can. | ||
And it's not everybody when I say they, it's a handful of liberals I see on X. But maybe. | ||
Maybe. | ||
We're gonna wait and see. | ||
I suppose smash the like button, share the show. | ||
You can follow me on X and Instagram at Timcast. | ||
We've got more coming up for you tonight at 8 p.m. | ||
Timcast IRL is back. | ||
Let me see if I've got the uh who do we got lined up on this, the October 13th. | ||
Peter Navarro will be joining us, which will be interesting because you know they locked him up. | ||
And uh RN actually will be joining us for the culture war this Friday. | ||
So should be should be uh very interesting. | ||
I'll leave it there, my friends. | ||
Thanks for hanging out. | ||
Smash the like button. | ||
We're gonna get you uh ready for the next raid. | ||
And uh I I don't know if we have uh Russell Brand. | ||
I think he's been off for some time. | ||
Yeah, he's not currently streaming. | ||
So we might have is it uh uh I believe DeVore is going live right now. | ||
DeVorey Darkins, I got to hang out with uh when I was traveling, who's absolutely amazing. | ||
Really great work, Devore. | ||
He is live now. | ||
So we'll get you guys on over to hang out with DeVore. | ||
I recommend it if you haven't seen him, you gotta see him. | ||
He's a good dude, smart dude, knows what he's talking about. | ||
Thanks for hanging out. | ||
And other than that, we will see you all tonight, 8 p.m. |