All Episodes
Nov. 6, 2025 - Tim Pool Daily Show
01:00:17
Bannon RIPS GOP For Dismissing Zohran, "This Is Very Serious"
Participants
Main voices
s
scott greer
18:26
t
tate brown
38:48
Appearances
t
tim pool
01:08
Clips
z
zohran mamdani
00:11
| Copy link to current segment

Speaker Time Text
tate brown
Of 15 seconds ago on the East Coast.
I'm your host, Tate Brown, here, holding it down, bringing you into the afternoon portion of our Rumble daily lineup.
I think we're at a morning lineup.
I don't know what the working name is.
Whatever it is, it's the afternoon.
It is a beautiful day here outside of our nation's capital.
It's balmy, like I don't know, high 50s.
It's quite nice.
It's really getting into the Thanksgiving season.
I, you know, is firing up the Snoopy, the Charlie Brown Thanksgiving special, and it's really setting a tone for the season.
With that, I don't know if you are really a politico, a news junkie, but the GOP didn't have a great performance.
These last three, four elections that we had on Tuesday, people had really high hopes.
I know we were competing in blue states, but people felt like, look, the vibes were there that we could potentially knock off, you know, make us make a play, make a statement in New Jersey.
Unfortunately, things didn't go our way, to say the least.
And Steve Bannon was breaking this down actually in a politico piece, and he said there should be flashing red lights everywhere regarding Zorhan Mamdani.
So we're going to break down what he had to say.
And later on in the show, we're going to bring in Scott Greer.
He's fantastic.
He recently wrote a piece where he was saying, look, I don't know if it's accurate to call him a third worldist.
You know, I think this is just the culmination of woke.
So we're going to bring him in to talk about that.
It's an interesting idea because I've been using the term third worldist, but I'm curious, maybe this isn't accurate.
So we're going to talk to Scott Greer about it.
He's always fantastic.
We also have a civil war in the GOP.
It's very unfortunate that this is part of the reason we got spanked two or three days ago was because everyone was just punching right and trying to settle scores with each other.
And people kind of lost.
I mean, I didn't really see any commotion about Jersey until like three days before just because everyone was, you know, busy canceling kids for Hitler memes or whatever.
But anyway, we're going to break that down.
The Heritage Foundation is just a dumpster fire right now.
There's no question about it.
And if we have time, we'll get to the ATC situation with the air traffic controllers.
Obviously, the shutdown effects are really sinking in with our skies, which is very worrying because if you don't know, there's massive hunks of metal carrying 300 to 400 people above you at all times for the most part.
So yeah, we'll get into that.
And then we also have the Pope who was being very liberal the other day.
It's very interesting.
But before we get into that, I want to get a quick shout out to our sponsors here.
This is a Caspar Coffee.
This is really some fantastic stuff.
Cough one second, please.
There's a cough button around here somewhere.
Oh, I can't reach it.
Anyway, Casbrew Coffee.
This is really some fantastic stuff here.
We've got Appalachian Knights.
Everyone loves it.
Everyone knows it.
This is really, you know, a seminal statement of who we are.
We are in the Appalachians, and it does turn night here, you know, every night.
It's actually quite wonderful.
With that, we also have Ian's Graphene Dream.
Oh, my gosh.
Look, I've told you about the violence that breaks out at our live events over at Ian's Graphene Dream.
It looks like a Haiti.
It looks like a FEMA camp.
It is absolutely insane.
People are throwing pile drivers.
People are Batista bombing women through tables just to get their mitts, their nasty little Timcast mitts on some Ian's graphene dream.
It is really something.
The good news is you can just buy a bag.
We'll mail it to you.
And it's wonderful.
It's wonderful stuff.
And new to the store.
unidentified
Wow.
tate brown
This is hot off the press.
Actually, I think it's been like a month now, so I should probably stop saying that.
But this Mary's Ghost Blend.
Now, you may be saying, why do I need to buy it?
Halloween's over.
For next Halloween, I mean, Halloween happens every year.
It's not a one-year thing.
So yeah, you should start loading up.
You should be getting ready for next Halloween.
That being said, it's a s'mores blend.
So it's really just a great flavor year-round, but especially in these cooler months.
So head on over to Caspar, grab you some coffee, and also head on over to Boonies.
We love Boonies.
Look at this.
Look at these new boards.
They're sold out already.
These things flew off the shelves.
We are still offloading some more boards here or offloading.
We're selling some more boards here.
It's the Declaration of Independence on cancelable, be gay, don't be gay, 28th Amendment.
Oh my gosh.
Keep an eye on Boonies for more drops.
It's really some exciting stuff here.
And we also have swag.
We got t-shirts.
We got stickers.
Oh, come on.
You know how it is.
Head on over to Boonies, shop.boonieshq.com and get you some boards.
And also, yeah, we have the Culture Live event coming up on November 8th.
So go grab you some tickets there.
I need to pull the link up, but it's going to be great.
Alex Myron, Brian Shapiro.
We also added Jessica Mistano.
She's like a lib.
And Afarah Khalidi, a feminist and an OnlyFans model.
So we're really, really, you know, going swing for the intellectual fences here.
So yeah, head on over to the Culture Ward Live website and grab you some tickets.
It's going to be really fantastic.
With that, let's get into our first story.
Uh-oh, alert.
There should be flashing red lights.
Yeah, ain't that the truth?
Steve Bannon on Mamdani's win.
Trump's former White House strategist has a warning for Republicans gloating about Zorhan Mamdani's election.
Let's see what Steve Bannon had to say.
More than a few Republicans are celebrating Zorhan Mamdani's victory, seeing the 34-year-old Democratic socialist as a political gift and an albatross for the Democrat Party.
Steve Bannon is not among them.
The former White House chief strategist has long preached that the populism is the engine of modern politics.
And he sees Mamdani's election as mayor of New York City as proof of the staying power and a sign of the growing anti-establishment force on the left that Republicans would be foolish to ignore.
Look, he said, this is a quote to Politico.
Tonight should be a wake-up call to the populist nationalist movement under President Trump.
These are very serious people and they need to be addressed seriously.
Interesting.
Bannon seemed to be impressed by Mamdani's campaign's ability to turn out low-propensity voters.
Quote, this is kind of the Trump model.
And though he branded Memdani a, quote, neo-Marxist rather than a populist, and he is eager to have Trump and his administration battle Memdani in the days ahead, they certainly will be doing that if Mamdani's victory speech was anything to go by.
In a wide-ranging conversation following Democrats' big wins in New Jersey and Virginia, Bannon also ripped Republicans for their failures, discussed how the GOP can avoid a 2026 midterm route, and laid out what Trump's immediate next moves should be.
So let's get into the interview here.
This was really fascinating stuff.
You may be thinking, okay, it's Steve Bannon, you know, oh, yeah.
Look, he's still a mover and shaker.
And honestly, a lot of people in the beltway keep an eye on him.
A lot of people that are very close to the president really value his word, including the president himself.
So this is really a good insight into sort of it's good insight.
That's all I'll say.
But let's, you know, who's Steve Bannie?
I'm like preaching to the choir.
You guys are politicos.
Of course, you know.
With that, let's read.
A lot of Republicans, including the NRCC, are cheering Mamdani's win tonight, already trying to make him the latest Democratic boogeyman.
But you've also warned Republicans to be careful what they wish for with Memdani, that he's a quote, skilled politician who connects with voters on affordability in ways the GOP hasn't.
Where's the flashing red light for Republicans in his victory?
First of all, all the people that said he wasn't going to win the primary and he was great to run against, I think, have been proven wrong.
This is not a debating society.
Tonight, what you saw of Memdani is something you've never seen this entire race.
I mean, that's an angry guy.
That was in your face.
And particularly the president's face up in his grill.
And the president responded, and so it begins.
People better understand they have a fight in their hands.
This guy is a serious guy.
I've said this from the beginning.
I said early in the primary.
Forget the Republican Party in New York.
That's a joke.
But the National Republican Party and some of the smartest strategists do not realize the power of the Working Families Party and the Democratic Socialists of America for ground game.
Modern politics now is about engaging low-propensity voters, and they clearly turn them out tonight.
And this is kind of the Trump model.
This is very serious.
And yeah, this is something that Bannon has really emphasized.
And this is a big part of what Trump has tapped into and has found tremendous success is engaging the low propensity voter.
What do they care about?
What gets them off their seat and into a ballot box?
And Trump figured out in 2016, immigration and trade.
Those are the two things that got a lot of people, especially in the Rust Belt, off, you know, off the couch or whatever and into a ballot box.
Because quite frankly, well, these people are working off of their, wherever they're working and into a ballot box.
But yeah, so, I mean, that's kind of what the race has really been in New York is a lot of people that just otherwise wouldn't really vote.
I mean, what are they going to pick between like a Cuomo and Eric Adams or Sleeve?
These are just not people that are terribly exciting, terribly active.
This is very scary.
The ground game, I mean, Mamdani crossed a million voters.
I know people are saying, well, he didn't blow out everyone, but he still crossed a million voters.
It's a considerable amount of voters.
Granted, a lot of this base are foreign.
There's the data showing that native New Yorkers overwhelmingly voted for Cuomo, while people that are not native New Yorkers overwhelmingly voted for Mamdani.
So, you know, his base was imported.
But generally, this sort of strategy you're starting to see implemented nationwide to a large degree.
We will bring Scott Greer on to discuss this more of sort of how this could play out with the new left, sort of how Zoron fits into that.
But we'll read one more Q ⁇ A response here because I think this is a really interesting one as well.
Are there alarm bells for Republicans in this victory?
I mean, he is clearly trying to make this populist appeal.
There should be more than alarm bells.
There should be flashing red lights all over.
This is not Karen Bass, the mayor of Los Angeles.
This is not the guy in Chicago, Brandon Johnson, or maybe the Pope, either or.
You're going to see a whole new group of Mamdanis in these major urban cities because they're just flooded with immigrants.
That's where his vote came from, principally, in the progressive left.
These kids have come up through the public school system.
This is the flower of what the progressive left has delivered over the last 40 or 50 years.
You saw it tonight and people, we are going to have a fight on their hands.
All the Republicans sit there and tell me, oh, Steve, this is what these guys always wanted, a socialist.
I said, this guy is a Bolshevik.
He's a Marxist.
These guys are going to hunker down for a while and they're going to take over every apparatus of New York City government and they're going to start putting the squeeze on the businesses.
And you're going to see they're going to roll.
They're going to roll hard.
And yeah, his speech tonight could not have been nastier, more aggressive.
He mocked Cuomo.
This is one of the first families of the Democratic Party, particularly in the state of New York.
And then with Trump, it was a direct throwdown to Trump, unlike any politician's ever done.
He tried to call President Trump out and President Trump responded.
I think tomorrow, and I've argued from the beginning, this guy's citizenship should be checked immediately.
True.
To me, it ought to be addressed.
It ought to be addressed by the State Department, DHS, and Justice Department.
And to go through all of this, if this guy lied on his naturalization papers, he ought to be deported out of the country and immediately put on a plane to Uganda.
So true.
He does.
His politics fit in more with Uganda, I would say.
Well, sadly, I guess modern New York certainly, you know, there's a bit of crossover.
But yeah, I mean, I think Bannon's right.
I think people are downplaying the appeal of Mamdani.
They kind of just assume like, okay, well, this is just something New Yorkers are voting for.
Then let them, you know, let them get what they're voting for.
And it's like, I understand that impulse, but this is going to be replicated nationwide.
All of your cities are being taken over and replaced and churned.
There's demographic churn in all of these cities.
None of these cities have the electorate they had 20 years ago, let alone when you were born.
It's a complete disaster.
So this playbook will be deployed nationwide.
And you may be thinking, okay, well, it's just these cities.
It's like, well, the cities, unfortunately, is where the GDP is generated to a large degree.
And it sucks.
I wish it wasn't that way, but it's just true.
And most of most states in the United States have a major city in them that boss the rest of the state's politics around.
So, I mean, it's like, you know, you kind of had to deal with it, unfortunately.
It's just, it is what it is.
New York City in this case, the reason it's particularly concerning is because it's the seat of our empire.
I mean, we're talking about the American Empire here, and the very seat of that power is now in the control of a guy with a Star Wars Cantina name.
I mean, it's like a total embarrassment.
It's a total joke.
And yeah, we got to get serious about immigration.
With that, we're going to keep moving.
We're a little behind here.
So with that, I want to get to the Washington Post.
Heritage staff in open revolt over leaders' defense of Tucker Carlson.
The departures and condemnations built on brewing frustrations with Kevin Roberts' handling of Project 2025 and internal sexism allegations.
Oh boy.
Wow, that sounds like this is dripping in right-wing thought here.
The Heritage Foundation is erupting an open revolt against its president, Kevin Roberts, as the white right, white white ring, the right-wing think tank struggles to deal with internal and external anger over his defense of former Fox News host Tucker Carlson.
The fur began after Carlson invited Nick Fuentes, a white nationalist who routinely espouses anti-Semitic views onto his popular podcast.
Roberts then posted a video that castigated a quote venomous coalition and quote the globalist class for attacking Carlson, with whom Roberts called a quote close friend of the Heritage Foundation.
Numerous heritage staffers and conservative figures said the comment played on anti-Semitic tropes.
This is just crazy.
I mean, like, I know Jewish people, they're like, no, the video is definitely not doing that.
The concern that I think most Jewish people I know expressed was the fact that it like normalizes Nick Fuentes or whatever.
Besides that, I don't like what venomous.
If you think it's more anti-Semitic to say when he says venomous coalition and the globalist class are saying, oh, he's talking about Jews.
That's way more anti-Semitic than just being like, oh, yeah, he must be talking about, oh, yeah, that venomous coalition that exists.
And yeah, that globalist class that exists.
If you're sitting there like, oh, see, he's talking about Jews.
That's way more anti-Semitic.
That's like, that's crazy.
So with that, you know, we'll keep reading.
A staff meeting Wednesday, Roberts' latest attempt to quell a week of resignations and condemnations over his defense of Carlson was marked with calls for him to resign and squabbles over whether Christian employees would be forced to participate in Jewish rituals.
At least five members of Heritage's anti-Semitic task force have now resigned in protest, and the distinguished fellow Chris Demuth has left the organization.
So this is what he was taught.
This is what they're referring to at the end of the art.
So this is like a really funny, I mean, it's sad to watch this infighting, especially because this is the reason we just blew three potential dubs.
But yeah, squabbles over whether Christian employees would be forced to participate in Jewish rituals.
Okay, this guy, he somehow obtained this internal statement or internal dialogue anyway.
This was Staffer at Heritage.
He helped write Kevin's Roberts book, apparently.
And he states that his faith prevents him from attending a Shabbat dinner.
So we'll listen here.
This is a really, it's sad.
It's very sad because it's like, why is this kid under fire?
But it's funny too, but we'll listen.
unidentified
Thank you, Mike.
That's a hard act to follow, but you did a really good job.
And I just want to say I'm grateful for all of our colleagues who are speaking up today.
And especially for our colleagues on the National Task Force to Combat Anti-Semitism.
I'm especially grateful for their work.
I also have a question about it, given some of the leaks that occurred yesterday.
Right now, the National Task Force to Combat Anti-Semitism is demanding that Heritage host Shabbat dinners with Heritage interns and junior staff.
The faith of many Christians here at Heritage, myself included, would prevent us from attending these dinners in good conscience.
As you know, for many Christians, Friday is a special day of prayer and abstinence to commemorate the death of Christ.
I assume that no staff will be required to attend the Shabbat dinners, but my concern is that these dinners will be to serve as a sort of informal litmus test.
And I'm worried that they will hurt many Christians who are not anti-Semitic but don't feel comfortable attending a Shabbat dinner.
I would like to know how you guys would respond to that concern and how we can be sure that the dinners won't be used that way when the people requesting them or someone has already.
tate brown
So yeah, this kid's getting piled on this kid.
He's probably like older than me.
I don't know what I'm saying, kid.
This guy, this gentleman, Evan, Evan Myers, he's getting dogpiled on for like a very normal statement.
He's saying, I don't want these Shabbat dinners to be used as a litmus test to like basically bait Christians into like falsely admitting that they're anti-Semitic under duress.
Because what they're doing is they're hosting these big Shabbat dinners and they invite all these staffers and then they say, hey, you know, you come to these dinner, you should come to this dinner, da-da-da-da.
And then if you respond and say, oh, well, you know, my Christian faith, you know, potentially conflicts with that.
And then they say, oh, there's no, there's no good reason why your Christian faith would, you know, be inconsistent with that.
So then it sets up the litmus test where if you keep pressing, then it's like, what do you have a problem with Shabbat dinners?
What's your deal?
When in reality, I think it's perfectly reasonable to say, like, hey, there's a lot of different rituals and prayers that go on at a Shabbat dinner.
And that conflicts with my faith.
So I'm just going to, you know, for everyone's sake, you know, I'm going to step aside.
And that's not, that's not anti, like I'm, I'm a Christian.
I'm a, you know, Protestant Christian.
And when I go to like a Catholic Mass and I can't take communion because it's for Catholics only, I'm not like, this is an anti-Protestant, you know, attack or anti-Catholic, like whatever.
I'm just like, yeah, that's just kind of how it works.
That's like how their rules work.
I don't find this particularly weird.
And then yeah, Heritage is coming unglued over it.
A lot of these people, they're like, they're like, they're seeing anti-Semitism in shadows, basically is what's going on here.
And fair, to be fair, yeah, I understand why they're on edge, to say the least.
You know, there's been various attacks and the rhetoric from some parts of the right wing and certainly of the left wing anti-Semitic rhetoric has increased.
There's really no question about that.
But now they're just chasing shadows here, like random staffers at the Heritage Foundation.
Like, really?
That's where you think the threat is to Jewish Americans.
Just kind of absurd.
So there was some commentary on it.
The struggle session at Heritage Foundation is pure feminization and action.
This is from Douglas Mackey, a feminized institution demanding woke obedience.
The irony is that many now participating in the struggle session probably all shared Helen Andrew's Comfact article two weeks ago.
It's a very good article, by the way.
You should go read it.
But no, it's so true.
This is just like very gay behavior.
Everything that's been going on at Heritage recently.
Yeah, Ryan Newhouse, obviously, who was, you know, chased out effectively after the initial Roberts statement.
Evan Manns is a good man who has done nothing wrong.
A character assassination merely for asking a question driven by our sincere devotion to our Lord and Savior is objectively indefensible beyond all rationale, rational defense, and is repugnant.
So, yeah, I mean, this, this, obviously, this whole heritage row started over Kevin Roberts' statement over Tucker Carlson, where he was saying, look, you know, like or hate Fuentes.
We're not canceling him.
It's not what we do.
Like or hate Tucker for what he said he has the right to, and he can bring on whoever he wants.
Like, it was, you know, it was a spicy statement for sure, especially coming out of Heritage.
And a lot of people obviously were concerned.
It's like, okay, well, they felt like Tucker did a bad job grilling Fuentes.
And so Heritage is rewarding Tucker for that.
That's what a lot of people felt.
That's fair enough.
Regardless, it's a departure from what you would expect to hear from the Heritage Foundation.
And in my opinion, yes, it is a step in the right direction.
As even though this space is very weird right now, it's at least not the wrong decision to make, I guess, would be the statement.
You're not like tearing down people.
But then, yeah, like everyone comes on glue to Heritage.
People start getting cans.
You know, people are claiming scalps.
It was like just insanity.
And then, yeah, you have these articles, like, oh, everyone's quitting.
Everyone's, you know, everyone's firing.
And then here, so this is in the Washington Post article we were reading earlier.
At the meeting Wednesday, Robert said Heritage was wordsmithing and workshopping language over how to distance itself from Carlson.
Though Roberts said he would remain a personal friend, he called Fuentes a quote evil person, but one who has quote an audience of several million people.
And at least some of the audience might be open to be converted to mainstream conservatism.
Yeah, so let's see here.
Right, right, right, right, right.
Yeah, so immediately Roberts just like the house comes down on him, right?
The entire board revolts.
And I think to save his job, he has to start walking this back.
He has to start distancing from Tucker.
So it's just a disaster.
It's just a total disaster.
It's, I guess, all this to say, wherever you stand, whoever side you're on, whether you're on Robert's side or on the Heritage side or whatever.
I'll say this is really embarrassing that this was happening.
This is what, you know, what the Democrats were doing and run up to New Jersey, New York, you know, California, Virginia.
You know what they were up to?
They were ballot harvesting.
They were early voting.
They were registering voters.
They were campaigning, you know, social media campaigns.
And then you know what the right wing was up to in the run-up to those elections?
Yeah, getting each other fired from Heritage, leaking group chats to Politico, just spurging on Twitter in general, trying to get people reported and mass mass bans.
That's what we're up to.
And then everyone's sitting here wondering, like, okay, well, how can Jay Jones, you know, the guy that's trying to kill every Republican in America, how can he become Attorney General?
It's like, because we're not focused.
We lost focus.
We took our eye off the ball.
We were busy, you know, screenshotting group chats and DMing them to journalists to settle like some personal scores that you have from five years ago with some guy.
Or we were at Heritage and we're mopping up Tucker's mess, who was a friend.
And some people say, well, it wasn't a mess.
That's fine.
And the other people are saying, that's a huge mess.
Why would you mop that up?
Oh, and then you go, okay, I got to fire everyone.
Or the board wants to fire me.
And then, no, we should be trying to look what they're doing.
Look what the Democrats are doing.
They're trying to win an election.
And we're over here like emailing politico journalists.
So just embarrassing.
This is what I say.
Whatever side you are on on this heritage row, dude, this is just, this can't be happening.
This cannot be, we're not even a year into Trump.
We're not even a year into Trump too.
And it's starting to feel like the base is fracturing along these lines.
It's a complete disaster.
And you know what's going on?
I'll tell you what's going on here.
They're trying to poison the well for Vance.
I think it's that, I think personally, it's the neocon establishment.
To a degree, the Gropers are trying to poison the well for Vance, too, but they've been trying to do that.
They've been active at that for some time now.
But the neocons, I think this is their play, is they want to try and tie some sort of string between Vance, Tucker, I guess Roberts in this case, some others, and try to pin them all in that.
So then when they, you know, fire off Cruz or whoever for 2028, then they have all these attack lines ready to go on Vance.
So that's what I think is going on here.
It's just my two cents.
I think they're trying to poison the well for JD Vance because JD Vance is by far and away the best candidate that's been prominent for 2028.
There's no question about it.
He's just been excellent on the framing.
I mean, if you remember, right after the political article, group chat article drops, JD Vance gets up there and says, I don't really care about a group chat.
The AG candidate in Virginia is trying to kill everyone.
This guy's crazy.
And you know how everyone responded?
Instead of saying, oh, yeah, JD, you're right.
Instead, they just started going back at it and going back at each other and settling scores.
And then heritage.
Just no one's focused.
JD Vance is focused.
That's why he's kind of seen as a threat to a lot of these people because he is still authentically MAGA, but he's still viable.
And it feels like a lot of figures that have emerged in the MAGA era are losing focus and coming on glue.
JD Vance feels like one of the few guys that still has his eye on the ball.
And the neocons hate that.
The neocons view him as one of the last chances of, or he's, they view him as one of the impediments from sort of bringing us back into that 2012 GOP paradigm and to the National Review conservatism and to the, you know, Mitt Romney conservatism, the John McCain conservatism.
And JD Vance is really a big bulwark against that.
He's going to prevent that from occurring.
So they got to, I mean, if you're a neocon, you are, you can pay some lip service to him.
That's what they're doing right now, but they want him out of the way for 28, right?
They want to get one of their buddies in.
So it's a complete disaster.
Here's proof of that.
JD Vance put a great statement out.
This was following the election, unfavorable election.
I think it's idiotic to overreact to the couple of elections in blue states, but a few thoughts.
Pressler, TPSA, and a bunch of others said they've been working hard to register voters.
I said it in 2022, and I've said it repeatedly, our coalition is lower propensity, and that means we have to do better at turning out voters than we have in the past.
That's what Bannon was talking about.
He knows.
Let's see.
We need to focus on the home front.
The president has done a lot that we have, president has done a lot that has already paid off in the lower interest rates and lower inflation.
But we inherited a disaster from Joe Biden and Rome, and Rome wasn't built in a day.
We're going to keep on making a decent life affordable in this country.
And that is the metric by which we'll ultimately be judged in 2026 and beyond.
And then here, this is what I was sort of ranting and raving about.
The infighting is stupid.
I care about my fellow citizens, particularly young Americans, being able to afford a decent life.
I care about.
Sorry if I cough too loud there.
I care about immigration and our sovereignty, and I care about establishing peace overseas so our resources can be focused at home.
If you care about these things too, let's work together.
Thank you, JD.
Great, great framing, VP.
And then David French, you know, one of these characters from the Never Trump coalition, who is pretty much defected now.
I don't even think he calls himself conservative anymore.
He's just pretty much defected, defected.
He got a cushy job right for the New York Times.
He says, hey, the infighting is stupid is the coward's way of dealing with rising anti-Semitism, nihilism, and even neo-Nazism in your ranks.
There was never any reluctance to engage in infighting against anyone who utters a syllable against Donald Trump.
Okay, first of all, this is just like, who is he talking?
Who is he in your ranks?
Is he talking about, presumably, he's talking about like what?
Like Groipers?
Last time I checked, they hate JD Vance, so non-starter.
And then if he's not talking about them, is he seriously talking about like heritage staffers and like jokes?
He's talking about politico group chat, the jokes that rent.
Is that seriously what he's referring to versus what's going on in the Democrat Party where they're killing everyone?
There was never any reluctance to engage in infighting against anyone who uttered a syllable against Donald Trump.
Yeah, because it was such a popular position to back Donald Trump around your prime, David French.
He took the easiest position you possibly could and he got rewarded for it.
He got a New York Times column all to himself.
So just good grief.
Give me a freaking break.
But with that, before we get into the interview with Scott Greer, we're going to bring him in to discuss the rise, meteoric rise of Zoramandani.
I have an ad.
We got a sponsor for the show.
So I'm going to play that ad for you.
And then when you come back, we should have Scott ready to go.
tim pool
It is Beam Dream.
Head over to shopbeam.com/slash Timcast, and you can get 50% off your nighttime blend to support better sleep.
I drink Beam Dream every night before bed.
That is not a script.
That is a fact.
They first sponsored the show.
I said, all right, this looks good.
I'll try it out.
First few days, it's good stuff.
It's a hot cocoa before bed.
It's got magnesium, alphenine, melatonin.
After like three or four days, my sleep improved dramatically.
I didn't even think I was sleeping poorly, but I got these sleep trackers and my metrics all improved.
And guys, listen to me.
During deep sleep and REM sleep is when your body produces testosterone and human growth hormone.
So you need to get good sleep.
You don't want to be disrupted, interrupted.
Beam Dream has really improved my sleep score by like 10 points.
That's an actual number.
So go to shopbeam.com slash Timcast.
Pick up your Beam Dream.
Listen, you're getting hydrated.
You're getting magnesium right before bed, and it tastes great.
I'm a big fan.
Thank you, Beam Dream, for sponsoring the show.
tate brown
With that, we have our interview coming up with Scott Greer.
First, let's lead off with who did Mamdani think?
Did he thank Americans for his victory, his meteoric rise in New York City?
Here's who he had to thank.
Let's take a look from Zoron.
zohran mamdani
I speak of Yemeni Bodega owners and Mexican habuelas.
Senegalese taxi drivers and Uzbek nurses.
Trinidadian line cooks and Ethiopian aunties.
unidentified
Yes, aunties.
tate brown
I think you could potentially just keep repeating different groups of people and get so specific that it becomes like really racist, you know.
That could be a potential action.
But let's see.
We're bringing Scott Greer in.
Hey, Scott, can you hear me?
scott greer
I can hear you loud and clear.
tate brown
Dude, what's up, Patriot?
scott greer
What is up?
tate brown
Dude, so before we get started, maybe you can give the people watching a quick intro who you are, what you do.
scott greer
So my name is Scott Greer.
I am a podcaster, an author, and writer.
And most of my work can be found in my sub stack on highlyrespected.com or highly-respected.com.
I also, you can find my work on my YouTube channel, youtubes.com slash highlyrespected, if I remember correctly.
Anyway, just type in highly respected.
It should come up on the YouTube search bar.
tate brown
Let's go.
Well, I'm glad I brought you in.
We got you.
We had to wrangle you because I had read your piece where you were sort of breaking down Zoron's victory, what this means for the left.
I know recently you had said that you were kind of, as the left sort of has to look inward and determine, okay, how do we sort of rebrand for the next chapter, that they would kind of take on a bit of chauvinism.
Maybe that would be kind of the technique.
Well, Zoron, yeah, like you said, okay, maybe he incorporated a little bit of that.
He's very much more Reddit.
He's very much more theater kid.
And in that article, you also pointed out that it's not entirely accurate to call him a third worldist.
Now, that's a line that me and a few others in the space have been taking, but maybe you can define kind of that chauvinism aspect and then maybe why the third worldist isn't the most accurate sort of title for him or adjective for him.
scott greer
Yeah, a few years ago, I read an article saying that the left may embrace what we could call American chauvism.
And that's named after Hugo Chavez, the left-wing dictator of Venezuela, who was succeeded by Maduro, which now Trump is not very happy with Maduro.
And they had a very left-wing socialist regime that was very hostile towards the West, very hostile towards capitalism, obviously, and wanting and had a certain bravoro and a very machismo aspect to it.
Now, this isn't really the case with Zoron.
Like Maduro and Chavez are kind of like swaggering alpha males.
They're like, we're going to take away your stuff.
Meanwhile, I would never use the term swaggering for Zoron, you know, maybe prancing around or something, but it's definitely not swaggering.
And I offer this idea is that what we would see in American chauvism is a combination of anti-white sentiment with economic socialism, as that these people would be denouncing the white man and saying we need to take all their stuff.
We need this massive wealth redistribution from whites to the other people in order to have the socialist utopia or whatever.
And I predicted this would happen.
Now, you sort of have that with Zoron.
Zoran and his campaign ran woke or it had a woke agenda, even though if he didn't highlight it as much.
In fact, if you compare him to, say, the 2020 Democratic presidential primary, you know, he was almost anti-woke compared to them, but his agenda was still very woke because he's talking about taxing whites at a higher rate than other people.
He's talking about ending gifted programs because they don't have a sufficient level of racial diversity.
And even a lot of the other things he's talking about has that similar woke focus.
So he still had that anti-white sentiment, even if he's not driving at that.
And we even saw that in his victory speech where he highlighted like every single immigrant group that backed him and said, this is your country too.
You know, I didn't mention white New Yorkers in that coalition.
Curiously enough, even though, of course, a lot of these wealthy are not very much wealthy, but middle class young people who voted for him, which I use the term yuckies, a young urban creative.
It's better to call them that than yuppies.
Different demographic, different type of people.
You know, they were not being included.
He didn't thank all the people.
tate brown
Patrick Baby wasn't doing resin art.
Like, you know.
scott greer
Yeah, yeah, yeah, yeah.
It's not like thanking all the great ARHR professionals who helped him win.
tate brown
Right.
scott greer
You know, it's this type of demographic.
So that's still there and is obviously very economically socialist.
So you do see those elements, but it's not quite as militant as I may have imagined with American Chauism a few years ago.
I was thinking more type Black Panthers or the Latin American militants we always see south of the border.
Now, on the third worldist element, I think it depends on how you define it.
And the article I was responding to with I'm probably going to mispronounce her name, but Zaneb Rabua.
My apologies.
She's sort of floating around here if I mispronounce the name.
But she argued that third worldism is inherently about destroying Western hegemony and she ties it firmly with anti-Zionism and that that's a core part of it.
And she argues that, you know, Jews and Israelis are really the hostility.
That's what animates it at heart, which, you know, there's sort of some elements of that, but Zorab or Zoron wants to overturn, doesn't really want to overturn Western hegemony.
He wants to take it over for his side and then make it more cringe.
Third world is the past wanted to destroy America and Europe and then have and then delegate power elsewhere.
That's why they worship China, Mao, Vietnam, Cuba.
They were admiring all these states.
The new woke people aren't as enthralled to these third world regimes as they once were.
And they still want power to reside within the American empire.
They just want it to be much woker and much more cringe.
It's why they still strongly back Ukraine against Russia.
It's why they, even a lot of times, they'll come out and still deeply care about supporting Taiwan against China and many other things.
They're not quite, they don't have the similar geopolitical focus as the third worldists of old or how you are how people imagine third worldism.
I don't think, I think it's fine to use as an epithet against Zoran.
There are third worldist aspects of him, such as him eating rice with his hand, but he is at the end of the day still woke.
And woke, you know, there's similarities between woke and third worldism, but woke still wants to uphold Western hegemony.
It just wants to make it much worse and much more cringe, but it still imagines the American-led global water orders still intact.
tate brown
Like the pride flags and Tehran.
unidentified
Yeah, yeah.
scott greer
We still have, we want the State Department's flying pride flags, not the embassies wiped out.
tate brown
Yeah, well, Zoran seems like kind of an interesting synthesis because I agree with you.
Like, okay, he's clearly not, you know, your classical, you know, well-read third worldist who's like, oh, we need to get revenge on these colonists and whatever.
I mean, he flipped off the Columbus statue.
That's really the extent of it.
To me, he kind of represents the synthesis between woke and kind of this third world mindset, because to me, it seems, it looks a little bit more like potentially South Africa, where it's like, okay, yes, maybe the South Africans, they were cozy with the Cubans or the Soviets, that sort of thing.
But when they took over power, they kept the free market to a large degree.
They just passed anti-white policy.
So maybe third worldists isn't the best description, but I guess what I'm getting at is it drives me crazy when people, when they're describing what could, like, what could be the outcome of a Zoron, New York City, they start saying like Sharia law and like social, like actual socialism.
And I'm just like, that's not really what I'm worried about.
I'm just worried about the fact that he openly admits that he wants to tax white neighborhoods at a higher rate.
Like he's partying at gay clubs at like two in the morning.
That's not really like jihadist behavior.
scott greer
Yeah, the jihadist line is so funny.
And there's people falling for it to this morning.
One of these content farmers, I won't name him, I guess.
They might be watching the show, but he had this, he took this parody video.
It's some woman, she might even be Muslim, but she's clearly secular.
She's not wearing the hijab or anything.
And she's like, all right, we're already going to start the Islamist Islamification in New York.
We're lining up everyone at the mosque, and it's clearly like her.
It's a bad satire, and it's parodying all these views.
And then this guy took it.
It's like, they're no longer hiding it anymore.
The mask is dropping.
They're going to try to convert everyone to Islam in New York City, which is like, if you look at his whole campaign, this is like the lamest thing ever.
The complete opposite of like a devout Muslim.
I mean, he did go and try to appeal to devout Muslims, but it's just part of this rainbow coalition he's formed.
But they're not going to be, you know, implementing Sharia law.
I don't think that, I think that would have some negative effects on the gay clubs he was campaigning at.
And a lot of his audience would not be supportive of that.
But I mean, it's still, you know, it's one of those things that in middle America, you know, that's still, there's still a lot of understandable anti-Islamic sentiment.
And that's an easy way to, and I'm not using this pejorative because I think there is a need to present Soran as a threat and to fear monger about him.
Now, I think that's good that we want to portray him as a threat, but it comes across as very stupid.
And if you look at some of the campaigning, this probably did help mom Donnie at the end of the day, you know, with like Andy Okles, you know, a Tennessee congressman showing off as like, have you forgotten New York?
And it's about like 9-11.
It's like, we're going to have this again.
You know, Zoran's going to fly the plane straight into the Empire State building this time.
I don't think he's, you know, going to be a suicide bomber, but it's just a way to present the threat.
And I guess that's more threatening than rent control that destroys the city.
tate brown
Right.
Yeah.
I mean, it'd be like, you know, it's the same, by the same logic, to be like worried about Joe Biden establishing like a Catholic integralist, you know, like it's just like, that's not really once you kind of adopt leftism, you leave a lot of the devout religiousness at the door.
But yeah, I kind of get it though.
Because I mean, I think one line that did seem to resonate, at least with a lot of people, is maybe not that Zoran would sort of perpetrate another 9-11 himself, but that it is shocking that a city that literally in my lifetime, I'm 24, in my lifetime witnessed, you know, Islamic terror attack knocking down, you know, these two massive skyscrapers 20 years, 20 something odd years later, they can elect a Muslim.
I think that's actually a very salient point is saying, like, okay, maybe not what changed liberals' minds.
It's like, look how, look how fast it took to replace New Yorkers.
Because all those New Yorkers that remembered that, they voted for Cuomo.
They showed the exit polling.
Native New Yorkers voted for Cuomo.
And a lot of them voted for Sliwa as well.
It was non-native New Yorkers, and that includes transplants, but immigrants primarily voted for Zorhan Mamdani.
So it's like, it's not that New Yorkers forgot about 9-11.
It's just that the ones that do remember it live in Florida now or North Carolina.
They got pushed out and replaced.
scott greer
So, yeah, that's right.
And, you know, it's just the changing attitude towards Islam in the country.
You know, it was like 15 years ago, it might have been 16 years ago, there was this huge protest over there being a mosque near the 9-11 ground zero in New York City.
And that was like New Yorkers.
That wasn't just, you know, the humble heartlanders who don't live in New York who are upset about it.
There was an intense protest within New York over a mosque being that close.
And this is around 2010.
You know, this is the early Obama years where there was that protest.
So you still saw that in New York in the early 2010s, but it's gone away.
And I think you would have seen even there a lot of concern over electing a Muslim, you know, in the late 2010s when ISIS was still fresh in people's minds.
But right now, people have forgotten radical Islam.
We haven't really had a major Islamic terror attack in the United States in a while.
Even the Palestinian issue, it feels separated from radical Islam, even if Hamas is, you know, a very Islamist organization, clearly.
But there, it's separated from that issue.
So we don't feel the threat of radical Islam, especially when we're presented these people like Ilhan Omar, even though she wears a hijab, you know, she divorced her husband and married a Jewish man for her second husband, and she broke up that marriage, if I'm not mistaken.
So that's not like very much Sharia behavior.
I don't think that'd be allowed under Sharia law.
Then you have Mom Donny, who's this theater kid, and on and on.
You know, it's now that they've all these Muslims come here and they become assimilated libtards rather than jihadists, which that's not, you know, maybe that's a slight improvement.
tate brown
Barely, yeah, it's marginal.
scott greer
I mean, it gives them an ability to be more powerful.
I mean, if Omar was a full-on Islamist, she wouldn't have been elected to office.
tate brown
Right.
scott greer
And it's the same with Mom Donnie.
So it's all, it actually is worse because now they're able to join into this rainbow coalition and push against traditional America and push for these radical policies that run against America's interests.
So I, but it's harder to create a threat around the theater kid versus you know, Osama bin Laden.
And that's really what creates fear.
And so, and even on the world stage, we don't really remember ISIS that much.
You know, ISIS seems pretty defeated.
Al-Qaeda is not really doing much of anything.
I mean, Europe still struggles a lot with radical Islam.
Like there's this week they've broken up like multiple potential terror attacks on Christmas markets and other things.
Like there's even in Germany that there's some Christmas markets they can't run because they can't afford the security costs.
So they still have a major Islamic terror problem in Europe, but Americans aren't as aware of that.
And it doesn't seem to affect us.
So we don't have as much of an intense hostility towards Islam that we would have had even in the first Trump term.
You know, you got to remember the Muslim ban that Trump opposed in the primary helped him win the primary.
tate brown
Yeah.
scott greer
Now it's, you know, he was still running on that, but people didn't really even pay attention because it's just not as much of a salient issue as it once was.
tate brown
Yeah.
Yeah.
I mean, you can even go back like 2008, the anti-Islam fervor was at such a high moment.
Like there was like a town hall with John McCain.
And just because Barack Obama's name is like vaguely Islamic, that lady got up and she was like, honestly, I think he's a Muslim.
unidentified
And John, I think she even said he's an Arab, which he's even better.
tate brown
And John McCain like cucked.
He's like, we're not going to say that.
I'm like, we should have listened to her.
You know, she's, she knows ball a little bit, you know?
So yeah.
scott greer
And the funny thing about that McKay clip, I think she like calls him an Arab.
I mean, she means Muslim, but she calls him an Arab.
And he's like, no man is a good man, which is implying if he was an Arab, he would not be a good man.
So it's a funny moment all around that whole clip.
We need some real patriots like that one to come up and talk about Barack Hussein Obama.
But yeah, that was the case with Obama.
Like everyone thought, I mean, you know, we had just gone to war against a guy named Saddam Hussein, and now we've got a guy with that as his middle name.
So that's like very weird to people.
tate brown
Remember, Rush Limbaugh used to like always say his name is Barack Hussein Obama.
unidentified
Yeah.
scott greer
And it's to remind people like it's a foreign name.
It's a foreign guy and he sounds threatening with that name.
But then clearly Obama was far away from a Muslim.
I mean, he pretended to be a Christian.
He's likely agnostic, but I mean, you know, he is hard to even fear monger about Obama being like a secret, you know, Islamist.
It's like, I don't think, you know, it's more that he's had other secrets in his life that a Sharia court wouldn't like.
unidentified
But, you know, it's, that's the same.
scott greer
That's the thing with Obama.
But, you know, it was a different time period.
I mean, that could return.
I think there's a lot of people who want to, You know, we still have problems with you know Islamification in like Michigan.
I mean, if you look at Dearborn, you know, there was that crazy town council meeting where they named a street, I think it would name a street or a building after a guy who had supported radical Islamic groups.
And there was just like one lone white guy in Dearborn came up to protest it.
And the mayor was basically like, You need to be pushed out of the city.
I hate you.
You're a hater.
You're the worst person.
tate brown
Can we not call the road?
scott greer
We're glad we're replacing you.
tate brown
And it's like, can we not call the road Infidel's Road?
Can we not do that?
They're like, get out of here.
scott greer
Yeah, yeah.
But I mean, it's funny with even with like conservatives, like a year ago, you know, Trump was campaigning towards the Muslims and highlighting, you know, the not only just Biden's Israel policy, but also wokeness in schools.
And you saw this in like Dearborn and other places where all these people in full Muslim gear are out there protesting trans stuff in their kids' school.
And then conservatives are like, based Muslims.
And you're like, well, I don't know about that.
But then conservatives have these sympathy for them when they're opposing wokeness in schools.
And that's also an issue that doesn't seem to be as fresh in people's minds right now.
So some people will remember that there's bad Muslims and Mom Donnie reminds some, at least conservatives, about that.
tate brown
Well, there was this, there was this theorizing on the right in conservative circles.
It kind of stopped a few years ago, but they would always see moments like that where Muslims would be protesting some sort of woke book or something.
And they would be like, see, the intersectional coalition is breaking down.
But Zoran seemed to just completely shatter that because his coalition was literally like everyone that's basically just not like a normal American patriot.
And he stitched it together pretty seamlessly.
And so maybe you can outline that, why that's probably not entirely accurate to say like the intersectional coalition is like on the verge of collapse.
scott greer
Well, it's not really, yeah, it's definitely not on the verge of the collapse.
I mean, a lot of minorities did vote for Trump for various reasons.
I mean, a lot of these Muslims voted for him because they're sick of like libs posting crazy stuff in schools.
tate brown
Yeah.
scott greer
Or they were upset about Israel is Biden's Israel policy.
And it was a way to protest Biden by voting for Trump.
You know, there was that.
And then a bunch of it and nearly, you know, 46% of Hispanics voted for Trump.
And then I think it was around 40% of Asians.
But that's not set in stone that they're all going to stay there.
And right now, with Mamdani, you know, a lot of those immigrants shifted.
And in 2020, and not the 2020, 2025 elections, you know, what just happened on Tuesday, the immigrants were noticing that the immigrants are shifting back to the Democrats.
tate brown
Yeah.
scott greer
Without Trump at the helm, it's not guaranteed that these immigrants are going to stay there.
And a lot of these immigrants obviously aren't very happy with Trump's deportation policy.
So they're shifting back.
And Mom Donnie's coalition was a combination of these, I don't know if the, we'll just say downwardly mobile or, you know, economically threatened middle-class young white people or young people, college-educated.
A lot of them are Asian and other things.
tate brown
People that own tone bags.
scott greer
I think they're college-educated yuckies, along with immigrants.
That was his core base.
Working class whites and blacks did not vote for him.
Now, it's not that the blacks are going Republican, it's that blacks generally stick with the establishment candidate.
That's usually the case.
I mean, they did that in the 2020 primaries where hardly any of them voted for Bernie.
They all went for Biden.
They generally don't go with the insurgent candidate.
They generally stick with the establishment Democrat.
That's why they stuck with Cuomo and probably would have voted for Eric Adams if he stayed in.
But and then it was like the working class whites and probably the more affluent middle class whites, the yuppies who really fear getting their, you know, their taxes going up and, you know, the crazy stuff that's going to happen to the city.
the more economic or the middle class people who feel more economically precarious and the young college educated people without kids and stuff they were more likely to vote for mom danny so it was that combination of yuckies and immigrants that proved the winning formula for mom danny and i think that's what we're really going to see for a lot of these far left candidates is a combination of college educated Americans who feel that they're not having the same economic prospects as their parents.
And then they're won over to a left-wing populist message along with immigrants who, you know, they didn't, they turned against Democrats when they felt that they were pushing a bunch of crazy stuff in their school and their kids' schools and they were letting criminals run rampant.
Now they may shift back to the left if they are told that, you know, Mom Donnie in this campaign is like, oh, I don't want to defund police anymore.
And maybe they were one over to that.
And he didn't really highlight, you know, how they're going to push like gender indoctrination in schools.
He just simply is like, we're ending gifted programs so your kids can go to better schools or whatever.
tate brown
Yeah.
scott greer
And end the inequality in schools.
So it's a different message.
And I think that can very well win back those two demographic.
Because I mean, you know, Trump did pretty well among young people, particularly young men, but Mom Donnie won 68% of young men.
tate brown
Yeah.
Yeah.
Well, this is what Bannon was talking about.
He was talking to Politico about this.
He was saying, look, as I've said, he keeps reemphasizing this, and it's true.
And a lot of Republicans don't quite understand this yet, is like populism is a viable tool to turn out low propensity voters, whether you like it or not.
And Zoron was tapping into that.
He tapped into low propensity voters, and that's just the secret sauce.
So my question is, what aspects of this Zoron thing are viable, maybe not nationwide, but in other cities?
How much of it do you think is more exclusive to New York City?
As in, why should people be concerned about a Zoron?
Because a lot of people are just saying, oh, it's New York.
You know, let them, you know, screw themselves over.
What specifically about Zoron is it that makes him a little bit of a evolution?
And I guess woke as him to be.
scott greer
I mean, it can apply nationwide.
I mean, New York is not that far left of a city compared to others.
This is not Seattle or Portland.
And they generally tend to vote, go with a cent, I don't want to use the term centrist, but a moderate seeming Democrat.
Bill de Blasio is an exception, but I mean, they went with Bloomberg multiple terms, Giuliani, and then they had Eric Adams is presented as a moderate candidate.
So they generally go for the moderate.
This isn't, you know, like basing your assumptions on, or even someplace like Minneapolis where they're generally far left.
This is like a major American city that has a lot of normal people.
If they went with this crazy guy, that's a concerning factor.
And I think the economic populism of a left-wing variety is something that Democrats can sell nationwide.
unidentified
Yeah.
tate brown
Looks like my camera.
I don't know.
I think my camera went out.
scott greer
Yeah, your camera went black, but I was like about to talk more, but I was worried that we lost to you.
tate brown
It's a Zoron attack.
I don't know what's going on.
scott greer
Yeah, Mom Donnie has attacked.
This is Sharia Law coming down on us.
tate brown
This is what every woman in New York City is going to see after mandated bird cuts are rolled out.
scott greer
Yeah, after starting Monday.
tate brown
Yeah, literally.
unidentified
All right.
tate brown
Well, it's okay.
I mean, we're running down the clock anyway.
So I don't know.
Maybe you want to give closing thoughts and where people can find you if they want more.
scott greer
Yeah, I think for closing thoughts, to go on that point with Mom Donnie is not a flash in the plan.
This can be a formula for other candidates to run on.
And somebody is going to run on this in 2028, whether it's AOC or Rokana or somebody else we don't know.
And they're going to be a competitive candidate.
I don't know if that person will win, but they have the potential to win, as Mom Donnie shows.
If he can win in New York City on this platform, somebody like that can win a Democratic primary.
Now, can they win a general election?
That's another matter.
So it's a major concern and you can't just dismiss it as New York City.
New York City is our biggest city.
It's the beating heart of our economy and our financial sector.
And if it goes to Mohamdaniism, that impacts the rest of the country.
You know, just dismissing it as like, oh, it's New York City.
No, that's not the case.
And this can apply nationwide.
So that's my closing thoughts on the topic.
And if you would like to follow my work, you can follow me on Twitter at Scott M. Greer and subscribe to my sub sec, highly-respected.com.
And also find my work on YouTube under highly respected.
tate brown
Well, good stuff, dude.
Well, I thank you so much for coming on.
We got the camera back on.
So looks like it's all worked out.
But yeah, dude, thank you so much.
We'll catch you next time.
scott greer
Thank you.
tate brown
Yes, sir.
All right.
Well, that was Scott Greer, man.
He's fantastic.
He's just got the sauce, I'd say.
He's got the sauce.
Yeah, let's see.
Okay, we got three minutes left.
That was quite a bit.
I can maybe cut him off like two minutes early.
I want more Scott.
We love Scott.
He's fantastic.
But yeah, I don't know what's going on.
I think it got too hot in this room.
It kind of cut the camera out.
I'm not entirely sure what happened there.
That was pretty freaking wild.
Yeah, no, no, I agree with Scott.
I think it's obvious to me that, you know, New York is the imperial capital of our American empire.
And it's like, okay, sure, you can kind of try socialism if you want in Chicago and it really won't have any effect for the most part nationwide.
No offense to, you know, Tim and others that are native Chicagoans, but New York City does have a bit of weight to it.
It does have a bit of pole.
And you don't want to see that.
You don't want to see the seat of your empire fall into the hands of, you know, this, of this woke, race communist kind of character.
So I'm glad Scott was able to come on.
He had a great piece, actually.
You'll see Darth Chastelliana said, Tate is messing up Tim's rig now.
No, no, I don't know what happened.
That wasn't my fault.
I do lower his chair and raise it.
And he gets like upset with that sometimes.
That's all, though.
Cheese, Jill.
What else?
It's Zealous Dog says, you, Tate, you're too hot.
Dial a back stud.
unidentified
Woo!
tate brown
Thank you, sir.
Back at you.
You can just tell that you're swagged out.
What else do we got?
Someone's saying something about Jews.
Someone said, F are you talking about?
My bad, dude.
Sorry.
I'm just trying my best.
What else have we got?
Hey, what else?
What else?
What is everyone chirping?
Was there any super chats?
The great replacement of Americans in New York.
That's true.
Like, that's the primary thing going on here.
Go.
I can't say that.
You'd all be far more disappointed with Kamala.
So true.
I know all these people that are like ankle biting with Trump, it's like, do you realize how close we were to mass amnesty for illegals?
Terrible, terrible.
What else do we see?
Hi, Tate from Estozer.
Hello.
Shay Stevens says Tate Brown puts the seat down.
It's true.
It's very true.
What else we got?
Real Noah Farbo says Tate's gay.
It's not true.
It's not Drew's cap.
I don't think it's true.
I got to buy the Don't Be Gay board to prove it to everybody.
Only at shop.bunovshq.com.
Fight Surge X says Tate.
What kind of dog do you have?
You guys are going to hate this.
I have a golden doodle.
I know.
I know.
But what are you going to do?
I'm white.
Anyway.
Thank you very much for hanging out, guys.
I hope the little back and forth at the end.
That was kind of fun.
Maybe we do that a little more.
Thank you very, very much for watching.
We'll be back tonight for Timcast IREL at 8 p.m.
It's going to be a great show.
I've been your host, Tate Brown, here on Thursdays here on Rumble.
You can follow me on X and Instagram at RealTate Brown.
Come on, come hang out.
Come follow.
And I announced on IRL Tuesday, and I want to announce it again here.
This weekend on the Culture War channel, we have very exciting, very exciting content.
Me and a good friend of mine, Connor Tomlinson.
He's a friend of the show.
You guys all know him.
You know, I'll love him.
We are launching a new series.
So on Saturdays, it'll be an hour of hard-hitting news, half British, half American.
And on Sundays, we will have an exclusive interview and we will discuss a topic with a very illustrious guest.
So on X, shoot me who you'd like to see.
Pop up on a Sunday interview who you want me and Connor to chat with.
That'd be great.
That'd be really helpful, actually.
And let me know.
So anyway, with that, we'll see you tonight.
We're rating Devori Darkins.
He is awesome.
You guys will love that.
Go hang out with him.
And I will see you guys on Friday.
I'll be on IRL Friday.
So I'll see you guys then.
Export Selection