Ask Dr. Drew - Is NYC Cooked? w/ Andrew Wilkow on Zohran Mamdani’s Mayoral Win & Viva Frei on Canada’s Ostrich Farm Culling Massacre – Ask Dr. Drew – Ep 555
Episode Date: November 16, 2025Andrew Wilkow (of The Wilkow Majority) says Zohran Mamdani’s plans for NYC will end in disaster. Viva Frei goes off on Canada’s forced slaughter of the Universal Ostrich Farm birds, which their go...vernment claimed was for “biosecurity and biocontainment protocols to mitigate the risk of spreading HPAI (Highly Pathogenic Avian Influenza)” despite objections from the farm’s owners. Dr. Drew learned about gold, silver & retirement with Augusta – now it’s your turn: https://drdrew.com/gold Andrew Wilkow is the host of The Wilkow Majority, airing weekdays on Sirius/XM Patriot 125. He began his radio career in college and rose to prominence after being hired by Sirius in 2006. Follow at https://x.com/WilkowMajority David Freiheit, known as Viva Frei, is an attorney and commentator who hosts The Viva Frei Show on Rumble and Locals. He cohosts Viva & Barnes Live with attorney Robert Barnes. Follow at https://x.com/TheVivaFrei 「 SUPPORT OUR SPONSORS 」 Find out more about the brands that make this show possible and get special discounts on Dr. Drew's favorite products at https://drdrew.com/sponsors • AUGUSTA PRECIOUS METALS – Thousands of Americans are moving portions of their retirement into physical gold & silver. Learn more in this 3-minute report from our friends at Augusta Precious Metals: https://drdrew.com/gold or text DREW to 35052 • FATTY15 – The future of essential fatty acids is here! Strengthen your cells against age-related breakdown with Fatty15. Get 15% off a 90-day Starter Kit Subscription at https://drdrew.com/fatty15 • PALEOVALLEY - "Paleovalley has a wide variety of extraordinary products that are both healthful and delicious,” says Dr. Drew. "I am a huge fan of this brand and know you'll love it too!” Get 15% off your first order at https://drdrew.com/paleovalley • VSHREDMD – Formulated by Dr. Drew: The Science of Cellular Health + World-Class Training Programs, Premium Content, and 1-1 Training with Certified V Shred Coaches! More at https://drdrew.com/vshredmd • THE WELLNESS COMPANY - Counteract harmful spike proteins with TWC's Signature Series Spike Support Formula containing nattokinase and selenium. Learn more about TWC's supplements at https://twc.health/drew 「 MEDICAL NOTE 」 Portions of this program may examine countervailing views on important medical issues. Always consult your physician before making any decisions about your health. 「 ABOUT THE SHOW 」 Ask Dr. Drew is produced by Kaleb Nation (https://kalebnation.com) and Susan Pinsky (https://twitter.com/firstladyoflove). This show is for entertainment and/or informational purposes only, and is not a substitute for medical advice, diagnosis, or treatment. Executive Producers • Kaleb Nation - https://kalebnation.com • Susan Pinsky - https://x.com/firstladyoflove Content Producer & Booking • Emily Barsh - https://x.com/emilytvproducer Hosted By • Dr. Drew Pinsky - https://x.com/drdrew Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices
Transcript
Discussion (0)
Well, we will welcome our friend Viva Fry in just a few minutes here.
He has a report on ostriches.
You know, he's been very focused on the ostrich farm fiasco.
He, of course, hosts the Viva Fry show on Rumble and Locals and Viva and Barnes.
He'll give us an update on many topics, but speaking many topics, Andrew Wilco.
He is the host of the Wilco majority weekdays on Sirius XM.
he began his radio talk show career in college.
We've got a lot to talk about in terms of revisiting the old days of radio.
There's much to go through in terms of so many things in the news today,
including what's going on in New York City with the mayor-elect,
as well as we'll talk about terrorists.
There's a lot to get into, including see if we can revisit Tish Hyman,
who I hope to interview one day soon.
So we'll be back with Andrew Wilco, right up to this.
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sorry about that i i think i superimposed superimposed steve wilco on poor andrew uh which must drive him
absolutely crazy you can follow andrew on x wilkow majority w i lk o w andrew welcome the program
thank you for having me sir so i'm sure steve wilco gets bled into your name once in a while
i apologize for being part of that it is it has happened many times over the years no no offense
So you and I want to do a quick walk down memory lane for radio because you got involved in radio in college and talk radio. Tell me about that.
I was doing sort of music radio and then I just started using what time I had to kind of do what I wanted to do.
I mean early on in my radio career, I kind of worked and you might call it unsanctioned radio and there were kind of no rules.
and then I made my way into FM and still kept doing that.
You know, if you're working late nights in a small market and there's really not a lot going on,
if you want to make a name for yourself, you took what time you had between songs,
and that's where I developed the craft, and then I made the jump to talk radio in 2003.
And that was Mel Carmesan, no?
Yeah, no, that was here in 2006.
In 2002, I did a fill-in.
I was still a rock DJ, but I was doing my breaks.
like on topics and i i got a i got a call for from wabc they said we have a weekend guy named
mark levin and he's doing a sunday show and we need someone on the bench in case he needs a
day off and that was 2002 and uh i went i i did my first ever talk radio program filling in for
the great one that was in that uh big office in new york city in penn station as i remember
were at one pan or two pen, something like that.
Yeah, that's crazy.
And Mel Carmesan was my boss, too, for many years.
I mean, he started with Infinity Broadcasting before he went to CBS.
And K. Rock, our little local radio station in Pasadena that became this behemoth,
he bought that and built Infinity.
And I remember, did you ever have any personal conversations with him?
Yeah.
He walked into the room when I was getting hired, and there were all these executives.
and he looked right at me and he said
I've hired two people around here personally
Howard Stern and now you
and then he sat down and he says
let me tell you the story
he said I had a rental car
I was going out to the Hamptons
so I goes I didn't have
he said he put on the competition
WABC just to get the news in traffic
and I was I was do
I inherited Mark's show when he went
full time so when he went to 6 to 9 p.m. which is where he is
now he was doing noon to 2
on Sundays. So I guess he was doing a mid-morning or late early afternoon drive out to the
Hamptons. And he heard me doing my thing. And he said, he took out a post-a-note, wrote hire this guy,
put it on the dashboard. And he said, when I heard you, he was, I heard passion. I heard passion.
I heard energy. And I thought you'd be a good fit for our Patriot channel here on SiriusXM.
This was 2005. I started the show in 2006.
And I remember being so intimidated.
Like, this is the guy, right?
When you think of the old studio bosses,
getting called into the gilded office with the big cigar.
So I'm going to make a star out of you.
I felt like, okay, the elevator door opened for me.
Now I'm going to the top floor.
That's how I felt.
I was talking to, I talked to Mel once where I heard my own voice.
And essentially the conversation was, yeah, but, and I, yeah,
I, yeah, I think it was like, it was like trying to.
to talk to a Gatling gun or something.
It's like,
blah, blah, blah, blah, and I thought,
wow, this guy really got
that energy, that hypomania
that so many successful business people have.
Well, speaking of passion,
let's talk about New York City, right?
I'm right here.
We've sort of been here before.
Those of us that have lived long enough,
remember how New York City has been destroyed in the past.
Are we going to do it all again?
I wonder if this time is a little bit worse.
I was kind of thinking about something before I came in here.
They keep talking about young leaders, right?
Mondami's young.
The guy that ran in Minneapolis.
He didn't win is young.
Now we have this woman in Seattle who just won.
Young doesn't mean new.
Just because you're young doesn't mean what you're saying or what you're promoting is new,
but there are people that are going to think it is.
It's kind of think of a cover song that you heard and you thought was awesome.
And then you found out it wasn't that bands.
they were borrowing it from someone else.
And you're like, wait a second.
That's not this artist's song.
And then you have that.
If you're going to rip off a band,
you better rip off a band that nobody currently knows.
You rip off something from the past.
And Mondami's not offering anything that is brand new.
These ideas of we're going to seize production
or we're going to raise taxes
or we're going to promise to make things free.
And democracy doesn't manifest things.
The sky doesn't turn purpose.
because you say it turned purple.
Health care doesn't become free because everybody voted it to be free.
That's just the exercise.
The practice is totally different.
Yeah.
Yeah.
I mean, it's so odd.
I saw someone commentating online saying it's like the Columbia students' playbook is being
writ large here, which is these young people that seem to have had no exposure to the
history of these ideas.
And these ideas have come and gone regularly.
and they have failed on the regular.
I mean, look no further.
I just look at what AOC did to Long Island City, right?
Amazon was on its way there,
40,000 high-paying jobs.
There was just a renewed, just enthusiasm
for that part of Long Island,
and she pushed them away
because she didn't want to give them any tax rates.
Never mind the fact that they were going to bring
hundreds of millions of dollars of tax revenue,
the brakes to get it set up,
she wasn't really to give them.
So you're ripping us off,
It's such a crazy backwards way of thinking.
She bragged about it.
Like, she bragged.
And it was like, how could you brag about killing jobs?
How could you brag about their...
Tens of thousands of jobs.
Tens of thousands of jobs.
It's the weirdest thing.
These people, you know what it is, especially with the spoiled rich kid,
Marx had a chapter where he talked about the bourgeois socialist.
and he described the bourgeois socialist
as somebody who wanted all of the trappings of the revolution
except any threats to their wealth and power.
If I'm ever able to ask one question,
if I were able to ask Bernie Sanders one question
or any of these advocates for single payer
or any of the stuff, are you going to get in the line?
Because if the idea, the thing I noticed the most about these,
capitalists are fine living with capitalism.
Libertarians are fine with libertarianism.
I don't see socialists living with their own ideas.
It's like socialism is for the people, not the socialist.
If the idea is so great, why is the first thing that you do is insulate yourself from it?
What is the problem with, I mean, sort of public and private kinds of systems?
I mean, why do we have such an aversion to that in this country?
I mean, you know what I mean?
We have public and private education.
We have public and we should have, could have public and private health care.
We sort of do, as a matter of fact, in some respects.
But why not really lean into that?
Because we could make that work.
Do you ever notice that the advocates for government-run education
send their own kids to private school?
They've reserved themselves.
Well, look at California, you're out east.
In California, we are living this nightmare writ large.
it's out of control in California
and of course Newsom
lies and BS's and you know
it says whatever is convenient
and he takes care of his family
and his businesses accordingly
it's
they really believe
that subsidizing something
makes it more affordable
if you could show me one thing
that's been subsidized by the government
that hasn't gotten exponentially more expensive
and then we're talking about more subsidies
I'm all ears
If the plan isn't good enough for the government, why is it good enough for the people?
After all, we're the ones that pay for it, or at least some of us pay for it.
I can't imagine my nightmare scenario where over 51% of the population is not paying taxes
because then they would vote for any spending measure and have no...
Welcome to California. We're there.
That's why people are... That's why half of your states in Texas right now is that because
some of these ideas, it's not a question of who's got a good.
good heart. I get callers when I say, I don't think the federal government should be running
school lunch programs and they'll say, what, you want to starve kids? No, I said federal government
or government just because you don't want the government doing something doesn't mean you don't
want it done. It means you've seen the government try to do it and you don't think the government's
doing a better, a good job. You think that a competitive marketplace will make things better
when the government monopolizes something, there's almost no competition. Well, there's no
competition and there's no accountability and there's no accounting for and there's no oversight and then people seem to the people that like that centralized authority and the government funded material you know whatever you want lunches or promise school whatever yeah they they like that they don't they don't imagine that it gets grifted all over the place it's just absolutely just dissipates it's the it's consistently true that centralized authority federal government in particular is the way
worst allocator of capital in all our systems. They do the worst job of allocating capital
and have the greatest opportunity for corruption and grift and rarely get the job done they
intend to do. It's certainly not the way they intend to do it. Well, Dr. Drew. The Affordable
Care Act is proven to be unaffordable. The risk corridor money was a subsidy for the insurance
companies to sell plans they didn't want to sell and couldn't make money on. And then they
subsidized the purchase by people who are buying things that they didn't need to buy. So 65-year-old
men don't need maternity care. And now we have the government subsidizing both sides of the
ledger. And if I always use the example of Springfield, Ohio, you know, where they're eating the
dogs, if the market rate for rent on a two-bedroom apartment is, let's just say arbitrarily
$500, and you send migrants into town with $700 a month vouchers, do the landlords keep the rent
at $500 or do they raise it
to get those subsidies? Of course
they raise it. It's the perverse incentive.
If you're putting
money into the marketplace, the prices
will rise to capture
that money that you're putting into the marketplace
and then if you come along and say, well, then we've got
to fix prices. Now you've got
what you just said, you've got the
centralization of capital and it all
comes crashing down.
I don't understand why people
can't get
this, but apparently
Kathy Hokel understands that she cannot make something free that is barely solvent with fee for service.
Tell us about that.
You mean the rolling homeless shelters that he's proposed?
Because if you think New York Transit is bad now, and I mean quality, wait until it's free.
The reason why she's not going to sign on to this is because she's going to be getting phone calls from Democrats in Nassau County, Suffolk County, Rockland County,
Westchester County, Putnam County.
Remember, it was Giuliani that ended the commuter tax.
I would bet anything that Mom Dani, when he starts to run into walls,
gets advice, hey, you know where a lot of money's coming into the city,
people who work here and go back out to the island or back out to the southern part of
what we call upstate, if you're from where I'm from, Nassau County.
He's going to try, but he can't do any of these things because of the bankruptcy of the 1970s.
Basically, any major move made by the city of New York has to be approved of by the state assembly, the state senate, and the governor.
Oh, that's interesting.
I did not know that.
Is that something that got passed as a result of the bankruptcy?
Yeah, yeah, he can't.
They can't raise taxes in the city without a vote in Albany.
Oh, that's interesting.
So how does he plan to get all his BS done?
I don't know.
When they talk about seizing the means of productions, it's not 1925.
There aren't textile mills.
you know, from 34th Street South.
You don't have manufacturing in the city anymore.
If he starts to threaten Jamie Diamond, there's more Chase employees in Texas.
He could invert that company out of the city and goodbye Chase Manhattan.
Yeah, yeah.
But that doesn't seem to worry them.
I heard he, I heard Anthony Scaramucci talking about a meeting he had with Wall Street leaders,
and he was arrogant and demanding and sort of negating.
Like, you know, you guys think you're in control here.
No, no, I'm in control.
A new sheriff in town.
You better get with it and listen to what I'm telling you.
He's telling that to the likes of Jamie Diamond.
How's that going to go?
Ron DeSantis is really happy.
Greg Abbott's really happy.
You know, if you're a real estate agent on Long Island or I live in northern New Jersey,
you're really happy.
Look, if you've got the kind of money that you don't have to really be,
look, there's things you love about.
out in New York City. There's no denying it, right? Cultural amenities that you just don't get
anywhere else. And people from L.A. would say the same thing. And the truth is you love it. And you put up
with certain things. But when push comes to shove, Florida's pretty nice, right? I mean, there's a lot
of New Yorkers in Florida. The weather's pretty good. The taxes are zero percent income tax at sea level.
I don't know if you spend any time in Florida, but people are happy down there. They are so freaking
happy compared to everywhere else. It is really kind of astonishing. Yeah. So what was the other thing I
wanted to talk to you about? Hang on one second here. Oh, yeah, tariffs. What do you make of the
court decisions for a Supreme Court decision on tariffs and how that's going to go and how the
money would go back if tariffs are outlawed? I don't really understand. They must be war-rooming
how to deal with this if it goes south on them. Well, this is the bizarre thing. There have been
multiple acts of Congress, which I don't know how wordy and nerdy you want me to get, but
there's a phrase non-delegation doctrine. The Congress can't pass its authority to the president
in the Constitution, but they do so they don't have to take responsibility for anything.
So 1933, 34, you've got the Reciprocal Trade Act. You've got the Trade Act of 1964,
1974, 1977, the Emergency Powers Act. Congress has given the President lots of authority
to regulate commerce with foreign nations, even though that's an explicit power.
in the enumerated powers in Article 1, Section 8,
but foreign relations are strictly dealt with by the executive branch,
but for treaties ratified by the Senate.
The president was looking at tariffs as a way to get better trade deals.
When he started talking about $2,000 checks, I was like,
oh, no, don't do that.
The Democrats are rubbing their hands.
If you want to say the president has to have a temporary power like the War Powers Act,
to say to China or Japan or Germany,
hey, you're VAT taxing our cars.
That's not free trade and that's not fair.
I'm going to slap some on you, Canada.
You've got a 250% tariff on American dairy products.
Bring it down and we'll go zero tariffs.
That, I think, is something that the president, I guess, should have or Congress should
back him up on it.
I don't want to see tariffs becoming a revenue driver.
I want to see them open up markets to American goods.
India has a 100% tariff on American rice.
They need rice really bad.
They've got like a billion people.
So if Modi is protecting whatever industry he has, that's not fair to trade for us.
With that said, I don't know.
Why is the court reviewing that power now?
The last big trade act was 1977.
Why is no one, Biden had this power, Obama had this power.
Obama and Biden laid tariffs on foreign goods.
Nobody said it was a violation of the Constitution.
Nobody said, well, they're stealing powers from Congress, even though Congress gave these powers to the presidency, going back to FDR.
So why are they complaining now? Is it because of Trump or what? And don't tell me you don't like something because it's being taxed.
Yeah, it's an interesting point. And I mean, obviously, no one took this to the Supreme Court previously, and that's the reason.
But more importantly, I think you're absolutely right. I think he is using it as a negotiating instrument.
and as an offensive instrument in certain respects.
But it's ultimately he'll take, he wants the tariffs to be lowered
and to be made fair.
And in the meantime, he'll accept the revenue.
Fine, bring it on.
I'll take the money from you in the meantime.
And so to me, I don't know.
I worry the Supreme Court is going to have a narrow interpretation of this,
in which case, doesn't he have to go to Congress
and get the right to do this or get the power to do so?
and then how's that going to go?
The power to regulate commerce with foreign nations
and an explicit power of Congress,
but so is the Declaration of War.
We have this thing called the War Powers Act
that Presidents 14th accused to deploy troops for 90 days,
then seek authorization,
which are now 90 days into a conflict,
and Congress is, you know,
no one wants to just pull the troops out.
But if you're going to give,
if you're going to say presidents have to quickly react
to global events,
I would say this is very late.
Where were our Republican and Democrat presidents when the Chinese were tariffing our goods or stealing our intellectual property or the Germans made it impossible to sell American automobiles?
Meanwhile, you can't drive down a street in America without seeing a BMW or a Mercedes or an Audi or a Volkswagen.
Now, if the Germans don't want to drive American cars, fine.
But we should be able to sell them without paying penalties to the government of Germany.
You know, have you had an eye on what's going on down in Brazil with that climate conference?
Are you watching that at all?
Yeah.
The BBC reported that they dozed tens of thousands of acres to build a highway to bring 50,000 people to this climate summit.
Landing in private jets, driving in limousines.
I mean, the carbon, you and I are talking over, over this crazy little technology thing here.
You're telling me these people couldn't have their little climate summit on Zoom?
I mean, I'm not flying out to California.
You're not putting budget out for that.
I have no carbon footprint to do your program.
And then you got Gavin Newsom down there talking about how he's leading the way.
We have this crazy thing called the Logan Act.
Governors are not allowed to entangle themselves in foreign agreements.
Yes.
Oh, God.
His presentations down there were just so cringy.
that you know how he's the he's the representative of the climate management in the United States
he has ruined California ruined it and along the way done no forestry management which is the
highway right there on the screen they doze it and their private jets came in and look
and all the surrounding population in this place in Brazil don't have plumbing don't have
sewage what one of they they want those people to be net zero give me a break well they'll be happy
watching the range rovers go by
Gavin was
did he say too
like Bill Gates softened right
Bill Gates is softened on this yeah
he said we're not dying from this stuff
but the uh that 2.2 billion
taxpayer funded solar facility
that you have in California just
went under
how do you say
Iventa eventa
I don't know how to pronounce it was this
it was it was I know Caleb you can find
pictures of this thing is the most
insane thing people fly over it and they
really think they're flying over some sort of, like some alien craft had landed and set this
thing up.
It's thousands of mirrors focused at a water tower to create steam to turn a turbine.
And guess what happens in the middle of the desert when you fire thousands of mirrors,
the heat at the water tower, is you fry every bird for miles around.
The thing is a huge circumference.
And they killed tens of thousands of birds, destroy these.
ecosystem. And guess what? Those mirrors
and those water towers, they're not taking them
down. There's leaving them out in the
desert. It's just this giant blight on
the ecosystem.
Oh, you should show pictures of the
Delta spells. And yet you protect the Delta
There it is. There it is.
It just goes on forever.
And that glowing they were looking at is
actually it's so hot from the mirrors
directed at that tower.
And then it turns a turbine, big
deal. So, okay, well done.
It did nothing. It collected.
did nothing. Those are the mirrors on the desert. It accomplished nothing and it killed thousands
of birds. Well, well, well done, you guys. Oh, just an experiment. Billions of dollars wasted
again. No sense of remorse or soul-seeking, soul-searching on how they're spending taxpayer
dollars. Nothing. Just here we go. Let's do another one. Do something else. Let's turn San Francisco
into a shithole. And yet you'll protect the Delta smelt. I love talking to people in California.
and I'm like, when's this aqueduct system of yours supposed to be completed?
How did you run out of, how did you run out of water?
You have a water czar in L.A. that makes $750,000 a year, and there was no water in the
reservoirs. And the excuse was, well, the power went out. You don't have backup for the
reservoirs? That sounds like something that, something that for the taxes you pay out there,
somebody should be on that. Yes, we have incompetence, though. We have that. And we have
people who don't aren't they they went no but they really in the californians aren't really interested in
governing they're interested in talking and they're interested in serving ideas and the ideas
unfortunately they're getting their heads around are divorced from the human experience they're
not pragmatic in any way they're not involved with governing they're not involved with solving
problems or helping people are helping people thrive and they're embedded in these ideologies
that are not related to the human experience it's not how humans work
No. And again, back to that out by my, Gavin Newsom is out that he, he, I think he's chasing a trend
that is on the tail end, that I've been likening him to the mouthy lead singer of a hair metal band
in 1991, that he doesn't know that that grunge is happening and he's chasing something.
He is, he is out there trying to out-trump Trump.
Magga, as we know, stylistically, is going to change.
it's not jaddy vans is not going to be doing the dance with the red hat he's not jd vans and marco ruby
and desantis don't have the same delivery gavin newsome is barbing at someone that he's not running
against that's the bizarre thing he's going after the person he's not running against and 2028 is
going to be here but it is a long way off we're not even at the 26 midterms yet and he's already
out there acting like a presidential candidate the problem with that is
peaking too soon. And that's happened before. And I think Gavin Newsom is, one, chasing something
that's coming to an end. Two, he's likely to peak too soon. Because there are going to be other
Democrats that get in. This is a party that doesn't really like middle-aged white guys.
You took a shot at the $2,000 rebate from the terrorists. What do you make about it?
I don't think we should do it. For the simple reason, then we've crossed that Rubicon of using
trade as a negotiating tool to now the revenue driver.
And let's say, look, I don't know what's going to happen in 26.
I think the Democrat brand is pretty damaged, but 28 can be a, it's going to be a reset.
Primaries on both sides, right?
I can't tell you who might emerge from the Democrat side and possibly when the pendulum does
swing.
I don't want to hand that power to a Democrat administration.
I would rather pay down the debt with that money.
I would rather see that debt, you know, we were watching your commercial for physical gold,
gold, good investment, by the way, that I would rather not get to $40 trillion in debt.
If there's going to be a surplus from tariff revenue, then put it towards the debt,
but don't make it a redistributive thing.
Yeah, and again, did not, did we not learn through COVID that that all serves inflation?
And that's about all.
It doesn't really do much else.
It certainly hasn't shown to.
What's going to your crosshairs these days?
What's on your mind?
Oh, the one thing about Gavin Newsom, I had called it way out during the Palisades fire.
I said, no way is he going to let these people rebuild their homes.
They're going to want that land for densified urban style low-income living.
And then they signed that bill until law, not that long ago, taking away local control of zoning.
And I was admittedly gloating on the air.
I said, see, I told you this was going to happen.
because that was Obama's dream with the affirmatively furthering fair housing.
A lot of what we try to do, of course, stay on the news, stay on what's going on,
stay on the big topics.
But a lot of the question, like I said earlier, talking about the people who are proposing
ideas, what are your ideas and how do they work?
Please walk me through this, Mom Donnie.
Walk me through this AOC.
And the one thing, and I might get in a little trouble here, I notice that in our business,
there's a lot of personalities barbing at each other and ideas are getting lost.
Yes, you can get clicks.
Yes, you can get likes.
Yes, you can get your clips on the aggregating sites and then TikTok and Twitter and all that.
But what are your ideas?
These people are talking about socialism and communism, but they're not telling us how it's going to work.
I want people who think like me, think like you, to spend as much time as they can,
walking through the ideas
but I would love it
I would love Bernie or Monda
or any of these people to walk me down the lane
okay this is going to happen
and then this is going to happen
and then this is going to happen
but they aren't doing that
they say Republicans Bernie will say
healthcare is a human right
and Republicans want people to die
well that's that's not true Bernie
but how does that function
it can't function like the UK
we have 350 million people
there's no
EU single payer citizens
they each have their own.
So tell me how it's going to work
and what the plan is if it doesn't.
You're just talking about policy.
Why can't politicians talk about policy?
Because most of them don't have any
or they are not, I don't know,
I worry about the American voter
that they'd rather get into these personality conflicts
and these.
That's what I mean.
Or these feeling, talk about feelings,
things make them feel a certain way,
rather than really help,
what do we do to help people thrive?
but what kinds of things are useful in a governance standpoint that really helps you.
Jasmine Krakis do it just fine. These people are threatened. That's what bothers me the most,
is I see these younger, you know, I'm 53, so I feel kind of old at times,
that I see these younger cats in the podcast space and the social media space,
but I don't see them promoting their own participation. It seems like they're trying to actually get wealthy
while condemning wealthy people.
They're trying to increase their power
while saying they're shaking their fist at power.
And again, just because you're young
doesn't mean what you're doing is new.
You seem to be getting rich while you're complaining about that.
So if the system is so bad,
I got a little frustrated there.
If your ideas are so good,
why is it you don't want to live with them?
Why are you seemingly chastising people
as if they need to be chastised
for not doing exactly what you?
you say. And by the way, what's your experience with these things? Right. Well, Senator Crockett will be
with us soon. I don't know if you saw that. We're going to have Senator AOC here. Well, that will be
very interesting. She's going to wipe the floor with Chuck Schumer. I appreciate you being here.
Where do you want people to find you? On Twitter at Will Cowell Majority, you could just search my name
on Facebook, Sirius XM Patriot, noon to three east, nine to noon west. Andrew, thanks for
joining me. Thank you for having me, sir. Cheers. All right, we're going to take a little
break. And a reminder, tomorrow, I've got Charlie Sheen and Aaron Carriotti in here, both great
guests. And we're going to try to make our way back to our home studio from this environment.
Obviously, this is not my usual studio environment. And we're going to take a little break,
and then be back with the one and only Viva Fry.
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It wasn't all Dr. Drew or anything.
Why would I screw myself?
What am I? Dr. Drew?
Drew, you're meeting.
Yes, I'm muted. Sorry about that. Viva Frye, the Viva Frye Show. Also, Viva and Barnes, follow on X, the Viva Frye, F-R-E-I. Let's see. Where else can I tell me? Where should people go for Viva? I guess rumble typically. Viva, are you there? Welcome. Good to see you, my friend. Oh, now you're muted. Hold on. That's not. There you are. Now you're back. Now you are back. So I've never seen somebody quite so.
exorcised about ostriches as yourself and this has been a campaign of yours for a little while
and it seems like something they got wasn't successfully defended uh yeah it's a funny thing like
not that i think that i had any critical power to actually do anything but you get emotionally
invested when you follow a story for 11 months and it's the story of literally of trying to save
animals from a senseless unnecessary slaughter and i eat by the way i eat meat i've eaten ostrich i've
have a bunch of videos where I make ostrich egg omelets on the internet.
This has nothing to do with, you know,
veganism or, you know, vegetarianism.
This just has to do with, you know, senseless slaughter
that is representative of a tyrannical government
that defies the science it claims to support.
So back in December, this ostrich farm out in Edgewood, British Columbia,
the birds came down with a virus, the H5N1,
allegedly, late December.
Allegedly.
Yeah.
Calls the CFIA and says,
says, these birds got infected.
The CFIA, which is called the Canadian Food Inspection Agency, it's a Soviet-style federal
agency, comes in and says, oh, the birds were infected.
They all need to get slaughtered.
You know, 60-some-odd birds died back in December.
The rest survive.
They survived.
They're healthy.
Why would we kill them?
They appeal the decision.
It goes to the federal court.
Federal courts are deferential to administrative bodies that are set up.
They have expertise horse crap.
But the federal court, April or May says, no, the decision of the administrative body was not patently unreasonable.
You know, it's been four or five months that the birds are healthy now, but kill them anyhow.
They appeal to the court of appeal.
And the federal court of appeal in August comes to the same conclusion, ratifies the lower court decision.
It's now eight months after the infection.
They're all healthy, 397 healthy ostriches.
They say, you can go ahead and kill them.
They appeal to the Supreme Court.
And in the interim, this is what we're looking at is called the key.
killpen, those are all the dead ostriches, in the interim, the Canadian food inspection
agency, along with their armed Gestapo agents at the RCMP, the Royal Canadian Mounted Police,
come in in anticipation of this gleeful slaughter and occupy the farm for over 40 days,
set up a killpen, like three bales of hay high, two bales of hay wide, with their killing
stands on the top, just like in anticipation of the orgiastic glee that when they get to
slaughter these animals, they're going to go in and do it.
And so, you know, it was a campaign. It was raising awareness. They were doing research on the birds,
apparently post-COVID because the farm used to be open to the public, but COVID hit, they shut down.
They discovered allegedly some antibodies in the ostrich eggs that could be used to prevent or treat COVID.
In 2021, there's an article in the paper. They were working with a Japanese scientist since that time.
And the idea is set aside some, you know, questionable elements as to how the bird allegedly got infected, the flock.
the birds were you know in theory had immunity or antibodies from the h5n1 avian flu that the government is trying to make the next big thing
and they were hell-bent on killing these animals and so you know we raised awareness rfk junior from
the trump administration offered twice to take these birds for scientific value dr ross offered some
ranch in florida where they would move the birds why would the government say no we'd prefer to kill them
And by the way, they don't want to retest them.
They never tested any of the birds they killed.
This was all based on two PCR tests, anal swabs of two carcasses in December 2024.
Not only did they not test any of the birds before killing them,
they prevented the farm from doing it under penalty of $200,000 in fines
and six months in jail if they tested any of the birds per test.
And Supreme Court, after 40 some odd days of sitting on this,
like a bunch of lazy people, come in and they say one paragraph,
appeal dismissed.
And that night, the CFIA, with their snipers, whoever the hell they were, slaughter the entire
bunch.
And there weren't as many as they should have had under their care.
Forty-plus days of torture, neglect.
One of the ostriches died of dehydration because the CFIA did know how to feed or treat
them.
They shot them something like 900 or 1,000 shots went off to kill these animals.
They left their carcasses out to rot for at least a day, if not more.
And it's been more, from what I understand.
apparently they had to go and decapitate some of them in the morning because they might have survived the initial shots that they got.
They then, in cleaning up the horror, just go spread the blood-soaked hay around the fields.
You know, that's how they're going to get rid of it.
Because it was such a health crisis that they went and sprayed their organs and their juices and their fluid and everything all over the fields, left it open for scavengers to come in.
And they got what they wanted, the tyrannical regime that's known as the Canadian government, with the armed branch,
of their government, the RCMP, with the propagandist arm of their government, the CBC,
with their state-funded propagandist scientists feeding all the lines that you need to feed to the
CBC, they came in and slaughtered 300-some-odd birds because they said that they were infected
a year ago, too expensive, too inconclusive to do any more tests, never tested the birds,
and they were just like, like demonic beings that need bloodlust.
They had to come in there and kill them in the most horrific way possible, and it didn't
get the traction. I was, not say traction. It's like
it's not a popularity contest. I wanted, you know,
the Rogan's in the world, Elon Musk to get
involved and say, Trump to get involved
and say if you kill these birds, we're going to impose retaliatory
tariffs. These birds could have
worldwide interest
scientific value if they indeed
survived the H5N1 virus.
And the Canadian government
says two middle fingers to the Trump
administration and we're going to slaughter them
in the most brutal horrific manner
to traumatize the farm owners, to traumatize
Canadians and to let you know you are not in control
of your destiny in that communist regime that's known as the Canadian government?
Well, I've got a few questions. First, a comment, not the least of which I did not expect to
ever speak the words anal swab of ostriches on this program, but thank you for allowing me to go
there, Fiva. Be that as it may, what did they, what would they say was their defam? I mean,
what was the argument that they presented that was so persuasive to the courts?
Hold on, let me get my dog here.
The argument to the courts was that you don't get in.
Oh, nice.
I got, I have one.
One blind dog, one paralyzed dog.
The argument was not persuasive to the court.
Is this the, this isn't the blind one though, is he?
Or is he?
Yeah.
Yeah, yeah.
Some lenticobos.
But, no, the, not persuading the federal court of appeal.
It was basically saying, we are a specialty tribunal, an administrative tribunal set up because we have expertise.
We get, it's the exact opposite.
of the Chevron decision in the states and the deference to these administrative bodies.
In Canada, they say the government decided that these bodies, they have an expertise,
they've got to set their own rules, interpret their own rules, and apply their own rules,
and the courts are not set, you know, they're not, they don't have sufficient expertise to get
involved. So barring a patent. Okay, all right, I get the court, the legal side of it,
but what is the regulatory side of it? What were they, what did they think they were doing?
Question, Drew, oh, sorry, good question. This is a, I, I, I,
ironic because what they thought they were doing, it's called the stamping out policy.
That's the globalist policy that our Canadian government has nationalized.
It's literally a policy of the globalist institution called the woe.
And it's literally called woe.
The World Organization of Animal Health, W-O-A-H.
It's a W-E-F, you know, globalist adjacent, W-H-O-adjacentity.
And they have a stamping out policy to preserve trade of poultry.
That was the argument.
Because I actually got into an online argument with the doctor.
I don't know if I should mention her name or no.
Please.
This is the expert that went on CBC to say why it was necessary to kill them.
Because the tests are too expensive.
They're inconclusive.
You can get false negatives.
And you don't know how long these birds are contagious for after surviving.
11 months out, they might still be shedding.
And it was such a danger, such an urgency, that they had to be slaughtered in a manner that spread their organs and guts and blood and juices all over the place.
Right. Right.
So the reason was actually that Canada has entered into or abides by this world organization of animal health stamping out policy.
So when a flock gets infected, those survivors have to get stamped out.
That's how you're going to stamp out the H5N1.
It makes no sense, but it is purely a globalist WHO policy that are globalist infiltrated at WHO, WEF3 passport carrying globalist who are government of Mark Carney is implementing at the national level.
And the argument is to preserve the poultry trade.
Because if they didn't do it, people wouldn't feel safe buying poultry from Canada.
These ostriches were not for human consumption at this point.
They might have been, you know, earlier on pre-COVID.
They were not for human consumption.
It wasn't open to the public.
And the only reason they said there was a risk is because migratory birds could come through
and catch the avian flu from this flock that survived and then spread it about.
So in order to preserve trade agreements, international trade agreements, under the W.O.A.H, the World Organization of Animal Health, they had to be stamped out because there's no pity, no remorse, no second chances at life, and no study them for having survived.
This wouldn't have really interested me so much, were it not for the, we're being on the heels of COVID, which is such a source of immense frustration that rationality and thoughtfulness and scientific inquiry,
and dialogue is something that was stamped out during COVID and to see it something similar
going on now for no good reason it's just it gets the outrage going again right uh and and by the way
humans don't get bird flu yet we might one day uh we get a little conjunctive iidae maybe a cough
treat it's treated effectively with that usual antivirals uh the birds that get it die or survive
I'm imagining you can't, I don't know for sure,
but I don't think you'd be able to get bird flu
by eating an infected bird.
You cook it, kills everything.
So what are they worried about
except somebody having a little panic
about other birds being infected?
Drew, they parade around.
What's the matter?
Oh, Susan's pointing at the sunset.
I'm like, what, is everything okay?
Isn't there a movie scene like that?
a nice sunset
a couple hours ago
but um
no
the truth
it's incidentally
and not for nothing
it's the actual
same people
you can go back
to their Twitter feeds
the same scientist
the same COVID
the pooping on
RFK Jr
can you know
and it's um
I was going to say something
about the
about the birds now
I forgot what I was going to say
but it's
well
the same tyranny
I'll tell you what
I talked to a Canadian today, and she said that there are people still wearing masks and isolating
their kids in not Alberta, but Saskatchewan.
What's next?
What's between Alberta and Saskatchewan?
Well, in Manitoba.
And that we've really made people so sick that they're wearing masks and not letting their kids
go to school.
This is where how many years after COVID being a real illness, serious illness?
And not only that, but.
they've apparently infected the brains.
In this country, it's all the urban centers that have seen.
And to be fair, I mean, in concentrated areas,
there's more respiratory and infectious diseases
and people can do what they want to do
as far as wearing masks and whatnot.
But way out in the country in Manitoba or wherever the hell,
my understanding is the little communities got infected
much the way the urban communities did here.
Have you heard that?
I'm infected. I mean, infected with these horrible ideas.
I mean, disturbed, rendered mentally ill is what I'm talking about.
You cross the border into Canada.
You're entering an insane asylum.
And I'm saying there's a lot of good peace-loving and God-loving and freedom-loving Canadians.
You enter an insane asylum.
You go to Toronto, it's an insane asylum.
Montreal asylum, Ottawa asylum.
And I remember what I was going to say.
For what is it?
What are they sick with?
Face masks.
People are walking around with outdoor with face masks.
They are so into the Trump derangement syndrome.
It's the only distraction they have misery up in Canada on miserable government.
What I was going to say is the H5N1.
Like you say, no human in Canada has died from age 5N1.
They rely on this one of a 14-year-old girl, I think it was from British Columbia.
The media always invokes her.
She was hospitalized.
She had underlying health issues and she was mistreated.
And so that one kid
is the reason why they say
It's such a dangerous
You know I was on with Alex Jones earlier today
And he said even he put an idea in my head
Which I think he's not it's not it's not outrageous
Is that they wanted to build up the H5N1
Into the same COVID panic
And it would not be in
Yes they did
And so you know
When the he says
What if the government implanted in this flock
And then the flock didn't die the way they won them too
They knew it wasn't a big enough deal
Like you know it wasn't a big enough deal
Like, you know, the way the outbreak in December broke out makes no sense.
You know, I go over, they land, and the birds got sick.
And then some anonymous whistleblower calls the government agency and they get their hooks in and they destroy the entire.
We're stealing the eggs.
They killed the birds.
So H5N1 is the risk.
They're stealing the eggs.
So it's quite clear something else is going on here.
I think it's farm induced.
But the bottom line, too many Canadians are sitting there.
they're saying, well, that's what you get when you're in the farming business.
People think they were there to be eaten.
People think they were there for human consumption.
People say, well, they're just birds.
They're going to get compensated.
Like a compensation for a chicken is the same as a compensation for an ostrich,
because that's what they're going to get compensated, if anything.
But apparently the CFIA and the government's going to actually go in there
and demand that they pay them for the 40 days of occupation and torture.
And by the way, when they started shooting the birds,
nobody had any advanced warning.
So the farm owners are hearing gunshots ring out in the night,
killing their animals that have been in their family
for 35 years and Canadians
in asylum that it is
or just too many, not all of them, but too many
are saying, well, you know, it's a stamping
old policy, that's what the experts say.
They've learned nothing.
They've gotten dumber and more subservient
and that country is going to hell in a handbasket
because it's got a tyrannical
W.E.F. Globalist government and it's
got nothing of an opposition in that feckless
coward, Pierre Paulyev.
How do you really feel about it?
But in any event, the
the H5N1, I talked to Robert Redfield, former director to the CDC, about this.
And he actually thinks that bird flu could one day be a significant problem because people
who really get very sick from it, but has the potential to make people sick, even though they
are not now.
And, you know, presently, you can take antiviral medications to good effect if somebody is
getting actually ill from it.
But it just leads me to think if, and I predicted it, I said this a couple of years ago,
when they first tried to make a panic around monkeypox, then bird flu, there.
They're just addicted to these hysterias.
I said, look, if bird flu does start to make a significant leap to humans, think gain a function.
That's why it happened.
If somebody's, people are actually concerned about this virus that's been around forever, suddenly going to humans, there must be somebody mucking with this virus.
Andrew, also not for nothing, but we had two Chinese scientists who had some bizarre connections to Wuhan who fled into China after COVID.
We've got some minor problems of Chinese Communist Party infiltration in the Canadian government.
Theresa Tam, I believe, is an agent of a foreign country in head of our health in Canada.
But you know, you know it's a bigger risk to humans than no deaths from H5N1?
Mass starvation.
And people look back to Soviet Russia and say, how did 20, 30 million people starve to death?
It's when the government came in and nationalized farming.
And when the government comes in and spotters tens of millions of chickens, takes over farming.
arms kills cattle. And now that it's allegedly an animal reserve, this is how the government
gets involved and causes mass starvation. Now, modern era maybe, but that's how it starts.
No, I look, Russia, China, they all did it, right? That's that's one of the main ways they
killed millions of, hundreds of millions of people, ultimately. So yeah, my family, Fred, fled Ukraine
just prior to the Holodomor,
which was a sort of a farm,
sort of weird, social,
I don't people understand what that was,
where Stalin went in there
and just pitted one Ukrainian against the other,
particularly people that were food producers.
If they produced enough food to sustain their family
without starvation,
they were to be, they were suspect
and were to be punished.
I mean, this is,
while everybody else then starved,
because these people couldn't produce enough food
to support, let alone their family,
anybody else.
It was really a whole, people, the whole of the dome was a terrible, terrible thing.
Great Ukraine, the Ukrainian famine, there's some dispute as to whether or not it was deliberately targeting Ukrainians.
But it was my grandmother left Russia in the late eight, well, her family left in the late 1800s.
This was just because of pogroms, not the Ukrainian famine.
But no, people ask, like, how could tens of millions of people have starved under socialism, communism?
This is exactly how.
Everybody gets involved.
This crisis is manufactured out of whole cloth.
But I do have a sincere and deeply held belief that the reason why Pierre Paulyev,
the leader of the so-called conservative, so-called opposition,
he didn't say a damn thing about it, Drew.
And I was needling on Twitter.
Like, my comments were ratioing every post that he put as like,
what about the ostriches?
He finally answered one question, and they say,
what do you think about the ostrich crisis?
And he says, well, I blame it on liberal corruption,
liberal incompetence and pivots into liberal incompetence.
He hasn't said a word since they've been slaughter.
And I have no doubt it's because big pharma is behind this.
And Pierre and the Conservatives, this is my theory.
There is, you know that, I'm going to sound like Alex Jones here,
but I've got my theories and they're well based.
We've got massive contracts with Moderna.
Go ahead.
The liberal government just, you know, they're building a super hyper-duper mega,
$500 million vaccine plant from Moderna, you know,
in all their medical success, they've never produced anything.
They've got a massive factor that they're building up in, um, outside of Montreal and LaValle.
Uh, you know, we had a supply of Pfizer.
I, I firmly believe that they knew that there was some scientific value to these birds and that
they were, they, by the end of the, um, occupation, there were not 330 ostriches that were
under the custody of the CFIA when they first took them.
Blue bins were moving in and out.
I have, and by the end of it, there were more roosters to hens than there were in the
beginning.
In the beginning, it was like two to three hens to rooster.
And the hens are more scientifically valuable.
So I'm convinced that these birds had something of scientific value.
And then in two to three years,
guys are going to come up with a miracle vaccine to treat H5N1,
and it will be because they stole from this farm,
slaughtered, and stole the eggs that had the antics.
Oh, look at you.
What a fascinating theory.
That's very interesting.
Okay.
All right.
We'll see.
Here is a coward, but even a coward knows what's politically expedient.
his omission to deal with this was deliberate and it looked like he's controlled and I believe
that he is and you know some people were saying it's globalist yeah and big pharma because big
pharma got those globalist contracts for putting out that toxic COVID jab and they're gonna you know
they've stolen the search to put out something else in two to three years book market people
all right we will we will you know the future will predict whether not you predict the future
will be one day, we'll figure that out.
Quickly, I want to switch my tension away from Canada and to the United States,
and I want you to put your legal mind on again,
the tariff issue that's being considered in the Supreme Court.
What's your prediction on that?
Speaking of predictions.
I'm going to, this is not my information.
This is, you know, Barnes and I talk about it,
and I defer to people who I know know more about things.
This was, we've talked about it for a long time,
and Barnes had been Robert Barnes, Viva and Barnes Law for the People, Sunday night, 6 o'clock people, across all platforms.
We had been saying that for a while, you know, the idea that Trump was invoking this Emergencies Act type legislation to impose tariffs for
Well, he kind of undermined his argument for that when he basically used it as a political cudgel.
And I don't say that as a blaming thing.
I think it was an effective thing to do, but it undermined the legal basis for invoking it.
And it seems that Gordon was amenable to that idea or sensitive to that idea.
idea in one of the questions that he asked, which was, so all you have to do is declare anything
a crisis and you can impose, you know, blanket tariffs across any and all products.
Allegedly I'm told in the markets, it was right after that question that the markets tanked
for the likelihood of the ratifying or, you know, legitimizing Trump's invocation of this
act for the purposes of the tariffs. He didn't do himself any favors in using it like a political
tool as opposed to an emergency measure. But then the question that I had to roll,
Robert and to others is, you know, the Supreme Court might come in and say, okay, it wasn't a lawful use of the Emergencies Act, but practically speaking, you know, you can't order the reimbursement of hundreds of billions of dollars that might have devastating impacts. So they might do something like, you know, it was problematic the way he invoked it. Now it's up to Congress to go ratify it so that we don't bankrupt the country in having to reimburse all of these tariffs. Exactly. Exactly. All right. So you're predicting a resolution ultimately in favor of you.
and sustaining the terrorists.
It may not come through the executive branch,
but the Congress will have to do it.
I think they're not going to want to bankrupt the country,
but they're also not going to want to...
The legal decision is going to be that it was not...
It was an excessive use or ultra-virus,
the purpose of the act.
They're going to leave Congress a room to remedy.
They better get to it soon
because the Democrats, I do believe,
would sink the country to sink Trump.
They were that angry with his stuff.
They would, through all of us.
Well, no, absolutely.
Absolutely. They say, look what Trump made us do or look what Trump did. And now we've got more socialism. But it's something I said this on Twitter and it's kind of, it's kind of good. Or I say good. Trump got elected on the promise of a populist revolution. And now I am realizing what happens when the people feel betrayed on the promise of a populist revolution. They feel tempted by the promise of a socialist revolution. And I think we've seen something like that in the last elections there with.
Mamdani and if the popular
feels betrayed or loses hope
they'll be tempted by the
snake oil promises of a socialist revolution
and that's how you get Democrats who are more
extreme than the ones you have in power
Is that what you're predicting?
You're just worried about it?
Well, I was going to say every fear hides
a wish. I would say I want to predict it because
my predictions are more often than not wrong
when it comes to politics.
No, I look, it's morning.
They better start fixing things up and not
You know, not inviting Albert Burela to the White House,
not having dinners with Zuckerberg, Zuckbucks,
who's an architect in the disaster in which we're currently living.
And, you know, not betraying what were the promises of this mega populist movement.
You can't do it and then blame the people for reacting when you don't follow through on
and or even at worst betray some of those promises.
They've done a lot of great stuff.
The border is very good.
You know, fighting crime is fantastic.
It's been an abject disaster with the Epstein files
and it's only getting worse.
The H-1B...
Do you think that Epstein's file thing
seems like so much nothing to be?
That's the Virginia Guthrie stuff
that's already been out there, no?
No, no, not today's release.
Just the binder game...
The entire administration...
The way the administration...
Oh, the way that was played out.
The way it played out. Yeah, yeah, yeah.
You're pushing this.
It's not my constituency.
It's wild.
But they've got it...
They've got time, I think, to write the ship.
But this...
This last, you know, the elections of two weeks ago, it's a darn stark indication of where the midterms are going to go if they don't start fixing things up fast.
Viva Fry, everybody. Tell them on scan where to find you.
Viva Fry on Rumble. The Viva Fry for a pottymouth Twitter. I've been referring to the RCP and a terrorist organization a lot because they are. They are. They've betrayed Canada.
So, yeah. Hold on. Hold on. Dudley-Dewrite is a terrorist. That's hard for me to, and it's hard for me to get my head around.
the current RCMP Royal Canadian Mounted Police
are the terrorist branch of the Canadian government
People seem to have already forgotten what they did
During the Ottawa Trucker protest
When they beat veterans, when they stomped elder
And then and then bragged about it in internal text messages
Now they just they didn't sit there
They partook in a slaughter that was the most unjust disgusting thing ever
They're the armed branch of a terrorist organization
What they did was pure terror
So all that's say
Viva Barneslaw dot locals.com
And if you just put in Viva Frye in the search engine, you'll find me.
FRIA, Viva, great to see you, my friend.
Have me out.
All righty.
So coming up tomorrow for us, we have Charlie Sheen, as I said.
I'll hopefully be back on our passing off, are passing a studio by then.
Charlie Sheen and Aaron Cariotti, the psychiatrist that stood up for the bioethics that he had been advocating his entire career and lost his career for that.
Jay Young Summer is coming back.
Terrence Hartett coming in.
Elaine Kuladi
We have Jay Palant
Pallentiner
Ryan Sickler's
before I get him in here
Rob Henderson
Dr. Chloe Carmark
a psychologist
committed to the
psychological
to freeing psychological
training from
encumbrances
and ideology
got a lot
coming up
and tomorrow
2 o'clock
Charlie Sheen
at Karen Ariotti
Dr. Aaron Kariotti
Karen Ariotti
That's interesting
We appreciate you being here
Let me quickly
look at the
Restream
make sure everyone
is good here
Susan is outside
I know where I saw
somebody looking at the sunset
the way Susan was looking at it was that
guy on acid looking at the double rainbows
that's the way she looked at the
that's the way she looked at the sunset this evening
It was really cool
That's what the double rainbow guy said
C.S. Lewis
Robert Barron's are easy to spot
but the more pernicious tyrannical regimes
are the compassionate types
which actually oppress its victims
Yes, yes. Compassion.
Toxic empathy, everybody.
Watch out for that.
Look, you are toxic to a drug addict.
They will die.
That you will kill somebody that way.
So this business of, oh, we care so much, be very careful.
Everybody cares.
Everybody wants everybody to thrive.
That's generally true.
But how we get there is what people are differing on.
And if one group says you're hateful, you're awful because you differ in how to get to a place of human thriving.
There's something wrong with that group.
So as Marine Le Pen said, yes.
yesterday or two days ago.
I see nothing but La Hen.
Leanne, that's it.
Leanne, look it up.
It's French.
Thank you, everybody.
We'll see you tomorrow at 2 o'clock for Charlie Shane.
Pacific time.
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