The Michael Knowles Show - Daily Wire Backstage: The Commies Are At It Again
Episode Date: July 29, 2021Will Simone Biles win a Nobel Peace prize for quitting on Americans during the Olympic finals? Will Biden continue to snap at female reporters until they let him sniff their hair? Does the White House... teaming up with Facebook on a censorship campaign against "misinformation" make anyone else feel like we're living in The Authoritarian Moment? Join this roundtable discussion featuring Ben Shapiro, Andrew Klavan, Michael Knowles, Matt Walsh, Candace Owens, and Daily Wire god-king Jeremy Boreing to find out! Get Ben Shapiro’s’ brand new book, The Authoritarian Moment: How the Left Weaponized America’s Institutions Against Dissent. OUT NOW! Order your copy at: dailywire.com/ben We want YOU to join the Daily Wire gang on a future episode of Backstage! We’re selecting one lucky winner (and a guest) to receive a FREE trip to Nashville to tour the Daily Wire studios, meet Ben Shapiro and the rest of the gang, and enjoy cigars and whiskey while watching Backstage live and in person. You may even get the chance to come on the air and ask your favorite Daily Wire host a question! Become a Daily Wire member today and use code BACKSTAGE at checkout to be automatically entered for a chance to win AND save 25% off your membership. Head over to dailywire.com/backstage to enter. Learn more about your ad choices. Visit podcastchoices.com/adchoices Learn more about your ad choices. Visit podcastchoices.com/adchoices
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Hey, Michael Knowles here. The latest episode of Daily Wire Backstage, The Commies are at it again,
is right around the corner. Don't miss me, Ben Shapiro, Andrew Claibin, Matt Walsh, Candice Owens,
and the God King, Jeremy Boring, as we discuss everything from Ben's new book and Simone Biles'
's Walk of Shame to the Dread Delta variant, the Delta Phi Beta Lambda Gamma Kappa, Sig Kai. Take a listen.
Welcome to the Daily Wire backstage. The commies are at it again. I'm Jeremy Bored.
known round here as it. Nobody actually knows me as the God King, but I say it every time with persistence.
We're glad you turned in. Will protesters in Cuba have to burn the American flag rather than march with
it if they want to get any mainstream media coverage? Will Joe Biden continue to snap at female
reporters until they let him sniff their hair? Does the White House teaming up with Facebook on a
censorship campaign against misinformation make anyone else feel like we're living in the
authoritarian moment? You know, guys, I'm just not feeling it.
What are you talking about?
I mean, physically I feel fine, but emotionally, I'm just, it's not fun for me anymore,
you know, and I'm just not in the right headspace.
And so I think I'm just going to, I've got to take some time for me.
Keep your seat, buddy.
You have an obligation to your team.
You have an obligation to your country.
But I am still a winner in my own heart, right?
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Wow.
Was that the whole show?
Were we done?
Yeah, the title, God King, is just an honorific they give you if you make it through all the
copy on the top of it.
Really, anyone can be a God King.
Michael, I have to say, that was one of the bravest things I've ever seen in my life.
Thank you very much for recognizing my courage and that I need to take care of myself.
It's just the heroism, the authenticity.
Yes.
I was blown away by it.
Kinso-O levels of authenticity.
Yeah.
Of course, we should talk about this story of Simone Biles, actually one of the great American athletes,
one of the great gymnasts of all time, perhaps the greatest gymnast of all time,
walking off of her team challenge at the Olympics because she had the sads.
And what are we to make of a culture in which?
such a thing as possible.
Matt.
I think it's important
for everyone to understand
here.
And I think I could
speak for most people in the room.
At least myself.
I wouldn't care.
I'll just speak for myself.
I wouldn't,
if she just walked off
and quit
and then apologized
afterwards and said,
hey, you know,
I really just felt like
I couldn't do it.
And then everyone reacted
with appropriate disappointment
and we all said,
oh, that's too bad.
Then I wouldn't be talking about
at all.
I wouldn't care.
I would just say,
well, yeah, people quit.
I understand why people quit.
It's relatable.
It's understandable.
We all quit things
when they're hard.
The problem is when,
the media tells us that we have to celebrate
this thing. Now we take
cowardice, and I'm not saying that she's
nothing but a coward, but this was a cowardly act.
It was a difficult thing. She didn't want to do, and she decided not to do it.
That's, you know,
that's something we've all done that before.
When you tell us we have to celebrate that. I almost didn't come on the show
tonight. When you tell us that, that is now, I think the New Yorker
called that, New York Times called that radical courage,
that's when it becomes absurd. And there's also a, there's also
a double standard here, too, because we know
you know, you cannot imagine Tom Brady
in the middle of the playoffs,
third quarter, they're down by a couple scores,
and he walks off the field,
goes to the sideline and says to the guy,
I hate coach, you know,
I'm just not in the right space right now.
I need to sit and collect my thoughts.
It would never happen.
And if it did happen,
I don't think there'd be anyone celebrating his courage for doing it.
Did you see what her teammate said?
So she came out and,
because one of the arguments was, well,
Simone Biles,
a woman who I had never heard of until last night.
By the way, that's how little...
That's on you.
I guess, I just.
I don't care about the Olympics.
I'm going to your point.
I wouldn't be talking about it except for this reaction.
And they said, well, Simone Biles let her teammates down.
And then the teammate came out and said, this is wonderful.
We support her.
We don't owe you a gold medal.
This is just about us.
And so it's true that the athletes don't owe us a gold medal.
But they do owe us trying.
They do owe us competing because it's not actually about Simone Biles.
I mean, I take it to be.
She's a wonderful athlete.
It is somewhat about the team, but it's really about the country.
We sent them to go represent us and go try to win some medals.
And so there is a sense of duty, I think, or there used to be.
I think that the big question, there's a sort of preliminary question, and there's the
secondary question.
The preliminary question is why she actually walked off.
So she actually walked off because she was suffering from what they're now calling aerial
disorientation, which apparently is the thing, where you get up in the air and you don't
know where you are, and it can be really dangerous.
Like, if you see what she does, I mean, if you actually seen her performance,
It's unbelievable. Michael hasn't, but I think everyone else on earth, literally.
It's just, I mean, it's incredible what the woman's capable of doing.
And she's been the best gymnast on earth for the last eight years.
If she was actually in a place where mentally she had lost her ability to orient her body,
and so she could really hurt herself.
And so she said, I'm not going to do this.
That is understandable, but it's still not heroic.
And this is the part, that gets to the secondary question.
So putting aside whether she's wrong or cowardly, like, that depends on what she actually,
the reason why she actually walked off.
They worked their way to this aerial disorientation argument.
That isn't the actual, that's not what was being said at the time.
It's not what she said.
Right.
She explained why she walked off.
We're all trying to interpret it.
What was the real reason?
She actually said it.
She said that she said she said she wasn't having fun.
She said she was under a lot of pressure.
She wanted to do it for herself, not anybody else.
Those are the reasons she gave.
That's fair enough.
But the real bigger question is the one that you're asking, which is why as a culture?
I care less about her as an individual and why she did.
what you did. Why is a culture, there were multiple op-eds, one in the Times, one in the Washington
Post, talking about how we have to redefine victory to include not participating. And what makes
the hero the hero of any story is overcoming the obstacle, not sitting down, right? Like,
Michael Jordan played famously a game in the playoffs where he had the flu. Right. He plays his
unbelievable game. He scores over 40 points. And this is known as the flu game. Right. And it was one
of Michael Jordan's kind of storied moments in his career. If he had sat down and said, listen,
I have the flu tonight. I can't play. Nobody would have been like,
wow, that's terrible. What a terrible person. He didn't play through the flu. But what made him
the hero is that he played through the flu, right, is that he played while he was sick. And the
move from, I did what I was supposed to do for my teammates, despite the obstacle, is the heroism,
to I've honored my own authentic feelings of what I ought to do. That is a society-wide problem,
right? And that's not relegated to sports. We've decided as a culture that we care more about
you honoring your own authenticity than we care about you fulfilling your obligations to others.
It's the purpose of what these people do. After all,
All they're doing is, like, flipping through the air.
And the reason you do that is to demonstrate excellence.
And to demonstrate excellence, you have to overcome the obstacles.
And I don't want to pick on her.
I'm with you on this.
I don't want to pick on her.
Maybe she felt she was in danger.
Maybe she couldn't pull it off.
There's no, it's not exactly a shame to say, I cannot do this.
It is a shame to hold that up to people as heroism.
In the same way, to send out a soccer team that kneels, that's the American soccer team that kneels.
Well, honestly, I was happy that they lost it this week.
Well, me too. I thought like a bunch of Swedish blondes beat these purple-headed, you know.
Donald Trump's never, Donald Trump's never said anything truer than America is glad that they lost.
Of course, we're glad that they lost because they don't represent us.
Why would I be happy that they win when they are choosing not to represent me?
There's a reason they're there. There's a reason. I'm so concerned.
The entire argument that we can have people at the Olympics who kneel or don't pay attention to the anthem, it's the equivalent of the Yankees.
signing somebody for $100 million, and they go out on the field.
I'm like, you know what, I hate the Yankees?
I'm just going to rip these stripes right off my shoulder.
Like, who in their right mind?
The owner wouldn't allow that to happen.
I'm so confused as to why we as a country
who sponsored these athletes to go to the Olympics
are supposed to be okay in celebrity.
I also find like this is just, it's kind of almost circular.
We started at, I guess, the women's movement
being like, we really just need to have women into these spaces.
Men have sports.
We need to have a women's sports team.
Men have, you know, a gymnast team.
We need to have women, gymnastics team.
We can do what men can do.
And then it just seems to be over and over again.
it's the women that are throwing down the towel and saying,
this is too much pressure, I can't do this.
You've got like Naomi Osaka, you've got Simone Biles walking away.
I just haven't seen a guy do this and say,
I just can't do this because I'm under emotional pressure.
So, you know, this might be an argument for trans women in the Olympics.
I don't know.
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Well, did you see actually on that point, and it kind of ties in with the excellence point that you made, Drew?
The head of the Olympics broadcasting agency said, this year, unlike years in the past,
we are not going to focus the camera angles on the women's bodies, because they,
That's wrong. We shouldn't be looking at the women's bodies. I thought, you know, these are the most
beautiful, exquisitely sculpted people, the men and the women, for that matter, like on earth.
We send them all there. Like 0% body fat. This goes back to ancient Greece. These people are
physical specimens, and we're not allowed to marvel at that anymore. Actually, that level of
excellence. I actually want to pick up on this idea of marveling, because I think that the entire,
I said this about the Victoria's Secret models when they remove the angels from the camera.
And everyone was like, well, this is good because these incredibly physically fit, you know, genetically
unbelievable specimens of humanity shouldn't be models.
And I thought, well, no, that's what a model is.
A model.
When we call someone a model, it's not the same.
The word doesn't mean the same thing as when we say that you have a model train.
A model train is a miniature replica of something much larger.
When we use the word model for someone who is a fashion model, we're actually saying that they are
the ideal form.
It's aspirational.
It's aspirational. And athletes are aspirational. We watch athletes because we want, not because I can't do what they do. It's the people on Twitter like, how dare you say that she did the wrong thing? You could never do half of what she does. Of course, I can't do half of what she does. The reason that we send people up to do these things and to represent our country by doing them is because we aspire to. It's not that I want to be Tom Brady. I don't want to, I don't care about football enough to be Tom Brady. I don't have any of the innate capabilities of Tom Brady. I don't have the discipline of Tom Brady. But in some way when I,
engage with the sport. Tom Brady represents an idealized form of what humans can achieve.
And that is part, that's part of his job. They do what they do so that we can. And that kind of
connects with what Ben is saying. So saying it's actually a larger discussion about what we're doing
in society right now. So now they're trying to edit everybody and say, actually, we shouldn't
aspire towards victory. We should aspire towards walking away and just throwing the talent.
That's now something that we should be, you know, should be aspirational in society. And then
you take a look at what's going on at the same time in the school system. You know, I talked about
it on my show, but, you know, Bill Gates is funding an initiative called equitable math, right?
Because they've determined that getting the right answer in math is racist, right? I'm not kidding.
It's a form of white supremacy to ask kids to get the right answer in math. I was never racist
in math class. So it's okay. I was never racist in high class either. But, you know, so they said
instead, what we need to do in the classroom is we need to have children that get the correct
amount of points, even though their answer is wrong because they tried. And this is really the
same thing that's happening here. You're literally just saying it's no longer enough to be good.
or to be great, doing things absolutely wrong, walking away.
That's now, that's now...
You don't even have to try.
Yeah, you don't have to try.
There's something so self-serving about this because, yeah, if we criticize Simone Biles,
suddenly we're the bad guys, but really, and we're being selfish or something because we
want her to put her body at risk.
No, no, we, as you say, this is aspirational.
These are great people, and we want to see them do great things.
For them to quit in the middle is disappointing.
But the people who say, oh, no, quitting is actually correct.
because you're living your truth. And as long as you're, you know, maintaining your own
psychological health, it's actually a courageous thing to do. That's just another way of them saying,
well, I'm courageous also because anyone can do that. I mean, anybody... Anyone cannot participate.
Right, exactly. It's bravery is rare. That's why we look up to it. When something is, it is very,
very difficult to be an Olympic gymnast. I fully understand it. And the pressure that Simone Biles is
under as the greatest. And everyone is expecting greatness from you all the time. To even try to live up
to that is incredibly difficult.
and most people can't do it. That's why we admire it. But saying this is difficult,
I don't want to do it. Anyone can do that. And so if that's courageous, if I'm saying that's
courageous, what I'm saying is, well, I get to be courageous to it. It's also the misapplication
of compassion, which I feel is a really damaging thing for the society as a whole. Of course I feel
compassion for a guy who feels like he's a woman inside. I'm compassionate for the suffering
that they feel. But that doesn't make him a woman. And it doesn't mean that this is a heroic act.
You know, you can actually feel somebody else's pain without trying to erase that pain by L.
I actually do object to our friend Charlie Kirk.
And listen, obviously, we all admire and are friendly with Charlie.
I think that he went overboard when he said something along the lines of that she's a sociopath for what she did.
She's not a sociopath for what she did.
She's narcissistic, though, not for what she did, but because of her justification of what she did.
That is a narcissistic.
Well, yeah, and I want to get to talk about narcissism because it's funny because they started to sort of thread Naomi Osaka.
At the same time they were trending, Naomi Osaka, Simon Simone Biles, is that correct?
Yes.
And Megan Markle.
And they said this year, black women are saying they've had enough.
And again, talking about the irony here.
Same argument with the feminist, right?
So it's like you have the group of black people that believe we're just not allowed into these spaces, right?
There's just institutional racism everywhere.
And then when you get into these spaces, you say I quit.
Right? So it's just like, I just don't understand where this goal post is going, right? So Megan Markle, they've been historically racist. She married to the family. I quit, right?
Simone Biles, oh, it's historical racism. There's no black. I quit. It's like, so what is the actual goal? Is I just, I don't know where we're going. And maybe that is the point. It's just chaos.
Well, it's this radical kind of subjectivism, right?
Because this is actually what ties in the math and the physical bodies and everything.
It's this full-on assault on standards where when the friend who's on the Olympic team says,
well, we're winners in our hearts.
I think, well, that's great.
But we want you to be winners in reality, actually.
But TV prefer.
You know, if you now say that there is a standard of physical excellence or right or wrong or true or false or good or bad,
then math is racist and Victoria's Secret is racist.
Now you're seeing just this total inversion where that which is sort of,
false and wrong and ugly, that's exalted as the highest good. Is that an actual quote? Winners in our
heart. Did someone say that? Yeah, yeah, this member of the Olympic team. Yeah. She tweeted it out.
Yeah, I think earlier, earlier this week on my podcast, I was talking about how one of that we,
we have an empathy crisis in this country, but the crisis isn't lack of empathy. It's that we have two
very different versions of what empathy constitutes. On the one hand, you have people generally on
the right who believe that what empathy is, is understanding that other people are individual
human beings with the capacity to reason and come to conclusions. And so if they come to a conclusion that
is different from your own. You still have to respect the fact they came to a conclusion
different from your own. But as a reasonable person, you can assess whether that conclusion is
right or wrong and you can hold them to a particular standard. So you understand that the other
person is a person, but they're still held to that particular standard. It's not unempathetic
to hold that person to the standard. It's actually more empathetic because you expect them to be a rational
human being. And then there's the standard of the left, which is that empathy means that whatever
is the subjective feeling that somebody has inside, all of society is supposed to conform to that,
all of policy is supposed to conform to that. And that creates a really asymmetrical politics.
Because if you're on the left and you conflate policy with empathy, then what this means is that
if you oppose my policy, you are non-empathetic by definition. You're a bad person by definition.
Whereas people on the right, we understand that policy is completely not connected with empathy, right?
It has nothing to do with empathy in the sense that the left is talking about it.
And so you could disagree with me on policy and still be an empathetic person. The left just doesn't
accept that. I think that this goes to something. You're saying it in a sort of glibb-b-bony way,
But there is a feminine component to this, that we live in a society now that has taken everything feminine, good and bad, and elevated it to virtue.
And everything that's masculine, good and bad, and denigrated it to sin.
And so the effect of this is that you have negative femininity being treated good and positive masculinity being treated as bad.
I'm not saying that a woman's rights should be limited in any way.
I'm saying something descriptive here, not proscriptive to borrow from Ben.
It is a simple fact that for the vast majority of human history, women have been primarily concerned with building the home.
And building the home requires huge amounts of empathy because you're working with the most flawed people, children, and you're helping to rear them and make adults out of them.
Men historically have been not primarily concerned with building the home.
They've been concerned with building the home for the home, which is the society.
And for that reason, in societies, we see the best and worst of mass.
masculine virtue. Horrible masculinity at its worst is very barbarian. You see this in pre-civilizational
societies. You see it in certain third world societies or Middle Eastern societies. But there are
positive aspects of masculinity, which were cultivated largely in Western society, imperfectly,
but over time, where you have concepts like justice, not social justice, but justice.
Justice is not empathetic. You don't want to raise your kids, justice.
first. You have to raise your kids
empathy first, but you have to order your
society justice first. And we're at this
place now where instead of having a natural
tension between those two things, we've just
completely eliminated one of them as evil.
And so it is women primarily
It's an acknowledgement. Yeah, it's an acknowledgment of our biological
presupposition. And that's the irony. And that's why I laugh
at this stuff, because every time you see it, it's a woman.
It is Naomi Asaka. It is Simone Biles. And you look at them and you just go,
you are acknowledging that women are not
the same under pressure as men. And
And it's funny, but it's, it is what it is.
I laugh at it and I say, okay, you know, I'm happy.
You want to go home.
I don't mind.
I'm with you.
I think it's totally fine, acceptable.
They are under a lot of pressure.
There's no requirement for them to have to perform.
But I do have, I think it's very annoying when afterwards they come to us.
And it's like, well, this person is a hero.
Anyways, I won in our, we won in our hearts said no male team ever.
You know, this also goes back to what Michael is saying about these bodies.
I would actually go further than what you're saying
because I think the female body
is at the center of all human relationship.
I mean, the attraction to the female body.
Like everybody, I only watch women's sports
for the skimpy outfits.
I believe, I believe, I mean, like everyone on earth, right?
I believe they should be able to choose
not to wear those skimpy outfits
while they're doing the thing that I won't be watching.
But still, I think that the truth is the truth.
And this attraction that we feel to women's bodies
It's part of our humanity.
We're embodied creatures.
We're here to reproduce.
I actually said this on Twitter this week.
Someone was angry about some man objectifying some woman.
And I said, you know, the fact that men find women attractive is not bad.
It's not a sin.
The promulgation of our entire species depends on men finding women attractive.
To your point, that is baked in to who we are biologically.
I'm not suggesting that we are only the sum of our biology.
I'm not suggesting that every masculine trait is positive, nor am I suggesting every feminine trait is negative.
But I am saying that unless we can have a conversation about how you balance those things in a modern world,
you're only going to end up with the worst things presenting.
You can't ever override biology.
I just want to object.
Ultimately, it's going to be negative masculinity that prevails because as the society, as good men are weakened, bad men are going to fill that vacuum.
I watch the WNBA because I want to see if one of them can dunk for the first time.
That's enough. That's enough. I have to do an ad, and there's no way to segue.
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So I want to talk a little bit about the craziness happening in the country right now around COVID.
You know, one of the things I've tried to discipline myself about lately is not to blame any of the effects of the lockdowns on COVID.
You find yourself doing it all the time.
You'll say, well, unemployment is at record levels because of COVID.
Unemployment is not at record levels because of COVID.
Unemployment is at record levels because of the unbelievable global overreaction of the elite and people in power to the pandemic.
I'm not saying there's not a pandemic.
I'm not saying that the pandemic hasn't been deadly.
I'm not saying that no action should have taken place in regard to the pandemic.
I'm saying the greatest act of mass hysteria and overreach by governments on a global scale
in human history is what we've just lived through. And now, as we're coming out the other side,
as the vaccines have been widely dispersed, certainly dispersed enough such that everyone in this country
who wants a vaccine has had the opportunity to have the vaccine, at this very moment,
our federal government and certain state and local governments are considering forcing you to mask again
so that you can protect people who choose not to get the vaccine, which is their God-given right.
So some of them are requiring you now to get vaccinated.
The Veterans Affairs Office today announced that they're going to require vaccinations from federal workers,
which, you know, if it were happening in reverse, you would say that it was a backhanded
attempt to drive the opposition party out of what few positions they have left in the federal
government.
And we're supposed to take all of that lying down.
In fact, social media has an entire.
basically list of things that we can and cannot say on this show if we don't want to lose
our ability to speak on social media in the future. And you may say, well, just say it anyway,
but we can't sacrifice our voice on this and other important issues just to be reckless
and cavalier about the things that we say. But you should know, we can't raise any question
as to whether or not vaccines, the efficacy of vaccines. You can't raise any questions about the
efficacy of masks. You can't raise any questions about the danger, the threat of COVID to small
children unless you are incredibly precise and say not that COVID does not appear to have a high
fatality rate among children under 12. Like even that, they're probably going to flag us and then
decide it was okay. Oh, he was very technically correct. And all of this goes to the central question,
is it the right of governments to combat misinformation simply because they have determined
that that misinformation is creating some sort of nuisance to public safety?
I think you're being way too kind that that's why they're doing it.
The Biden administration has made it very clear that the people they blame for misinformation
are conservatives and Fox News.
And the thing is, that's literally untrue.
The reason conservatives are not listening to the government and listening to the media
about the vaccinations is because the media has lied about them for the past 10 years.
It has told them Donald Trump was a Russian spy.
It's told them Brett Kavanaugh was a racist.
And then, oh, by the way, you should do this.
And people think, like, why should we trust?
By the way, they're just want to add on the vaccines.
Yeah.
Yeah.
I want to point out that even that is a lie because the least people that are likely to get the vaccines are black Americans.
So even the lie that it's the conservatives aren't getting the vaccines.
But it's black Americans in red states.
Black, yeah.
And also, black Americans are.
Also, blue Americans in blue cities.
Okay, 40% of all New York City teachers are not vaccinated.
Right.
The CDC.
Employees.
LA County.
Last I checked L.A. County, a minority of the residents of L.
County are vaccinated at this point. There's not like, there are like five Trump voters left in
LA County since I took my family and my company out of LA County, right? We all left. We were all
the Republican voters in LA County. The, the stats, the move that is just mind-boggling to me,
beyond the VA, mandating vaccines. And I think, to be honest, I think that there's a case that
if you work in a hospital and you're working with uniquely vulnerable people who can't get
the vaccine, the notion that if you work in a nursing home, for example, for a living,
that you have to get a vaccine to work in a nursing home,
that's a different story.
There's no question that certain career choices that you make come with certain...
Right.
But if you're working for MTA or something in New York, the notion that they can fire you if you don't get a vaccine is absurd.
And the one that's utterly mind-boggling, astonishing to me, as the pro-vax guy on the right, right?
I love the vaccines.
I think the vaccines are great.
I got the vaccine.
My wife got the vaccine.
My parents got the vaccine.
We got it literally the first day that we could.
I think they're a...
I think they're a miracle.
I think that if you look at the disconnect between the case rate and the death rate,
in countries that have wide levels of vaccination. It is unbelievable how they've been disconnected.
I mean, like, we are on, we are averaging in this country on seven-day average 290 deaths a day.
We are up at 3,000, 4,000 deaths a day back in the early part of the year. That is largely because of the
vaccinations and as well as the natural immunity that's been produced by widespread of the actual
COVID. Okay, as the pro-vax guy, the notion that we are, that we the vaccinated are supposed
to mask up is so unruited in anything remotely approaching the science.
that it's insane. It is, it makes me want to punch a wall. It is, it is beyond crazy.
I don't know why the pro-VACs people thought that getting the vaccine was going to give
your freedom back. That was a part that like, that was always the trap. I was like,
everyone really thinks like, two weeks or so, I mean, just like, how far are we going to go?
No, but the difference is okay. So for me, and for my parents, so let me think my parents,
my parents are 65. I didn't want them walking around unprotected with COVID. Once they got the
vaccine, then forget about everything else. Now I said to them, it's,
is much safer for you to walk around unmasked, which it is. It's much safer for them to walk around
unmasked, because even if they were to be exposed to COVID, their chances of actually being hospitalized
from COVID are vanishingly small. I read the CM CDC that's saying the vaccinated need to mask up
now reports. There have been 161 million Americans who have been vaccinated, right, totally vaccinated,
which by the way is an unbelievable thing. We vaccinated half the country with a non-FDA-approved
vaccine, right? We're still operating under FDA. This is also mind-boggling. We're operating
under FDA, it shows the FDA is a pile of garbage. FDA emergency authorization, but you are mandated
to get the vaccine before full authorization of the vaccine. Okay, so what are you going to suck it back
out of my arm if you don't get the full authorization? So, but put that aside, 161 million people
in the United States have been fully vaccinated. There have been a grand total, according to the CDC,
of less than 6,000 hospitalizations among the vaccinated in the United States, which means that
your chances of being hospitalized after being vaccinated in the United States are won in 27,223.
The statistics literally don't matter. Why did you think that if you did everything the government said you were going to get your freedoms back? That's my question. Well, I mean. But here's the thing. It's the government. But there came a point, and this is the thing that's happening. I didn't think that the left was going to ever give the freedoms back. But I did think that more Americans were going to take their freedoms back. And this has been fun. It's been, Jeremy and I have had this kind of conversation many times since the beginning of the pandemic. Jeremy was very anti-everything at the very beginning. But he also thought that everybody was going to be very robust in their defense of their individual freedoms.
I was much more like, let's hold off, let's see how this thing goes.
I was much more cautious with regard to the pandemic.
But I also thought that a lot more people were going to be like me.
Like they're going to be more cautious.
But even I am just bewildered and befuddled by the fact that so many Americans are going along with this absolute utter, unbelievable bullshit.
It's unbelievable to me.
I'll say to toot my own horn, because with a name like God King, it was Liz Wheeler and I from day one.
It was pretty close.
A couple of weeks after me, maybe like two months after me.
I was day freaking one on my Twitter feed.
Like, come on guys.
Oh, I was too.
Come on.
I mean, it's just.
And my whole, my entire point was what the government takes, it is loath to ever give that.
Of course.
But I will say, where I was wrong, I think I was right about the nature of government.
I was wrong about the nature of the citizenry.
I genuinely thought, you know, people will take this for weeks.
And then as the weeks turned into months, I thought,
Well, people are really afraid. Maybe another month or two people are going to put up with this.
But Americans, we're a feisty bunch, we're a rebellious bunch, we're a self-determining bunch.
I'm shocked at the level of people. I mean, we're 18 months into this thing or something.
But do you know what we're missing? The thing that is missing from this conversation is we're thinking of it.
Okay, there's their big government pushing this on one hand and the citizens either going along with or fighting back on the other.
But it's not just big government. We've said it ourselves tonight. It's the media. It's not just the media.
It's the media. It's big tech. It's the universities.
the corporations. It's the blob. It's the liberal establishment. Working in concert, by the way,
you've got now the Biden administration admitting, for all intents and purposes, that Big Tech is acting as a proxy
and enforcement weighing for the government. So it's, you know, just to focus all of our ire on the
government, obviously, I'm extremely irritated at them, but it's the NGOs. It's just every.
But it's also, it's not just, I think your point is correct. We can talk about government. We can talk
about media. We can talk about all these big institutions, but it's also, there's something deeply
sick within the American population. And that's a, that is a frightening thing to confront. It's very
depressing. And there's, there's no quick answer to it. But I think part of it, at a deep level,
I think part of what's happened here and why people haven't been robust in the defense of their
liberties is that for a lot of Americans, this was a confrontation with mortality, that they've just
never, I think a lot of Americans had lived, because we live very comfortable lives,
more comfortable lives than anyone had ever lived in the history of mankind, like an unprecedented
level of comfort and luxury and freedom up until now. And this was this moment where for the
first time, lots of people had to confront the fact that they're going to die and that death
is lurking around the corner. And I actually think that there are millions of people who had never
actually reflected on that fact. And now they cannot, they can't handle the reality.
Any level of risk they cannot hang.
It's a very peculiar thing, and I've said this on the show before,
that essentially after the Second World War,
the West defeated war, disease, poverty, and death.
We live these lives where it's not that there is no poverty.
It's not that there is no disease.
It's not that there is no war or that there is no death.
It's that the vast majority of us very rarely, if ever, encounter those things.
And the result of that is that for the first time in history,
if you happen to be one of the people who did encounter one of those things,
it becomes very defining for you because it's isolating because there's no one with whom you can share that experience.
And so, you know, I mean, we talk about how the forever war, neocons just won a forever war in Afghanistan 20 years.
I mean, you know the British had a war called the 100 years war.
Like, war was forever until the middle of the 20th century.
There were fighting seasons.
And every fighting season, every fighting age man, that's where these words come from.
Fighting season, fighting age man, every fighting age man during the fighting season would go off to war.
When that happened, you saw horrible atrocities. You saw terrible things, just like modern combat
soldiers do. But when you came home and you were haunted by those things, you weren't, you hadn't
been unique out of the common human experience. Your neighbor had gone through those things.
Your father had gone through those things. Your grandfather had gone through those things.
And so you had some context to understand your experience. Similarly, you know, if you lose a child
in this day and age, obviously, I can't fathom anything harder than losing.
a child is almost unimaginable. And yet, if you lived before the 20th century, every single person
lost a child. And so if you lost a child, you weren't unique out of the human experience.
Your mother had lost a child and your neighbor had lost a child. So all these things that we
experience now confronting our mortality, PTSD, loss of, we see, and so disease is the other
one. Most of us have not really encountered disease. And when we do, we put ribbons on our door.
We're basically made heroes because we're the one in anybody who's actually faced,
especially if you're below a certain age, the one of anybody who ever faces a disease,
you have no context to put that in.
Now comes a disease, not in the scheme of things, all that fatal a disease,
although obviously compared to the...
Compared to the mivonic plague.
It's not particularly fatal.
Along comes this disease, and it does suddenly affect all of us for the first time again,
and none of us are prepared for it.
We're not prepared for it experientially.
we're not prepared for it as a community.
We're not prepared for it spiritually,
which is, I think, a big part of what you're driving it here.
We have absolutely no way to contextualize the thing that we're experiencing.
And, you know, when you say disease, it's not just disease, it's pandemics.
Just like there was a fighting season, pandemics swept through all the time.
And you're absolutely.
It's cholera season.
The cholera season and the plague.
I mean, you forget that like Shakespeare wrote Hamlet during the plague.
There were always plagues.
And the plagues, some of those plagues wiped out like a third of,
the world and and it was it was just what happened to people and that has stopped it has
complete it's a miracle it's a wonderful wonderful thing but of course it has the the the side
effect of making people afraid i also think to go back to the media for one second the media
are such damned liars about this it is unbelievable and they lie with stats and people have no
familiarity with how statistics work and so they'll say things like wow the number of deaths is
up like 40 percent oh you mean it went from like two to 2.2 right that's that that's that's that's
really what there was a clip the other night of Allison Camerata and Victor Blackwell trying to
browbeat a mayor outside of St. Louis. And they were saying to him, you're not forcing your
citizens to mask up. You should be forcing your citizens to mask up because people are dying
in St. Louis County. So I had the temerity to actually look how many people are dying in St. Louis County.
St. Louis County is a county of about 996,000 people. Their daily rolling average of
deaths from COVID is one. Yeah. We're still missing also some of the political aspect here,
which is, yeah, the media probably at the lead of it. But when we say it's an overreact,
by the ruling class, it's an overreaction from the perspective of our way of life and our rights.
It's not an overreaction from them because what this lockdown has resulted in is a massive, historic
transfer of wealth and power, especially the middle class, but lower classes too, to a very
small handful of extremely wealthy billionaire oligarchs in Silicon Valley.
Who own newspapers?
Who own newspapers, Amazon, and obviously to the government.
Yeah, that's why I thought it was so ironic and frustrating when,
Jeff Bezos goes into space,
which is a different topic.
I thought that was great.
I think it's great to have billionaires going into space.
If they're going to build stuff,
rather than building like a mansion for their poodle or whatever,
why not do the spaceship?
But anyway, yeah, Jeff Bezos goes to space.
You got all these leftists that are complaining about this rich guy,
and he's so evil, and Amazon is evil.
Well, not only do they all use Amazon, of course,
and like almost every adult in the country is an Amazon Prime member, literally.
But Amazon was enriched by these,
lockdown policies to an extreme degree. And a lot of these same people supported those policies,
which, as you say, is this thing that transferred wealth over to these corporations. They are the first
people. These corporations are the first one to really hit hard on that fear mechanism. They want to
keep you fearful. You go into Whole Foods. Jeff Bezos owns that. You go on to Amazon.com.
We're all on this together. All this messaging, we're all in this together. When you look at the
corporations that are controlling that messaging who want to keep this pandemic going on forever,
they are the ones that are simultaneously lining their pockets. And people don't need to think through
that. So I always follow money, you know, because to me there's always going to be a
financial incentive. And, you know, you see Bill Gates popping up everywhere. I mean, just recently, before it was announced a couple of days ago about the PCR tests.
CDC issued some, I'm sure you saw that updated guidance about the PCR test and saying they're no longer, you know, efficient. They pulled back.
They're not efficient in terms of determining the differences between COVID and other viruses, which the conspiracy theory said for a very long time, but surprise, surprise, surprise, took them this long.
But prior to them making that announcement, we see that Bill Gates is invested in a new, you know, technology to determine.
COVID. So it's just like how much they know? When are they knowing this stuff? When are we getting
this information? It seems like we're getting the information sort of at the end of everything.
And I don't trust the government, but I do want to say in defense to the American people, because
I actually don't think the reason that there's, you don't see these uprising as much,
because you look overseas, obviously in Europe, you've got the uprisings happening every day
in France. You have the uprising happening in England happening in Greece. And these people
have had enough of lockdowns. But it's also the structure of our government that this allows
that for better or for worse. What I mean by that is state rights, right? There's no reason
people in Florida, and recent people in Tennessee to get up and start, because we're not living
in New York. And those people that are living in New York are the neurotic types that are okay
with these lockdowns. So that's part of the reason that you're not seeing the uprightings is people that
are most likely to say, hey, I want my freedom back, are actually living in free states.
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policy genius.com. True. Can I just speak into something that Knowles was talking about,
which is this frightening conglomeration. Although this is the second time that you've affirmed
something that North is talking about. This is way too many. I'm going to try and make it intelligent.
The conglomeration of powers that is now, you know, the corporations, the government, the media,
the academy.
Imagine for a moment
if the churches
has stood up
against the lockdowns.
If they had said
what John MacArthur
at Grace Church in California
said, he said,
I'm not here to protect
people from the flu.
I'm here to protect people
from eternal damnation.
Because of what you're talking about,
because of the way
that death and the four horsemen
of the apocalypse
have sort of been pushed
back into the background,
we have lost that sense
of immediacy
that used to be represented
by the Magdalene
with her skull
that your sins are about to be
answered for soon.
And you're not in the distant future, but soon.
And so the churches have lost their faith.
I believe the churches have lost their faith in actually in the supernatural in the thing
that they're supposed to be preaching.
So there is no, there used to be a state and the church.
That used to be the two people who argued over who had the power.
Two stories.
Now the church is basically folded.
I mean, there's very, very few churches, incredibly few churches that said, you don't
have the right to shut down churches.
Constitutionally, you do not have the right.
And because they didn't do that, there's in the sense like,
why shouldn't why should we rebel? What what side are we on if we rebel?
I do want to ask a question just, I don't last it to anybody, but maybe Ben, I actually want to hear.
What is your opinion on people who are naturally immune, I mean, who naturally have the antibodies?
Like, where is that in the discussion?
It is, again, an insane failure of the public health establishment not to even talk about this.
There are some good studies out of Israel that suggest that not only is natural immunity a result of infection, but also that natural immunity may be more durable.
That's what the studies from Israel are suggesting.
And when we make these certain immunity.
that too. Yes. I mean, when you make these herd immunity, you know, sort of arguments over what
percentage of the population is vaccinated, it would be remiss not to actually say how many people,
I mean, how do we not even have that stat? How do we not even have the status to how many people
who are not vaccinated already got COVID and were diagnosed with COVID?
What happened to the ticker on CNN that was counting up infections?
Right. Basically, by now, everybody should have had COVID and yet they're telling us that doesn't
matter. Everyone has to get the vaccine. And it's also an easy way for the media to elide one
of the one reason why a lot of people are not getting the vaccine.
If you talk to people who are not getting the vaccine, there are a bunch of reasons why people aren't getting the vaccine.
Some range from the completely unreasonable to the somewhat reasonable.
And the somewhat reasonable is I had COVID three months ago.
I was diagnosed with COVID.
And I have a natural immunity now, so I don't need the vaccine.
I have not heard any scientists really speak to.
Does the vaccine make things stronger?
I had chicken pox when I was a kid.
I wouldn't just go get the chicken pox vaccine for no reason.
He's got chicken pox parties when people were kids.
That's what we had.
But I think you're missing an important aspect of this, which is that the vaccine mandates are not about
public health. At this point, vaccine mandate is about making you bend the knee.
It's the imposition. Yes. You must. You must acknowledge the power of the ruling class.
You must acknowledge the authority of the media, the authority. Oh, yeah. Now, this is why
they're talking about expanding testing into small children for whether we should use the vaccine
or not. Okay, to date. Again, I will quote the CDC statistics because we wait, we can't get blacklisted
for quoting the CDC apparently, the all-knowing, all-powerful CDC. So I'm only going to quote CDC stats
tonight. According to the CDC, grand total number of children under the age of 18 who have died of
COVID is 337. A huge number of those kids had pre-existing conditions, right? It had real
comorbidity. Locemia. Right. The number of people in the United States, according to the Census Bureau,
under the age of 18, is somewhere between 73 and 75 million people. Yeah. Okay, the number of people
who have died in the same period, in the same age group from pneumonia is 810, according to the CDC.
So this idea that we have to vaccinate every single three-year-olds or that all the three-year-olds
have to mask up to protect their teachers.
If the teacher wants to get the vaccine, get the vaccine.
40% of New York City teachers are not vaccinated.
The reason they're not vaccinated is because a lot of them don't want to go back to the classroom,
frankly, and they have no attention.
There's the gaslighting because we've expanded the definition of what it means to be anti-vax.
It used to mean that you just don't believe in vaccines and don't want to touch vaccines.
Do you think they're all bad, right?
And now it's included people who have gotten the vaccine, had a bad reaction and spoke about it.
Eric Clapton is now in the anti-vaccine category going, okay, that's weird.
It also includes people that are just being honest with you about what's going on.
And there's been this tremendous gaslighting.
This is where I really have a problem, and I agree with you that, this is not actually about public health.
People have listened to exactly what the government told them to do.
They have locked down their businesses.
They have stayed at home.
They got in line.
They got the vaccine.
And there are people that have talked about the reactions afterwards.
Myocarditis, obviously, is now listed.
But that was after we knew about the myocarditis.
If you were just listening to people telling their stories who were getting banned and censored,
moms who did the right thing, took their kids to the doctor and said,
since then, my kid has had heart inflammation.
I knew four months before the CDC decided to acknowledge it.
So that is what makes people even more uncomfortable with what's going on.
It's that you are purposefully, you know, censoring,
some people to be quiet and hushing them up,
rather than having an honest discussion.
If they were honest and said, like we are with everything, by the way,
no matter we could put Tylenol on this table,
somebody could have a bad reaction.
Tylenol is generally a good drug, you know?
There's a list of warnings at the end of drug.
Every drug, right?
There's going to be a few people who are not going to have a good reaction to Tylenol,
people who are allergic to everything you take.
You need an apple.
People are going to be allergic to it, right?
Apples are good to eat.
I'm not going to say don't need an apple.
But they're pretending that this vaccine,
It is impossible.
You are crazy.
And this mass gas sliding is actually turning people who are traditionally very pro-vaks into believing that there is some evil conspiracy here.
The idea that you have, this whole idea that you have to have one opinion about what's your opinion on vaccines?
Are you pro or anti-I?
I've always found that to be absurd even before COVID, where people would ask you, are you pro or anti-vaccine?
I mean, it doesn't it, it depends on the vaccine.
It depends on the situation.
Depends on who we're talking about.
It depends on a lot of things.
It should be the same thing with the COVID vaccine.
And, you know, Rand Paul is one who I believe didn't get the vaccine because he had prior infection.
And that seems like you don't have to have any ideological, philosophical opinion about vaccines to just make that reasonable judgment.
This is just one of the, to your points, one of the, one of the several things about COVID that we just don't talk about.
It all flows from this crazy term settled science.
Well, this is the.
Nonsense.
Which doesn't exist.
In my book, the authoritarian moment, I talk about the conflation of the science TM trademark.
You know, the science is an institution with the actual scientific.
process. And one of the things that you'll notice, and this is really driving me up a wall,
if you like me, would like to see more people who are in vulnerable positions get vaccinated,
right? I say this all the time. I'd like to see, like there's a guy I was talking with today,
63 years old, didn't get the vaccine. I said to him, you probably should. He said, well,
I'm waiting a year to see what happens. I said, do you have like a rationale for that?
And you really should, at the very least, go talk to your doctor about getting the vaccine
and then get the vaccine. You're in the vulnerable category. The way that you convince people,
if you actually want to take them seriously, is you say, okay, here are the statistics that we know about adverse reactions to the vaccine.
Here are the statistics we know about adverse reactions to COVID.
There's chances of getting an adverse reaction from COVID are this percentage higher than your chances of getting an adverse reaction from the vaccines.
That is the way that you would convince somebody.
But no one in the media wants to do that.
And the reason they don't want to do that is because they don't actually care whether you get vaccinated.
They care about yelling at you.
Or also, if you do it, like Tucker, you then get thrown and castigated and called a conspiracy theorist and anti-vaccine.
You read actual bears data.
You can spite on.
You can spite on.
And they're making the frogs game.
And they're true.
By the way, he was right about that.
You know, the historical component of this, too, is something that I think is probably the
most scary aspect of it.
Because what we're talking about is big data, big science, big information.
And in the 19th century, we had the Industrial Revolution.
In the 20th century, we had the managerial revolution.
And in the 21st century, what if we had the information revolution?
Everything is becoming smart.
Your refrigerator is smart.
Everyone's spying on you.
I just read an ad about how everyone's buying on you.
There's a great new book out, The Age of Surveillance Capitalism.
I'm not sure if you guys have read it yet by Shoshana Zuboff,
really good book about how these big data companies working with,
often working with the government,
are gaining a huge amount of power and a huge amount of influence.
So while we're talking about the blob and the Fauci's and all of these people
taking a lot of political control and money during this,
there's a major historical shift in the way that the economy works.
And so I think we're going to continue to idolize science and data.
And the people who have benefited most from this lockdown in terms of power and money are the people who are monetizing.
Listen, I think that we all have a great science remains by polling data, the one institution in American life that people trust.
Why?
Well, because science has produced unbelievable goods for the human race over the course of the last couple of centuries.
Undeniable.
Undeniable, right, uncontroversial human goods.
But because it is such a powerful institution, because it has so much trust, the left has now infused these institutions with its own politics and skewerely.
away from the science. They've decided that science is actually just a tool to be wielded like
everything else in American society. And therefore, if we have to ignore the stats,
and if we won't, we won't even tell you the stats, even if it makes the case for what we're
talking about, because it's more important that we stake a position here, a moral position.
And it's important that you not take that moral position. In fact, we will avoid making
a convincing case to you. Instead, we will say that you are an idiot denier who's only doing this
because you watch Tucker Carlson. And ignorant because you don't have the data that they have.
that you refused to give us.
Did you see Jen Saki yesterday being asked about the data to support the mask,
the mask mandate on the vaccinated?
She was asked about it.
She didn't cite a single stat.
She didn't cite a single fact.
She just said, the scientific institutions tell us that this is what's important.
Well, I'm sorry.
I wasn't aware that there was a person called the scientific institutions who was touched by the hand of God.
But this is exactly how Fauci talks, too.
If you question Fauci, you're questioning the science.
Well, then was I questioning the science when Fauci was pro- or anti-mast?
Was I questioning the science or Fauci was pro-war anti-school?
This is the way.
So this is my problem with science, and of course, science, unbelievable, created modernity
and all the miracles that we have.
We're created utilizing the scientific method.
My problem with people putting trust in science, but I don't like Young Earth creationism.
That's a thing in, particularly in evangelical Christianity, is where you look for scientific
evidence that the Earth is precisely this age or that age, 6,000 or 5,000 or 18,000.
I mean, there's a few different numbers, but, you know, and they'll measure the
pressure from oil wells. And they're always coming to you and saying, well, now we've got
proof of something that we believed going in. And I always say, well, here's the problem with doing that.
The problem of doing that is the science will change. And so if you have built your justification
for what you believe in faith on something that you believe has been proven by science,
what's going to happen to your faith when the science changes, it will change. The one thing
that will absolutely happen every single time is the science will change. That's not a
law in science. That's the good thing about science. That's the honest part of science. You're saying
that there should always be a debate. And if there was more of a debate and people talking about what's
going on, you know, different reactions that they're having, that I would be much more inclined to say,
you know what, okay, at least I know the discussion is honest and I'm more inclined to go and trust
this vaccine with the knowledge that I have. But there is no debate. And again, in my personal
opinion, I think that what we are going to see because of the dishonesty, because of the changing,
because of the censorship, censoring doctors off of YouTube who are talking about what they're seeing
in the emergency room saying only doctor that can speak is Dr. Fauci.
I think it's actually going to create an underbelly of people that are explicitly anti-vax
because they're going to now correlate this experience with every vaccine under the sun.
And they're going to think, okay, well, if they lied to me about this one, I know what they lied?
If they gaslit me about my own reaction to this and they won't even acknowledge that this happened to me,
then what about all these other vaccines?
What am I doing?
And you're going to start that process of saying, okay, I don't trust any of this.
And like, for one big discussion that every woman is having, anybody's paying attention.
and they're just now starting to look into it,
is that women are having, you know, menstruation
is being affected by this,
whether it's, you know, coming later, starting earlier.
You know, I'd love to have discussion with all you boys,
but, like, this is a ton of women.
Tons of women have been talking about this, right?
And this is a very big deal for women
that are in their baby-making years, like for me.
Like, this is the most important discussion
to be having, I want to hear doctors
talking about this, debating this,
if you want to have children.
And by the way, it could be because,
oh, that's because of blah, blah, blah,
that happened.
There's tons of the sign.
By the CDC website openly admits
that they have no data with regard to how this vaccine affects pregnant women.
Exactly.
And it's rather than having a discussion, they're saying,
women, you have to get this vaccine.
That is so horrible to say to a woman that we don't have a data.
We haven't looked into it.
And we're not willing to have a discussion with you,
but you damn well better.
That's how you know that someone is not.
Someone is pro-science if they're open to questions.
If someone doesn't want any questions,
then you know that this is not a scientific person.
But even the phrase pro-science and anti-science,
The way that we're taught, and it's hard not to lapse into it, but the way we're talking about it doesn't actually even make sense because we have to keep reminding ourselves and everyone else that science is just a process by which we come to understand the physical world.
And so that's all it is. To say you're anti-science, it's like saying you're anti-math, I don't know, walking or something. It's like you're going to, it's a process of going to a certain place. So we talk about it like it's an institution. We talk about it like it's a person.
we talk about it as if it's this idea that you could be against or instead of a tool a tool for
it's a tool that's a whole it is a process as i was coming in here as i was coming into the shop i was
thinking this is in some strange way an act of insanity not just because i'm here with walsh but
but here we you know ben we'll talk about him as if he's not here for a moment he's brought out
a book he runs a major media company despite the way he looks he's actually a fairly
intelligent fellow he's written about a really interesting thing the only
place where you're going to be interviewed is places like this. And why? Why doesn't ABC think,
you know, there's a guy I disagree with, but that's an interesting point of view. Let's bring
him on and discuss what it is he sees. The fact that that doesn't happen is insane. It's insane.
In fact, ABC finds Republicans to have on. They find the ones with whom they agreed the most.
Right. What Republican disagrees with me the least? I'd be curious what he thinks about the
court gesture, right? I mean, those are the only two possible options. But we saw this last
week when NPR literally put out an article
about daily wire, in which they admitted
that we don't tell lies on the site, that we don't engage
in conspiracy theories on the site, that
we were critical of President Trump from time to time,
that we openly acknowledge that
we are a conservative website, and then they were like,
also they have traffic, and that really has to stop.
It was like so...
My favorite phrase was
the professor who said, well, you know, any
information stripped of context can be misinformation.
Whoa, okay.
Amazing. Well, you might
want to look at the media then. Like, from time to
You might want to actually look at the media.
It is an amazing thing.
And I think it does come down to the left's deep and abiding need to demonize anybody who
they disagree with.
They don't want to convince.
They just want to destroy.
Earlier this week, I put out a tweet.
That was sort of a fun thought experiment where I said, you know, if you want to, every
talking about polarization in society, how we all hate each other and all this.
Okay, well, if you want to stop that, here's an easy idea.
Just right now, all of us, pick somebody who didn't vote like you did in the last election,
tweet at them, a famous person, say, I like this person.
I think what they have to say is interesting even though we disagree. Very, very easy.
Right. It's super easy. All of us can list a dozen people off the top of our head who we disagree with,
but we still, you know, talk to from time to time and they're not cool.
Well, I said nice. And the only people, there were a bunch of people who did it. The only people who did were people on the right.
There was not a single blue check on the left who did it. In fact, Media Matter started tweeting back at me,
my, you know, bad old tweets to demonstrate again. It couldn't be me, right? It could never be,
but it couldn't be anybody. That's the whole point. All of this,
has become a religious totem for them. The masking is now a religious totem. If you don't wear the mask,
you could see how frustrated people were when the mask mandate ended from the CDC. There were a bunch of
people in New York who were like, well, I'm still wearing my mask. I don't see why the CDC should be able to say that.
AOC notoriously. I'm just not comfortable. Well, do you know, AOC made a point exactly on what you're saying,
Ben. She made it just this week. She said, it was unwittingly honest. She said, it's not enough
to fact-check Republicans, subtext, because we can't do that because they're generally not lying.
She said, we need to attack their core logic.
And I don't think she intended to say this, but what she's saying is we need to attack logic.
We can't, we actually, and they do that.
They say that logical argumentation, objective reality, reason, those are all dog whistles of white supremacy, and we all need to just clubb each other on the head with our interest.
And this kind of gets into what we brought up before we started rolling today, but like the PayPal thing of like everything that they said that they're going to start conquering on PayPal with any money to anti-government.
Does that mean if I make a statement against Biden?
Like you can just say, am I allowed to have a PayPal account?
What are they actually saying when you say you're going to misinformation,
anti-government rhetoric, all of this stuff?
It's so subjective.
I'm sure that they mean that you can't use PayPal to give money to Kamala Harris
after she said that she wouldn't take a vaccine that was created under Donald Trump.
Right.
You know exactly where this is heaven, you know?
It also goes to, and it creates the reactivity from the right.
So the right looks at the left and we say, we know your game and we know what you're trying to do here.
And so that's why it's so funny to see sort of the naive it.
of sort of Liz Cheney and Adam Kinsinger on the January 6th Commission. We're like, well,
we have to uncover the facts here. This is just a fact-finding mission. And then you have
Adam Schiff crying, right, about January 6th. And you say to yourself, well, what is the actual
purpose here? Like, we all know what the actual purpose here is. There's not a single human being
in America who believes a single new fact is going to be uncovered by the January 6th commission,
right? No one believes that. So what is this really about?
They're going to figure out who left that bomb outside the RNC and the DNC.
Do you know what Kinzinger said, too? I mean, I'll go with the charitable read that it was
naive Tay on their part. But Kinzinger,
when people brought up, hey, you know, pal, you didn't, this guy is a liberal Republican,
he's probably not going to be in Congress for you long, and they said, you know, you didn't
raise any issues about a commission to investigate the BLM riots and who was involved in that,
namely the sitting vice president. And he said, well, that's different.
BLM and Antifa, they committed crimes, but what happened at the Capitol, that was an attack
on the rule of law, because, you know, the horn guy came in. And I don't mean to downplay.
They really made a big mess of things at the Capitol.
BLM torched police stations and a federal courthouse.
And people died. So you're telling, so you can burn a federal courthouse.
That's not an attack on the rule of law, but you steal Nancy Pelosi's lectern and that's the
And nobody's been charged, by the way, with insurrection, treason. No one has been charged with that.
Right. Nothing, no seditious conspiracy. Right. You've been charged with trespassing, right,
because that's the best, that's the best they can do because that's actually what they did.
Vandalism, right. And if what they did, and this is the obvious point, but as you said, we have to
keep, I don't know what else we could do, but keep repeating it, that, you know, if that
qualifies as insurrection, then I don't know how that wouldn't also apply to going into a police
station in a major American city. Ten times over. And burning it to a ground. I mean, that is,
you want to talk about dark days in America. So everyone said about January 6th. I want to make
sure that we don't seem like we're flying cover for what happened at the Capitol on January 6th.
Obviously, there were a million, there are a million people in town for the president's rally,
a million people there to protest. I disagree with those million people about what?
what they were there to protest, but they were well within their rights to be there to protest.
So I don't want to paint with such a broad brush that I'm guilty of what the media is guilty.
A million Republicans sack the Capitol.
Of course, that's not true.
There was a very small minority of those people who did do something that was wrong.
They did do something that was criminal.
They did do something that was.
It was mostly peaceful.
That was mostly peaceful.
Yeah, it might say that.
Mostly peaceful.
Nevertheless, you may recall that someone on the left shot up the...
The congressional baseball game and almost killed Steve Scalise.
You wouldn't know that if you ever watched the media in this country.
They're so selective.
The Ullum's reporter shot six cops.
Shot six under Barack Obama.
A bottle cocktail to police cruisers.
The Senate of the White House and 60 Secret Service agents were wounded in that last year.
But you know, but this is what we're doing right now.
This is what aboutism.
So you're not allowed to do this because what aboutism is a bad thing apparently.
Which of course it isn't.
What aboutism is simply we call what aboutism.
Yeah, it's just, it's right. It's trying to understand what the standard is, and it's holding you to your own standard, which we're not allowed to do. And of course, here's the thing. I think everyone in this room, I know everyone in this room, has previously stated that they're not in favor of what happened on January 6th. So, like, that's been said. We all, we all understand that. We're all on the same page. What the media wants us to do is we have to continue repeating that over and over and over again. Just for just for just, just, just,
just because they tell us to. Well, it's for 2022. Right. I mean, their program is,
that's what it is. Their program is unpopular. The president is not good at his job. His administration
is blowing out the inflation and lowering the growth rates. People aren't going back to work. He didn't
put an end to the virus, as he bragged that he would. And so now they have to come up with some other
narrative. And the narrative for four years was Trump. Trump's no longer in office. So how do you
keep that narrative alive? You just keep saying January 6th over and over and over again. Okay, the reality is
everybody who participated in criminal activity on January 6th is now being prosecuted and they will go to jail.
Okay, that is certainly not true of all the thousands of rioters.
Well, they're being let, they're being let off the hook in Manhattan and the Bronx.
The majority of the people who were involved in BLM for looting are just being dismissed for that.
Right, exactly.
So the people who threw a Molotov cocktail into a police grouper during the BLM riots in New York were released on bail.
Yeah, so the kind of attempt, and we can see what's happening, right?
The real goal here is not about January 6th.
The real goal is to do exactly what Jeremy you didn't do, right?
The goal is to say that it was everybody who's not, who's at the protest,
And not only everybody who's at the protest, every single person who voted for Trump.
Yeah, everyone who is sympathetic.
And everybody who even didn't vote for Trump, but is sympathetic to anything that doesn't
resemble the left-wing position, is in their heart guilty of this deep act of evil that
happened on January 6th.
And it's an argument that's bound to fail.
It is not going to work.
Most Americans don't believe that.
Most Americans can see January 6 for what it was, which was an act of criminality and in
some cases evil.
And also that that does not represent, as one of the cops said the other day, all of
America, right? One of the cops said, like, yesterday on the stand, it turns out this person
tends to be kind of a left-wing activist on Twitter, that, unsurprisingly, that this, that his
experiences during January 6th when people were calling him racist names, this is indicative of something
broad about America. And that is the left-wing pitch. Well, good luck with that, because I think
the Republicans are just going to kick the living hell out of the Democrats in 2020.
And you know what it's... I think the Republicans are going to take the House. I think there's a 60%
shot they retain the Senate. I think the Democrats are in for a world of hurt. Do you think, though,
if we do not get the multiple election integrity measures that are trying to go through the states right now,
if we still have things like widespread mail and ballot harvesting, motor laws, are you still confident that we're going to take the house?
Yeah, I am. I hope so. I mean, the polls look good. I mean, first of all, I think that those laws have passed in a lot of these states.
But second of all, I just don't think that the Democrats, Donald Trump ain't on the ballot. He's a great turnout machine for everybody.
And him not being on the ballot is for congressional candidates, virtually all of whom outperformed term.
I mean, like pretty much every Republican congressional candidate, including in the
senatorial seats outperformed Trump in the last election cycle, which is why Republicans
outperformed in Congress. With Trump not on the ballot in 2022, I think that Republicans, they've
taken away the biggest Democratic talking point. That's the reason why Pelosi keeps saying Trump
in January 6th over and over and over again. She wants that report to come out next year.
She wants to claim that all the Republicans were complicit in that. But guess what? Americans are
not into this. They're not into this. Trump has not been in office for six months at this point.
the president of the United States is a dottering senile old buffoon who can't hold it together
and is presiding over the most radical agenda of our lifetime.
And on whom they depend?
Yes.
That dotering old senile president is their only hope.
If God forbid something were to happen to him, Kamala Harris cannot win a national election.
Kamala Harris couldn't win a California primary.
A California primary.
She is the worst politician I have ever seen in my entire life.
And the Democrats know this.
They know how fragile this is.
And the thing for Biden is that Biden also recognizes that because he's a one-term president, they've really put themselves into rock in a hard place.
Biden knows that he's a one-term president. He also knows the only way he goes down in history is to do a bunch of radical stuff in this one term.
And he knows that by the end of next year, he had in control of Congress.
Well, before we call her the worst politician, let's not pretend that Hillary Clinton never existed.
Kamala's worse than Hillary.
Yeah, because she has interesting.
Hillary won votes.
But by the way, though, the thing with Kamala, though, on the worst politician thing, because I liked her, I didn't like her. I think she's awful.
I said she might do well from the beginning.
And she's a terrible politician with the people,
but she's pretty good behind the scenes.
She's pretty, I mean by that, exactly.
All right, I don't want to get too into detail.
But she, but at least in terms of the presidency,
I'm not talking about California,
in terms of the presidency,
the woman ended up the vice president of the United States.
Yeah, but that was an easy woman, black, Indian,
that's how they think.
That's literally what they thought.
That's the whole reason they put her up.
They thought she was going to perform much better.
I think that they actually wanted her to be able to be in a black woman.
It's literally black woman. Yeah, that's it. There was no other reason because they actually thought she performed much better.
And they were shocked in the black community didn't respond to her because they were, you know, very aware of her record as a prosecutor.
And they just did, they were not about Kamala Harris. She's also fundamentally, she has that Hillary Clinton factor where she's just fundamentally unlikable.
Every time she speaks like, she just looked so bad next to Pence in that debate. She looks petty.
And I think that they realized that and they just sort of pitched draw.
to Joe Biden's wagon because who else was, Cory Booker? I mean, I have certain lifelong dreams.
One of them is to, you know, play Brahms with Condi. Another one is to, you know, go and have a long
interview with Thomas Sol. When the third is to play poker with Kamal Harris, because I will take her for all her money.
I mean, that woman's poker face. She has the worst poker face in the history of politics.
She's actually just a bad actress. So here's a question. Everything is just, yeah.
I want to take some member questions from our members over at dailywire.com. You can become a member right now.
Dailywire.com slash
subscribe.
And this question is for the whole group.
Though the Olympics have gotten a little woke,
you have to remember the 1980 Winter Olympics
in Lake Placid when the United States
hockey team defeated the Soviets and went on
to win gold. I'm hyped just thinking
about it. Do you think we will ever get
back to that? Funny to think that the country
actually bonded over the communist
hate and how quickly we have forgotten that communism
used to be the common enemy.
Russia will beat us first.
I don't think we will. We're not going to get back
to that anytime soon in terms of
that sense of national
unity and cheering together
because the thing that's lost, and I think
this is why people find, for example, the
women's soccer team to be so disgusting and we were
happy when they lost, and I know I certainly
was, it's just there's this sense
of gratitude for the country that's been lost.
And that's a lot of what patriotism really is.
It's being grateful
for the blessings you've been given by our country.
And I think we've got a whole generation of people, multiple
generations that haven't been raised with that. We don't have an American pastime anymore, right?
So because we don't, we don't have an idea of what Americans are uniting around.
You know, this is a very interesting thing that, but I've been a little under the weather,
not with COVID. Whatever you're going to catch from me is far, far worse. But I went home
from work early yesterday because I was taking some prescriptions and just needed some rest.
And as I was laying in bed, I watched the pilot episode of a show from the 90s called Star Trek
Deep Space Nine. And I'm a big trek.
I've watched every episode of every Star Trek series
except Deep Space Nine
and the real hardcore track you say
it's the best. I just never got into it and I was
laying there sick and I thought, well, I'm going to watch it.
So I download this episode, I'm watching it.
It's famous for being the first Star Trek
that had a black lead.
Black commanding officer.
Because I hadn't prepared to talk about it, I don't know the actor's
name off the top of my head, but
the character's name is Cisco.
And this was a major moment in the 90s.
Star Trek was a major franchise.
Star Trek The Next Generation a major show.
And they gave us, you know, Captain Janeway, who was the first female captain.
That made big news.
And just before that, they gave us Commander Sisko, who was the first black lead.
And as I was watching the show, I was so struck by how disingenuous this racial moment is that we live in right now.
Because here you had this actor playing a role.
And the role was a 24th century Starfleet commanding officer, right?
And we know, if you ever watch The Next Generation, in particular, it's very utopian.
the future. Humans were a little bit more collectivist and we're a little bit more evolved and we
have all these common thoughts about what it means to be a person and what it means to be sentient.
And this actor gives a performance in which essentially the role that he's playing would not
have been dramatically different had it been played by a white actor. And in fact, there's a scene
where he's on the hollow deck where you can make all of your fantasies come true. He's on the
hollow deck with his son and they're playing a game of baseball. And he's having to explain to this
this non-croporial alien life form who doesn't understand the physical universe or time.
And he's trying to explain to them what memories are and what imagination is
and how we linear corporeal beings can move ourselves out of this moment
and into moments that don't even exist, our past, aspirations for our future,
this game of baseball that he plays with his son.
And because it's on the holodeck, it's like a 1930s game of baseball.
You know, it's a different world even from now.
And part of his speech is about how this is the great pastime.
This is one of our great endearing pastimes and how illogical it is in its way,
but how what we're really doing when we engage in sport is we're facing,
as linear beings, we're facing an almost unlimited number of possibilities
that don't become a predictable reality until you've already done them.
You can't know what's going to happen.
Anyway, all of this to say with this very aspirational speech about,
essentially about humanity from a Western point of view.
I mean, he was declaring what's great about America,
although they certainly didn't say America.
It's in the 24th century.
And a white actor could have played the role.
An Hispanic actor could have played the role.
Race was incidental.
And I thought, by God, in the 90s, we had this thing lit.
You can't say today that Ibrahim X.Kendi,
all this crap about structural racism,
You can't say that the reason that they're burning down Minneapolis and all of this stuff is about Jim Crow.
And in order to be able to say that, you have to be able to draw a line straight back from today to Jim Crow.
And you can't have the 90s exist in that thread.
You can't have a time when Bill Cosby was the most famous American.
You can't have a time when Michael Jackson was the most famous person on earth.
Whitney Houston was the most famous female singer of the time.
the most famous female singer in the world.
You can't have that time when a black actor playing a role in which he defends Western civilization essentially
could have also been played by a white actor and could have also been played by an Hispanic actor
where race was not the defining central.
The fact that that time existed and that it culminated in the ascension of Barack Obama,
who was the bow on top of our victory over Jim Crow and over the legacy.
I'm not saying that there are no lingering effects of the treatment of black people in America.
Of course, that would be a silly thing to say.
What I am saying, though, is that you can't take this moment and go straight back to Jim Crow without ignoring that moment.
I really believe that this whole thing is the Democrat astereo over the failure of the great society.
Because the fact is you can't take that moment even before the great society.
Before the great society, blacks were rising into the middle class faster than after the great society.
It has been a massive, massive failure, and the left has been feeding off it like a tick, you know, and so they don't want it to go away.
They don't want all that money and all those bad programs to go away.
And that's why they're telling, listen, I'm sorry, I travel all over the place.
We all travel all over the place.
I mean, people of every color.
There are lots and lots of black people making it in America and really grateful to be here and really grateful.
Like all of us are grateful to be here.
I do not believe they can sell this thing past a certain point of hysteria.
They own the media. They own the government. They own the academy. But at some point, the truth will
out. But there's this problem actually getting back to the viewer question. There's this problem of
what are we focused on right now. And so the American left always shield for communism and for the
Soviet Union, especially on the fringes of it. And they never apologized for it. But the American
right was really unified because you had all these disparate factions, the libertarians and the hawks and
the traditionalists, the religious right, and all of them kind of came together to fight the Soviet Union,
which they hated for various and diverse reasons.
And then the Soviet Union falls.
And so you're not fighting an enemy any.
Then you start fighting like terror broadly or you start fighting.
You start fighting each other.
Because there's no unifying external enemy,
now we're all just focused on these issues
that we basically had licked in the 90s.
Which is everything.
Working together is everything.
I mean, if we start to have these arguments
between the Trumps and the RNC and all this stuff,
we'll fall apart.
They are so organized.
You know, the people who took over the Russia, who formed the Soviet Union, it's like 23,000 people out of the millions of people who populated Russia.
It just takes an organized minority to take over a government and take over a country.
It feels like a dream now or something, but it was real growing up in the 90s, as I did.
And I can remember, in the school system, I went to public school, unfortunately, for all of my schooling years.
and one of many failures to come out of that system.
But I can remember, I went to a very diverse school system,
and we had, you know, black kids, white kids, a lot of,
there's a heavy Asian population as well.
And I can just remember that it was, we never talked about it.
It was never an issue.
There was never any time when we all sat down and talked about our racial differences
and what does this mean, let's confront the sins of whiteness.
That never happened.
And I'm not saying that it was harmonious and everything was great.
There were a lot of problems, but it wasn't an issue.
We just said, and as kids, this is what makes me so angry because having experienced that,
I know that if you kind of leave kids to their own devices and you put them in an environment
together, yeah, they're going to ask questions, sometimes awkward questions about their differences
and that sort of thing.
But they're not going to make a bit, they're not going to see any great deep significance
in that.
They're just going to see each other as kids and they're going to play on the playground.
You have to make it an issue.
You have to go to these kids and say, oh, you see that person over there.
They look different from you.
That difference is important and significant.
And here are some feelings you should have about those differences.
And that's what we're doing to kids now.
And it just infuriates me.
I just want to say also running parallel to this argument, though,
to answer the question another way,
and I made the joke, Russia will have that moment first,
but I'm being serious because we're moving away from a meritocracy.
This goes back to our earlier discussion about, like,
you're winning by not even competing, right?
Winning in your heart?
You're winning in your heart.
This is now becoming the American perspective.
So how do you expect America to have a moment in which we win and have something triumping, like against Russia, against the Soviet Union, or ever being able to replicate that moment when we don't even understand fundamentally what winning is?
And we're starting to say the concept of winning is wrong. That's what's going on in America right now.
So, no, unless we reverse the Titanic away from the iceberg, I don't see how we have that moment, at least on our lifetimes until we...
We're going to need to have, as Michael says, an existential threat. Normally, it would be perfectly obvious what that existential threat is, which is the rising tide of China.
China is an existential threat to the future of the United States. It's an existential threat to the future of the world.
They're a communist authoritarian power that is on the move. They have made radical moves against Hong Kong.
They've made radical moves in the South China Sea. They just unleashed a virus, whether accidentally, which I think, or not accidentally, that is killed in excess of 4 million people, probably closer to 6 million people, if you get the actual stats from India.
And yet the West's response to that has been, can we yell at each other some more?
One of the things that's been so amazing is that Europe, which is usually where bad ideas come from in America,
Usually there's a bad idea in Europe, and then we take it here, and we're like, what if we just, like, up the ante on the really terrible idea?
Now Europe is looking at us, and they're going, what are you guys trying to export over here?
Are you seeing the French go? What is this woke crap that you're trying to push over here?
When the Europeans are telling us that we're too far to the left, I think that we have to start having some conversations.
So here's a question from a DailyWire.com.
Remember, should we start a movement to boycott sports that succumbed to the woke mob?
Do you think that type of movement could be organized? Would it even work?
So I think that long-term boycotts are very difficult to make work.
What does work is the immediate blowback effect.
So you can have an immediate blowback because the left never has a long-term boycott.
The left couldn't even long-term boycott check fillet.
What they did is they create a bunch of headlines in the moment.
And the headlines are enough to scare the corporate bosses into thinking they're going to have a bad quarter,
and then they just kowtow.
So you can certainly do that.
And I think, frankly, that the Wright kind of successfully did this with MLB.
I think that Major League Baseball, after the All-Star game, felt the heat.
And it seemed like they sort of backed off of some of this stuff a little bit.
And you've seen it with other corporations that have, Coca-Cola did the same sort of thing.
They sort of backed off.
In order to renormalize an institution, which is one of the things that I talk about in my book,
The Authoritarian Moment.
In order to renormalize the institutions, all it requires, as you say, and this is the correct step,
is about 20% of an institution that is diamond hard, rock core, aggressive, and will not give up on the principle.
And the left has used that in order to cudgel everybody else into silence.
But the right and the center is like 50, 60% of the country.
And so all you really have to do at your place of work or in response to MLB and say, listen, for one week, none of us are going to a game.
Just a week. We're just going to flex our power for one week. We're not going to go to any MLB games.
And that would have the sought after impact. I think the idea that people are going to boycott the NFL or boycott MLB for the rest of time is probably a pipe dream.
But you don't have to.
I actually don't think it's a pipe dream. I think it's happening right now. I was going to say, I think this is already happening.
It doesn't even need to be organized. If you look at the numbers that the viewership has tanked compared to five years ago, the viewership
is absolutely tanked. NBA finals, I don't even know who played. I canceled my MLB.
Everybody is canceling their subscription. And it's not even, like I said, it's not even
because I'm trying to be like, ah, I'm trying to stage a boycott, but because I fundamentally
I'm like, I don't feel like being lectured. Here's the problem. I used to watch sports to tune out.
Now you guys, every time we're watching a sports, it's a lecture. We're seeing people
on their knees because they have to say something. People are wearing a shirt because they
have to say something. Someone's wearing a BLM mask. They have to say something. And quite frankly,
that's not why Americans watch sports, you know? So I think we're seeing that naturally. And at the
same time, the UFC is picking up, Dana White.
The UFC has gone off the chains in the last couple of years because they decided not to make
wokeism corporate.
But I think the problem with what you're describing, Candace, is that that's a bifurcation
of the culture.
And there's no question that the culture is bifurcating, the economy's bifurcating to some
degree.
For a boycott to be effective, it actually has to be organized.
The reason is this, we all stop watching the NBA because screw the NBA.
But they don't care because China will keep paying for the NBA.
Yeah.
They can accept the loss.
What they can't accept is instability in the predictability of income,
which is why a boycott actually has to come,
both with the threat of removing the support
and the potential to restore the support.
Only when that exists, is there an economic incentive
for them to change their behavior?
When we all just stop, because we have,
we stopped watching the Oscars, we stopped watching the Golden Globes,
we stopped watching the NBA finals.
When that happens...
They doubled down on their audience.
They double down on the people who are still watching.
That's right.
Which in this case is the Chinese.
But what's the downside of that?
Who cares?
Well, only that it's actually changing who the celebrities are, and they're realizing this, right?
Once upon time, everybody, and Austers is a great example.
Everybody watched it.
The speeches meant something because we were all tuning in.
Now we're tuning out.
So if they want to just still say we're going to have it every year and we're going to flood
in a bunch of money from China, who cares?
They're not having an impact on our culture anymore because nobody actually looks up to
those people that are giving the speeches.
There's an issue, one issue with the boycotts is, I don't have any problem with it in principle.
I think it's a good idea.
But there's a certain futility to it
because I'm sure, you know, as conservatives,
I stopped watching the NBA too.
Another issue here is I'll have to admit,
I was never a huge NBA fan.
So a lot of the people doing these boycotts
on the left and right were never using the product
to begin with.
So I was kind of like, I was a moderate fan.
I just stopped watching.
I wasn't much to give up.
But, you know, if we're really,
if we as conservatives, we're serious about it,
we're going to start boycotting companies
that are not in line with our values,
that are working against us in the culture,
that hate us.
We should be starting with...
How about Disney?
That should be the first place we start.
Because Disney hates our guts,
the amount of filth that they put out into the culture.
Remember, Disney owns ABC, ESPN, so on and so forth.
But you put that out there to a lot of conservatives,
and they say, whoa, hang on a second.
I got to watch Marvel.
Like, I can't give that up.
I mean, this is my whole entertainment repertoire.
You're asking me to give up.
And so then you start making these calculations
and you realize, well, if I'm going to go down this road,
I got to give up, like, everything.
or at least all of the things that I care about as a consumer,
and I identify myself so much as a consumer because we all do as Americans.
And then I think people just sort of, like here and there, we'll kind of, okay, we won't watch the NBA.
But I kind of think, you're not watching the NBA, but you're still watching Marvel movies.
So what difference does it really make in the end?
I think that Ben, I agree with Ben that short-term boycotts are fine.
Long-term, though, we have to create our own stuff.
And this is the actual reason we call you the Godfrey.
You know, because the stuff we're doing here, I think that's the answer.
And that's what I'm saying, yeah.
People are watching this.
This is the reason to MPR writes an article, right?
Why is this, despite the fact that we used to be the kingmakers, we'd have this person to speak on the Oscar stage,
and they would be the number one person who watched, listen to, it's just not happening anymore.
This is why they're actually demanding more censorship.
This is the reason why CNN goes, oh, my gosh, we need to censor, Kansas owners, the Daily Wire,
and all this needs to be gone, misconquering misinformation is what they're always saying.
But in reality, what they're becoming powerless.
So let them have their shows.
I don't care.
For this reason,
people should go over
and become subscribers
at daily wire.com.
We started on Monday.
I can't tell you much about it.
On Monday,
we started producing
our next feature film.
It's not one
that the audience
knows anything about yet.
It's not the Gina Carano film,
although that begins
production very soon as well,
and we're very excited about it.
But this is something
we haven't even told you about yet.
And Ben and I were watching
Daly's in my office earlier.
It's pretty.
It looks great.
It looks great.
It's fabulous.
Here's a very important question
from a dailywire.com member.
If you were an NFL player,
A, what position would you each be? And B, how would you handle the forced vaccination situation, Drew?
The forced vaccination situation? Yeah. Yeah. Well, if I were, I think that I would have to be a
defensive lineman because I'd only live through one play, but no one would get past me.
So I think that's where I would have to be. Fair. And yeah, I'm not for, I'm with you on this. I'm
not for forced vaccinations except in certain situations. And I think they've got to refuse them.
I think they've got to refuse them on mass in sports.
Yeah.
I mean, look at me.
I'm a kicker.
That's just the reality of the situation.
Every so often, I'll, like, I'll be called upon to fake a puns,
and then I'll throw the ball four yards and then get back.
That's pretty much how that works.
I'm already vaccinated, so.
But, I mean, obviously, I agree with through.
I think that the whole point of vaccinating is to protect you.
If somebody else is unvaccinated, that you have taken that upon yourself.
You have now made the choice because we're all getting immunity one way or the other.
You're getting COVID?
or are you getting the vaccine. Those are your two options. There's really not a third option where you just don't get COVID.
It's here to stay. I think I'd probably play third base if I had to pick a position.
That's the worst. I assume I would. I don't know. I'm a lefty, so maybe first base. I don't know.
Or, you know, the issue of the athlete protests is, I think, the craziest one, because these are the healthiest, most virile. And there are the people in the best shape in the entire world. And we are telling them, no, you,
who are, are we allowed to say it, statistically, not at a great risk of death from COVID?
Is that, I think the CDC wouldn't agree with that? Young and healthy people. And, but, but the reason
that they're forcing it on them is the reason that they're forcing it on the kids going to school,
because it's about the imposition, much more than it is about any of the data.
Although I will say, there, there's a funny line from somebody whose podcast is directly opposite
my own, John Lovett over at PODSA of America. And he said, it is sort of ironic that the
athletes who, who very often are turning down the vaccines, have not turned down cocaine from their
friends.
Candace?
Quarterback.
That's a point.
I couldn't see that one coming, Candice.
Who could have seen that coming?
Yeah, definitely.
And obviously, I think everybody knows where I stand on it.
I think this is another one of those things that I'm going to say.
You give the government this power now to be able to force vaccinate you for something
that is not FDA approved in which they have removed themselves and the vaccine makers from
liability, and you will never get that back.
I don't have any opinions that haven't already.
been taken or any funny answers that have already been taken. So that's it. That's it. That's all I got.
You're not the coach? Well, I mean, in this fantasy world where I can actually play football,
I guess I'd be the quarterback too if that's what we do. Yeah. I, uh, if I were in the NFL,
the sport would truly have reached.
Drew, what are your thoughts on women being entered into the draft? I'm entirely opposed to it.
I'm entirely opposed to women in combat roles.
I think that, you know, women as ancillary, staff is fine.
The whole point of the military is men going out and killing other men.
I think that women who leave their children behind and go overseas are doing a terrible
disservice to their children and their families.
I love the people who do it.
I understand that they are service people.
I understand that they have served.
But I think our society, you should just say, this is, you know, killing is something
that men do.
You know, 95 percent, I think, of crimes are committed by men.
we are the people who do this stuff, and I think we should keep it that way.
I wonder if this would actually be, we talk about something that would ignite something within
the American people to actually resist and stand up for themselves.
Maybe this, because I can tell you for sure, for me, I would, as a father of two daughters,
I would go to jail in a heartbeat, I would move from the country, I would do whatever was necessary
to actually protect my daughters from being drafted into combat if it would ever come to that.
and I think that's how most people instinctively feel.
I mean, I could be wrong.
But of course, the problem is, yeah,
I'm totally opposed to drafting women for the reasons that you gave.
This is the whole point of having men fight is to protect the women and children.
But then there's also that sort of that, this, you've got to say to feminist,
this is what you wanted.
This is what you called for.
This is good for the gander here.
Right.
You said that you're saying, there's no difference between the two sexes,
and it's not just feminist saying that the whole.
left. No real significant difference. We can have men competing against women and track and field
and wrestling and it's not a big deal. And so you should be celebrating this. You should be throwing a
parade celebrating this because it's such a profound statement of gender equality. Candice, I'm not
going to ask you your opinion because I get so tired of people saying, well, you didn't get the woman's
opinion about an absolute moral issue. What are you talking? The absolute moral issue is kind of it.
because what you always hear from the left, they always say they're like, well, you know, but actually
some study that I did actually shows that women with a certain kind of hormone, they actually are just
as strong as men. It's like, first of all, that isn't true. But second of all, second of all, that's not
the point. The point is it's wrong. It's ugly. It's not right. It's not just to send women to go
die in combat to protect. It's just because men and women are different. If there were,
If there were a truly existential, like in the real meaning of existential threat, and this has happened at various times and various places where women have had to take up arms because of the severity of, you know, I watched this Chris Pratt film because I absolutely love Chris Pratt. And it was like a $200 million movie on Netflix. Tomorrow War, yeah. Tomorrow War. God, it was terrible. It just was awful. I wanted it to be good because it's got everything, Chris Pratt, aliens, Chris Pratt, time travel, Chris Pratt.
But it wasn't great.
But one of the things that offended me about the film is actually that, so these soldiers come from the future, and they say, we're your sons and daughters, you know, 20, 30 years on.
And this alien force has invaded, and it's what humanity's down to 500,000 people.
And we have to ask you, our fathers and mothers, to come forward to save your progeny, basically.
We need you to come forward through time to be soldiers in this existential war that we're in.
And then the next scene is like this montage of things that happened very quickly.
over the next couple of years.
And the peoples of the world mobilize.
And you see like Taliban warlords, you know, going through the time portal.
And you see, you know, like people from the people down in the Amazon who've been untouched and never met any outside human.
They go through the time machine to fight for the future.
And you see Americans go through and fight for the future.
Women and men go through and fight for the future.
And I thought, it's such a bull crap concept to think that if soldiers came through a wormhole and said,
said, we need you to come save us in the future, that the Taliban would sign up for it.
Yeah.
Like, there's this thing that Hollywood does, and it's part of this whole corruption that we started
with the Simone Bill's conversation tonight.
The entire corruption of our society that ultimately results in you making women register
for the draft is the one that says everyone, everywhere is the same.
And deep down, if we all knew there was a problem, we'd all band together, and we'd all,
what you're basically doing is you're taking Western values.
And you are superimposing them on people who do not claim them.
I mean, to your point earlier, like, Simone Biles told us why she didn't do it.
Don't, you can't take what would have caused you to have not.
People are making all these, you know, this is because of the sexual abuses that were taking place in gymnastics over the last several decades.
She didn't say that.
You can't, it's after 9-11 when people would say, well, you know, I mean, Osama bin Laden just wants to be able to raise his children in peace.
No, that's your values.
And in this instance, in a weird way, and I agree that feminists earned it.
They asked for it, and now they've received it.
But essentially what they're saying is the values of men should be superimposed onto women.
And that is fundamentally corrupting.
Because, this would be my controversial statement for the night, because discrimination is neither good nor bad.
Discrimination, like science, is simply a judgment.
The judgment can be used for good.
and the judgment can be used for evil.
If you make a discrimination in which you say a black man cannot eat at the same counter,
at the lunch counter, you have used a valuable tool, discrimination, for a evil purpose.
If you say women should not be going into combat roles and murdering people overseas,
you have used discrimination, that same tool, for a very good and noble purpose.
I think any person who has formerly believed,
a woman who formerly believes that there are no differences
to men and women should be drafted.
I really do.
Call it controversial, but there's enough out there.
Go ahead, Lena Dunham, you know, do your thing.
You know, I'm totally okay with that.
I've been so actively anti-feminist,
that I think that the feminist should, yeah, I mean,
I should have asked a woman her opinion.
You should have to be.
I think they should have to go.
It shouldn't be all women.
I have acknowledged biological differences.
You know, we acknowledge biological differences.
Why not?
I think that's the best way for people to come up against the truth.
I say send them all.
Lena Donham, Taylor Swift, I'd love to see it.
Can we just draft them for a mission to Mars instead?
Instead of something?
Send them off the planet.
Why not?
Last question.
How do people not see that all those Cubans who risk their lives to escape actively vote
against the progressive Democrats?
And by the way, this is true for people from Eastern European countries who fled here in the
60s, 70s, and 80s as well.
Has it really never occurred to people?
Why, all those who escape from communism now lean toward conservatism?
Those are bad. Those are bad Latinos.
That's right.
Those are the ones that Biden administration's actually going to stop from coming.
You swim here. You're going back.
Dallas needs to go back to Cuba.
Really, really important.
If you're crossing the southern border and you come from a country where the Democrats perceive you to...
Come on in.
Sharing their values, then you should come on in and bring your COVID with you.
And if you are a Cuban refugee attempting to escape actual overt tyranny, then you are a bad...
So well said, Ben.
It's really...
I mean, I'm sorry.
It's so absurd.
But it does go back to the point that you are making, Jeremy,
which is that we are so America-centric in this country.
First of all, America is such an amazingly broad country and a big country.
Very few Americans have actually spent any serious time abroad.
Or in America.
That's true.
Right.
Right, exactly.
Or outside of California or New York.
But it really is more about they've never spent any time in an impoverished country
or in a country that doesn't share our values.
And so they tend to think, okay, everybody shares our values.
And so when somebody comes from one of those countries,
And then they mirror the sort of Republican values, conservative values.
They go, well, they're an outlier.
There's something wrong with them.
They don't understand that true communism has never really been tried.
It's like, well, I've noticed a fact about the vast majority of communists who live in the United
States.
None of them come from communist countries.
It's very pleasant to be a communist in a capitalist country.
It's very unpleasant to be a capitalist in a communist country.
And so the complete failure of our education system to even teach about flaws everywhere else.
This is one of the things.
I mean, this really ties together a lot of things.
It ties together to the Olympics as well.
the insanity of people from America kneeling for the national anthem or protesting the national anthem
in front of the Iranians and in front of the Chinese government and in front of some of the
worst regimes on the planet. And the State Department of the United States, by the way,
saying that we should empower people at the U.S. embassies around the world to explain to foreign
countries all the flaws that are inherent in the U.S. system to, like the Saudis, or to the
Pakistanis. The utter madness and naval-gazing narcissism of our country is what's destroying it.
It's that we're too focused on ourselves.
It's not...
In some cases, it's not even narcissism, right?
So what you're talking about is the majority of students can't point out the 50 states, right?
If you told them, hey, could you just give me a general area of where you think Nebraska is?
They're going downward.
You know, to the left.
They have no idea.
And it goes back to what I was saying earlier about Bill Gates, who's funding this initiative to equitable math.
So that getting the wrong answer, you get an applause, you still get correct because it's white supremacy to get the right answer.
You know, so that that Marxism that we're talking about, that sleeping through the education system is what's leading to this,
because they have, they have, they're absent any facts.
They've never left their country.
Many of them haven't even left their states.
It's very rare people have done to three states, yet alone to talk about going into another country.
And America is, unfortunately, it's one of the only countries, or very few countries
where you can be in a plane for six hours and still be in your same country.
You're allowed to be ignorant and travel.
Before we, before we leave, I just have to, this went off the subject for a minute.
Our pal, Steve Crowder, who makes the best astrays in the country,
just in a hospital fighting for his life.
and he's really come close.
He's come close to the dark edge of things.
And I just want to say that crazy as he is, we love him,
and we're thinking about him.
We hope he makes it back.
You're a better man than I am.
Well, that's true.
I was actually just looking forward to the show being over
so that I can text him and say, you know,
hope you don't make it, pal.
You know, actually, this is a real story.
Last night I had to go for a drive,
a long story, but I had to burn down gas
to take my car into the shop.
And so I was going to smoke a cigar and, you know, I was going to say my nightly prayers.
I thought, oh, you know, I should probably pray for Crowder, you know, because he's in this.
I thought, oh, well, you know what's great.
I'm going to light up one of the cigars that Crowder sent me.
And Crowder, this guy, who's a complete maniac, he sent me these beautiful cigars.
And I was like, oh, pal, I'm going to send you some cigars right away from my humidor.
Haven't sent him a single thing, you know, but that guy, you know, really a generous fellow.
I actually got enough credit.
I actually did text him and say that we were praying for him at great risk to our souls.
And if he dies, I personally will kill him.
You know, the last thought, Ben, on what you were saying,
I've had the opportunity to travel in the third world,
in developing nations and in the third world,
in Cuba in particular, in Africa, in particular,
in Latin America in particular.
And always in group settings.
Like, you know, I traveled in Africa in the Middle East with actors from Hollywood.
I traveled in Cuba, Michael and I, and encountered a lot of Americans on the various stops that we'd make on that trip and would engage with them.
Every time I've been in the third world and engaged with Westerners in that setting, there are two polar opposite reactions.
You either look at the abject poverty, the abject despair all around you and think, my God, what have we done to these people?
or you look at it and say
my God what have these failed systems done to these people
and if you're if you're standing in the literal
pile of trash that is Djibouti Africa
I mean as far as you can see it is it is like a landfill
from horizon to horizon created by the French
a landfill and and people living in it
if you look at that and think the history of slavery
you've missed the entire point
of course slavery
what you should be seeing
when you look at this kind of poverty
when you see the kind of poverty that exists
people staring down at their shoes
people in like our driver in Cuba
wasn't allowed to go in the hotels with us
because they don't want the people to actually see
what exists past the sliding glass doors
it's not for Cubans
it is not for Cubans
what you should see when you see all of that
is the beauty of what we've created in the West
the flawed as it is
the beauty of what capitalism has created
flawed though it may be. The beauty of what Christianity has created on a civilizational scale,
flawed though Christians mightily are. It is a kind of hubris to look at the suffering that
exists in the third world and think that it's because of you. It isn't because of you. It's because of
these systems and the people in those settings have no power to overthrow them. And what we're seeing
in Cuba right now, they're not just winners in their heart. They are probably,
losers, but by God, they're brave. They are actually doing something that puts them in
actual jeopardy, and they will probably fail. And like Stephen Crowder, they're worthy of our
prayers. Thank you everybody for tuning in with us tonight. As always, we're very happy that you've
joined us. If you'd like to become a member, we would sure love to have you. You'd be supporting
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and certainly about the moment in which we live right now, it's too bad that Mark Lethyn
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That book, my God.
Unbelievable for him.
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Thank you again for joining us.
We'll see you guys right back here next month.
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