The Pete Quiñones Show - 01/22/2026 - Old Glory Club Livestream - American Holocaust - w/ Guest Tim Kelly
Episode Date: January 23, 20261 Hours and 25 MinutesNSFWPete and members of the Old Glory Club talk about the latest headlines. With guest Tim Kelly.Our Interesting Times podcastOld Glory Club YouTube ChannelOld Glory Club Substac...kPete and Thomas777 'At the Movies'Support Pete on His WebsitePete's PatreonPete's Substack Pete's SubscribestarPete's GUMROADPete's VenmoPete's Buy Me a CoffeePete on FacebookPete on TwitterBecome a supporter of this podcast: https://www.spreaker.com/podcast/the-pete-quinones-show--6071361/support.
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Yes, I declare holy war on tax season and all those who participate in it.
But indeed, we are here for another episode of Pony Express Radio.
I always get you right in the mood listening to the old William Tell Overture every week.
But we're here to talk about kind of a sad and tragic story tonight, but one we must discuss nonetheless.
But first, welcoming back to the show, Mr. Piquanonez, how are you, my friend?
Glad to be back.
enjoyed the week off last week, but yeah, happy to be here.
Indeed, always happy to have you here.
And we got our guest tonight, Mr. Tim Kelly.
How are you, sir?
Very well.
Thanks for having me on.
Do you want to give you yourself a very brief introduction to the audience,
those who might not be familiar with you?
Oh, I host a podcast called Art Interesting Times,
I guess for almost 11 years now.
I also do a show with Joe Atwell, weekly show, Powers and Principalities.
We talk about various topics, historical, sometimes as topical, current issues, whatever comes up.
And that's pretty much it.
All righty.
Well, thank you for joining us tonight, sir, to discuss this story.
But first, we got to make sure all the lights are kept on over here.
So we must get through all of our list of sponsors as we do every week.
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and the 19th century as well. So head on over to Tallman Books. All right. With that out of the way,
gentlemen, we are going to discuss one of the, when we look back in history, this is surely going to be
one of the things we are judged most harshly for in our time. You know, everything from, you know,
of all the myriad of issues that we face in our time, whether it's like massive.
celebration, truning out, all the decrease in religiosity in the United States.
This one truly is going to be one of the most horrible ones.
And we're going to talk about the subject of abortion.
It's coming up on the one year now since Roe v. Wade was overturned, which, you know,
many people in the pro-life movement thought was just impossible, you know, could never be done.
But Donald Trump, you know, they did do that.
So credit, where credit is due on that one.
And then, of course, this weekend there will be plenty of guys who are going to be
heading to the March for Life in Washington, D.C. this weekend as well.
So what do we think just in the year out since Roe versus Wade has actually been overturned?
It's actually kind of been a bit of a quiet topic in the last year because, you know,
massive immigration, foreign policy, whatever, is kind of taking the front stage.
But I don't know, maybe we can just start around the horn here and just see like, you know,
I mean, well, Pete, you're in the south.
So, I mean, not too much.
as it's like a free flowing abortion state, you know, down there.
But, well, do you think that this is something that,
it just seems to me like this issue has just gone by the wayside
and the thinking of most people,
but it really got a resurgence this last week in Virginia
when Spanberger just came in, and Amelia's like,
oh, nope, we're going to put abortions up until birth on the ballot
this fall for the vote.
So I think this story is coming back with a vengeance.
I mean, down here, it's not, if people were getting it down here, they weren't really advertising them.
You know, no one's bragging about it.
And, yeah, I mean, I don't know how much of a change it has made.
You don't read a lot of articles about it since it went, since, since Roe went away.
You know, I don't know.
I don't know that I've noticed much of any.
thing. I do follow Alabama news a lot, and this really just not mentioned. And when it was overturned,
I mean, yay, a lot of people, you know, churches celebrated, but then they just went right back to
right back to business as usual. So, you know, I mean, you're not going to have any protests here.
You know, you're not going to have, if you do have people protesting here, it's going to be five people
and it's going to be like old white libs who live in like hoover you know right outside of birmingham
you know so yeah not not a lot here um um tim do you have any uh thoughts on this manner just on the local
level or state level for um uh abortion well just not to spur out but the dob's decision was
came down in 2022 and uh so we're coming up and almost will be four years this this spring at the uh
Roe Reve-Vade was reversed.
Roe-Rov-Rae, of course, was passed January 22nd,
in 1973.
So this is the anniversary of that landmark decision,
and also its companion ruling Doe versus Bolton.
There's always been a certain geography to abortion,
and you could say that Roe v.
Revereated was in position of New York and California abortion law
and the rest of the country,
and that geography doesn't really change much.
You know, where people go, get abortions,
it's always to say,
Basically, it's a left coast, east coast phenomenon.
There's some flyover countries like Illinois was very liberal.
But right now, as it stands now, 2026, there are 14 states that have total bans.
Alabama being one of them, Texas, with the exception for life.
And, of course, there's California, New York, which is shrine protection via statutes
in the Constitution.
So it's
abortion itself, again,
it's obviously it's a crime.
It's a horrible thing, but it's also a symptom of something.
It's a symptom of the culture of death,
which expresses most of it expresses the self
most primarily in the idea of sexual liberation.
Obviously, sexual intercourse has a unit of impropriative function,
and often when people have sexual and of course a human being is created a child is created
and that child is a reminder that there's no such thing as sexual liberation or sexual freedom
because there's always consequences for one's actions and from those actions there there's
responsibilities and so it's a try inevitably when you when in the 1960s when i think it started
to get broad cultural appeal the sexual revolution the idea of sexual freedom
with normalization and proliferation of pornography,
abortion was inevitable, really,
given the cultural trends, the cultural war that was being waged.
Abortion itself, the Roe v.A decision, of course, was preceded by the Griswold decision,
Griswold v. Connecticut, which the Supreme Court discovered a right to contraception
under the guise of the right to privacy.
And then they immediately started publicly funding contraception, meaning it wasn't a private matter or all.
It's a very public matter because taxpayer dollars was used to pay for it.
And the same thing occurred with abortion, notwithstanding the Hyde Amendment.
So that's where we stand.
It's done as damage.
I don't know how many deaths are there, 60 million maybe in the United States.
About that much when I was last second at the numbers.
Yeah, 60 to 65 million.
It's interesting because you look at issues like mass immigration, the great replacement,
and you can't separate it from abortion because, quite frankly, we look at the plummeting
birth rates throughout the West.
All that was, of course, preceded by liberalized abortion laws.
And so you could say that the embrace of legalized abortion by the West was a sign that
the West itself didn't want to live anymore.
And so they embraced sexual liberation, sexual freedom, contraception, and abortion.
and the birth rates plummet.
And of course, God will not be mocked.
And nature pours a vacuum.
And as a result of that, we're told that we need people to come in and, you know,
fill the breach with cheap labor.
And that's what's happening in Europe and Ireland and the United States.
I think it was Chuck Schumer, who I think a year or so ago was outside of the Capitol.
I think campaigning or promoting in a press conference,
The, what's that immigration thing?
The American Dream Act, dream act, was it? Dream Act.
And he said, it's necessary to bring people in from the four corners of the world
because Americans just aren't having children anymore.
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Well, why is that, Chuck?
So.
Yeah, they feed you the poison and then try to sell you the cure and the cure is just more poison.
Yeah.
So that's initially that's all I have to say, I guess.
Yeah, it's interesting you mentioned the angle for mass immigration about this because I saw our friend across the pond, Mr. Carl Benjamin.
Actually did a video about this this week because the new abortion numbers came in for England.
I saw that, yeah, I saw that.
Yeah, where they just had a sharp increase in abortions in the last two years.
And it's actually almost identical the number of abortions versus the number of, well, allegedly illegal immigrants that they have caught and they found in the UK.
They're letting in way more people through legal means, like legal migrants, but it was actually crazy when he was doing the math.
It was almost one to one with the illegal immigrants that they have caught in the UK versus the amount of abortions that they had in a year, which is just nuts.
Yeah, and like I said, how do you claim a birthright if you're not giving birth?
Right?
And so, I mean, you can say it's karma or it's God's, you know, wrath.
Ireland embraced abortion in 2018 with a referendum and also embraced same-sex marriage.
That is a symptom of sort of Irish people's declining Catholic faith.
And I would say, again, if there is a society that at a high birth rate or even a replacement-level birth rate,
would be a symptom of a society that has faith in the future and also has the resiliency and the will to defend itself.
And again, it's one of things, it's not an immediate, it's not a,
an obvious connection, but if you really think about
there's a connection. If you are
aborting your next generation,
you will eventually be replaced because you're simply not
there to stake, to
maintain the claim on the land that you claim is yours.
Yeah.
It's another thing here as well.
I know there's a lot of popular arguments
in our side of things about people saying, well,
you know, actually, it's good that we keep this legal
because, you know, a large portion of abortions come from, you know, minority communities,
and we don't want, you know, more of these people running around in our society, so abortion should
remain legal. But, I mean, if just looking at the pure numbers, you know, if you are to address
this argument, I mean, since it became legal in the United States, the majority of the people
who haven't been aborted were white people.
Yeah, you have to look at dynamically, because first of all, the fact that so many women
are having abortions, it radiates to other issues and other cultural issues we have. The same
women that are, you know, that willy-nilly go out and abort their unborn children are the same women
that show up at anti-ice protests in many respects, or at least support it. And so you just can't
look at that. Another thing is there's no, there's no progress outside the moral law.
There's no shortcut. So again, embracing and fantasize to solve demographic problem is,
to me, an attempted shortcut. It's not. There's other things you can do.
do. Obviously, the health and the continuation Western civilization should not depend on killing
other people in other countries or minority people in your own country that you've let in.
To me, that's sort of a, again, you're not accepting responsibility for your own decisions
if you start doing that. And a lot of those people, again, are living, I think if you embrace that attitude,
you yourself are probably living a dissolute life. And then you have to look at the mirror and say,
am I part of the problem?
You know,
you know,
so.
Yeah,
I,
I just find it very,
very difficult to take a,
take that argument really seriously from.
You really just can't tell me that the solution.
It's just,
oh,
we just got to kill more like black and brown babies in the United States.
Yeah.
To fix our problems.
Like,
come on,
man,
really.
You know,
this just,
this just doesn't pass the smell test to me,
no.
Yeah,
I saw it.
There was a post I saw.
here's by
Black Pilled
Oh yeah
I'm sure I know where he comes down on the subject I'm sure
Actually he doesn't he's against
He said yeah yeah because he's not
I like him actually I don't never talk but I like him
I like him I like his online personality
He's his personally
But he is you know
He's a former Mormon so there you go
But anyway
He was lamenting the fact that the Catholic Church
was only globally 30% white
and I go and I sent him a tweet I said you you do you don't understand the Catholic
church is universal and I said you might want to now if you want to if now if you want to
improve those numbers why don't you get baptized and convert because that's again you're
you're you're dealing with a symptom of another problem you're not dealing it properly if
you're if you're again he doesn't advocate abortion to solve the
demographic issue. There's other things, those far humane and moral things you can do,
rather than, you know, resorting to infanticide to solve your demographic problems
because some of your people have decided not to procreate anymore for whatever reason, you know.
Yeah. There's not other thing. I mean, I think it's like, I think the biggest thing is,
it's a sign of decadence. It's also a sign of decadence that we have so many women in politics.
Because there's no more, because you either get to have patriarchy or you're going to have
anarchy. And in the name of liberty, we've chosen a moral anarchy. And that's why you're
so many of these crazy women in politics, like Abigail Spanberger, who's just emblematic of these
affluent suburban, you know, boxed wine guzzling women. They get into politics, you know.
Oh, yeah. Well, and then there's this, I mean, I'm sure this is where the, it was inevitable
this stream in this discussion was going to lean in this direction at some point. But nothing else will
motivate women to go out into the polls than the abortion issue.
And there's a lot of things going on with this one.
I mean, you know, we can go back to our, you know, basic like, you know, red pill, like
Manisture talking points 101 here.
And you just understand that like, well, abortion is like the ultimate expression of like hypergamy
and the ultimate way for women to get out of, you know, bad decisions that she's made.
But that doesn't also, that doesn't quite account for the fact that why is it that women
who would never get an abortion or choose the end abortion still turn out in droves to.
you know, enshrine this so-called right into law in so many places. Like, why is this the huge,
you know, animating issue for women, even if they themselves, will not more participate in this thing.
And, you know, there's a lot of questions there, but one of the things I think is a big part of
this is just that the entire women's rights, whatever, you know, I mean, you can argue
if that should ever take a place in the first place. Obviously, everyone here would say no. But
the whole kind of meme of women's rights has been wrapped up in oh well if they take away one
thing from us they're coming for everything else you know it's like oh we're one step away from
the handmaid's tail it's uh very productive it's very productive propaganda for the left because
i mean just look at the results right i mean we all know the women aren't necessarily the most
rational thinkers um but you know you know guys they're kind of like children you know it's like
if you take the if they just don't want the toy taken away from them you know
Women and children.
There's a certain, yeah, there's a certain level of narcissism there to, you know,
I posted something on, on Twitter today.
It was from a recent nursing textbook.
And it was talking, they were focusing on diversity and culture, cultural differences in
response to pain.
And under this certain group, we call them Jews, it says they may be,
vocal and demanding of assistance, but they believe that pain must be shared and validated by
others. And I immediately thought, oh, so they're just women. And I mean, that's exactly,
that's what, that's another thing about the whole abortion thing is, is like, okay, I'm doing this
thing. I know deep down, I'm hurting myself. But you, if, if you're not willing to, if people aren't
willing to embrace what they're feeling, then they're going to have a response.
They're going to find another response.
And it seems like the way they've coped with this, with the horror of what they're doing,
is by turning it into a positive and celebrating it.
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Yeah, and if you watch the type of shows, me that's popular with particularly single women,
Because I know I run in other circles, and often I go to, like, events at my children's school, and I run into women who have multiple children.
And you want to talk about women that are based.
These are, because they have children, their families, their responsibilities, and they're not neurotic and insane, like so many single women who have sort of put off their, you know, put off having children.
they don't they're not they don't have these things that complement their female nature the nurturing nature they go they're out there being sort of uh brutalized at work and they become sort of neurotic many of them are very guilt-ridden it is certain a pertinent insight that ea michael jones offers with abortion is one way you turn a woman into a one way you judiize a woman is you have or have an abortion or you're engaged in pre-marital sex or sexual liberation and inevitably you get pregnant then you get an abortion
And because of the guilt you feel, you can't get around that.
And since you're alienated from the church, you don't have sacramental confession.
So you seek a sort of justification in radical politics.
So that's why they show up with wearing pussy hats, you know, and that sort of thing.
And they embrace the revolutionary spirit.
Yeah.
And there's comfort in the crowd, right?
Yeah.
And that's how you have so many, like, Catholic women voting for, like, a Jewish governor in Pennsylvania
because they've been morally compromised.
And again, they're cut off.
They're alienated from ways that traditionally we dealt with guilt in the West,
which is confession, as opposed to the Freudian method,
which is where you sort of you pathologize guilt.
And you say, keep doing what you're doing and rationalize it.
So that's broadly, and this is kind of fun.
A year ago, yeah, it was during the election.
There's an article, Brides of the Camel.
as brides, the brides of the state. Remember that term? BOTS. Oh, yeah, I remember that.
Yeah. These are women like Camilla Harris, who sort of drunk, they drank from the cup of sexual
revolution liberation. And now, you know, they enter their 20s, their 30s, and their 40s,
and they feel empty, guilty, and their neurotic. Half of them are on prescription drugs for
anxiety or some sort of, you know, drug for the pain they're feeling, emotional pain they're feeling.
And these people, rather, you know, they become reliable, you know, voting votes for the Democratic
Party because of their, the choices they've made.
I think Edward Dutton would call them witches, right?
They become witches.
Yeah.
You know, and so there's a psychological phenomenon to this, I think.
whereas the system churns out these women.
And the numbers are now Legion,
and they're in suburbia.
Money more affluent, you know, because they work
and the dual-income families and all that.
And they're not going to look back
and they're not willing to look in the mirror
and go where I've made some really bad decisions.
They're going to try to rationalize it.
Yeah.
Or ease their pain with drugs or, you know,
or wine or X, that sort of thing, you know.
Oh, yeah.
I mean,
this issue really is like a canary and a coal mine for so many other problems, right?
I mean, sometimes, you know, people are like, oh, well, how can this, uh, no, uh, one issue
be interconnected with, you know, women's sexual liberation and, you know, homosexuality
and all these other problems of degeneracy.
And it's like, no, well, I mean, just think about it what we just talked about right here, right?
It's like, okay.
So you have an entire, um, society for the last like several decades that is pushing it
in all the news and the media that, oh, it's.
totally fine for women to get abortions. They do this on literally everything. You were mentioning
Blackfield earlier, Tim, and to the guy's credit, he's done some excellent work on particularly the
media in the 90s on things like homosexuality, for example, like when Ellen first had her show
on primetime and she was like the first gay character to come out on TV and everything. And the
jokes they were making in the show was, oh, okay, so where do you get your, like your subscription to
the gay club now, you know, here's your money or whatever, right? And it's like they always try to do
these edge cases to bring into the door. They do this with abortion, right? It's like, oh, well,
you know, we need to have this legal because in case like, you know, of incest done by a migrant
that you just led into your country from Pakistan, you know, because like, you know, but where else
would this be a case, right? You know, but again, the media is like, oh, well, it's just because
of, you know, the people in West Virginia and Alabama are engaging in incestuous activities. So we need
to have abortion legalized in those states, of course, because this is just happening all the time.
And it's not happening in the Pakistani community. We just let in.
to Detroit or whatever, or, you know, the cases of, like, rape along the southern border in El Paso,
because we just let it, like, you know, Manuel Gonzalez here, who just went on, like, a rape spree
or whatever.
This is, this is always how they do these things.
Yeah, and there's Norman Lear with abortion on the show Maud in 19, I guess that was
1973.
Yeah, I got it, you know, coincidentally, just when they were just, uh, it was 19702, I think,
the fall of 72 you have
mods
that was a spin-off
from the family and she had an abortion
the character did
and of course this is
they're presenting this issue to the public
in an
alleged sitcom
you know this is the very special
episode remember of those
yeah the water cooler episodes
everyone like would watch back when the
culture had a little bit more
hegemony
yeah
it had been off
options of what they were watching all the time.
But,
you know,
Maude was in her 40s and I think she'd just been elected to Congress or something.
And,
I don't know if that happened.
That happened later in the show or something.
But I remember this was Norman Lear presenting his vision and how he framed the issue.
And we're all supposed to be people supposed to sit back and just accept, you know,
his,
his,
the Malibu Mafia's framing of the issue.
Well,
you see this too because like,
Okay, so you have all these decades of propaganda slowly pushing the Overton window towards the left's direction.
More and more women get caught up in this.
More and more women get abortions themselves.
And when you actually hear there of speeches from, they'll get like various women that speak at like March for Life or stuff.
Some of them, you know, had abortions in the past and like immediately were right at it or something like that.
And this is like obviously the small minority that are vocal about it.
But the majority of women who talk about this just immediately report how.
horrible it felt to them you know to do this is like oh yeah I've literally killed my own child
it's like literally one of the worst things in the world you could do but when you have such a
large percentage of women that are engaging in this behavior more and more they're just going to
double down to the point over you actually do have a substantial like voting block of women and
these are the ones that are literally out in the streets protesting ice right now in Minnesota
and it's not just women of course there's Bernard Natheson who produced the sound scream in the 80s
He started the National Abortion Rights Action League in the 1960s.
He's one of the key figures in getting abortion legalized,
although it was a Supreme Court decision.
The Supreme Court's decision was highly political.
And it wasn't fundamental law or sort of a dispassionate reading of the law.
But he himself in his book, The Hand of God,
because he eventually converted to Catholicism before he,
He became pro-life eventually.
But he claimed that he had taken part in some 75,000 abortions,
and 5,000 he conducted himself.
He was an OB-GYN in New York.
And he admitted that he fudged the numbers about, you know,
women dying with illegal abortions.
Remember the coat hangers and all that?
They claim that there are thousands of women dying here from illegal abortions
and as if that justified abortion.
But it's an emotional appeal.
You know, abortion has to be safe.
legal and rare as Bill Clinton's approach rhetoric in the 90s but he himself admits in the hand of
God that he pressured his girlfriend to get an abortion he was in medical school and he says that
one of the reasons why he became as a staunch advocate of abortion wasn't just because he was Jewish
or that probably factored into it um is because uh his own guilt or rationalized what he did what he had
done that his own child that he had he he had murdered or at least had his girlfriend murder
or get murdered rather um and so see how this would affect his psychology of it and so he he kind of
covered that up with this radicalism kind of more or less going so extreme on the other end to
rationalize what he had done what he and his girlfriend had done uh when they were young um
but you know he eventually came around her because of uh apparently because of ultrasound technology
And he actually saw, that's what the side scream is a vision of an unboard child,
recoiling and essentially screaming as it's aborted.
It's interesting that he was very, he was a very prominent media figure when he was advocating for abortion.
But when he started speaking out against abortion, media stopped asking him questions or interviewing him on the matter.
And even he admits that the way the issue was framed in the 1970s, when abortion was being debated,
was whenever a politician or public figure came out against abortion, the media would immediately bring up the fact that they were Christian or Catholic.
But no one ever addressed the fact that disproportionately those who worship on Saturday, supposedly, were advocates for legalized abortion.
Meaning they didn't...
Imagine my shock.
They didn't address the ethnic religious battle lines that were being drawn here.
you know
the stage is set
Dublin Racing Festival
2026
two incomparable days of racing
where champions meet challengers
it's a gathering of people
of passion of sport and music
experience it all this February
Bank holiday weekend
January 31st and February 1st
Dublin will be alive aliveo
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So it's time we had a little talk.
Mom, do we have to?
I just want you to be safe.
Oh my God, stop.
We already...
I mean, online.
Oh, what?
Like what you share, keeping your accounts private.
Oh, okay.
These days, there's another talk every parent needs to have.
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now.
SSE E E Eriticity brings a different kind of energy.
So you can bring your, we're going to enjoy this hike even if it kills us, energy.
Or your, how hard can this DIY thing really be?
Energy.
Even your fourth coffee has just kicked in.
Energy.
Whatever energy you bring to the world, SSE Eartricity brings a cleaner, greener energy.
SSE Eartricity, a different.
Kind of energy.
You know, I did a, I did a episode for my show back in November.
I rarely do solo episodes where it's just me talking.
And I had the idea of, you know, you can kind of trace like the Israeli takeover of the United
States.
I mean, when it's just like really complete to like 1972, 1973, it's kind of hard not to
argue that by that time it was just pretty total and um you know i was addressing the whole thing
about where you know like if you're blessing israel those who bless israel are blessed
and i looked at the culture and everything since 1973 and it's like hey what what's gotten better
since 1973 and the only thing i could really find is the murder rates actually gone down
which is important but um the one thing i left out of that was abortion
I mean, if our blessings for blessing Israel and, you know, basically saying, hey, you know, good, take the reins of power here.
Own our politicians.
We'll fight your wars for you.
You know, just march in.
You know, take over.
You know, when you look at everything that's happened from 1973, if it was just abortion, it would be, you know, where, literally where are the blessings?
if God blesses those who bless Israel
our blessings since
72 and 73 have been pretty
damn horrific
I mean it's like really if those if those are blessings
I'd hate to see the curses
yeah it's funny you look at 1973
or sort of Anna's Herribulus
I guess you could say because you have
Roe v. Wade
19th January
1973 you also have
1973 is when Deep Throat is allowed to play at a first-run theater in New York City.
So your pornography, you also have the Yom Kippur War and the oil shocks, right?
And you have the broader economic conditions.
You're also a feminism peaking at this time.
This is the, I guess you say, high watermark of feminism.
The women's live movement ever was known.
Was that the year that Billing King beat Bobby Riggs or was that 72, I forget.
It might have been 72 or 73.
Is that 75?
I thought it was earlier.
72 or 73 thing.
Of course, it turns out Bobby Riggs blew it through it because he had gambling debts.
But he was 73.
Okay, 73.
So you have Billet Jean King beating Bobby Riggs in a tennis match.
Of course, Bobby Riggs, I think it was like 54, as he was 26 or 27.
And also, it turns out he did throw out.
It was a PR thing, obviously.
But anyway, so you have sort of the war between the sexes, feminism, pornography.
This is, again, the intersection of sexual liberation, abortion, and also usury in debt.
This is when wages stagnate and the credit card becomes widely used.
Was it also the year that women could get credit cards?
Go off the gold standard.
Yeah, it's 71.
And this is the, this when they bring in the petrodollary, the year.
year later and this debt so you will have usury sodomy uh abortion all these years being sort of
well sort of being normalized and accepted to be promoted openly promoted by all the institutions
media education government and even the broader economic conditions that are being created because
this is also that was the next point i was going to want to get into is you know that's like the
you know whether this is it was 1974 when women could um get secure they could get a bank account
and obtain credit cards and everything like that so it was 74 same time frame i mean yeah right around
there i mean whether this is a um excuse to you know justify like the bad behavior or whatever
in the people's minds or what have you is that uh when surveyed you know when like uh people are saying
oh why do you get abortion uh largely people cite it for
economic reasons. And now, again, you know, you don't necessarily have to, you know,
think that that is the main reason why people are doing this. I mean, we all know it's elective,
but that still doesn't change the fact that it is obviously much harder for young people to
start families. I mean, we talked about this a bunch on this show that the numbers came out at the
end of last year, that the amount of the number of 30-year-olds in the United States who are
married and own their home is only 5%, which is just staggering. Yeah. I mean,
A system that does that is a system that simply should not be allowed to exist.
Yeah, you expect, you expect, you know, people who are sexually mature and do things that kids do for 12 years and, you know, not be able to afford homes up until that point.
I mean, it's like, what do you think is going to happen?
I mean, there's going to be pregnancies that happen in that point.
And so, like, a lot of people make the calculation.
obviously it's evil and it's horrible,
but when you're in a society that promotes it
around every corner, it's just as simple as
you know, it's just as simple as any procedure,
right? You know, like what they talk about.
So, I mean, if it's there,
people are going to use it.
And we live in a society that doesn't have
the capacity to hold
those who create culture, entertainment,
accountable anymore.
There used to be mechanisms for this,
like the legions of detail.
and a sense that those who make entertainment, movies, and stuff are accountable, or at least are on a leash, a race, short leash.
And that ended in the 1960s.
Around 1965 with the pawnbroker, a Holocaust film, coincidentally, which broke the production code.
So they were given free reign.
And within a few years, you have television becoming very, you know, starting lecturing, being didactic, promoting the, you know,
liberalism, Norman Lear style of American freedom, these things.
And there's no pushback anymore, no capacity for people to push back, for civil society to push back.
Because the oligarchs now are given free reign because we're all free to pursue what we want to do with their own lives.
And only a few people have the capacity.
Only a few people who are wealthy enough with their resources to impact or influence people.
You know, produce magazines, glossy magazines, or to produce.
films I saw a thing like YouTube is how a sci-frey movie that nobody saw affected women and he
was talking about the Stafford Wives it came out in 1975 I remember it came out I remember the
ads for it on television for the Stafford Wives you most people are familiar with when
you when someone who says you know like the Stafford Wives you're kind of referring to a
woman who stays at home and who robotically serves her husband right
I mean, Pete, you probably remember it, right?
Yeah, my mom liked it for some reason.
And the video on YouTube goes to how what the film does is it didn't, only, no one really saw it wasn't a popular movie at all.
But it was, the terms were picked up in the media, the term, the references to it and everything was, it was promoted on the media and everything.
So it got in everyone's mind.
It was sort of a meme of the day.
Oh, you're, Stephford.
you know stay at home mom that sort of thing you know trapped in the kitchen and the the guy's doing the
doing the video says what the film does is by the way the book is based on a novel by ira 11 okay for
i know i know i know i'm shocked i mean that's that's that's amish right yes um that's the
dutch company that's a great what they do is they take that the katherine ross meets up with
this other lady uh who again it was the
she was liberated and katherine ross is i guess somewhat liberated she wants to move back to new york
the husband decides to move him into this um the town of stuff for this idyllic you know uh small uh
you know sort of like a bedroom community of new york and and and everyone all the women are all
beautiful they they dress nicely they go shopping they're obedient the husbands support them and that sort
thing and kath and kath and kathen ross character is just offended by this you know
but what the film does is it takes like normal things and has the
the women repeat them robotically so it sounds creepy.
So they have this one woman who's,
the idea is,
I mean,
women are replaced by robots.
You know,
that's the idea.
And the robots are obedient.
That's the idea of these sort of the simulations of the women.
Then the real women are killed.
And that's the idea of the show knowledge.
There's an evil patriarchy that's doing this in the small town.
But anyway,
sorry,
spoiler alert,
right?
So a movie that's 51 years old.
But anyway,
what the movie does is it takes these statements like this one woman who's I guess presumably been replaced and she's just saying robotically he says I like providing a nice home for my husband and raising his children he works so hard to give us a house and he deserves this and she says it in a way that's creepy but it's perfectly normal I mean how is that weird but it's presented as weird you know and the only normal women are the women
that have content for their husbands that want something better that you know they always want to
go back to the city and they're tired of their boarded life and so this is how it's presented in the
media and of course that idea was promoted day in and day out for the better part of what 40 years 50
years in this country you know and you can't promote still is yeah still is so if you're good if your
media's going to promote narcissism you know egotism consumerism the you know the
these things day in and day out on media, it's going to have its effect on the population.
And that's why so many young women today aren't suitable wives or mothers or don't want to,
you know, don't have that natural impulse to be.
They don't have healthy aspirations.
They want to go off and go to college and quote have careers, jobs and all that.
Yeah, and all their careers are fake anyway.
So all the men that are, you know, like traditionally,
when you're in the workplace, you know, obviously women shouldn't have been there in the first place,
but let's ignore that for a second, right? You know, traditionally when you're in the workplace
and women were in, you know, roles like, you know, a secretary position or something like that,
it's actually not a bad place that should meet, you know, a potential husband for you. The power
dynamic is natural there, you know, meet somebody you're in the workplace with. But now through
artificial things, again, this is like a manasseur talking point. It's going on for the better part
of two and a half decades at this point. But it's like, well, when you have like all this
corporate feminism that is artificially inflating the careers of women or the positions that they
should be in. Now, every single man that works with her already knows like, okay, you're an insufferable
bitch and your career is literally worthless. The stage is set. Dublin Racing Festival
26. Two incomparable days of racing where champions meet challengers.
Go on your got a gathering of people, of passion of sport and music. Experience.
experience it all this February bank holiday weekend.
January 31st and February 1st.
Dublin will be alive, aliveo.
Visit leopardstown.com.
So, it's time we had a little talk.
Mom, do we have to?
I just want you to be safe.
Oh, my God, stop. We already...
I mean, online.
Oh, what?
Like what you share, keeping your accounts private.
Oh, okay.
These days, there's a number...
another talk every parent needs to have.
The Tozzy app from Vodafone Foundation, DCU and Childline helps you start it.
Using tools, tips and expert guidance.
Download Tozzi, that's TOZI now.
SSE E EATricity brings a different kind of energy.
So you can bring your, we're going to enjoy this hike even if it kills us.
Energy.
Or your, how hard can this DIY thing really be?
Energy.
Even your fourth coffee has.
just kicked in energy.
Whatever energy you bring to the world, SSE E Eartricity brings a cleaner or greener energy.
SSE Eartricity, a different kind of energy.
You know, but because women have been told their entire lives, like, oh, like, I'm this really
accomplished girl, and I've worked really hard to get into this position.
And I work a great job with my work from home, remote corporate tech job thing where I'm
sitting by the pool.
And, you know, I'm sure every guy can kind of attach.
of this if you're in a relationship with you know girls these days or something it's like okay
explain me what you do like for your job you know it's like like from like office space and what is it
you do here you know and it's like it's a joke it's a complete joke it's like the fuck you're talking
about you have a job it's like if i if i like you know just decide to call into the office one day it's
like yeah i'm not feeling too good like i can't really go in or what have you or you know just
it's just staggering to me how little work did they do and how much money they
make one thing i've noticed and i don't know if it's issues that women have a tendency to refer to
their jobs as careers and men are referred as jobs yeah very good point and it's because men know
they have to do unpleasant hard work to succeed um and to the i mean there's people have
looked at the numbers and the real productive economy is overwhelmingly male as far as research
extraction refinement innovation even patents and
intellectual property.
My buddy, Aaron Clary, wrote a book about this called A World Without Men and Analysis of
Female Economy.
Yeah.
Excellent.
Excellent read.
Now, I mean, his tone is kind of dismissive of women, and I understand it.
Obviously, we're not dismissing what women, obviously, we're paying women actually a very huge
compliment because we're acknowledging what their natural roles are very, very important.
And they've been neglected for the better part of 60 years, and we're paying the price for it now.
I'm paying you a compliment.
And the one thing that makes them different, the one thing they have to offer is the fact that they can bear children and raise our young children.
And everything that comes with that, that would be providing a home, providing comfort, physical comfort, these things.
These things are very important.
And in their proper context, they're wonderful.
They're very easily abused, of course, as you can tell.
But, again, the fact is that men and women complement each other, they're not equal.
and if you have a society that's obsessed
and trying to make them equal,
women will develop contempt for men.
And men, I mean,
I mean, here's the reality is that when it comes down to sex,
men are much more attracted to women,
the women are to men,
but women need men for provision and protection.
And that's how it works.
Very true.
That's how it works.
And that's how,
and if they don't think they need men,
Of course, they do, because as we just mentioned, everything, it's all the physical comforts of modern society actually are provided by men.
In fact, men have provided the labor-sating devices that have led women, given them the free time to be such trouble.
That's one of the ironies of modernity, as you could say.
And another thing, you talk about abortion.
Get back, get it back to abortion.
The fact that women feel free to kill their unborn children.
I was watching a debate with Anna Kasparian and that, what's that woman, Pearl Davis?
Oh, yeah, yeah, Pearl.
You know, and it was kind of insuffable because between the two of them, I think they've almost lived 70 years.
There's not one child between them.
Yep.
You know, so it's a culture of death right there.
But some of the things Pearl says is true, but I don't know what our game is, just to demoralize everybody.
But the...
Yeah, unfortunately, but Pearl is that, you know, it mainly.
Your talking points just don't work when they come from a woman's mouth because it's like, okay, you know, you're not a man at the end of the day, sweetheart. You know, this is this is just ridiculous. I mean, listen, I like Pearl. I've had no issues every time I've talked with her. She's been very, very nice to me. And she's dating one of my friends. So, I mean, okay. But, you know, listen, sweetheart, this just isn't your realm. So why are you talking here? And you're talking here because you can get an artificially large platform because men have been trained.
since the day that they were born in this day and age,
to see women as figures of authority,
you know,
a position isn't okay for men to hold unless a woman signs off on it.
Yeah,
it's like a black guy telling you're not racist or a Jew telling it.
Oh, yeah, exactly.
It's exactly right.
And, you know, but the, um,
so Anna Casperin,
she's upset about,
you know,
Israel is killing babies in Gaza,
but she's perfectly fine with killing babies in,
in the womb,
you know,
um,
but she's,
you remember she,
Anna goes,
I married a husband.
My husband, he was a cat, what, he was on the couch unemployed, and I love him.
And I'm like, geez, she's just like, made her husband have to be a big loser in front of everybody.
It's like, nice, Anna, nice Anna.
She'll that works in the long term.
But the idea of women, again, they've right, though, you know how to write to kill her
unborn children, which again, the one thing they have, they really, and everything that comes
with that, have an offer is they bring, giving birth, giving birth, giving,
bringing life into the world and raising that.
And they think they can just trivialize that or make it a choice without having an effect.
But one of the reasons why, I think one of the major reasons why rape is considered such an awful crime,
is because it desecrate something that we think is sacred, which is motherhood,
and also the idea of paternity.
Right.
It's not just the physical violence or the violation of bodily autonomy.
If that were the case, it wouldn't be so many jokes about men getting raped in prison, right?
A reference to it on police shows.
So there's something, and I agree there is something very different about the assault
and the physical assault of women, and particularly rape.
And it's much what we consider it more brutal.
It's less acceptable for a man because, you know, we just see this awful.
Well, we see it as awful because it's a desecration of something.
But if you, as a woman, think you were right to kill your unborn child without anyone, you know, you're allowed to write to kill your unborn children.
And that kind of spoils that because what's sacred?
You know, why are you any more sacred physically or worth more precious than a man then?
You know, obviously men or women, I think biologically, or at least from a reproductive standpoint, are more precious because they are going to be able to.
they can only have like one usually typical only has one child in a year men can have many you know
it's only so many eggs men have billions of sperm cells so that factors into how women when men and women
relate to one another and also the relative balance of men and women in society and the risk that
men take and how women don't and you know men are there to protect and provide which is why
this gives it should confirm men uh certain privileges because they have certain responsibilities
A good example is the conscription draft.
In fact, that men are subjected to conscription of the military draft
should confer on them special political rights and responsibilities vis-à-vis to women
because they have that responsibility to protect.
I've never gotten an answer from a woman after I, we're talking about voting and all that.
Well, what about this?
Doesn't it give them special, you know, certain privileges if there's responsibilities?
You see my point, though?
I mean, you can't go on and talk about, you know, we can kill our children and then claim some sort of status, you know, you know, you being have to be, you have to be protected or something.
But that's, again, that's, again, probably a carryover from a more genteel innocent time when women didn't kill their own children in the millions during the year.
Well, I mean, this is just all the spirit of the age, right?
I mean, when you take into consideration the post-war consensus, I mean, you know, the post-war
consensus is, you know, don't tell people what to do.
If you tell people what to do with their body, you're fascist.
If you tell women, they can't have abortion, you're a eugenicist.
Women are just as, you know, women are just as useful in the workplace as men.
I mean, come on, it was black women who got us to the moon, right?
I mean, everyone's seen, everyone's seen the movie.
And Emilie Earhart proved they're better pilots.
But, you know, so I mean, this, this is all to be expected.
I mean, when you take into consideration, everything that was destroyed from the old order,
the old way of doing things.
And, you know, now there is no real truth.
I mean, they still let people go to church, but they've subverted.
the churches. Yeah, they've subverted the leadership in the churches and mostly the leadership
in churches now care more about racism. I don't know if you've heard that. If you've had that
in the mass lately, Tim, have you heard that one? Have you seen a priest pray to end racism?
Yeah. And last Sunday, the choir sang the Black Nash anthem.
Oh, wow, yeah.
So, yeah, it's just...
I was like, what?
This is for Robert Lee's birthday?
Doesn't make any sense.
So, you know, the spirit of the age is, you know, that you don't invade other countries
because, you know, that's mean, unless, of course, you're doing it, then it's okay.
If Russia wants to do it, that's...
If Russia wants to invade their neighbor and people who are basically blood, their DNA matches up 98%, you know, 98%.
You know, that's a problem.
But, you know, I mean, we have to go chasing monsters all over the world because, you know, we're the good guys.
There's good guys, nearest bad guys.
And part of being the good guys is you let women murder their kids.
And, I mean, it's just all a part of this order.
it's like i mean there's there's also something very primal about this too because you see like the
kinds of guys that are at these like pink pussy hat marches and the same kind of guys like you know out in
the streets in minnesota or what have you and they're all like you know the stereotypical soy jack
you know a guy that we're all familiar with right but there's something that goes into the deep
primal brain of women too because they know deep down that the main job that men have is to
sharpen a stick and then go shove it in somebody's face right to like to literally to protect the women
and children back home
And if this guy is going out of his way to be like, you know, an ally and do a sneaky fucker game to try and like, you know, get in with like these chicks saying, oh, you know, we really got to make sure they have the right to murder my on board child. It's like, well, what do you expect like how they're going to treat you? You know, as response. They can't respect you if you're this kind of guy.
No. There's a comment. There's a comment here I wanted to, I wanted to highlight because it's a really good comment when you think about it at John Gore of 73 here.
He said Satan might be the Prince of Darkness, but at least he's not racist.
And that's really important because, you know, you can be a Satanist in this culture
and no one's going to attack you because, you know, Satanists just aren't.
They're not racist.
You know, Satan hates everyone equally, and that's perfectly fine.
But, you know, God chooses people.
He chooses people to like it and he doesn't like others.
he saw he oh is it um
jacob who is it
he saw he hated who he loved
he loved i mean it's i mean that's terrible
he obviously doesn't
he obviously he obviously doesn't believe in equality
yeah
he made people so he made people so different
the sexes and various groups so different
i mean it's uh yeah
he's it's
it's
Yeah, I mean, there's something wrong if people can't, you know, if, if God, who's good, you know, discriminates, but Satan hates everyone equally.
I mean, in an egalitarian world, you got to choose Satan, right?
I was reading my daughter, a little daughter, youngest one in our family, was given a Bible story book.
by her,
her cousin who's older.
And I was reading her stories.
I was reading Adam and Eve,
the Garden of Eden.
And explains to him the weaknesses of women and ban and all that.
Way to explain it,
it was very funny.
He goes, Adam, God confronts Adam after they've eaten from the tree of knowledge.
Adam goes, it wasn't me.
It was that woman you gave me.
That woman.
And I had to get his crack it up.
it was that woman she made me do it and god rebukes him for that she was defective it's very funny
he's trying to play in the because we know the story there is yeah eve because she was bored in paradise
wanted to do this and because adam's failing was what happy wife happy life yeah right
that's what's what god says to him right it's like because you have listened to the woman and
yeah it's like the first thing he says is not you know you've eaten from the tree it's because you've listened
to the woman. It's like, oh.
Now, I mean,
in Falunvarez is, you know, good.
Again, I've talked to a lot
of women, and, you know,
most of the women I talk to are, you know,
are Catholic and pro-life,
and they're not neurotic and insane because
they're not living lives
that drive them neurotic or say they have
a healthy life. It isn't to say they don't
have character flaws like all of us do.
But we're, we're speaking, broadly
speaking, the general culture. Obviously,
I'm like in a sub-
culture. But unless you have the proper, like, prescriptions and prescriptions and rules,
and you have a permissive society like ours is today, I would say the majority of women
would cease being the nurturing, you know, figures that they should be.
because they they themselves have embraced the satanic spirit or our age and so that's
what you assume many of them behaving that you know so poorly now you know and you know in
addition to that you know one of the other topics that we were discussing earlier to
circle back to us that you know most of all just trained to be defective men at this
point is the is the other problem too yeah there's
So just like you've noticed even, yeah, just sort of a undeniable insecurity you see in them, yeah,
because they're not, they're trying to be something they're not.
And there's, they just, they just become unhappy.
Yeah, it's, it's so interesting that this comes up because I'm sure a lot of the younger guys in the chat can definitely test this.
But it's very, very interesting to see how women, when you get into a relationship with them today, you know, not just talk about like, oh, like, value in the career and stuff.
but the way they perceive as being like most effective and most helpful like to the relationship and to like the family is well I want to go and work or uh and even if they don't want to work their assumption is that they're doing something bad by not wanting to work you know it's like that's the default it's like well you know my my instincts are telling me not to work but you know like is the man like you know going to judge me harshly for it or am i not contributing if i'm not working or something you know there's just a complete disconnect of
what men actually want out of a relationship.
Well, yeah, they don't want to be a stephen wife, right?
You know, and stay at home and, you know, even the idea that you have something called a
traditional wife thing, right?
As if there's something else, right?
Yeah.
You know, is, you know, a sign of decadent of our age.
And again, it's sort of a self-fulfilling privacy because the way the economy,
economy is structured. When women poured into the workforce, wages were officially halved,
and you also had the spiraling debt, which is inflationary, so the cost of living going up.
And also, with tool incomes, you have also much more consumption. So prices go up.
Oh, yeah.
You know, the price of houses go up and that sort of thing. And this shifts sort of lifestyle expectations and all that.
So, you know, obviously you have a couple, a two-income couple with no kids is going to consume a lot more and may even add statistically to the GDP, but they're not having any children, whereas a one-income couple won't spend as much, but they're having children, and a lot of money is being invested in children, the human capital.
And what happens is eventually over a couple of generations, because you have a much lower birth rate and it drops to below placement level, you're literally losing a population, which is the ultimate source of capital in any economy, are the people.
There was Janet Yellen, I think, a few years ago.
I mean, she was head of, she might have been Secretary of the Treasury at the time.
I think she was Secretary of the Treasury at the time.
but she was pontificated.
It might have been fed.
I forget which role.
She was fed,
Chair.
Yeah, she did both at different times, I think.
But Janet Yellen, of course,
Yellen.
She is one of them, of course.
And she's talking about abortion and legal,
for some reason, she's talking about legalized abortion.
And this might have been around 2022.
What does she Treasury Secretary for Biden?
Am I wrong about that?
She was one of those.
Obama.
But she was saying that abortion is good because it allows women to go out and work and adds to the GDP.
Not thinking, you know, when you have children, children grow up and work and actually add value, whether it's providing children the next generation or providing a labor force.
You're killing off a labor force.
This is what usury eventually does, by the way, because usually grinds labor into the ground, which makes them so people keep.
can't have families, have less children, then you find yourself without a labor force
for the economy, and you try to make up for it in illegal immigration or AI or, you know,
robotics or something, some sort of weird, like Elon Musk fantasy or something, you know.
But ultimately, it's the culture of death. It's the culture of death. So, you know, I'm sorry, go ahead.
Yeah, Yaki talked about that in Imperium, how as soon as you start, as soon as you start adding to the native population, birth rates drop, not only because of things, prices can get higher and you're destroying the culture, but also there are like true biological factors where women, if you're importing people who have absolutely nothing to do with your culture, that can affect women's reproductive cycles because they get into a,
a fighter flight mode because they're seeing people who were historically their enemies.
Just think about it.
I mean, you know, civilization's been around for, you know, oh, 8,000 years or so.
And really, it's only now in the last 50 years that we have mass immigration to a point where
it's like the only time you had this many foreigners living a bunch of population would be like
when the Mongols were invading your town or something like that.
So obviously it's not a safe time for you to be having children.
Yeah, it's almost like war has a similar effect from it.
Yeah.
Yeah.
Yeah.
This is the stress.
The stress lowers fertility.
Um, and another thing is this is where hypergamy kicks in, which is a constant.
Oh, yeah.
If the, if the native male population isn't seen as being the primary source of provision and protection, women, women will pick the winners and drop the losers.
And that's why women tend to be less loyal, at least from an ethnic step.
point, right? If you celebrate it, if you promote it, they will go with those you can provide.
And so that's why you have this sort of this recent report. What was that that article in
compact, The Lost Generation about white men? Yeah. That dealt with largely like cultural
gatekeeping jobs, elite jobs, but it radiates down where the opportunities aren't there for
young ethnic white men to support families.
And that is a way to keep them from finding wives and having children and reducing the
population.
It's one way to accelerate the branding of the country.
So, which we're not supposed to notice, but they talk about doing it, you know.
Oh, yeah.
It's not happening, but it's a good thing.
Yeah.
Yeah.
Yeah, Tucker's monologue yesterday on the Great Replacement was probably, uh,
Oh, it was excellent.
Yeah.
Some of the best stuff to get out there.
considering who has you know considering his audience yeah he's had a pretty fire week between uh that
and the peter brimlow uh interview oh yeah it's why are they doing this yeah why are they doing that
why do they want to replace us i don't hate anybody i'm not an anti-semit you got the award tucker
either way
people really just
it's still wild to me
that people still don't really understand
like you know what his
wash stick is at this point
where it's like
okay basically every episode
for the last year has been
oh you know like the nation of Israel is great
now I'm going to talk about how they suck
in the worst place in the world
I love Israel
yeah
and he goes on this 45 minute
he's actually recently been saying you know that he really he said the other day he doesn't like
israel i like the people he said but he does you know i like some of he actually says i like some of the
people but i don't really like the country you know and so it's you know and also the way he's
standing up for white people you know for for his race he's is really contradicting stuff that he said
10, you know, like just a year ago.
Yeah.
Where he's like, oh, I don't care about my ethnicity.
There's, you know, there's nothing about it.
And he's just now he's just leaning into it.
And, you know, from what I understand in private, a lot of the things that he, like,
when he's going to the White House and he's talking to Trump, that's his like main focus is
just the anti-white, you know, how this country is anti-white.
And if this country stops being white, it stops being this country.
But, you know, it's like, I mean, one of the things I talked about in my, in my Where the
Blessings episode was in 1973, it was like the country was like 82% white.
And the black population was like 12 or 13%.
So that's a total 95%.
It was like 5% from other places.
And now the country allegedly is 56% white.
It could be less than that.
So if it's 56, if it's, yeah, if it's say it's 50% white.
and you still have 13% blacks.
That means, what, 37% of it is like mystery meat from other places?
Yeah.
Yeah.
Totally emergent behavior, emergent factors, you know, totally the natural movement
of people who come into a place from time to time, guys.
There's something suspicious about this whatsoever.
It isn't organized by all of our elites and our governments throughout the entire West,
giant network of NGOs, billions upon billions of dollars.
No, no.
I just read some of those 55,
there's 55 separate organizations that are providing legal services for those arrested in Minnesota for the protest, anti-ice protest.
Jeez.
Now, who's funding all that?
There she is.
We were talking about her earlier.
She made the appearance.
And this is the things that people like Tucker are discovering.
And again, it was a lot of this nonsense.
I mean, there's all this anti-white stuff in the 70s.
but when it was cute when you're 82% of the population because it's marginal, it has to be
marginal.
But now, you know, it's reaching critical mass.
And the velocity of change is evidence, primarily face a case for a conspiracy, if you will.
You don't get that rapid change in demographics without a program or an operation being carried out,
and which is also a sign of malevolence.
It also indicates that the normal functions of assimilation
and natural, you could say, cross-pollination,
which would smooth out differences haven't been allowed to develop.
So there's going to be, it's social engineering,
and social engineering is inevitably breeds conflict.
Come on, Tim.
Come on, all these groups that were letting in our natural conservatives.
Come on.
We've got that for decades, you know.
you know no i mean it's different if you have i mean america's always going to have a spanish because
it expanded in the southwest just like it it had catholics because of you know expanding the louisiana
the southwest and not to mention the fact it was happening in ireland and what the british were doing
so you have and in fact you needed so many irish to go fight in the union army to suppress the south
that's all that works out but you know immigration is always a question of how many who and when
and it's ridiculous to say that just because so many came in and
of certain people came in in the 1880s or 1840s
you have to do it now you have to develop
you have to allow infinity Indians
or millions of Somalis into the country
yeah Sean O'Connor came in in 1860
and fight the South and now that means you got let in
Gigaboo Jackson and his entire family
and finance their welfare schemes
which political
the politicians benefit from you know
but you know
but here we are
you know
three guys talking about abortion
and women's reproductive rights
is evidently
which is how it should be
because if you leave it up to women
what happens
yeah
right
yeah
one of them is
but not like that
you know
it's like
you what do you know
is that what was it
glory Stein
said that she said something
that affected
if men could get pregnant
abortion would be a sacer
or something. Yeah. Yeah, right. And she was also famous for saying,
women need men, like a fish needs a bicycle. It's like, uh-huh. Thanks. Thanks,
sweetheart. She was also CIA. Yes. It turns out. Yeah. And it was men who
financed her magazine, who built the building she worked in, and the media she was
promoted in all the technology. It's like, it's like, come on. It's like,
it's so stupid. It's, uh, it's almost child.
The
Well, we've had a pretty
You know, as if it.
It's like, you know.
Well, we've had a pretty expansive discussion about how this issue ties into a lot of other problems that have been occurring in the United States over the last several decades.
You know, this issue always gets play in election years.
It's going to return to the forefront come the fall this year when I'm sure more states are going to put it on the last.
More states are going to put it on the ballot.
I mean, we know Virginia was in the news this week because, you know, it's potentially going to get to add to the Constitution of the state if it's voted into law this fall.
So I'm sure there will be many more stories on this issue coming up pretty soon.
But when we hit through these super chats and we'll call on the night, gentlemen.
Okay.
All righty.
Scrolling up to the top here, we've got two bucks from, no, I'm not.
Grimm from Red Hood. He says legendary thumbnail. Yes, indeed. Our thumbnail guy does fantastic work every
week. All right. Doug did a really good job with that one. Yeah. Yes, he did. Let's see.
Let nobody say that we don't have the best theme song and the best thumbnails in the entire
sphere because we told me do. All right. John Marmaduke for Five bucks says, good evening all. Well,
good evening to you, sir. Thank you. Fritz and Peer.
friend of the show for
three bucks says, I want lemon and chains
make an example. Yeah, I mean, we all want
Don Lemon and Chains, of course.
Let's see.
Is it John Lemon or Don LaMond?
It's, I don't know.
I try not to think about
these unsavory characters.
Imagine being so retarded
that Elon Musk fires you within like two days
of getting a contract on Twitter.
Do you remember
Elon was like, oh, people are going to
be on Twitter and we're going to have their own little shows and, uh, partnerships and stuff.
And one of the first people he snagged was Don Lemon had one interview with him, saw that this guy
was just completely retarded and immediately fired him. Has he been arrested yet? I don't know
they arrested those two ladies, there's two fat black women. I don't. Apparently the judge is
refusing to, uh, refute, there was a judge who said that there wasn't enough there. And then it turns
out that the judge, let me see, I have it on my timeline, the judge is.
Judge's wife was in like Keith Ellison's office or something like that.
Yeah, the judge's wife is connected to the, uh, magistrate judge that refused to sign off
on Don Lamont's arrest warrant is married to an assistant AG in Keith Ellison's Minnesota office.
I mean, it's, again, this is, this is the problem.
the judiciary has already been destroyed.
So whatever Trump does,
he can't destroy something that's already been destroyed.
Oh, yeah.
So politicized,
Keith Ellison said that going and storming the church
was First Amendmently protected.
Actually, it's not.
But if I call Keith Ellison A,
that is covered by the First Amendment, actually.
Faggett, fagget.
If I call Tom Leverman or fagget,
that is covered by the First Amendment.
but not going going into church and disrupting a service for the purpose of disrupting the service is not it's a violation and first man's also a violation of a specific federal law which the liberals passed by the way for abortion you know what is a massive fucking faggot
I mean we'll we'll we'll see what happens I mean the left's not going to stop they're going to continue to escalate oh it's
There's no way.
There's no breaks on this Jacobin drain, you know?
Yeah, Bolsheviction Jacobins and you can't,
you can't have conversations with these people,
much as live with them.
And that's the issue we're confronted with.
All right.
You know, you actually can shoot them in the face.
You know, in my grap.
Law enforcement, law enforcement, you know, legally,
the people who are allowed to do that can actually do it.
I'm not saying we're going to, I don't recommend anyone listening to this unless you are law enforcement.
Do that, but you protect yourself when it needs to be done.
Mm-hmm.
Wow.
The face of a generation.
It's just, ah, I'm tired.
I'm tired, Mr. Mustash, man.
Pow.
With Renee, with Renee Good gone on to her turner, uh, uh,
reward. I guess she won't have any more kids.
They won't be, she won't be able to abuse any more kids, right?
Yeah, indeed.
Solid Snake, 1964 for 10 bucks. He did not get the first super chat in this week.
How dare you, sir? It says, evening gents, look like I wasn't first due to preparation for the storm.
Hope you all in the area is getting hit by the snowstorm will stay safe and stay warm.
Thank the Lord that this heinous law was overturned.
I pray that the evil of abortion will be finally ended someday.
Well, someday it will be that I am sure of.
So, uh, salute.
Thank you, sir.
Real Americans.
Yes, and you, sir, are a real American.
Thank you.
Um, TK sends us two bucks.
A salute.
Uh, did I beat solid snake this time?
You did.
You did.
Um, nice job.
Um, Don Browning, the only woman that listens to this show.
Um, it sends us, uh, 10 Australian dollars and a super sticker of a anthropomorphic
hippo spinning in a gaming chair well thank you don browning for representing the uh fairer sex uh in the audience
tonight as ever thank you um ex comer for 25 bucks says canceled work tomorrow because of the
unbelievable cold still paying my employees because it's the white thing to do i hope my brothers
in the south are prepared for the storm yeah i mean uh everyone uh bundle up i mean uh remember a couple
years ago when people froze the death in their homes in Dallas because people weren't prepared
for the icy conditions. So everyone keep your heads on a swivel out there. And if you were
in a local OGC chapter and our need of assistance in some way or another, be sure to reach
out to your regional liaisons and the whole OGC network can help you in these trying times.
So moving on to Sir Blank, census two bucks. Real Patriots panic buy milk, bread, and stay warm. Yes.
Real Americans.
Yes.
Trevor, uh, subscribe for five bucks.
Thank you very much, sir.
We appreciate that.
Um, yeah, there, there are channel memberships, but, uh, you know, nobody,
nobody really ever does it.
But, uh, yes, you guys can do that.
Um, C-sider sends us $10 and a salute as he does every week.
Thank you very much.
Real Americans.
And you, sir, are a real American.
Um, Trevor sends us $3.
Entropy is a mess or I'm showing my midwittery.
but still want to give y'all more and YouTube less.
Yeah, try and give it as much as entropy as possible,
even though it is a little finicky.
All right, no curtain for 10 Canadian dollars.
This is, hi, Tim.
I want to take the opportunity to thank you
for your exceptional work over the years.
You have this rager-sharp intellect
that cuts through all the noise and nonsense.
Thank you, and God bless.
Oh, I'll cut and pay.
taste that shirt to my wife.
There you go.
They're in Canada.
That's from Canada?
Yeah, that's what says.
The same is tentinal overdose deaths.
All righty, moving on.
Let's go to Chancy for $23.45
says, it's amazing how much of our
popular culture has been shaped by subversive propaganda to the point that the most patriotic of our guys
unconsciously mouth the virtues of our enemies, it's going to be a long road ahead, brothers. Yes,
yes, it will be.
Yeah, it's crazy. You know, you just find these mindworms in your brain that, you know,
just get implanted there in a young age. No, it's wild.
Yeah, internalize the command of your oppressors, yeah.
Hmm.
City break dancer man,
always one of my favorite names of Super Chatters.
Thank you.
Sends us five bucks in a salute.
Thank you.
Free Americans.
Yes.
No, I'm not grim from Red Hood since another two bucks.
Literally sciopped from the jump.
Yes, there's definitely a big problem for sure.
Speaking of sciops, we got capitalissimo who talks about
siops all the time on Library of Mass Destruction on Monday with our good friend.
Mr. Christopher Sam Batch, people, be sure to tune into that.
For five bucks, he says, if you super chat the OGC enough,
the GDP will go up enough for the migrants to go home and the women to stay home.
Hell yeah.
They should tax remittances and give you a cut.
Hell yeah.
Amazing how the United States government has found the one thing he doesn't want to tax.
Suddenly they're libertarian.
Yeah, yeah.
Mikey Machine sends us $10 and a salute.
Real Americans.
Yes, you are a real American.
And then finally, we got Volp his persona for five bucks, sends us a salute.
Real Americans.
Yes, real American indeed.
Thank you, Mr. Patton.
Appreciate it.
All righty, that is us all caught up on the super chats.
Pete, any final words?
Anything to promote?
Yeah, release episode to Tom,
and I are doing a quick little series on how Germany was interfacing with the Muslim world
before World War, before and during World War II. There's some interests there that people have
expressed. And it's really interesting history when you take into consideration the diplomacy
and basically how the Muslim world had become part of the axis.
Very interesting. Your talks with Thomas are very insightful.
and educational every single time.
They're not really talks with Thomas.
It's Thomas just basically doing a college lecture course.
Well, there you go.
I always enjoy my road trips that get to take with Thomas because it's just a free podcast.
You know, so just.
Yeah.
All right.
And Tim, thank you for coming on the show, sir.
Any final words or promotions?
No, just thanks for having me on.
fun despite the topic.
It's always nice to chat, you know, have a chat with two like-minded guys.
We'll have to do it again.
God bless America.
Hell, yeah.
God bless Americans.
American, yeah.
You're here.
All righty.
Oh, and one more super chat has come in under the wire here.
Florida Man Adventures.
That's another good name for a super chatter for $25.
He sends us a salute.
Have you seen the attempt by Islamic LLCs to form another epic city in Vero Beach, Florida?
Check at trust, DML on X.
Oh, really?
Okay.
Real Americans.
All right.
Thank you for bringing this to our attention.
You, sir, are a real American.
No, we will have to send up the bat symbol on this one and get people to pay attention to this.
but I'm not surprised.
These people are getting bolder and boulder, you know, just.
You would think the Jewish community in Florida would stop this.
But, I don't know, did anybody see the article this morning?
It was in the Jerusalem Post talking about how invoking the Torah,
Minnesota Jews mobilize against ice operations.
Minnesota's Jewish community is speaking out against ice raids,
invoking Torah teachings on welcoming the stranger and mobilizing protests across the Twin Cities.
Notice they're not advocating for this in Israel.
From the river to the sea, Israel backstab me.
Every single time.
I mean, these are some of the same.
Lollies are Muslims and they don't want to get rid of them.
They're a Muslim community in Florida, in Florida, in Florida, where like you can't get elected
office unless, you know, elected governor, unless you go down to West Palm Beach and, you know,
pray towards the, you know, pray towards the, uh, the Holocaust Museum three or four times a day,
five times a day. I mean, what the fuck is going on here? I mean, it's just like our
Peter Brimlow was talking about in his interview with Tucker is, you know, there's a reason why they want all these people in the country because, you know, that we're not going to focus on a certain group.
So, shocking that.
Anyway, so, well, we're going to wrap this one up here.
We'll be back next week on Monday with American Spirits, Chapter House on Wednesday, and another episode of Pony Express Radio next Thursday.
check out all the sponsors in the description below and we'll see you guys next week everyone stay warm
when i pass on my good jeans to my sons they're going to join the old glory club
