The Tucker Carlson Show - Why Are You Gay? Milo Yiannopoulos Explains.

Episode Date: December 4, 2025

Why are you gay? Milo Yiannopoulos explains. (00:00) Monologue (36:01) Why Are You Gay? (47:23) Does Conversion Therapy Actually Work? (55:06) When Did Milo Decide He Was Gay? (1:01:53) Why Are... There So Many Closeted Gays in Right-Wing Media?1:10:34 The Dark Truth About the Fashion Industry (1:22:10) Is Lesbianism Real? (1:28:02) Are Gay Marriages Monogamous? Paid partnerships with: GCU: Find your purpose at Grand Canyon University. Learn more at https://GCU.edu Pure Talk: Get unlimited talk, text, and data for just $29.95/month for life -- only at https://PureTalk.com/Tucker Preborn: To donate please dial #250 and say keyword "BABY" or visit https://preborn.com/TUCKERTCN: Shop the kind of Christmas gifts people won’t re-gift at https://store.tuckercarlson.com/ Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices

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Starting point is 00:00:00 Of all the great memes and clips on the internet, fat kid falls off bike being, of course, the top of the list, really in the last 13 years, 13 years this week, almost nothing created on this planet has surpassed in popularity or sheer hilarity an interview that took place on Ugandan television in December of 2012 on a show called Morning Breeze, the morning show of Kampala, Uganda. which a trans activist, a woman who now identifies as a man, came on and was asked a series of questions by the host. And if you don't know what we're talking about, here is a two-second clip that reveals the essence of the conversation. Why are you gay? Why are you gay? Let's play that again. Why are you gay? It's still the funniest thing that's ever been on the internet. But why is it funny? And why does almost everyone find it funny? Left, right, straight, gay? Well, because it's kind of the key question. And it's kind of the question that no one in the United States is allowed to ask, why are you gay? And of course, it's being asked by an East African
Starting point is 00:01:20 with kind of a quaint, semi-colonial accent. And, you know, conservatives can laugh at it, liberals can laugh at it. this is the kind of the only way a white liberal in the United States could ever laugh at a black person. If it's an African expressing non-PC views on homosexuality, why are you gay? And of course, people in the West laugh because the guy's an idiot. Why are you gay? We all know why you're gay. Why are you gay? Actually, we're laughing in part because we're not allowed to ask that question.
Starting point is 00:01:48 It's settled, though no one's really explained what about it is settled. If you were to ask the average American, why are people gay? they would probably say, well, they're born that way. And then if you followed up with, well, how exactly does that work? They would have no idea and tell you to shut up. Because, again, like so many myths or things that we think we know, we don't really know. We can't really explain it. But we do know for dead certain we're not allowed to talk about it.
Starting point is 00:02:13 So when some African morning show host in Uganda, wherever the hell that is, asks it out loud, we can't help but laugh nervously. Why are you gay? if you watch the whole interview and actually it's worth watching because it's really revealing both about Uganda and about the West
Starting point is 00:02:32 the first thing you notice is how polite everybody is that tone why are you gay continued throughout the entire interview which lasted over an hour just watched it and the morning show host
Starting point is 00:02:44 whether you like him or dislike him was just unfailingly polite to the guest who was him or herself also unfailingly polite and they were just sort of talking past each other the trans activist couldn't really explain why he or she was gay or whether gay was different from trans
Starting point is 00:02:58 or what was good about being gay. That was another question. The host asked, why would you want to be gay? And the trans activist just didn't really have an answer. What was amazing was the sweetness of it. It was not a hate crime,
Starting point is 00:03:14 not even approaching a hate crime. No conversation like that could take place in the United States. But the host was coming from a position of total certainty that this is just weird and wrong. And that is the consensus in a lot of the world, and it's certainly famously the consensus in Uganda.
Starting point is 00:03:30 And the consensus in the United States across both parties and pretty much the whole educated population is they're horrible because they think homosexuality is wrong. And we know this because about 10 years later, in Uganda, the legislature passed almost unanimously with only, I think, one dissenting vote, a law against something called aggravated homosexuality. Aggravated homosexuality as of 2023 is a death penalty offense in Uganda.
Starting point is 00:04:02 What? Aggravated homosexuality? A death penalty offense? That's medieval. But how is it defined in Uganda? Well, if you read it and you can because it's online, the Ugandan government defines aggregated homosexuality as gay rape of children
Starting point is 00:04:21 gay rape of the elderly who can't consent people over 75 gay rape of people who are mentally deficient and the intentional transmission of deadly diseases to another person so it's rape and murder effectively
Starting point is 00:04:38 are against the law in fact capital crimes in Uganda hmm it's a little different than advertised but you would never know it because the entire American political class erupted as one when this law passed in East Africa thousands of miles away with a non-relevant trading partner with no real military.
Starting point is 00:05:03 In other words, there's no actual reason to care about what Uganda does, but everyone here did care, bipartisanly. And we're actually not going to expect you to take our word for it. We're going to go right to the CIA for the answer, meaning Wikipedia. This is the Wikipedia description of the response. President Joe Biden weighed in. This was two years ago. This is 2023.
Starting point is 00:05:27 President Joe Biden condemned the law, calling it, quote, a tragic violation of universal human rights, and quote, the latest development in an alarming trend of human rights abuses and corruption in Uganda. Corruption. So here, the Ugandans, the Ugandans, had the temerity to exercise a democratic process using a legislature
Starting point is 00:05:52 elected by the people of Uganda to pass a law almost unanimously with one dissenting vote and that's corruption it's almost as corrupt as the anti-gay marriage initiative in California that voters passed but judges wisely struck down in the name of democracy okay so that was Biden's response
Starting point is 00:06:10 but it wasn't just Biden. Here's Senator Ted Cruz the self-described conservative from Texas. Here's what he said. He tweeted this. He put this in writing, as he so often does. And we're quoting, any law criminalizing homosexuality or imposing the death penalty
Starting point is 00:06:27 for, quote, aggravated homosexuality, is grotesque and an abomination. All civilized nations should join together in condemning this human rights abuse. So it's uncivilized to penalize. gay rape or the intentional transmission of a deadly disease. That's uncivilized.
Starting point is 00:06:52 Seems kind of civilized. But at the time, nobody agreed. This was grotesque, the kind of thing that only Africans would do. It's one step up from cannibalism. Can you believe it? Penalizing gay rape? And the intentional transmission of AIDS, what do I think of next? We'll throw you in a stew pot, savages.
Starting point is 00:07:12 You'll notice that Uncle Ted calls. called it an abomination. And the Anglican Communion agreed. Here's Justin Welby, the Archbishop of Canterbury, the leader of the rapidly dying Anglican Communion, which would include the Episcopal Church of the United States, the state church of England. He wrote to the Archbishop of Uganda, Christian brother to Christian brother to express his, quote, grief and dismay at the Church of Uganda's support for the Anti-Homosexuality Act, the head of the Church of England was filled with grief at the thought that rape would be banned and the intentional transmission of AIDS, etc., etc. But it didn't stop with expressions of grief and condemnation and tweets
Starting point is 00:07:58 Ted Cruz, no. It got right to the hard stuff, to the things that matter, meaning money and foreign aid. Here's the World Bank. Immediately, the World Bank swings into action. The World Bank announced it would halt lending to Uganda in response to the new law. No more lending. No more money for you. We're cutting you off.
Starting point is 00:08:23 The financial institution noted that the act, quote, fundamentally contradicts the World Bank Group's values. Ooh, what are the World Bank's values? That'd be interesting to know. You know, in a sane country, contradicting the United States, the World Bank's, quote, values would be a sign of virtue, probably. Probably get a merit badge for that. But the World Bank was outraged. They know sin when they see it.
Starting point is 00:08:50 Banning gay rape. We'll tolerate a lot, but not that. And then finally, Joe Biden, in October of 2023, spun fully into a frenzy at this point, watching taking the lead to the World Bank, announced that Uganda would be expelled from the group of sub-Saharan African countries that benefit from tax breaks under the U.S. African growth and opportunity. Act, AGOA, because of the country's, quote, gross violations of internationally recognized human rights, which violate the AGOA eligibility criteria. So that was 2023, so bottom line, no more money for you.
Starting point is 00:09:28 What happened next? Well, Uganda and starved. Next year, there was a famine. Not to laugh at famine, but it's almost unbelievable. So you ban gay rape of children and the elderly and the mentally disabled, and we're going to starve you out. And boy, did they, the United States shut it down. International aid institutions followed suit.
Starting point is 00:09:53 And the next year, Uganda had a famine that is still ongoing. 50% of children in Uganda today suffer the symptoms of malnutrition, stunted growth, anemia. 50%. Ugandan kids are starving. And of course, Uganda's never been a rich country. It's had a lot of turmoil. Idi Amin was from there. Uganda has some problems for sure.
Starting point is 00:10:17 But the year after the West collectively withdrew aid from Uganda, billions in aid, they have a famine, and it's all because they banned gay rape of children. Okay.
Starting point is 00:10:33 So I guess the point here is our values are pretty clear. We're for this and we're totally against questioning it. And if you do, we will hurt you. So what is that? What are you gay? Maybe that's a question worth asking. But of course, nobody has. And then you wake up one morning and you realize that supporting homosexuality, which is very different from like not hating, gays, no one should hate gays, and most Americans don't hate gays. In fact, most has to be men in an American who did hate gays. I know I ever have, at least in the past 30 years, no one hates gays. You know a million gays, and some of them are awesome people.
Starting point is 00:11:20 Work for you or your friends or whatever. It's not about hating gays. It's about being forced to say this is an affirmative good, and if you disagree with that, then you are affirmatively bad and we're going to stoke a famine in your country to punish you. That's literally where we are. And some of us should have been paying closer attention as this movement, never formally declared, not the gay rights movement, but the terror against anyone who opposes gay rights, whatever those are, worshipping homosexuality, we should have paid closer attention. I'm going to refer you to one of the great clips of the entire Biden administration. When people look back on the Biden administration, there will be, of course, an endless loop of him
Starting point is 00:12:04 falling off his bike or identifying his sister as his wife or clips designed to show how confused and senile this poor guy was. And those will in a lot of ways represent the administration. But it's the moment of clarity, those occasional moments of clarity where Biden was really saying something on purpose because he meant it and he wanted to tell you what was important, those are the clips that actually define the four disastrous years of Joe Biden. And above all, I would argue this clip tells you everything you need to know about the values of the U.S. government, of our popular culture, of the West collectively.
Starting point is 00:12:40 And once we understand the values, we can assess are those the right values? And can a civilization continue with those values? But first, the clip. Here's Joe Biden describing a trip to downtown Wilmington, Delaware, with his dad in 1962. I remember getting out of a car when I was trying to be dropped off
Starting point is 00:12:56 at the local city hall. to get a job to be the only white employee in the east side of town in the neighborhood, in the projects, as a lifeguard. My dad was dropping me off so he'd go around the block and run and get the application. And two well-dressed men kissed one another as I was open the door, and I hadn't seen that before. And I turned around, and one walked off to the DePont building,
Starting point is 00:13:23 one walked off to what used to be called a Hercules Corporation. And I looked at my dad, and he just looked at me, and said, it's simple, honey. They love each other. It's just basic. There's nothing complicated about it. That's how I was raised, for real. This is the greatest clip ever.
Starting point is 00:13:40 And there's just so much. I mean, you could really spend all day getting Talmudicana, just dissecting it and trying to figure out what it means. I mean, there's so many parts to this. First of all, Biden's dad called him honey. That's weird. What dad calls his boy, honey, honey? Strange. And who knows what it means.
Starting point is 00:13:59 Not implying anything, but it's weird. Well, Grand Canyon University is not like most American colleges. It focuses on the things that actually matter. It is not a rip-off. It is the real thing. It's private, affordable Christian university located in the heart of Phoenix. One of the largest universities in the country, actually. At Grand Canyon University, education is more than academics.
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Starting point is 00:18:30 standard. But the country's official views on like gay sex, for example. Well, it was a felony in 49 states in the summer of 1962. The only state in which it was legal, Illinois, had just legalized it several months before. So having gay sex. in the United States, when Biden claims this happened, was a felony pretty much everywhere. A felony. Very few people ever went to jail for it because no one was really interested in enforcing it. But the laws of the United States mirrored those of pretty much every country in the world from then going back maybe to Athens. Like, people have always been against this.
Starting point is 00:19:09 It's always been officially discouraged by every single society. The question is why that's worth a conversation at some point. Probably not just random bigotry if every society that we know about ever has had an official policy against gay sex reforms of gay sex. Why again? Can you explain to me without getting hysterical? Maybe there's a reason there. Who knows? But that was a state in the United States in the summer of 1962.
Starting point is 00:19:39 So the idea that Joe Biden's drunk-used car salesman dad turned to him, this brutish Irish guy who Biden has described many times, and says, honey, honey, it's just love. It's okay. It's just love two guys making out outside the DuPont building in downtown Wilmington. It's totally normal. It's so transparently absurd. It's such an obvious attempt to graft modern values onto an antique setting that it's so clearly fake that amazingly no one laughed, but no one did laugh.
Starting point is 00:20:17 because no one was allowed to laugh, but that's absurd. Ask anyone who was alive in 1960s. You just use common sense. That didn't happen. But notice how Biden frames it. He said he was getting dropped off to get a job as the only white man working in the hood, breaking the color barrier. It wasn't just a summer job. It was a victory for civil rights.
Starting point is 00:20:36 And he was the kind of guy who would do that because his family had a long commitment to civil rights as evidenced by his father's kind of casual acceptance of homosexuality. Love. It's just love. Okay. So what do we learn from that? Well, we learned that Biden's, of course, a fabulous. We knew that. But in this specific clip, he's lying for a reason to transmit to the nation its essential values. And at the very top of that list is we are for homosexuality. That's number one. It's right up there with civil rights. People get to vote. People get to have sex. That's America. That's our culture. Okay. So it probably shouldn't surprise you that the self-reported incidents of homosexuality and its many varieties in the United States rose dramatically during that period. And here are roughly the number. So about a little over 10 years ago, 2012, among young people in the United States, about 6% said, yeah, I'm not heterosexual. So that would be in the range that, you know, we've been told for many years was natural, right? Maybe 10%, a little under 10% if people say they're not heterosexual and whatever, you know, gay, lesbian, transgender, bisexual, whatever, but they're not one man, one woman monogamy people at all. So that was the number a little over 10 years ago. Last year, the number among young people was over 20%.
Starting point is 00:22:03 So a little more than a decade, you have a threefold increase, 300% increase in self-identified non-heterosexual orientation in a little over 10 years. What are we looking at? Well, we're looking at demographic collapse, among other things. Right? But what is the phenomena actually?
Starting point is 00:22:30 Where does this come from? Or to put it in Uganda in terms, why are you gay? Well, let's see. We have been told, for the course of my life, that you're born gay. It's like handedness or eye color or height.
Starting point is 00:22:45 It's just something that you're born with. God created you that way. You are unique. Your iris, your fingerprints, your sexuality, they're all unique to you. And that's something not to be embarrassed of unless you're a white man, in which case, of course, slink away in shame. Be denied admission to college or a job. But for everyone else, your immutable characteristics are something that you celebrate that you should be proud of. Not something that you chose.
Starting point is 00:23:11 They're not something you can change. and this is the story that all of us have been told, and most of us, me included, sort of, kind of believe that. Okay. And if that's true, of course, you could never, ever show bias against someone on the basis of his immutable characteristics, because that's wrong. It's also unchristian.
Starting point is 00:23:30 And that is true. It is unchristian to attack someone on the basis of something with which he was born, of course. Really no one has put this in clearer terms than the former mayor of South Bend, Indiana, the former transportation secretary, and as of today, the leading candidate for the Democratic nomination in 2028,
Starting point is 00:23:51 Mr. Pete Buttigieg, here he is. I can tell you that if me being gay was a choice, it was a choice that was made far, far above my pay rate. And that's the thing I wish the Mike Pence of the world would understand, that if you got a problem with who I am, your problem is not with me. Your quarrel, sir, is with my creator. Take it up with God! He made me this way. Notice the self-seriousness, the sort of JFK-esque gaze into the distance. Your quarrel, sir, is with my creator. A little drama queen. Yeah, maybe. Okay. But that doesn't really answer the question.
Starting point is 00:24:37 And why was Pete Buttigieg dating chicks for the first part of his adult life? By his own admission, he was dating women, like a bunch of women. He was openly heterosexual, including in the U.S. military, after the repeal of Don't Ask, Don't Tell. So it was totally legal to be gay in the military, but Pete was still heterosexual. So the answer, I think most people come to is, well, he was just ashamed of being gay. Like he couldn't be his true self. kind of let it out. Maybe that's true, though those of us who were living in the United States 10 years ago
Starting point is 00:25:13 remember that there was no sanction against being gay, tons of gay, television is filled with gay people. Those of us who worked in television around gay people, great gay people, actually, just being clear, really nice, good people all day long. It was something weird about being gay 10 years ago, 15 years ago, when Pete put a judge was like, I couldn't come to terms with my own sexuality because his parents are so repressive. No, they were actually lifestyle liberals. They're big left-wingers.
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Starting point is 00:29:13 at your local Sprout's supermarket. Pick up a bag before they're gone. They will be. So it's a completely fair question. You were dating chicks not that long ago, a bunch of them, and all of a sudden you're getting all self-serious about how God made you this way. Explain how that works.
Starting point is 00:29:30 It's a totally fair question, especially since Pete Buttigieg's whole identity is wrapped up in being gay. His whole identity, it's not like Pete Buttigieg is running for president because he's had such an incredible career as a public servant. He fixed South Bend, Indiana, he's just a really good mayor. Nobody thinks that. Ask anybody in South Bend. He was just a really good driver in the U.S. military,
Starting point is 00:29:57 who's an awesome transportation secretary. He was a joke as a transnational. transportation secretary. Did air travel get better under Pete Buttigieg? Did the roads get fixed? Did anything improve in American transportation during Pete Buttigieg's tenure as transportation secretary? No. He wasn't just lame. He was awful. And in case you don't remember, here's his signature achievement as Secretary of Transportation identifying racist roads. And the interstate system, the interstate system was built to keep certain groups in and certain groups out. So it was built on a racist system, correct? Yeah, often this wasn't just an active neglect. Often this was a conscious choice. There was racism physically built into some of our highways. There was racism built in to the highways. There was rebar and a concrete substrate and of course gravel and then asphalt poured over the top. But mixed in there, probably in a drum at some point, was actual white racism. It was mixed into the roads. And that's why people to judge had to tear them up. That's it. That's a real clip. That's not AI, as you may remember. like that's insane
Starting point is 00:31:03 that was his tenure as secretary of transportation not being mean to him and it's like not even worth dredging that up again except to make the point that being
Starting point is 00:31:17 gay isn't just this thing about Pete Buttigieg it's the whole point of Pete Buttigieg it is the reason that he has the plurality of support from Democratic primary voters
Starting point is 00:31:32 who are not black. His support among black voters? They're more in the, why are you gay, camp? They're not impressed at all. In fact, I'm trying to do the math here. I think his support, people to judge's current support
Starting point is 00:31:47 among African-American Democratic primary voters is, let's see, around zero. So zero percent in that range, meaning nobody, like no black people. They're not going for it. Why are you gay? You can almost hear them saying, that. But among white liberals, Pete Buttigieg's gayness, the fact he's married to a dude called
Starting point is 00:32:08 Jason and has somehow acquired babies somehow. How do you get babies to sort of buy them somewhere? Whatever, he has these babies. And he is the model of whatever, a modern gay man. That's the whole point. He is a civil rights hero because of who he sleeps with. Pretty amazing. So two obvious points to make about that. First, do you remember when they used to tell us, we don't care what happens in your bedroom? Do you remember that?
Starting point is 00:32:47 We want to keep politics out of the bedroom. We want to keep politicians out of your bedroom. This was a way to justify the Holocaust of abortion, of course. But the line sounded kind of appealing. Yeah, politicians probably stay out of my bedroom. That seems fair. now your bedroom is the whole point. You've got politicians running on what they do in their bedroom and on the Democratic side succeeding.
Starting point is 00:33:10 So that leads very obviously to the second point, which is there are a lot of rewards in store for someone in the Democratic Party, an ambitious politician, someone who really only cares about the goal, which in Pete Buttigieg's case has always been becoming president. Is it bad to come out of the closet? and announce that you're gay? No, no, no. That's like the only way you're going to get to the White House. That's the only way. That's your ticket, being, quote, gay. Huh.
Starting point is 00:33:42 So given that that's obviously true, and given that this guy dated girls as an adult, it's totally fair to ask the question, why are you gay? Like, what is this? starting to think that maybe it's not genetic or entirely genetic. And if it is, show me the gene. We've decoded the human genome.
Starting point is 00:34:06 We can tell you where the gene for eye color comes from. Where's the gay gene? Maybe there is a gay gene, by the way. Lots of things we haven't decoded yet. Maybe it's there. Are you looking for it? Are you trying to answer this question? No.
Starting point is 00:34:23 The whole game is to make you be quiet, ashamed because it's something to do with sex and what do you, a creep, focus on sex? You're obsessed with gay sex. Sort of a variety. You're obsessed with Israel. Actually not. But you're way up in my face about it. And so I think it's fair to ask you a couple of very simple, straightforward questions,
Starting point is 00:34:44 foundational questions, like what is this? Where does it come from? Why is it good? Why is being gay better than not being gay? And if it's not 100% genetic, clearly isn't. If you've had a 300% increase in 10 years, probably not genetic,
Starting point is 00:35:01 unless our genetics are changing at lightning speed, unless evolution is a much faster process than Darwin ever reckoned. If it's not entirely genetic, then what are the other factors? And since apart from moral concerns or the concerns of human happiness, does this actually make you happy? And what does it mean to live as a gay person in the United States? what exactly does that look like?
Starting point is 00:35:26 Like, what's your life like? How are people do you have sex with? How are those unfair questions? Since you're the one throwing it in my face and telling me I'm not allowed to be against it, maybe I'm allowed to ask the questions. I don't really want to ask, don't really want to know the answers to,
Starting point is 00:35:41 but since you've made it the North Star of our moral system in the United States, since you're willing to starve an African country because they disagree with it, maybe it's time for me to ask those questions because you push me to. on this and a lot of other issues if you just back off a little bit
Starting point is 00:35:57 if we could just return to the status quo of say 1985 where yeah they're gay people they're great they're off you know whatever they're here they're there whatever but they're not pushing gay sex on my kids in school that's clearly not a good idea tell me why it is a good idea and of course it's a crime to intentionally infect someone
Starting point is 00:36:18 with an infectious disease and of course it's in fact the hallmark of civilization to make rape illegal, gay or straight? What? But since you blew up all those previous assumptions and now made them illegal, Uganda made this crime punishable by death, you made their law punishable by famine. So who's more serious about it? You are. Since you did all of that, how about we just slowly in a non-hysterical, obviously non-hateful, way, ask, what are we looking at? Why are you gay? Why is that a good thing? What is it exactly? And there are a lot of people we could ask about this, but we thought, believe it or not,
Starting point is 00:37:05 the most articulate person we know to answer these questions is Milo Yanopoulos, who was very famous 10 years ago as a, what was he called, conservative provocateur, running around the country making the case against liberals as an open, in fact, flamboyant gay man. And that was part of the shtick, right? It's like, we've got a gay guy, too. What are you going to say now? You know, we've got black conservatives, too. You can't call us racist. We've got a gay conservative. You can't call us homophobes. And so Milo was unleashed on the world. And then in literally one day, he was canceled, really destroyed as a person in a sort of non-scandal that, like so many of that period and of this period, took him right off the stage you never heard from him again.
Starting point is 00:37:51 But during the period when he was flitting around America on his dangerous faggot tour, spreading whatever it was, libertarian economics or something, to the kids, it became obvious that this guy was actually really smart, you know, even for those of us who were never that interested in the dangerous faggot part of it, if you listen, you thought, well, this guy's not dumb at all. He's actually very thoughtful. Very thoughtful, high-a-Q, high-a-Q guy who thinks about things. So over the last couple of years
Starting point is 00:38:20 during text conversations, I became aware that Milo had decided that he didn't want to be gay anymore. I thought that's kind of interesting. I didn't know you could decide you didn't want to be gay and then you read about it
Starting point is 00:38:33 and turns out there's a whole industry movement and laws designed to prevent you from deciding not to be gay. Huh? Part of the States have banned conversion therapies. You're not allowed to talk to a psychiatrist about not having same-sex attraction.
Starting point is 00:38:48 Wow. What is that? It's like once you're in, you can't get out. It's like mandatory gain us. What the hell are we looking at? Well, it's the season to give gifts to those you love, and there is no greater gift than the first gift, the gift of life. With the abortion mafia doubling down, there's never been a more important time to fight back against them and for children, which is really all that matters, children. Our friends at Preborn are the ones to go to. They're the ones we trust. We've got a partnership with Preborn, and that partnership helped. preserve the joy of life and supports mothers in need, mothers who didn't expect to be pregnant, but who have decided to have that baby.
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Starting point is 00:39:46 twice as many mothers receiving care for up to two years, twice as many people entering this world, Americans. We know the people at Preborn, they have our total endorsement. There are a lot of frauds in the charity world. They're not frauds. They're totally real. Their work help heals this country. One ultrasound is just 28 bucks. All gifts are tax deductible. Dile pound 250, say the keyword baby. Pound 250, baby, or visit preborn.com slash Tucker. Preborn.com slash Tucker. And so it seemed worth a sit-down conversation with Milo Unopoulos and just ask him sincere questions. Like, what is this? Why did you decide to change?
Starting point is 00:40:26 What's it like changing? What does it mean to be gay in the United States specifically? And so that conversation follows. And we hope you enjoy it. So you probably got Verizon, AT&T, T-Mobile. That means you are definitely way overpaying for wireless service. And we're not just saying that. It happens for a reason.
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Starting point is 00:41:29 slash Tucker. It literally takes minutes. It's America's Wireless Company. You're really nice to do this. I'm glad you came. I want to begin with the only person that have me on. I'm joking. I'm joking. No, I'm actually really interested. I'm interested in this topic. I've never been interested in it, but I want to begin by asking you... It's icky, isn't it? It's icky. Well, sort of in personal, but, you know, it's occurred to me. Particularly when I have interviewed Republican politicians, particularly neocons over the years, I've always... Sexuality comes up, comes to mind.
Starting point is 00:41:57 I've always wanted to say, in a Ugandan accent, are you gay? Why are you gay? So let me ask, are you gay? Were you gay? Like, what is gay? Nobody's gay. After that clip, which is the best thing on the internet, he changes the question. The interrogative to a declarative, he says, why are you gay? And she starts, you know, it starts talking.
Starting point is 00:42:19 He says, you are gay. It becomes a statement. And this is where he goes, this is where he loses me because nobody is gay. We've been encouraged to think of this. It's an icky subject. Like straight men don't want to think about that. No, no, it's okay. I mean, it's reached.
Starting point is 00:42:38 But you invited me. Well, I invited you because I have not, you know, not wanted to be engaged with the topic at all. I don't have strong, super strong personal feelings about it. But all of a sudden, it has become like a defining fact of the West that we have a huge gay population. Exporting sodomy. But no one wants to talk about it. Giving aid with, you know, with strings attached. So I'm sorry, I've told you what metaphor am I reaching for strings attached?
Starting point is 00:43:08 Yes, you can. but only if you have a gay pride festival. Great. What is that? Exactly. What is that? Yes, it has been. And all of these things, and with the collapse in people identifying as trans, you're beginning to now see what some of us have always known about homosexuality,
Starting point is 00:43:25 which is that this is a product. I mean, there are some people, obviously, who were probably always going to be gay, Tammy Bruce. But, you know, like maybe she might be the only real lesbian. She might be the only real lesbian. I believe when Tammy Bruce tells me that she was only ever into women, I believe her. And I like her, by the way. I think she's great.
Starting point is 00:43:45 But she's like the only real lesbian. With gay men, which is completely different, we see the numbers go up, the numbers go down. This is not, without some change in environmental factors, this doesn't make sense if we believe the old lie born this way. If we believe what was in fact invented in the 1980s as a public relation strategy born this way. So what happened back in the days, gays were in the 80s and with AIDS and all the rest of it, wanting to be out and proud and to wear their sins on their sleeves.
Starting point is 00:44:19 And somebody came up with this idea, which caught on and worked. It was twofold. One is, well, what if we say that being gay is like being black or being a woman? Yes. Then they're a bigot. We're not weird. And so it takes the religious, the moral majority's sinful lifestyle choice argument, and it screws them because now they're saying like, you're wrong to be a girl or you're wrong to be black. It was invented. It was invented wholesale by the activists in the 1980s. And the second part of it was, and this is in a book called After the Ball, which is kind of defined how gay activists were going to, it really, it was very influential because it was really the book that,
Starting point is 00:45:05 told gay activists how to get this revolting sin that most people don't even want to think about, up front and center, family friendly, and ultimately to the state where we let them adopt children, which is a whole thing we'll get into. And that was don't talk about bodily functions. Don't talk about effluvia. Just talk about love. Just talk about love. Talk about it in terms of love, like love is love, love wins and we see this to the first day never talk about you know the stains on the sheets the promiscuity the drugs the um the glory holes in berlin nightclubs never talk about any of those things because those things will repel women and you need moms with gay sons to affirm their homosexuality and and so what is that homosexuality long answer for a short question i understand
Starting point is 00:45:54 um uh in almost every case and in certainly in every male case it is a trauma a response. It is not a sexuality. It is not part of what you are or who you are or a component of your personality or a function of it. It is a set of behaviors that emerges in people with a number of very easily identifiable common etiologies. One of them is, well, so for instance, among gay, excuse me, among black and Jewish Americans, they report statistically significantly higher rates of homosexuality or why could that be overbearing moms and absent dads or in the jewish case nebish fathers and you know uh you know like jewish my jewish friends i always call their their marriages are like lion taming you know uh where you have a sort
Starting point is 00:46:48 of um nebish scholarly bookish dad and a larger-than-life mom who you know once one day decides she's going to be a rabbi but you know um that or in the black community of course just the fatherlessness And it's why, why, if it's born this way, if you don't have some other better explanation, could it be the case that there are more gays among black and Jewish populations where something's going on here? Why are we getting more trans and more gays and then less gays? Why? Because this is, in fact, a symptom. In fact, this is a product of something. It's the result of something.
Starting point is 00:47:21 Well, this was Freud's position, which was kind of conventional wisdom for the better part of 100 years, that this was a response to the environment and particularly to the relationship with the mother that a young boy has and a relationship with his father. I mean, this was like people just assume that was true when I was a kid. They were not gay haters or homophobes. That just, that was a state of knowledge on the subject.
Starting point is 00:47:47 One of the only things Freud got right was that. And it's funny that, you know, the way that that's actually in line with Catholic Church teaching and now has become, now you see the terminology in the medical industry has begun to change as well because now gay people are sort of saturated everywhere. You know, like when you get a, it's kind of like America, you get a whole country full of people who are very similar but all think they're really, really individual.
Starting point is 00:48:15 That's deep. P.S. I do know what that looks like. And, you know, America is a very fagotized country in all kinds of ways. That's the technical term. If you want to know the truth about homosexuality, you've got to go to black YouTube and listen to the girls. How do you get to black YouTube, by the way? You know, it's a sort of tumbling,
Starting point is 00:48:36 it's a tumbling kind of thing. You find one good video by somebody who's like, Steph Carey, you fake a task. Sorry. And then you'll tumble through the algorithm. I'll send you some links. I'll post some links on my Twitter. I don't know if I dare
Starting point is 00:48:53 but you're saying that's the more honest YouTube It's the only honest YouTube It's the only honest anything Because You go past the churches And you'll see you know The white homo demons
Starting point is 00:49:03 stealing your man And it's not the pastor Who comes up with this stuff It's his wife It's his wife Who's got this You know Who was trying to set her
Starting point is 00:49:13 girlfriend up with somebody And that was all great But but he went Off with a dude Which is you know like even, which is sort of, uh, equi, um, uh, distant for them from going off with the white girl or whatever. But, uh, no, you, the only honest place where, you know, people will just be like, um, did it, fagataz, you know, and then they'll go, and then, and then.
Starting point is 00:49:38 Amazing. Lebron, fagatatat, and they'll go through it all. I mean, the, for me, the nepless ultra of this genre would be, um, a black china's mom. Do you know who that is? No. Of course you don't. You remind me of a line from Blackadder sometimes, you know, because you have this sort of, like, lovely kind of, like, en genu kind of thing that you do. And it's like, well, no, I've just, I don't know anything.
Starting point is 00:50:00 But do you remember that line from Blackadder, like, slumbering ultrigenarians who claim never to have heard of the Beatles? No, but I get it. He's talking about High Court judges. I've never actually heard of Blackadder before, so I... You're kidding. I'm actually not. What?
Starting point is 00:50:14 I don't even know what you're talking about. But that's okay. It's not about me. I'm just trying to think... This is how Stephen Fry. and Rowan Atkinson got famous. How do you not know? I don't know. There are huge gaps. I'm not a knowledgeable man.
Starting point is 00:50:27 Sweet baby Jesus and the orphans. Well, you say this, yes. But anyway, so Tokyo Tony is her name. And she's, anyway, you can Google Tokyo Tony. That's your end to black everything. Anyway, she's great. There's a whole, I mean, YouTube, now the only interesting bits of YouTube that still get views are like these black shows. They're like, these massively overproduced shows with these incredibly elaborate sets.
Starting point is 00:50:48 And they've got, like, you know, 43 people live watch. But the archives and the clips like go crazy. Anyway. Man, I've got a series of delights ahead of me. Well, you don't have many black people on the show, so you've got me instead. I'll be your African-American contingent. I'll introduce you to these things. So, no, I'm kidding, Mike.
Starting point is 00:51:12 So you're describing a world into which a lot of conventional propaganda has not yet filtered. Or they're resistant to it or something. interesting because why are you gay? Are you gay? The origin of the born this way I've just described, I've just explained. Yeah. The reality is that these communities who experience this problem a lot, right? The black community, particularly because of fatherlessness, a lot of gay black kids, there's just a lot of them, have this very blunt and truthful. I mean, look, look, look. Looking at me now, it's impossible to imagine that I used to be a homosexual. It hadn't entered my mind. No, but I knew you during your flaming stage, so I had heard. But, but, but there are so many, like, flaming young black men in America today, especially.
Starting point is 00:52:09 And this is a problem this community is dealing with. And they don't, you know, black America is like commendably impervious to a lot of the woke PC language. You know, like very creditably skeptical of vaccines. Yes. They won't go along with a lot of this stuff like, you know, the proposition, whatever, in California, gay marriage. Why, it's black women who are like holding on the floor. So I love Candace Owen so much.
Starting point is 00:52:31 You know, like the ungovernability of black women is the only thing it might possibly save America. You know, as embodied in our friend, Candice, who is just like, you know, she's ungovernable in the best possible way. She's not going along with it. She is, to put it mildly. Yeah, fair. She is not going along with it.
Starting point is 00:52:46 And Candice is a very beautiful, polished, you know, intelligent and sort of microcosm of a trend that you see everywhere in black America now, which is like, ain't doing that, ain't doing that, definitely ain't doing that. Wow. And it's very interesting. So they will be very resistant to this stuff. They kind of intuit what white people, I think, have forgotten because, you know, we're just
Starting point is 00:53:13 also like bomb, it's a weak and demoralized and like kind of overburdened with this nonsense. The truth is that homosexuality and in particular conversion therapy is the first thing upon which the liberals tried what they later did to Trump, which is just this wall of fake news, misinformation, propaganda. It's the first time, I mean, there's other examples around wars and things like that, but when it comes to social issues, it's the first time I think the press just says, oh, hell, no, except they didn't do that because they're white, but, you know, they just have smooth. Sometimes I lose the characters, get confused. I'm going to put Rwanda away. No, the first time that the media decides, this is a social issue, we care about enough because we don't lose our gay friends, that we're going to just lie and demonize and give the full fake news treatment
Starting point is 00:54:09 that we later saw in its most sophisticated form leveraged, praise God, unsuccessfully against Trump again and again and again, right? So they start off with this, you know, you were born this way, honey, you are born this way, honey, you are beautiful, whatever you are, no, you're like that because you got raped by a priest, or you're like that because your mom was overbearing and your dad wasn't around, or you're like that because you failed to form a platonic, stable attachments to other men as a child. For some reason, maybe you didn't have a good male role model or whatever, but there is a relatively small number of identifiable and repeated etiologies that might. mark somebody out as being, you know, vulnerable to this. And you're looking at the histories of gay, but they'll all deny it. They're saying, no, that's just me. But it's not. And they know, they know, because I knew, and they know.
Starting point is 00:54:59 And I talk to them privately when there's no cameras. They could squeeze it out of them eventually that you get there. Yes, there's something about their sexual activity. They know isn't right. And it's not just in the technical sense that the sex is sterile. And therefore can never be part of the Holy Sacrament of marriage. it can't be co-procreation with God, right? Yes.
Starting point is 00:55:19 Co-procration with God, meaning, you know, you make a physical body with your wife, but then God puts a soul in. And that's why it's the most precious sacrament, because, you know, you do the others, you do your confirmation or the rest of it, but it's leading up to you getting to make something with God, right? Which is the real reason that Lucifer is so mad, because the angels can't do that, right? The angels don't get to participate in creation with our Lord
Starting point is 00:55:44 that every single human being does. and you feel that too when you have kids you even if you don't know what it is you feel there's something supernatural going on here this is going to sound completely pathetic but i like i have some kind of some kind of pathetic simulacrum of it now i've become a cat dad just in the terms of like caring for something helpless yes um and it's bringing out of me something that i know is going to lead to fatherhood because i'm responsible for this being that loves and laughs and they to, you know, and requires regular, not just maintenance, but affection and to be tended to and love. Like, I love dogs. I'm like, I used to be more of a dog guy, but I live in a, I live
Starting point is 00:56:28 in a house on the National Register of Historic Places, so I can't have dogs. And so I just, I got a cat one day, you know, just because somebody found it in an engine. I was like, I'm so alone. So, you know, I said, sure, I'll give me a, give it, give it a damn kitten. And at that point, I wasn't sure I was going to drown it, wear it, or nurture it. But I was just like, oh, okay. And being responsible for shaping the personality, which anybody who has animals who loves animals knows that is 100% real, responsible shaping the personality, nurturing that being
Starting point is 00:57:03 into either being a parent itself or just to being a companion or to being the best that it can be, right? It's bringing something out in me, you know? that wasn't present when I was having a lot of what most people would regard as, well, what homosexuals would regard as very desirable kind of sex, you know, with the particular kind of person or whatever. So you get to the base of it and you get to the heart of it if you're sort of one-on-one with the gay, but they won't just talk about the emptiness of their life
Starting point is 00:57:36 or the fact that the sex is sterile or whatever. They will know that there's something not quite right. And that its origin is there at something that was not. quite right. Have you ever been addicted to anything? Oh, yeah. Big time. So you know there's that moment when your mind is flooded and it's all you can think about. Yes. And it's all that you can, you've got to get it out because if you don't do a line or have a smoke or do something, if you don't get it out, it's just going to be all that you can think about the rest of the day. It's just driving you crazy because it floods your mind. Yeah. I've been addicted to one or two little
Starting point is 00:58:14 things, you know, and I realized my sex works the same way. I believe that. I realized that when I was on a plane, I'm sitting down, hey, Team 1A, I'm sitting on the plane, I'm like, yeah, I'll have a genetic girl, and then, you know, like a basketball player, well, not basketball player, they're all gay nerds, but you know, like a football player would sit next to me, like, it would take hold of me. There were times I had to like go to the bathroom and like, you know. Yeah.
Starting point is 00:58:42 Because I, because I had to get rid of it. because it was taking hold of my mind. Sounds like a demon. Yeah, because it's what it is. I joke, I say Gorgoroth, the semen demon, you know. He comes out away. He doesn't visit me very often anymore, you know, but he's... It's totally real.
Starting point is 00:58:58 I mean, that stuff is all real. But I realized that, so I don't do cocaine anymore, but I, you know, it'll shock people to learn. I used to be a bit of a cokehead. You know, when I was, you know, that rush of dopamine, the rituals associated with it, well, you know. It's like, oh my God, that's how I feel about sex. And that's, that can't be right. It can't be right. No, it's a, it's literally a, I'm not just talking about gay sex, but any,
Starting point is 00:59:26 that is literally a perversion. Yes. And it's, and it's also other things, too, because these things go hand in hand, you know. May I ask how, in your own, with Asanteu personal, how did you wind up? I think we are. Okay. I think we are. I just told you I wanked on UA, one. seven, two, soon. Or they'll crack one out in the bathroom. People are never going to sit next to me on planes again. I think we're good. Anyone who's ever been, well, I drank alcohol in the morning.
Starting point is 00:59:53 I mean, you know, anyone who's ever been possessed. That doesn't count. No, I know. But I'm just saying, give me a real one. Anyone who's ever been possessed by an obsession knows that it can totally destroy your behavior. But we spend so much time talking in our society about, you know, gay and it's all good,
Starting point is 01:00:11 of course, you know, gay is good and gay rights are good. And, in fact, they're the marker of human rights. rights. They're the only human right, really. But it is the only human right people still care about. You're right to be sodomized. You're right to wake up in the morning and you're like, oh, okay, you're ready to go, are you, and hear that voice in your mind. And it's not a sultry voice. It's not a sexy voice. It's go and get it.
Starting point is 01:00:32 It's, you know, it's like it's, it's, it's, it's, it's, it's, it's, it's, it's, interrupting you, but, but it is, that's dark. I've thankfully never, because it's one of the few problems I don't have, but I get it. That's why grind are so dangerous, you know? It's just like within 20 minutes, they can be in the living room. I want to ask you about that. But first, let me ask about your own life, because you never get to ask, you know, everyone's telling you how proud they already be gay, and that's great and all that.
Starting point is 01:00:56 It's a sin, by the way. Pride is a sin? Well, I agree with that. But you never get to ask, like, how did this, how did you start being gay? Like, specifically described with, you know, in a PG way, right? if you insist. No, the way I remember, we've done enough, I know. The way I remember it is I just did it to piss off my mother, but that's not true. I think that's self-mythologization. You know, like I did, and I did take a lot of drug deal at the time when I was, it was, it was...
Starting point is 01:01:25 Were you close to your mom? When I was in high school. She married, so, so I'll answer your question. I'll skip back first. Let me do that first. So my dad was in organized crime. Funny, charismatic, brilliant. there are things about like maybe Alex Jones that remind me of him a little bit just in that kind of like
Starting point is 01:01:48 just in manner you know like a bit of a bruiser with the heart you know like you know like he's a bad guy with a heart of gold yeah yeah I've known a few
Starting point is 01:01:57 yeah yeah yeah I cleave to that kind of personality it reminds me a little bit of the good bits of my dad right but there was another section which Alex does not have which which was that you know he was a bad guy
Starting point is 01:02:09 and I saw him do really bad things to people. I would come down, I told this story before, but I would come down, sometimes the kitchen door would be closed, and I would hear, you know, Nicky, Nicky, I'm giving up a life of crime, I'm turning over a new leaf, I'm not going to do anything that's going to give me any more than 18 months. You know, it's funny, but...
Starting point is 01:02:26 It's all about goals, Milo. Yeah, but he was a bad guy, and I saw him do things that really frightened me. And, you know, he was in pubs and nightclubs, in a, you know, running the clubs and the security and sort of like, you know, he's gone now so I can say it, laundering millions, you know, like, blah, blah, between those two, you know, like the security, these security guards are on $120 an hour, huh? Yeah, yes, yes, officer. Oh, yeah, oh, yeah, aren't you? Tell them what you're on. It's like 110, 120, 120, you know.
Starting point is 01:03:00 Yeah, yeah. So he used to let me sit in the, in the booth and, like, do the stamps, and I would watch people go in and I'd watch the behaviors of like low socioeconomic white working class like in their 20s just you know just drinking effing you know and and and then I saw some of the things my dad did and they would start with that joke they'd start with that very charming joke they'd start with that alluring joke and my dad had like a degree in my dad had a master's in fine art he was a great sculptor and painter but that but that was the charming bit of him the dark bit was you know like he would say to people, can't his bad language on the show? Yes, you may.
Starting point is 01:03:41 Because you can bleep it, but my dad would say, like, listen, just because you're in a wheelchair, don't give you the right to be a cunt. And he would grab the wheelchair, spin it around and, like, walk people up to, you know, like to parking lot edges and stuff like that. And I'm sitting in the car like, you know, or he'd go collecting, which means protection rackets and he would um and he would uh um you know i would overhear like julian can you take your glasses off please it's like i don't want to get glass in my finger when i poke your fucking eye out it's very charming very funny like very tony supano kind of like that kind of ilk you know um but but i
Starting point is 01:04:22 saw some of it and i think maybe somewhere in my head was like yeah if that's being a man i think i'm out you know because i was in child it was frightened and then my mother left him and married it a new guy and he was very like it's sort of a nice guy now but but um he would go through all my stuff like if i had papers you know if i was reading something for school or whatever he would like when i was out go through every page and just sort of leave it like this just it's just that i knew that he'd been in there you know and that kind of like invasive like just like just for a very sensitive artistic child like me um you know already on my way then you know having had a lot much larger-than-life grandmother who was like, you know, egging this stuff on. And by this time,
Starting point is 01:05:07 I had had some interactions, sexual interactions with a Roman Catholic priest, who's dead now, I've been dead for a long time. But that had obviously, you know, that fed into it as well. Wait, wait, stop, stop. That obviously fed into it. Right. Well, if you're being molested. Well, yeah. Also the molestation. No, but really for me, this is, this is the most important to do the other stuff first before you get, oh, and I was raped by a priest. But this sort of psychological torture as I experienced it was, you know, so I had no private space anywhere. And I knew that all the men in my life were just not things I wanted to become.
Starting point is 01:05:43 Yes. And then I cast my mind back to a lovely old rich man in a frock, Father Michael. And I, you know, and I, who had not been like that with me. and one of the things got me into trouble 10 years ago was when I said I felt like the kind of the aggressor in that situation and I didn't know what bad stuff it had done to me and at that time I didn't you know I made a couple of jokes that got GOP ink hot and bothered because they're all faggots
Starting point is 01:06:15 and they weren't happy about some of the truths that we're talking about today kind of toppling out you know and so these things combined the having what I perceived to be at that time I perceived as a child to be consensual sexual experiences with an older man who was a kindly he was kindly sweetheart you know he was I think of him now as a harmless old queen
Starting point is 01:06:42 you know of course what he was doing was not harmless well you have a right to any opinion you want about the experiences that happened to you well I've been retired for some time as a result Well, I continue to believe that people are allowed to formulate their own opinions about their own lives. I think you should be able to talk about your rape however you like. I kind of agree with that. And not necessarily have to go on live international television and apologize for it like I did, but I'm not better.
Starting point is 01:07:10 Fortunately, I carved out much. I have a new kind of career and a new life now that I much prefer. It's more satisfying, lucrative, blah, blah, blah. I will talk to it later. So I haven't gone crazy like so many of my friends. And it's funny watching them because I see some of the, in the way that their personalities have become kind of empty and sharded and become filled with wickedness,
Starting point is 01:07:33 I see some of the things that I have been working the last 10 years to get away from that created this sexual behavior. They've become facultized. Well, there does seem to be a connection, but it does, you know, the incidence of closeted homosexuals, sexuality on the right is like overwhelming. It's like way above what you would imagine is statistically probable. Three straight guys on the right is like, Alex, you and I have a floating wild car just in case I forgot anybody.
Starting point is 01:08:06 Who else is there? What else is there? I mean, maybe the Tate's, but who else is there? What is that? I don't understand. There's such a long, there's such a long relationship, a long happy marriage between conservative politics and homosexuality. And it's easy to joke about it and say, oh, it's, you know, all of the bells and smells and frocks of the religious dimension to it all. Or it's the pomp and circumstance of power.
Starting point is 01:08:32 The New Testament is really tough on homosexuality. So I don't see it as a, that's certainly not a Christian thing. It's not a Christian thing. But of course, it's easy to understand with the sort of obscene obese heresies of the type that obtain in this country. I mean, in a country where prosperity gospel can thrive. you're right who would be surprised right it's not an authentic face
Starting point is 01:08:54 as we would know I sometimes tease you about your your denomination but Episcopalian Episcopalian church is as close to us as it's possible to get
Starting point is 01:09:02 and was designed to be a mirror to high Anglicanism which was indistinguishable from Catholicism and you know at its, sorry at its best it's a very similar
Starting point is 01:09:11 creed and with a very similar style and similar beliefs you know but as soon as you wander away from that in America just like mental so but what is and i'm not attacking anybody and i never want to out people because i don't
Starting point is 01:09:28 you know it's not my business right yeah i've never done it and uh i mean maybe i live i live to out people i live to up on which subject corey booker um i let i'm sorry but what is that why is there why is it so common on the right well of course on the left too but on the right with closeted gaze. Like I don't get that. It's an interesting question I've never heard a really good answer to. I'll be honest with you. I suppose I should have a good answer to that, but I don't. But I think if it's about anything, it's about the exercise of power over others. Yes. I feel that. I have no idea exactly why that's true, but I feel that that's true. What's the worst thing about magic? It's not that you can turn a person into a frog or you can make yourself look more beautiful or you can,
Starting point is 01:10:17 whatever. What's the worst thing about magic is that it robs others of agency that you can make them do things they don't want to do? The worst and most sinister bit of magic is that you can trick someone or compel someone against their will to fall in love with you or to throw themselves off a cliff. It's a kind of slavery, yeah. Exactly. The most frightening thing about magic is its ability to compel the wills of others. Yes. And that's what I think homosexuals are seeking when they, because they feel so powerless in their own lives and have this understanding that they are broken people without agency over their own
Starting point is 01:10:51 sex lives, over their bodies, over that down there. Like, I don't even have control over me, but I'm damn well going to have control over you. That's, I think, a lot of it. And so if you dovetail that in with the... I know you're telling the truth here. I don't fully understand what you're
Starting point is 01:11:06 saying, but it comports with a lot of what I've seen. I feel as though if you are a person who intuits that you have a lack of control of power, of agency over your own drives, your own desires, your own urges, and even your biological, anatomical, your physical responses, like, I can't stop getting aroused by men. What is that?
Starting point is 01:11:37 You're going to want to exercise power elsewhere over others. Oh, that's so interesting. And being sucked into the nexus of intersectional. you're going to be tempted by explicit magic as well as the implicit magic of whatever. And so, you know, dovetail that with right-wing authoritarianism and I have to say, I'm sorry to say it, I must say it, some dimensions, in some respects, I can see that that might be something that attracts homosexuals to the Catholic Church, for instance, just the illusion of being a bishop. Or National Review magazine, you know, which is.
Starting point is 01:12:17 just saved me. It's all right. I'm happy to talk about the Catholic element of it. I mean, the bishops are all faggots. I mean, they're all whoopsies. They're all whoopsies. Gays. I like that way. It contains within it a kernel of the sort of slapstick that I think we have to. One of the ways I got myself off it was was imagining myself in that situation as ridiculous. Like, I can't even perceive that I would do something so ridiculous. Like laughing at it became, because you know, I laughed is the death of arousal, right? I totally agree. So I read this some, I read the, or something like that went off in the back of head.
Starting point is 01:12:52 Anyone who's ever been laughed at naked can tell you that. Yeah, yeah, yeah, well, never have, but, um, uh, uh, I haven't either. I tell you, no, no, no, but I mean, you know, like, it's, it's a, I think it's a famous, like British, uh, particularly a British, like an injunction, you know, that laughter is the death of arousal or whatever. Um, uh, and, and I just thought, okay, well, how about if I start thinking about it as ridiculous because it is ridiculous i mean like you and the football team like it's ridiculous uh and so that's one of the ways like that but but no this this this that is so true
Starting point is 01:13:22 seeing themselves as powerless even to control their own bodies and knowing on some level i think homosexuals seek out those places um and you know you see on the left this is why you might want to bomb iran in venezuela yeah bomb bomb bomb bomb what's gayer what's gayer i'm not saying was practicing homosexual physically, but is there anything gayer than John McCain's like bloodlust? I agree. Or his protegees. Seen through this prism. I mean, he's even got the fat friend. It's his daughter. You know, like, he even bred the fat best friend, you know, like, is there a more ostentatious, like, faggagging America than Megan McCain? You know, she hates herself. She's fat. She's crazy. She's every gay man's dream. You know, she can't dress.
Starting point is 01:14:09 You know, she's... Why is that every gay man's dream? Because they want to visit upon their female friends the cruelty they wish that they could perform on their mothers. Whoa, whoa. They want to make her feel fat and ugly and ridiculous because that's what their mother did to them and there was no dad around to protect them
Starting point is 01:14:35 and their mother was just this overbearing terrible. You know, sort of the Jungian devouring mother. All of this has been banned in the United States So I don't even think people are familiar with these concepts anymore Right, so I'll try to keep it simple Imagine like Imagine like a female like Lutheran pastor Or a female Jewish rabbi
Starting point is 01:14:55 And there is like, you know Hey, it's great to grieve That's for a TV show But you know, you're like one of those, right? This is horrible overbearing monstrousness that on some level the homosexual knows is what's made him like this. Because you know, dad wasn't around, so mom did it, right?
Starting point is 01:15:14 By the way, this is why trans was so popular because it got parents off the hook. If you've got a gay kid, you know, you did something, but if your kid has a disease and was born into the wrong body, well, that's not your fault, is it? And you go with sympathy and all your friends were like, oh, do you got a trans kid, how tough for you? No, you got a faggot because you raise a faggot
Starting point is 01:15:31 because you're a terrible parent. You know, that's what's really going on. They want to avoid that. So instead, no, I'm going to chop its ding-dong off. and say it's got a disease. Like, that's why it was so popular with single moms. Amazing. That's why trans was so popular with single moms.
Starting point is 01:15:44 Because it got them off the hook. It means they didn't turn their son gay when they know they did. They know they did. They know they did. And the sons know they did. And the sons grow up being cruel to women because of what mom did to them. So they're hostile toward their moms, even though... Well, they say, they've had varying...
Starting point is 01:16:05 Right, right, right. But it's a toxicity. it's a codependent relationship that they know is so sometimes they can't visit this cruelty on their mom because they have this close relationship with their mom
Starting point is 01:16:15 but they do it on other women it's redirected right it's transferred onto other women because they love a mommy like what would I do that my mom but on some level they know that sense that she did that she did that so they
Starting point is 01:16:30 force women into ever more uncomfortable and ever uglier outfits and throw them down runways on you know, in 10-inch heels, or they... What? So you think the fashion industry is acting this out? Of course it is.
Starting point is 01:16:46 I mean, what other explanation could there be for the intolerable ugliness of the catwalk? You were blowing my mind on so many levels, I can't even. I mean, sure, we used to have, when society was working properly, you would go... Have you ever seen Mrs. Aris goes to Paris? No.
Starting point is 01:17:03 It's a lovely movie about a char lady, a housekeeper Yes, housekeeper, yes, to Americans I see, I know Charwoman and you've never seen Mrs. Arras goes to Paris who dreams of one day owning a couture-diore dress like the person she works for, right? And she saves up and she saves up
Starting point is 01:17:22 and there's calamities with her money and, you know, some boyfriend, whatever. And eventually she manages to go to Paris and she manages to get the dress, right? And when society was properly ordered, there were these aspirational beauty stands. and these aspirational lifestyle goals included gorgeous tailoring and beautiful silhouettes for women that accentuated their, you know, their gorgeous characters. It's not like that now, is it?
Starting point is 01:17:50 It's not like that now? No, and it's funny. I don't know much, I don't know really anything about fashion, but I love female beauty, of course. But you don't see any of it on the catwalk now. Exactly. In fact, you see the opposite. You see the opposite. You see, you see manufactured ugliness.
Starting point is 01:18:05 gay men turning women into the demons they see themselves as you see gay look at look at the most it was the most celebrated woman on the stage at the moment is is the the um gorgon opposite ariana grande whose name i forget now um you know this this the this the this the the sferatu like black nosferatu um who seems to be sucking the life force out of poor ariana who's i think going to die with the next few weeks uh if you've seen if you've seen that singer's um physique lately She sort of But this This appalling
Starting point is 01:18:40 Apparition Cynthia or something I think Of course she's called Cynthia You know with these With these claws You know and you look at the silhouette And you're like That's literally Nosferatu
Starting point is 01:18:55 It's literally Nosferato And I know a gay man did that And of course a gay man then put her on stage In Jesus Christ Superstar as Our Lord Did you know that? No You've seen the person I'm talking about right? No
Starting point is 01:19:05 Okay, well, you'll Google it later, but it's this spindly, it's just straight up goblin-looking black woman. Like, and I'm not trying to have like a Rose, a Roseanne moment, although she was right. You know, whatever, but this woman is like, you know, like ugly by any racial stage. It's just just monstrous looking, right? Just what our mothers might have called a deeply unfortunate, right? Yeah. I mean, practically circus level.
Starting point is 01:19:35 And, of course, she's the heroine of the billion-dollar franchise now, Wicked. And she's on stage as Jesus. Which... So it's an act of hostility, is what you're saying. Exactly. Exactly. And so these gay men who feel the will of Gorgoroth inside them, you're like, do it, do it.
Starting point is 01:19:59 You know, and turn these women into the demons they see inside themselves, you know. are the demons they see acting on them? This is a lot deeper than I expected when I texted you to have this conversation. It's more than you would imagine from a guy wearing this t-shirt. No, it's not, actually. And by the way, can I say one thing that's bothered me for years when I was a child?
Starting point is 01:20:20 There was a lot of creativity coming from gay men in the United States. It's all gone now. I know. And it's Dave Rubin is responsible. Not him personally, but I mean, like... But do you know what I'm talking about? I mean... Of course.
Starting point is 01:20:32 And why? Because... A lot of free things. And I was related to one of them, and I spent a lot of time in my house, lived under my house when I was a kid and gay died of AIDS, you know, and had a lot of problems. But I will say, creative, free thinking, like truly free thinking. Gorda Dahl was like the archetypes.
Starting point is 01:20:51 This is Berkian. There are no Gora Vidal's in gay world that I'm aware of. They're all, like, conformists and supporting the man. Like, what? The only ones these days are ex-gay. But do you know what I'm talking? Yes, and it's Burkean. It's because creativity arises out of order. There has to be limits. And if homosexuality is not proscribed as wretched and kept at the fringes where it belongs, creativity
Starting point is 01:21:14 dies. And what do you get? Because you don't have those people playing with the limits. You don't have the taboo breakers. You don't have the artists, the creatives, living at the limits of society. They're brought instead. I think the gay community such as is is one of the least creative, most conformist elements of our society. I never thought I would say that. become the enforcers just like... They're the enforcers. They're the purportian guard for Apple and Microsoft. Like, what the hell?
Starting point is 01:21:39 Just like the white women of folklore who, you know, are responsible role evil. But they become like turbocharged Karens, you know? And it's the white women who welcome in the white single moms typically, but single moms generally, I think, who bring in a drag queen story hour. Because there's no gay people like banging down the door. No, that's right. There's no gay people like, excuse me, can I come reach your children, to mind? Can I come reach your children?
Starting point is 01:22:08 Like, no, they're not. They're not. But there are demons out there who will come do it if you invite them. Because what do you have to do with demons? Open a portal. Open a doorway, you know? Yes, I do. These women open the doorway and in comes, you know.
Starting point is 01:22:25 Three little pigs. But the gays now have taken this role. they've taken the mantle over from, you know, what we used to, we mean, we used to say, didn't we? We used to say a white single mom's a root of all evil, like, you know, kind of half-joking because of all those crazy stuff they support. But now it's homosexuals. I have to, I have to be honestly with you. I bear some responsibility for this because it was me 10 years ago, mainstreaming homosexuality into the Republican Party is the great regret of my life, more so than anything I've done to my own soul, which is.
Starting point is 01:23:02 a lot. It's the great regret of my life because it has given rise to horrors I never imagine. I mean, Lenin said, all revolutionaries come to hate their children, you know, while the gay horrors that I've given birth to, Lady Marga and Nick Fuentes, I mean, they keep me up at night. They keep me up at night. Why did you mention Dave Rubin? What's his role? Well, because he is at the vanguard, along with another of other gays in public life, of introducing children into the equation. because it's when you, when you do what I did, which is like gay, it's just like everyone else,
Starting point is 01:23:37 you'd be a normal gay. I remember, and this is the thing I regret more than anything else in the world, there's a video of Ross Matthews in 2017 on Twitter saying, so I came home and landscapers have been in. We're getting more citrus. You can never have too much citrus. And people ask me, Ross, what do you think about this, this Milo guy? And I'm like, Milo, Milo, how low can you go?
Starting point is 01:23:58 I don't know who this person is, but I read it. And he says, I'm getting letters. This is Milo guy. He's resigning from Breitbart or something. And he says, I'm getting letters from people who say, you make it okay that I have a gay son because if he grows up, he doesn't have to be like Ross Matthews. And I was like, no, they should be like Ross Matthews. They should be like Ross Matthews. They shouldn't be like Dave Rubin, like you might not even know unless you watched him for a little bit.
Starting point is 01:24:22 Because this domesticity of homosexuals has killed all the things that were good about gays that made them like tolerable. and instead has given them this grotesque parody, this simulacrum of domesticity, which has, of course, in their never-ending hunger, expanded to include babies. And now we have the Buttigieg couple buying black children. I thought you weren't allowed to buy people. Oh, no, you can if you're homosexual.
Starting point is 01:24:54 It's called adoption or surrogacy or whatever, but you can buy them. I thought it was called slavery. In fact, you have to buy them because it's really, and it's quite expensive. In some online slave market? No, no, no, it's the government. As you know, but Dave Rubin has like franken sperm babies. Like he mixed his effluvia with that of his husband. I mean, this is real, this is physical.
Starting point is 01:25:26 Gave it a stir and hoped for the bad. And whichever one we get we get implanted it in some highly paid woman will never know the name of, the real mother of those children. And, you know, he and his catamite are on the internet, you know, with these signs like, it's coming with these two dates. And I'm like, yeah, your damnation. That's the date you're counting down to. The date you're... How was that conservative? Oh, because it's family, you see. Because it's a, it's, the, the, the slight of hand, like, that's going on is they're like, well, gay is it just like everybody else?
Starting point is 01:26:06 So we should behave like everybody else, which means we should have kids. And if we can't physically have kids because our sex is this like demonic sterile horror show, then we'll buy them and then we'll look like we've got it. I mean, that's how bad it is. That's how bad it is. And so you have the, I love, I don't know if it says anything about Republicans, versus Democrats, but you have, like, Dave Rubin, who, for whom buying a child is not good enough, it must be his own, you know? Like, like, the, the, the, the conceit of that. So on the right, you've got this sort of techno-conceit, Frankenbaby, and on the left, they adopt blacks.
Starting point is 01:26:47 You know, you've got these two wispy, wiry faggots who adopted two black babies. I mean, isn't Buddha just the most interesting character of our age? Like, I mean, it doesn't look like he looks like an intensely boring homosexual, like everything gay people shouldn't be. But it's so interesting the fact that, I mean, clearly he wasn't gay, like at the beginning. Well, he had girlfriends. Right. So he wasn't gay, but he made himself gay.
Starting point is 01:27:11 I made that point because, actually, I had gay men who worked for me who were more in tune with this than me. I'm not in tune at all. I just didn't, I thought Peter put his judge with a joke, but they said, well, he's not really gay. And I was like, no. So, but what does that mean? Well, his sexuality, like all homosexuality, is a function, a product, a symptom.
Starting point is 01:27:36 What is his homosexuality a symptom of? It's of his vaulting ambition. Buttigieg timed it perfectly so that post-Obama, the gay guy with the black kids, perfect presidential candidate. So to the, I think to the heterosexual brain, it's like, are you really? saying a guy would switch his, quote, sexuality in order to get a better job? Yeah. Yeah. Women do it all the time. Lesbianism has got nothing to do with male homosexuality. Just look, everybody knows they got a college girlfriend who was a lesbian in college.
Starting point is 01:28:13 Yeah. Everybody. Like, you could barely find a woman who hasn't played around with a woman. Queen Victoria didn't believe that this was sex or that two women would do that with one another. and she refused to accept that women even did that very wisely, realizing that lesbianism wasn't real. And so lesbianism wasn't illegal in Britain for a long time when male homosexuality was. But a female sexuality is known in the studies to be far more malleable. Women go backwards and forwards between men all the time. And lesbianism is a social and political decisions, a series of social and political decisions.
Starting point is 01:28:50 I mean, women want companionship, they want stability, they want safety, They can find that in a woman, you know, like you can find that in a butch dyke, just as easily as you can find it in an American man these days. I'm sorry, you know, at least she can cash in her Harley Davidson. What have you got? You know, but sorry, I love the jackets, it's called Go for something. You know, the warehouse full of eyeliner you've got. No, I joke, but only slightly, we've seen women's do it, seen women do it. They do all the time. They choose to be lesbians all time. So you don't find it, you don't find the... I realize it sounds extreme and implausible. Well, to me
Starting point is 01:29:35 anyway, it's like, really? But we're dealing with a sociopath here. We're dealing with somebody who's entirely divorced from his own emotional, from his own feelings, right? We're dealing with somebody who will do anything, go anywhere, be anything. I mean, are you telling me, like, Is it so crazy that he would have a boyfriend and adopt these kids? Is it so much more insane than a gay man living in the closet and having a wife and having sex with her and producing children with her? Is it so nuts?
Starting point is 01:30:08 Like, okay, so there's probably more sex involved. Fair, fair. Is it, like, isn't it just like that on steroids? Like, is it so bonkers? And that's where gay people should be, by the way, in the closet praying to get better. But is it so wild? It's not wild. No, you're right. I just hadn't thought of it, that.
Starting point is 01:30:25 And gay men have been doing that for centuries. Well, I know a bunch of them. Right, of course. Well, you work in, and I used to work in conservative media, and it's all of them. It's everybody. It's everybody. I know. They're all faggots. They're all gay. All of them are gay. All of them are gay. Like, everyone is gay.
Starting point is 01:30:45 I haven't said anything about it for like 30 years just because of my just general Anglo commitment to not get involved in other people's business. but it's so noticeable. I just don't know what I... Clearly there's something going on here. I think it's the exercise of Power of Brothers as we talked about. I think it's really smart.
Starting point is 01:31:02 But in this case, the Buttigieg, I find him fascinating because he's... He's misjudged, but only slightly, what would be required to be the perfect presidential candidate, like in 2028, 24, right? And he starts off and he's got girlfriends He's in the military
Starting point is 01:31:23 He's Living a normal Like American life And then Chason I mean Like if you want to They say that ex-gays often go for like
Starting point is 01:31:40 Near Eastern women Because they're not sexually demanding And they look like boys from behind You know like sort of Malaysian girls You know when they come to have wives But isn't Chasin Kind of like the closest thing you can get to a girl because it's, you know, sort of, if you need a similar like you're a woman,
Starting point is 01:31:53 you know, flip him, I ever could be a girl, you know. I don't think I know what Chason looks like. His, well, you're blessed. His husband is, is, if you don't know that, then you might know the expression, aged out twink, or, but, but he's about as the most, the most effeminate man that you could, you could. Oh, is that true? Yeah.
Starting point is 01:32:16 Not in the kind of like, so this. Whereas Pete has that kind of fake radio. voice, like, oh, yeah, yeah, yeah, so you know,
Starting point is 01:32:23 yeah, yeah, so you know. And it is a fake voice because you can get, you can find recordings of him earlier, and he's got more into it
Starting point is 01:32:32 the more gay his life has become. Really? Yeah, like the, the bass. The diaphragm. Yeah. It's like,
Starting point is 01:32:39 talk from your stomach, Pete, talk for your, you can imagine chasing him before he goes on stage. Remember babes, from your stomach, he's like,
Starting point is 01:32:45 yeah, yeah, yeah. Like, like, from down here, you just, Imagine, you know, remember what Lindsay said, you know, the speech coach who taught him how to sound heterosexual, you know, whatever. But no, no, it's going down. It's like sinking. It's like there's like there's like working its way through this like achingly slow form of peristulses. You know, gradually finding its way down. Eventually he's going to sound like Gorgoroth.
Starting point is 01:33:12 You know, he's going to sort of when he realizes his full potential. No, he, he's, um, he's, um, he's, he's, fake. He's not gay. He's not gay. There's a doubt in my mind. He's not gay, but he's performing homosexuality because, including having the sex, you know, but probably not a lot of it. I mean, you don't imagine them, you know, well, I don't want you to imagine anything because I don't, I don't wish to leave a unpleasant taste in your mouth like that, but, but I'll, I'll, I'll, I'll, I'll, I'll suggest to your viewers that there, it's not a particularly sexually active couple, which might also explain how it's possible. for somebody to do that, right?
Starting point is 01:33:52 In the same way that a D.L. gay guy wouldn't be a particularly sexual husband. Are gay marriage is monogamous? That's funny. Oh, you've been it? Well, I sense that they're not, having known some. But are any, I guess, is what I would ask. I mean, I think you get that sort of elderly antiques dealer in Kentucky.
Starting point is 01:34:15 You know, you get that, you get... That's so good. You know, we have a senator like that. who, you know, I think if he, if he found a husband who was prepared to put up with, I really shouldn't, I really shouldn't, but look up the ladybugs. Look up his ladybugs. It's on the internet. We have so many senators like that.
Starting point is 01:34:37 It's crazy. Well, I think people know the one I mean. Oh, the actual one from Kentucky. No, no, no. Oh. A little bit over. You know, you can imagine he sort of invites his friend, a jasper in for a mint julep. you know, and it's like,
Starting point is 01:34:50 do you want to just sit there while I'm going to get myself dust it up? You know, like, yes, of course there are loads, but I'm thinking of the one in particular everybody kind of, you said you don't out people, so I feel like, no, sorry, sorry, sorry, I'm not going to use Mitch McConnell's name. It was Lindsay Graham.
Starting point is 01:35:08 Oh, sorry, but, no, I don't, it's a shame, isn't it? The falling over, the, like, how long are you going to stagger on? They're determined to turn themselves, into the goblins that dictate their behavior. Well, that's the thing about, and I'm not, yeah, it's that there's so bloodthirstiness that's just really distressing and offensive to me. But have you, but think about it like this.
Starting point is 01:35:33 The sassy, vindictive, catty cruelty of the homosexual. Imagine what he'd be like if you gave him a nuclear button, right? Sounds stupid, but it's a continuum. It's a spectrum, right? And so those gays that have the will to power, they go get some and they use it to bomb people or to bully or to – I mean, how much must they all get off on the fact that they are all having sex and nobody would dare touch it? Nobody else them. Nobody says a thing. And they're all living lies to their – this is – I mean, we were joking earlier about outing people, but like that's why I have a thirst for it because it's hypocrisy. It's public hypocrisy. Actually, I'm not interested in outing like, you know, Joe Simpson who has a corner store. Right. I'm interested in outing people who are misrepresenting themselves to the public.
Starting point is 01:36:28 And, you know, somebody just got married with wedding pictures and with engagement pictures that are so absurd. I know. I figured him out, by the way. I figured him out. I could never work out this guy. I was like, what is it that's off with you? And I realize he always wants a bigger laugh than the joke he tells commands. And it's because he's actually obese, but in the body of Amelia.
Starting point is 01:36:48 fat person. Like, if you think of him as like 400 pounds, he suddenly makes sense. Because he's always doing this, you know, and you're like, oh, you're a fat person. You're a giant fat person. So he's like a really fat gay in the body of like a merely slightly overweight gay. And suddenly his personality begins to make sense. He does all these like fat, you know, he's got these like fat tics that fat people do to like get a bigger laugh than their wit would normally allow for, you know? You know what I mean? And everybody laughs long anyway, because they're fat. You know, the fat people are just funny because they're fat.
Starting point is 01:37:26 You know, and he's like, he's like, he acts like he's funny because he's fat, but he's not fat. You're talking about Cory Booker. Yeah. Yeah. So, just back to the question, though, is, so is monogamy an expectation in a gay marriage? No. I think, well, I think it's an aspiration. I think it's a, I think it's a stated ambition.
Starting point is 01:37:45 But, you know, like all ambitions, You know, we state something we know we can never reach because in grasping for it, we, you know, we achieve greatness. And so maybe they only have sex with 20 people a year instead of 200. You know, and that's, that's gay, that would be, that would be gay fidelity. That would be gay. Really? Oh, yeah.
Starting point is 01:38:09 I'm maybe, I mean, maybe I'll tell you, but like, because there's no woman there to enforce it. So I've always. Exactly. And normally no kids to the, blah, blah, blah. How could you use your children? and blah. This is why living this is why living on the DL
Starting point is 01:38:24 in marriage with a woman is the optimum environment for a homosexual because all of the social cues are pushing them to do what they know that they should be doing anyway, which is working on eradicating these disordered urges as the
Starting point is 01:38:40 religious religious ex-gays would put it or unwanted same-sex attraction as the reparative therapists would have it. Whatever it is, all of the cues and the pressure is moving them in the right way. And so, you know, I mean, it's, it's good. Alan Turing, for God's sake, you know, I was living like that. Alan Turing, you know, the... Yeah, Alan Turing.
Starting point is 01:39:08 He was living like that. And they castrated him anyway, which seems a bit mean to me after the war. After he won the war for them, it's like, okay, that's all brilliant, but we're going to chemically castrate. It's a bit gratuitous to me. It's like, God, God, God, God. Let him crack one out
Starting point is 01:39:21 after he won the bloody war for you. All right, all right. So, Brits can be savage like that, you know. So do you know, like, the happiness level of people who are involved in, like, promiscuous gay sex? Like, what's it? When you, when you live that kind of life, You're living deep in profound denial, and it comes from, I read something in, maybe it's here, the Atlantic or Mother Jones, of all places, you know, some left-wing gay guy who just wrote about this really beautifully.
Starting point is 01:40:01 I'll try to find it in Twitter after this, but he said, when homosexuals are young, they realize they have to put on different faces for different people. I guess the racial equivalent would be code switching, right? Yeah. And the effect of this on a person who has disordered urges, unlike someone who just happens to be black, is that it begins to, like, create cracks and ultimately that turn into like shards in the personality, like bits of the personality, like burst ping off like a chandelier that felt the floor. It's so sad. Yeah. And it produces the space for profound denial of the type that most homosexual men find themselves in, where that that flooding of... addictive urge is mistaken for healthy and normal sexual um uh attraction and so i kind of stumbled
Starting point is 01:40:53 when i when i looked into i just woke up one day and i was like and i was married to a dude to my shame and i who's now like the ex-wife from hell my god um you know just look if there's no other reason to like not be gay just imagine like how bad a black homosexual a sexual ex-wife is. I'm not even going to go there. You don't even want to know. It's like, oh, sorry, it was two sports cars a year, it wasn't enough.
Starting point is 01:41:21 Okay, all right, okay, all right. Don't even. But when I woke up one day and I, I woke up one day and I looked over it, and I was like, oh, no, I don't want to do this anymore. Like, hell is real. I don't want to go there. And it just hit me, like, all after,
Starting point is 01:41:40 it was growing, you know, while. I was just like, no, no, really don't want to go there and I know what am I doing and the way that I started to address this I kind of stumbled upon a crude version of what the enlightened like they don't call it conversion therapy anymore they call it reintegrative therapy because it's reintegrating those shards and those and those broken and those broken bits of like memory that lead to the wrong output we're talking about detail if you want to but um I I I I stumbled upon kind of like a crude version of that.
Starting point is 01:42:15 So when I was trying to stop myself from doing this stuff, I was using like hot oil on my thighs. I was like doing things, you know, like, like, like the hurt. And I was trying to rewire my brain. Because I read a lot of, you know, psychology, anthropology, anthropology books and stuff like that. I thought, I don't know what it was. Sex urge is such a basic and powerful urge.
Starting point is 01:42:34 It's got to be hard. I thought I knew what I was doing. So I was like, every time I get aroused, I'm going to go and do something that hurts, you know? And so I took the, I took the, you know, like pay my taxes, no. You know, like having sex with black people. No, no, no. I did something immediately to try to redo that. And there's a much better way to do it, which I can talk to you about.
Starting point is 01:42:59 But I was, I think I was recognizing in that that I had this, that something had jumped the tracks in my brain. brain, right? And I was having an incorrect response to a particular stimulus as a result of damage, trauma, whatever. And that it was a little bit like being a PTSD victim or some other kinds of sexual deviants, right? And that I knew that I knew that I could train my way out of it because at the same time I had been returning to the Catholic faith of my childhood. And I had been speaking to a different, she's a very brilliant professor in Chicago. She's a world's leading expert on Marian devotion in the Middle Ages.
Starting point is 01:43:50 And she was kind of like feeding me of this rich material about training the soul and virtue. And I was like, okay, well, if I can do that, because I'm getting pretty good at that. Like, what about this? And so I did this stuff. And I got myself as far as celibacy, which is where I'm coming, in January, it'll be five years. Of celibacy. Yeah. And the good thing about the male libido is the less you have, the less you want, which married men can tell you. Is this the only reason they're still married? You know, it's like sugar, though. The more you eat, the more you want. It is exactly like that.
Starting point is 01:44:28 Why? Because it's an appetite, not a sexual orientation. It's an appetite, it's an addiction. And the more that you have cocaine or adderol, the more that you are likely on a given Tuesday, afternoon to be like, oh, Lyme would be nice, or, ooh, I don't I have a little, little instant release 30 milligrams, that'll get me through the day, you know? It works the same. It functions the same. It is the same. I remember reading during the AIDS period about, like, the number of sexual partners a year, which is like crazy high. I think it's all banned and I don't want to talk about it anymore. But, and thinking, you know, if those are all like hot girls, what I want to sleep with, 75 probably wouldn't be able to get through it honestly i don't think most trade men would it'd be
Starting point is 01:45:12 like yeah you know i mean you know men are obviously pigs and like variety and all it's hit on something real which is that well i'm trying to be as honest as i can i'm sure i'll be mocked for this but i did wonder like if it's could you go there's something wrong with the act itself if you're doing with that many people right yes now there's a component of it where it's like the the women are setting up the friction there they're the ones with the precious jewel want, you know, they're setting up barriers to, right? Men will put out, like, if a man wants to have sex, like they're normally the person asking for the sex, right?
Starting point is 01:45:45 They're normally the ones who are seeking the sex. Women, normally the ones who are, I wouldn't say withholding it, but regulating the access to it, let's say, as the enforcers. For sure. Take that away and, of course, and put two men on there, and you're like, well, if they both want it, they're both going to do all the time. Of course. But that doesn't really explain the...
Starting point is 01:46:06 Exactly. Exactly. That was my thought. It's like if there was no limit, if good-looking women wanted to, this is my younger self thinking of this, if they wanted to sleep with me as much as I want to sleep with them, I still don't think I'd sleep with 75 of them a year because that sounds kind of gross. Well, I mean, by gay standards, that's a practically celibate. I mean, maybe not these days with the boring gays that adopt the children who don't have sex with each other and just molest the kids. But by the old-fashioned, gay standards of the taboo-breaking promiscuous drug. I mean, look, I grew up in London, taking a lot of fucking drugs, going to a lot of clubs, going to Ibiza. And then, of course, you know, like in London, you had a circuit of clubs, trade and beyond and DTPM, whatever.
Starting point is 01:46:56 There was like a circuit every weekend. It was four continuous days, right? Which you could only really do with drugs. And during that time, stops off for sex. I mean, 75 is like... picks you up to February. Actually? I mean, I probably was a lot worse than usual,
Starting point is 01:47:12 and I group scenarios and whatever, but yeah. I mean, it doesn't fully explain the grotesque extent. And by the way, it's always the gay couples that are basically lesbians that live sterile, like, live these, like, sexless lives who are incensed when you dare to talk about gay promiscuity. It's not because gay promiscuity doesn't exist. It's because they don't have access to it. But most gays do.
Starting point is 01:47:36 and what we are thinking about in our hypothetical example of two men doesn't explain the full grotesque extent of it and it's because there is something unsatisfying about gay sex well that was my assumption and you're correct and it's it's it's so Catholic natural law and the way that law therapies work they start with this presumption that things are working properly when they are performing the function for which they were designed. Yes.
Starting point is 01:48:12 Right? Clearly, an erect member going into the wrong orifice is not doing, is not performing the function for which it was designed, right? So sex that ends that way, too, cannot possibly be satisfying. It's not permissible spiritually. It's not satisfying physically. So if you take Catholic Church teaching, for instance. No, I think that's real. And that's true for eating, and it's true for beauty, and it's true for...
Starting point is 01:48:39 The sex is sterile. No, but every pleasure that's like a righteous pleasure satisfies you. Yeah, I don't need 15 of them, right? But like justice feels good. You know, when you see somebody wicked, get the comeuppance, and you're like, yeah. And that feels like a lot of... That feels a little like, as you say, righteous pleasures, all of which tend toward the kind of satisfaction that a lot of people describe. getting in Holy Communion.
Starting point is 01:49:08 It's filling, right? It is filling. It is filling. That little wafer is very filling, right? The further you get away from that, the less satisfying things are by volume, if you like, that tiny little wafer, which is complete, you feel like you don't need to feel, eat, drink, think, anything else, the rest of your whole life, you just feel like perfect in that moment. Like, you have, because you are just in that brief moment in dialogue with our Lord in some fashion. And you're like, that's my Sunday vibes, you know? Like, whatever it is.
Starting point is 01:49:45 And it's not until Monday morning that life kind of comes back at you. The further you get away from that, the more stuff you need to approach the same level of satisfaction. Think about, like, the fake sugar you have, right? over here, the cornstarch, whatever it's called, how much Hershey's chocolate you have to eat to feel the same as two squares of capri's. Or how many Reese's peanut butter cups equals a steak? Yeah, yeah, yeah, exactly.
Starting point is 01:50:11 Well, I really noticed that. I mean, by the way, you know, Halloween candy, you can, I don't know, I don't know much about calories, but you could eat like millions of calories, but you can't eat six pounds of steak as it's not possible. But the point is that not the sugar is bad necessarily, but that this fake sugar that has that waxy taste
Starting point is 01:50:31 that's not really bad. You need so much more of it to feel satisfied to get your sugar here. That is totally right. And in so doing, you have so many more calories, right? And you start to get fat. And then you need not just six coax, but eight coax a day instead of one.
Starting point is 01:50:48 So homosexual sex is sterile. It's not capable of leading to production, excuse me of procreation right you cannot make a baby with gay sex it is spiritually unsatisfying in addition to being and of course these two things are connected physically unsatisfying too
Starting point is 01:51:05 and when you start to think about like everything working performing the function for which it was designed like doing that for which it was intended you start to realize why gay sex is like is not hitting you know and this is the basis
Starting point is 01:51:24 this is the start. This is where the therapy begins. It begins. But can I ask you one last question before you describe how your life has changed? I don't mean to rush onto that. No, no, no. No, I'm fascinated by it, but I... I just find so much so you spent like an hour and 20 minutes
Starting point is 01:51:37 describing the hell that you lived. You thought it was hellish. You left. And you... It sounds like you feel better and certainly resolved. But you're not encouraged to feel that way. Like there's something about the life that you live that's treating. like a gang initiation or something like you can check in but you can never leave like
Starting point is 01:51:58 you're not welcome to leave well just look at the comments you get like um forgive the language but um under every post that i will make online or every every you know on the rare occasion i might say something about this in an interview one phrase keeps popping up over and over again in the comments you can't unsuck a dick meaning there's no salvation for you once you're gay or gay you're gay you're homosexual but that's it who's pushing that the stain that that leaves right which is profoundly and unchristian i mean we think about isaiah right you know your sins may be scarlet but they'll be washed white snow um that saul became paul right doesn't exist for these people and it's often leftist but not always um insisting on this permit the permanence of this
Starting point is 01:52:47 stain and there's more to it than merely just I hate you and I want you to hurt or you're doing something stupid or whatever it's it's it's something more going on and it's people are terrified by the idea that this might not be an intrinsic part of a person's personality or nature's right why why are they afraid of that I thought we were for personal choice we're all a bit afraid of that, aren't we? Because we're all kind of like, you know, we see other people who are
Starting point is 01:53:21 doing well in life or who have got themselves out of a sticky situation or, you know, who left their phone on the table when they went for the bathroom in the break or whatever. And who lash out against others who do seem to be achieving something redemptive. And isn't it true that one of those characterizations, the demons is that they're, you know, in the presence of the light, in the presence of good, of the word of God, they hiss and spit, right? And it's not necessarily these people are gay themselves, but they, to confront the horror that a gay person might be able to un-gay means that whatever you've got going in your life, you could fix easy. But you don't want to,
Starting point is 01:54:12 do you? You don't want to get better. You don't want to stop. Because if he can stop having sex with men. Knowing what a powerful compulsion urge that is for most men, you know, that might mean I have to stop drinking. That might mean I have to stop taking drugs. That might mean I have to stop being a fat ass. That might mean I have to stop being cruel, being vindictive, abusive, malicious. And I think that part of it is certainly that we have become a society that encourages vice over virtue that aggressively pushes sin yes why because dumb dependent people are easier to control because dumb dependent people living paycheck to paycheck enslaved not only to and we live in a particularly evil environment now where we're not just enslaved to things
Starting point is 01:55:09 we're enslaved to the mechanisms by which we get them. Compound interest. You know, our car payments, like 50-year mortgages, yeah, thanks, Trump. How many years of that are we just paying down the interest before we own a brick in the house, you know? We're now enslaved to these like meta-addictions or these additional layers of problem,
Starting point is 01:55:30 which mean that we can't even do anything about our lives because one missed paycheck, you know. We can't do anything. Totally true. We can't do anything about it because we're locked in from every single angle into our addictions, into our compulsions, into the bad food that we eat in the supermarket because it's cheap. And the TV we watch, we know we shouldn't.
Starting point is 01:55:49 And the video games that are fine by themselves, but which, you know, 20 hours over the weekend. Like, that's a lot, bro. You know, just all this stuff. And it's packaged and it's pushed and it's encouraged and just look at the sponsors. I looked at the sponsors of Jimmy Kimmel's show when he was taken off the air. And it's donuts and banks. Look at the sponsors of Jimmy Kimmel's show, and you're like, oh, my God. Like, these are evil, wretched, terrible people who just want you fat, stupid, and quiet.
Starting point is 01:56:22 There's no question of my mind you're telling the truth. It's too obvious. And you're dumb and dependent. And do you think the relentless promotion of homosexuality is part of that? Because it is relentlessly, tirelessly promoted, period. Anyone says it's not so wire. What is more incapacitating? What is more incapacitating, having no control over your own sexual desires?
Starting point is 01:56:43 And just look at how comfy capitalism has made itself with homosexuals. Like, oh, you've got no kids? Well, perhaps you'd like these designer clothes. You know, oh, you don't have any dependence? Well, maybe you'd like to spend way more than you should on this cruise, you know, or whatever, I mean, boat cruise. You know, oh, you, you, you, all your disposable income is yours to. spend? Well, perhaps you'd like to try. We do have a special this evening, sir? Like our pan-roasted, blah, blah, blah, blah, blah. You know, they used to call it the pink
Starting point is 01:57:18 pound in England. This disproportionate ability of gays to spend, which has a reinforcing effect. It has like a, I don't know the economic term, but you probably do. It has like a magnifying or a fortifying effect because, of course, gay spend more. So you market more to gay, so you get more, you know, so you get more of them. And then other people begin to acquire gay taste, which has happened to women and is now happening to men because it's seen as a prestige or a luxury or a desirable kind of lifestyle. So you see men as the charming ladies of YouTube would tell us, fagataz, who are acquiring gay habits and, I mean, like soul cycle for it. I mean, please.
Starting point is 01:58:04 Like, what are these people doing? It's like, you're in Lyker and you want me to see your ass. Got it, because this is doing nothing. What are their gay habits for men acquiring? Definitely food, which, I mean, like, if you're a chap, as I was in a hotel last night, as I was thinking about this show, and I looked at the menu, and I was like, there's nothing on here for men. it was all these like seafood
Starting point is 01:58:33 a bit but hand whatever and the guy that was serving me had a huge ginger beard God bless him and I said you don't eat here and he said well and I said you don't eat here where do you eat
Starting point is 01:58:48 and he said is there anything on here that you would eat aside from this and he didn't say how big the filet was but I was like what is it six ounces we need four of those and he was like yeah I was like, you're working and you're just like, you wouldn't eat anything because there's nothing for men on the menu because it's all this like airy, fairy, unsatisfying, calorie rich, full of like, you know, flavor, but no protein, food for girls.
Starting point is 01:59:13 Or food for girls. Look at the menu in your favorite restaurant. Look at the menu in every restaurant. There's no food for men on it. I mean, like, where is it? Even, even like a heroic meat like lamb. It's like $78 to this little, this little, like, like. but thanks thanks so much what is that that's not man food so food for sure i mean clothing let's not even um uh uh sexual habits women uh have become fagotized by by the promiscuity culture that their gay best friends um you know like to to sort of have a nudge in a wink kind of relationship with like oh i don't do it but who's this oh just jemal uh you know um uh Who's this?
Starting point is 02:00:01 That's not the guy that you were with, like, three days ago. Quiet girl! Sorry about her. You know, like, just all that kind of stuff. And men... Just the way in which the self-destructive... A self-sacrifice, the relinquishment of the will
Starting point is 02:00:21 to the most addictive version of everything is very gay. Very gay. The most addictive version of everything. So, like, if gay sex is like addiction where it just floods your mind with, like, the chemicals where you can't get it out of your head, like we were talking about right at the beginning, well, the food has become like that and the clothes have become like that. And, you know, like, men buying designer clothes has always been a bit sus to me. Oh, I totally agree. Like, I'm, I mean, I do it because I'm like, I've got about another three years where I can still get away with this.
Starting point is 02:00:53 And then I'm going to have to just be straight. But, well, I can still do it, you know. And then I'm going to have to find, like, some, like, I'm going to have to find my own nudge and a wink thing, like, oh, no, they're not Dr. Shimano, they're Arolano. Oh, let's see, it's the late Pope Benedict the 16th favorite favorite favorite, favorite, you fagetast. You know, stop it. You know, I have to give all this up. But, but someone's been heterosexual all their life. Like, what are you doing in Dior? Well, I mean, they only make shoes, I think. No, no, there's male deal now. What are you doing? It's Chanel that doesn't do men's clothes. What are you doing in Dr. Inabana? What are you doing in Dr. Abana. What are you doing in Versace? Why are you spending a thousand dollars on a pair of shoes that is not like a, like a tactical or a, and even that stuff? Oh my God. Like the faggotization of like the, of the, you know, you can go, now you can go to cryptic and you can get the Versace of Camo. It's like, which their salespeople will even call it that, not on the website because men don't like that, but, but there's now like designer camo where it's like, like,
Starting point is 02:01:57 I mean, I know I have it, but, you know, faggotize, fagatize, everything is. Look at the consumer, who's making these decisions? Women, and we have this decision. Women in the marketing departments, women in the advertising, women on social media, everything's growing gay, and it's justified, and just the same way the pink pound is self-reinforcing. This thing, we always say, oh, women make most of the purchasing decisions in most houses. Shut up. Like, doesn't mean every man has to go out looking like he wants to drop on his,
Starting point is 02:02:27 knees in a in a in a public park or in a toilet just because just because his wife chooses what washing powder they use like stop it everything is gone gay everything's going gay I mean just just just every bit of life I mean music I mean now we now we force heterosexual to listen to Lil Nas X you know and and and and this sort of you know endless turnover of of of preening homosexual crooners that we call part of pop stars there aren't any anymore because um you know pop stars require a kind of like heroic manly virtue i think that is just just gone now it's not there anymore so if you wanted to weaken a society to the point of collapse fagatize it it's not feminization that's a that's a that's a mistake
Starting point is 02:03:14 to believe that it's not society is not becoming feminized it's becoming faggotized it's become it's it's it has been gayed you know and it's um and it's um and and and it's And it's like the difference between effeminacy and femininity, right? You look carefully at the behaviors. It's like it might have started off feminized, like you said, oh, the HR departments have kind of like feminized language in the corporate sphere and blah, blah, but it might have started that way, but the gays took over very soon afterwards. And so now we don't have a feminized public square.
Starting point is 02:03:48 We have a fagatized public square. And it's hardly surprising, given that everybody in Congress and everybody in the Senate and everybody in the party and everybody on TV and everybody else that you've ever heard of on television and everybody on all the TV shows are gay. Like, it's not a shocker. This would be the result. Because even if they might be living, um, uh, uh, uh, a deal lives, they still like what they like.
Starting point is 02:04:13 And they're still going to do it. And it's like, oh, yeah, that's good cause I have that little cocktail, you know, like they still do it. You see a DC, like these, these, these men in DC like drinking their little champagne and things. So when you are, I mean, a lot of this, it's like walking into a room full women and there's all the stuff going on but you have no idea what it is a daily occurrence for me but um you know something's going on but you know you don't quite get the right right but it's the wrong
Starting point is 02:04:37 frequency you're not recognizing it because it's not feminine because you'd recognize it if it was feminine you'd know what you were looking at but when you go to washington when you were flitting around washington as a what was your dangerous faggot tour is that what it was called yes i think i think the verb would be flit or perhaps flounce there was some flouncing i saw it There was a bit of flouncing. Do you know, the funny story, perfect, sorry to cut you off. No, no, no. Again, I've been doing the whole day, but a perfect illustration of the facultization of society.
Starting point is 02:05:07 My bus, my giant, dangerous phagetot bus is in a parking lot, just outside Washington, D.C. And Mike Pence's advance team are planning to put him in the same hotel. And they have to change hotel. No, stop. But they have to change. I mean, he's like spiritually gay, for sure. But he had to change hotels. and divert his, I mean, this is the, you know, this is the incoming vice president of
Starting point is 02:05:30 United States, right, to make way for the faggot. Just saying, it wasn't like, they, they could have come to me and said, would you mind because we have, like, the vice president elect, like, whatever, or coming in, well, I mean, this is 2017, so he is the vice president by then. You know, we have the vice president, you know, coming through, like, would you, and we would have said, yeah, sure, we'll, you know, we'll go to the, we'll go to the residence in. But no, they just changed all of his plans, not mine, to make way, to make space for the faggot. Perfect analogy, isn't it?
Starting point is 02:06:05 Perfect. But you picked up that vibe a lot when you're in Washington. Oh, my God. The number of people who, sorry, you told me you don't help people. No, I mean, I think allegations have been roundly just proven, haven't they? No, but the number of people who were just, I mean, they didn't quite say hop on my lap, but. So you, I mean, because you're on that. Well, 10 years ago, I was very beautiful.
Starting point is 02:06:31 I didn't notice. Of course, you didn't notice. I've been upset about it ever since. Tucker never said I was. No, I was very good looking, you know, I was in shape and it was the rest of it. And now, I mean, it was, it was like a daily avalanche. Really? Never needed to visit Niagara Falls.
Starting point is 02:06:53 I just, you know, just like, I've got, I've got, I've got. I've got a giant torrent coming. Let me, I won't finish that metaphor, but no, it's just, just, no, it's like a torrent. So how is your life changed day to day now that you're celibate and getting away from trying to overcome your gay sexual impulses? I don't really have them anymore, not, not often. My life is, so, so I've learned. Well, the first thing to say is that dogs have stopped barking at me.
Starting point is 02:07:30 What? I mean, I used to set dogs off, like really set dogs off. Like, they would go crazy around me. Really? Yeah. With hostility or affection? I mean, they can sense evil, you know. My spiritual...
Starting point is 02:07:45 I can only tell this joke because it's my spiritual director that said it. I said, do you think it's because they can sense evil? He said, no, it's because you don't smell like blacks anymore. Look, the priest said it. Let the record reflect, I'm not laughing. You know, dogs have a famous complex relationship with certain people. I'm sure that's not what it was. But maybe.
Starting point is 02:08:14 No, but you know the biggest thing that happened to me? Wait, can I stop? Did dogs lure? Are you being serious about dogs? I'm 100% serious. I mean, like, there's two photos of me like snuggling with puppies. like okay you got me but other than that almost every other dog like would just go nuts anywhere around me my my i set up a loving firm last year with a friend and and um and her dogs just
Starting point is 02:08:39 went at any time i was even in the vicinity until i started making these changes and then it was like and now they're like it's it's bizarre i mean i'm a cat person now because i kind of have to be but but I'm a great lover of dogs. Like, I think you are too. Yes. A great lover of dogs. And, you know, what they lack in intellectual sophistication versus their feline compatriots,
Starting point is 02:09:08 they make up for it in, like, intuition, you know? Yes, they do. They're like babies. They've got a little Holy Spirit in them or something. They're just like, they know good guys from bad guys. Dogs just couldn't be around me. That's amazing. I mean, I'm sure not all gay people have that thing,
Starting point is 02:09:20 but it's just a sign of something that changed. The biggest thing that changed me, though, which is not like the biggest thing to me, because I live quite an internal life, you know, like most of my life is up here, right? The biggest thing that happened to me is I started caring what happened in stories.
Starting point is 02:09:37 Like, spoilers started to bother me. And I couldn't figure out what that was about. Like 10 years ago, when a Star Wars movie came out, just before Christmas, when no one had had the chance to see it, I tweeted, Hans Solo dies.
Starting point is 02:09:50 You know, like a thousand people unfollow me. I thought, how could you? Ah, you know, You're the worst person, I was like, what are you talking about? It's like a stupid space movie, like get a grip. But I started to care, maybe because I started to care what happens to me. I've started to care what happens in stories, like the plot matters. I'm no longer just looking at the surface, at the, well, at the surfaces in it.
Starting point is 02:10:14 I'm not looking at the dresses on the women or the accents, or at least not just looking at those things anymore. Like, I want to know that the story has a happy ending. Because I think, you know, cleaving to my faith more closely, I've become more aware that the universe has a happy ending and I want a happy ending. And that's the biggest thing that's happened to me like in my head, in my soul, you know? Did you not care about yourself as much? No, of course not. Of course not. But I've gone from, I went from somebody who liked Oscar Wilde because I liked the witty lines and the sparkling surface of it to somebody who,
Starting point is 02:10:54 appreciates instead now, or at least reads it differently now, for the subversion, for the little eddies in language he uses, which are meant to show, you know, this kind of like disintegrating way of life. And I read it historically now. History, I never read history books because nothing mattered before or after. It's just like today, because I'm in a grip of an addiction. But now I read biographies. I never did that before. Well, because a narcissist doesn't care about other people's lives. Right, but I knew stuff, but I didn't like, I didn't want to know details. And now I feel, I mean, Myers-Briggs is a lot of old shit, but, but I'm, like, my, my personality type, such as it is, it's completely changed.
Starting point is 02:11:42 And I don't know exactly. Really? Yeah. I mean, I know I look and sound like pretty similar, but the way that I, because I have the same sense of humor, like, I have some bits of personality that I have, but the way that I acquire information. information has changed. Like I, like, I forget the distinctions because it is a lot of shit, but,
Starting point is 02:12:00 but, you know, like the intuitive to the sensory or whatever. It feels, it feels now like I can, I feel more in tune now. Like before there was kind of like a sheet of glass, like some critical ironic distance between me and the world.
Starting point is 02:12:14 Yes. Didn't really want to engage with it, you know? And now I'm like, I want to grab the wood. Sorry, I'll rephrase that. I want to like,
Starting point is 02:12:23 I'm now, I want to grab a different. No, I want to, like, know what it's made of and where it's from and look at it and think about it. And, like, so this is how you ended up, huh? You know, you know, like, that didn't used to occur to me at all. I just be like, yeah, that's cool. I love the aesthetic. It's really nice.
Starting point is 02:12:40 I love what you're going on to do. What is this? Shabby chic? You know, like, and I just wouldn't know. And now I'm just like, this is alive. This is like, it, like, now I get, I didn't get when you first started. I was like, like, this about the set. And now I'm like, no.
Starting point is 02:12:54 So you were a prisoner of ironic detachment. Yeah, yeah. Like this kind of like, everything's got to be matter, everything's got to be whatever, because I was afraid of engaging with the material critically. Yes. And authentically, you know. I was afraid of engaging with the material. And now I'm not.
Starting point is 02:13:11 Can I just say, can I just brag indirectly? Even when you were, I first met you in the green room at some Fox show years ago, many years ago. And you were in full. Full fag. Yeah. Yeah. Oh, ridiculous. It was a lot. Parity of a gay man.
Starting point is 02:13:28 I thought you were deep anyway. I could see that in you. Sorry. Not bragging. I always thought that. I mean, it was a compliment to both of us swallow. No, but I perceive that. Now when I do gay things, I do it in like a Margaret Thatcher accent
Starting point is 02:13:43 because now it's not really me anymore. No, I saw that, though. I saw that instantly. Like, first day, I remember we were, yeah, exactly, we were standing. But when you see somebody that way, I mean, there are gay people who are not deep, you know, Dave Rubin, you know, people who just... There's no one shallower. There's no there there.
Starting point is 02:14:00 There's nobody behind there. Oh, I know. It's just that. And you read his book, you know, she read his book and it's like, Candace made me read his book. Really? She made me... I mean, his book, like, don't burn this book. I'm like, I'd have to buy it first.
Starting point is 02:14:15 I'd have to know. I'd have to have heard of it. I'd have to acknowledge it really is a book. No, please, the spacing, like, the margins. and oh my god I mean you know from having so many successful books like all the publishing tricks like you know
Starting point is 02:14:28 if your manuscript comes in short you're like you know we probably both had that happen to us from time of time there was this there was this rumor that I there was this rumor that I didn't write my books it was this team a fleet of
Starting point is 02:14:42 of assistance and so the first interview I gave about my my book about the last Pope the book had been out two months and I said sounds brilliant I can't wait to read it But you just I don't know
Starting point is 02:14:55 When you actually have like stuff going on You're too busy to write it And then you write other people's books When in the fellow periods Anyway So Actually I have a famous friend or never In any of his books
Starting point is 02:15:05 No of course And he had a million of them Come on Yeah That's very much a TV thing Yeah it is It is it is And I was on tour and stuff
Starting point is 02:15:12 So but I did actually write mine As it happens I had a research assistant But actually a very great guy Alan Bucari Who's now writing a book About Gamergate The Great Untold Untold Story
Starting point is 02:15:21 about how Trump happened, which is a completely topic for another day. But what was the question? Well, the question was how you've changed as a person. I still go off on tangents. But you were saying that you have an appreciation for the future and for things beyond yourself, whereas you didn't before.
Starting point is 02:15:43 I'm back in the room. Now I care what happens. the end of stories. Like, I used to read it for the wit and try to remember the sparkling dialogue to semi-plagiarize it in conversation or whatever, you know? Yeah. And, you know, I see a little of this change in another friend of mine and George Santos. What a good guy he is.
Starting point is 02:16:11 I can't help but like him. I always like him. I always liked him. I was just like, oh, he's not likable. And he's likable. He would be likable if he was thin, which is how likable he is. I never thought of that. He'd be likable, even if he was skinny.
Starting point is 02:16:29 That's how likable he is. He's especially lovely, being jolly. But I've noticed in him some little changes, some adjustments along these lines since he's had his reckoning and his, you know, I mean, he had to confront something. I make a prediction. guarantee you the guy doesn't die gay guarantee you George doesn't die gay because he's going to see
Starting point is 02:16:56 his behavior, the Walter Mitty stuff as being in dialogue with dependent on, congruent with the other damage guarantee it guarantee it I'm still so uncomfortable with this topic that I'm not going to broach that with him but I think you're qualified to do that
Starting point is 02:17:15 well I'm on Tim Paul with him soon so maybe I will So how do you change? Like, what's the process? This thing that we're not allowed to talk about, which is, and I can't, gay conversion therapy. We don't call it conversion therapy anymore. But that's what it was called, right?
Starting point is 02:17:32 They were trying to ban it. You were required to be gay? I remember thinking, like, by the way, I've never been answering. What are you converting from and too? No, but also the idea that you're not allowed to change? Like, what? That's when I realized. It's the biggest thing.
Starting point is 02:17:46 Why are you keeping people gay against their will? You keep you, well, that's when my mind, as someone who's always been, I guess, pro-gay or whatever, I'd never really been that involved in it. It's one of the least attractive things about you. Yeah, I agree. I agree. But I started, my brain started to change a bit when they were like, we're going to ban gay conversion therapy. And I was like, I thought the whole point was you can be whatever you want to be, which I was kind of for. But now you're gay, you must stay that way.
Starting point is 02:18:10 It's respectable for you to be pro-gay if the basis of your pro-gainness is that they're trying to force people to stay gay. Well, no, no, that's when I started to change. I was like, what are we talking about here? You're not allowed. So you're going the wrong way. Yeah, no, you're just off on this. That just blew my mind when they tried to ban that. They're trying to...
Starting point is 02:18:28 This is not what they told me it was. They're trying to force people to stay gay against their will. Yes. I mean, it's bizarre. There's a Supreme Court case right now. The ruling will come next year about whether or not bans on gay conversion therapy are constitutional, whether it's legal to do it. So we'll find out...
Starting point is 02:18:47 It's the craziest thing I've ever heard. Well, Supreme Court's kind of like, it always struck me, at least until recently, I guess, with the injection of the DEI, like, lunatic. Isn't the greatest chart you've ever seen?
Starting point is 02:19:02 The greatest graph of my life. How much Katanji Brown Jackson talks. It's the greatest chart I've ever seen. Self-esteem is in inverse proportion to ability. Yeah, we're aware of that. Yeah, it's the greatest chart I've ever seen. And then you go, And then you got old Clarence in your life.
Starting point is 02:19:18 Right. Yeah, one word. It is the greatest job. I just saw it. My reaction was that tracks. And we had in the Supreme Court and probably maybe so. I mean, it's sort of down the line, isn't it, Democrat? Up until recently it was, you know,
Starting point is 02:19:31 it was really just like Catholics, we Jews on the Supreme Court. I don't think there are any Protestants on the Supreme Court. I don't think there are now. There is one. Neil Gorsuch is an Episcopalian. Yeah, but you're just over the fence. You know. No, but I mean, there was a wild.
Starting point is 02:19:46 You've got a little toe in the tiber. You got a little toe in the... This country was founded and created by Protestant men, and there's not a single one of the Supreme Court. Yeah, but it was a fifth of them of Catholic. The small ones. Only in Rhode Island, but whatever. Another day.
Starting point is 02:20:04 When you see that kind of civilizational clash, as it seems to me that it is one, I can't help but hope if they're not going to do Obogafel that they at least let people get away from being gay like at least let people leave
Starting point is 02:20:25 at least let people leave because I had to fumble my way with hot oil on a stove and like hurting myself to eventually get to a point where I was not seeing a person particular stimulus and automatically having a particular arousal response.
Starting point is 02:20:49 Is that what you want? Is that what they want? Is that what they want everybody to have to do to sit at home and abuse themselves, to sit at home and hurt themselves, to get rid of these unwanted, disordered urges that are making them miserable, that are hurting other people, that are hurting them, that are the product of trauma, that are a trauma response. Is that what you want? You want people to sit at home and do it to themselves? I don't think so. I think it's what they want. I think destroying people is what they want. But I don't think it's what we want, you know? I agree. So how do people change and what is the process? Well, the father of this stuff, the most, I mean, there are some quacks. Oh, I bet. I'm not going to lie about it. But the
Starting point is 02:21:34 father of the stuff, the most respectable stuff with the highest success rate, the guy's name was Joseph of Nicolosi. And he can't find most of his books on Amazon. But actually? Yeah. Why? Because they're suppressed? So that just tells you that right there.
Starting point is 02:21:55 If they're banning books. Okay. Yeah, okay. Well, I don't, I'm not such a, I'm not such an anti-book banned guy. You're a bit more of a free speech fund. What were the Nazis burning? What were they burning? Ask them.
Starting point is 02:22:07 I know, I'm very aware of that. Well, I guess what I'm just saying... You're more of a free speech fundamentalist. I am. I am a free speech. I have evolved into more of an authoritarian over the last 10 years. Well, I'm not even having that debate. I'm just saying that you know what's important to people. You know what they're lying about by what they try and hide.
Starting point is 02:22:24 Sure. We can agree that's right. And we can also agree that all of the... All of the Jewish trans doctors need to have their books burned. But when... he wrote about this stuff over decades, had a very tempestuous relationship with the bodies in psychology and all the rest of it
Starting point is 02:22:51 and psychiatry. But, you know, he's the person to read if you want to understand how people become gay and how many of them have got out of it. So for me, the most important book is shame and attachment loss. It's kind of got a yellowy green cover. And the good news, is that although Dr. Nicholas has left us, his son, Joe Jr., is still in the practice and
Starting point is 02:23:17 it's still training therapists today. He's based in California, obviously. And so he's still working today. And today, the way that the therapy that Joe Jr. does presents itself is, okay, it looks weird. It looks really weird. It's peculiar looking. It's almost funny looking when you see when you know because sometimes they'll film a session as a demonstration you know but it and it almost looks sort of like a like something you might see from Ali McBeal like smile therapy or something right but for a lot of patients it's showing enormous progress and progress we measure as um the amount of arousal um unwanted same sex feelings like are just like I didn't wait a minute did I I I don't think I like got the
Starting point is 02:24:12 huts for anyone this week you know yeah so people become people have a gay sex urges for variety of reasons you know so that the without getting too specific you know the passive partner in a gay encounter is looking to take on some of the masculinity he feels he lacks and that's in a literal physical way and in a emotional way too, right? He's seeking to absorb in some fashion, the manliness he feels he doesn't have. Really? Yes.
Starting point is 02:24:53 And it makes sense, don't it? Like when you think about it? I've always wondered about what that was, but yeah. It's a way of interacting with the kind of men you've never been able to interact with or who have never like taking you seriously or that you've always kind of like admired from afar or whatever because you have had this like jump tracks thing in your brain from neglect or abuse or whatever it is and so you seek you want to be you want to you feel like it's like getting charged up and this is the way the magic comes in again as you know like this is
Starting point is 02:25:21 how magic works you know like magic artifacts got like charged up with evil power like that's what you know grace doesn't work like that you know god doesn't work that way uh the infinite limitless generosity and charity and grace of god doesn't work like that you You don't have to, like, recharge your reserves. Another reason gay sex is unfulfilling because it's refilling a battery that's always depleting. It's like a slow puncture, you know. And you just top it up.
Starting point is 02:25:46 You can ever fill it up. You can top it up for a moment with an encounter like this. Those urges in the first place come from a memory or a thought or something that's leading to this arousal, this disordered urge and the way to get rid of it feels a little like some people will have heard of maybe CBT
Starting point is 02:26:12 although it's different in some important ways the therapy is three-step the first the first thing that you do is you produce that state so you think about or you look at something that will take you to the place
Starting point is 02:26:29 that would have produced arousal previously and then you introduce something unexpected into the brain. And the idea is that you rewire the brain in its plasticity to expect a different outcome when it has that stimulus in future, right? So the way I did it was to hurt myself. So if I saw a basketball player, I'm not basketball because we're all gay nerds, like I said,
Starting point is 02:26:55 but a football player, like I said, sitting down next to me on a flight or something, I wouldn't get aroused, like the blood wouldn't stop flowing. I would get like, you know, like that or something, right, vaguely. Or at least wouldn't get that arousal response. The way that the therapist do it, which is better, is a sort of like just a completely unrelated feelings neutral kind of a thing, right? And the way it looks, it's just remarkable. And the third step is just repeat it. because there's only two ways you can persuade the brain of things,
Starting point is 02:27:32 which is emotional connection and repetition. Nothing else works. Those are the only two means of persuasion that work. Emotional connection and repetition. So this is why all the late night comedians who aren't funny anymore, their job is not to be funny. Their job is to associate certain things with certain emotional reactions and then to do that every night of the week forever.
Starting point is 02:27:52 So Trump, ew! And then the next night, Trump, ew! And this eventually persuades people that Trump bad, right? Because they're associates. an emotional reaction to a repeat, repeat, repeat, repeat.
Starting point is 02:28:07 It's just programming. It's programming. They don't have to be funny. That's not their job. It's not Jimmy Kimmel's job to be funny. It's Jimmy Kimmel's job to repeat and repeat. It's why they're so boring and repetitive, right?
Starting point is 02:28:17 Yes. They repeat and repeat and repeat positive, happy, like Camilla's so brave. Trump's abidious. Oh, God, disgusting. Isn't he gross? Isn't it? Oh, that fat, ginger, orange retard, whatever.
Starting point is 02:28:30 you know, they're not talking about him in terms of policy. They're talking about in terms of disgust, yeah, because that's an emotional thing. And then again, again, again, again, eventually people like Trump, ew, you know. Of course. It's happening. It's programming. It's why the comedians aren't funny. You're welcome.
Starting point is 02:28:46 This is that pervertuous ends because it's what works in the brain. And it very often uses, so people find this strange, but, so Aquinas talks about how grace builds on nature. right Thomas Aquinas and so there are ways in which our bodies are
Starting point is 02:29:10 machines they function according to mechanisms and respond to stimulus and although there's a spiritual dimension to all of this the way our brains work it's trainable
Starting point is 02:29:23 it's trainable like a dog is trainable it's trainable like anything is trainable and so the way this therapy looks, and I provided you with a couple of little examples in video, so that you can see yourself afterwards, the way this therapy looks is, first of all, the original stimulus
Starting point is 02:29:45 will be produced. And then there may be a pattern of like following a pen around or a particular kind of tapping on the knee or something. It's just intended to be like a neutral, a different outcome from that initial response. So that no longer does the brain go to arousal, but it goes to something else. And that, it's very common. If you see them, PTSD survivors, if you've ever been to the VA, you'll see a lot of like this going on in like the treatment rooms. And you're like, what the hell of that? Yes. That's what it is. They're produced. They ask them to remember something traumatic from their service. And then something, it's just kind of a little thing. And what's going on is the best way I can kind of describe it is it's like when you press control, delete, and then a couple of other
Starting point is 02:30:29 things and the computer reboots without the virus now. Yes. You know, that's not quite how computers work. But, you know, it reboots and you know, longer in that situation again. You can do that with the brain. But it takes not just one reboot, but it takes repeated, raising if they call it the schema or the target, the thing that produced that unwanted response. And then immediately the introduction of an unexpected outcome. So your brain's like, hang on a second.
Starting point is 02:30:58 this happened so I was expecting that but then this happened and then over time your brain learns to just do that instead and that instead could just be like something you know completely anodyne or it could be like I did which is you know the kind of clunking amateur version of it which was you know something something painful or unpleasant and the third step just do it over and over again and eventually you see people just have less of those desires it's the most peculiar thing but it is being born out in the studies. And so Joe Jr., I brought this with me, I'll leave it with you, if you're interested,
Starting point is 02:31:33 but 144 people in a randomized placebo, blind trial, it works. It works. And it works because this, these homosexual urges are not so totally unlike other forms of trauma, other forms of damage, other forms of deviance. This same thing.
Starting point is 02:32:03 It works on people who are obsessed with rape like a guy who can't get off unless he's thinking about raping a girl. Now, rape is something
Starting point is 02:32:11 that women love to fantasize about, but perhaps don't necessarily enjoy the reality of, even the reality of play of it, right? It's something women love to think about,
Starting point is 02:32:18 but you know, you act that one out without warning, you're sleeping on the couch at a minimum. Yeah. It can help men to enjoy sex lives that don't involve coercion, you know, because they have that sort of thing. And much of the same technique is used with people who have other kinds of trauma, who have other kinds of trauma responses as a product of bad things that happened to them, or as a product of just something going a bit wrong where that track has jumped, you know?
Starting point is 02:32:51 And so this, though it looks very odd, is based on decades of research and builds on other therapies for other kinds of trauma, and it looks like it's working. Now, I didn't have this kind of therapy. I will say that. Like I said, I kind of bumbled through on my own because I'm, you know, stubborn and a loner. But this has started to work for people. When you look back on the life that you led 10 years ago, how do you feel? I feel ashamed. I feel embarrassed and disgusted by the things I did, but I feel ashamed, particularly about 10 years ago, about how many people...
Starting point is 02:33:36 I thought I was laying it on thick with a sort of like day-med-in-everage kind of, you know, a high-since bouquet performance on stage. And I realized people weren't picking up the layers, maybe. And every talk I ever gave in the Q&A, I said, if I could not be gay, I would push that button, you know? And nobody ever, like, that never registered with people. Why? I don't know. All they got was being gay is okay now and being right wing, being gay and right wing is okay now. And I know that I pushed that button with the left to annoy them and because it was absurd at that time.
Starting point is 02:34:03 But people never got the message when I said, if I could possibly, I never gave a speech in my life where I told people, go be gay. I said my first ever appearance on television was with Boy George like 20 years ago and I said I feel that something is wrong inside me and I didn't have the vocabulary
Starting point is 02:34:26 to articulate this and he's like no honey you're perfect just the way you are I can't do Boy George but you know I was like no no I feel that something is wrong in there and everybody around the table just left you know like
Starting point is 02:34:36 thinking like oh there's a self-hating homosexual well I'm not hate I wasn't hating myself I was hating the things that I was doing because I knew they were hurting me. And I knew even then, and I never gave a speech in my whole life where I say,
Starting point is 02:34:48 go be gay. Have you ever talked to other gay men who have the same feeling? Yeah. Yeah. I think because, I mean, not many of them will articulate it like I do
Starting point is 02:34:57 because I am a little bit cuckoo and I don't mind kind of living in public and talking about my feelings. Like my Twitter is just like this, well, aside from the eight years missing, it's just this like insane stream of consciousness where I'll just say the most like ridiculous, absurd, outrageous things.
Starting point is 02:35:13 but it's because people are getting like a tap straight in, you know? It's just what's going on in there today. So I'm comfortable living that way, and I'm comfortable expressing myself and talking about myself. And I think now I have a duty. Now I have a responsibility to others because of, because the message didn't land. Like I was not intending to give birth to this huge generation of gay Republicans
Starting point is 02:35:42 who now just, I think it's openly, like openly fine to traffic in babies and to be a gay Republican. And I feel a great deal of responsibility for that. I hate myself for that a little bit. My Eloinopoulos, thank you for everything you said. Thank you. For your honesty. I appreciate it.
Starting point is 02:36:01 Thanks. And your insight, which is amazing. Christmas is back, and so is our merchandise shop at TCN, visit at Tucker Carlson.com to see what we have to offer, and it's awesome. Everyone is a long list of people they need to shop for this Christmas. Our new line can help you brighten the day with gifts they will actually love, not the kind they're going to throw away. Well, thank you for, but not mean it.
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