Timcast IRL - Bail DENIED For Leftist Who FIREBOMED Democrat Governor's Mansion, Mangione Effect w/ Cnosky, Michael Leo, & Jack Posobiec
Episode Date: April 15, 2025Tim & Phil are joined by Cnosky, Michael Leo, & Jack Posobiec to discuss bail being denied for leftist who firebombed Democrat Governor's mansion, Taylor Lorenz defending Luigi Mangione, a teen charge...d with killing his parents & planning to assassinate Trump, and El Salvador refusing to return 'Maryland Man' deported to the country. Hosts: Tim @Timcast (everywhere) Phil @PhilThatRemains (X) Serge @SergeDotCom (everywhere) Guests: Cnosky Michael Leo Jack Posobiec @JackPosobiec (X) Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices
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The judge has denied bail for the leftist man accused of firebombing the Democrat governor
of Pennsylvania's home while he slept there with his children and his wife.
It's a horrifying story.
Governor Shapiro has come out condemning political violence.
I'm glad he did.
I'd appreciate if he did a little bit more previously, but we'll take what we can get for now.
We've also got the story to CNN where Taylor Lorenz, if you don't know who she is, she is all
over Netflix right now. She cheers. She celebrates Luigi Mangione, alleged to have murdered the CEO
of UnitedHealthcare. She says that he was a morally good man. And is this the Mangione effect,
which is resulting in an escalation of political violence? And just today, police swarmed United
Healthcare offices and apparently arrested or apprehended some suspect. We don't know exactly
what happened, but I'm going to tell you, the left has been cheering for this. It's been escalating.
And now the man who is being accused of firebombing the governor's house in Pennsylvania, he says he's a registered socialist. He's a BLM supporter. None of this is surprising to release a terrorist so the U.S. can bring him back to the United States. This story is absolutely insane. A district court judge ordered the president
to effectively kidnap a foreign citizen out of their prison and bring it back to this to the
United States, which makes no sense. And he has no authority to do and they have no authority to
dictate. So now the story is going crazy with Democrats saying Trump is a totalitarian who is going
to throw people out of this country.
And get this, a hot mic.
Donald Trump caught saying homegrowns are next.
To be honest, we don't know exactly what he said on the hot mic, but it is going around
the liberal circuit claiming that Trump is telling Nayib Bukele to build five more prisons
to house American citizens.
I don't know that's actually what Trump was saying.
It sounds like Trump was making a joke and saying it in jest in reference to what the media was claiming.
And people in the room all start laughing.
I'm not serious.
Whatever, man.
I don't know.
So we're going to talk about that and so much more.
But before we do, we've got a great sponsor, my friends.
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forget to also head over to Casper. Pick up some delicious coffee. Got Appalachian Nights, Ian's
Graphene Dream and Luck of the Seamus. And a big announcement. The culture war debate live will be Friday at noon till two,
at least for now,
as we are gearing up for the pilot of our first culture war live event on
stage with you as members.
Tickets are now available free for members of the Tim cast discord at
Tim cast.com where you as members are going to be invited on stage live on
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on the 10th biggest live stream in the country to debate us.
And maybe Jack Posobiec.
If he's there, who knows?
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And if you're a member of the TimCast Discord server right now,
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It's going to be fun. Smash that like button. Share the show with everyone you know. We got a big panel joining us tonight.
As I mentioned, Jack Posobiec is here.
What's going on, man?
What's going on to all the crew out there?
You were just hosting the War Room from Timcast.
We did.
So in a follow-up to folks who haven't followed the War Room Timcast crossover episodes with Jack Posobiec guest hosting, we did the War Room.
So Steve was out today from the War Room. Jack Pasoba guest hosting so Steve was out
today from the war room
he had me guest hosting but then
all of a sudden it was like hey Jack can you come to
Timcast last minute alright but I gotta do
war room how am I gonna do that well just
like when we were in Butler
Pennsylvania and we needed a way
to power the war
rooms now remember Butler this was back in October
Steve the second rally not the October, Steve, the second
rally, not the first one, of course, the second one, Steve's in prison and I'm hosting the morning
show and the secret service, because they had the whole place on lockdown. They said, you can't have
a gas power generator there in the parking lot. And I said, you mean like a car aren't car, all
cars, gas power generators, it's a parking lot full of cars well they still said no wow it was not allowed and i said well i need some kind of large mobile battery
that uh that has enough power to generate you know to power the entire war room and i kid you
not like five ten minutes later tim calls me hey jack are you going to this butler rally because
i'm driving up in my in the cyber truck and i'm like what and and it worked out we powered the war room from the cyber truck right there at
butler and it actually like it went like kind of viral just like not not anything we were saying
but just the fact that we did it the lord works in mysterious ways that he does right as jack was
needing a large generator i called and let him know i had the cyber truck on the way and he was
like can i power my show from the cyber truck that would be the coolest thing ever and we
certainly did so we did the show from here today and and the the the epic saga continues right on
we got a couple more guests we got seen oski howdy howdy guys you know i was here a month ago
and i decided i loved it so much i just hit under the table uh tim found me said hey you got to do
the show and i was like yeah fine if you're here you
know yeah he hasn't been paying me this whole time but you know i i've been finding table scraps
found some water you know i survived but uh happy to be back you know i i brought someone with me
though you know my co-host of the quiet part pod uh michael hello i'm michael leo some of you might
know me from the discord you should totally join
uh and i'm the co-host of the quiet part live with chris and also a working man right on hello
everybody my name is phil abanti i'm the lead singer of the heavy metal band all that remains
i'm an anti-communist and counter-revolutionary let's get into it here's the news from the ap
judge denies bail for man accused of setting fire at Pennsylvania Governor Josh
Shapiro's residence.
The latest development frozen and no, the Democrat governor had his home firebombed
while he was sleeping with his wife and children by a, quote, registered socialist and BLM
supporter, allegedly, say the police by the name of Cody Balmer.
Well, I should say his name is Cody Balmer, and he's alleged to have a firebomb in the house. He's been charged with arson,
supporting general leftist memes and BLM tropes and things of that nature, as well as comments
he's made as to the Ahmaud Arbery case, showing he's clearly on the side of Black Lives Matter.
And this is what you get with the Mangione effect. Now, the AP reports, Cody Ballmer spoke with a public
defender at times as he appeared in court late Monday afternoon after being released from the
hospital where he'd been taken after an unrelated medical incident. Ballmer of Harrisburg told
police he planned to beat Governor Shapiro with a small sledgehammer if he encountered him after
breaking into the building. According to court documents, a motive for the attack, including
whether it had anything to do with Shapiro's politics or religious beliefs, wasn't immediately clear.
Now, initially, one of the first things we saw on X was that people believed it was an anti-Semitic attack, because on X, everything's going to be about Jews or Israel, apparently.
And Shapiro was having Passover dinner, so it's not completely unfounded.
However, the key speculation right now is that this guy, he had his house...
It wasn't during the dinner.
No, it was like that night.
The dinner was set up.
So here's what's really fascinating is...
Jack, you're going to love this one.
Apparently the socialist had his home
seized by the state and then auctioned off
and the socialist got angry
so he firebombed the governor's home.
Allegedly.
Wait, his home?
I think you mean our home.
Don't you mean our home?
Oh, yeah.
Right, right.
The socialist was very upset about his private property rights being violated,
even though he supports literal abolishment of all private property.
So this was funny because I was trying to explain the story to my wife,
and I said, so I was like, hey, remember that this morning we saw the story of the guy who firebombed that house?
Turns out he was a socialist.
And she was like, what, do they know the motive?
And I was like, I guess he was mad because the state like seized his property and auctioned it off.
And she was like, the socialist.
And I was like, right.
And she was like, no, the socialist was mad the state took his house.
And I started laughing.
I mean, that's so good.
She's doing great, by the way.
Got to see her.
Got to see the fam a little bit. Glad to see that's all doing. Congrats, by the way. Got to see her, got to see the fam a little bit.
Glad to see that's all doing. Congrats,
by the way, officially. I don't think I've seen you since.
But, no, this is a case where, look, I
took a lot of crap last year for putting this book
out about leftist violence
and anti-communism and saying that
I saw what I called the rise of the unhumans.
And every
single mainstream outlet under the sun
came at us and attacked me.
You know, you're fascist, you're crazy,
you're calling for a return of Franco.
And like all these things that we didn't actually say
in the book anywhere.
Came on the show many times, talk about unhumans.
And then immediately, what, four days after we put the book out,
Donald Trump is taking bullets in pennsylvania uh and
then the violence has only escalated since there multiple uh assassination attempts and then not
only that you have this actual assassination of a ceo um who as we talk about in the book leftist
violence always targets specific classes.
So in the Bolshevik Russia, you saw the kulaks.
In China, it was the petty bourgeoisie.
And it's always, you know, anyone associated with the current, quote unquote, status quo.
Predominantly in the United States today, that is affluent white Christian males.
And so that's the phrase that that's the phase that it's taken on now,
which is sort of more of a form of cultural Marxism.
And so I just kept saying the left is playing footsies with this like crazy.
And now it's like to Tim, you mentioned earlier, Taylor Ren, she's on.
They're platforming this this. Oh, we need to understand the the free Luigi movement. It was scumbags like Bill Burr.
It was a long time where it was it was almost with a wink and a nod and they wouldn't outwardly admit it. They wouldn't say that they're looking for class war. But now if you listen to AOC and Bernie who are drawing thousands of people on their tour or you listen to people like Taylor Lorenz or any other prominent leftists that are actually leftists, they're saying things that are very much class war and they're the lionizing people like Luigi Mangione.
We have a massive problem with the left in the United States because even if they're popular,
they're still effing wrong and they'll destroy the country.
Yeah.
Well, and you got Luigi Mangione coming out.
And I remember, by the way, so you look at the two events.
So Luigi Mangione gets arrested, by the way, in Pennsylvania
in December of 2024. Remember, he fled from New York, then was caught in Pennsylvania.
So Josh Shapiro was involved in that. Butler, Pennsylvania, again, also Pennsylvania. Josh
Shapiro was involved in that. And I remember Shapiro, after both of those events, including
Luigi Maggioni, speaking out against political violence. So I'll give him credit for that. He
did actually do that, including Maggioni, directly.
But at the same time, it's like, dude, look at your party, man.
You know, you want to spend all your time going out and talking about the right
and talking about Trump supporters, but look at the problem in your own party,
on your own side, the footsies that they play with this.
I'm not condoning political violence anywhere,
but the point is you should always oppose all political violence and we haven't we certainly
haven't seen that on the left and again you're talking about the netflix stuff the taylor wren
stuff dude i've i've seen free luigi bumper stickers out in the wild in the dc area just
just driving around and you see them around and you you see the mainstream now platforming this kind of stuff and it's only going to get worse uh the algorithm i think drives a lot
of this stuff as well that's why you're not really seeing uh scott career had a really good point
where he said that millennials did more of like the mass movement kind of stuff like like antifa
blm whereas gen z tends to they want to go Right. So they want to have their moment in the sun.
They want to have their moment where they get to go viral.
There was that kid in Wisconsin who killed his parents recently.
Yeah. Much less communistic.
You know, saying that he you know, saying that he was wanted to do that and somehow a plot to get Trump because he was going to use their money to fuel this or something like that. You saw there was another guy who just got arrested last week for wanting to kill Trump
in Butler, Pennsylvania, by the way, by the name of Mr. Satan on.
Oh, yeah.
We saw on YouTube, even though Thomas Matthew Crooks did not live in Butler, he actually
lived in Bethel Park, which is about 45 minutes away.
But obviously, you know, he tried to kill him in Butler, PA.
So point being is this is getting worse this is actually getting a lot worse and they're not going for the large the large scale
movements anymore uh you know that that thing the other day was like totally paid in where like
rachel maddow was supporting you remember like the anti-doge protest they were having it was it's
total joke but the actual feral left they're not doing the antifa black block stuff anymore they're just
going out and picking targets and going for it oh yeah there's also the dog whistling that happens
right so you'll see these attacks and immediately the left is going to jump on they're saying
oh is maga going to come out and uh condemn these attacks is maga going to do something
yesterday i'm seeing calls to condemn this violent act, which I'm happy to condemn that act.
But it's like, are we not okay with this?
Well, of course we're not okay with this.
But is it supposed to be because I'm not okay with it because it's MAGA?
Well, no.
I need to know who did it before I can condemn them.
The act is condemnable by itself, but that's how they get these stories out there.
But they paint the picture like they're perfectly fine and it's all us doing it.
It's the weirdest thing when I go on Reddit and the response from all these people is that the right is dangerously violent.
And I'm just thinking to myself, can we name one Republican, like prominent conservative Republican who went and committed acts of terror
and violence in the past couple of years? Of course not. I mean, maybe one. I don't know.
Is there one? I mean, they would. So the left would say January 6th. Yeah. So five years ago.
But what about four years? I mean, I guess I know that we give that one four years,
January 6th, and then they would lie and say that uh people died right so
they would claim that january 6 is a terrorist attack well then of course there was also the
jan 6 pipe bomb bomber why don't why don't we just go get that guy that guy you know you know
what the left is completely correct we better find out who did that you should find out exactly who
did that but if you really want to know up cash patel right now if you really want to win the
last time right-wing political violence happened you going to have to go back like 150 years. And Abraham Lincoln was the one that
did that. Huh? Oh, I got you. Yes. Yeah, exactly. No, it's it's it's it's ridiculous. It's it's
it's horrible. And, you know, the left will sit down and, you know, I would say prior to this,
the FBI would and the and the left would say, oh, it's all right wing violence.
It's all right wing violence. Right wing violence is the greatest threat.
And yet I can list names, Luigi Maggioni, Nikita Katsap, Sean Mompers, this guy, Cody Balmer in Pennsylvania, Thomas Matthew Crooks, Ryan Wesley Ralph or Thomas.
Yeah. And, you know, again and again and again. And they'll look at you until you're blue in the face. By the way, I had I had a friend who had a leftist that he knows, like in real life, said to him recently about even about the Cody Ballmer case and said, wait a minute, this is trump's fault yeah how is this trump's fault
and this was the answer i i was i was actually surprised i was so surprised that i was like i'm
i'm almost proud of you for being able to accomplish this olympic feat of mental gymnastics
they said it's trump's fault because trump has emboldened the white rage of white male violence
in society today and you like you look at the
stuff this guy posted and it's like wait a minute antifa was always white males they were always
white males on the left from the very start of antifa that's by and large by the way a lot of
blm was white too by the way like if you actually looked at the the composition of the rallies
and so when you're talking about this it's like we never talk about it this way.
We talk about the political ideologies and pathologies that are driving the violence.
You're the ones who try to put all these weird racial identity markers on all of it.
We just follow the facts where they go.
Another aspect of it is the accountability part i think because there is a complete lack of accountability with the leftist actions or at least um an attempt to to seek accountability they they run
rough shot basically and uh it'd be nice to see like the fbi and stuff take this more seriously
and perhaps they are maybe there's investigations that are underway that I'm unaware of. But it is getting
worse and it has been escalating. And I'd hate for it to get even worse than where it's at right now.
There's been so much leftist influence in the government and in popular culture and in the
national zeitgeist. You have the media cup running cover for anything any leftist does
you you there was a time where it was just like ah you'd hear you'd hear the the you know the
news or whatever kind of glossing over the politics of the left or glossing over the you
know everyone remembers mostly peaceful riots etc and the right was kind of outraged and and kind of like what this is this
is ridiculous etc now again we talk about prominent leftists that are saying things like well you know
luigi mangione man and and they're they're behind the they they endorse the violence now they say
well you know they it shouldn't be violent but you know when you they make excuses well you know when you when you push people too far etc and taking agency completely
away from the people that are actually acting right let's uh let's jump to this clip this next
story we have from cnn's donnie o'sullivan oh donnie boy you see the new york post uh reports
taylor lorenz defends luigi manj, a fangirl's in glib CNN interview.
Morally good man, she says.
Here's the clip.
Hilarious to see these millionaire media pundits on TV clutching their pearls
about someone standing a murderer when this is the United States of America,
as if we don't lionize criminals, as if we don't have, you know,
we don't stand murderers of all sorts and we give them Netflix shows. There's a huge disconnect between the
narratives and angles of mainstream media pushes and what the American public feels.
And you see that in moments like this. And I can tell you, I saw the biggest audience growth that
I've ever seen because people were like, oh, somebody,
some journalist is actually speaking to the anger that we feel.
The women who got her outside court in New York.
So you're going to see women especially that feel like, oh my God, right?
Like here's this man who, who's a revolutionary, who's famous, who's handsome, who's young,
who's smart.
He's a person that seems like this
morally good man, which is hard to find. Yeah, I just realized women will literally
date an assassin before they swipe right on me. That's where we are. I'm sure you wouldn't
like to be compared to a Trump supporter. But some of how people cannot understand
why people have sympathies for Mangione
strikes me as the same as a lot of media
not understanding why people support Trump.
I totally agree.
It's because a lot of people are just really, really desperate.
They want somebody to take on the system.
They want somebody to tear on the system. They want somebody to tear down
these barbaric establishment institutions. They literally just compared Donald Trump to
Luigi Mangione when he asked or stated that, you know, some people can't understand why people like
Trump. Maybe that's like Luigi Mangione. No, Donald Trump isn't going around murdering random
people. Luigi Mangione is accused of just shooting a guy in the back several times. That changed nothing. It didn't alter the
system in any meaningful way. So not only was he insane, if he really did do this, if he's alleged
to do, he's also completely ineffective. Now, I like Donald Trump because not only is he not going
around killing people, but he's extremely effective. He's getting the job done yeah taylor rends is is giving fuel to this
kind of pathology and i'll actually i'll if i can i'll i'll take a page out of the left and and i
will actually try to explain a little bit better what i think dony is trying to say there by the
way can we talk about how ridiculous dony is dressed in like the black shades and like the
black what is this like like this guy's and like the black, what is this?
Like, like this guy's,
we're supposed to take this guy seriously
and that's how he dresses on CNN.
He knows it too.
He mentioned that he would, you know,
they won't swipe right on him or whatever.
You know, and, and yeah, I mean,
and Taylor ends, I mean, I mean,
she's obviously, you know,
old enough to be Louis Gianni's mother,
which I mean, I don't know.
Maybe she can clear that up for us
if she wants to.
I mean, you could check the Wayback Machine,
but apparently all of her stuff has been deleted there for some strange reason.
Don't know why. But but what what the anger at the system that is palpable out there is real.
It's 100 percent real. And one of the reasons for that is because the Gini coefficient in the United States is so off.
And what they're talking about is kind of like the original, Tim, you might know something about this, the original Occupy Wall Street protests, where it was talking about the fact that the 1% in this country has gotten so incredibly wealthy off the backs of the middle class, off the backs of the working class, off of globalism, which, you know, President Trump is talking about with the tariffs and all these things, which they're attempting to try to rectify. And the issue is that people can see these huge disparities in
our society, which are real. It's just real. It's just true. And there's two paths here, right? So
the the Trump path is, hey, you know what, you're right. Globalists have been absolutely screwing
over the working class and middle class in this country. We agree as a matter of fact which i know is probably not
like a conservative thing to say but it's it's just factual so rather than but rather than destroy
the country what if we lift the ground what if we actually lift people up into better working
class conditions better better towns better streets better villages better jobs etc that's
the populist right then there's the populist left that's just like
let's just kill everyone yeah tear it all down and destroy everything and go in with all of this
because we want to and we hate them and you have movies like parasite by the way which was given an
academy award which is all about killing the rich. It's literally about moral justification for killing rich people,
and they gave this movie an Academy Award.
And it started off this huge push,
I think, on the left,
that you also see in culture,
where it's totally,
and Taylor Rents is on Netflix.
She's got a contract there for,
what's her show called?
Eat the Rich, right?
It goes again and again and again.
Where's her show airing?
I believe she has a thing on Netflix
called Eat the Rich.
So there's one of the top films the other day.
Or she's in the one where it's called Eat the Rich.
There's one called Bad Influencers.
Yeah, this is the older one, the GameStop one.
So you go on Netflix and you go to the top films or whatever
and Bad Influencers, the dark side of kid fluencing.
The moment you highlight it, Taylororenz pops up and starts talking they are putting her in all of this
establishment media and you heard her she said she saw the biggest audience growth from this
indicating the left is violent they want more violence and she's milking it like the grifter
she is not just that but can i ask this question when is taylor lorenz not been mainstream media
she's pointing us out that oh hey i i'm not this but i'm seeing this growth because of this because
you know finally a journalist yes when has she not been this she's she's she's always been an
establishment corporate shell and here she is still to this day yeah it's being an establishment
corporate chill it's the same play as as b day. Yeah. Being an establishment corporate chill.
It's the same play as Bernie Sanders does when as soon as he became a millionaire, then it was the billionaires.
They don't think of themselves as the rich.
They think of themselves as the working class.
They think I'm one of you.
But they're completely and totally detached from reality.
And that's why the Democrats are unpopular nowadays.
That's why they've had such a massive problem with the middle class and with the working class,
because the working class realized that the Democrats were the party of the very, very rich
and the completely, completely dependent.
Did you see the video of Bernie Sanders, by the way, that somebody put on X where...
Coachella?
It was, no, no, it was like 30 different frames of Bernie talking throughout by the way, that somebody put on X where Coachella it was.
No, no.
It was like 30 different frames of Bernie talking through.
Oh, right.
And he's been the exact same person in every one of these frames for 30 years.
He hasn't changed.
So Bernie, a million millionaires and billionaires to just billionaires.
To me, it seems like Bernie at the time.
And certainly we saw this in 2016.
It was a version of controlled opposition.
So they knew that there would be this populist left political push.
But the Democrat establishment wanted the ability to try to harness that for political support at election time.
So you would have Bernie.
You would have him go out there.
You'd have him run up in 2016.
Then you'd take the nomination away from him, which we saw in the original wiki leaks by the way uh prior to any of
the you know other stuff that came out and which nobody talks about anymore that they showed that
they stole the nomination from bernie sanders in 2016 but then you have bernie endorse hillary
and then try to cleave off which obviously didn't work in 2016 but the goal was always to get those
people back under the establishment tent and then they just give them another mansion. It's basically the Charlie Brown Christmas episode.
Yeah, yeah, yeah.
I do love how Bernie,
he's the largest recipient of insurance lobbying dollars
and he says, not the CEOs, only the employees.
And it's like, so the employees of the big insurance companies
feel like you're the right candidate
to maintain their jobs and their way of life.
What does that mean about you, Bernie?
I don't think he thought about that.
No.
I don't know.
Well, somebody's got to administer that single-payer health care system
that we're actually going to go to, right?
You know, what is the end goal of what Taylor Lorenz
and allegedly Luigi Mangione want?
Nobody would want to work in health care.
Nobody.
So all the health healthcare CEOs quit.
The companies all crumble.
And then the government tries appointing
somebody to run government healthcare,
but nobody wants to do it
because government healthcare will be run worse.
Their whole thing is they want single-payer healthcare.
We were talking about this before the show.
They want single-payer healthcare that is limitless.
Because as soon as you get government-mand want single-payer health care that is limitless because as soon as you get government mandated single-payer health care there's always waiting lists because because
things like doctors are not unlimited like you you have to have a system in in place to actually
give the care to people and if you don't provide incentives to these people that to become
doctors and nurses and stuff then you end up with too many people trying to go to too few doctors
so the only option you have is make people wait well yeah you got you got to be able to incentivize
the doctors to want to do this they got to go spend 15 years in school you know and you're
you're still creating that class system i have to to pay you more. You got I got to put you above everyone else to make you want to do this.
But you have to be treated the same as everyone.
No, this doesn't work.
Yeah, it'd be they might actually have a good argument if they focused on an honest path towards this system and addressing things like obesity and other things that people can control in their own life
and then inevitably reduce costs in medical care altogether.
I just want to briefly mention, too, before we move on to the next segment,
that we have this story from the Daily Mail.
There's not much information here, but the police rushed to UnitedHealthcare's Minnesota headquarters,
and an hour later they added a suspect had been detained without incident,
saying there's no threat to the public. We're continuing to clear the scene at this time. So we don't know exactly what happened. They say a police station, an officer at the site as they heightened security in the days after Mangione allegedly gunned down their boss, Brian Thompson. So I'm wondering if the Manchon effect is just really expanding this
rapidly. And now people are targeting the company itself. And this is what the left is going to do.
You're going to want to be good copycats, people are going to say I want to be the next Luigi,
or people who say I want to follow in the Luigi's footsteps. So you're going to get a,
you know, rally around the leader effect, you're going to get a bandwagon effect, more people are going to want to do this. And then they're going to get a, you know, rally around the leader effect.
You're going to get a bandwagon effect.
More people are going to want to do this.
And then they're going to find out that,
Oh,
by the way,
Taylor Lorenz is going to go on Netflix and go on CNN and talk about how
great I am.
And then I'm going to be a hero.
And people are going to put my name on bumper stickers too.
Just like for Luigi.
Here's the worst part of what,
about what Taylor Lorenz was doing and what Daniel Sullivan was doing.
So right now, 55% of, percent of single men are actively dating, but only 34 percent of single women are actively dating. This was a News Nation published this two weeks ago.
A lot of lonely young men just watched Taylor Lorenz talk about how women love revolutionary murderers. Yep. She is going on TV,
screaming in the faces of desperate, lonely young men.
She wants them to engage in violence.
Yep.
That's a terrifying thing.
And she just said it there, to your point.
I saw my biggest follower bump ever.
Well, yeah.
And all the women are cheering outside of the courtroom.
All right. Well, here's the next story in all this.
Hybristophilia, right? Hybristophilia. Is that what it's called? Yeah.
Here's a story from NBC News. Teen charged with killing parents also planned to assassinate Trump, FBI says.
Nikita Kasap, 17, is accused of conspiracy to assassinate the president.
Now, I wonder what those charges, if they actually have real evidence, he really was intending to go after Trump.
Apparently, he killed his third, his mother, 35 year old Tatiana Kasap and his stepfather, 51 year old Donald Meyer.
And he was accused of living with their corpses for two weeks.
Apparently, he had a manifesto and he had allegedly done it to take their money so he could use it for his for financing his plan to
assassinate the president. Now, this guy's not a leftist. They say that he was associated with
some neo-Nazi cults and, you know, anti-government extremism. But I will tell you this as well.
The right is not the faction in this country advocating for violence. This guy will be
condemned easily by
basically every single person on the right when the left comes out and cheers for violence it won't
just inspire other leftists it will inspire anyone he look he's he's definitely i mean look
now he's just a he's a crazy kid unfortunately right like if you if you think that killing your parent your
your mother and your stepfather are going to be a means for you to kill donald trump and thereby
incite a race war i think that's that would fall under detached from reality but i mean you know
i don't know i'm just kind of podcast so like's delusion. It's a delusion of delusion. Yeah, it's a classic delusion of grandeur.
I can I can do something that will and accelerationism, which is something that you see a lot in these extremists.
I don't think that that falls under right wing ideology.
If you have delusions like that, I don't think that that you actually I mean, sure, he's he's looking at, you know, crazy Nazi stuff.
But I mean, that that's part of the delusion.
That's not like that he has a coherent political philosophy that's right-leaning.
Well, it's clearly anti-Trump.
Yeah.
Weird.
No question about that.
Weird anti-Trump neo-Nazis.
Well, he did condemn them totally, you know.
He did.
He did.
There are very funny people on both sides of this argument, Tim.
Come on now.
But not.
Right, right. No, but again, you know, you have someone. He did. There are very funny people on both sides of this argument, Tim. Come on now. But not. Right, right.
No, but again, you have someone, what did it say?
Telegram and TikTok.
And you can't sit there and say, we just found out all this information from the New York
Times about ADHD for decades.
I'm sorry, I don't know if you had that up as a later topic, but admitting that ADHD
was totally over overprescribed.
And it makes men short.
And it makes men short.
And it's not that big of a deal.
And yet we, so even if you don't have that, you still have TikTok and you still have Instagram.
And you don't necessarily know what that does to developing minds.
We don't know at all what it does.
In terms of the dopamine, in terms of responses for anyone growing up.
That's why I keep my kids off screens just as much as possible.
You know, the thing is, it's not until a guy is older does he start to understand height.
And you've got a lot of people online.
There are subreddits for short guys and they talk about
how like it's not fair or whatever there's the women who say six six six six foot six feet tall
six pack and six figures according to the new york times report
according to the the report from the new york times it was making men an inch shorter than their than their peers without actually solving any of the underlying symptoms.
I mean, the the and again, this is all by the way, this is all stuff that, you know, the the crunchy, you know, Maha people have been saying for years.
Yeah. You know, but you would be condemned as an RFK psychopath, sycophant, et cetera, kind of thing if you talked about it last week.
But now that you talk about it this week, it's like, well, sycophant, et cetera, kind of thing, if you'd talked about it last week.
But now that you've talked about it this week,
it's like, well, according to your times.
So one of the questions that I have, though,
is what does this mean politically, right?
Do you think that it had anything?
So we all know that the millennial generation had a lot of weird stuff happen to them,
a lot of terrible stuff happen to them,
a lot of just trauma associated with those formative years. But we don't really talk about the massive over medication of millennials,
the way that we probably should, because I think that's clearly stunted a lot of the emotional and
psychological development of millennials, just as much as, you know, Iraq and the global war on
terror and 911 and the great financial crisis, global
financial crisis, etc. That when you throw the the the massive Ritalin and Adderall on top of that,
and you're like, gee, I wonder why they hate the system so much. I wonder why they have so much
resentment. I wonder why they think they can't do anything, probably because they've been told
their entire lives by everyone that was put in a position of authority over them that something is wrong with
you and you can't do anything and you need a pill and you've been you've been medicating yourself
since you were a child you know you know what i think is really crazy about this story he was born
in 2008 right we are old wow it's just crazy to think that it doesn't take that much time
got old boys oh a terrorist no it doesn't take that much time to grow a terrorist.
No, it doesn't.
That's the scary thing.
That other guy from the other story.
So the homegrowns.
The homegrowns.
Trump's going to lock them up, lock them up, send them away.
Lock up the homegrowns.
They are apoplectic of us.
But we'll get to that in a second.
But with this other guy, he was 38.
This Cody Balmer, I think his name was.
He had a family.
38 years old wife
and kids and uh socialism doesn't work out well for socialists as we've warned them repeatedly
i don't understand how you think how someone can come to the conclusion that like all these bad
things are happening i have a family that i have to take care of so the the most positive course
of action i can come up with is firebombing the governor's mansion.
I mean, most criminals aren't thinking.
Right, right.
I mean, that's why they just grabbed it in the first place.
I often ask myself when I see these stories about bank robbers and criminals, and I'm just thinking, like, why don't they just apply themselves to make money and get better jobs?
I was like, oh, wait, right.
If they had the capacity to do that, they wouldn't go and rob places.
They'd literally be doing it.
That's the problem.
They can't.
Their brains don't work.
Yeah, I actually was in a – I was in a – it's the one story I tell about this, I guess.
So I was in intel training at one point.
I was in like this course that's sort of like a joint course that's taught everywhere.
And we actually had a retired NYPD
homicide detective who was in teaching the course and they gave us the scenario and there was all
these clues and we had to sort of figure out where this you know this woman had gone missing from an
office in New York and we had to figure it out and it was just a scenario kind of thing you know
how to analyze reports and things like that I remember I came up with this like completely outlandish like everything was combined
everything was working behind the scenes kind of scenario and you know this i was maybe like i don't
know like like like my 20s and and uh and the detective was like look most criminals aren't
that smart if they were they wouldn't choose crime in the first place.
Right.
And it was literally like she was just having an affair with her boss.
And, you know, it's kind of.
You know, look, there are dudes on the road that sell bottles of water.
Yeah.
Yeah.
I knew a dude.
Let me tell you.
I knew a guy who would go to he would go to state in Madison, I think,
down in Chicago, lay down against a light post, the street light post, with an empty Folgers can, and he'd go to sleep.
And he'd wake up with $300 in it.
Oh, absolutely.
And he'd buy heroin with it, which is unfortunate.
That's very unfortunate.
We're looking at this guy wrong, the Josh Shapiro guy.
We're looking at him all wrong.
He truly found out that socialism is so bad for him that this is the only way he can afford a divorce.
Right.
It's just I think it comes down to, you know, taking accountability for yourself and your life and all the problems that you might have.
And instead of taking the honest and often harder route, they perpetuate a lie or they they run with a lie because it's just simply easier
than coming to terms with reality they find themselves in these situations where they brood
and end up acting on it yeah so there's there's two things go at play so the first is this by
the way we talk about this in in unhumans this is we call this the ouroboros option playing out this
is where the snake eats its own tail which is something that the left left always does. The Mensheviks always eventually rise up because
people forget that it wasn't actually the Bolsheviks that overthrew the Romanov family,
the dynasty. It was it was this much wider earlier February revolution. And they set up a republic
for like six months in Russia. And then the Bolsheviks overthrew that republic and said,
yeah, you guys are too moderate. We're just going to slaughter all you guys and do things this way.
And then they eventually, of course, slaughtered the Romanov family in cold blood as well.
And, and she'll never be forgotten for that.
But, you know, it's, it's also a situation where we, when we talk about the pathology
is it's like, I described it like this, like a town and in every town, you know, you've
got that one section of town that's a little bit nicer
or we all know right that's how towns work maybe it's on a hill but it's usually gated
and everybody else in town kind of looks at them and it's like yeah those those you know
those yuppies those those up-and-comers whatever they think they're so much better than us so you
always kind of griping about them but some people say hey you know what if you want to get a house
like that it's what you said just just try to work harder try to you know what? If you want to get a house like that, it's what you said. Just, just try to work harder.
Try to,
you know,
try to better yourself.
And then maybe you can better your lot in life.
No,
no,
no.
And then someone else comes and says,
Hey,
what if we go kill all those people and take their stuff?
So I've got a better solution.
Better than all that.
Oh,
better than that.
Yeah.
So we,
we,
from the airport today,
we drove past a Loudoun County,
you know,
you're seeing these palatial mansions. Oh yeah. Yeah. Loudoun County. So McLe the airport today, we drove past Loudoun County. You know, you're seeing these palatial mansions.
Oh, yeah.
Yeah.
Loudoun County.
So McLean, baby.
I'm waiting until next year when Trump's fired all of these people in the federal government that were affording these houses and they can't afford to live there anymore.
And the housing market is going to burst.
And I'm just going to come in, buy those houses on cheap and that's how yeah that's how we get well yeah the dc area works
a little bit different than uh than a a fair uh you know free market area that's for sure what
are they well it's basically like this dc is an industry town so when trump comes into dc and says
hey we're going to get rid of government it's like that's the industry in this town to be like
going to la and saying hey guys let's stop doing movies like they would run you out of town even though by the way you know people realize that
most of hollywood has actually left hollywood yeah they aren't actually made there anymore
um in in though they just kind of like live in the you know hollywood is even hollywood
it's like little pockets around right but they're for the weather yeah exactly and so it's it's
this is the issue though with doge and well and like the the pete
morocco guy who got you know got fired from usaid which he gets brought in to shut down usaid he
works to shut down usaid shuts down most of it and all of a sudden gets bounced like on a friday
and everyone's like what's going on you know you know i just thought of something uh before we go
to the next segment you know people should do is they should take,
whenever they see a picture of Luigi Mangione,
take it and alter it slightly to make him kind of ugly,
like use one of those apps,
but only by like one or 2%.
That way all the images that start circulating
will make him look ugly
and the woman will be like, oh, he's ugly.
I don't want to support him anymore.
I'm only half kidding, by the way.
Just put a red hat on him with an M and he's.
That's a, that's that, by the way, by the way, there's a, that's, that's,
that's a members only subject for why women support attractive murderers,
but not unattractive murderers.
Indeed.
We'll get to that in a second, but let's,
let's jump to the story from Politico.
El Salvador won't return wrongly deported maryland man that's right ladies and gentlemen
according to the corporate press an innocent man from maryland was deported to a prison okay here's
the real story uh there was a guy who entered the country illegally that's what the courts have
determined he was in he was a member of ms-13 according according to one court and an appellate court.
He had an order for removal from this country.
There was a temporary stay put on deportation related to fears he would face harm if he returned to El Salvador.
Donald Trump's administration upheld the deportation order and said it was an administrative error, the oversight on the previous day. However,
he was now outside of the U.S. jurisdiction. And as a citizen of El Salvador,
that's El Salvador's problem. A district court ordered the president to return to the United
States a member of MS-13, illegal immigrants, from the jurisdiction of a foreign country, something that not only Trump
could not do if he tried, but he doesn't have the authority to force a foreign government to give up
its citizens. He can pressure them and try. We get that. But they don't have the authority to order.
So while the Supreme Court ruled Trump must facilitate the return of this man if El Salvador
releases him, they said these courts can't order the president to engage in foreign policy negotiations.
So now what ends up happening is Naeem Bukele, who visited the president, he's the president of El Salvador, visited Trump, said, I'm not going to.
What do you want me to do? Smuggle this guy back into the U.S. as a terrorist?
And they said, no, no, but you can release him.
And he says, we don't we don't take kindly like we don't want to release terrorists from our prisons onto our own streets. He's an El Salvador man. We're not releasing a known terrorist. He said, we just went from the murder capital of the world to the safest country in the Western Hemisphere. And you're trying to reverse that. It's never going to happen yeah now look at the reaction on reddit from these uh this is default this is just
default reddit okay you go to reddit.com you go to news and what do you see top comment so let me
get this straight these people committed no crimes they were illegally detained and removed from the
country against their will and they're being held in a foreign prison indefinitely with no due
process and yet they still frame it as deportation and not kidnapping and human trafficking. No crime. Let's pause real quick.
The crime, the only crime committed is illegal entry into the country for which the penalty
is deportation.
Now, they were illegally detained.
Incorrect.
That was not an illegal detainment.
You could argue that it wasn't an illegal, but they violated a court order through his
deportation.
But they're not being held in a
foreign prison the man is el salvadoran he's being held in his own prison they want him back look at
this so kidnapping it is then either they don't want any reporting on the conditions of the prison
or he's already dead this is an effing problem these are the only theological conclusions trump
told him to say this to subvert
the decision of the courts. He is dead. They don't actually know where he is. Visits the U.S.
We cannot guarantee you won't be deported to a prison in El Salvador by mistake. Why is it that
all of these people, it's supposed to be politically neutral, but they omit the key details of what
actually happened here? So I think that I think, and can you scroll down a little bit?
I want to see how many upvotes the main post has.
37,000.
Okay.
So, so this is what people need to start understanding better that when we talk about the, the,
the ascendance of the unhumans, that, that unhuman activity is on the rise.
This is where it starts.
It starts with people just willfully accepting lies
about cases and then reacting to it
and then taking that and then running with it
to its logical course.
We have to fight back.
And what you need to understand is that
that's 37,000 people just on this one subreddit.
There are millions of people who have this,
what we call the fried mental model of the world
where they just still sit there and regurgitate everything the NPR tells them, the Facebook tells them, the Reddit tells them.
Whatever the NPR sales narrative is, they will immediately regurgitate it.
And these people, by the way, live around you.
They're in your school, probably controlling your schools and libraries, by the way.
And it's a huge problem.
Look at this comment.
You want to read that one, Phil?
Leaving a legal resident of the U.S. to rot in a foreign prison should make every single
member of Congress vote to impeach him.
The fact they are silent and the fact Trump revels in sending people to a foreign prison
will not be remembered kindly.
His legacy is long gone.
He didn't send an American citizen to a foreign prison. He didn't send a man to a foreign prison will not be remembered kindly. His legacy is long gone. He didn't send an American citizen to a foreign prison.
He didn't send a man to a foreign prison.
He said a legal resident.
So, I mean, that.
Oh, right.
This guy was not a legal resident.
He was here illegally with a stay over, I guess, safety concerns.
And the Trump administration argues they actually did have the authority to deport him.
And it wasn't a mistake.
But this guy's not going to a foreign prison.
He went home.
He went home.
Could you imagine a guy breaks into your house, steals a bunch of your stuff,
eats all your food, and he's holding a bunch of your gold and rare earths
that you store in your house that you've exported from China at the last minute, imported,
and then you go, hey.
I have so many rare earths in my mudroom. And you go, buddy hey you're gonna pay the penalty i'm gonna give you a ride home come on
my van's right here hop in we'll drive you home no my wife's gonna be mean to me that's okay i'll
give you right home so you know when we say make america great again i i really come back to this
point of you you guys remember when the aclu which if you don't know what that acronym is, American Civil Liberties Union.
Anti-civil liberties union now.
Well, that's what it is now.
But it used to actually stand for protecting our civil liberties.
Now they spend so much time protecting and defending these illegal immigrants or people who aren't actually deserving of those civil liberties,
it is insane to me. And they're fighting so hard to get this guy back. Here's the conversation.
And I laid this out a week and a half ago before this guy came and El Salvador came and said,
no, we're not doing that. It was quite okay donald trump must facilitate here's the conversation hey yeah we're gonna need that guy back and elsa was like what our citizen
yeah that guy nope not gonna happen well i tried not just that it's like if there was a crime the
man committed whose penalty was answering for the murder of somebody and we wanted to extradite him
saying you can't protect this man.
He murdered some—no, no, no.
This is a guy whose crime was, he's a gang member who entered illegally, for which the penalty is, go home.
He was sent home.
By what logic are we going to extradite him back here?
Here's the crazy part.
So the day before the Supreme Court announcement came down saying, hey, 9-0, got to get him
back, Pam Bondi and I can't remember who else did a conference saying, hey, we're dropping
all these charges. It's like they knew
that Supreme Court decision was coming as it
was supposed to be, and they
said, we're going to drop these charges because
we can't say
we have to bring you back to get
your due process for the crimes that you
allegedly committed.
We're not charging you with any crimes.
The only crime you have is being
here illegally the whole the supreme court said not that he could they said trump can't be compelled
to have a foreign government give up one of their own citizens they said in the event that el
salvador does release this man trump must provide the plane for him to come back so if the guy is
freed and then says i would like to come to america trump's supposed to fly him
back so now he's a criminal he ain't going nowhere perfect i mean thankfully go ahead
no i was gonna say what what people need to understand though is that so the maryland man
hoax and that's what we're calling it's the maryland man hoax this is a disinformation
operation that's being run and and reddit of course is a huge huge channel for disinformation
that's being run against president trump obviously of course, is a huge, huge channel for disinformation that's
being run against President Trump. Obviously, they're trying to break up his relationship with
Bukele. They're trying to use Bukele as someone who's, by the way, beaten these people at every
single one of their games, including the judges and including the courts down there, including
liberal media. But now they they're terrified of Trump actually using these tactics in the United
States, not just for illegals, by the way, but for hardened criminals, murderers and the rest of actually locking up gangs and
throwing people away and throwing away the key. And so in order to do that, you've got to run
a sort of low level, we're starting to see our versions of the color revolution playbook be used
against Trump. And one of the key elements of the color revolution playbook is the locking up of nonviolent citizens. So this is always
something they use. This is this is, by the way, something they accused of Gaddafi of doing.
This is something they accused across the Middle East when they were knocking off regimes. It was
a you're locking up people, you're going against your own people, you're attacking your own people.
They said it about they, you know, you think of autocrat after autocrat, dictator after dictator. But now you're
using that same narrative. He's attacking his own people. They know that they're lying. They don't
care that they're lying. They know that we are telling the truth. The thing is, they're going
to run the operation anyway, because they can still reach the people on Reddit, the people on
NPR, the people on Facebook, which, by the way mark zuckerberg has done nothing to clean up and you know they'll
use that to try to erode support away from trump as much as possible we do have this story we'll
get to in a little bit with uh meta facing off on antitrust so zuckerberg's begging the white house
to back off yeah well zuckerberg he's not backing off the censorship. We still
deal with it every single day. He's done nothing about this. Now, granted, they got rid of the
fact checking thing, but, you know, we'll see. What I will say about Naeem Bukele is the corporate
press in the United States claimed that he was arresting and jailing innocent people and doing
all these awful things. And you know, my response to that is. Abraham Lincoln and then thank you. Never I stay. Naeem Bukele had a country that was overrun by various gangs that did whatever they wanted.
So many people in Central and South and South in Central America and South America have tried to combat these narco gangs, these cartels, and they die in Mexico.
Mayors are killed by the cartels if
they dare defy them. El Salvador was brutal, one of one of the highest rates of murder in the world.
He says it's the murder capital of the world. Well, it's disputed, maybe Honduras, actually,
or maybe Venezuela, depending on how you're counting the murders, but still one of the worst.
He gets in and he says, this is war against criminal, evil rapists, child traffickers, drug dealers.
And we're going to save this country.
And so we lament when in times of conflict and great war, like his country was dealing with, that the innocent do get swept up in these things.
But everybody in this country, when asked, if you said it was Abraham Lincoln, a good president, you get something like 95 percent say he was a great president.
When people are asked who is the greatest American president, some 83 percent say Abraham Lincoln.
And what did he do? He arrested politicians who disagreed with him. He threatened to arrest a
Supreme Court justice for disagreeing with him. He set up a suspension of habeas corpus
from Pennsylvania to D.C.
to arrest anybody he wanted for any reason.
And their argument was,
we need to be able to move
from Pennsylvania to D.C.
without question and without threat or risk
because Maryland was a slave state.
Which ironically,
it would have covered a lot of Maryland men.
Indeed.
Just like this Maryland man.
Is anybody going to come out and be like yay we love
that abraham lincoln was arresting random people without charge or trial no of course not but he
was a man at war seeking to preserve the union and with naiba kelly and to a great to a great
degree with trump you have what i describe as extenuating circumstance in a wartime president
it's not it's an idea I've come up with.
I think Will Chamberlain's been talking about this for like seven or eight years, that you have a deep state that is willing to imprison, jail, or in some respects, you have components that want to assassinate Donald Trump.
He needs to use what powers he can constitutionally, I argue, but to the extent that he can to preserve this nation.
Now, I don't see Trump doing anything as egregious as Abraham Lincoln did.
He's deporting people under the Alien Enemies Act.
It's a law.
He's allowed to do it.
The Supreme Court said he's allowed to do it.
Abraham Lincoln was like, eh, habeas corpus, nah.
You can't do that.
He did it anyway.
So Nayib Bukele arrested overwhelmingly all gang members and criminals, and we don't know
the extent to which innocent people may have been wrapped up.
And we lament that if that's the case.
But what Nayibu Kelly did in transforming El Salvador is historic.
And it's a story of legend, of a man who came in, resisted the cartels,
survived the cartels, rebuilt his nation,
made it one of the safest, if not the safest in the Western Hemisphere.
Now you've got people of wealth flocking to El Salvador because he's fixed it and made it into of the safest and not the safest in the western hemisphere now you've got people of wealth flocking to el salvador because he's fixed it and made it into a a beach paradise surf city
and surf city too did you did you hear what he said when they when they brought this up in the
white house today what bukele said uh a couple of it but he the the line that i love was he
reframed the entire thing and they he said you want to talk about how many people we've incarcerated, and yet you never talk about how many people we liberated.
It was something like, you say that we incarcerated thousands.
I say we liberated millions.
We liberated millions.
And he's right.
It's exactly right.
You can't have a functioning society if you allow these homicidal maniacs to roam free, to roam out of prisons, that's why you have that's why we have prisons in the first place.
There are other ways to deal with crime, by the way, but a homicidal maniac, a psychopath, a gang, a narco gang, etc.
You can't allow them out. And so you have to deal with them some way to allow for freedom, the viability of of of families, the raising of children. This is how societies
continue. This is how you get your birth rates back up, etc, etc. There's a lot that goes into
that. But the point being is, if you don't allow for your basic function of civilization to continue
because unhumans are in control of your country, then guess what? You will lose your country,
which is the situation that El Salvador was in. And it's also why I believe Bukele won. It's like the largest presidential victory in history.
I mean, could you. So the story I like to tell is I was playing poker at National Harbor in D.C.
It's the casino guy sitting to my left was everybody was talking.
He mentioned that someone brought up Trump and people were talking about it.
People were pretty chill because poker players tend to be more right leaning, not all of them.
And dude brought up he was from El Salvador. And then I was like, oh, really?
Why? Why'd your family come here? Like it was really bad as crime. And then I was like, oh, yeah.
Yeah. How do you feel about Bukele? And he goes, we're moving back.
And I'm like, you're moving back to El Salvador. And he's like, it's really nice.
Now, yeah, we want to go back. And I'm like, that is the coolest thing I've ever heard.
Congratulations, sir. I'm glad you've gotten your country back and i'm glad you have a leader
like naib i'm i'm i'm excited to see what he does plus you got max and stacy down there bitcoin uh
revolutionaries and el salvador of course is the land of bitcoin so what what i'm hearing this is
what i'm hearing through all this guys is don is Donald Trump, depending on who you ask,
could be the greatest president of your lifetime or the worst president of your lifetime.
But what I'm hearing through this is he's not going far enough.
He needs to take that next step and be that real dictator everyone wants him to be.
And we can really have America back.
I don't know that he needs to be a dictator. My point is the powers of the Constitution afford him the ability to go after Adam Schiff and any J6 member who lied, manipulated witnesses or committed crimes.
These these lawyers at the DOJ who they're just firing, taking a light approach.
And, you know, I do trust them.
A lot of people got mad at Cash Patel and Dan Bongino because they appointed that guy.
What's his name
jensen i i don't know jensen yeah you know about this story and that he had said disparaging things
about j6ers and they're like why is this guy staying on and i say guys there are there there's
there's no one i trust more on this than dan bongino and with all due respect to cash patel
who i think is also great dan is a a a bull i i i i I cannot see that guy going back on his word or betraying the people who stood by him and helped him and and who he wants to serve.
So I have concerns.
But for the most part, for the most part, I'm like, let him cook, man.
I mean, look, I have nothing but respect for Cash and Dan, for sure. And at the same time, though, I can also understand why people are asking questions. funny enough um so they talk about something that happened on that camp on his campaign in 2006
that was actually the very first campaign i ever interned on where so this is like part of the
post-origin story or whatever um that tucker has the guy on that i worked for and the campaign got
raided like a month before the election and this is is 2006 when Mueller was still FBI director.
And this was a time where, by the way, nobody was talking about this.
Guess what they claimed that he was involved with?
Russia.
Oh, wow.
20 years ago, he was an agent of Russia and his daughter, et cetera.
And by the way, all of this was because he was ringing the bell on 9-11 stuff
that the government knew prior to the attacks.
And suddenly the FBI came in and destroyed his entire career.
Kurt Weldon. Yeah, that's just kind of what I got my start.
Let's jump to this next story from MSN caught on hot mic.
What did Trump tell Bukele about homegrowns?
So it's everyone's favorite Aaron Ruppar.
And he says Trump to Bukele, quote, homegrowns. So it's everyone's favorite Aaron Rupar. And he says Trump to
Kelly, quote, homegrowns are next. The homegrowns, you got to build about five more places, not big
enough. Now, those that are familiar with Aaron Rupar, there is a technique in journalism called
Ruparing. And that means you take a story and cut it out of context and falsely frame what
actually happened. Tim, are you making this up or can I find this on the Internet somewhere?
Indeed, you can.
Should I pull it up?
Where could that be?
Urban Dictionary?
Urban Dictionary.
But that only tells the truth, Tim.
Let's see.
To Rupar.
Here we go.
Here we go.
Yep.
We got it from Urban Dictionary.
I didn't make it up.
March of 2021.
To lie with impunity, a brazen statement with a focus on misleading, usually with the intention
of a premeditated outcome, predetermined outcome. To purposefully, purposely mislead,
to intentionally and grossly mischaracterize a statement and or video. Indeed, as Aaron Rupar
publishes this clip, Trump to Bukele, homegrowns are next.
I will tell you this.
Donald Trump has stated publicly he'd like to send the worst of the worst from America
to this prison in El Salvador.
And I will tell you, my opinion is absolutely not.
American citizens go through American courts and we have Guantanamo Bay for the worst of
the worst.
We don't need El Salvador.
That being said, in this clip, it looks like Trump is joking and you don't really even know
what he's saying because you can't make it out. Here is the next.
The homegrown is built.
You got to build about five more places.
Yeah, that's fair.
All right.
It's not big enough.
Come on.
So this is a much different office than you.
So I'm going to tell you,
I don't know for sure. Trump has stated before he wants the worst of the worst in America to
be sent to this prison. It seems like he was I almost kind of feel like there was there was a
news cycle where they were attacking Trump saying he wants to send Americans these prisons and that
the reason everybody in the room laughs is because he was making a comment on this.
I don't trust that Aaron Ruppert put on only only 30 seconds of this they called it hot mike he's standing in front of a bunch of reporters and he turns and says i said the homegrowns are next he's
got to build more everyone laughs yeah i don't know what do you guys think he's definitely known
for literally turning to the reporters in the room when he's making jokes like that so i i don't think
that he's being serious at all here he He makes eye contact basically with the reporters in the room.
But here's the real question for everybody.
When Trump says the homegrowns are next and we're talking about gang members, cartel murderers, child traffickers.
What is the argument that with due process, a conviction, Donald Trump can't send a child trafficker to a prison in a foreign country?
Well, I suppose legally – just devil's advocate, I suppose legally speaking that would be releasing him to another government's custody.
So he wouldn't actually be in our custody at that point.
And so you'd have all sorts of legal issues there because then I'm sure the Supreme Court would come in and say, well, you're depriving them all sorts of rights.
Or arguably releasing them.
Because, yeah, in a sense.
But, you know, you're depriving them a right to appeal, right to attorney, all those things.
Indeed.
Does Guantanamo Bay have all of those functions under the U.S. governance?
Yes, it does.
Indeed.
So Guantanamo Bay has, and I can say this as a source, I lived there for, you know, and served there for almost a year.
They have McDonald's and stuff, too.
They sure do have a McDonald's.
They have a McDonald's.
They have a Subway.
We had a bowling alley on Fridays and Saturdays.
They did laser light bowling.
Wow.
Two movie theaters, by the way.
I worked in the movie theater.
It was pretty cool.
Waterboarding at Guantanamo Bay sounds really fun until you learn what it means.
I didn't make up the joke. It's pretty cool. Waterboarding at Guantanamo Bay sounds really fun until you learn what it means. That's a great I make up the joke. It's somebody else.
Rush Limbaugh used to have the T-shirts that said Club Gitmo, your tropical retreat from the stress of jihad.
So I look at this and I just say to Trump, we don't.
And yeah, they have lawyers and look for the homegrown extremist criminals.
We have Guantanamo Bay. And I don't know why we would need to use el salvador for
this i i would not want to see that happen which by the way the um the actual facility of i think
it's camp six at guantanamo is based on the same schematics as the supermax in colorado so it is
almost a one-to-one i don't you know these uh size i don't know if size wise it's exactly the same
but it's it's the same structure that you would get in a size i don't know if size wise it's exactly the same but it's it's the
same structure that you would get in a federal correctional institute what if we offered a
choice to capital offenders death row or el salvador see here's here's my thing right here's
my thing wait wait capital offenders you mean like you mean like so straight up straight up, you will be killed. If you stay. So death sentence.
Yep.
Or we can send you to El Salvador.
I imagine they would mostly take El Salvador.
No, I'm still for the death sentence.
I've changed my position on the death penalty because I was watching a protest over the firing squads in South Carolina. And I would say not that I've changed my position to be in favor of the death penalty, but that I consider the will of others.
I weigh that to what I believe and think it is fair that I am not the arbiter of society.
So what I would request is in exchange for the death penalty, we have a system in which
following a conviction, putting someone on death row, the prosecutors and the investigators themselves, the police, will face an investigation from an independent agency outside the state or federal.
And if it's federal, there'd have to be some way to do this to investigate any malfeasance. That is, there are certain politicians who will remain unnamed for,
let's just call it community guideline reasons, who are known to have withheld evidence that
would have exonerated death row inmates. That is my problem largely with the death penalty.
That being said, if we had a safety net that would make sure that those criminals that are
trying to get the state to murder people for whatever insane reason are held to account, then I'm much more willing to accept the death
penalty existing. Despite the fact that I still fear innocent people being wrongly convicted,
it's a compromise in that, you know, I saw a woman holding up a sign that said,
don't kill in my name. And the first thing I thought was, they're not. They acknowledge that
you are not okay with this. But the will of the state and the voters is that they don't want these offenders who have been
duly convicted to continue living as they're a threat to society. And I can respect that argument
from everyone I had with it. My concern is still malfeasance in government. So I say,
have an investigation to ensure that there is no malfeasance and that certain prosecutors
from California can't withhold evidence that would result in innocent people dying. We one of the things that we also brought up, though, is the
the Lee Kuan Yew option. And so this, of course, is the guy who cleaned up Singapore, which was,
by the way, I wouldn't say it was a similar situation to El Salvador, but bear some
similarities. It's small. It's like a city sort of sort of a nation state, city state. And he
introduced famously
flogging so rather than massing rather than mass incarceration right now think about it though
right so you're talking about the the option would you pick this or that yeah so uh rather than this
or that what if and said you look think about it right hey you're facing 20 years for this crime
so non-capital crimes let's say okay you're facing 20 years for this crime what are you going to take 20 years or 20 lashes well i mean bro it would be 20 years is a serious offense you get way more than 20 lashes
for that well you did you could be 100 lashes for 20 right right but you get what you get what i'm
saying in terms of the thought everyone takes the lashes everyone takes the lashes yeah and then
you're scarred for life but i agree with that But it works for Singapore. I the reason why I agree with this is it's not a violation of cruel, unusual punishment. If they're given a choice. Yep. We will give you standard incarceration. But there's an alternative. And we do alternatives all the time. We do work release. So why? And they do you know, if you fight fires will. Okay. So why don't we offer up? Russia is doing front lines. One year in prison.
One year in prison or one month in the stockade.
What if option three?
A month in the stockade.
A year in prison is a long time to lose.
A month in the stockade, that's rough.
Outside any elements.
Okay, okay, right, right.
You get to go in at night.
So my assumption on the stockade is. You'll probably die of exposure if you're. Yeah, yeah, yeah. That's what I'm mean, elements. Okay, okay, right, right. You get to go in at night. So my assumption on the stockade is...
You'll probably die of exposure if you're...
Yeah, yeah, yeah.
That's what I'm saying, yeah.
So let's just...
You can go to the stockade for a short amount of time,
a week or two or something.
But my point is there will be people
making sure you don't die, obviously.
It's just you're in public.
Everyone can see you.
You are shamed and you suffer for a certain amount of time,
but you have a choice.
This is why we had stockades.
This is why... I mean, you think about it,
it's like people are so,
which by the way, people get,
oh, mass incarceration, mass incarceration.
No, mass incarceration was originally part
of the original small P progressive movement.
The idea was that you would have,
that rather than have public floggings
and public executions and stockades, then you would go to mass incarceration.
And then suddenly progressives say, oh, this is so much better.
This is so much more wonderful.
And now they're all upset about the mass incarceration.
So for those that are saying, wait, what's a stockade?
It's this.
You've seen it.
Phil, show the people.
You've got – they's it's they just
hold you in the wood okay yeah yeah so you're held in position and it's for a certain period of time
maybe maybe what i don't what i mean to say is it's painful but it's also humiliating and that's
the point right so obviously a month probably too long you probably die so it'd be like a week or
something because military stockade would hold soldiers for for days to weeks pending
trial wow for minor offenses drunkenness or petty theft you'd be a few hours to a couple days
i think we save a lot of money i think um we save a lot of money just saying guys there's other
options okay there's other there is yeah i i think uh when trump's talking about homegrowns
if he's talking about capital offenses that would result in the death of an individual, what are the leftists angry about?
Well, in their mind, Trump is saying Mahmoud Khalil.
In their mind, Trump is having some like little old lady going, you're a tyrant getting sent to El Salvador.
No, what Trump is talking about, he said the worst
of the worst. We're talking about capital offenders, child traffickers, drug dealers,
cartels, etc. The point he was making is that there are cartel members in this country that
were born in this country and they work and serve the cartels that are foreign to this country.
Personally, I say Guantanamo is good enough. You know, I don't want to open the door to that. It's
a slippery slope. But that being said, it's not a violation of the Eighth Amendment to offer choices.
I don't see how that's cruel and unusual at all.
You can go to prison like normal.
Everybody goes there.
It'll give you an option.
I would say, though, if you are worried about price, the cost of incarcerating someone at Guantanamo is very exorbitant compared to within the confines of the mainland. Yeah, if there's a situation where Trump feels the individual is so egregious and so violent
that they're not getting the death penalty for whatever reason, maybe they have information or
something, I don't know. It makes sense to pay the premium for Guantanamo for whatever strategic
military or intel purposes we would need for that. That's why I believe it exists. Otherwise,
I don't know why Trump would want to send anybody anywhere. Is it because it's cheaper in El Salvador?
Well, for El Salvador, yeah, because you're again, these are illegals to begin with.
So it makes sense to send them there rather than send them to Gitmo.
If we send Gitmo, we have to pay for them.
Well, a lot of the the the reason for having Bacalli do this and why it's such a smart idea, it's even smarter than sending them to Gitmo.
And I say this as a guy who is supportive of Gitmo.
And there's so many conspiracy theories and myths about that place, I swear.
The people, the guys who have been released, they just all lie.
They all just straight up and lie.
The guy went on Jordan Peterson.
He's like, oh, I was tortured every day.
Like, no, you weren't, dude.
I was there.
And it's, but it's, we're not bearing the cost.
Bukele is actually paying for the United States.
Right.
We're saving the money from having to do this.
It's a great business deal from Trump's perspective.
We got a couple more segments I want to try and get in.
So before we jump to the ADHD one, I just want to mention, as we have it in this segment,
the law of self-defense, Branca, says, I'm with Jack Post on the lashes if the victim gets to deliver the lashes.
Ooh, I love that.
Let's jump to the story from the New York Times.
We're a victim's family member.
Indeed.
The New York Times is basically saying that ADHD was a scam.
They say, have we been thinking about ADHD all wrong with diagnoses at a record high?
Some experts have begun to question our assumptions about the condition and how to treat it.
Except South Park questioned it a long time ago, where they played a video and the doctor was like, our new treatment for ADHD is non-medical, non-invasive.
Simply approach the child, and he walks up to the kid, and he slams the table and says, sit down and study! And the kid just gets right to it and starts reading, and the other kids are shaking. And he goes, once the treatment is administered to one child,
the others fall in line as well.
So the crazy thing about this that I think needs to be brought up right away.
Check this out.
They say there was another distressing result
they noticed in their data, a physiological one.
The children who took Ritalin for an extended period
grew less quickly than the non-medicated children did.
By the end
of those 36 months, subjects who had consistently taken stimulant medication were on average more
than an inch shorter than the ones who had never received medication. Many of the scientists in the
MTA group assumed this height suppression in childhood would be temporary, that the shorter
children would catch up during adolescence. But when data was collected again, nine years after the initial experiment,
the height gap remained.
In 2017, Swanson and the MTA group
published another follow-up,
this time tracking the subject until age 25.
The ones who had consistently taken stimulant medication
remained about an inch shorter than their peers.
Their ADH symptoms, meanwhile,
were no better than those who had stopped taking the medication
or who never even started.
Excuse me.
That is to say, men out there, everybody, think about this.
The New York Times says when they put you on that ADHD medication, you'll be short.
You'll be an inch or more shorter than you would have been. I think that if you go, if a lot of these men knew that being put on this
drug would do this to them in their adulthood, they would say absolutely not. More importantly,
I think most people are starting to realize when you take young men who are spunky and full of
energy and want to run around like kids, you put them in a room and say, sit down and shut up.
And they're sitting there shaking. It is not an illness. It is called being male.
So I visited some family friends, my wife's friends, and they had a son and a daughter.
And they were very close in age.
And they said, you know, it's really funny.
One day, the boy started running around smashing things.
And the girl started running around taking them and trying to protect them.
And we didn't teach them to do this. They just did. And yes, boys and girls are different.
Men and women are different. They are. So when they start drugging children en masse,
I think it's like what a fifth of kids are getting these drugs. It's not because the kids anything's
wrong. I think that the data point that I saw in the article earlier was 23% of 17-year-olds currently, which is one in four.
One in four.
Yep, 23% of 17-year-olds.
Look at this.
15.5% of American adolescents, 21% of 14-year-old boys, and 23% of 17-year-old boys.
Seven million American children have received an ADHD diagnosis, up from
6 million in 2016. And what happens
between 14 and 17
high school? That's when you get hit with the
high school teachers, so the 17-year-olds
have a higher rate because they've spent
more time in high school and had a high school teacher
say, oh, this kid needs a prescription.
It's such a scam, man. It's so bad.
I wonder how much of it... You know what's really fascinating
is that school sucks.
And everyone knows it sucks.
Kids have been saying school sucks forever.
And parents don't listen.
And there is something functionally wrong with this country that children every day say, I hate this.
This is not what human life is supposed to be.
We're supposed to be working towards goals.
Go back 200 years.
The kids would wake up early and work with their parents.
And sure, kids would be like, I want to go hang out with my friends and things like this.
But you weren't supposed to hate where you were at all hours of the day to the point where you get bullying and you get shootings and you get other nonsense.
These schools are being run miserably.
And that is why we must abolish the Department of Education.
Well, among others. that is why we must abolish the department of education well among these but i mean look that
there are are there's evidence that or the the way that schools are designed is to train kids
for a world that doesn't exist anymore most kids are not going to get out of school and go and work
in a factory and that was kind of the design but that's that that's the scheduling structure with
the bells ringing and all that yeah schools today are just miserable places to be where kids are not, typically the teachers don't like you.
And they're a vestige of the past. That's why we should get rid of them. Well, I mean, I don't
even think they were functional when they were implemented as means of training kids to work in
factories. The fact of the matter is kids always learn from their parents and their communities.
They had neighbors. The son would work with the dad from a young age and learn the dad's craft.
And the daughter would work with the mother and learn the mother's craft.
And now what we've created is we give our children off to the state to put them in an institutionalized learning facility where the kids don't actually learn and they're miserable.
And then the teachers start telling those kids, start lying to their parents.
This whole thing is broken and when when young men who are disagreeable say i don't like this place they go he needs drugs
it is a nightmare dystopia happening before our very eyes and it's time to put an end to it
there's more distractions today than there was a decade ago as well cell phones in the classroom
uh all sorts of things that are targeted at the teen generation as far as marketing.
And I think that the pharmaceutical company's business practice of creating forever customers
and giving kickbacks to physicians and doctors that prescribe these medications in the first
place kind of plays hand in hand with perhaps these data points we're looking at.
My child is not going to go on the internet until she's 50.
That's a solid plan like steve
jobs was famous for not allowing his kids any technology yep none i can make the argument that
the riddell and generation is the reason we have smartphones the reason we have tablets and the
reason we have social media in the form that they are because parents saw
how ritalin was affecting their children like now we're creating zombies we can't do this
we need a different way to control our children and pacify them so guess what social media comes
along and guess what here's your new babysitter i don't have to put you in front of a tv anymore
i can just put a tablet in your hand and I can still watch the TV shows that I cared
about.
Yeah, I say nah.
Nah, none of that.
My kid is not going to have any tablets or phones.
I will get a computer with no internet so she can learn basic computer stuff.
We will have a touchscreen.
We will have tablets, but no internet.
No internet.
None. No internet. None.
No.
We're going to get – she's going to use a 1994 Dell PC with a Pentium II processor, and it's going to have Math Blaster and Number Muncher on it and Oregon Trail.
And she's going to play the games I play.
Oregon Trail.
Oregon Trail.
Oregon Trail.
The original –
You died for Oregon Trail.
Does anyone remember does anyone remember
Deep Cut
Prairie Dog Hunter
yes
no what is that
Prairie Dog Hunter
wait maybe
because it had the most
epic sound effects ever
you would shoot the
prairie dog
and it would be like
eeeee
that came on the
Apple 2e
along with Oregon Trail
yes
it was yeah
it was on
I was never an Apple guy, but I had Jetpack.
I had a bunch of those games.
Jetpack.
Jetpack was awesome.
Yes.
You can make your own levels.
Exactly.
So I want that kind of stuff for my kid where, I want some of the newer things, but I don't
trust a lot of this modern stuff.
You know, these modern kids shows are horrifying and they're not educational.
But you know what it is?
Mr. Rogers.
You know what it is?
It's because of the frame rates. horrifying and they're not educational but you know what mr rogers you know what it is it's
because of the frame rates um it's with frame rates and friend um it's the skipping of content
so the way the scenes switch over and over and over and that's one thing you know um you uh i'll
just show it for a second but like the brave books guys one of they have a new brave plus out that's
out right now and and you know kirk hammer was doing the whole Iggy and Mr. Kirk thing.
But they've also launched, it's on Roku and smart TVs, a show or a channel that you can just go and download for free where you get Iggy and Kirk and you get like some of it for free and then you can it to make sure it doesn't have those fast scene skips
that would lock someone into this like adhd sort of state the way that the new stuff does and they
were walking me through it the other day i was like that's actually fascinating because i know
that when my kids and we've like banned all that stuff from my house i didn't realize that before
i had kids i was like what why is this like show like a like a paw patrol kind of show content wise is fine like i know there's a couple
woke episodes wait wait paw patrol most of that where the animals speak english like people
my child will not be watching any of that furry garbage that is furry indoctrinating content and
my child will not watch it i told my wife no bambiambi. She's like, but Bambi is good. No Bambi.
What about Winnie the Pooh?
No.
Okay, but only the live action Snow White.
What about Fraggle Rock?
None.
I hate Muppets.
Darn those Fraggles.
We're going to raise her like it's the 1800s, and we're going to convince her technology doesn't exist.
Oh, so you want to go back.
I am kidding, by the way.
You want to go back before Schoolhouse Rock,
and I think Schoolhouse Rock should absolutely be taught in every home.
Raise your hand.
Who learns more from Schoolhouse Rock than they did from school
about how government actually works?
The only answer that purifies things that should be allowed are bills.
Yeah, exactly.
Exactly.
Explain to the child how bills become law, and that's acceptable.
She's going to do chores on the farm.
She's going to take care of the chickens.
We're going to get a garden going.
We're going to get a mini cow, and she's going to do work.
Wasn't there a Simpsons episode where they did a parody of Schoolhouse South Park, I forget, and they did a parody of Schoolhouse Rock.
They're like, here's how it really works.
You're like, I'm a bill.
I'm a lobbyist.
Simpsons.
It was like a bunch of money.
Let's jump to the story to piss everybody off from the post-millennial Carmelo Anthony's Bond.
Here we go.
$250,000 will be placed on house arrest.
And there's video of him being released from prison.
Really?
Yeah.
He walked out.
The Postmoneo says murder suspect in the death of Austin Metcalf Carmelo Anthony has been
placed on house arrest after his bond was lowered from $1 million to $250,000.
Totally insane.
He appeared in court on Monday morning, where his attorneys asked for the bond reduction.
Anthony had been charged with murder in the death of Metcalf after he reportedly stabbed
the Texas teen in the heart while at a track meet earlier this month after an altercation between the two
over a seat. Anthony has claimed self-defense in the case, police have reported. Both of Anthony's
parents have testified at the court's bond reduction hearing. The family was able to raise
over $400,000 of the Give, Send, Go fundraiser, meaning that they can make the bond. Anthony will
have to speak to the bailiff every Friday and is not allowed on social media. He will also be required to wear an ankle monitor. Now, the argument from Anthony's
family was they actually don't have any of the Give, Send, Go money, which I don't know if this
is true. I heard Give, Send, Go holds the money pending conviction or something like that, which
I'm not sure that's actually the case. Someone made that argument. I don't know that that's true.
The co-founder of Give, Send, Go has been adamant that they allow anybody to raise money for a legal defense. Otherwise, they'd be hypocrites, despite the fact—
When they did all the J6 guys. mercilessly being called evil, demonic, anti-Christian, because there's a demand that
they take it down, take the money, seize it. Some have said, give it to the Metcalf family instead,
or they will boycott the platform. But I mean, I do think I mean, I'll put it this way for and,
you know, I know, Jacob, and, you know, I. I think in this country, you should be afforded the right to a legal defense.
And if Give, Send, Go, like,
if Give, Send, Go gets taken down,
guys, like, where else are we going to go
for platforms like this that don't do cancellation?
But there's two interesting developments.
The one is that Carmelo Anthony's legal team quit
and was replaced by a nonprofit that I'm not sure.
Did they quit or did he trade up?
I think he traded up. Because this group is now like a BLM-associated nonprofit group. i'm not sure i don't know they quit or did he trade up i think traded up
yeah because this group is now like a blm associated non-profit group i'm not entirely
sure but i've seen that be reported and there is video the police have now the question is
where did the video come from because there is a huge list of witnesses here well i mean it's a
teen track meet you right and and it was more than two schools that were there. It was a ton of schools, like, I don't know, four or five at least.
And so they've got video footage.
So to put it simply, this will be interesting to see what happens.
But many people are questioning why the video footage wasn't released.
That is, if this was self-defense, wouldn't the defense do everything in their power to get the video footage released that shows that
you'd think the defense team yes right right yeah you defense would be coming out right now
giving statements saying we want that footage released and they're not doing that i haven't
i haven't heard that at all and and this is something where look everyone's been back and
forth it to me i don't see any evidence of a self-defense argument here i mean sure you can
make the claim i just don't see evidence for it being successful at trial. But sure, any piece of video. The thing that I asked for is what's
the dog that's not barking? And so teenagers, we just talked about how, you know, teenagers are
always on their cell phones. They're always looking for the next piece of content. They're
sort of trained to look for content and trained by the algorithm that you will be rewarded for
content. So you see two people fighting the instinctual response.
It's,
it's Pavlovian at this point,
teenagers pull the cell phone out and you start filming.
So the idea,
I'm sure there are multiple videos.
The question is why I haven't seen any.
And so if the,
it's police department,
sheriff's department.
And it's Frisco police department.
So the police department,
you know,
I would implore them to get it out.
Obviously, you know, blur out anything that's that's specifically gory.
We don't want to see someone being killed, you know, that for its own sake.
But we want the evidence. And, you know, if that doesn't work, then I hope A.G. Paxton steps in because it really needs to be released.
This is a point a lot of people have said. I've seen a lot of comments online.
If this was self-defense, why hasn't the family
released the footage? The simple response that you see from a lot of people on the left is,
they don't have the footage the police do. The further argument is, if the footage came from
the Memorial High School team or those individuals who were involved in the incident,
if it was proof that it wasn't self-defense, why wouldn't they release it? And I don't think that
matters because nobody is going to tell the police to give up public evidence if they're trying to
convict a murderer. They're going to say, no, the story tells itself and we want we want a
conviction. So we're not going to compromise that. I actually think this lends itself to
not a self-defense in the case that this legal team, the family of Carmelo Anthony,
would be publicly saying there's
proof and video evidence that exonerates him and the police should release it.
But they're not doing doing press conferences in front of the courthouse every day saying
release the video, release the video, release.
They would be.
They're not doing that.
They absolutely could still be doing those press conferences, knowing full well that
it won't get released by the police, obviously.
I think in a case like this
given the fact that there's so many people at this thing you know given the fact that just the way
cell phones work i'd be surprised if the video doesn't either be officially released or get
leaked at some point if it doesn't well it's if if if so if this is in any way favorable to
uh the anthony family it's it's getting leaked in two seconds.
Some liberal, they're unscrupulous.
They're going to be like, put it out.
I actually question why that's not been the case and what that actually shows.
And there's a couple scenarios to look at in the way that the officer who responded initially, the way he described it.
That is, we have two police statements. So there's many different
police here, the officers who apprehended Anthony and two officers who responded to witnesses.
The two stories that were provided based on witness response differ only slightly.
But he basically says that Austin had told Anthony that he needed to move out from under
his team's tent, and Anthony grabbed his bag, opened it, reached inside, and proceeded to tell Austin,
touch me and see what happens. No one really thought Anthony had any weapons in the bag,
and Austin proceeded to touch Anthony, and then Anthony told Austin to punch him and see what
happens. A short time later, Austin grabbed Anthony to tell him to move, and Anthony pulled
out what redacted recalled as a black knife and stabbed Austin once in the chest and then ran
away. Austin began grabbing his chest and telling everyone to get help. Redacted recalled as a black knife and stabbed Austin once in the chest and then ran away.
Austin began grabbing his chest and telling everyone to get help. Redacted advised he did not know Anthony's name, but stated another Memorial Trek member, whose initials are E and P,
its name is redacted, was friends with Anthony and he could identify Anthony. Redacted described
Anthony as a black male, skinny with possibly a goatee, short puppy hair, wearing a centennial
high school clothing, and that concluded their contact.
This tells us very little about what happened.
And I believe the interpretation from the right largely is that Carmelo basically was getting in the face of Austin saying, touch me and see what happens.
And that is possible.
The other interpretation, which is much more, which is which the left is playing about, say, is that Austin approached him and
was being the aggressor and the touch me was a warning. This wasn't an enclosed space. Some other
factors that matter was it was raining and the police said that it began to heavy thunderstorm
downpour upon arrival. All of these things factor in. Anthony was friends with a Memorial
track team member. There's at least six high schools that were there at the time.
Now, obviously, I think this falls under likely manslaughter at the bare minimum.
But I will revise my statement upon discussion with your Jack when we looked up the laws, actually.
Texas doesn't have a first degree premeditated murder rule like other states.
There is no distinction between premeditating a murder and accidentally killing someone in which regard. This is why they charged
him with first degree murder, not felony rule murder. And it's likely why he's going to get
convicted of murder. That is, Texas law states if you engage in anything that is harmful or
reckless that results in a death that is first degree murder. You don't have to premeditate it, in which case by Texas law that applies. My assessment of this was based
probably on Illinois or New York law, which in other jurisdictions, you've got premeditated
first degree, which I think was New York, meaning you went to a place with the intention of killing
somebody. Each state varies quite a bit. and Texas, I think, even more than most.
Right. So the important distinction here is Texas has only a manslaughter law and a first-degree murder law. And first-degree murder is you intended to kill somebody or you engaged in
an activity that could reasonably cause someone to die. Like stabbing them in the chest. Stabbing
them in the chest, exactly. In which case, it doesn't matter what the context is.
He's not been charged, I understand it, under the felony murder rule.
And a lot of people are claiming it's because he had a knife.
This knife may not have been illegal.
If it was less than five and a half inches, it was legal for him to carry it in that school.
The issue is... Which, by the way, is another Texas...
There's a specific Texas law, if I understand understand that regarding self-defense that says,
if your life is lower than a certain level,
then it,
you can still declare self-defense.
Even if you hurt you,
you could have that knife on your person,
right?
Like a pocket knife or something.
You can have an illegal weapon,
but you can use it for self-defense.
You can automatically lose it.
If the knife that you are carrying is over a certain amount and,
you know,
lawyers correct me if I'm wrong,
but there's something like that. Here's what I think. I think with the news of the video footage,
I think the police reviewed the footage and easily determined this was a first degree murder.
That is, I don't think Carmelo Anthony showed up with the intent to straight up murder somebody.
I think Matt Walsh is correct. He felt disrespected. He didn't want to be made to
stand in the rain. He would. Austin was getting He didn't want to be made to stand in the rain.
Austin was getting physical, but not to the extent that it warrants a stabbing.
And Carmelo Anthony, feeling disrespected, feeling like, hey, you can't touch me,
engaged in an action that was likely to cause death. And it resulted in a death,
which is first degree murder in Texas. Right. And so the situation regarding that a lot of people have talked about, you know, say, if he just fought back you know would that have just been a fight that yes that would have
been right that would have just been a fight or if he hadn't fought back could potentially he have
you know press charges on on austin which you know for for pushing him or something perhaps i i i
but you know i don't know if they would actually brought it but but the point being is just because
you're in a fight with somebody doesn't give you the ability to pull out a knife and then stab them because you want to or you think you can.
You need to have all of those elements of self-defense predominantly being the imminent
threat of fatal violence. Now, I'm actually surprised that Texas is actually as light as
they are in terms of the line separating self-defense.
And so this is what I did not know about Texas in West Virginia.
West Virginia is very, very in favor of the let's just say the person claiming the defense.
So in this regard, I think it's the video evidence that made it easy for the police
to charge this as it was.
Which I'm sure they would have collected. You don't see that in these statements, but I'm sure because these statements you would need the actual video verification before you could put that in report, etc, etc.
These are these are statements based on what they saw and what they heard, as opposed to a video report, which I'm sure is going to be
coming out at some point that will describe what was seen on the video. And so I but I'm sure these
same officers collected those videos. Exactly. I think very easily what is not put in these
police reports is that the kids probably said, watch the video. And they probably saw the uh carmelo anthony clearly act uh in an escalatory
manner but we'll see we'll see and so uh i will say the clarifying points people don't understand
um why was he under the tent many people are saying he was trespassing he wasn't trespassing
there was at least six other high schools in uh in this track meet he was friends with one of the
memorial team members and it was about to rain. That's why he was there.
This is the cause for what causes an altercation.
Him not wanting to stand in the rain,
most likely feeling disrespected by being told to leave
when he was friends with somebody.
But clearly he escalated it beyond what it needed to be.
Again, we'll see how this one plays out.
I will say though that by that same token,
that this judge should clearly have access to the
evidence if she wanted to see the video. I don't know if it's been officially entered yet, but I'm
sure this judge that dropped the bail down, which which is in its own regard is obviously I'm sure,
by the way, that the DA's can go over and tell her, hey, we've got we've got video of this judge
that this is really bad. And yet you're dropping it anyway, which would go to me as—
That's a good point. This is weird.
Which would go to me and say, though, that she's doing this based more on ideological reasons than anything else.
I'm eager to see what happens with this one because you're right.
The police would say, Your Honor, upon review of the video,
it is clear that this individual is a threat to his society, like to this community.
And I wonder, I wonder.
And she dropped it anyway.
And he's out, by the way, which there is video of him walking out already right now.
Well, we're gonna go to your chats, my friends.
But before we do, we got a second sponsor.
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and don't forget smash that like button share the show the uncensored call-in show will be
coming up in 20 minutes over at rumble.com slash timcast irl jay's index says shout out to the
discord indeed to a willie says he probably said they'll just say homegrowns are next just change
word exactly that's what I'm talking about.
Trump could whisper and says, you know, they're trying to claim that I'm going to put homegrowns next.
I'll just say homegrowns are next. Right. And then and then he says, I was saying they're, you know, homegrowns are next.
And he's going to need five more prisons that everybody laughs because they know it's a joke.
Andre Dukulescu says, oh, no, it's POSO. This year, Catholic and Orthodox Easter are on the same date. So it's on for the three-day fast for Holy Week. So people know, like, you know, Jesus died on the third day,
He rose, so why don't we do a three-day fast? And so we're starting it. I haven't quite figured out
the times of this yet, but we're starting it on Holy Thursday, and then we're going through to
Easter Sunday. And because the ortho bros, for once, and people know what time you're saying,
my wife is Orthodox, that, you know, we're mending the schism. I'm saying this in the spirit of brotherly love as a Philly guy.
You know, let's mend the schism.
Let's do this together, the Catholics and the Orthodox together.
You're Catholic, right?
Oh, yeah.
Okay.
Oh, yeah, big time.
I tweeted that Catholics are the superior Christians.
Whoa.
Do you have to fight over what's going to be on the Easter table for dinner? No, it's all good.
No, it's, I mean,
we're both Slavic, so
the Easter dinner is pretty standard
or fair for both.
No, no, no, we do
pierogies. My mom's
already been working on pierogies,
getting them ready for the big dinner.
She did a couple test runs already last week.
And then gwumpki, so pigs in the blankets.
Yes.
And kielbasa, of course.
Just massive, massive amounts of kielbasa.
And that's just for me.
And then everybody else has to fight me off for that.
Klotskis, yeah.
Yeah.
You get klotskis.
We do blintzes.
We do blintzy.
We do like everything.
My neighborhood growing up was largely Polish,
so I grew up with a lot of Polish food.
It's amazing.
It's fantastic.
Everything about Poland is fantastic.
I'm 100% American, and I will eat all those things from Thursday onward
just so you don't have to miss out.
Well, thank you.
I appreciate that.
All right.
We got 72.
By the way, I'm saying people can do, because people keep asking me this,
you can do zero calorie, like black coffee, something with electrolytes.
People say, can I do diet soda?
Fine.
Whatever you want.
But if you can do 72 hours, you can do 72 hours, zero calories, only electrolytes.
Yes, you can have water or black coffee and other stuff, but that's it.
All right.
I did it a couple weeks ago.
It's rough.
Streamy Elsie, I think it says.
Terrifying to see so many people go from supporting innocent until proven guilty when it comes to Rittenhouse and Trump. Now flip flop and go
guilty until proven innocent with this current track meet case. And I completely agree. The
issue is not those that think he's guilty. The issue is the people who are calling for
Gibson go to be boycotted and to shut down a fundraiser. That's wrong. But by all means,
if people want to argue that he's guilty and he's guilty, it has nothing to do with what happened to Trump or Rittenhouse.
And the difference between the Rittenhouse case is, look, we saw the Rittenhouse case.
If you were home and online that night and on Twitter, which we had Periscope back then,
I wish to God they would bring it back, that you would watch that like a TV show.
I watched that like a TV show.
All of the video was out there for every single person who was involved in that case. And this one, you know, obviously, I don't think it
was politically charged in any way like Kyle Rittenhouse's was. It has become politically
charged, but it wasn't in the first instance that there is video. We don't have it yet. We need the
video. But it's actually quite simple. Kyle Rittenhouse was clearly acting in self
defense and was innocent the whole time. Yes, they tried to kill him. They threatened to kill him. He
ran. He turned himself into the police. All the things he was supposed to do. They fired shots at
him. And it's a tragic situation. I think he's gone. The issue is not whether or not these two
things are the same, which the left is trying to argue. The question is, do you support due process
right now? And I take large issue with the people
calling for a boycott of Give, Send, Go, who did nothing wrong. They're a politically neutral
platform that won't ban you when you try to defend. It's so important that Give, Send, Go
exists right now. They stood tall, by the way, and they faced a lot of government attempts at
shutdown up in canada
for the freedom truckers and they were sued they were brought to court they spent a ton of their
own money to maintain that so i i would say guys like even if you even if you disagree with uh with
the facts in this case and even if you think like i i personally think that Carmel Anthony is a murderer that, you know, going after give send go, though, is a hugely, hugely bad move and just a massive, massive strategic error.
This absolutely needs to exist if you want the right to continue to exist.
Yeah. And shout out to Jacob and give send go for standing by their principles.
And no cancellation means no cancellation.
Unless you're, by the way,
actually raising it to commit crimes.
Yeah, like,
okay, sure, cancel that.
Jason Dixon says, you should get
Romanation on again. He lives just down
the road from you. He's great. Indeed.
Indeed.
All right. Big Cheese says, Minonka pd made an arrest of
an individual threatening violence at united health headquarters i think that's uh what we
saw yeah yeah yeah it's it's getting crazy man all right jason dixon says tim you are wrong about
the self-defense with the kid who got pushed and stabbed pushing someone doesn't warrant deadly
conduct you have no reasonable argument for self-defense. With being pushed equals
deadly force. I am going to tell all of
you right now with extreme passion
you are all wrong. I'm right about everything all the
time no matter what. I'm kidding.
Tim paid me a lot of money
before I came on tonight to say that he was
right about Carnell Anthony
and I said no Tim I will
not do that. We have a briefcase full of
cash. I was like Jack just do it. It was actually full of chickens. No actually what happened is Jack and I will not do that. We have a briefcase full of cash. I was like, Jack, just do it.
It was actually full of chickens.
No, actually what happened is Jack and I, we were arguing it.
We looked up the law and saw that there is no first or second degree murder in Texas.
And the murder law in Texas literally is just if you act recklessly, that causes death.
It's a spirited discussion.
We were debating the issue.
We were talking about the sentiment and everything.
What I will say is
two of the things that really irk me about the
current position for so many on the right, not literally
everybody, but so many, is that
because he had a knife illegally in the school,
that makes it murder. Okay, no, that's
throwing away the two-way, defensive two-way
because of this one incident,
which is not the case, presumably.
I don't believe you should be able to vote away the right to keep in bear arms.
You can use a gun to defend yourself in a self-defense situation.
Let's say that, you know, let's say you're in a situation and, yeah, maybe you're on,
I mean, God forbid you're on, you know, I don't want to say school grounds,
but you know what I mean, a place that's a gun-free zone and you're not supposed to have it but all of a sudden you get
chased right and there's a there's a gang or kyle rittenhouse situation where the mob chasing you
was he allowed to have a gun in all those places you know the he was he was actually but um but
if you let's say he ran through a school for purpose of the argument through a school zone
oh my gosh has he you know, has he violated?
Well, technically.
Right.
But that still wouldn't make it murder.
But I will I will also say I have utter disdain for the people who are pulling my clips clips of my show out of context.
When one thing I said was the family is going to argue this.
And then people have started posting that clip as if it was me making that argument because people are scumbags.
The other thing I will say is I still disagree.
So based on the fact that video footage exists, the family has not called for its release, and that's a big, big factor here.
And they're posting pictures of Carmelo at the house house by the way now right if and but considering that and considering
the uh what what is required for it to be murder then there's no then the self-defense claim is
largely weak that being said the family is arguing self-defense they're literally doing it doesn't
mean they're going to win but the issue is they're going to argue that he had these other people
around him and they're going to try and use that as justification for why pushing does warrant self-defense. And to counter, and I'm not saying they're right,
but to counter Jason's point where he says you have no reasonable self-defense for being pushed,
that is not true at all. A five-foot-tall woman who weighs 100 pounds, who was confronted by a
six-foot-eight man, 200 pounds, who shoves her. She does have a reasonable fear of great bodily harm.
So I'm seeing a lot of people.
They're trying to twist this one to make an argument when you literally need only look
at the police report and the existing Texas law.
And what's convinced me more solidly that this is murder is simply by reading Texas
law and the behaviors of the family.
I'm leaning more towards.
I think this guy likely felt
disrespected, didn't want to stand in the rain. And so he decided to escalate and assert himself
in a situation where he should not have. There's also, and you know, it doesn't necessarily bear
on the legality of the case, the legal ramifications here, but we have noted already,
there was one incident where he was suspended from school. I believe he was either currently
under suspension or he was skipping school that day when this all took place the
carmelo anthony uh for carrying a knife inside his school uh which obviously he knows he's not
supposed to do and i guess there's also a report that his father was called to a court case to
testify in some kind of assault altercation related to him that was related what was it they
said it was related to the school and they said it wasn't necessarily clear if it was related to
carmelo but i mean i can't no i believe it was okay carmelo was involved in some kind of assault
at his school but they don't know if that meant he was a victim perpetrator or witness but again
i'm going to stress this my point doesn't have any bearing on the case.
My point the whole time was that the likely charge would be manslaughter because that
means he felt threatened but used unreasonable force.
Considering my review of the Texas law, which I mistakenly assumed, and that's my fault,
there is no premeditation.
We asked lawyer Grock.
We asked lawyer Grock. There's no premeditation requirement for lawyer grock we asked we asked lawyer grock there's no
premeditation requirement for first degree murder it's just acting recklessly and i'm like oh that's
what i assumed manslaughter to be in which case welcome to texas that's why they're charging i
get that my point however is that there's a lot of people arguing you they're saying you can't if
you get pushed uh getting pushed is not a reason to to use lethal force.
And it's like, OK, that's how it was shoved.
OK, he was chased.
Someone fired a gun.
If the argument is plainly as a blanket statement, being pushed isn't a fear of lethal force.
There are many circumstances where pushing can be.
And and that's why I said, again, which is being taken away to context, that we have argued it is not incumbent upon the victims of violent crime to determine the threshold by which the perpetrator would engage them.
So recently a guy was at a gas station and someone was shoplifting.
And he shot at the shoplifter who fled, jumped off an overpass and fell down and died and died because
it was a huge overpass. And BLM is angry because this guy shot at the dude, causing him to panic
and jump over an overpass to flee the gunfire. And then he died from his injuries. What is the
argument right now for the gas station owner? Did he have a right to use lethal force against the
guy for shoplifting? Of course he did not. BLM is now mad about this.
Are they in the right?
Why was the gas station owner shooting at a guy for shoplifting?
He's not using lethal.
He's not threatening the guy with any lethal force.
So my point is, I want to see, and I'm not saying this, there's a lot of accounts online
that want this case so badly that they're arguing for things that actually hurt self-defense
arguments so i think in this whole carmelo anthony situation the thing that is going to
probably hurt both the state's case the most and help him out is the fact that he gave his
he effectively gave his statement before they were able to
mirandize him so everyone knows this you have the right to remain silent you should fucking do this
no i think that benefits him why yeah he's the first thing he said so again here's more
what's up he was you're saying it hurts the state oh okay hurts the state. Oh, okay. Right, right, right. This is why he's likely going to get off.
Because first off-
He'll get off.
Get off.
I'm sure of this.
Wait, wait, wait.
Wait, wait.
I think he's right.
And not for moral and legal reasons, but for political reasons.
He did stab a football star in Texas.
Yes.
And BLM is going to riot and they're going to terrify the jurors?
It was not Mirandized and they took his statement. No,'t no he said that to like press or something no he said it's the police he
said it directly to police okay so so some important clarifications many people have said
he fled the scene technically that's correct but he stayed at the track he fled from where he
stabbed austin metcalf to the other side of the track where he waited for police yeah police came and they approached him. He put his hands up. This is according to the police report.
And he said, quote, I was protecting myself. He then said again, I told him not to touch me.
I was protecting myself. He then asked an officer if that was self-defense to which he responded.
I don't know. He does not need to be Mirandized. He blurted those things out. And the officers
stated we did not ask him anything.
He just yelled these things. Yeah. So, I mean, and by the way, the prosecutors don't have to
use that statement, for example, they you actually I mean, if again, if this video footage
shows what it shows, you don't need to use that statement at all. Right. The prosecution won't
and the defense and they probably won't for that exact purpose but um it greatly benefits the
defense that he made those statements now the only thing that really matters is when blm shows up i
mean they're the homes of jurors they can try but yeah the only thing that matters in this case is
black lives matter will likely riot they raised four hundred thousand dollars already and when
the jurors are being brought into the court
under armed guard and chased by journalists threatening to expose their addresses,
the jurors are going to say not guilty.
All right. Par for the course. Most of these cases.
Do you think BLM is quite as strong as they once were, at least when it comes to street activism?
Real quick.
I'm not saying he hasn't raised a lot of money, but I'm saying i just haven't seen blm get activated the way they did five years ago
or really not but we have this quickly from uh jason dixon who chimes in that's called res
jesting he volunteered info that was never asked it can be used and he's an off he's an officer
let's uh let's grab some more super chats here all right All right. Law of Self-Defense says SCOTUS did not say Trump must provide the plane back for Obrego Garcia.
Merely said Trump ought not raise barriers to entry at border.
Good luck getting to the border.
Ah, interesting.
Interesting.
We got more from Branca.
He says Bukele is proving that we all know what we all know.
If you want less crime, lock up criminals.
Otherwise, we're all forced to live in an open air prison with the criminals.
Yes.
Yeah.
Shocker.
He says if El Salvador adopts sensible gun laws for law abiding citizens, I'll be buying a vacation home there.
I would say people that actually are, you know, violent criminals or the number of people you actually have to lock up in comparison to the population of most cities.
It's very small.
Yes.
Talk to beat cops or police officers.
They know the scumbags.
They know the guys that are committing crimes.
They constantly interact with them.
It doesn't take some kind of massive overhaul of the policing structure to figure out who the bad guys are and wrap them up and get them off the streets.
Branca also adds, there's no law against housing convicted American prisoners in an El Salvadoran
prison.
That's merely being placed in a prison.
It's not deportation.
Deportation implies loss of rights to return to U.S.
Interesting.
So they can house U.S. inmates in El Salvador so long as they have all of their constitutional
rights to appeal and do all of the things, no?
I just, for practical reasons, I don't necessarily no? I'd be, I just
for practical reasons, I don't necessarily see
it happening. Oh, I agree.
I agree. And I would prefer
Guantanamo Bay. I think that's why Guantanamo
exists as sovereign territory
in Cuba. Who's running the
prison? Who's our oldest overseas base?
Alright. DJI
says for serious crimes, two choices.
Death penalty or lifetime indentured servitude to your victim and or their family for minor crimes, prison or service until debt paid.
I mean, yeah, I like creativity. Yeah, I think that's by the way, that's I.
Oh, man. I get in trouble for saying this, but this this is a lot how a lot of debt bondage got started yeah actually and then i believe in ancient times in ancient times ancient times
corollary corollary caveat caveat well i believe but this is how a lot of that stuff got started
i believe the first slave in the u.s was an indentured servant i didn't say that word i
didn't say that word so the first slave in the united states was an indentured servant who
couldn't pay their debt and so the uh the the owner of the debt got a ruling from a court that that individual would be in his service indefinitely.
So this is mass incarceration is a modern phenomenon.
This is not something that existed in the ancient world.
And all of these other various arrangements did exist in the ancient world.
And so we did away with all of them.
And now we have mass incarceration.
But in the ancient world, it was penalties of death were significantly more frequent.
Yes.
And also you could be exiled, which turned into death frequently.
I got to tell you guys.
That's where the word outlaw comes from.
If the penalty in Chicago for violent crime was they would put you in a diaper
and make you wear a baby bonnet with it with a pacifier and they would make you then hop down
roosevelt avenue holding up a sign saying i'm a big uh i'm a big bad baby and they made you do
that every day for like for an hour with cops and then people could watch and laugh i'm not kidding
crime would drop substantially.
Oh yeah.
It really would.
The reason why is much of the crime in,
in,
in those communities are honor driven.
That's right.
And when they get to feel disrespected indeed.
And when these gang members,
uh,
and it's,
it's largely on the South side in the black community,
but it does,
there's a Hispanic area and they have all the different names.
These individuals want to go to jail.
They don't necessarily want to go to jail, but going to jail is like a badge of honor.
And the way they talk is they say things like, I ain't been to jail yet.
That's how they say it.
When they go to jail, they don't view it as a punishment.
They view it as a thing that happens.
And they go and join other gang members in that jail and go about their business till they get out. Isn't that like the Arizona prison that gave all the pink jumpsuits and whatnot?
Yeah.
Remember that?
Judge Arpaio or Sheriff Arpaio.
You make Chicago gang members suckle the feet of other people in the neighborhood who they victimized while wearing a baby diaper and
crawling on the ground while everyone left.
Sheriff Arpaio down in Maricopa County, when it used to be more red, was actually doing
stuff like this with criminals.
I'm not saying we should.
And by the way, they went after him like crazy.
They went after him like absolute crazy, saying it was cruel and unusual, etc.
But that's exactly what he was doing was playing into
exactly what you're talking about, Tim, this idea that there are alternative forms of justice that
make it a, by the way, a deterrent to want to commit the crime, kind of like by sending someone
down to the El Salvador and Seacott prison is a deterrent for people who are trying to illegally
break into our country.
Indeed.
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Shout out the book, Unhumans, Secret
History of Communist Revolutions, How to Crush Them.
That book has been going strong for almost a year at this point because, unfortunately, we are living inside.
And just for everyone out there, for all of my Western Christians and my Eastern Christians, happy Easter.
Happy Easter.
Christ is King.
Find me on QuietPartPod on Rble quiet part pod on youtube quiet part or sorry not
quiet part pod uh real chris nosky on x and you know shout out to the discord always shout out to
all the great creators there that are actually trying to take it from that point further you
know without that i mean we're not going to grow this community right on same as
chris uh check us out at the quiet part pod on rumble and youtube uh special shout out to my
girlfriend who i met in the discord wow so men out there joined yet get in there uh definitely
join the discord it's a great place uh full of community um and conversation and projects. There's lots of projects taking place in that Discord
that you might potentially be valuable for
and be able to provide input on.
Yeah, that's about it.
So go to TimCast.com and click Join Us.
Then you click Discord.
All the instructions are there,
and you guys can launch your own show.
And we are trying to regularly feature community members who are working on shows.
Now, I will say this.
Don't get me wrong.
Literally not anybody from the Discord is going to pop up on TimCast.IRL.
These gentlemen just happen to be very prominent and creative.
And they've done a really great job building up a show that has reached the threshold of professionalism that we can have a good show.
We can't just take anybody randomly except for the
Culture War Live podcast, which will
be Fridays, noon to two.
So what we're thinking right now, Saturday night,
we are going to be
at a live stage event.
They're pre-recorded episodes, but you guys, as
members of Discord, will be invited to
join the stage.
We'll just pick you.
It's limited. It might be six to eight people for one episode
in two hours, but we might just be like,
Bill Smith?
Come on up! So it'll be a lot
of fun. But anyway, Phil.
I am philtheremains on Twix. I'm philtheremains
official on Instagram. The band is All That Remains.
New record dropped on January 31st.
It's called Anti-Fragile. You can check it out on
all the streaming platforms.
Don't forget the left lane is for crime.
We will see you all over at rumble.com slash timcast IRL in about 30 seconds.
Thanks for hanging out. you you