Timcast IRL - Bill & Hillary Clinton SUBPOENAED Over Epstein CRIMES w/ Dave Landau

Episode Date: August 6, 2025

Phil, Elaad, & Tate are joined by Dave Landau to discuss a US House issuing subpoenas for Bill & Hillary Clinton over Epstein crimes, Trump calling for the federalization of DC, Texas AG looking for a... judge to vacate the seats of Democrats who fled the state, and Adam Schiff under ciminal investigation over mortgage fraud.   Hosts:  Phil @PhilThatRemains (X) Elaad @ElaadEliahu (X) Tate @RealTateBrown (X) Serge @SergeDotCom (everywhere) Guest: Dave Landau @LandauDave (X)

Transcript
Discussion (0)
Starting point is 00:00:00 Today, a U.S. House panel has subpoenaed Bill and Hillary Clinton for Epstein testimony. Now, the House Oversight Committee has also to issue subpoenas to several former attorneys general and FBI director, so we'll get into that. Elon Musk and Donald Trump both have called for federalizing the police in Washington, D.C., after a member of the Doge team was beaten up for defending a young woman who was being assaulted by a group of young men. So we'll get into that.
Starting point is 00:00:41 A.G. Paxton from Texas has asked a judge to vacate seats of Democratic lawmakers who fled the state over the redistricting vote. If you remember, we covered this a little bit last night, so there's some development in that. There's some breaking news about Senator Adam Schiff who's under criminal investigation now for mortgage fraud, so we'll discuss that.
Starting point is 00:01:01 Jim Acosta is still a piece of garbage, and everyone is aware of it. We'll tell you why. Michael Rappaport is having problems in Alabama. One of his shows was canceled, so we'll discuss that a little bit. But before we do, head on over to boonies.com and buy our brand new skate deck uncancellable.
Starting point is 00:01:20 It's got the old, it's not really the Iron Cross, but people got offended. and so they stopped using it and Tim said, well, I'm going to buy that and he's made it his own now. You can also head on over to castbrew.com, buy some coffee. There's the 1776 Signature Blend,
Starting point is 00:01:38 Josie's special brew is available. There is the two weeks till Christmas, which has got me dressed up like Santa Claus, I guess. The Ian's Graphene Dream is available for K cups and for regular ones. Latchin Nights is still the big seller. So head on over there and buy some of that. You also want to head to timcast.com and join our Discord so you can join us in the after
Starting point is 00:02:06 show. Well, you can join us, I'm sorry, join the Discord so you can call in in the after show and head on over to rumble.com so that way you can join the after show and watch the after show on rubble.com. So we're going to go ahead and talk about all these things and more, but we want you to smash the like button, share the show with your friends, and with us to talk about. talk about all this stuff is Dave Landau. Hey, how are you?
Starting point is 00:02:29 Hello, Dave. Who are you, and what do you do? I'm a comedian. Also, I buy it. Thank you. You're welcome. You can check me out, DaveLando.com. Also, if you want to, you can go to blazeunlimited.com. You can use code Dave 20.
Starting point is 00:02:42 You get Frontier Magazine, which is out now. Also, check out my book, Party of One, a fuzzy memoir on Amazon.com. Awesome. Thank you for coming. Yes, I'm excited to talk about a lot of things coming. Tate is here? I'm here. Yeah, the producer, Tate, Tate Brown.
Starting point is 00:02:57 Sorry, I've done a lot of introductions today. Is he today, right? Is he? Yeah, it's wild. The morning show, and then you were over at PCC? Oh, yeah, the wage cage, as they call it. I love it. It's fun, so it's good to see everyone again.
Starting point is 00:03:07 Excited to be here. Elad is here? Good evening, everybody. I am Alad Eliahu, the White House correspondent here at Tim Kest. Let's get into the news. Our resident illegal wrestler, right? Resident a lot of things, but... You got a good mustache.
Starting point is 00:03:20 Thank you. I was actually... I thought it was a little bit too short, and I've been a little bit self-complored. conscious about its length. You shouldn't be. Good. You keep it. It's very Bolton-esque. I like it. No, I had one for years.
Starting point is 00:03:33 I'm thinking about regrowing it, so I was looking at it a little jealous. I think you should. I'm going to regrow it, I think. I'm actually bringing the full beard back, I think, for the fall. We'll see how it goes. As a half Italian, somebody was just talking about Daego culture. Can you believe the vulgarity?
Starting point is 00:03:49 So we were talking about the Rizzler, and how he's bringing it back. He's bringing it back to a nine-year-old boy. Bring back the Sopranos. A lot of pressure on his little chubby shoulders. Yeah. If anyone can do it, the Rizzler can.
Starting point is 00:04:03 Yeah, he can. Three cell phones, that kid. That's right. All right, so from the Guardian, U.S. House panel subpoenas Bill and Hillary Clinton for Epstein testimony. House Oversight Committee also issued subpoenas to several former attorneys general and FBI directors. The House Oversight Committee on Tuesday issued subpoenas to Bill and Hillary Clinton as well as several former attorneys general and directors of the FBI demanding testimony related to horrific crimes perpetrated by Jeffrey Epstein.
Starting point is 00:04:30 The investigative committee's Republican chair, James Comer, sent the subpoenas in response to two motions lawmakers approved on a bipartisan basis last month. As Congress navigated outrage among Donald Trump supporters over the Justice Department's announcement that it would not release further details about Epstein, a disgraced financer who died in 2019 while awaiting trial for sex trafficking. died. Yeah, allegedly. The subpoenas raised the possibility that more details will become public about Trump's relationship with Epstein, which stretched for years but appeared to have petered out by the time Epstein was convicted of sexually abusing girls in 2008. Last month, the Wall Street Journal reported on the existence of sexually suggested sketch and lewd letters
Starting point is 00:05:14 Trump sent to Epstein as a 50th birthday gift in 2003. Does this seem like it's going. anywhere. Gentlemen? Well, we all have wonderful secrets. Very wonderful. I think honestly, if Bill has to take, what's he going to say under oath? I mean, he's lied under oath before about similar things. Yeah. Except it was
Starting point is 00:05:36 a legal of age husky intern. But this time, who's actually aged very well? Have you seen a new picture, recent pictures? She's gotten better with age. She looks great. Yeah. She's like a fine wine. Good on you, Monica Lewinsky. Yeah, good on her. Not on, yeah, the opposite of When the on you came out, I was like, oh, we got a joke here. Yes, yeah.
Starting point is 00:05:57 All over her. She's a, yeah, but I, I mean, if they have to actually pull out, what, phone records or some kind of records that he has to be honest about, there's no doubt he's on the list. The only thing that would shock anybody is if he wasn't. Right. Even his own wife would be like, wow, really? You weren't? Everyone knows he is, right?
Starting point is 00:06:16 Hillary would be like, I feel bad for hitting you all those times. I know, right. Like, I thought it was just the one girl. Wow. We're all amazed. But I mean, I don't imagine that Bill and Hillary Clinton are going to reveal any information that isn't already known. No, we all know he likes to have sex with people that aren't his wife. I mean, but in fairness, have you seen his wife?
Starting point is 00:06:40 I wouldn't want to have sex with his wife. No, no one would. I don't think any would. Look at the big Maxwell House can. I don't think I'm doing myself any favors here, but I will say back in the day. day, Hillary Clinton was not the worst-looking woman. You're not doing yourself anything. You're saying when she was Epstein Highland Age?
Starting point is 00:06:59 Back in grammar school. Yeah, yeah, back in the day. Oh, no, you're right. Her college photos are pretty good. You know which one I'm talking about? I do. She's on the lawn, right? With the glasses?
Starting point is 00:07:12 Yep, yeah. Sirch, can you pull that up? Yeah. You're not wrong. I'll pull up hot Hillary Clinton, please. Sirch, come on. Disavow. Yeah, there's probably not a lot of hot Hillary Clinton.
Starting point is 00:07:20 There's probably just the one. Google shouldn't show you one picture Or it's just her in hell Yeah I'm telling you there was a time where she looks She looked relatively good Google hot Hillary Clinton and see what comes up Put moderately attractive Hillary Clinton
Starting point is 00:07:34 I hate when people pretend that there are no hot liberal women I hate that oh there's hot liberal women I hate that There's many hot liberal women of course We thought Sidney Oh yeah black and white I don't recall it being black and white No to the right that one
Starting point is 00:07:47 Yeah that one That's more That's a little bit older but the one to the right Okay, you don't have to pull the time article. Oh, no, no, keep you scroll down. That looks like she's just poisoned you in a horror movie. Yeah. She looks like an extra from psycho.
Starting point is 00:08:00 This isn't the one with the glasses, so. I don't like it. Bell, we're supposed to go to the island. There's the one beside this. We're going to miss our flight, Bill. Sorry, who? I like women, but I can't tell people in this time. To that point, I thought that after the Bill and Monica Lewinsky thing, I thought she swore off men.
Starting point is 00:08:16 I kind of got that vibe. I don't know. I thought she swore off men before it. That's why. She swore off. Okay, fair enough. You can't own that many suits and be into men. Pants suits are, you know, okay. They're like the Subaru for the ultra wealthy.
Starting point is 00:08:30 They certainly are. You know, her and her staff have always had a lot of trouble with men. Huma Abedine also went through, who was it, Anthony Wiener and that whole affair. Now Huma Abedine is with Soros. Soros Jr., Alex Soros, and are probably power players, frankly, in the Democrat Party. And we all know, Anthony. Obviously. Anthony Wiener loves adult women.
Starting point is 00:08:52 We all know that. You know, you could blame Anthony Wiener for helping to contribute to Trump's first election win because he, something with his emails or the case was reopened into him because of some more allegations that came out against him.
Starting point is 00:09:08 I'd need to review the exact story, but he helped give more credence and evidence or give more reason to investigate further into the email scandal. Didn't do her any favor. No. No. But, I mean, so anyways, back to the Epstein stuff. I don't see how this, the, you know, Bill and Hillary Clinton are going to make a difference.
Starting point is 00:09:30 I certainly am not going to, you know, trust anything Bill Clinton says. Is this the hot picture? It's not working. No, that's definitely not the hot. But, but the... It's like John Lorakette. But the, but if they're, they don't list who the attorneys general and FBI directors are, but that might actually produce something that's, you know, worth,
Starting point is 00:09:50 worth discussing you know yeah evidently this Epstein guy had some sex trafficking going on apparently who do you think is the most hilarious photo taken on Epstein Allen so far that has been leaked uh well I mean the Stephen Hawking
Starting point is 00:10:06 right? I haven't seen the Stephen Hawking on Epstein Island is hilarious there's like two girls holding Daakrys clearly he's not drinking him that guy can't swallow he talks with his It's so funny Bring me another drink Yeah, I'm Thursday
Starting point is 00:10:24 You look up hot Stephen Hawking I finish with the odd So back in the day Where is it where is it? Yeah there's got Oh there it is There it is He's having the time of his life
Starting point is 00:10:32 Over on the top left Top left right there Look at that Yeah he is having the time He's on autopilot I mean I don't think you went to the island I think he was brought Oh yeah I mean
Starting point is 00:10:41 Yeah Look here's the thing though Back in the day If you were anybody you got the invite to hang out with Jeffrey Epstein and this cool little billionaires club with Donald Trump, Bill Clinton, Prince Andrew, Stephen Hawkins.
Starting point is 00:10:57 Yeah. FOMO had to be crazy. Kevin Spacey who got there and was like there's not even any male waiters. That's why Spacey's like, I'm going home. He just like, turn this plane around. You know, I hear nothing sticking to that guy. Yeah, not a...
Starting point is 00:11:15 Oh, yeah, nothing. I'm nothing. At least none of the cases. No, no. Kevin, we'll find her some hot guys. I love that he's like, I want the list to come out. It's like, of course you do. There wasn't all underage girls there. What do you care?
Starting point is 00:11:27 It's not a little boy island, Kevin. Nobody thinks you're guilty. If there was like a Disney World list, he'd be in trouble. Yeah. If there was a Hollywood list. Yeah, right.
Starting point is 00:11:44 If there was just a Haley Joel Osmond lookalike list. How many young men have you taken to Disneyland after a long day on set? I have no idea if it's true, but there was a story of him and Liam Neeson. And there was like a kid on the set. And he's like, yeah, we can go back up to my room and study lines. And Kevin Spacey goes to the bathroom, and immediately Liam Neeson's like, don't go up to his room. Whatever you do.
Starting point is 00:12:14 Don't do it. Oh, yeah. I mean, you know, and, you know, you want to like Liam Neeson, don't you? Like, you kind of want, you're like, man, I hope he's a good guy. He's probably got the role in Taken. Yeah, actually, the director overheard him saying, he's like, that's the guy. You know, he is in his 50s, but he just saved that kid. I think he could be an action star.
Starting point is 00:12:41 I agree, I agree. Yeah, so, you know, I don't think there. There's a whole lot more to say about the whole Epstein stuff. But I think he's right. I mean, if you were anybody, Chris Tucker we saw on the plane. Mm-hmm. Yeah. I mean, I don't know.
Starting point is 00:12:59 I never actually looked into the list, but I mean, I'm aware that there was like a lot of power players. And, you know, if you were anybody, it was thought of like, you want to go be around those people, which is part of the reason why I think that there's a lot of people that don't, a lot of people positions of power they don't want the list to come out because back then no one knew what Epstein was up to or ostensibly no one knew what Epstein was up to and they were like well you know I want to go hang out with those people and if you're in that kind of you know I guess if your if your bank account is that big those people tend to just hang out with each other and be around each other because that's what that's the thing to do so um there's a lot of people that
Starting point is 00:13:43 are just like oh I don't want this to come out because it's going to implicate me and And people automatically assume, oh, you were on the list or you went to the island, so you automatically must have done nefarious things. And while, you know, it's not great to be in his company, especially nowadays, to look back, it's like, it makes sense for people that if they didn't do anything, to be, you know, Dershowitz is one that's like, whether or not he actually did. Yeah, he's me, sorry. He's like, I'm just the lawyer for the penalty.
Starting point is 00:14:14 Yeah, exactly. And that's, look, that's Dershowitz's M.O. He's like, who's the scummiest guy? I'm going to find him and defend him. And I guess if you do that, you know, people are going to assume things about you. Sure. You get used to it. Yeah.
Starting point is 00:14:28 Well, and he's, it's also, you're going to get flight logs. You're not going to get, like, what they liked. Yeah. You know what I mean? It's not like you're not getting a menu. Yeah. Yeah. You're not going to get Janet 13 with Bill Clinton, broom closet at four.
Starting point is 00:14:42 It's not like Yelp reviews. Yeah. Yeah. Two stars. She didn't even pretend she liked it. Yeah, there's nothing you're going to get like. Yeah, so it's, no matter what comes out,
Starting point is 00:14:57 it's always going to be an assumption, right? Apparently not. All right, so, I mean, I don't really have a whole lot else to add to the Epstein story. So why don't we move on to this next story here? New York, I'm sorry, Washington, D.C. apparently is a nightmare. There. Donald Trump tweeted the other day, I believe this was today. Crime in Washington, D.C. is totally out of control. Local youths and gang members, some only 14, 15, and 16 years old are randomly attacking, mugging, maiming, and shooting innocent citizens at the same time, knowing that they will be almost immediately released. They're not afraid of law enforcement because they know nothing ever happens to them, but it's going to happen now. The law in D.C. must be changed to prosecute these minors as adults and lock them up for.
Starting point is 00:15:45 a long time, starting at age 14. The most recent victim was beaten mercilessly by local thugs. Washington, D.C. must be safe, clean, and beautiful for all Americans, and importantly, for the world to see. If D.C. doesn't get its act together, and quickly, we will have no choice but to take federal control of the city and run this city how it should be run, and put criminals on notice that they're not going to get away with it anymore. Perhaps it should have been done a long time ago, then this incredible young man and so many others would not have had to go through the horrors of violent crime. If this continued, I'm going to exert my powers and federalize the city, make America great again.
Starting point is 00:16:19 And then Elon Musk retweeted Donald Trump's truth. A few days ago, a gang of about a dozen young men tried to assault a woman in her car at night in D.C. A Doge team member saw what was happening, ran to defender and was severely beaten to the point of concussion, but saved her life. It's time to federalize D.C. Look, everyone knows that D.C. has been an absolute, you know, madhouse when it comes to crime for a long time. You can go to certain areas, and you're pretty safe. because those places are where Congress people are frequenting, where staff are frequenting, but if you go just a couple blocks the wrong direction, you know, you're likely
Starting point is 00:16:56 to get beaten or mugged or whatever. I don't know that federalizing is actually the proper role, but if the, you know, the municipality won't handle it, maybe the federal government should step in. Yeah, you don't want Paul Pelosi get another headhammer. That happened in San Francisco, but still Yeah, well, I mean, he goes into the wrong neighborhoods for different things. He does. Usually, but it's not gay sex.
Starting point is 00:17:26 What? Too much? No, no, not all. No, I mean... I'm making assumptions, of course. Of course. Yeah, I don't think the man... But there's nothing wrong with pontificating. There's nothing of them. I'm simply guessing that men would buy a male escort off of a school bus.
Starting point is 00:17:43 Yeah, this sounds horrible. I'm from Detroit. Oh. Oh. Yeah. So I can't imagine these kind of crimes. This is light work. Yeah, in a major city. I don't know if federalizing it's a very good idea, to be honest. I also don't think prosecuting all minors as adults
Starting point is 00:17:59 as first time offenders is a very good idea either if I'm being honest. I mean, I understand what you're saying, but right now the MO is the young kids are the ones that are sent out to do the crime because the older gangbangers know that they don't get treated like adults. If it's killing, they should extend the sentence.
Starting point is 00:18:14 but I don't think that it's something that should just be, I understand like the cusp of 17, a lot of them are doing that, and then they're also bragging in court that they're not going to get in trouble for it. So I think they should extend the sentence obviously, but I don't, I do not think that giving them
Starting point is 00:18:31 no chance at all at the age of 14 is wise either. Okay. It's a personal opinion. What do you think a lot? You're fairly, you know, the law is the law kind of dude. So me, Serge, and Tate, actually, witnessed these Y-Ns firsthand the other weekend in Washington,
Starting point is 00:18:48 D.C. And it's actually extremely odd. It's a group of like 20, 30-some-odd, very young kids, like you can tell in their faces. Nobody's probably above the age of 17. As young as maybe even 13 and 14, being followed by like three or four different cop cars and they're just
Starting point is 00:19:04 running around the streets, throwing things and yelling. I guess some groups may be more aggressive than others. Obviously assaulting somebody's messed up and like you should go to jail as a result. of that, but again, I don't know, at the age of 14, might be a little bit young to be trying to charge people as adults, and I haven't heard as many of the cases of them murdering people, but if you murder somebody, I think you should be charged as an adult for that crime in
Starting point is 00:19:28 particular. I don't know what the murder rate is in D.C., but I know there was a time recently in the past 10 or so years where D.C. was the murder capital of the United States. You darned tooting. Yeah. So, I mean, this is 190. Oh, wow. Wow, that's a lot. Yeah.
Starting point is 00:19:45 Well, and the problem with, like, crime in cities like D.C. and New York and Boston as well is the tolerance for crime is far lower because it's like a very walkable city. So you're actually interacting with these points for crime will occur a lot more. The tolerance for crime is lower? Yeah, yeah. So, like, if you live in Memphis or Detroit, the tolerance for crime is much higher because you can just drive past it on your way to work and back to your house. You're not actually interacting with the crime criminal aspect as much.
Starting point is 00:20:10 But yeah, if you're somewhere like D.C., you have to walk down the street. you have to take the subway, you have to do this, that, and the other. So your actual sense of crime, even though, because leftists always be like, well, if you compare it to like Jackson, Mississippi, and it's like, well, yeah, but in Jackson you don't ever see it, you're just going to Kroger and back, where in D.C., you're walking around, you're going to bars, you're taking the train, so you're going to interact with it a lot more, and it's much more unacceptable for a high amount of crime. I would be remiss if I didn't bring up the fact that the Second Amendment is basically
Starting point is 00:20:38 non-existent in Washington, D.C. So restoration of the rights of the American people might be a deterrent to criminals in the district, but I know that the members of Congress and the support staff around them are all, or generally not particularly fond of that idea, but I think that's where the Ted Nugent rule comes in. Just have the Second Amendment and don't listen to the state. I personally agree with that as well. Yeah, I think you should just be allowed to carry a firearm to protect yourself. I'm not going to say that's what I do. No. Maybe. They took it for me before I got on the plane today. But they didn't take my wooden one.
Starting point is 00:21:20 And that's, I learned that from John Melkovich and in the line of fire. You just make a wooden one. Yeah. And get into any stadium. All right. These are facts. So I feel like for the past, I don't know, 40, 50 years in our country, we have been seeing groups of quote unquote youth, which is a funny euphemism to use here. I think we all know exactly what we're talking about, but we need to use this stupid young. people. We're talking about like black teens. We're talking about black teens running around usually in cities and committing different types of crimes. I think we saw in Cincinnati the other
Starting point is 00:21:53 weekend where they were like just random adults assaulted. Maybe they might have yelled at each other, but it resulted in multiple different assaults. And it's interesting when we choose to pay more attention to them. And what we're going to do about that, you know, is up to the government and we'll see. But I mean, I feel like these are always happening in the background every so often. And sometimes it's only a local news story. And then sometimes the president decides to truth social about it and making a national news story. But like these assaults are happening throughout our country all the time. And it's just interesting when we decide to make it national news instead of local news.
Starting point is 00:22:27 The factor is. What do you want to do you ask it is that makes it? You know, crime, socioeconomic factors. No, it's a big conversation. What is the thing that makes makes it, makes it become a national story? Well, sometimes it's just so shocking you can't. Well, the media. Yeah.
Starting point is 00:22:44 That's what decides. Literally, only the media and, like, if the races were portrayed in the right way for most of the media to decide to pick it up and, like, put it up the chain of command, then that's what goes. And it's a national news story because the president decided to talk about it now, and it's going to go as far as, you know. For this one, yeah, but when it comes to the one that you mentioned in Cincinnati, that was trying to be subpoenaed.
Starting point is 00:23:04 The media was actually trying to suppress that one. That was actually, it was a fairly grassroots kind of thing because the media and the the municipality was trying to suppress the story they didn't want it to get out they didn't want to talk white guy though knock out the woman I don't know I believe a white guy did knock out the woman but then black people were piling on and kicking the guy at the jazz question so I think you shoved her yeah yeah but then black people were also pulling people off of you know the guy like it was a group thing where a lot of people were involved so depending on what site you
Starting point is 00:23:40 were watching it was white versus black but then there was the reality of a lot of people were trying to help and a lot of people weren't. Wasn't it allegedly because somebody called another person the ensler? Supposedly, but I don't even know if that's what it was. Yeah, I've heard that people, I've heard people make that argument,
Starting point is 00:23:57 but I believe if you watch the video, the attack had initiated, and then the dreaded ensler was uttered. Not that name calling should justify violence. Absolutely not. I think that's the most ridiculous argument that people make oh well you know they had it coming or or the the idea that like oh um well you know there are
Starting point is 00:24:18 consequences for for things you say i mean sure but jail is a consequence for that kind of yeah you know i get told that often if you're in a heated argument with someone it's best probably not to use it at a jazz festival i've always said that if you're at a wu tank concert let's say and someone's angry at you perhaps you don't yell that at them yeah i there will be a concert yeah i i i'm not saying that you can argue that it's right or wrong and that someone's not a lot But you will get your ass kicked for lack of a better term. And I'm not saying that what happened to her was horrible. What happened to that guy was horrible.
Starting point is 00:24:50 But to just go, okay, it was entire. They want that to be the division. That's my problem with it all. They want them to go, okay, it was black versus white. That's not the case. It was different people going at each other and other people were helping other people. Well, you recognize that this story likely only got so much gasoline into it because of the racial projection onto the story. Absolutely.
Starting point is 00:25:11 Yeah. But also like with, I mean, with this DC story specifically, it's like, I hate to be that guy. But if the roles were reversed, if those were a mob of 50 white teens and they beat up a black guy, I mean, we'd be in camps right now. Like, it would be over. That just doesn't happen. Exactly. So it's like. No matter how hard I train him.
Starting point is 00:25:29 Also, this was, did we mention it's because it happened to an alleged Doge employee and I don't know if we could blow up big balls. Tate. Is that him right there? Tell me more about this guy, big balls. That's alleged to be. I don't think we're going to share the picture because we. We don't have confirmation of who it is. Oh, I got you.
Starting point is 00:25:44 But it's from the rapid response. Oh, well, I mean. There's other people. Allegedly, it's Big Balls. He was a big player. If you want to look, if you want to, I mean, just go to X and look for the story, and there's plenty of pictures and there's comparisons of who big balls, you know, what Big Balls looked like when he was, you know.
Starting point is 00:26:01 Yeah. Be careful going on X and typing in Big Balls, but I'm pretty sure you're fine. Just go to Google and type in Big Balls. Yeah. Or Lemon Party. Yeah, you don't do that. Don't do that at all. Go to X, Hamps.
Starting point is 00:26:11 He's bloodied big balls He's bloodied up Yeah he's hurt Black teens rough up big balls Black and blue big balls Black teens Rough up big balls You shouldn't Google any of these things
Starting point is 00:26:28 No Do it on your work computer Yeah for sure Just put black big balls on your work computer Angry, violent black people attack big balls Do it during a presentation Tomorrow Yeah a library
Starting point is 00:26:41 full volume perfect this sounds great this will do wonderful things love the news all right so I'm not even sure how we got to this from
Starting point is 00:26:56 we were talking about oh we were talking about the attack so we need to talk about we're going to go ahead and change to this story from the post millennial Texas AG
Starting point is 00:27:10 Ken Pat Paxton to ask judge to vacate seats of dem lawmakers who fled state over a redistricting vote. Texas Attorney General Ken Paxton will seek judicial orders to remove Texas state legislators who have fled the state in an attempt to block a congressional redistricting vote taking place in the state legislature. The lawmakers have until August 8th to return to the state and to perform their duties in the legislature before Paxton requests the order. Attorney General Ken Paxton has announced that the continued refusal to perform legislation. legislative duties by Texas House Democrats who broke quorum constitutes abandonment of office and that he will pursue a court ruling ensuring that their seats are declared vacant. Speaker of the House, Dustin Burroughs, has given members until Friday, August 8th, to return to Texas and present themselves before the House. Any lawmaker who has not been arrested and returned or fails to appear by the Speaker's deadline will be subject to aggressive legal action by Attorney General Paxton, a news release from Paxton's office says.
Starting point is 00:28:09 so I learned that apparently this is actually felonious so these are these are felony they could face felony charges for for vacating and preventing the the continuation of official business was that true I read that there was just a fine I had a fine so they could end up in jail with some teens hopefully not I don't suspect that's what's going to happen but I think the crux of the issue here is whether or not gerrymandering is kosher. Dave, jerrymandering? Cool or not? It's the norm since the fourth president of the United States. I'm going to say that they should, yeah, I think they should have to come back and face it. Yeah, I mean, they should have to come back and actually do their jobs. I agree.
Starting point is 00:28:57 The question as to whether or not, you know, jurymandering is acceptable. This is just the state of affairs today, and it's been that way since James Madison. Right. His vice president was Vice President Jerry, and the name gerrymandering comes from that. So whether or not it's okay, I don't know. I think that that's kind of... It doesn't even matter. No, it does matter. And I'll tell you why.
Starting point is 00:29:18 It's because not all of the states are fully gerrymandered. And Democrats have actually, like, put different guardrails in place to not allow them to gerrymander certain states. So, Tate, I know you're from New York, but you might not know much about the politics there. But in New York, right, the Democrats did want to gerrymander, but their maps got tossed out by the courts there because they had certain laws that didn't allow them to gerrymandered to the nth degree. Eventually, gerrymandering's bad for our country. Like, the way to, the big brain
Starting point is 00:29:45 solution here is obviously having somebody non-bias, an impartial on top, kind of ruling top-down, trying to make as many fair districts and rub the least amount of people the wrong way. But I don't know if we just see this, both sides are just going to try to gerrymender their districts more and more aggressively. Both sides are obviously guilty of this. So I don't know really where that's going to leave us. The Democrats here are just trying their best to prevent it. This is a Band-Aid solution for them. These Texas Democrats aren't going to be able to achieve actually preventing the Republicans from gerrymandering Texas. It's only a matter of time. Even with these commissions like you're talking about are like in California, they can just special
Starting point is 00:30:24 election around it if they really want to. So it's like, okay, it's nice that it's put into place. But if push really came to shove, New York, California, they'll just circumvent it. And honestly, if you were to say, okay, jurymandering is illegal, what's the solution? How do you break up the districts then? There are different people with different theories on how to do this without having swiggly lines that go in circles. Like, I don't think that's the problem. I think it's the political will to do so, which neither side is going to see. And like, it's escalating, right?
Starting point is 00:30:55 One side's doing it, then the other side's going to want to do it more. And then they're going to both point fingers out. Well, part of the reason that the Democrats are having such a problem with this is because the Democrats have kind of like squeezed all the juice, right? Like, there's not a whole lot more they can do. There's juice. There are multiple. Yes, there is, yeah. How many? How many? How many? Second large, just Jews population. We're not talking about Jews.
Starting point is 00:31:15 We're talking about Jews. We're talking about they've gotten all of the, the, the, made all of the jurymandering they can, they can do. There's not going to get. I thought they squeeze. There's a lot of Jews there, though. Yeah. And there's nothing wrong with that. Squeezing more. Yeah. I love Jews. So like some, uh, state like, you know, Massachusetts. There's something like 45, 40% of the state is conservative, and there's zero representatives, there's zero representation for the conservatives.
Starting point is 00:31:44 And that's the situation in the same situation in Illinois. There's like, you know, 40% of the state is Republican, and there's no representation at all. It's 14 to 3, and it's a six point spread in Illinois. But if you have each state that's blue or red taking legal action on each one, wouldn't that just affect the other state to want to do it more? I mean, that's the, I think that's what's happening. Well, that was the point that I was making. The reason that the Democrats have a problem is because there's not much more they can do.
Starting point is 00:32:11 Right. They don't have the ability to actually jurymander and get more representation out of most states. There's nothing left they can do. They've really maximized the jurymandering that it's possible. So the reason that they have such a problem with this is because they don't have the ability to just fight back and say, well, jurymander and et cetera. There's talk of it in New York, there's talk of it in California, but there isn't a lot that's actually possible for them to do. They can do a little bit around the edges, but they're not going to get the same kind of effects that the Republicans could get because the Democrats have been so successful at jurymandering nationwide. So it's like, sure, there are places where they can get some, but the Republicans actually stand to benefit the most by doing things like redistricting halfway through the.
Starting point is 00:33:02 the time they normally do it because it's normally done after every census so it's normally done after every 10 years this is halfway through there is an argument we had a guest on last night that was talking about this there is an argument that it's a good thing to do because of all the demographic changes because of one the all of the illegal immigrants that have come in but also because of all the people that have moved from california to other states to texas to florida and stuff. So Texas is doing it a big part of the reason is because of the illegal immigration and because in Texas? Yes, it's been known to happen. Shocker, right? I live there. I've not seen it, but go on. Okay. But yeah, so that's the argument that they're making is, you know, this is why it's a legitimate
Starting point is 00:33:50 effort. Sure. No, I get that. So. And the way they gerrymandered the new seats in Texas was such that all the districts were now roughly a Trump 60, a district where Trump won 60% of the vote. So like some, Congresspeople would usually disagree with gerrymandering because they don't want their districts fudged with where they run and they don't want to be diluted. But that's how they kind of appeased the Texas Republicans. I suspect Democrats will do something. Call me a genius. I don't know.
Starting point is 00:34:17 But I suspect Democrats down the line will try to do something similar to this that Republicans may not like. But this is power politics. And, you know, I think we're seeing more, quote, unquote, norms being broken. Trump's a big norm breaker. There are other political power plays that people could do, like packing the Supreme Court. Trump doesn't need to. The Democrats had a few other plays like this. Jurymandering is another example.
Starting point is 00:34:40 But we're going to see more norms being broken. Where that takes us, we'll see. I mean, I agree with you. I think that there's not a lot of room for dumps to go legally, but that's the problem is how hard we want them to push back eventually. I don't know. That's a very good... We're going to say, oh, Trump changed the districts ahead of the census where, and you know, and that's how he, well, he's doing this to defend his majority too. He doesn't want to be in the minority for the second half of this presidential term. He would definitely
Starting point is 00:35:11 be impeached because of who gives a crap, something. And then all the investigations he's doing now would get investigated. So, you know, that would be his biggest nightmare. So he's really trying to just guarantee this majority. Trump's been, it seems insecure about his majority almost the entire time he was president. Especially recently. Yeah, there was Elise Stefanik who he initially wanted to elevate a UN ambassador, but he was like, no, stay in your seat. Yeah.
Starting point is 00:35:36 He wanted Mike Lawler to stay in his seat and not try to run for governor. So there's a few examples of this. I think there's a very slim majority. I think it's two or three seats, something like that. So something to keep your eye on, because Trump is clearly worried about this as well. Yeah. I mean, I think that it's legitimate because if the, like, you said if if the democrats take the house there will be impeachment there will be oh of course
Starting point is 00:36:00 nothing's going to happen it'll be just uh you know doing everything they can to stymie any kind of progress for the american people one i think that's the benefit not even to go back to the epstein thing but of doing that stuff because there has to be something that switches that because that's kind of their ticket into an impeachment yeah yeah i mean look i'm i'm i'm i'm a naked partisan so like anything that they can do to to throw sand to the gears of whatever the Democrats are going to try. I'm for. Sure. Because if they don't, then the Democrats are going to do whatever they can to throw, not just, you know, not only impeached Donald Trump, even though I don't imagine that it'll get removed from office because I don't think they'll take
Starting point is 00:36:40 the Senate, but they'll try and they would try to take him out of office. And then should they get the presidency again, I imagine all of the bureaucracies will get filled up with Democrat sycophants again and they'll come after people in the you know in the right wing podcast fear they'll go after people like joel they'll go after people like timpool they'll go after people that that have benny johnson and and anyone that they consider a political enemy they will absolutely target and go after because that was the plan when kamala harris would have won't well just like before it's why they're saying that stephen colbert is the enemy or like supposedly people are the enemy of him when that's really not the truth no stephen colbert's you know his his his viewership
Starting point is 00:37:23 is why he lost his job. And his viewership was a result of, I think, CBS, pushing him to do something. I mean, it is his own, I mean, you have to, you know, blame somebody for what it is. But CBS, I do also blame because they're the ones that pushed all that crap on him. And then they're the ones that are going like,
Starting point is 00:37:41 oh, your numbers are down. It's like, well, you kind of forced it. Yeah, I mean, your whole company did this, but they all did that woke stuff. Yeah, I don't think you're wrong. But again, just like you said at the end, it was not just Colbert. It was all of them.
Starting point is 00:37:52 It's like Disney blaming the Snow White Girl for being Latina. Like, why are you Latina? Because you did it. Yeah. It's you guys that did it, not her. The only thing that I would add to that is they did it at a time when people were moving away from cable TV anyways. Right. So it just sped up what was already happening.
Starting point is 00:38:11 Oh, sure. All right. So let's jump to this story. This is breaking news from, I guess from Fox News, from the Ingram angle. we'll go ahead and we'll play the bit is his primary resin easy there ready to go okay on an ingram angle exclusive a trump administration source telling the angle that a criminal investigation of adam schiff is underway conducted by u.s. attorney's office in maryland for possible charges involving mortgage fraud now this follows the story we broke last month
Starting point is 00:38:45 when the federal housing finance agency sent a criminal referral to the doj alleging this shift in multiple instances falsified bank documents and property records to acquire more favorable loan terms. And a 2011 affidavit signed by the then California congressman, he certified that a property in Montgomery County, Maryland, is his primary residence. He also owns a condo in Burbank, California, which he's also claimed is his primary residence. He always looks like he's swallowing at a glory hole, doesn't he? Like he just finished it?
Starting point is 00:39:18 just about every member of Congress as a resident. A neighbor of Mangalix. So this is essentially the same thing that they accused Donald Trump of, right? Yes. Yeah. They said that he committed mortgage fraud, which even though in Donald Trump's case, like the banks were like, nah, this is good. Like, we made money. This was, this was fine.
Starting point is 00:39:40 But the, no, actually, no, this is different because Donald Trump was accused of lying about the value of the value of the, of his apartment of marlago marlago marlago was an apartment in new york as well am i wrong about that i don't know so i don't know i'd have to look into that but this is the same thing that uh that letitia james has kind of or whatever so she has she claimed that she was a resident of one place and you know for tax reasons or whatever now schiff was claiming that he was a resident of california while he was spending all of his time in Maryland. And now his argument is, well, you know, I work in D.C., so I have to do this. But if you work in D.C., I'm not sure how it makes a mortgage fraud.
Starting point is 00:40:34 So he works in D.C. and lives somewhere else? You have to live in California to be a senator from California. You actually have to reside there. So you have to spend, you know, X amount of time there. Well, that's it up into Letitia James because she had a house in Virginia and she made it her primary residence, but she's AG of New York. It's kind of a problem. Yeah. And so.
Starting point is 00:40:54 Yeah. You have to have your primary residence. I mean, his primary residence has to be in California. Right. Because of, because he. But you could have an office right off in D.C. Um, yes, but I'm not sure. I'm not sure the exact details of, of this particular issue.
Starting point is 00:41:13 Look, I'm no, I'm no Schiff fan, but doesn't this seem like a. little bit flimsy like can we get the real goods on this guy like for participation in the russian collusion hoax for years but no we get him on what mortgage fraud i just suspect this isn't going anywhere i feel like we're um yeah and and this just feels like some red meat like this isn't going anywhere mortgage fraud really give me the juice give me something meaty but no we're getting oh some mortgage fraud what do you think the content even if they convict him which i doubt they will what what are the real consequences of this going to be nothing i think this was just a juicy story to be leaked to Laura Ingram from somebody in the administration
Starting point is 00:41:49 doing somebody favors and it almost seems like they're trying too hard to go after him and they don't they don't have the goods go after him and get the goods but no you're coming to me with mortgage fraud what about his part all the Russian what Russia hoax BS that he was spewing for years that helped contribute to the steel dossier that eventually helped wrap Trump up in this crazy media narrative but no mortgage fraud so it's like I'm not a lawyer. I'm not a judge. Okay, so...
Starting point is 00:42:19 Worked in law, but I don't suspect this is going to go very far. So the argument, from Fox News, Senator Adam Schiff is under criminal investigation for mortgage fraud, a Trump administration source told Fox News. Fox News host Laura Ingram broke the news on Tuesday night on the Ingram angle, saying that the source at a criminal investigation is being conducted by the U.S. Attorney's Office in Maryland on possible charges involving mortgage fraud. The investigation comes a month after. a story broke about the federal housing finance agency sending a criminal referral to the Department of Justice alleging that Schiff in multiple instances falsified bank documents and property records to acquire more favorable loan terms. In a 2011 affidavit signed by then California Congressman Schiff certified that a property in Montgomery, California, Maine, Maryland is his
Starting point is 00:43:09 primary residence. Schiff also owns a condominium in Burbank, California, which he has also claimed as his primary residence as recently as 2023 during his campaign for Senate. Schiff's office did not immediately respond to Vox News, digital's request for comment. And also a bar in the meatpacking district called the Blue Oyster. Every Saturday, he does his job as a urinal. I think as far as mortgages go, though. What are how many people know what the Blue Oyster Bar is? Police Academy.
Starting point is 00:43:40 Yeah. I think as far as mortgages go, and the wonderful job that they've always done, with the housings at three times what it's worth and the 12% interest rates, does it matter? I mean, is this really what the American people should be concerned about when you look at the way that we've been screwed so many times? I mean, look, I'm a naked partisan. Anything we put this guy in, in giving him problems I'm down with. I am too.
Starting point is 00:44:03 I get giving them problems about this. The problem is it's just what Zillow does, it would seem, at this point. It's not like, I think you have to get something that sticks, and I just don't see this something that sticks because it's it's a write-off that you could then go at any conservative for i believe if he's if he's if he's cloned it depends if he's claiming that he if he's claimed that it was his primary residence in maryland then he's not eligible eligible to be a senator from california i get that i'm worried about the domino yeah i mean i don't know it's possible that there are other people that have that have done this sure um but unless
Starting point is 00:44:39 there's evidence of other people doing this I personally am not worried about, oh, what it could happen to other people. Again, he's made claims that his primary residence is in Maryland. He's ineligible to be in Congress or in the Senate for, as a representative of California. So possibly they strip him of his, you know, of his position. Yeah, but I actually don't foresee that happening. He likes to be stripped. There's zero chance of that actually happening.
Starting point is 00:45:10 I think it's the issue. You don't foresee anything happening, though. No, Phil, straight up. They're not going to take him out of the Senate because of this. Just, and it's a pipe dream, and I think it's like it's just a straight up distraction to say otherwise. Like, nothing's going to happen to Peter because of this. He might even become more popular among Democrats because it looks like it's a partisan attack against him. I mean, anything is going to be considered a partisan attack, though.
Starting point is 00:45:33 Not anything. If they had the goods, then. No, I totally disagree with you. When it comes to partisans, which I am, like, partisans are going to say, nope, whatever he did is fine because he's on our team. That's just the way that politics works now. I agree with that, but I do also agree that this is kind of a nothing burger mortgage fraud. You're not going to depose anyone from a Senate seat over this.
Starting point is 00:45:55 You need something meaty. I would love to see it. It'd be great. You can catch him with something meaty. I mean, like, think what George Santos got tried with and he still stayed in all. But that's, but that's, he got meaty. Yeah, yeah. Well, no, Santos isn't in, Santos is in jail right now.
Starting point is 00:46:08 Now, but he was in office for a while. the Republicans themselves kicked him out. Yeah, and it took a while. And now a couple of them are asking them to, uh, Trump to pardon him. Well, I mean, I think that, just MTG. Free, I think that they should be. Yeah, they should pardon. Are we free George guys?
Starting point is 00:46:23 I'm a free George. I don't know. They should have never, they should have never. They should have never taken him out of office. What happened? That's, that's not happening. Oh, you bet it is. Oh, no.
Starting point is 00:46:38 A little cream pie from the nation. Muslim Nice I'm sorry the Islam Islam nation He's not He's too glammed
Starting point is 00:46:47 To dwell in jail No no no That's why The fact that he's not Is why they don't mind And then again They don't eat pork Sorry
Starting point is 00:46:56 I can't Oh man I just can't With these people I mean I don't blame you at all Adam Schiff is a very Limber fellae here I mean maybe
Starting point is 00:47:11 I have you look at him I do like how he he effectively bullied like when they when the Kamala ran for president they they put a black woman like a lesbian black one in that Senate seat
Starting point is 00:47:24 and then Schiff just like bullied her out of that game oh yeah because he was already running he's like sorry he looks like the grown Campbell soup kid the goofiest looking person I just I kind of like him there because he's so non-threatening. Like, there's no way anyone takes him seriously.
Starting point is 00:47:43 Well, I mean, I agree with your estimation of him as a person, but he does get the vote. And, you know, he's always going to vote with the, it's crazy. He's going to vote with the Democrats, you know. He's a power player, I think. Like, he worked his way up through the House to the Senate right now. And it was all because it was all because of the. Well, it's because he's anti-Trump and the Russia collusion stuff that he put out. Like, people, Democrats in California would argue like, yeah, he took
Starting point is 00:48:08 down Trump, man. This shift guy with the Russia spin, so that's what they'd give him credit for. And, hey, you know, so. I don't think he's going to get it kicked out of the Senate for this. I don't think any Democrats are going to give a crap either. I don't think that there's a high chance of it, but I do think that it's good that they're going to, you know,
Starting point is 00:48:27 put the screws to him. There's nothing wrong with it. Yeah, I mean, I'd love to, like, get these guys for parking tickets every day. Yeah, like, so, I mean, again, if you're like, Oh, we're not going to get results, so they shouldn't, they shouldn't, you know, they shouldn't put the screws to him. You send your best meter made at that man. You should have to follow him around.
Starting point is 00:48:45 You're not wrong at all. Yeah. Like, that's the thing is you're both accurate in this. It's just, I, yeah, I just think it won't stick. No, I tend to agree with that. They're not going to be able to make anything stick, I don't think. But I do think that they should do everything they can to make his life difficult. Yeah.
Starting point is 00:49:04 Because he did. that to Republicans for, you know, for however long he's been in, or however long he was in the House in Congress, you know, he was doing that. And he's going to continue doing that. So make him, make him, uh, the process can be the punishment. Yeah. And again, the, all of the stuff that DeLodd mentioned about the Russia gate stuff, I, there's still ongoing investigations for that. So if there's any way they can put the screws to him for that as well, I'm, I'm, I'm all for it. So like I said,
Starting point is 00:49:37 I'm a naked partisan. So anything they can do to make his life more difficult, I'm going to be supportive. So we're going to move on to, let's see, to this story. What is it?
Starting point is 00:49:48 The Jim Acosta interviews an AI version of a teenager killed in the Parkland shooting. It's just a beautiful thing. It's actually disgusting. Was this a real kid that was? Yeah, that's a real fake kid. Real fake kid? Yeah.
Starting point is 00:50:04 Is he okay? No, he's dead. Oh, really? A kid that they reanimated to life with, like, low-quality AI. Wow. That's why I hate AI. I'm always telling people this technology is the worst. I hate it, too.
Starting point is 00:50:15 Yeah, total garbage. And now what are we doing it for? It's like, yeah, guys, we're living in the future. Now we could, like, have videos of dead people, like, having their mouths move and, like, have them regurgitate my political beliefs back to me. Right. It's like he's interviewing himself. Right.
Starting point is 00:50:28 So, anyways. You know if a kid fell out this way? No, no, no. He's been dead a long time. Well, right, he was killed by gun violence, so he has to be. Let's get into... He has to agree with me. Hold on.
Starting point is 00:50:39 Let's get into this year. Variety reports, Jim Acosta, the former CNN chief White House correspondent, who now hosts an independent show on YouTube, has published an interview with an AI-generated avatar of Joaquin Oliver, who died at age 17 in the Parkland School shooting in 2018. The interactive AI was created by Oliver's parents, who granted Acosta the first interview with the recreated version of their son on what would have been his 25th. birthday. Oliver was one of the 17 people killed in the mass shooting at Marjorie Stoneham Douglas High School. Acosta asked Oliver about his solution for gun violence to which the avatar responded, I believe in a mix of stronger gun control laws, mental health support, and community engagement. We need to create a safe space for conversations and connections, making sure everyone feels seen and heard. It's about building a culture of kindness and understanding. It is incredibly creepy. Do we have the actual
Starting point is 00:51:35 video of the of them i hope not yeah i mean we it was on twitter and we should we should show it it was it's like low quality let's see oh this is actually a cost of full show you're gonna have to click through yeah all right welcome to the jimicama oh it's right in the beginning here but it is another day for several years now i consider them to be a good friend so of course i took him up on the opportunity so we can create a safer future for everyone what would you like to know more about. Joaquin, I would like to know. Right, if you want to share anything or have questions, I'm all ears.
Starting point is 00:52:08 Just let me know. Joaquin, it's Jim Acosta. I was wondering if you could tell me what happened to you. I appreciate your curiosity. I was taken in this world too soon due to gun violence while at school. It's important to talk about these issues so we can create a safer future for everyone. What would you like to know more about? Joaquin.
Starting point is 00:52:26 Like, that's literally like, would you like to know more from Starship Troopers? Steven Hawking. Dude, it was better when Brando landed. in the original Superman. I would like to know what your solution would be for gun violence. Great question.
Starting point is 00:52:42 I believe in a mix of stronger gun control laws. Mental health support and community engagement. We need to create safe spaces for conversations and connections making sure everyone feels seen and heard. It's so morbid and gross. It really is.
Starting point is 00:52:55 Seeing her, dude, what? I think that's a great idea, Joaquin. We definitely need more of that. I'm so glad you think Is he also AI, or is that his personality? That's just Jimagoste. 17-year-old is not this well-spoken.
Starting point is 00:53:09 No. It's sad to do this. I would like to know more about you. Just the prompts are so creepy. And now he goes on to talk about sports. I'm all about love, laughter, and living life to the fullest. I cherish my family and friends and always try to spread. You know, like, AI version one.
Starting point is 00:53:27 Exactly. I just, I can't imagine. I mean, and it goes on like. My father, I would never, I'm sorry. Oh, yeah. That's so sad. Yeah. It's disgusting.
Starting point is 00:53:37 I lost plenty of my friends when they were teens, and I just can't imagine doing this. I'm sorry. It's gross. But, like, it goes on where he's asking him about sports, and he's talking about, like, things that he likes. Like, really? The kid died in 20, was 2017? Yeah. Yeah.
Starting point is 00:53:56 It's, it's so. It looks like Rosie O'Donnell. It's so incredibly gross. Acosta. Costa, nothing. And you're right. If you look at Acosta, you can see these roots are showing too.
Starting point is 00:54:09 He's got a little gray going on there. And I will say, I don't blame the parents as much. The parents are obviously going through it and they're thinking, what could I have done differently possibly to have saved my child? And I'm not a father. I hope one day to be. And I'm sure if I
Starting point is 00:54:24 ever lost my child, I'd be constantly reliving that and thinking what I could have done differently to change that. But Jim Acosta, what a piece of absolute fucking garbage. And he's really just manipulating the parents and using them to try to advance his specific politics. And it's so gross because, you know, the right could do this too, but they choose not to. They could, you know, have some parents who would say, oh, maybe they could have used some more security guards there or had more police there or had police who actually decided to go in to the school. Because at the Parkland School shooting, they didn't have the police actually go inside when the shooting was happening.
Starting point is 00:54:56 So just so nakedly gross to use literally dead children to try to advance your political agenda. Um, digital taxidermy. It's a horrible thing. Well, the two went in for Yuvaldi, but they were complete pussies. Yeah. Yeah. So, I mean, Yuvaldi, Yuvaldi was a special disgusting. Very sad.
Starting point is 00:55:14 Yeah. Especially when you saw, like, the body camp from, like, Nashville where they just ran right in right away. Yeah, and they did their job. Yeah. So it's the same as the guy who borrowed the gun from the barber shop or what was it. Yeah. And Yuvaldi. Mm-hmm.
Starting point is 00:55:26 It was military. Yeah. Um, so the, the overall reaction. is actually nonpartisan most of the time you expect people to kind of you know pick their side and and okay i'll defend acosta because i'm politically aligned with him but even over on blue sky the response was absolutely excoriating him you know um hey jim quick question what the f is wrong with you what i want to know is what the f is wrong with the parents grief makes you do crazy things.
Starting point is 00:56:02 It cost has no excuse, though, and it goes on. That's not him. This is not his true self. That's a computer generating answers. Jim, you ever think about turning into MDF might be more useful career pivot. Usually, I usually don't comment on stuff like this, but this is beyond effed up and gross. You're a monster. This is in an interview.
Starting point is 00:56:25 This is the AI version of Weekend at Bernie's, and they did a better job in anime. mating a dead guy. And this is blue sky, right? This is not... Blue sky turns on a leptart. It's over. Exactly. This is not X. I mean, X, you expect Jim Acosta to get excoriated. But it goes on and on, thanks. I hate it. This is disgusting. There's no reason at all do this. This is journalistic malpractice. We're also looking at people that consider themselves artists and they don't want AI to begin with. And now you're using it in the most egregious, disgusting way imaginable. It is the most egregious disgusting way. I think the right and left can come together and go, that's wrong on every level. Yeah. And like you said, I don't blame the parents.
Starting point is 00:57:05 Grief is a horrible thing. But that's the worst thing you can do with it, I would say. I think that that's pretty accurate. Especially when you're interviewing yourself and then you're going, but it's a dead kid too. It's, I mean, I don't think that there's, there's, I don't think anyone actually has had a positive review of this or positive response to this. I don't know how Jim Acosted thought this was a good idea I mean he said himself but he was you know
Starting point is 00:57:35 here he is advertising a show you don't want to miss at 4 p.m. I'll be having one of a kind an one of a kind interview with Joaquin Oliver he died in the Parkland school shooting in 2018 but his parents have created an AI version of their son to deliver
Starting point is 00:57:49 a powerful message on gun violence then where was the actual powerful message on gun violence because that was the most boilerplate you know boring Exactly. It's the most garbage kind of thing that you could possibly imagine. I love the mental health thing where it's the, it's like we do have a massive mental health problem in this country. We also have a dopamine problem. We're addicted to our phones. We have companies that want us addicted to our phone so people stop feeling anything.
Starting point is 00:58:15 And that there's so many things you can get into. But an AI robot is the last thing you want to have tell you that. And also I love during COVID, you had a bunch of books behind you every time somebody was doing an interview. and in this it's just his books I don't know I just noticed that nothing says narcissism like that can sell any of them they got to put him back there no either like he's like I think I just had a lot of returns today
Starting point is 00:58:38 I think too if you just ask chat GPT the questions Acosta asked you'd get something totally different so they had to have coded this like give me the most run of the mill lib answers like that's what they coded this person to be reanimated as so this guy was killed horrifically and reanimated literally as a lib
Starting point is 00:58:57 Yeah, I mean, it's an empty shell as a symbol of liberal light. Yeah, I just, I can't imagine that, that's what they had to prompt it. I can't imagine that they had a data set that could accurately, you know, be used as an AI to reflect what this kid was like. No, and they couldn't have had actually a bunch of data that went together from all the shootings where it was like, well, you know, I think SSRIs are a problem, so you don't want to get a suite at the Mandalay Bay. He would have just stopped it. So it's not like there's a bunch of stuff they would. we're covering to have an actual answer. Like you said, it's just a boilerplate, run of the mill.
Starting point is 00:59:33 It's irresponsible. Yeah. I do think that it is irresponsible. And I think he's getting the result that he deserves, the criticism that he deserves. I don't see how... He does, yeah. You know what? Maybe, you know, we don't have a lot of answers from the Las Vegas shooting.
Starting point is 00:59:50 Maybe we could try to reanimate Stephen Paddock? Stephen Paddock and have an interview with him. See what answers we get out of him. Yeah, it'd be funny if he just, it's like, I don't know, I didn't like the hotel. I lost a lot of money. I think isn't that the current line? Like, I lost a lot of money gambling with my Asian wife. He was using me.
Starting point is 01:00:09 Wouldn't swap my towels. I honestly think that the FBI wouldn't allow that personally. Probably wouldn't. I don't think the FBI is going to allow that at all. It would just be, yeah, like, why did you bring them in, though, at checking? I don't know, you know, I had a feeling it wouldn't go well. I lose every time. they just keep letting me back in
Starting point is 01:00:28 someone had to pay for it you'd be surprised but you only packed one shirt you had six suitcases of weapons he had so many guns up there like even if I was in line I'd be like excuse me
Starting point is 01:00:42 there's a lot of gun bags I'm going to that those guitars no no no I have plans the rate of fire doesn't I've got the highest floor.
Starting point is 01:01:02 I mean, it's very sad. But if I don't make light of it. But it's just, it's absurd. I mean, how long ago did it happen? I mean, it's 2017? A while ago. I mean, not that long ago. I mean, it's over five years, so I think it's safe to make it.
Starting point is 01:01:16 I mean, it was pre-COVID. It was, yeah. Even Parkland, though, was, I think, seven or eight years ago at this point. Parkland was 20. Yeah, it was enough to make David Hogg. famous and now people are like all right enough crazy that he became the most famous one
Starting point is 01:01:30 because there was like a whole crew of them I remember there was like an Emma chick and then there was the right right wing version with Kyle Kashuv Kyle Kashiv Yeah and he He was the one that was like not even there right
Starting point is 01:01:43 Hogg was not there Yeah wasn't he like down the street Hog was at school when it happened He left and then he went back to do a little dance on graves. Oh, once the coast was clear. Yes. Yeah. He's like, now that it's safe, I'm going to go pretend I was part of this.
Starting point is 01:02:01 Yeah, he was, he was in another part of the school. He wasn't actually, he wasn't, he wasn't actually in danger from the actual shooting. He left, went home, and then went back and started giving interviews and was like, hey, here's my chance to be a Democrat apparatch. Can you imagine what a scumbag would run up to a news camera and just start making it about himself? When he was, look, he was 17, so part of me is like, our. all right, he's young and dumb, but then he turned that into, you know, Harvard with poor grades and going on to be in the DNC after that and basically failing at everything that he tried to do. So wearing skinny suits.
Starting point is 01:02:42 Did wear skinny suits. Because he, like, threatened her, like, primary one guy, and they're like, get him out. Yeah, he, I mean, we've got some good ideas. If you listen to, if you listen to James Carville, he was like, this kid's an idiot. Yeah, that's hilarious. They were primary, he wanted a primary safe Democrat seats because they weren't progressive enough. But it's like, look, man. They're just kicking the can down the road.
Starting point is 01:03:02 You're not helping anybody by primary. He is their future whether they like it or not. Well, we'll see. I mean, I don't know that he's, that he's extreme enough when it comes to the politics. I think they're turning on him. And he did. Yeah, I think that. Yeah.
Starting point is 01:03:15 A huge, straight, white, come on. There's no, there's no, he's not in the hierarchy. No, I mean. He's coming it up with Zoron. I know, I saw that. Oh, yeah? Was he? Yeah, they're boys.
Starting point is 01:03:24 Well, I mean, again, I think that Hogg is the most self-serving of the Democrats that I know of. I don't think that any of it is motivated by actual political beliefs other than, well, you know, I'm supposed to be a Democrat or I am a Democrat. That's how I identify. So I'm going to just be a Democrat. I don't think there's anything other than self-serving attempts to. Well, he's the weird combination of being self-serving and having a chip on his shoulder, and that's always a really deadly combo. would be yeah we called in bomb threats not to go to school and then columbine happened and all that jazz
Starting point is 01:04:00 that was that yeah that did that did put a damper on a lot of it used to be like it was funny though when we would we'd be like is that this is a dog's going to the school and a robot and you're like maybe we shouldn't do this anymore there were no robots back in the 90s they were like little bomb ones yeah really yeah I thought that that was uh I thought that those didn't really become a thing. Yeah, like little remote ones. I mean, they, I don't know if they did anything.
Starting point is 01:04:27 There wasn't a bomb. Just looking. Somebody who I won't say, who did it from a pay phone in Detroit for outside a bar anyway. Well, you never can't tell with Detroit, right? The schools were crazy. Yes. Yeah.
Starting point is 01:04:41 Yeah, public schools. Yeah, they had these things called metal detectors. And then they had people that work security in a lot of the schools. Really in the late 90s, huh? Yeah, through the 80s and 90s. Even where my son goes to school, there was the opportunity to have a armed, armed off-duty Detroit police officers, retired police officers.
Starting point is 01:05:07 And the entire school was like, yeah, good, yeah, we'll do that. Just taking a quick vote. I mean, I think everybody wants to protect their children, no matter what side you're on when it comes down to it in private. Doesn't that make sense? I mean, at least particularly nowadays with the advent of school shooting at, You know, since Columbine. It really has, it's crazy because that one was out of nowhere.
Starting point is 01:05:28 Yeah. And then, I mean, there had been a few before, but it was in the 70s. You know, there had been gang violence, but that was a very rare one. And they wanted to blame Manson and goth kids, but it turned out that it was actually two fairly popular kids, one extremely intelligent and one kind of a follower. And after that, I mean, the way that it is now is just alarming. So there is a problem. but we have to identify what it actually is. And what is it?
Starting point is 01:05:56 I think that it's the fact that there are very few fathers and kids being raised by single mothers and SSRIs. I think it is a lot in the treatment. I think there is a lot of, yeah, I think there's a lot of that. There's a lot of pressure. There's a lot of, I mean, I think the Internet's a huge problem to it because you're not being judged by a group of friends. You're being judged by Earth.
Starting point is 01:06:16 The whole world. Yeah. I think there's a lot of problems with psyche as a result with that. Yeah, I mean, well, the idea that you're on display for the whole world, and if you put up the wrong picture, you can, you know, or the wrong video, you can have literally 100,000 people mocking you, is something that a kid is not prepared for. No, it's something most adults are not prepared for. Yeah, most adults probably can't. I don't have the data in front of me. I believe school shootings to be going down. I think one of the core issues here is the social.
Starting point is 01:06:51 social contagion aspect of it. So the Columbine stuff really blew up and there was a lot of copycat people as a result of many things, but due in part by them getting the idea from the Columbine shooting. Yeah, so almost instant. Like copycat, a ton of copycat killers,
Starting point is 01:07:04 which was really messed up. When I was younger, I remember they, I forgot the name of the program. They brought us all into this room, like an auditorium or something, and they all like were really gave us an extremely dramatic telling of the story and how it could have been us
Starting point is 01:07:16 and they tried to get half the kids to cry and everybody was all sobbing about this. And they really got this story out there aggressively. And it might have died down a bit now. But even still, when you're seeing these school shootings, it could encourage others to do these copy cat type attacks, especially because humans are so stupid and we're such followers. Real.
Starting point is 01:07:38 That was a big problem, like, in the 2010s where they would, like, a school shoot would happen and then they would have, like, a scoreboard. And it would, like, show the record shooting. I was like, of course I was going to lead to these, like, psychos. And also, nowadays, what is it actually? It was like a thing. It would be like, who's killed the most kids? Deadliest since then.
Starting point is 01:07:54 Yeah, the Columnide got mobbed to lose. And what's considered a mass shooting nowadays has been really, the waters have been muddied so much because now they're talking about anyone that's shot, like any shooting that happens where there's more than two people that are shot, right? And when you say a mass shooting, it brings to mind someone going, well, I mean, a lot of people that have lost their lives and it brings to mind someone that goes, with the intent to kill multiple people and start shooting and continue shooting and killing people until they're stopped. So you think of a large death toll. Nowadays, anything that happens,
Starting point is 01:08:31 any event with a gun on a school, they call that a school shooting. So if a gun goes off and someone gets shot, they call it a school shooting, not an accident. It's a school shooting. Anytime there's more than two people that are shot in one event, they call it a mass shooting, which, again, if you're walking down the street and there's a you know someone decides that they're going to try and rob someone and they shoot the person they're trying to rob and two people get hit in the in the crossfire they call that a mass shooting but the the context are very different so when you're thinking of a mass shooting and it brings to mind these these horrible you know events where multiple people are shot and killed or someone is you know mugged and someone shoot them and two other people end up getting hit that's those are two very different types of crime and two different types of criminal perform those crimes you know well it's a scare tactic yeah you know that's the that's the point they muddy the water so that way they can they can essentially farm clicks i imagine you know that's the main reason for anything now and like you guys said when it first happened
Starting point is 01:09:41 i mean with the immediate response i remember was lockdown and they said if there's a shooter we're going to pull the fire alarm and we're going to barricade the door and everybody gets under a desk so essentially you're sitting ducks and you know it's like well first of all what if it's a fire and we don't hear the shot so now we're just sitting in a classroom under desks but the way that they responded they had no idea what to do with it and now it's like you said if somebody a lot of times someone will bring a gun to school on accident they will do it to be cool something will go off and now it hits all these stats and it's not necessarily real so we don't really know how to, they're not all individual. They're all just lumped into one thing to kind of
Starting point is 01:10:21 scare every single parent. I think there is something so horribly fascinating about this social contagion idea and how bad ideas could spread from like one person to another for some of the most horrible things and how talking about these things more can help encourage them in people. So like school shootings aren't the only example. Offing yourself is another example when when it's covered more in the news. It's a crazy phenomenon that it includes. And another thing is like the trans issue, the more attention that the trans issue is given, the more trans people we see start popping up due to the social contagion theory. So I think it's crazy how impressionable people are. And I think it's something that we need to be like hyper aware of. And then it's an interesting thing in how we in the media should behave knowing those things. You know, should I not cover people offing themselves as much because I know it could help spur other people doing that? Should I not cover school shootings the same way because I know it could lead to others? Should I not name shooters or this or that?
Starting point is 01:11:22 So just something to be aware of as people, I think were super impressionable. Yeah, I think the idea, okay, you name the shooter because that's what they want. I don't know if that's true, right? That's just something we say. I think going, okay, well, suicides are up against men. Do you be honest and say it's gambling? Do you be honest and say it's these certain things of huge loss to people is what causes it? Or do you kind of keep hiding that too?
Starting point is 01:11:43 we kind of just put all that stuff out there the trans issue i think is also proven to be real where the more and more we talk about and make an issue the more and more people want to identify it for attention so it is tough to say what is what but we do kind of talk about it then we put these blanket things over like we can't talk about the shoot that's not preventing anything so and also we do that thing like you said calling certain people teens then naming certain people on the other side because we can talk about that person we muddy it all up so we're never getting clear actual statistics of what's going on. People are such hard-asses about the naming now.
Starting point is 01:12:19 It's like, oh, you support this guy. Is that why you're naming him? You're trying to make him famous or something. It's like, bro, I don't think this is going to change anything at this point. No, and it's not going to satisfy him. He's dead. But it did get out of control for a while where, like, a shoot would happen, and then he get, like, a full, like, Netflix documentary on him.
Starting point is 01:12:34 Or, like, Timefront Page. I think it was the Boston Marathon. Yeah. Oh, yeah. Where it's like, we're fetishizing these movies. That was disgusting. That was the Rolling Stone cover, which is horrible. It's like if you had nothing to lose and you're just like, this is it.
Starting point is 01:12:46 It's like, well, you can get a Netflix documentary out of it. Yeah, if you're going to be on the same cover as Kurt Cobain, that's certainly incentive. Yeah. A messed up way. Yeah. It's, I think that it does make sense to do what you can to minimize the shooter or the people that are carrying out these violent acts. If it makes sense to actually name them or if it makes sense to talk about their background or whatever, then I think that it's acceptable. but the idea that you have to talk about them ad nauseum
Starting point is 01:13:17 and talk about their motivation, et cetera, I'm not sure if that's, I'm not sure if that's a good idea or not. Because if they have motivations that, if they have some kind of manifesto or whatever, maybe it is good for that to be put out. But at the same time, you know, if it will inspire other people,
Starting point is 01:13:37 you know, I'm not sure where the line is, you know. Like the kid who was the son of a Hollywood producer, I believe he produced like Harry Potter movies or something. And then he shot up like a restaurant in Malibu. I think that was an interesting one where you kind of go, okay, well, there's this rich kid who's spoiled and kind of has everything. Why? Why is that life as vapid and empty as another life?
Starting point is 01:13:59 And I mean, I mean, you could read like Brad Easton House is less than zero and see why. But if you're not really aware of that, it's like, why do these things where people have so much and people have so little have these same repercussions of violence? Well, what about something like the Christchurch shooter, the guy that shot up the mosque with all of the, you know, both the weapons that he used had all kinds of crazy writing on him and stuff. Is that worth discussing or is that worth making his manifesto known? I mean, he live streamed it on Facebook. I mean, I don't know that you could find the actual live stream, but for a while it was available, you know, on the internet.
Starting point is 01:14:35 And you could literally just watch the guy, he got out of his car, went to his trunk, picked up a gun. I don't remember, I could be misremembering, but I want to say that he's humming as he does it, and it's just really brutal and morbid to think about, you know. It was so casual, that's what I recall, that it was done in such a way that I think the first person at the door greeted the guy, if I'm not mistaken, and the FPS nature of it also made it look so surreal,
Starting point is 01:15:05 almost like a video game where, you know, like you're in GTA, where it just almost didn't make sense seeing it. I think on the manifesto stuff, it's like, if we're being honest, it's a messed up way to get your stupid manifesto a ton of attention. And then some people would give credence to it and some people won't. And, you know, that'll kind of just be that. But it's tragic. And I'm just wondering if it where do you guys think we should draw the line, though? Is there a place where it's acceptable to say, okay, this particular person's information should be given to the public? This particular person's information should be. withheld there are there is i think a valid a valid argument for look people shouldn't be kept in the dark you the if the government has information there's no actual reason to withhold it from the public but there's also the argument oh hey if you put this information out it may
Starting point is 01:16:01 inspire copycats i'm wondering where you guys if you guys think there's a line is is it some should some shouldn't all of it should be kept as quiet as possible or i think a lot of it be able to, you can seek it out, but it shouldn't be jammed down your throat. I mean, I think we should be allowed to have the information as citizens. I think Ted Kaczynski is something for an example where you can look and go, okay, he's a genius. There's a lot of information here that he was accurate about. He just shouldn't have made nail bombs. Like the whole thing that was wrong about the post office. He was wrong. He really blowing off a postal worker's hand was the thing he shouldn't have done. But the rest of it reads where you're like, pretty accurate.
Starting point is 01:16:40 It could have made like a substack or something Yeah I mean really If only the internet was around when he was And even if it was around He was in a place with real spotty wife I imagine Starlink or something Out in that shed in the woods
Starting point is 01:16:53 But yeah Only Elon Musk But yeah Can you imagine Ted Kaczynski The guy that wrote The guy that wrote Industrial Civilization And its consequences There's probably 30 of them alive today
Starting point is 01:17:07 But Twitter just gets it out of them so they can just get fired up on Twitter and it gets that juice out. I mean, that's a valid point. How many people out there actually the internet has given them an outlet and prevented them from going? I think the opposite.
Starting point is 01:17:20 I think more people are getting radicalized on the internet and you could find a small group of people who agree with your delusions on the internet, no matter how dumb your delusion is. You can find a group of people on the internet. The point that we're making is that those people find people to talk to
Starting point is 01:17:34 and that's the outlet as opposed to just killing people. No, they become more, more radical as a result to only talking to the specific group of crazies who confirm their craziness. So in the past, if you were a complete wacko, you couldn't find crazy people online who agreed with you and gave
Starting point is 01:17:50 you confirmation bias to your crazy ideas. You'd be around people who were like, nah, you're actually a moron. But now you could find somebody who says whatever you want is a natural thing. I'm not arguing against that point. I think you're correct with that. But the question that's... What Marshall Applewhite found followers? Well, yeah, that's the thing. It's like we had an entire
Starting point is 01:18:07 countries that were to cut their penis off so they could jump on hail bop yeah i have no idea what this is the uh the hail bop i forget what was it it was a comet that was coming heaven's heaven's gate oh and they were like we're going to ride the comet we just have to cut the lot the point that i'm making is you the shoes were nice you find people to discuss these things with and because you find people to discuss these things with you don't actually become violent in the real world and it seems that there is less violence to day than there was 20, 30, 40 years ago. Yeah, we had entire countries that were like communists and fascists.
Starting point is 01:18:45 Like the idea that these radical ideologies are spreading because the internet's like crazy. It's like last century was way worse for this kind of thing. Yeah, we were talking about this last night. The 20th century was an absolute bloodbath and all of the radical stuff that people are afraid of. I mean, by the time 1925 rolled around, there had already been the most destructive war in human history and by and then to be followed by world war two which was again the most destructive war in human history let's give the internet some time to cook guys i think it's only been ubiquitous
Starting point is 01:19:17 for what 20 or 30 years let's give to the internet some time to cook don't worry it'll cause a lot of problems with radicalizing people i think in the future yeah i'd only say 15 really has it had has it really been everywhere that everybody's been on we don't even have all the indians on the chinese have a great wall of china internet well great firewall great firewall wall of China or what have you. So, no, and I think if you give like a group of crazy, crazy radical communists ways to speak to each other online, I think they'd be talking themselves to the more extreme and not like off the, off the extreme. So it's your, it's your, or your opinion that there are more extreme ideologies today than there were in the 20th century.
Starting point is 01:20:00 I think they could be normalized easier by finding peers who agree with you. and will confirm your crazy beliefs online, make you feel more comfortable and confident in them. But I also think online, these people that are these, like radicals, ghetto eyes quicker, they just become purely online types of people. We were back in the day, they had to seek each other out. They'd start compounds. Like, when's the last time we got a good compound?
Starting point is 01:20:23 We haven't had a compound in a long time. You just don't know of the good ones. They're off the grid still. I think that, I mean, it's possible that you could prove to be right, but I do think that, I still think you're wrong. And I think that the 20th century really was like, I think the 20th century might have been the apex in recent history of just absolute bat-shit crazy people doing crazy things.
Starting point is 01:20:49 Well, you could get away with more. Absolutely. I mean, if you even look at like the mafia, you could just walk around like the Teflon Don, just kill people. I mean, it was really, it was really nice. I mean, not that it was good, but I mean, it was just. That level of anonymity. You know what I mean?
Starting point is 01:21:03 Like a fun time to live. where, like, you really had to pick and choose the bloodbath you were going to air on the news that night. There were so many. Yeah. You know. Like, you commit crimes. You could just skip town. Right. Nobody was finding you. No. I mean, you would just bury somebody
Starting point is 01:21:18 and they're like, I don't know what happened to Tim. And it was, that was it. You could dodge a draft by just going to Canada. Yeah. Yeah. And now, like... Go fish. We just have a bone spur. You don't even need to go that far. Yeah. Okay. Like, now they're solving cold cases with DNA,
Starting point is 01:21:32 which is interesting. But there's so many of them. of them. Like now they're about to, like, find out with Jean Bonnet and stuff. All you have to do is turn on, like, Netflix, and they have all types of murder mystery things. Oh, yeah. And that's what women, like, unwind through. I always wondered who's watching this as women. They don't wind a murder.
Starting point is 01:21:50 My girlfriend has literally watched everything that Netflix has to offer when it comes to murder. It's terrifying. I'm like, I have a lot of guns here. Do I really want you watching these kind of things? And they say, if you unwind to that, you have severe mental disorders. And I don't know one woman who doesn't watch
Starting point is 01:22:07 that. I feel like severe mental disorders and women kind of go hand in hand. Yeah, maybe they need it because they're always like, I want to feel safe and I'm like, but you go to bed watching the Carnival Cruise thing where a woman gets taken and they still keep seeing
Starting point is 01:22:23 her at different places even though she's 50 and still being traffic. Did you see that? No. I didn't even know about it. My wife's like, yeah, I've watched it twice. Why'd you watch it twice? It's horrifying. There was nothing. else on. Yeah, she was like 16 and like the Bahamas with her parents and somebody's
Starting point is 01:22:39 just like, oh, worker just took her and she's been gone. Creepy. That's why I don't go on cruises. I, you know, I don't go on cruises myself. I don't go on cruises because I'm claustrophobic. Come on. I want to be able to go where I want. No, I hate the cruises because you go on there and it's like the workers are like
Starting point is 01:22:55 from like the Philippines and Indonesia and they look miserable and then you ask them, they're like, it's actually a really good job in their country and you're just like this. If I want to murder somebody, I'm inviting them on a cruise. Someone has to say good job. and fell out by In Their Country, it's not a good job. It's not. It's like they actually fight over this.
Starting point is 01:23:10 I'm like rapid cheeseburgers for fat Louisianans. Any caveats are not a good idea. It's actually a really good job caveat. No, it's not a really good job. What's another good job there? Well, they sell cocaine off a jet ski. You could be a child soldier, so it's a little better than that. Have you ever parachuted off the back of a boat and not lived?
Starting point is 01:23:28 They do that too. All right, we're going to jump to one last story here. Michael Rappapore was supposed to be playing at the Stardome in Alabama, and it was canceled. He tweeted, my show tonight at the Stardome in Alabama was canceled. I did not cancel. I would never cancel, especially since I'm already here in Birmingham, ready to perform. It was shut down because of protests and threats over my support for Israel and for speaking up about the 50 hostages still being held in Gaza,
Starting point is 01:23:58 670 days in captivity, and people are protesting me for demanding their release. It's embarrassing. it's sad but I'm not ashamed I stand by what I said and who I stand with fortunately I got to meet some incredible people from Shavad of Alabama today and had the blessings of rapping Teflin a ginormous mitzvah
Starting point is 01:24:15 and a reminder of what really matters I am Israel Shai that's right I am Israel Shai I think he said Anyways Abbas Phelit and Amistralh Yeah rapping to Phelan is the weirdest thing that I have ever seen a religion do
Starting point is 01:24:32 Like they put up the weirdest thing. It's one of the weirdest things. They put a box on their head. They put a box on their arm. The scripture memory time. In the box, there's scripture. Yeah.
Starting point is 01:24:42 And they're like boxers. And then it's cow leather that you wrap X amount of times and it's symbolic. But speaking of the 20 hostages, Hamas actually released a hostage video over the weekend of Eviatar David, where he was starving, literally starving, not fake Palestinians. Indian starving, literally skin and bones, forced to dig his own grave, according to the Hamas video. Again, this is Hamas that chose to make a video of them starving somebody and forcing him to dig of his own grave and, like, well, counting down the days and watching him cry all
Starting point is 01:25:20 over himself. So I think it's good awareness that he's bringing to this, Mr. Rapippor. So Hamas was violent? Who would have thunk it? My star. I still can't believe that there are people that would side with Hamas. They are. After the...
Starting point is 01:25:40 You can't paraglide anymore? I mean, you can be critical. If you want to be critical of Israel... After did Shady frame them for 9-11? I know, right? If you want to be critical of Israel and the way that they're carrying out the war in Gaza, fine, you can be critical of that. I get it.
Starting point is 01:25:53 But, like, the idea that, like, people are, like, Hamas are the good guys. Yeah. And it's like, come on. Come on. Well, you talk about the 90s and people being on. aware this is the Middle East yeah it's just war all the time and has been since I was a kid starving children is awful but this has been the entire time I've been alive mm-hmm I don't know how people aren't aware of them yeah and it's and people love to say that it's Israel's fault
Starting point is 01:26:21 it was not Israel's fault that Iran and Iraq were at war for no two decades or a decade or whatever and Iraq is really there because Iran lets them well yeah because Iran Iran is a very big and in context, powerful country compared to Iraq. Then you have Americans going, why would we bomb Iran? It's like, what? Because I ran, because I ran, you know, Lebanon, you know? Did you not understand any of it? It's a terrible dry place that God doesn't want you to live.
Starting point is 01:27:00 Nothing grows there. I mean, well, in Iraq, but Iran, if I understand correctly, Iran has, they've got mountains and stuff. That's true. It's nice. I've never been. Neither have I. I just, it looks awful from all the footage I've seen. So I could be speaking out of turn.
Starting point is 01:27:17 Everything post-1979 seems to be kind of a mess. The footage, I mean, like, it's getting just blown up all the time. That's every time I see the footage. In Iran? Yeah. Yeah, if you defend Jews now, you get called the Zionist and you're like, I don't, I don't think you should be murdering Jews. Remember how that happened? And not only, so not only if you defend Jews, but if you don't hate Israel.
Starting point is 01:27:39 Right, right. Then you're a Zionist. Like, I catch a lot of heat because I'm not like, kill all the Jews. Right. And then you hear Jews go, I'm not anti-Semitic because I'm against Israel and you're like, what? So what are you then? Yeah. You're like, well, I'm just pro-Palestine.
Starting point is 01:27:58 Okay, what do they believe? from the river to the sea. Do you want to read the Koran and tell me what part of that is pro you? What do you think? You're going to be saved? Well, especially when it comes to people in the West, those are the same people that would say, you know, I'm, I think that I'm a queer for Palestine. Which is hilarious. Yeah, it is hilarious.
Starting point is 01:28:19 The idea that, you know, they. And if you talk. As we know, they only have sex with children who drive them around. right i don't know is that's what i've heard that's what i've heard that's the case that's what i've heard a lot of the the soldiers the i don't know what they have over there corporals sergeants i don't i don't know what uh hamas no offense if i live you know dearborn so you're there i bless you people allah bless you people Love you guys
Starting point is 01:28:56 Peace be upon him The Quran or as I call it The Good Book It's a bestseller Oh it's really Yeah top drawer Flying all the shows I call it the New New Testament
Starting point is 01:29:09 So this Michael Rappaport getting cancelled though We were talking before the show It's my sense that this is an internet thing As opposed to a locals in Birmingham thing I don't imagine that there are a lot of people
Starting point is 01:29:25 in Birmingham that are You know You know, we gotta let them hostages go You know, that's kind of No, they're anti-Israel Yeah, I mean There's a genocide taking place
Starting point is 01:29:36 That ain't right Them kids are starving You know, I mean Is that Jew lover down there? That Zionist boy Tell me he hates Muslims Get in the truck Get the queers for Palestine
Starting point is 01:29:54 We're heading down there In the truck, we're going to go down to the Stardome and not watch the show. So, I mean, it's my sense that it's kind of an internet thing, but I wonder why is it that, why is it this particular location as opposed to, you know, is he on tour or is it they just decided, oh, get him now? There's a lot of progressives in Alabama. You don't tell me the Nazi in higher learning ain't really a Nazi? I mean, there's a lot, there are a lot of black people in Birmingham, and black people tend to, you know, not be. The Stardom is largely a black club. Is it really?
Starting point is 01:30:28 Yeah. Okay. Yeah, yeah. So do you think that that's what it is, the, the black population in Birmingham? They may have just not wanted to go to the show. I mean, I have nothing against him at all. But, I mean, that could be it. Maybe it just sucks.
Starting point is 01:30:45 Yeah. It's like, oh, I got protests. I mean, honestly, they could have been the two that bought tickets and they were like, we got a two for one. We got an e-mailed coupon For a meet and greet You can't say no to coupons No, I mean, you blame them I can't
Starting point is 01:31:06 How happy they are Bring those guys up Look at they're excited Yeah, they got there And even Rappaport looks like Do I got to take this picture Geez guys Tone it down
Starting point is 01:31:18 Oh, come on the nose Can I get your boys a hat with a brim? Yeah, I mean, I think if it's the real reason that people were protesting. If you're protesting outside and black people want to go to a show, they're going to go to the show. I imagine. They're not going to go. There's a bunch of white people who don't want us to go in. They're going to go, do you want to move?
Starting point is 01:31:50 Nobody Nobody has ever stopped A black group of people From getting into a concert Or out So I don't know It seems like a publicity stunt
Starting point is 01:32:06 Maybe it is Maybe it is I don't know if there's any kind of Let's see if there's any kind of follow up To this or if this is the There should be video If there's people protesting, right? Yeah, you'd assume
Starting point is 01:32:17 Partition the auditorium I will say he's not my favorite favorite pro-Israel guy. Why is that? Michael Rappapoor. He flip-flops a lot. I just, I thought he sucked before the Israel stuff. So now post-Israel stuff, I think he just still sucks.
Starting point is 01:32:30 He's a comedian, like, I don't know, he does shows and stuff. He used to do like the, when they draft, the Knicks drafted Christop's Porzinius, and he was like, does he even have a green card? It was a beautiful thing. And then I remember him as like a sports guy. Yeah. And he was kind of racist. And then he's liberal.
Starting point is 01:32:45 He was in like Hopland. He was really good. Higher learning. Are all comedians kind of racist? I mean, come on. Landau, can you tell me about this phenomenon of all comedians, just becoming geopolitical experts, just, I don't know, the turn of a switch. It's all these guys, because we're apropore now, too.
Starting point is 01:33:02 And it's, I don't know what it is with comedy. Maybe it's about feeling really confident about, and while you don't know a lot about a topic. Right. What's going on here? For me particular? No, no. Is there something in the, and I don't know,
Starting point is 01:33:13 they're giving you guys at the back of these comedy clubs? No, I mean, a lot of world history books back there. I ended up, you know, tons. I ended up on the Anthony Coomia show, gosh, 2016. So I just started kind of looking into it, and I started doing shows at Fox and meeting people. So for me, it was kind of before all of it. But I don't.
Starting point is 01:33:31 I learned talking to people like you. The ones that happen to be experts on it like this, I don't understand because I don't buy it. That's why it doesn't make much sense to me, to be honest with you. And also, I'm kind of offended by actors who become comedians like him, because you're kind of going up on stage and going, Hey, remember me for movies? Well, now I do comedy.
Starting point is 01:33:53 You know what I mean? It's like how Jeremy Piven or, you know, Dustin Diamond RIP. But it's like how they were something. Now they go and do comedy. It's just, it's odd to me because it's like you didn't start as a comic. You became one after you were that. And I did like him exactly. There's a movie called bamboozled actually that Spike Lee did where he's the head
Starting point is 01:34:12 of like the WB and he's basically just like tap dancing on a death. It's like a huge middle finger of the WB. Like Spike Lee or not, I think it's a brilliant. movie it's and uh yeah and he was a really good actor so i don't know why he became this but i think he just had something go viral that was political so he stayed in that realm and i think a lot of people end up doing shows where they talk about it so it become successful for them and then they stay in that angle but once it turns on them because he was huge left then he switches and goes another direction that's why it's hard to say what you really are that's why i'm fairly moderate though
Starting point is 01:34:49 because I don't trust either side. And the reason I don't is because, and I've talked about this many times, my dad got Agent Orange from Vietnam. You got sick when I was 15, died when I was 18. The government did nothing to help him. I do not trust either side. I've never seen the VA do anything for anybody. Once our soldiers are taken care of and once I believe that a war deserves to be fought, I will.
Starting point is 01:35:11 But until then, I don't believe in any of these people. I believe the Senate is overcrowded. I don't believe politicians care. every time you get stuck in traffic, that's what I believe that they don't. I believe they take our money, they overtax us, and they waste lives, and they do not care about the average human being, and they want to keep us fighting. That's what I truly believe. So when people go, oh, you're moderate, you might sit on a fence.
Starting point is 01:35:33 I do, because I do not believe I'm not partisan. I do not believe in neither of these people. And to look at somebody, and I voted for Trump, and I've said that, but even that has now disappointed me. And until he can prove the Epstein list, because that's something I believed in. I thought he was going to stop corruption. I thought he was going to go after the swamp. Well, does it get any murkier than that? I don't think so. So I want to see where all of this goes. I'm so disappointed because we are polluted now with politicians. And there are nothing more than insider traders who take our money and gamble with it with tips they create themselves.
Starting point is 01:36:13 It's fascinating because a lot of comedians on both sides have become some of the most potent voices when it comes to a lot of issues like this. I don't know if it's, I don't know if I'm being cynical now. I don't know if it's just to try to get some more buzz going on. I'm cynical, so I understand that. I don't know if it's like they're just hopping on trends, but they're doing it effectively. And a lot of these guys, their comedy is second or third to their activism. And so I don't know if they're just straight up opportunists, just hopping on trends or they truly care.
Starting point is 01:36:41 But they are getting the most ears. in a lot of these cases. There is some leftist pro-Palestinian guy named Jacob Berger, I believe, who's very popular in that space and he gets a lot of attention. Obviously, there's Dave Smith, who gets a lot of attention. I like David a lot, yeah.
Starting point is 01:36:56 There's Mike Rappapur who gets a lot of attention. Theo Von, whenever he talks about politics. There's a requirement to voice your opinion in politics nowadays, though. If you don't, you get accosted by people that are accusing you of not having the correct politics, or you get accused of being this supporter or that supporter, whatever. So it's almost a requirement to say, look, this is how I think about these things.
Starting point is 01:37:22 And there is kind of a politically correct politics to have now. It's like comedians aren't even comedians anymore. They just start, they're just riffing on politics. They're just like deep-level political commentators. You sprinkle in some jokes sometimes. I know more comedians who that's like their second or third. Public faces, though. That's why almost every opinion I've had tonight has been a joke.
Starting point is 01:37:42 it's like comedy should come first to every comic in my opinion I agree I think Dave Smith is very passionate about what he believes and I think that's why he's a little bit more outspoken than most people about it and what do you think he believes because I believe again in a very cynical way that a lot of these guys it's just whatever's getting me the numbers like that's what satisfies that I don't think he's chasing the numbers I think that he very much believes the stuff that he says I think that he very much believes that he does not believe in the war Do you think he has more success as a comedian or doing his activism stuff?
Starting point is 01:38:13 He was very successful as a comedian, actually. So I think he's kind of lost fans and gained some as a result of it. I think his number is very clearly shot in up since he's talked about. More of his activism stuff. And I think that's he's gotten more likes and more. Being on the Joe Rogan podcast multiple times. I mean, he was on, he's been on it for so many years. It's tough to say, you know.
Starting point is 01:38:35 So, I mean, he was known for Legion of Skanks, which that was really big with compounds. So I think he's definitely got his fanship being in the political sphere. But, I mean, he goes back to Red Eye. He goes back to all that stuff. So he's always been kind of, you could say it's like a Bill Maher. I mean, you can't really take the politics out of Bill Maher, where if you look at somebody like Carlin, that's more who I admire because that's just completely blackpilled and kind of against everything. And that's where I sit. It's hard for me to align with anything because there's so much transparent stuff.
Starting point is 01:39:08 Here's my kind of beef with the comedians in the political realm, too. It's like you're arguing with like a wet pig. And it's like if you pin them down, it's like you're a moron who's like, you know, you're just arguing with somebody who's just making jokes all day. And then if you lose, it's like, oh, you lost some debate to some moron who's like a comedian just making jokes. It's John Stewart did this to Tucker Carlson once on my crossfire. He's like, oh, you're taking me seriously. Like, what kind of moron are you?
Starting point is 01:39:31 You're supposed to be the serious political guy. So it's like, you know, engage and, you know, they win. I think John Stewart, though, holds himself as a serious political guy. Well, you don't think, like, Dave Smith or even Michael Rappaport also hold themselves to be serious political guys? They definitely do. I would say Dave Smith does. So I think at the end of the day, it's not, I don't think he defends himself with that comedy angle. I would be surprised that John Stewart do that.
Starting point is 01:39:57 I haven't seen that clip. Yeah. Because I would say that almost because going through the daily show, was it a while ago? It was back when Tucker Carlson was on CNN. At that point, though, he was still a comedy. No, but I think that's true while talking to any, having a political debate with any comedian. I think it's still a whole... I think finding the humor in it, though, is fair.
Starting point is 01:40:16 I mean, if you're going to talk about anything in life, politics is still fair game. So you're allowed to argue it as a comic the same way as you're allowed to argue anything else. I mean, it's the same, I mean, across the board. I mean, if you see something wrong, you're allowed to point it out. I guess my beef is that comedians just barely aren't even... They're not funny anymore. They're just yapping and bitching about politics. A lot yapping and bitching about politics.
Starting point is 01:40:37 Thanks for your nice lecture. You're not, you know, Dave Chappelle, where you got to that point in your career, where you could just give me a long lecture and I'll think you're funny no matter what. It's just like, why are you bitching and moaning on stage? Make a joke. Like, that's funny. Well, I love Dave, but I mean, I would argue that the element of that is the turnout an hour because everything's content online now.
Starting point is 01:40:54 And I would put that in movies. I'd put that in a lot of things. I think we stopped creating art and we started creating content. Yeah, I think, and it's worth, it's worth noting that if you're watching a comedian stand-up, then they tend to be funny like if you watch Dave stand up Dave's fun but if you're watching
Starting point is 01:41:11 like Dave on a podcast Dave is not doing standup on a podcast and he's not on a podcast because he's a comedian he's on a podcast because he's a libertarian activist almost all the time right like very rarely does Dave go on to a podcast as
Starting point is 01:41:27 Dave Smith the comedian like he's a funny guy and so he might crack some jokes but he's not there specifically because of Dave Smith, the comedian, he's there because he's a political activist. He's there because he's a libertarian. My thing, too, is if you look at, okay, if there's an authenticity to it, right? Now, if I look at a lot of people in the right-wing sphere that I've met personally, they're not authentic. They're lying. They're just saying something to make money. I've met
Starting point is 01:41:56 plenty of these people. They have other people write all their stuff. They're not actually bringing out what their natural opinion is. You've said everything you feel today off the top of your head. I've watched it. There's an authenticity to you. So I believe you. I enjoy talking to you. It's what I felt about everybody in this room. But I've met plenty of people who aren't that person. So you meet so many inauthentic people in this sphere that I look at those people and go, well, isn't that the same uninformed person, but they're making 100% of what they do in this? It's a fair point. I guess. And yes. Yeah. All right. We're going to. Oh, no, no. I think it's, I mean, and I do agree.
Starting point is 01:42:34 I mean, there are a lot of people that I do find mind-numbingly painful to watch now because of this. Like, I wish I fell into politics sort of incidentally.
Starting point is 01:42:46 But I think comedy's number one man. And I think it always should be for any comic. That's how I personally feel about it. All right. We're going to go to super chat. So smash the like button,
Starting point is 01:42:56 share the show with everyone you know. Go on over to rumble.com, become a member. then head on over to timcast.com and join our Discord where you can hang out with like-minded people and you can call into the after show. You can talk to us, talk to our guests, ask questions. But right now we're going to go to your super chats.
Starting point is 01:43:15 And I think we're going to start with some rumble rants here. Shane H. Wilder says Rwanda just agreed to take up to 250 of the deported illegal aliens. If they want them, they can have them. They can put them in Don Cheadle's Hotel. I'd rather go back to whatever South American country than in Africa, I mean, damn. I mean...
Starting point is 01:43:33 I mean, what are you going to share the food? Rwanda. But the reason that they're, that they're, ostensibly the reason they're going to South America or to Africa or countries in Africa is because the countries of origin don't want them back because they're actual criminals. Like they're the, the bad guys that, the bad hombres that Trump has sworn to get, or, you know, was said that he's going to be. get rid of so look i am as pro deportation as it come as you can get like send them back send them back by the bus load by the plane load i don't care just send them back do you think there's any exception personally no my opinion is that everyone that's here illegally should go we should have a moratorium on all immigration uh for the next 10 years and so that
Starting point is 01:44:26 way the people that are here legally can assimilate and the only people that should be left let in are like possibly oh one visas and it shouldn't there should be a stringent there should be stringent requirements to those oh one visas as well like you have to come you can't be someone that's like you know if you're if you have anti-american sentiments if you're some kind of socialist or you don't believe in in america's values then you shouldn't be allowed in i'm very very strict about what we should do when it comes to you what if you're hot like a Columbia. See, now this is the Alex Stein
Starting point is 01:45:00 Big Booty Latina argument and I still say no they have to go home. He's not even dating a Big Booty Latina that guy. And his whole his whole shtick is Big Booty Latina and he has the whitest girlfriend I could ever, you could ever imagine. No, I have to work next to the man. It's all afrored. You comedians, you can't trust him.
Starting point is 01:45:17 No. That's not call him a comedian. Now, what? We're gaykeeping it now, huh? I got scared for something. Alex is a good friend of mine but yeah nobody nobody can stay everyone has to go if you're here legally you have to go
Starting point is 01:45:35 and I would go so far if you're like this close you got a family and a dog they can all go dog can stay but the kids would be kosher that's the issue they'd have anchor babies so the children are citizens you've been in the country for 30 years the kids the kids can come back when they're 18
Starting point is 01:45:52 like send them back with the parents legal age yeah when they're legal age to come then they can come back because they're U.S. citizens, but they have to leave with the parents, then they can come back. And you can't chain my great back either because you were here illegally. You don't get to come back when your kids come back. I'm the kind of guy that thinks that we should actually punish business owners that hire illegals. And I think that if you rent your apartment or, you know, some kind of room or whatever, a house to an illegal, you should lose the house. like I'm I want to make it I want to make it as the thing that I want is I want to make it as uncomfortable for illegals to be here as possible so that way they decide to leave of their own volition so we don't have to have ice going and kicking indoors and finding people and stuff the more difficult you make so this sounds mean right but it's actually the most the most compassionate way to do it make it incredibly difficult for them to live here tax remittances that
Starting point is 01:46:53 90% do everything you can to make it as uncomfortable and unwelcoming here. So that way they decide to leave on their own. So we don't have to have ICE go and confront people. You don't have to arrest people. You don't have to have the police interactions. I think the ice show is the problem. Yeah. I think the way, if we can tone that down, that would be the best way to handle.
Starting point is 01:47:15 We tax the remittances, you're going to save a lot of money on ice because that's the number one thing is people want to send money back to their homeland. make it leave themselves you wouldn't even have to worry about it the more difficult and more uncomfortable it is to be here as an illegal the better so that way they leave on their own and then like look man you want to give them a thousand dollars to leave i'm good with that too give them two thousand if you leave and you use the app and say look here i am in my my home country and i left we'll send you two thousand dollars there you go like the the point isn't that i'm trying to hurt these people the point is i want as many people to that are here illegally to leave americans of their own volition, you know, buy their own plane tickets, so that way ICE doesn't have to get involved. And the more uncomfortable it is to be here, the more people will leave. And then we shut the border down for a decade. So that way the people that are here can assimilate. Everybody has to learn English. The federal government should stop making any kind of paperwork or anything in any other language. They shouldn't provide translators. You have to learn English. And my argument for that is
Starting point is 01:48:20 because, look, everybody that speaks the same language, if you understand English, you can understand the concepts. There are certain concepts and jokes that don't, like, there are jokes specifically, right? That's the easiest to understand. Like, they don't make sense in other languages, or there are jokes that make sense in another language that don't make sense in English. That's because of the way that language works. So if you all speak the same language, then you can understand the same concepts.
Starting point is 01:48:47 It's far easier for people to understand the same concepts. So these things, I think, would actually make people that are here illegally leave, and it'll make sure that we can become a country that is less divided because we all share more commonality. Good answer. Thank you. Anyways, let's see. Mike the Wap says, I liked him, but when he's gone, it's like the teacher's out. There's a substitute and you get to fool around.
Starting point is 01:49:17 Clank. Oh, you're a clanker. he's talking about, he's talking about the Rizzler Sticks, the robots, Hacks and Hammer. No, stick. Oh, I thought that was a slur. I thought it was a slur for robot, Klinger.
Starting point is 01:49:29 No, the spoon. Dirty clankers coming for our jobs. Yeah, those wirebacks. No, he's a fan of Sticks, Hexonhammer, and Sticks is great, he's great. Should have him on the show. I don't, I don't know that he travels, but... Shout out to Stix.
Starting point is 01:49:42 It's great. No, he's a YouTube personality. Oh. Political commentator usually doesn't wear a shirt, I believe. Accentric, cool guy, Bert. Nice. Let's see.
Starting point is 01:49:55 S.H.22 says, this is what happens when you have women left to raise their kids alone, be it from death, jail, criminal enterprise, no positive male role model leads the way to this crap in D.C. I mean, look, man, there's a lot of people that complain about toxic masculinity and stuff, but, like, young men are raised by single mothers and they're instructed. by women in schools so if the problem is young men who's teaching these young men you know it's it's not positive male role models you know yeah i mean a dad needs to be involved in a kid's life just as much and if they choose to be out of it that's on them yeah and like if you if you choose to be
Starting point is 01:50:40 out of your kid's life you're a garbage yeah you're a bad person right there's been nothing better for me than having a kid yeah i'll take that a little bit further, you need to marry your baby mama or your scumbag. Take care of that kid for at least 18 years and then divorce. Otherwise, you know. Pretend. Just pretend in front of the kid.
Starting point is 01:51:00 Well, don't do the crime if you can't do the time. It's lirping. It's lirping. Yeah, you shouldn't be boning women that you just sneak out to one of them wax shacks. You know what I mean? Get a little rubbing tug. I mean, look, any closet in an internet connection is one of them wax shacks nowadays.
Starting point is 01:51:16 Yeah, that's true. It's a specific thing. Just you and another you can beat each other's beard? You know what I mean. Michael McCord says they need a RICO-like charge for adults who convince or order juveniles to commit crime. That's not a bad idea.
Starting point is 01:51:32 I think that's a very good idea. Yeah. Some kind of, you know, something to say you're committing, you're committing this crime as well as the child. I don't disagree, but I don't think this is stopping the quote-unquote, youth from the youth
Starting point is 01:51:49 DC crimes and like a New York Post headline right now. I was a juvenile criminal though so I kind of crime uh well murder drugs alcohol not much murder not much just a wee just a small amount when weed was bad the normal amount of murder when weed was very illegal I don't know 20 years ago
Starting point is 01:52:08 I don't know super illegal yeah oh no it was very illegal you had to go to terrible places to get it now you just walk into a store you had to go to terrible places everywhere like the mall You're hard to avoid. You're like CBS. Yeah. Yeah. Now you just walk into Kroger.
Starting point is 01:52:22 Yeah. You use your card for gas points. The nursery sector. Yeah. It's nuts. But yeah, I think it's, I think you should get a chance, though, depending on where you were raised, what's going on in your house. I think you deserve an opportunity to turn your life around at that age. But if you are of an age where you're 30-something years old convincing kids to go out and do this stuff, you should absolutely catch a RICO charge for that.
Starting point is 01:52:44 That is trafficking. Yeah. Something. I mean, something. Not that it's... It'll detort. I'm not saying it'll stop these kids from doing illegal things,
Starting point is 01:52:52 but I think it'll stop some. Yeah, I don't know that it's a deterrent. I do like the idea of it being a punishment, though. Like, I think that most criminals don't look at the law as a deterrent. If they're the kind of person that's going to break the law, they're going to break the law regardless.
Starting point is 01:53:09 Prison fundamentally isn't a deterrent. It's just about incapacitation. Yeah, well, I mean, it's literally about taking the most violent people in our society off the streets and isolating the... That's why, like, when they plea insanity, it makes no sense. We're, like, I'm too insane to go to jail.
Starting point is 01:53:21 It's like, no, you're, like, the person that needs to go to jail. What do you mean? Perfect candidate to go to jail. You're too insane to sit in court all day? Well, then you should be put on lithium and locked up. Yeah. Definitely taking off the streets. Well, I also think if you look at, like, look at a 14-year-old and then look at high school
Starting point is 01:53:38 and think about how long that was for you. Think of the idea of the, like, you don't get how short of a period of time that is in that time frame. That's forever for you. You can learn a lesson in that amount of time It's not like it's now It's not like you have a grasp of time Like when you're that old
Starting point is 01:53:53 You still have an opportunity to change yourself And I know a lot of people who have It's beautiful story of redemption Exactly They are real, some of them are Not Rudy That guy, he didn't do shit Come on
Starting point is 01:54:08 You nagged somebody Until they let you play And you go around talking about How you did something Rudy didn't do shit Rofio 1804 says Ahoy Dave I love Norm World
Starting point is 01:54:24 And I'm buying a fuzzy memoir tonight You are the man Thank you That's your book correct My book party of one of fuzzy memoir Where can they find it? They can find it on Amazon.com And the audiobook is coming out
Starting point is 01:54:38 At the end of the month Did you do the audiobook? Yes, I'm working on it right now Awesome But I'm trying to add some stuff to it So it's not just reading make it a little bit more unique. Ad-libbing.
Starting point is 01:54:48 A little ad-living, and then I'm adding a little bit of some music stuff to it. Oh, nice. And just some sound effects, making a little bit different. And, you know, like police brutality and some other things I went through. But it's about my different arrests, stuff that I had to deal with, being locked in a mental hospital, stuff like that. Oh, okay. Nice. Bueno Malillo says, it's mortgage fraud because he claimed both his California home and Maryland home were both his primary.
Starting point is 01:55:14 residents. We can live in work in Maryland as a congressman, but he called it his primary for better local, for better loan terms. Yeah, we were talking about that. Look, man, I, uh, I do think that that they should do everything they can to make his day miserable. I'm not a fan of Adam Schiff. I think that the whole Russia thing was, uh, was garbage and he was one of the most guilty of pushing that narrative so if they want to you know make his his life miserable because the process is the punishment i'm all for it's got gay face he does have gay face they love that in california yeah that's why he's a senator that tastes funny right is he straight i don't i mean he might pretend to be there's no way though with those cheeks it looks like he's storing semen for the winter
Starting point is 01:56:12 Wyatt Claydenberg says Alad the feds could only convict Al Capone on tax evasion He murdered people Sometimes you have to get them on whatever you can Sometimes you just got to get him on mortgage fraud I mean Whatever it happens to be
Starting point is 01:56:29 That's all you could get sometimes You got to take what you could get He also let him out of Elcatraz Because his brain was rotting from incurable syphilis And he was fishing in his pool Oh It's true That's wild
Starting point is 01:56:42 Yeah, can you imagine And they were all watching them like the feds And they're like, I don't think we need to watch There's no way he's pretending all day Awesome Josh O says All That Remains is a favorite band Thank you very much sir
Starting point is 01:56:57 Found Timcast by your stuff As a cop I have enjoyed y'all's content There are some things y'all say about cops I 100% agree with Love y'all and you too Dave Thank you That's funny because I think we can trash cops On this show a relative amount
Starting point is 01:57:10 The other day I was on, Tim was like, NYPD, yeah, they're a bunch of commies. So, thank you for, we love law enforcement here. I see you guys are doing your great job. Josh is like, yeah, they are, though. So. There you go. This is a show for you.
Starting point is 01:57:28 Coffee Jerk 85 says, reanimating a dead teenager, just to have them voice over your political views to the public is frigging ghoulish. I'll take 19-84 over this S any day. I do think ghoulish is the, proper term for that. It's pretty gross. Yeah, you should only reanimate
Starting point is 01:57:44 a dead teenager for sex. Yeah. Right? I mean, I think we all know that. Yeah, I mean, you're kind of preaching to the... I mean, 18, but yeah, thank you. I mean, I'm not saying under. Of course. Of course. How old was Sean Benet? 18, right?
Starting point is 01:58:01 I don't know. Man, if she's not, I better... I got some hard drives to break. Three years of hard. work. Oh, boy. Oh, boy. And I do mean hard. That is not a floppy disk. Let's see. Wushito Kai says, by that logic, if you're pro-Israel, you're anti-Christian. Why don't you ask the average Israeli what they think of Christians? A Jew can be an anti-Zionist and not anti-Jew. What do you think of Christians a lot? Where'd this guy come from? I love Christians and the Jewish state exists due to the continued support of Christians. The Christians are the Jews keepers in this planet. There's not enough Jews to be able to do it by ourselves. So if we didn't have, we're definitely not getting the support from Muslims in which there are billions of. So, you know, the Jews and the Israeli state, the state of Israel exists to the good blessings and hard support from Christians. Well, and it's pretty clear that they want everyone dead who's not them.
Starting point is 01:59:10 who's they Muslim oh okay that's not being I'm not being racist I'm being just dead accurate to their book so why would you side with that
Starting point is 01:59:21 that's not I'm not even saying get rid of them or anything against them I'm just saying that is the actual goal of the Quran is that they should inherit the earth they have a whole PVP enabled server they should just stay there
Starting point is 01:59:34 out of Europe stay out of America and the quick tidbit the way that anti-Israel sentiment manifests in our country is mostly from the left thinking that Israel is white and right wing coded. That's the reason why far leftists say to Israel because they believe Israel Israel are white people. So I think it's a fascinating, I don't know, coalition we have of some people on the far right and some people on the far left being anti-Israel when for all other
Starting point is 02:00:00 intents and purposes, these people should absolutely hate each other. How much crap do you get from like Roypers and stuff on the internet? Not much. I don't, I mean, I just post my journalism too. So, you know, reporting, I think, speaks for itself. You don't really interact on the old age. No, no. I'm not yapping on Twitter. I feel like people posture all day on Twitter. It's brain rotting stuff, frankly.
Starting point is 02:00:20 Isn't the number one name in Ireland, Muhammad? I believe. Doesn't that say something? I don't know about Ireland, but I believe that in the UK. Yeah, so yeah, you have like Muhammad O'Reilly. I mean, that's a problem, right? Raymond G. Stanley Jr. says, Killer show Dave is leading the revolution.
Starting point is 02:00:44 Oh, thank you. I don't know where that's going. Where are we going after? Where are we going to McDonald's? All right, well, listen, share the show with your friends. Everyone you know, smash the like button. Share the show with everyone you know. Can I pimp a thing real quick?
Starting point is 02:01:03 Yeah, absolutely. We were about to get there. Oh, good. I didn't know. I don't want to interrupt you. Dave, you got anything that you want to plug? I'm sorry.
Starting point is 02:01:09 Yes, please. I just wrote an article. It was one of my first ones called in defense of Kwame Kilpatrick. It's on, if you can go to blazeunlimited.com, you can use code Dave 20 for $20 off a subscription. It includes my show Normal World
Starting point is 02:01:24 and tour dates, Dave landout.com. Sorry, I didn't mean to jump in. That's quite all right. Do you have an X account or anything? I do. It's at Landout Dave. Okay.
Starting point is 02:01:33 And yeah, that's, Instagram, I think, is similar. Just go to DaveLanda.com. It'll guide you. Perfect. It'll guide you where you want to go. Awesome. There you go. Yeah, you can follow me on X and Instagram at Real Tate Brown. Doing a lot of shows randomly.
Starting point is 02:01:49 So, yeah, follow me on there. I'll let you know. It's because of that sickness that's been going around. For whatever reason, I'm just immune. I think I have antibodies or I got the J&J vaccine. Maybe that's what it is. There you go. That's a heart stopper.
Starting point is 02:02:01 Yeah, it's a good one. A lot. No, you're just next up, Tate. That's what it is. I just realized all you guys are wearing hats, by the way. Alad Eliyahu, White House correspondent. Recently, I've also been doing a lot of coverage outside of New York City immigration courts witnessing ICE detain illegal aliens, which has been very dramatic, thrilling work. All of that is on my Twitter and Instagram.
Starting point is 02:02:22 Thank you guys for tuning on. I am Phil that remains on Twix, and the band is all that remains. You can find us on YouTube, Apple Music, Amazon, Music, Pandora, Spotify, and Deezer. If you are a Rumble member, stick around for the after. show. If not, you should become a member. Everyone else, we will see you tomorrow. Thank you.

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