Timcast IRL - GOP Redistricting BLOCKED, Republicans DEFECT & Align With Democrats w/ Mark Herman
Episode Date: May 13, 2026Tate, Ian, Raymond, and Chris are joined by Mark Herman to discuss Republicans' block South Carolina redistricting, ICE exposes 10,000 potential fraud cases, a California mayor admits working as an ag...ent for China, a Trump official caught admitting to internal subversion plot against Trump, and SpaceX & Google to put data centers in space. SUPPORT THE SHOW BUY CAST BREW COFFEE NOW - https://castbrew.com/ Join - / @timcastirl Hosts: Tim @Timcast (everywhere) Ian @IanCrossland (everywhere) | https://graphene.movie/ Raymond @RaymondGStanley (X) Chris @ChrisKarr17 (X) Producer: Carter @carterbanks (X) | @trashhouserecords (YT) Guest: Mark Herman @MarkJHerman (X) Podcast available on all podcast platforms! For advertising inquiries please email sponsorships@rumble.com GOP Redistricting BLOCKED, Republicans DEFECT & Align With Democrats | Timcast IRL
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Republicans have won the redistricting war quite decisively, but not without some hangups.
Lots of court action going on throughout the country.
The Democrats are not going down without a fight.
So we're going to get into all of that.
There's quite a few stories on the redistricting front.
I'm sure you guys are all sick and tired of hearing about it.
But this is potentially we're talking about decades of Republican dominance in this country,
despite the demographics not quite going their way.
So we're going to get into all of that, a lot of big stories on that front.
We also have ICE cracking down big time on one of the most egregious visa scamming mills I think we've ever seen in this country.
Absolutely unbelievable stuff going on specifically around student visas.
You might think that that's innocent.
We're just talking about, you know, some people just trying to get their caps and gowns.
Far more nefarious things going on in the student visa universe and ice is cracking down hard.
We have a California mayor going down with CCP ties.
I think that's to be expected.
I don't know if you've kept tabs.
I don't know if you're really much of a politico, but the happenings in California.
California aren't exactly the most pro-American, at least not thus far, and a mayor has gone down
with CCP ties, quite interesting stuff happening. We're going to get into that. We have a few
other stories we'll get to throughout the show. But with that, we're very pleased to have you
guys with us. And I believe we have a few advertisers that we need to give a shout out to before we
start the show, but we'll get that going in some time. Before we do, obviously I want to give a shout
out to the Discord. Everyone hanging out in the Discord, very happy to have some fantastic Timcast
members you can out over to timcast.com
check out our Discord to get involved
get involved in the action some very
exciting stuff so if you haven't clicked away yet
because there's no Tim head on over to Discord
go hang out in there first and then come back and hang out on the show
it's going to be a very beautiful thing but yes Tim he's out today
unfortunately a little under the weather so I'm holding it down
for you guys because as you may know Phil is on tour
he's on a nationwide tour and barking I don't know where he is right now
does anyone know what city Phil's in right now it's kind of the Santa
tracker you know we need like the Phil
where is that man beard yeah he's he's
He's somewhere, I think he's on the East Coast still, so he's still in our hearts and in our minds.
But with that, we're going to get today's show.
I have a fantastic guest today. Mark, how you doing?
I'm doing well. Thanks for having me. Really excited to be here.
Yeah, could you give the people a quick intro of who you are and what you do?
Yeah, I'm Mark Herman. I am the former director for Candace Owens, even more former, former director for Daily Wire.
Currently, the host of the new podcast, Marksplained, where I mansplained things, but I'm Mark.
Let's go. Mark's like a mansplained. I see what you did there. That's really cleverer stuff.
I love it.
Well, thanks for coming on.
Yeah, thanks for you got Chris hanging out.
What's going on, man?
Happy to be back.
Thanks for having me.
I think it's our first time on any sort of Tim Cash show.
Indeed it is.
I had a lot of discussions in the room over there, so excited to get into everything.
Awesome.
I love the Tate cover.
Yeah, yeah.
Because he is, you know, Tate Brown's always holding it down.
So I appreciate that.
I look forward to Mark hanging out with him.
Especially tonight.
He is holding it down.
There's a bit of a coup happened, actually.
It's more of like a Wagner style.
Tim is healthy.
It's just that.
Yeah.
If the chat gets rowdy enough, we will present proof of life,
but I don't think we're there yet.
So we got Ian hanging out.
I'm going to derail this every chance.
Please.
I'm just kidding.
I promise you, I'm just kidding.
I love it.
How's it going?
How's it going?
Good man.
I'm going out too.
What up?
I'm hanging out.
Thank you all for joining me.
And I'm excited to get into this.
Yeah, we've got a fantastic panel,
some rock stars on the panel tonight.
So let's get into this first story.
I'm sure you guys are sick and tired of hearing about it.
But again, like I said, absolutely vital stuff.
This is really important stuff to pay attention to.
First is, I got to say,
it looks like the Republicans have decisively won,
the redistricting battle. Now, as soon as we sort of kicked that bees nest, I was pretty skeptical
this was going to go a positive direction because, as we know, the Republican is the party of
managing decline, and then the Democrats are the party of just declining. So I wasn't too hopeful when
we sort of kicked off this entire redistricting saga. And as time went on, I felt vindicated.
I saw, you know, Indiana, various other states across the country. The GOP sat on their hands.
They came up with the reasons for why we shouldn't or can't redistrict. It was really some pathetic stuff.
We saw the Virginia redistricting race where the Republicans put pennies behind that race, and the Democrats put a war chest behind the redistricting battle.
It was really blackpilling for a while.
It was not too thrilled with the direction that things were going, but fates have turned around.
We got a decisive decision, obviously, from the Supreme Court, gutting the Voting Rights Act, which sounds, you know, kosher on its face, right?
Oh, yeah, we want voters to have rights.
Well, obviously it was used, utilized by the Democrats for quite nefarious purposes, basically consolidating.
as much power that they were not entitled to as possible.
So first thing that dropped, obviously, we had some news here.
Missouri Supreme Court upholds legislators' midterm congressional redistricting map.
So this is a good white pill here.
This is good news, obviously, is that the Supreme Court, as we've seen in Virginia
at the state's level, can intervene if they feel that things are not quite passing the sniff test.
Well, Missouri, we're in the clear.
This is where people were a little more concerned, obviously, and this is what we have in the title.
And this is a bit concerning, obviously, if this was a bit concerning, obviously, if this
happening while we were underwater in the redistricting battle. People would have been quite
outraged, but I think everyone's taking a victory lap right now, so it doesn't seem to be
discussed as much. This is concerning stuff from Yahoo News. South Carolina Republicans tank redistricting
for now. That is the key contingent here. The South Carolina Senate just made it harder for the
state to draw its congressional map, resisting pressure from President Donald Trump.
Lawmakers on Tuesday failed to reach the two-thirds majority needed to approve a measure that would
have allowed them to take up a vote on redistricting even after the legislative session ends later this
week. And then this is the sort of egregious thing, but this is what we're kind of used to.
Five Republicans hopped across the aisle, joined all Democrats in voting against the proposal.
Henry McMaster, the governor of South Carolina could still call a special session,
though his office, so far has dismissed this idea. So we have good news, bad news. And then here
is an example of something in a blue state where it appears that, again, conservatives are
going on offense, which is unbelievable that I'm even saying that. I never thought that would
happen from Democracy Docket, a really reputable source here.
Right-wing group sues Illinois and first post-Clay attack on the state voting right act.
Of course, Illinois is probably one of the most egregious gerrymanders in this country.
It looks like you spilled a bowl of spaghetti.
But yes, the Republicans, by extension, the conservative movement going on offense here.
Finally, we have, this was from Sean Davis.
He has the copy here.
Notice has been given to all Democrats in the Tennessee House that all members of the Democrat caucus
are being removed from all standing committees and subcommittees as a result of their behavior
in the State House during the redistricting debates last week, which included setting fires inside
of the Capitol and attacking law enforcement.
In the state of Tennessee, political terrorism will not be tolerated.
National Republicans take note that this is how you exercise power.
So guys, how are we feeling about this redistricting battle?
I think we're in the clear yet.
What do you think the future is looking like for the political composition of this country?
I think it's just going to get crazier and crazier.
But as a Tennessee resident myself, I love that.
I love that they're actually holding people to account.
because there's been issues in the past with members of the state house acting up.
I want to say to them like Justin Jenkins or something close to that.
They were protesting on the floor and I'll just it.
Yeah, I'm sorry.
And it's good to see them actually hold people to account.
But I don't know.
What's the, I guess what's their main issue with the redistricting?
Because they were fine, Democrats were fine when that happened in California.
If you look at California, it's just solid blue.
Yeah.
So they're against it when it works against.
them or yeah of course yeah of course if democrats if they are winning then they love it if they
lose the um supreme court ruling which would take i wouldn't say they gutted the um the ruling voting
rights act they didn't gut it they just upheld a lot by the sure yeah yeah so when they get
when democrats can't break the law or do what they want to do illegally or kind of twist things up
they get upset when like actually the real laws held to the ground and what they're supposed to be
yeah i think it would be i agree because actually what
what they did was they kept all the bones of the VRA intact. I think gutting that language I use
is specifically regarding the current Democrat interpretation of the VRA, which is effectively
just, look, I'll just cut the chase here. It's effectively a black supremacist interpretation
where they're just saying, no, we're entitled to districts because of our race. It is absolutely
absurd, and the Supreme Court obviously came down on the right side of that decision regarding,
yeah, Tennessee. I mean, I'm a Tennessee native. I don't know how many people in the audience
can relate to that, and I'm from Memphis. So this is something that I'm quite familiar with.
and Justin Pearson, you brought him up.
I mean, this is this guy who literally,
if you look at videos like 10 years ago,
he was like a just basic normie, like, theater kid
in his university.
And he was like, hello, I'm Justin Peter Pearson,
and I'm looking to work across the aisle
and I'm looking for bipartisanship connection.
Flash forward 10 years,
he's doing this like basically minstrel show
on the floor of the Tennessee Congress.
I mean, it's unbelievable.
He's got his big afro that he's like,
and then he's like larping like he's like a reverend.
I mean, it is really egregious,
unbelievable stuff. And to your point, or to the point of both of you guys, I mean, yeah, of course,
the Democrats here feel especially threatened because, again, they're losing a beachhead
and what is becoming the center of the United States, which is the South. And the reason that's
important, the reason why they're specifically so concerned about what's happening in these southern
states is because, again, if you look at how what the next census is going to look like, again,
the way that the direction of the country is going, the South is going to be dominating the
political spectrum. I mean, they're going to be dominating the presidential elections. That's where
a lot of these electoral votes are heading towards in the next census. And so the Democrats understand that
if, again, the entire South becomes ruby red, they're in serious trouble for the next few decades
as far as winning goes. I mean, they're in serious trouble. Kind of aligns with all these people
leaving the Democratic Party over the last eight years since the mask came off of the machine.
and I think you're just kind of seeing a sorting realignment throughout the electorate now.
It is, I mean, like you were saying, Mark, it looks like escalation.
Like it's, I just mean escalation towards more of it.
And like, I've been like, okay, the United States is transitioning to a technocracy,
a global technocracy led by American military economic force, whatever.
This is like the most stark indication of that.
This is such a transition of American governance.
I've never seen anything like it in my life.
The way that the voter, the electorate's going to change in six months is so drastic.
But I mean, we need, I think we need drastic change.
Yeah.
Well, I think what's interesting is, you know, this was the fear for the longest time with various Republican strategists.
It's just because of the nature of the changing demographics of the United States,
it was thought that the Republicans would be increasingly politically unviable.
Because again, we've seen the non-white percentage of the country grow, I mean, exponentially
over the last 60 to 70 years.
What is the primary voting group that will turn out the ballot and check an hour on the ballot?
It is white voters.
So again, as white voters, their share of the electorate shrunk, that was kind of the common
thinking is that the Republican Party would shrink along with it.
So that's what makes this so dramatic, is we've seen two things happening.
One, in the last presidential election, we're seeing the Democrats lose their monopoly on non-white
voters.
We saw especially Hispanics surge in support for the Republican Party, and there's a lot of reasons for that that we could get into if we want.
I think it was primarily Trump's Cinco de Mayo tweet 10 years ago.
Marianne Brand, his Mexican food out of wall around it and everything.
Yeah, absolutely.
And, you know, something that we can get into, and I don't know if this is a little too controversial for anyone to discuss, but I think it's true, is there's this idea that, you know, with the Obama Rainbow Coalition, that all non-white voters were this one giant monolith.
But I think we learned during 2020 that maybe Hispanic Americans and black Americans don't quite see eye to eye on everything.
I think that's fair to say.
And we've seen Hispanic voters react at 2020.
Again, the Democrats sort of, you know, their entire culture that they have kind of developed was very black-centric.
And I think Hispanic voters did react to that.
I think that's fair to say.
And again, Trump was just presenting a non-racial pro-American policy.
And they said, well, that's why we came to this country in the first place because we wanted to participate in America, not a specific ethnic grievance-based, you know, culture.
or zeit guys. They just want to be in America.
And so again, I think that's why Trump was able to resonate with them.
And again, kind of break up that Democrat power block.
And then the second part of that initial point that I was making is, again, just the shifts
that we're seeing and redistricting in these sorts of things.
Again, it's shifting the ball back to the Republicans court.
The immigration, you know, mass immigration, 20 million people pissed off so many.
And just not even like black people or Mexican people or whatever.
Southerners, like people or people that like minorities that were then displaced.
by immigrants and they're like, what are you doing?
People, yeah, I agree with you.
The black vote for Trump was like, and I'm not much of a monolithic, you know,
regard error either, but it was notable.
Yeah, rural Americans, they care.
People who consider themselves Americans care about these illegals come and getting
jumping in front of the lines.
Real immigrants, legal immigrants are real pissed too because they had to go through,
spend all this money, do all this paperwork, and all these people get to jump through
with the front and line and they get to get and they get their hotels and houses section a whatever
else they get paid welfare checks and just regular everyday americans are not like this illegal
bullish yeah and i think the general um the general perception of how immigrants will view
america and view the republican party will change in this trump to paradigm because again it's much
tougher to immigrate to this country now under president trump's in a second term and so the people that
come here you're basically you're basically guaranteeing that these people want to be here where i think
maybe since in the post-heartseller America, the majority, maybe not the majority,
I think it's fair to say the majority of immigrants that were coming here,
were coming here because of potential economic prosperity, right?
There was a huge departure in the way that immigrants decided to come to America,
where before Hartzeller, it was more of a lifestyle adjustment.
They were seeking freedom.
They were seeking liberty.
They wanted to buy into the American project.
Post-heart-seller, a lot of the immigrants that were coming here,
I would argue the majority of immigrants that were coming here,
were coming here primarily for economic prosperity, which again, can you blame them?
Not really.
But the problem is we're not running a charity here, we're running a country.
What is Hard Seller?
Heart Seller was the 1965 Immigration Act, which basically changed the entirety of how we conducted
immigration.
So prior to the Hart Seller Act, credence was given to immigrants from countries that would
be perceived to be more culturally assimable into the United States.
Post-Hart Seller Act that basically removed any pretense gave the American zero discretion
over who should come from where and effectively viewed the entire global population as a
blank slate that could be rewritten with American values, which I would argue.
failed quite extensively.
And it makes zero sense.
It makes zero sense.
Sorry.
You can't take someone who has nothing like American.
I don't want to, certain countries say, okay, you live in, say, in South Asian nation,
and they're used to throwing your trash out on the street every day.
And that's how you get rid of it.
You can't come to America and think that's going to be culturally relevant, or you can't assimilate.
That's heart seller.
We need before heart seller.
You could, like, if you have a different culture and a different religion, that's a
hard seller right there.
We're talking about selling.
Hard seller.
If you have a Christian that's like an Indian Christian or a Pakistani Christian, that's,
you know, a lot easier.
Or like an American Muslim, that's a lot easier.
It's a little tricky because I'll push back a little bit because I do think a British
atheist, like a Carl Benjamin, is going to assimilate much easier into the United States
than a Christian Haitian.
I mean, Haiti is majority Christian.
And they've had a very difficult time assimilating in the United States because I'm saying
this as a Christian, as someone that is chauvinistically.
Christian, I will acknowledge that there has to be a little bit more to their ability to
assimilate into the United States than just sharing, you know, a vague Christian worldview.
I think would you consider like British people and American people of the same culture?
Broadly, yeah. I would say that Oron McIntyre made this point on Tucker Carlson Show,
actually, where he was sort of walking through, he was doing a retrospective on sort of the founding
of America, what was a certain spirit around the foundation of the United States. And he argued,
and I think this is correct, that again, fundamentally the American identity at the time of the founding
was sort of an Anglo-Protestine identity, as in these were descendants from the Puritans, these were
descendants from the Cavaliers that settled the South, even the Scots-Irish were kind of bought in on this
idea.
So he was basically making the contention that if you're not in that group, that doesn't mean you have
zero stake in the country or you're not an American or anything.
That's ridiculous.
What he was saying was the closer you get to that identity, the closer you are to sort of that
core American understanding of sort of what it means to be an American that you would sort of
see from the founders.
I mean, the overwhelming majority of the founders were, again, a British stock.
Again, they were Protestants.
Again, this isn't to say you can't be.
That's, I don't think anyone's making that contention.
It's just saying, if the people are coming to this country, what are they going to assimilate to?
Well, that identity looks a lot like that Anglo-Protisan identity, even if you're not an Anglo, even if you're not a Protestant.
Fair enough, but that's still kind of shocking to me, because I've always thought that, like, the British and the Americans are, like, different species, not even the same culture.
Yeah?
Oh, yeah.
Yeah.
Like, it's a different culture, but it's a similar culture.
I guess if you have a perverse culture.
would you argue would be more similar culturally to Americans than the British or
the Irish, but maybe I'm predisposed to having that perspective. It could be. Yeah, I mean,
I think the Irish, we're really getting in the weeds here. I think there's kind of a broader,
like maybe anglosphere sort of common identity where I think Australians, Canadians, Irish,
British, I think these people can all come here and it doesn't feel too exotic to them. I think
that would be kind of the key word use as exotic. I mean, I'll say I have people I know quite quite well
from all of these countries.
And they come to the United States and they say, yeah, it's fairly familiar.
We have a lot of the same customs, a lot of the same understandings, a lot of the same
presuppositions, where if someone comes from Somalia, for example, or even to get closer,
if someone came from Albania, even though that's European.
Because this is not a white, I'm not saying this is a exclusionary white thing.
I'm saying it's a very specific culture, very specific nationality.
American is a nation.
And there's a lot of white groups that would have quite a lot of difficulty assimilating into
American life.
Albanians come to mind, Russians.
There's various groups.
Checks.
even checks.
But what is even British culture now?
You've seen so much over the last decade or so of mass immigration.
I've been to England a couple of times, and it's just unrecognizable.
Yeah.
Yeah, I hear a lot of that anecdotally from a lot of people that travel to the world, and they see that in a lot of places.
Well, I think that's the tragic thing across the West is, again, all these, I'm making all these presuppositions if we're talking about these countries.
But again, these countries have fundamentally changed, even the United States, where, again, what would be the Japanese understanding of an American?
and it'd be like, I'm James Johnson and I'm a former Marine and that, and that's like what's in
their video games. But if you look at like Dallas now, I mean, Dallas looks like a like a literal
UN refugee camp. I mean, it is unbelievable what's going on there. Same thing's happening in
Toronto. Same thing's happening in Birmingham and the UK. Same thing's happening in Melbourne,
Australia. Like these countries and it's happening all across the West are just increasingly becoming
unfamiliar. I think that's very fair to say. And again, I'm not making it the contention that
anyone is better or worse. I'm just saying that diversity on the global scale is actually quite a
beautiful thing. You know, the fact that Bangladesh is Bengali or the fact that Nigeria is Nigerian,
that's a very beautiful thing. The idea that a lot of these people are proposing that, you know,
the entire world should just turn into one giant group, like one giant homogenous group that has no
identifiable features, I find quite tragic. And again, this is saying on a global scale,
I think it would be tragic if Eritrea ceased to be Eritrean. If you could snap your fingers in
everyone on earth knew English, would you?
No, no, I think that would be pretty sad.
That'd be a Tower of Babel scenario, basically, so you don't want that to happen.
In Dungeons and Dragons, there's a language called common, and everyone knows common,
and then there's like elvish and dwarfish and all these things, but humans only speak
common.
I think it's a take on American English, and like how Americans only speak common, you know,
they only speak English, but I personally, my thoughts in 2006, when I started doing this was
if we can create a world language, and I like a Tower of Babel reference, but if we had a world
language that it'll be a lot of easier to do this, to win this culture war, like once you get
someone to speak your language, you've basically won them. Do you think that creates peace?
Because, I mean, look at the United States. Everyone here speaks English, and there's quite a bit
of division and difficulty getting along.
I wouldn't say everyone.
Yeah.
At scale, it's funny, because, like, I never really had a problem with multiculturalism in theory
until I started experiencing, like, multiculturalism. And my neighbor, and my neighbor's
in my state, the places where I live, and also seeing how it's impacted all these other countries
to the point where you've diluted what made some of these countries historic.
Yeah.
Well, there's a reason Vermont votes like dictatorial numbers for the Democrat Party, because they're not
exposed to the ramifications of Democrat policy.
Well, Vermont's actually a pretty safe place.
Exactly.
Yeah.
So, yeah, yeah.
Yeah.
So, like, you know, what you would expect from, like, I don't know, a Democrat rule in
California or New York, Vermont is still a very homogenous place.
So the reality is in very homogenous countries and very homogenous communities.
They can try a variety.
of different policy cocktails.
And the actual day-to-day life, the social compact,
it would be very difficult to disrupt that.
I wonder, like, Chris, where you're sorry,
what's the craziest cultural thing you've experienced personally?
I'm open, if any of you guys have, like, a thing that jumps out,
like, I want to hear it.
But I'll have to think about the most appropriate one for YouTube.
And maybe I'll say the more inappropriate one that came immediately to mind
the after show, if anybody else wants to wait.
I lived in L.A. in 2007, 8, 9, and I was in, like, East,
what is it, East L.A., you know, Melrose Hill,
and it was do, do, do, do, do.
or every Sunday.
He gets home.
And it was like, I dug it.
And then my buddy invited me over for Collar Greens, you know, and I'm like hanging out at his house,
I loved it.
I loved it.
But I had a good family.
I wasn't getting like adopted into their culture.
I just liked being like the white guy at the party.
I hang out with all Mexican dudes or South American, Central American dudes that spoke no English.
And I would just think words at them while they would be speaking in Spanish.
And I could like feel their vibe and they would laugh and they love me.
But I don't think most people are like that.
No, and I think that tees into our next story quite well, actually, what led to this?
Well, it was my mass immigration that was kind of disrupted a lot of these things we're talking about.
This is from the post-millennial.
ICE identifies more than 10,000 potential fraud cases nationwide related to foreign student job program.
Unbelievable, unbelievable what's going on in this country.
Thankfully, the Trump administration is on the case.
They are, they're jumping on this.
They're proactive.
Again, ICE has found over 10,000 potential fraud cases involving a program that permits foreign students to
along their stay in the United States after graduating from college by claiming work employment.
The federal investigation into the OPT, that's the optional practice training program,
revealed that thousands of foreign students have been claiming to work at businesses with fraud
indicators, many of which are non-governmental organizations engaged in, quote,
suspicious activities, said ICE acting director, Todd Lyons, during a press conference on Tuesday.
OPT permits foreign nationals to work in the United States for 12 or in certain situations
24 months after entering the country on a student visa.
Additionally, the program enables students to switch to an employer-sponsored H-1B visa,
according to the DHS website.
Quote,
Our nation will not tolerate security threats originating from the foreign student programs.
Today, we are announcing that we have identified over 10,000 foreign students who claim
to be working for highly suspect employers.
That was the ICE director, it was Todd Lyons, making that statement.
again, what we're looking into here, what we're seeing is, as they said, the OPT, this basically
allows these people who came here on student visas to find work and employment in the United
States afterwards, which in theory is like, yeah, that makes total sense.
But the problem is it's being exploited.
What's happening here is they're setting up fake job mills in order to extend that visa,
which is, as I understand it, was a fairly simple process.
You basically just go and say, yeah, I got employed.
I should stay here for next for 12 months.
State Department says, yep, checks out.
Here you go.
You're here for another 12 months.
or in certain cases two years.
And ICE has identified that this has been a loophole that's being exploited, and they're
cracking down hard here.
Were the NGOs that are doing these job mill things that you're talking about?
Yeah, yeah.
So, again, what we're seeing here is, again, it looks like NGOs.
They were involved.
A lot of these employers were set up by immigrant communities themselves, and then in some
cases, NGOs.
And this was effectively their way of keeping these students in the country because they would
not have been able to find employment otherwise.
So it's fraud.
I mean, case in point.
and ice here is obviously cracking down hard.
It's the same as Minnesota fraud.
It's the same as the California fraud.
It's the same as all the fraud that we've been seeing lately.
I mean, people are mad at Trump in the administration for some things,
but this is a big deal.
Like they're doing empty buildings, private homes listed as for hundreds of students,
but no one's there.
Multiple employers using the same address without valid licenses.
It's the same scenario of fraud that they've been doing just on a different scale.
Yeah.
We've seen this.
I mean, Canada is a great example, actually.
of what happens when, again, these programs make a lot of sense.
I mean, again, if everything was functioning as normally,
these programs make a lot of sense.
For example, in Canada, if you are a good student
and then you come to Canada to study,
it makes sense that you would be granted a visa
so you can study in Canada.
Yeah, checks out.
That makes total sense.
But what was happening was, again, immigrant communities,
NGOs were involved, but this was primarily immigrant communities,
specifically India.
They would set up technical colleges,
and if you looked up the address of the technical college,
they said, well, we're purely online, so we don't need a campus.
Okay, you look up the address, and it's a mailbox,
and they're granting like 30,000 student visas.
Because, again, it was a system that when set up,
and, you know, in past decades, worked fine.
I mean, no one would, it never would have occurred to someone
to commit fraud at this level.
But again, as the world changes, again,
as the composition of a lot of these countries changes,
we're facing new problems.
And so Canada had this problem,
and now it looks like in the United States,
we had a similar issue where, again,
And we've cracked down that a little more.
It's more difficult for just colleges you've never heard of to grant student visas.
But the post-school employment loophole is now being clamped down on by ICE.
A lot of the beneficiaries are managed by employees based in India.
I mean, of course.
So they're violating the work and training requirements.
So all these companies, a lot of these companies are saying we're hiring these people
and they're bringing in there, even though it's a wrong address.
There's no, they have tax liens.
They have red flags, has civil lawsuits against them.
They're using these to say that they can stay in the United States
when they should not be staying in the United States.
Well, Canada has a solution for having too many people.
They just tell them to kill themselves, essentially, through a doctor.
So America's not there yet.
Yeah, we're not there yet.
That's kind of extreme.
Yeah, it's like, just kill yourself.
Because Canada, it's a computer spitting out of calculations.
So Canada has universal health care.
And again, if they determine that this person is going to be like a net drain on the taxpayer,
if they were to be treated, that would be the recommendation that would be given to the person.
So people are literally being prescribed suicide by the state because of a math formulation.
I mean, it is absolutely barbaric what is happening all across the West.
The United States is a bit insulated because obviously state power, believe it or not,
isn't quite as encompassing in the United States as it is elsewhere.
And it's pretty bad here.
But to your point, I mean, Canada, dystopian.
I mean, the fact that a doctor will tell you, yeah, you should probably kill yourself because my computer told me so.
Yeah, free speech, dude.
I was just thinking about Brett Weinstein
was on the show last night.
Like during COVID, the way that the Americans
kind of at least provided
some resistance to that whole
lockdown world scenario was
And a lot of Canadians too, the truckers in particular.
I mean, they stood up.
And then what?
I don't know if it's the monarch.
You know how I feel about monarchy, Chris,
but their government just took their bank accounts away.
That's what it was.
And the people that donated to the truckers,
they messed their bank account.
sounds up too. See, the beautiful thing about America is our freedom. The government will not do that, but private corporations will do that for you. It'll debank you. They'll cancel you if you have some sort of wrong thing. Yeah. Sarcastically, the beautiful thing about America. Well, when we saw the shot across the ballot, I don't know if you guys remember when Beto O'Rourke was running for Senate in Texas, I think so it was in 2018 against Ted Cruz. And at the time, there was a lot of fervor over shooting, like mass shootings and these sorts of things. And so they asked them, they said, well, okay, as governor of Texas, you can't just take people's guns because there's,
you know, a Republican state legislator that would stop that from happening.
So how do you plan on as governor, again, clamping down on, like, assault weapons, for example,
that was like the specific question.
And he said, what I would do as governor is I would instruct private companies like Chase.
I think he cited Chase, you know, specifically from, they would basically not allow private
customers to execute a bank transaction with a seller to acquire an assault weapon.
Like he was specifically coming in AR-15.
So in short, what he was saying was, I would instruct Chase,
to not allow you to do business with a gun shop.
And I think that's kind of the workground in the United States
because, again, we don't necessarily have an all-encompassing, you know, government.
But again, government, and you'll like this, Ian,
government collaboration with the private sector
can actually create far more worse oppression
than just straight-up state intervention in this instance
where who are you supposed to appeal to?
There is no private sector to bail you out anymore
if you're like a consumer trying to get a transaction done
because the private sector's, you know,
co-zied up with the federal government or state government in this instance.
I mean, thankfully he lost.
Is that the same debate where he said,
hell yeah, we're coming for your guns?
Yes, it is.
I remember because I was watching it on a stationary bike.
I was like, well, I guess I'm going to go buy my first one.
Top ten all-time political moments.
Hell yeah, we're coming through the guns.
He probably was like almost working for them.
You could hear the whistle from his poll number drop.
When he went in campaigned in California for some reason.
Did he disappear for good?
Or is he still trying to make it out there in Texas?
He was writing like, I don't know if he had a column or a substabre.
or something. What he's talking about after he lost,
he went to the New Mexican desert to find himself.
And he was like, I was eating dirt to connect with the
people there. I'm like, what are you a pregnant woman? What do you mean?
That's code for I was eating peyote.
That's what he was doing. You have an iron shorter?
Like balls. Beto?
Beto went there and he just
like chowing down on dirt. I don't know if I
Maybe a ploy to capture the Haitian note.
I don't know. A categorically
more intelligent way to spend his time than
running for office. Is he still in politics?
You just asked that question? He ran for president
in 2020. You think he's
going to run again?
I don't know.
You don't even always up to you.
I know.
I have not heard of his name in so long.
There's organization people,
powered by people, which focuses on
photo registration and rights.
So he's still doing a little bit of the...
I think he lost again.
Yeah, he lost again.
He's lost everything he's done politically.
Remember people were like, he's the next Abraham Lincoln
because Abraham Lincoln lost a slate of elections
before he gained president.
Abraham Lincoln.
I don't know if he noted skateboarder as well.
That's kind of what.
Yeah.
I'm sure Abraham Lincoln was doing kick flips and
wrong ribs. Do you guys think Maid would make it in America? Made? Yeah. It would be difficult
because it's like, you know, there's a lot of restrictions. This is actually, you know, one-up-
State by state, you know, you got the 10th Amendment, so. Yeah, I mean, I guess the question is,
would it be allowed versus would it be widespread? I could see a situation which becomes
allowed in quite a few blue states. Would it be, like, common? I don't think so. Because, again,
the primary reason you're seeing Maid utilized so heavily in Canada and the UK is because
of their public health care, and they're trying to lessen the burden on the health care system.
And again, if someone is facing potentially really expensive treatment, it's just a calculation they're running.
They're saying, well, if we kill this person, then we don't have to pay for their treatment.
So made is the thing they're using to prescribe that to people in Canada.
Medically assisted.
Right, right.
Whatever.
Yeah, it's just effectively like doge for human beings.
Like, we're just saying, you're redundant and we're getting rid of you.
And it's like, I wish that was a joke, but it's like real.
I mean, it's insane what's going on up there.
Literally, there was one guy.
He was like, he broke his leg, I think, was what it was.
And instead of setting his leg, they, like, offered to kill him for...
What?
Yeah.
I'm like, was he a horse?
Like, what is this?
Take him to the glue factory.
Yeah, literally.
Did he take, did he say okay?
Did he go?
No, I hope not.
Okay.
I went to the doctor.
You know better.
I was like, um, they were like, how are you feeling?
I was like, I'm very stressed.
They were like, do you want medicine?
I was like, no.
No, I'll meditate.
I'll meditate.
I'll meditate.
I think he said, why are you stressed?
I said the liberal, like, and that was a different situation.
I was getting my weed card and they were like, why.
I'm stressed out about the liberal economic
order. He's like, here you go. This last time I was like, yeah, I've been having anxiety. And it was
like, the first thing that it was offering me medication. It was like, no ask about diet, nothing about
my lifestyle. It was just, do you want something for that? Yeah. And maybe, okay, maybe the like,
I'm glad maid doesn't exist here. Oh, I know. And I guess the reason you're seeing a lot of these
policies pass is, again, this is something we've talked about in the show quite extensively is,
again, as sort of the high trust society in America erodes, you're going to have to see the government
be more proactive to, again, ensure stability, ensure peace among the population.
A great example would be El Salvador, a great example would be Singapore.
These are two countries where prior to the mass government crackdowns, and Singapore is
legal on you and El Salvador is Buckele, and this was in our lifetime, so it's very prevalent,
is these societies prior to the takeover of these, I would say it's fair to class.
And I'm not using this as a prerogative authoritarian leaders.
Prior to their ascension, these were countries with very low trust.
These were places where people were terrified to go outside.
These are places with like very, very minimal indications of like healthy society.
In El Salvador, obviously, it was culminating in violent crime.
But even in Singapore, I mean, there was a lot of jostling over political power.
Malaysia and the entirety of Southeast Asia at the time was a very chippy place, I think, to say the least.
But Singapore was kind of interesting because they had a large Chinese population and the rest of Malaysia was primarily melee.
So they viewed Singapore as like a problem.
And so again, when you have these very low trust,
societies, the only way to ensure that the population is able to at least have, able to ensure that
society is going to function in any meaningful way, the government has to crack down hard. And that's what
we're saying across the West. Again, as the high trust societies break down for a variety of reasons,
including immigration, which is vital, this is why it's so vital that the Trump administration
really, you know, knocks us out of the park, is because we have no choice but to move towards
authoritarianism, again, if society continues to break down. And I don't want that. I don't want to live
in an authoritarian society. I want to live in a authoritarian society. I want to live in
sort of a Rockwell painting America.
Do you think the government was having to crack down hard?
You think Maid would have even occurred to anyone, again, in a more classical American
situation?
No, people didn't even lock their doors.
And that's real.
That's a very real thing.
Even the idea of the Wild West, like these like, you know, gunsling guys, that was
exceptionally peaceful compared to what is going on now and what is now the West, like California,
Oregon, Seattle.
That's the direction we're going to have to go.
If, again, if we can't agree as a country that, again, we need to have a board.
We need to have national sovereignty. People need to be on the same page as far as ethics, morality, customs goes. We have no choice but to introduce a bouquet-lay-style government if we want peace. Now we're talking. I like that. It's possible to have a good, righteous, noble tyrant. I agree. But we're going to be denied that. We're not going to be able to have that in the United States, unfortunately. But I'm glad you brought up Singapore, because that actually is a counter-example. That's a perfect multicultural society.
Sure. Compared to other situations that are multicultural around the world, Singapore functions very well.
It's a multicultural society.
But it's a society that requires a lot of government intervention.
That's right.
That's right.
But hey, you know, you spit your gum on the sidewalk, then you're shunned.
I mean, they take care of their city and they take care of their citizens.
And the citizens seem, for the most part, take care of each other.
You've got Chinese, Malay, Indian, Eurasian countries that are there.
Yeah.
And it's the same, it's been the same ruling party now for 50, 60 years.
Not because necessarily of oppression, but just because it hasn't occurred to them to vote them out.
They're like, good job.
Because it's working.
Because that's why I also fear for what's going to happen in El Salvador.
And when Buchala is raining.
ends if it doesn't, and I hope it doesn't.
Yeah.
No, yeah, I think there'd be a bit of a vacuum.
El Salvador is a slightly different case because it was just so
exceptionally violent before. Their problem there
isn't so much ethnic squabbling like you saw in Singapore,
and El Salvador was just violent crime.
A satanic violent gangs?
Yeah, literally.
Like literal human sacrifice occurred.
I mean, if you listen, I think it was also on Tucker's show, actually,
Buckele talking about some of the things that were going on in El Salvador
before the crackdown.
I mean, it's like, even if you're a full-blown atheist,
read it a atheist with a fedora, that would send chills
down your spine, some of the stuff going on in El Salvador prior to Buckele.
Yeah, in that interview, I'm pretty sure Tucker said, what was the first thing he did when
you got in office and he said, I prayed to God for wisdom.
Yeah.
Like, he's a really exceptional leader.
Yeah.
Yeah.
And Tucker was even, he kind of laughed and was just like, why would a leader say that?
Like, who thinks that way?
And he's just like, why would you think otherwise?
Yeah.
Very wise, man.
Nice.
Yeah.
The American ice crackdowns was like, I felt like a lead towards overt authoritarian crackdown on
street violence, whatever, you know, corruption in the system.
but the people reviled so, so drastically that they pulled back.
And now I feel like the authoritarianism is digital,
like they're using Palantir to hunt these,
this fraud down.
I don't know what they're using.
They are using Palantir.
And it's secret and it's in the background.
I'm kind of like, well played, sir.
But at the same time, I feel like I'm ushering in the beast,
like the totalitarian technocracy that's going to be spying on when I take a crap.
It's going to be like, you got worms.
Why do you think it's a sword?
Not that I have worms.
I would just say it's authoritarian when was
obeying the law and doing what the law stated
Well, if they make a law, like the Patriot Act's pretty
But they'll be like, hey, it's all legal
You gave an example of current ice raids
That was all legal
It's like the executive branch making a pretty
overt military action on the domestic population
So military by taking out illegals who are not here
Well, not just illegals were taken out
Might I remind you? I mean, which tells you
That a lot of these goons are just trained
terribly. That's part of the problem.
We could have an authoritarian regime that comes through and does a proper suite, but these guys aren't trained for it.
That's what we've seen in the streets.
Yeah, six months ain't enough, or whatever that is.
I know it's quick.
Well, whatever it is, it's not enough.
And also, it's being poorly executed at some level.
Do you think it's better to call it a military action or a police action?
I would say it's a law enforcement action.
I think the problem, and I'm supportive of vice because I think what they're attempting to do is something that's very much overdue in the United States.
But to Chris's point, I mean, part of the problem is, again, the reason why,
Buckele can do what he can do in El Salvador, and the reason why it can't be replicated in the United
States is because what is Buckele's approval rating? 92%. Now, it doesn't matter how well, let's just
use a Republican as an example. It doesn't matter how well a Republican governs the way that
American society is currently structured, you're going to have at least half the country that's
going to have a problem with him, because it's just the nature of American society. And so,
again, to take action as drastic as a naive Buckele, we have to be like in a dire, dire situation.
And for the most part, most Americans, you know, even though we're observing a lot of these problems in American society, most Americans still don't feel like they're cornered. I think that would be fair to say. I think American life still functions fairly well, even though it's obviously degraded. Obviously, our standard of living is dropping. You go to Walgreens, you got to like beg the employee to get a stick of deodorant. But by, the fact that you can drive to a Walgreens and not worried about being carjacked, you know, the worry about a shooting taking place at Walgreens, that indicates that we're not quite at El Salvador level.
Did Buckele, does he control state media?
Like, is it locked down in El Salvador?
Internet and all that?
I don't actually know, and I don't think it would be terribly relevant, because, as I
understand, the way most of Latin America works is the media that they consume is mostly
like civilizational.
So, like, telemundo, companies like this, Spanish language, media, kind of transcends
national boundaries.
So they don't have, like, a heavy media-rich atmosphere that's completely domestic.
It's more of like an international sort of thing.
This happens in Europe where, okay, maybe each country has their own specific, you know, news aggregator or whatever, but like News 24 is quite ubiquitous across Europe. There's a few other outlets that come to mind. And as I understand it, that is the case in Latin America. So even if Buckele were to take total control of state, of all media actions in the country, I don't think it'd be that consequential. Is there internet, free internet?
Yeah, yeah, yeah. I mean, that's the thing is, like, El Salvador functions now as a first world country. It's just they have a heavy law enforcement. That's the only thing that's really ramped up in El Salvador is.
law enforcement because they had to because people were getting killed on the streets. Did they make new
laws or did they just start enforcing what did they do? Like a good example. Well, it's not necessarily a new
law. I think now it's been codified into law, but when he declared emergency powers to again secure
the country, he was basically saying this was like a national security threat. A good example would be
anyone with a gang tattoo was going to be brought in to the police department and then processed
accordingly. And that was something that was later codified into law, but at the time that was through
emergency powers. Through law, but actually in practice, what would happen is that like during
those early crackdowns, if you're talking to a gang member, then you go to prison. And you might not
ever be heard from again. I know people from El Salvador where that's happened. They've said,
oh, my cousin was caught talking to a gang member, wasn't involved. He got caught up in the raids.
He went to prison. Never going to hear from him again. Yeah. And they told me this is, of course,
anecdotal, but they said, that's a tradeoff we'd be willing to make because that's how bad it was.
Yeah, exactly. I mean, like at its peak, I think like four percent of El Salvador's population was actually
imprisoned. And to Chris's point,
because things got so dire, they were like, look, we got to crack a couple legs
and make an omelet.
Like, I don't want to risk dying when I just walk outside to collect my newspaper.
The United States isn't there yet.
That's just the reality.
I mean, people are melting down over, like, what was the guy that got returned to El Salvador
and then brought back?
Yeah, RCS.C.
And Maryland, Maryland, Maryland, right?
The Maryland man.
And, like, the entire, like, you know, at least half the country was, like, ready to ride over it.
So that just tells you that, like, even though things are heading that direction,
We're just not quite there yet.
And I don't think we should ever, well, maybe not never, but ideally we shouldn't have to beg the federal government to police our neighborhoods.
Like that's what we're supposed to do as American citizens with militia and, you know, ideally, I think is that's the intention of the nation.
In theory, but maybe I'm wrong.
No, no, I dig it.
I dig the local militia thing.
I mean, we're in a different state than what we used to be back in the day.
but having your own local militia nowadays to
Right, like how could you organize ice raids with the local?
That'd be like having the protected neighborhood community guys,
but they get in trouble because they're on their terrorists
because they're a group patrolling their own, you know, their own streets.
Yeah.
Which has reached the government itself.
Well, in the areas that you would really need to penetrate the most
are very Democrat areas.
So major cities, the state of California.
Yeah, you're not coming to the suburbs.
Precisely.
So even then, I mean, look, half the country voted for Trump.
and Trump was pretty explicit that, yes, we're going to send federal agents into these cities to deport illegal immigrants.
And so half the country signed off on it.
That was like his biggest policy that everyone was talking about.
With that, we got to get into this next story.
Move on a bit from immigration.
I could talk about it all day.
From time, California mayor resigns admitting to being an agent for China.
The mayor of a Los Angeles suburb resigned Monday as U.S. officials announced that she will plead guilty in federal court to acting as an illegal agent for the Chinese government.
Federal prosecutors announced Monday that Eileen Wang, 58 of Arcadia, California,
has been charged with one count of acting in the U.S. as an illegal agent of a foreign government
and is, quote, expected to plead guilty in the coming weeks.
The charge is punishable with up to 10 years in prison.
Quote, Mayor Wang admitted to acting as a foreign agent from at least 2020 through 2022,
promoting PRC propaganda in the United States and acting at the PRC's discretion,
or direction rather, to promote their interests.
was according to Cash Patel.
FBI and our federal partners continue to move aggressively to root out this kind of influence
in American institutions all over the country.
Here's just a little background on Eileen here.
Come on Eileen.
Wang was elected in November 2020 to a five-member Arcadia City Council where the mayor is
selected on a rotating basis.
City manager Dominic Lazareto said in a statement Monday that Wang, who became mayor in February,
has resigned from the council.
Guys, what do we make of this?
Because this is a really bizarre story.
It's fascinating.
I think there's been a little bit of suspicion for a long time that, again, whether we like it or not, the CCP is probably infiltrated the United States a little bit more than we would like to care to admit. Now, obviously, this is high profile because this is an elected official, but there's been discussions at the student visa level, like a lot of these students coming in from China. Again, these people, they keep a tight, stiff upper lip, like they will not disclose a lot of their, you know, premonitions. So what do you guys make of all this? Well, not to go for the low-hanging fruit, but I think it was kind of a dick move on Mrs. Wang's part to do that.
Those are the only dick jokes I'm going to make.
I apologize.
I mean, I'm not surprised by it.
I'm really not.
You see this subversion by the CCP in America in many facets of American life.
You see it a lot online as well.
So I'm not surprised at all to see it starting at the local level.
We also know former Representative Swalwell allegedly had an affair with an alleged Chinese spy.
I don't know if this was before or after the hotel room video thing came out.
I think it was before.
I remember before.
There's so many.
weird. I know. Why is it done that? Which was funny because Swalwa got busted. Again, rape charges
pending and all that. Initially, what's gotten him thrown out was basically infidelity, which is
wrong, obviously, but it's not the first time a congressman cheated on his wife. I would have
thought the affair with a CCP agent was worthy of getting kicked out of Congress and probably
your citizen stripped, but that's just me. I didn't realize he was married with a family.
These guys don't know all over the place. I didn't realize he was straight. Yeah. I still don't realize
I'm just kidding.
In recent years, at least 15 Chinese spies
and operatives have been linked to the
People's Republic of China in California alone.
How many?
15, since 2019.
So the last six years, we've got at least 15
per the brave thing.
But also, there's so many more out there.
We know there's more out there.
They're buying our farmland, first and foremost,
and they're selling, we're buying their infrastructure
for our power grid.
I mean, that's not a different subject.
We can go crazy in that.
But there's so many spies out there.
Just in California,
we got 15 people last couple of years.
So many.
It was a mayor.
How does it?
So what happened?
She's Chinese.
I was in the bathroom, full disclosure,
but I don't know if you explain this already,
but she was what?
She had a Chinese family,
so the CCP's blackmailing her,
getting her to give state secrets or something back to the party.
How deep does this go?
I think she's just a fan of the CCP.
I think that's what they're born and raised to be their country.
It's like being a real American.
A lot of folks, like she's a real proud China woman, Chinese woman, CCP person.
She comes to America.
She could have been a baby anchor.
We don't freaking know, but there's a lot of ways to go about it.
And so she's here becoming the mayor, take over a little town to help China,
buy maybe more farmland, buy more electrical grids.
She's just an operative, bro.
Well, yeah, she was born in China, actually.
So she was born in China, and then she came over here as a child because her father took a gig at USC.
Okay.
And that's how she ended up in Southern California.
But it is very concerning, I mean, obviously it's very concerning if the CCP is electing officials in the United States.
But it's difficult because, again, we have to view all people as interchangeable cogs and that people will not have, again, preconceived notions regarding how they view American sovereignty and these sorts of things.
And we're going to continue to be surprised and blindsided by this.
Of course, hers is promoting the interests of a global adversary in China's case.
That's why this was specifically so egregious.
and she was collaborating with the government of China.
That's what the charge is here.
But you see, I mean, Elon Omar literally gets up
and she's like, I'm fighting for the Somali community.
And it's like, okay, Somalia is not a global adversary.
But again, does raise the question,
what are you doing here then?
You know, if you're not here to serve America
because you're not here to serve your constituents,
you're here to serve Smollies?
It's a very salient question because, you know,
whether we like it or not in the same state of California,
Steve Hilton running for governor there,
he's not like getting up and saying,
I'm going to fight for the British community in California.
It's like, you know, it's just, it's a tough conversation to have, but we need to be a little realistic here as like, again, if someone is born in China and they're a little bit vague or opaque on these types of issues, it's worth a second look. I mean, that's happened a bunch of times we saw in New York City a few years ago where a bunch of NIPD officers that were Chinese born got busted for CCP ties.
Yeah.
Well, I mean, there's been the discussion of people in the House of Representatives and the Senate should not be able to hold dual citizenship.
Should that, agreed?
First of all, be enacted absolutely a thousand percent, but should that trickle down to the local level as well?
Like, you really need to prove that you're loyal to America and only America and even more so your local community.
Everything starts at the community level and just moves up from there.
Yeah.
Her campaign manager also, by the way, is Youning Son is serving four-year prison sentence as well.
So her campaign manager, so there's a couple people involved, it's just not just her.
It's a group.
And it's so tricky because, again, this is Arcadia, California, which I,
I'd never even heard of.
That's what I was going to say.
I understand the concern, but how sharp of a propaganda sword is she really going to wield in Arcadia, California?
That's terrible talk, my friend, because they start small and they build yourself up.
In California?
Yeah.
Let them deal with themselves.
They're in America.
I don't care what state they're in.
My interjection here would be that, again, the CCP is actually quite clever here with where, let's just say she was operating as a provocateur.
They were directing her political career, which I don't think is true.
I think she had overlapping interests and ended up working with the CCP.
But again, the reason I say no one's ever heard of Arcadia is because no one would be looking there.
Again, if, like, Eileen Wang became, you know, mayor of Los Angeles, that'd be a lot more high profile.
You would probably have people combing through her story a lot more extensively.
And this, we would have found this out a lot earlier.
My concern is that, again, people are able to operate away from the limelight.
She's not high profile at all.
And again, no one's ever heard of this town or the suburb or whatever.
No offense if you're on Arcadian.
I've heard of Arcadia.
It's near L.A. It's 13 miles northeast of L.A.
It's a suburb.
I didn't know that.
It's like, unless you, like, unless you, like, are from a suburb.
the area. So it's not consequential. It's not consequential at the national level. But again,
this is, if they're able to control bite-sized chunks of the country, that's a bigger problem.
It's close to L.A. And there's a couple things that I, that come to mind for me as to the rationale
as to why China would be interested in that. I mean, the majority of our elected officials
started at the local level as a city councilman or a local mayor. So you get in with them early.
They move up through the political food chain. And eventually you have a senator or a president who
is beholden to China.
But then also you look at what is the city council and mayor?
Like, what do they do?
What are they in charge of?
Let's say you have an American company trying to get a permit to build a data center
or build a factory or something.
The mayor can veto that, the mayor can mess with that,
give preference to a Chinese company.
So there's like little things that they can do.
But I think really, they're just playing the long game.
I think Swalwell even started out as a city councilman,
not to circle back to him, but he's just too funny.
What was he was dating a Chinese spy?
That's right.
Fangfang?
Is that what are you saying?
While he was married as well, I think.
And then he gave her state secret, was he giving her secrets?
Or was it just dating as Chinese spies enough?
I don't know what their pillow talk was.
But apparently, dating a Chinese spy was not enough because he didn't really suffer any consequences from it
until the video of him with some random hooker came out.
Clearly the least perverse person working for the federal government.
I was also going to say that's the same thing as like, we'll just take Britain, England, for example.
You start small, like with their Muslim community and the Pakistanis and,
and for people of South Asians,
you start small and you build,
and you build, and you build,
and then you take over,
and we can't be having that in America.
I'm not, we're not going to,
we can't allow it,
and I will not stand by.
This is why it's so concerning
when you see, again,
like ethnic voting blocks,
because, again,
they may be able to just participate
in the system as it is,
as it stands, you know,
as like 2026 terms.
UK is a great example
where, again,
they experience large scale,
mass migration.
A lot of these people came
from Islamic countries,
and they came to the United Kingdom,
and the share of,
like, foreign-born
or foreign heritage in the UK is far lower than the United States.
So, you know, the United States, you might start to see this mobilization occur.
Last local elections in the UK, it was last weekend.
Again, the Muslim migrants to Britain primarily voted for the Labor Party, which would be the
analog for maybe the Democrat Party in the United States.
They're, you know, varying, depending on who's in charge, left wing to center left.
The Muslims are fine voting for this labor party for a long time.
But again, they would make statements that people on the right would point to and said,
hey, these guys are planning on mobilizing.
You know, it's not going to be like a, you know, global.
and fatata, it's going to be just influencing your government to benefit that community.
What we saw in the last local elections is quite literally a Muslim sovereignty party
got maybe 200 local counselors elected, which would be the equivalent of like city counselors
in the United States.
That's insane.
There's like a literal party for Islamic fundamentalism.
Is this to say that we should be worried about strictly an Islamic takeover?
Maybe, maybe not.
My point I'm making here is that, again, we should fear foreign blocks coming to our
countries and then advocating for their own policy above their adopted countrymen.
You're seeing this United States all the time. Tyler Oliver was talking about it.
I mean, you know, there's, he's talking, Somalis, Yemenis, I'm sorry, the Hasidics in New York.
Big problem. I'm sorry. Like, I know it's like the taboo to say, but like, let's be honest.
You're a big problem. It's something I kind of bite my tongue about asking guests if they come on,
if they're Jewish. I'm like, do you think of yourself as an American Jew or a Jewish American?
Well, great Jew, Jude, because I was born Jewish and raised Jewish. I was
never bar mitzvah though so i'm technically not a man explains my sense of humor uh but no i think of
myself as an american i grew up here this is all i've ever known i've never been to to israel i never
took the birthright trip i thought about going a couple years ago before october seventh and regret not going
to you know pre-october seventh israel because it's it's different now but yeah i think of myself as an
american as you should you live here that's yeah when i when i come across a person that's like i'm an
American Jew. I'm like, well, what's your allegiance then? To America. And it's okay. Like, Judaism
isn't an, you don't have allegiance to Israel if you're Jewish, but then somehow they try and
make you think you do. So you're like, beholden to, are you supposed to be beholden to another
country if you think of yourself as a Jew above all else? I don't like that. Depends on the Jew.
Yeah. I mean, we have to start granular here, because obviously, like, what I brought up was
the Hasidic community in Brooklyn. And again, if you can't differentiate between, like,
a Hasidic and, like, Jerry Seinfeld, then you probably shouldn't be participating in the conversation
because there's like two dramatically different groups of people.
And again, like people just have poor understandings of like demographics,
how these things work, et cetera, et cetera,
where again, like you would be indistinguishable from any other American,
even someone like Jerry Seinfeld, like very well integrated and ingrained
in American society versus, again, like Hasidic Jewish people,
which is a specific sect of Judaism that, again,
they're extrapolating exorbitant amounts of welfare money from the taxpayer.
They refuse to assimilate.
They've been here three, four generations,
and they refuse to do business with Americans.
They literally refer to us as outsiders.
They have their own police force.
They have their own police force.
So again, I'm just contesting the idea that we should tolerate, like, ethnic blocks
existing in the United States.
Does that mean the federal government should go there and bust it up?
No, I'm just saying that people have the right to be upset when groups come to this country
promising that they're going to participate in the American social compact, and then they
don't.
They get here and just do their own thing.
We're talking about, like, Somali.
Everyone on the right was comfortable chest beating over Somalis.
But then as soon as Tala Larvera went to, you know, Kierce Joelle in New York,
all of a sudden was a big problem.
and I'm just saying we've got to be consistent
across all of these. Again,
America, majority Christian,
you know, the Amish, everyone's like,
what about the Amish?
The Amish refused, they refuse to take any American tax
bear dollar. They just moved out to the country.
They're an afterthought.
Or do we even...
They're not even watching.
They're not watching.
Are there American, like, enclaves of like Australians
or of Irish?
Does that exist anymore? Because they all speak English.
They just diasporate?
No, yeah. And that goes back to my original point.
It's like, okay, who is going to be more assimilable
into the United States?
Well, the fact that we don't really have any Australian or British or Irish, like, blocks that advocate for their own people indicates that they assimilate quite well.
And Australian comes here.
Yeah.
What's it?
Boston's pretty close.
I feel like if a group of Australians get here, they'd be like, all right, I'm getting away.
I'm out.
I'm going to the problem.
Like, they want to immigrate.
They want to integrate.
Yeah.
Most, I mean, I think of them as America already, like Americans with a funny accent.
No offense, guys.
I know I'm the one with a weird accent.
But then some cultures, they stick together.
because they don't speak the language.
That's a big part of it.
They're afraid of the outside
because they don't understand it.
Yeah.
But then some of them do speak the language
and they still isolate.
And I don't under,
like maybe you're speaking about the Hasidics.
I don't know their languages.
Is it like Yiddish.
Do they speak English as well?
Some.
So it's a lot of it's a language barrier.
I remember like,
I used to live in like Brooklyn
and I would see school buses that had Hebrew on them.
It's Yiddish.
Yeah.
It's like, wow.
They have their own school buses.
Yeah, it's insane.
And like this is why we have to have a sensible
immigration. I know we've been hitting on it all show, but it's so true because I think about
myself, if I were to move to Australia, if I were to move to Britain, if I were moved to Ireland,
it would be quite easily for me to assimilate into local life. My accent would be different. That would be
about it. I would assimilate quite quickly. Now, if I moved to Algeria, I'd be pretty freaked out.
I would refuse to assimilate most likely and I would like require my kids to like sort of be brought
up in my cultural tastes, my cultural customs, et cetera, et cetera, because it's very exotic.
and that is a good reason for why Algeria should reject me if I ever seek to immigrate there
because it's very sensible for me to view a very exotic culture as potentially adversarial
to my core values and my core beliefs. So we just had the flip-flop the other way around.
That's just the reality of the situation is, okay, if I move to Greece, you know, would I assimilate?
Maybe a little bit. It'd be difficult for me to grasp the language, but at least it would be a slightly,
it would be a little bit less of a barrier than it would be if I moved to China. I would
never be Chinese, ever. It would never happen. It would be impossible for me.
me to assimilate there. I tried in South America
in Chile, but
they just kept calling me Thor.
It was so stressful
not speaking the language. I couldn't do
any, I couldn't start a business. I was trying to start
a graphing company. It was next to impossible. I couldn't
even communicate with the investors. I had to get a guy
to speak Spanish to the guy and he couldn't
talk about what I believed
and so it was impossible to get the thing off the ground.
I can't. Trying to turn that around
and think about what these people are going through, but I guess
it's just better because what I would say is like use the
internet. If you want to change the culture of the United States
to Yiddish or to Somali or whatever the freak you're doing, use the internet.
Don't come here and disrupt from the inside or there's going to be problems.
But then if they don't come here, then they don't get the benefits of being here.
So I understand why you came here.
Yeah.
Well, and I think you're making a really good point is we can't necessarily be channeling
all of our outrage at the people that were just following a very natural incentive structure,
which was the border was wide open.
There was zero impetus for them to assimilate, so they took that chance.
Again, I'm more upset at our lawmakers and the people that cheer.
them on when they were advocating for this suicidal immigration policy. I'm far more upset with them.
Same thing in Britain. I mean, okay, yes, you can be upset, especially at the ones that are committing
crimes. But broadly, most of your ire should be directed at your lawmakers that allowed this to happen.
Yeah. Because again, these people were following very natural incentive structures. The border
was wide open, you know, et cetera, et cetera. There was all these benefits extended to them. I mean,
yeah, that's obviously what they would do. For sure. And the NGOs. All the people that cheer
them all. Catholic charities. That's why Catholics are great. But
they are they have some issues because they brought them up here a lot yeah well even in the jewish
community high ass h a i think they're they're a big NGO that that really really pushes immigration
i think i think even laura luma dug into them like that's how corrupt that that's how bad it
yeah you know laura loomers you got a problem yeah it's it is important to stay focused on
anger at the policies and the non-governmental organizations and not the individuals man
because that's like, you were saying earlier, like, Co-Intel Pro, you want to get a global
revolution and you want to topple the United States, get them to go at each other from the
inside, and then get them to beg for technocracy to spy on these foreigners, you know, that crap.
I don't want to say it like it's got to be careful with even joking about it or hypothesizing
it because it could happen.
Speaking of new existence.
Yeah, well, let me make another attempt.
I failed on the last one.
Let me make another attempt of segueing into a segment that is not immigration focus.
It's my fault.
I love talking about it.
from the Gateway Pundit,
breaking two high-level White House insiders
caught on undercover video
bragging about internal subversion
against President Trump.
One has been placed on leave.
The O'Keefe Media Group on Tuesday
released undercover video of White House insiders
bragging about an internal subversion
against President Trump.
Maxime Lott, a special assistant
to President Trump on the White House
Domestic Policy Council,
admitted to the OMG.
I love it their initials were OMG, by the way.
The OMG undercover journalist
that domestic policy
decisions are often made based on what, quote, feels like a good idea. He continued, in theory,
everything should come from the president, but it might come from the level below him. Trump,
where they like, where they're like, I think I know the president well enough to say what he would
say on this. Benjamin Elliston, a budget analysis manager within the executive office of the
president expressed, quote, we have to get rid of Trump. He's talking about Trump,
effing it up for everybody. We've got to get rid of him. The O'Keefe,
But media group continued here, Maxine Lahn, et cetera, et cetera, admitted da-da-da-da-da.
Lot reveals that White House officials frequently make decisions based on their own interpretation of Trump's preferences, stating, quote, I know, I think I know what the president well enough to see what he would say on this.
So again, this is what we all discussed.
I'm going to play this video here from James O'Keefe.
This is really some shocking stuff here.
Take a look at this.
Like, the decision-making processes are a little bit.
A White House policy advisor opens up about the internal decision-making processes throughout the White House.
I think it's just the overall tone, like, you know, the government right now, but I mean, they're like, it's touching in itself.
Maxim Lott even acknowledges that officials below Trump will often make decisions for the president, presuming what his stance would be.
In theory, everything should sort of come from the president.
Yeah.
But it might come from the level below him where they're like, they're like, I think I know the president well enough to say what he would say on this.
on this.
So, okay, it's 15 minutes of this.
I don't know Maxime Law.
I don't know what his policies are.
I could potentially have overlapping policy positions with them.
My first contention is,
can we please stop spilling our guts to journalists?
For real.
Because we're on a date,
and then we just spill our guts to this woman
and presuming that, again,
first of all, your date would, like, care.
Like, hello, what are we doing here?
What kind of Riz is that?
That's all Riz.
So, again, I'm not, like,
necessarily even making the contention
that Maxime Lott is behaving subversively here
because again, I don't know specifically what his policy proposals is.
So I'm exonerating myself from this.
He could eventually be a great guy.
The problem here is the principle, the idea that there are Trump staffers that feel comfortable
enough to openly admit that they are making decision, policy making decisions based off
of what they think Trump would make.
It's also indication that the centralized authority of the president is not, like it's a big,
a lot of governance that has to go through this one guy that doesn't have time for it,
apparently. That's why I don't find this even remotely scandalous or revelatory. I mean,
I assume this is what's happening. Yeah. What these people are saying. And I mean, they're talking
about it trickling up sort of. That's kind of strange because I thought we were governed by a permanent
unelected bureaucracy behind the scenes that's never held to account for anything. So we're taking the power
back. Yeah. I mean, because like here's here's at least as I see it, the fundamental problem here is
you would expect cabinet officials to say something like this. Because again, they were appointed by Trump.
they were appointed by Trump because of their expertise in said department and what they would be
overseeing. So again, it would make sense, I don't know, Brooke Rawlins, the USDA administer. It would
make sense that she does operate with a bit of autonomy because, again, President Trump has put her
in that position, presuming that she will carry out his agenda in that position. And if she ever
ceased to do that, she would be reprimanded or removed from her position. We've seen this countless times.
It is a little concerning here that, again, I don't know anything about Maxim Lott. He could
have some fantastic policies. I'm not dragging the guy. I am saying that the principle here is a bit
concerning that they feel comfortable enough to operate like this because we have seen sometimes
throughout President Trump's administration that some of these policymakers, especially in Trump one,
it's not big as been as big of a problem in Trump too, but in Trump one, we did have a lot of
rogue policymakers. It was very real. And okay, yes, the unelected bureaucrat problem is a problem.
But again, we're talking about, is President Trump going to be able to oversee every single thing
going on. No, that's why he has cabinet officials. That's why he has appointees, etc.
But on domestic policy, that should be something that Trump and his trusted circle should
be dictating. You're Stephen Miller's, you know, these sorts of, these sorts of people.
So I don't know we guys make of all this.
I scale it. What are you saying? I was going to say, yeah, there's delegation. I agree
with what you're saying. Say if Ian wanted me to build a bat house and he's like, put a
bat house over there, put a bat house over there so we get bats at night. They can kill our
mosquitoes. And I'm building it and I'm making it. And I'm making it.
and I don't know where exactly to put it
so I might use my own judgment
to put the bad house right here
and this one over there.
I mean, this is a whole different scale
because we don't know like
what's exactly going on.
We just know what the dude said.
Sure.
You know what I mean?
So maybe being going that, I mean, it's very salacious.
And if you went to Mark, you also here
and we're like, Ian's messing it up.
We got to get rid of Ian, man.
This birdhouse thing.
I'm just doing the, like that's what these guys
are talking about.
If you're talking crap about me after
you're building my beautiful birdhouse,
I'd be very upset.
Bat house, by the way.
Your bat house, your bat house.
Yeah, I always suggest that you build a bat cave, to be honest.
Yeah, we're...
See, I knew you would like that.
See, this is why I should be your specialist.
You're fired.
He's hired.
You see what happened?
We need more.
We need special assistance everywhere.
Yeah, I think what's...
I mean, look, Maxime Lott, okay, he's likely a Trump appointee.
So I think it would be safe to say that the way he's conducted himself would probably be in line
with the Trump agenda broadly.
But you brought up elected bureaucrats.
there are a lot of people
you can ask anyone
that works in the admin
they have to work
with people that are not
on board of the Trump agenda
do they feel empowered
to conduct themselves
in this manner?
Because again,
I don't think this is
scandalous what Maxim Lott
has said here
and I don't think
this is really an indictment
necessarily of what he's saying
I think it's more of an
indictment of the general culture
of how the White House operates
this would have been a problem under Biden
would have been a problem under Trump one
would have been a problem under Obama
is again do bureaucrats
who are not Trump appointees
that were not signed off on
when people voted for President Trump
do they feel empowered
to conduct themselves in this manner
That is concerning.
Are they discreetly subverting the Trump administration at times?
That's a possibility.
I'm not entirely sure.
No, that's not a possibility.
That's 100%.
I mean, I can almost guarantee it that they're doing one little thing, this or that, dotting one T, missing one comma or anything else that they're going to do any kind of subvert anything they can if they don't, if not in with the Trump program.
And technically, if there's a 100% chance of something occurring, it is all, it is possible.
So you're both right.
I did agree with them, but yeah.
Yeah, it would be a little neurotic there.
I think so. I think this is what you're the deeps. This is what you call deep state. This is
administrative overreach, administrative authority where they just take it. And some people
probably think like, I have one chance at this. And Trump is a demigog. I have to do this now
for the good of the people. Who knows how cyclical or how twisted people's reasoning can be
when they're justifying their behaviors. And maybe some people are actually doing it and it's helping.
Yeah. Oh, yeah. Well, and like my concern would it be so much the White House Domestic Policy Council.
I imagine everyone there is on board.
And again, if you're sticking your head out to advocate for something that would not be in line
to the Trump administration's, you know, popular agenda, so to speak, you'd probably get canned
pretty quickly.
My concern would more be on the Intel side, because this is where we know that there's a lot
of rogue bureaucrats, rogue intel actors.
And again, that is where they're able to shape policy in ways that really slide under our
noses.
That can be concerning.
I mean, this is why the Trump administration is trying to clean house with FSOs.
You know, these are our agents that we dispatch to, you know,
conduct American diplomacy overseas and these sorts of things.
That's a lot of positions that you have to overturn.
So they are dependent to some degree.
It's getting better,
but they were dependent for a long time on career guys.
And career guys have their own agenda.
Career guys are not signed off on by the American people when they're elected.
And the intel apparatus is littered with them.
Now, Tulsi Gabbard,
obviously we've seen stories where she has attempted to clean house.
But again,
you only have access to so much personnel.
There's a lot of things that need to get done and runs the risk of, again,
these people that just feel like, hey, it's kind of the culture on here.
to just kind of, oh, I'm doing this.
You know, President Trump would be totally in line of this
and then conduct operations, you know,
in a variety of ways that would be drastically out of step.
Well, the intelligence community is essentially
a de facto fourth branch of government at this point.
I mean, especially when you look at the integration
with Palantir, you know, Peter Teal's past association
with J.D. Vance.
Really, like, Palantir, their big thing right now
that they're looking for is reauthorization of the FISA 702 authority.
That's the warrantless mass metadata collection
that sweeps up everyone's communications.
And you look at the last time that came up
and J.D. Vance abstained from voting.
He didn't vote yes or no.
And so that gives me a little bit of pause.
Like, is he actually going to affect change
and actually, like, push people away from that sort of thing?
Or is he going to be beholden to the billionaire class?
But it's just Peter Thiel instead of George Soros.
Is that?
I hear people, I hear he's a right-hand man
or maybe like his mentor is Peter Thiel
in certain aspects.
Like that can be very bad for us as a country.
If he's, if he's, if he's, if his, if his main goal is to, you know,
follow what this gentleman says, what Peter Till says instead of what the American people
say.
Well, it's kind of a difficult, it's kind of a difficult subject to approach because, again,
best case scenario, we have zero billionaires influencing politics, obviously.
That'd be a best case scenario.
Yeah.
We go back to the way that our country was constructed.
The situation that we're in where, again, we do have a security apparatus.
We do have an intel apparatus.
we have the surveillance apparatus, whether we like it or not, is a company like Palantir,
is this person like Peter Thiel more or less amenable to the desires of conservatives than
basically any of the other offerings?
Because the way I view it at least is that you have to view it like a vacuum.
If Palantir, you know, if you truly united against Palantir and push them out of any influence
in U.S. government, does meta or alphabet not just step in and absorb and that vacuum?
I mean, that's the way I view it where I'm like, okay, well, at least, and I'm not like
running cover for Ballantier.
I'm just trying to be like, you know, trying to look at this objectively.
at least they're amenable to, again, popular, conservative policymaking.
At least they seem to, again, maybe push things in our direction from time to time
versus, again, the United States, whether we like it or not, they're going to scrape data.
That's just the way the world works.
It would rather have, like, I don't know a Bill Gates or a Morgan Zuckerberg overseeing that
operation or potentially figures that we don't even know.
I don't know.
This is why I'm postulating this out loud.
I think about it every day, dude.
Almost every day.
Almost every day.
The CCP could be the one.
If the vacuum, if we were to say like, hey, no,
more spying in America, none.
Somebody's going to do it. And then we're disempowered because our own government doesn't have
the access to the data. And there's a lot of things in the United States that want to
destroy the United States that it's kind of good that our government knows about.
I'd love to hear what your take is on it, Mark.
I don't know. It's tricky. It's tricky. I don't want to be like a King Solomon
analogy or anything. We have to split the baby. But really, America's founded on privacy.
That is one of the core tenants.
And we essentially don't have it anymore.
And I think it's bad that the government's doing these things, but much to your point,
there's private corporations doing this as well.
There's so many data aggregators that are scraping everything that you do online
and packaging it up and selling it to the highest better.
So it's like, do I want the government doing that or do I want a private corporation profiting
off of it?
And right now we have both.
Yeah.
So I don't, I.
And do we want a pure privacy area, like per privacy?
Like you can not, I mean, it's just terrible things say, maybe.
Do we not want anyone looking in on our people who might be terrorist cells or doing terrible things?
Like, they're behind a wall.
Nobody knows what's going on.
And then they can come around the wall and do and then do what they do.
I think so last night when we were talking, me and Brett, Brett Weinstein, I was talking about, he was like, we need to like a digital second amendment.
What would that look like?
And I said, I think that would be like everyone has access
to their own personal artificial intelligence off the grid
that gives you completely unchained, unlocked data.
You can give you like, how do I make this dangerous thing?
How can I do this horrible thing?
And it will tell you everything.
And that's your arm against the digital overlord system.
But like, then we wouldn't know what people are doing.
And they're in there.
They could be making the most devastating weapons in secret
and no one would know.
And like, I...
But that is kind of feels like the American way?
Yeah, I mean, we should be allowed to have nuclear weapons as private citizens.
I mean, you're supposed to have parity with the military.
I think that was the true intent of the Second Amendment.
Granted, they couldn't think of nuclear bombs at that point in time.
Someone's like running your pockets.
I'm like, I'm going to nuke you if you don't get your wallet.
Yeah.
But, I mean, I don't know if there's really a solution because you get, much to your point in,
you should be able to track down bad actors.
You should be able to figure out when people are planning something that is bad
that is going to hurt American citizens.
But at the same time, you shouldn't just willy-nilly scrape up every single bit of information,
put it on an NSA server in Utah, mask it, and have the ability at some point in the future
to get a warrant and go back through time and look at all of that information that was
collected outside of the warrant, but the warrant applies retroactively.
That is the current FISA system.
Yeah.
And that's not constitutional, but I guess it technically is because Congress voted on it,
because freedom?
I don't know.
And it's one of those difficult,
it's one of those difficult conundrums
because it's like,
once you instigate,
once you start a boss fight,
you can't walk away from the boss fight.
A good example I would use for this is,
again,
you have a lot of people who are deeply concerned
about the surveillance state.
They're deeply concerned
to all these things,
and I totally agree.
There's a concern.
It's sad that we're in this moment.
But following the assassination
of Charlie Kirk,
everyone was clamoring for a massive crackdown
on, you know,
left wing agitators,
Antifa, et cetera,
but then they simultaneously
held both positions.
And I'm like,
what do you think a crackdown is going to entail of door knocking police like randomly door knocking
no it's going to be data collection they're going to determine who's talking to who they're going to
you know wiretap phones investigate you know any potential terror blocks these sorts of things
and that's just the reality of the world we live in in the same instance where it's like
I understand the apprehension to AI the problem is we can as a society decide we're going to
take a foot off the gas we're going to return to the 1990s China is not and again if you start
calling behind in technological races that's there's
We're not going to say, oh, okay, well, U.S. gave up so we can chill now.
No, that's just not how it works.
It's unfortunate.
I wish it wasn't that way.
But at least the way I see it is China can just dominate us in 30, 40 years.
Well, you were outsourcing all of our highly advanced technological manufacturing to China was not the best thing.
No kidding.
Yeah.
Our power grids, example one, power grids.
You kidding me?
Fricking China, they make our parts for a lot of our major power grids.
And they could put a little switching in or whatever they want to do to turn it all off.
Yeah.
Think of all the zero-day exploits that are built into, like, devices that are made in Chinese factories.
American devices designed.
And a factory in China, they could just sneak something in and keep that to themselves.
Like those pagers, those.
I was going to say, yeah.
When you were saying, like, the surveillance state or how would a crackdown look, it would be, like, data aggregation.
See who's talking to who?
I started to think about Boo Kelly and how people were getting locked up for talking to a gang member.
And like, that's why I think we got to start slow with this with this spy tech,
uh, deep state tech not technocrat.
Because if it goes too hard, if we wait too long and then it becomes really, really
desperately abrupt, you will go to prison for talking to someone that was bad.
Like, it could be that bad.
So I, I think saying like you're saying, you can't just say no, don't, because then someone
else will do it.
And if we don't, so we have to do it like in a, in a ethical way.
if there's even such a thing.
Yeah.
Well, it's the same argument
that like people,
conservatives make on gun control,
which is like,
okay,
if you ban guns,
you know,
like let's just say
a city of Memphis,
right,
a city with exceptionally high crime,
violent crime,
well, we're going to ban guns
to stop gun crime.
Well,
that doesn't stop the criminals.
That just stops the,
like, law-abiding citizens
who would obey
with whatever the law is.
The law says don't murder,
so they don't murder.
So it's like,
again, if you implement gun control,
if you implement gun bans,
that only impacts
people that were already abiding
by the law anyway.
So it's like you're not actually preventing anything from, you know, any bad actors from acting
maliciously.
It's kind of the, at least as I see it, the same fundamental principle that we're talking about
here, which is, okay, you're stripping it away from people that weren't intending to use
it for evil anyway.
You're just guaranteeing that, again, like a China or other rogue bad actors gobble up
even more power.
Mark, you were saying that what's unconstitutional or what should be, what is unconstitutional,
but it's currently legal, which is a weird way to put it, is that there's scraping up mass
amounts of data. So how do you feel about pre-crime technology where they only scrape up data
if they think they've determined through like artificial intelligent algorithmics that you might
or very likely could be a problem? But then I don't know. Just with the, we've seen so much
AI likes to hallucinate a lot. It likes to aim to please its master, whoever, you know,
there's right now somewhere in the world, there is the stupidest person ever typing something
into chat GPT and chat CPT is you're absolutely right that's a great idea does that extend to
these government-based machines as well could there be issues i i don't i don't necessarily like the
idea of a of a pre-crime type of thing especially driven by AI yeah this whole situation we find
ourselves in it's a it's an ironclad finger trap chinese finger trap if you will um and uh thank fang
we're talking about her again thank fang she's the finger well well maybe for some uh but i do i do just
want to say that I know that my dear friend and colleague, Shane Cashman, wants desperately to teleport
himself into this room and set us all straight on Toulintier. And I'll just share one thing that
he said on X today that it's one of those things I read it once and I'm never going to forget it.
He said that J.D. Vance is the data center of politicians. Fantastic. When you say we're in a Chinese
finger or finger trap, what do you mean exactly? Well, you can't, you can't unleash yourself from it.
Like we're stuck in this situation. Like Taylor said, we can't decelerate where we're at. And we
We have to be very careful about accelerating it.
It's a finger trap.
Well, those things, if you try and pull out of it, you can't get out.
But if you push in slowly, then you can extricate yourself.
That would be a deceleration option in terms of this probably a little wonky metaphor.
And that has its drawbacks too.
Yeah.
And this is why I take this sort of contrarian position, because on the right, again, the popular,
I'm not going to say boogeyman because that's kind of a degrading thing to say,
but I just can't think of a better synonym to use here, why people, again, constantly
pointing to Palantir, again, I'm just saying I'm kind of in that in that boat to some degree is like,
well, there's not many options right now. There's not many options. Again, we're speaking in very
abstract solutions. Like, what if we could have like, you know, a Faraday cage for our phones?
It's probably not going to happen with the options, you know, at our disposal right now. Again,
democracy is very rigid. Democracy is pretty much impossible to collapse. I mean, South Africa is a
great example. South Africa should have collapsed a long time ago. But the way that, again,
liberal democracy's function, it is very hard to collapse one. So again, Palantir, you just have to
evaluate on its face, articulate what specifically is bad about it and what makes it worse than
any of the other data collector shows in town that, again, will just gobble up any vacuum
left over from Palant to. That's just my question. Again, I don't want any of these companies
to exist. I think it's a very traumatic, intrusive thing that data collection is even occurring.
It's just my initial point. Once you start the boss battle, you can't really go back.
Would you do a world where everyone knew everyone's thoughts?
No, no. That would be terrible.
I like human autonomy. I have a very like classically American view of privacy.
The more the better, but what would you say, Mark? I said I would get arrested immediately.
I think we all were. Yeah. Oh, there goes that.
Eric, well, we could have stopped Eric Swallow on his tracks. I used to fantasize about a world where we all could read each other's brains just in...
The hive mind? Yeah, I was like, what better, how else will we curb the chaos and death of tribalism unless we're all one unit? But that's very bored, you know?
Yeah, I watched the first season at Pluribus as well.
What's that?
It's an Apple TV show about an alien hive mind virus that comes in.
And there's a couple people that are resistant to it.
But it's very interesting.
And not to go too cliche here,
but social media did in some ways allow us to read each other's thoughts.
And we realize that people are filled, again,
not to sound cliche, but people are a bit more angry than we previously thought that they were.
My philosophy is if I have a calm mind and then you have an agitated brain and we meld,
you calm down, although I get more agitated.
Maybe there would be a balance if enough calm people could be part of a hive mind that it would quell, it would calm people down.
And I don't know if people were angry before the Internet.
They've become angrier, at least in my world, since the Internet than the whole social media world.
Because Ian's a very mellow, chill guy, but then all of a sudden he read Raymond's Twitter.
And then Raymond, who he previously thought was a chill guy, is actually really angry.
And now you get angry because Raymond's angry.
No, I'm tapping my foot.
What the crap?
Now you're getting arrested from me because of my thoughts.
Yeah, yeah, and further on, an issue with social media is just the commoditization of anger.
Like, for these companies to be profitable, they have to show an active user base.
They have to show engagement.
And so their algorithms are going to be built to serve you stuff that's going to piss you off.
So you comment on it.
And it's just like an endless feedback loop of angry people yelling at each other.
It's so true.
And this is why I want to get to this last story.
Originally, we're going to go with Mike Pence, but I don't think that fits in very well.
That's the direction.
I want to keep pontificating on this idea from the Wall Street Journal.
SpaceX and Google are in talks to launch data centers in orbit.
A deal between the two tech titans would give a boost to SpaceX's business ahead of a historic public listing.
A launch deal would put the two companies in a partnership as they gear up to compete on orbital data centers,
an unproven technology that SpaceX chief executive Elon Musk has said is the next frontier for his rocket company.
This is not my domain, but it sounds like it is Ian Crosson's domain.
Well, I love it.
I've been thinking about using since about two,
2011, it seemed like it was actually feasible to store data in DNA or in glass cubes in orbit.
And I just keep picturing, like, firing a laser from Earth in, like, hitting a data center and just getting the data.
And then I'm like, maybe they're already out there.
Like, maybe a species 100 million years ago seeded data centers.
And we just don't know where they are.
Because if we hide data centers underground or out in orbit and then humanity suffers a cataclysmic wipeout on the surface, we wouldn't know they were there for another million years, potentially.
Plus, you got to get them off Earth.
They're too big.
They're loud.
I just saw Valuetam it tweeted out how they're buzzing.
They're causing people like anxiety from the noise they're making.
They're sucking up water.
They're pumped.
So spaces, I thought, though, that I had read that they were trying to figure out
to cool these things down.
Yeah.
It's in a space.
Elon Musk did a presentation recently.
He was talking about, we talked about this before the show, his all-on-one chip fab and manufacturing.
And he talked a bit about the orbiting data centers, and it sounds like it's just they're going to have radiators out in space just on the dark side of whatever satellite is out there for the cooling to pass everything through.
And I agree with you.
I think data centers should be moved to space if possible.
There's a YouTuber Ben Jordan who did a really deep dive into the infrasound that is coming off of these data centers and affecting people that live in the neighborhoods.
He's doing a project right now to capture and quantify just how much infrasound is coming out in these neighborhoods, I guess, to organize a class action lawsuit.
But it's using up natural resources.
It's using up power.
In space, you have a solar panel, unlimited free power from the sun, frees up resources on the earth.
This also, I feel like it gives vindication when Donald Trump said, the windmills are giving people cancer or something like that, the windmills.
Because the sound will destroy people.
I mean, the dudes that took shell shock in World War I from all the artillery going off,
they came back physically broken in a lot of ways.
Yeah, you expose people to this kind of, and you're just calling it infrasound,
meaning it's below human perception, is that what it?
Yeah, but you can feel it.
And so he showed, he went to some of these neighborhoods right by the data centers,
and you could just feel something.
He had some special microphone, special audio recording equipment.
He was able to capture what it sounds like.
And it's just this very, very low frequency hum,
it just messes with you
and these people live in it 24-7
but you know we have to be able to make funny pictures
with AI well now to play devil's advocate
here I mean look one of the objectives
for the American right for some time now has been
sort of re-industrializing the United States right
we want to see an increase in manufacturing
an increase in industry hard industry
and these sorts of things
like you've asked yourself in 2026 what does hard industry look like
I think data centers might be an example of that
and so far as people were used to furniture shops
or textile mills or steel mills moving into their towns prior, those left and those towns
collapse.
Now, is there an argument that be made that, again, data centers are sort of the 21st century,
really 2026, sort of analog for, again, hard industry, re-industrialization?
Yeah, because they're going to make chips that are faster and require less electricity.
So these giant, megalithic buildings are going to become, start to become obsolete, like ghost towns,
like the iron, you know, like Akron, Ohio after the rubber boom of 1950s.
What concerns me?
You were talking about, like, this is the new industrial revolution, is the AI revolution.
They're putting them in orbit.
So when it orbits over China, does China have a cast as belly to blow it up?
Because it's above their country.
Like, it's going to be the reason why now, they're going to make the argument that we have to militarize space to protect our data centers.
It's already been done.
We did that demonstration.
We shot a faulty satellite down from a boat in the middle of the Pacific Ocean.
They fired a missile.
it hit a spy satellite that was deorbiting on its own already,
but they're like, oh, the tank on it has deadly hydrozine in it.
We can't let that potentially land intact.
So we better shoot a missile at it from a boat.
I think that was kind of like a, you know,
something measuring contest with China to show like,
we can shoot your stuff down.
It was an orbit at the time?
It was an orbit at the time.
They hit it with a missile?
It was a missile fired from a boat in the middle of the Pacific Ocean.
Oh, so it wasn't even above the United States.
It was just, was it moving towards the United States?
And that was their argument?
Yeah, and it was already deorbiting.
So what you would have to have these things orbit, like, not above adversarial nations?
Can you change orbital?
I don't know enough about the thrust, the rocketry.
Yeah.
Well, I think also a calculation on it with other countries is if you shoot something in space,
it creates untold amounts of shrapnel, and it basically traps you on the planet,
destroys a bunch of other things that are in orbit, because a little piece of glass or a
little piece of metal flying at 17,000 miles an hour is going to cause some major problems.
And so I think what's holding them back, it's almost the same principle of, you know,
with nuclear weapons, mutually assured destruction.
If they shoot a satellite in space and it creates all this debris field, they handicap themselves.
They can't go back up there.
They can't launch their own satellites.
They could cause damage to their own satellites.
So I think that's what's keeping them in check right now.
And potentially in the future, a nation could do some sort of Samson option type
thing where they're like screw it. If I can't do it, no one can. I'm just going to blow this up
and let the world handle it. I think that's just keeping us safe right now. It seems like the
U.S. has won world war. Whatever that world war was that started in 1914, the U.S. won.
And now, what's that? The Great War. Yeah, the Great War has finally come to a close.
It was the best. One, the Great War. But what's next is like robots. Because I don't think
the Chinese or the Russians are going to try and fight this military monolith thing. No one wants to.
They don't necessarily like it, but it's the least worst economic system that's ever existed.
But the rope, I don't know what the next iteration of the Great War is going to look like. I think it's robots. I don't know.
Yeah, potentially. I mean, I think, not to quote Alex Jones, I think it's going to be an info war.
And I think we're already in it. There's just so many people online trying to subvert each other.
and subvert ideologies to gain control.
And that we have a proxy war between the United States and Russia through the war in Ukraine.
I think even Marco Rubio literally said it's a proxy war, which is crazy for Marco Rubio.
But respect to him for that.
I don't know his angle on it.
But we're already in it.
We're already in it.
We're already seeing the effects of it.
And it's an ideological war.
It's a war for our minds.
You mentioned co-intel pro before we went live.
That's an FBI organization.
What is it?
Co.
What does it stand for it?
Counterintelligence program, basically.
Counterintelligence program.
They definitely stopped that in 1971, by the way.
There's no way they would have changed the name of it.
Operation Mockingbird has totally stopped as well.
There's no people on podcast or on TV that are given talking points by domestic or foreign
nations.
Definitely not.
Is counterintelligence?
That just means that we're going to make a false narrative?
Well, I think that was the name that they gave it.
That was like calling it the Patriot Act when it has the opposite effect.
Like in their minds, they were doing the right thing.
They were surveilling these groups.
It was predominantly black groups in the 60s.
These are the, this is the operation.
I don't know if you heard the story about MLK Jr.
receiving a letter in the mail being like, hey, we know you're cheating on your wife.
You better kill yourself.
That was the FBI that wrote that letter and sent it to him.
That was part of Cointel Pro.
And so these black groups were gaining so much power and so much cohesion working together.
they had to stop it, and so they had to subvert it by going after a leader of one of them.
They would send letters that purported to be for members of other groups to opposing groups
to try and start fights between them, to stop them from working together.
They would bring an agent provocateur to protest, to start drama, to start beating people
up, to start looting, to misbehave, to essentially weaken that movement.
And we saw something similar with the fall of Occupy Wall Street in the early
2010s, which coincidentally rises with the fall of Occupy Wall Street rises with instances of the
words racism and white and black appearing in national newspapers. So this woke culture came directly
out of subverting Occupy Wall Street. So, so you're not, okay, real quick, uh, you're saying, uh,
by black groups, you mean like, uh, African American, or not, sorry, black American groups.
Yeah, yeah, like black panthers. Yeah. Yeah. Yeah. Like black panthers. Yeah. Yeah.
You know what I mean? Black sites?
Yeah.
Not a CIA black side.
One that gets me the most that you mentioned of all these like tactics that, you know,
counterintelligence tactics is where you get two enemies to start fighting each other.
You send one side like party A, a message that says, party B, I'm party B and I'm coming for you.
And then party B is like, I'm party A, I'm coming.
And then they go to war and you just sit back and watch.
That's an ancient tactic.
The Chinese thousands of years ago.
Ancient Chinese secret.
You're right.
Sorry.
I learned it in Romance of the Three Kingdoms by playing it on the Sega Genesis.
I don't know what the term was, but it was a very lucrative.
I mean, if you get two opponents to exhaust themselves,
I think that's what's happening today on the internet with podcasters.
And they're making money from it.
That's the incentive.
They're getting eyeballs.
And the more controversial ones,
some of them are being algorithmically boosted to sow that dissent,
like to sow that discord between people who to fracture bases.
So the conservative base is totally fractured because you have these different warring factions, the podcast wars, as Michael Knowles affectionately refers to it as.
It's by design and it's being encouraged by big tech.
And it's, I see why big tech would do it because it serves two purposes for them.
It drives engagement so they get money from it.
That's probably priority number one.
But also a lot of the people running these big tech corporations are liberally minded.
They're hardcore liberals.
Of course they're going to want to subvert conservative ideology.
They're going to want people to fight amongst themselves because then they easily, easily can win elections.
Because if the conservatives can't come together behind a single candidate, the Democrats always vote blue no matter who.
That's one of their taglines.
So it's by design.
And it's terrible.
I don't know where I was going with it.
I just want to interject one thing about Quintel Pro.
There is one vital book from the past, I don't know, 15 or 20 years that everybody,
It's essential reading.
It's Tom O'Neill's chaos.
And he takes a really deep dive into Cointel Pro,
the likely associations between that,
the CIA and Charles Manson and the whole 60s radical movement.
I read that.
You read it?
Oh, yeah.
You have to read it.
It's great.
What was the main takeaway from it without spoiling the book, I guess?
It kind of leads into the same territory that we're talking about right now,
just, you know, CIA subversion.
And that we'll use, I mean, anything from mind-controlled, MK Ultra.
I mean, it gets into all that stuff.
and it links it to the Manson murders.
Oh, yeah, I heard Charles Manson was M.K. Ultrid.
Very convincing argument that O'Neill makes in that book.
Yeah.
Oh, man.
I think in scales and patterns, like, where else is this take playing out?
Like, this getting your opponents to fight each other.
Think about it as like, if you're in that system, like, where?
What's happening right now?
There's LGBT and Palestinians.
The Israel-Palestine thing.
The Hamas folks, you know, like, or the Muslims and the LGBT community.
Like, they're not going to get along when it comes down to it.
We've already seen fighting streets and not get along at all in their protest.
They clash.
And you're even seeing it in the LGBT community itself.
The LGBBs and the T's are starting to fight with each other.
And that whole thing is another rabbit hole.
One interesting thing that I did notice as a reporter in Southern California was that there were these kind of unlikely bedfellows
of alliances among Muslim parents and Christian parents that were pushing back against all the LGBTQ, you know, gender goblin stuff.
I was going to ask that. Do you think that Islam and Christianity should come together to form like a better Abrahamic union?
I mean, it goes back to Abraham.
There can be coalitional efforts, but, please.
You don't think Abraham was like, the guy?
Like, why isn't there religion about Abraham?
He's the guy that?
He was just the guy.
I should let you answer the question before I start.
No, please, please.
Sorry. I mean, Abraham Lincoln, you tell him Lincoln, right?
No, no, Abraham.
Father of...
Father Abraham.
The father of Judah.
Not honesty.
The father of Jacob, who is the father of Judah, the tribe of the Jews.
I'm learning about those guys.
I don't know what you're right.
The grandfather of Judah, father of Jacob, Israel.
I think generally for Muslims, Christians, Jews, and then God takes more precedent than Abraham.
But I reject the notion of an Islamic Christian alliance purely based on what utility do Christians have.
for Muslims because again, like this is the same, this is the same false premise of the left-right
alliances. What does the right offer the left? Because again, the left, Muslims have demonstrated,
I'm sitting this separately here, but they often work in collaboration. They often are able to
impose their will, impose their will in spite of their host population or in the left's case.
I'm just tripping on my words. They're able to impose their will in spite of the rights opposition.
So what do they need us for? I mean, that's kind of the question.
You mean what is Islam? How could it benefit from merging with Christianity?
Or even the left, you said, right?
Even the left, or just even if we were to speculate a Islamic Christian alliance, I think, like, every time this has been tried, at least about the last few years, what typically happens is the Christians will fight to advance Islamic causes, but it's never the other way around.
Like, we can give them, like, we like freedom of speeches and freedom of liberty and property rights, but that's what they can gain from us, but they'll take that and throw it out the door.
Yeah.
And second they get a chance.
We've got the Judeo-Christian alliance.
They actually call Judeo-Christian.
So I assume there's some sort of merge that happened.
I mean, Jesus was a Jewish guy.
I think the Judeo-Christian thing was more of like a top-down effort to maybe find common ground because
the conservative movement following the 1960s.
There was a lot of Jewish intellectuals.
And I'm not saying this is like a pejorative.
I'm just saying it's just the reality on the ground.
And so we felt like, okay, we have some common understanding and culture war ideas and stuff so we can
unite. But I don't utilize the term Judeo-Christian because I think like, I think actually was
Yoramizoni said that he believes that Jews, and he's a Jewish gentleman, he said that Jews should be
maximally Jewish, Christians should be maximally Christian. And if that's the case, there's actually
not going to be much in common because, okay, where there is overlapping interest, there may be,
but again, Christians do have a fundamentally different view of God, like who God is. We believe
that Christ is the son of God. Therefore, it's difficult to truly merge those two.
in any meaningful way beyond, like, against some cultural or culture war issues where we do find
ourselves linking shields.
If, is there a way to like, with Islam?
I'm looking at nothing, Raymond.
You saw me looking at it.
I'm visualizing God.
I was trying to visualize God what it is.
So, like, for the Islamic faith to see the same God, because they're all talking about
the monotheet, you know, the one true God.
Is it not just the same?
I mean, I know it's defined differently, but that doesn't mean it's not the same thing.
Actually, off camera, I got into this a little bit with Brett Weinstein yesterday, and he said he doesn't use the term Judeo-Christian either.
He says that, what did he say?
He said that the New Testament is an upgrade, not a sequel, which I thought was a very clever way of putting.
I never thought of it that way, but he's correct.
So there are some fundamental differences between Abrahamic religions that can't really be reconciled.
Yeah, like as a Christian, I would contest that if you're not adhering to the triune God, right?
God, the God, the Son, God, the Holy Spirit.
then that's not the God, that is not your creator that is going to essentially be in communion with you for you to enter heaven.
And I think if a Muslim is being honest or if a Jewish person is being honest, they would make that same contestment.
It's just in public when we're in public spaces debating.
It's polite to not like speak about those hard divisions.
But especially in regards to Islam, you've seen that, again, they do have some fundamental differences between us and Christians.
It's not very useful for either of us to like really seek an alliance because,
There's maybe overlapping interests in regards to, I don't know, maybe like LGBT things, maybe abortion.
That's really where the like locking shields potential really stops.
I see it sort of as like a necessity to buffer against a greater evil, like the way that the Americans and the Soviets came together to fight the Nazis in World War II.
That there is, not that like Taoism or Buddhism is the big threat out there, but I feel like there's more technical threats than religion that we could.
I probably have a lot more in common.
with a secular American than a Pakistani Muslim.
Religion's a way more stronger,
more powerful than in some army,
over the scale, long scale of things.
But I would also make the contestment,
this is going to be unpopular with the audience,
but this is just how I feel.
I would have a lot more in common
with a secular American than like, I don't know,
like a Haitian Christian,
because it's like, okay,
we do have some worldview overlaps,
but the reality is that Western civilization
structurally is Christian
and so far as how we structure morality,
ethics, customs, et cetera, et cetera.
These all come from Christianity.
And so, again, as someone that's operating within Western civilization is going to have a slightly closer worldview to me than someone that's from a disparate culture that also does have sort of nominal Christianity.
And Raymond, to piggyback off of your point about how powerful religion is, humans inherently want to believe in something higher or something bigger than themselves.
We have just, it's almost like an empty spot in our brains that needs to be filled with something.
And for a lot of people, it's God.
And for atheists, and we see this a lot on the left, it's leftist ideology.
That's why they are so angry about certain things.
And sometimes you even see it with people who just love funco pop dolls and seshwan sauce from McDonald's jumping up on a counter screaming, I want my seshwan sauce.
It's like those people that are that extreme, 500 years ago, they would have been like ridiculously.
What was it Christian maxing?
Sure.
Jew maxing.
I'm not Jew maxing.
I barely practically.
I did my taxes this year.
that's the extent.
Judaism, practicing.
And bacon's delicious, by the way.
That's why you didn't get a bar mitzvah, isn't it?
Yeah, you love bacon.
Yeah, I ran away from Hebrew school when I was 12.
It's a long story.
I used to think of like the unification of the faiths as a nice thing that could happen.
And now I see it as an inevitability that it's a survival mechanism against the greater threats.
Like, at some point humans are.
going to realize they're not each other's enemies. There's a greater threat out there.
The problem is Muslims will typically side with secular atheists to combat against Christian interests.
Like this is what you see. Virtually every Western country is Muslim immigrants will typically
fold in with whatever pre-existing left-wing party there is, Britain, the Democrat Party in the United
States, because again, they view Christians, you know, that Christian core of Western civilization
as oppositional to their existence. Because, again, if Christians were to truly operate, you know,
punching above their weight, firing on all cylinders, there probably wouldn't be much non-Christian
migration to these countries. So that's why Muslims do view Christians as adversarial in Western
nations is because they are an impediment to further Islamification of those societies, where
secular people are kind of indifferent. I don't know, you can just do whatever you want.
Has there, what's that? Furchas have been way too nice on this front. And a couple weeks ago,
I called Catholics the devil. Just because they, you know, the NGOs and the,
the pope but like they had the crusades so i'm i'm learning more like that's props like i don't know
if any christian community besides like the catholics of rome would do the crusades of even back
in the day because they're just such a nice good human beings so raymond i have such plans just
wait one of the crusades was christian on christian they'd just like land grab they the pope would be
like the french the cathars are it's a heresy everyone go take their land if you want and all these
French dukes would go just take pieces of...
Well, it's when the Crusades got derailed
because they were like, look,
we've done a bang-up job here in the Holy Land.
We're in the neighborhood.
We should go take back Constantinople,
and that's how it began to unravel.
But it was a worthy goal.
But with that, I think we need to head
to Rumble Rants and Super Chats.
We got quite a bit to work through here.
Carter has been plucking out
the finest Rumble Rants and Super Chats for us.
So what do we got here, Carter?
If you can just kind of highlight for me
what you think I should be reading
because I'm a Calvinist.
so I don't believe I have free will.
And so I need Carter to make my decisions for me.
I think this one is about last night.
Okay.
All right, we'll read this.
From Marusha Dank 316, I think Brett's point,
we're not talking about Brett Dasavik,
we're talking about Brett Weinstein here.
I think Brett's point about maximizing freedom
is like using the Laffer curve to maximize revenue.
Too much or too little doesn't get you there.
I think that's a fair assessment.
Yeah, well said, well said.
Truth maxing.
South Carolina.
from Don't Begoy.
For two bucks, he's thrown in a super chat here.
South Carolina is like Indians.
Oh, no, rather.
South Carolina is like Indiana.
Okay, that makes a little bit more sense.
All right.
They did elect one, Nikki Haley,
so I don't know if that would flush out.
South Carolina is like Indiana.
It's a rhino state.
Yeah, I know.
This is South Carolina.
They produced consistently some of the worst senators
in the GOP caucus, unfortunately.
Graham has been there for whatever now?
For, like, literally.
Yeah, like honestly.
It's been,
I was born, I think.
As long as I've been plucking.
Wow.
Him and his ladybugs.
Cody Johnson, 97.
Sorry.
Cody Johnson,
9781 said,
met Phil last night in St.
Louis.
Oh, nice.
All right.
Wow.
Yeah,
shout out to the great Philibonte.
He is tearing it up right now.
That is where he is right now.
A lot of us went.
A lot of us went,
wondering earlier.
Yeah, he's on tour.
He's busy.
A few of us here at Timcast
went in Salmon, Baltimore.
I had a little crowd surfing incident.
Oh, you did.
I heard.
It was fantastic.
It was a lot of fun.
You can go, I put it on my Instagram.
If you want to go to my Instagram, you can see me crowds here.
Nice.
If you're watching, I recommend if you got a chance to watch out,
all that remains, man.
It's rocking.
I'm sorry, I just stepped in front of you, man.
Okay.
I blocked your camera shot.
I'm so mad about that eating your fire.
Did you catch that Carter?
Yeah, well, I did, dude, I tried to trickle around it.
Yeah.
I tried to create illusion that you'd never left the room,
but it didn't really work very well.
Shout out to Phil LeBonte.
I love the man.
Phil, I'm in your seat right now.
Have a killer to her brother.
Just crush it, dude.
I saw him.
Did you guys see that one?
I retweeted it of him screaming.
Like, the dude is built, like, not a lot of people on Earth can do that.
That's pretty wild.
That guy's awesome.
Mechanical Mercenary for 20 bucks here on Rumble said.
SPLC commercial on TV right now, fundraising on the redistricting.
Funding racism won the donation at a time.
I think that's absolutely true.
It's kind of actually funny.
There are a lot of these NGOs that are quite thrilled about how excellent the Republicans
have been behaving over the last few weeks because it's a,
huge fundraising opportunity for him.
It is quite something
to see there.
Pop
Raider.
Ice being poorly trained,
this I think it directed at you.
Ice being poorly trained
is a Democrat talking point.
Fast-tracked agents come from those
with previous experience in law enforcement.
Not all of them.
Otherwise, it wouldn't have American citizens
being killed.
I understand that they were,
you know, being resistant, but these guys
are not well trained.
And not all of them, obviously.
but, I mean, there's been these very well-known incidents
that indicate that perhaps they're not getting the level of training
that they need to be able to do the job that they're tasked to do.
Are you referring to like the, like the René Good?
Yes, yeah.
Do we know what kind of training they actually have?
Because I'd be curious to know.
Yeah, they have like kind of a...
Because they were hired so quickly, you know,
there is a pre-existing ICE training regiment.
But, again, when you're effectively fast-tracking agents here,
which is what they need because they're trying to carry out a mass deportation agenda,
they're banking quite a bit on their previous law enforcement expertise.
Yeah, the Renee Good.
I mean, look, that was something that we litigated quite extensively on Tim Cass.
We had a few people that were contesting that this was unjust.
I think the stalemate that I think a lot of people could arrive at was, again, if you're sort of impeding on a federal investigation, what happens to you is sort of a responsibility of you.
And so I think that was kind of the assessment people kind of came to a conclusion.
Chris, do you think, I'm going on the next chat, though.
Do you think that we'd be better off with the robot police in these situations?
I've seen robocop way too many times to think that that's a good option.
But just to clarify, I'm not a Democrat.
I don't care about the talking points.
I'm an anarchist.
So I'm critiquing them from any angle, it's from an anarcho-Christian perspective.
Yeah, well, I respect that you're consistent on that.
So this is from Hitman Zarelli.
He says, for 10 bucks, modern Europe, modern UK is not anywhere near similar.
They say constantly we have no food.
We have no culture for two weeks.
Japan showed more respect than the UK has ever shown.
Japan is a stronger ally.
I agree with that.
I think Japan has been a very loyal ally of the United States, which says a lot.
And, you know, as an aside, you know, you see a lot of these countries and they cite European colonialism is really why we've been held back.
Well, we literally like nuked Japan and decimated their society.
And in 70 years, they've emerged to be the third largest economy.
I think they just got passed by India, but for all intents of purposes, third largest economy.
And a unified, no, absolutely.
I mean, that's a important.
I trust society.
I trust society, very homogenous, proud to be Japanese.
they've elected sort of pro-Japanese national identity groups.
It's quite something to see, and they've been a very excellent ally.
Minus Hirohito's militant empire.
Was that the guy?
He wasn't the emperor, Hirohito.
He was the emperor.
Was he also the emperor?
Yep.
Minus his, that little 40-year debacle, the Japanese have been so cool.
I just kind of overlook that weird period of Japanese imperialism between like 1890 and
1940.
But I guess they've always been kind of warlike, you know, with the,
The shogunette in the 14 and 1500s, the Sengoku-Gi Dai,
Oudunobunaga, Tokugawa.
Way after the 1920s, 30s, 40s.
What's it?
You just said the 1400s?
Well, back in the 14 and 15-00s, when the Sengoku-Gi Dai was going on,
and it was like this gig, it was like the Japanese civil war that went on for like a hundred.
Effectively a shogunate well into the 19th century until we opened up their economy,
forcibly.
And it's been very romanticized in American culture, a samurai, for instance, ninja, you know.
Yeah, which actually was like a thing.
quite long. By the time
the 19th century rolled around, it was a little bit of a different
structure. It resembled more something we saw
in World War II. But yeah, they had about
50 years of free trade, and they were like,
enough of this, we're electing a fascist.
On the point of Japan, like, they're able to maintain
their trains, they're able to maintain their buildings,
whereas the people got colonized in certain
countries are unable to maintain anything.
They don't know, they don't know how to do trains, they don't
do bridges. So at least, like, there's people who can't
function in the world, and there are people who actually can function in the world.
Yeah.
Do you know what they used before candles in Zimbabwe to light their houses?
It was probably some fattice of some sort.
It was light bulbs.
Oh, what?
It was light bulbs.
Oh, that's hilarious.
Do you know how people in Tanzania got around before the donkey?
Carts.
It was cars, actually.
Cars and trains, yeah.
Anyway, I digress.
Nikki Coco here says, this is on Rumble.
This is a Rumble rant.
Oh, Nikki?
Nikki here says, I grew up in New Jersey in the same town as the Hasidic community. You have no clue
how deep it goes, how coercive the community is, and what they've done to Lakewood and the surrounding
towns and areas. Yeah, Lakewood is a pretty egregious case because in this instance,
originally the sort of ultra-Orthodox communities, what we're talking about, the Hasidics for
those. That's kind of the term that's utilized. People call it Herodem. That's what they call in Israel.
Anyway, they sort of consolidated in Brooklyn initially in New York City, and then now as Brooklyn
becomes very difficult for them to live in, they have started moving.
to surrounding suburbs.
And Curious Joel was the one that Tala Lavera investigated.
Lakewood, New Jersey is another example of where they basically come in, they move in,
vote out everyone and impose their will at the local level.
I want to say about the Hasidic community without being disrespectful,
because I don't want to talk about the community as a monolith.
It's kind of like a girl that's been through some horrible trauma in her life,
and you're like, I'm going to fix her.
I feel like that about the acids.
Like in New York, I'd walk around, I'd look in your eyes and I would see you,
and I'd be like, yeah, you know it's cool.
Like, you know it's cool beyond whatever you're doing with your, whatever your thing is.
I think you should partner to Talola Avera and go on a rescue mission and say, guys, come on.
Yeah, he just got back from Israel.
A little quicker than me is here.
At an acquaintance of mine, I wrote a book called Unorthodox about her experience breaking out of the Hasidic community.
Very enlightening read.
She shares quite a story.
Yeah, absolutely.
I mean, because that's kind of like the false equivalents a lot of people are drawing here.
You're not like with the Amish.
I'm like, okay, there's a variety of reasons
about the Amish are different.
For one, people don't have, like, open memoirs
about how traumatic, like consistently traumatic
the Amish community treated their people.
You actually have a thing in the Amish community.
I don't know what it's called specifically,
but they basically go out into the world.
Rum Springer.
Yeah, what's called?
That's what is.
Rum Springer?
Yeah, well, yeah.
So the, you know, an Amish community,
they go out for two years and participate in the world
and they're like, hmm, let's try this on for size.
And I believe the majority of people
end up returning to the Amish community
because they're like,
it seems like a bit healthier.
So,
Assytic community, I don't know if that's the case.
So, well, not treating them like a monolith, the reviews are not good.
Yeah.
So, fair to say.
It's true.
That's the feeling I got when I would see them in New York with eye contact.
It was like they were forced to look away.
It was very strange.
It was weird.
Yeah, I just want everyone to assimilate.
I think that would be, that's my, I'm consistent across.
So Smollies, Yemenis, any one.
Assetics.
That's all we're asking.
What are you do this?
Is this how we do it?
Yeah, yeah.
I'm new years.
Modern world.
Slip poetry.
Because people were like, why are you picking on them?
I'm like, you were like cheering me on when I was slamming Somalis and slamming enemies.
And then as soon as I touched the group that like people,
some of my cheerleaders had a bit more affinity towards,
all of a sudden I'm like this evil anti-Semite.
So I have like, these people calling me anti-Semites.
And then I have a whole other segment of viewers that are like,
you're a Zionist chill.
And I'm like, what?
I'm just advocating for a pro-America policy here.
Pick a team and stick to the talking points, Tate.
Why can't you just do that?
I know.
Just being a patriot, bro.
And I'm not even trying to be new.
either. Like, I think it's like gay to be nuanced. I'm like, I am taking hardline positions here.
It's just like, unbelievable. So, Methos 671 says, anybody see Nick Shirley's videos documenting
his near arrest and flight from Cuba? He almost got arrested by Cuba's intelligence service.
No, but I saw that he did it. According to Candace Owens, it's all fake. I don't know if Mark has any
I don't. I don't. You want me to speak for? I can't.
She's a great PR guy, though. You can call him.
Bustin balls, my friend. Yeah, no, I haven't, I haven't seen.
seen that. I've seen tweets about it, but I mean, I'm a fan of Nick Shirley's work. I think he's done some
some extraordinary things. I kind of see her perspective on it, you know, that an outsider wouldn't be
so really, really accepted, but. Oh, so he posted videos to be like, hey, I wasn't totally accepted.
I actually got, had trouble. Is that what that video was that he posted? Well, and the thing is like,
okay, I've met Nick Shirley before I've talked to him. And I mean this as a, as a compliment,
actually, is that he's a very, like, straightforward guy.
So, I mean, you're going to have to take my anecdote for, you know, evidence here.
But, like, the idea that he's, like, some sort of clandestine operator,
he's not a, he doesn't have a good enough poker face.
He's like a surfer dude type mentality.
Like, hey, what's going on?
Let's just talk.
Yeah, he's just like, you know, unless he's breaking points, so I don't know.
Yeah, he's just like a guy.
Unless he's the most subversive genius.
Oh.
It's just like when you talk to him, he'll literally just tell you what he's up to him.
It's like, oh, okay.
All right. Anyway, we could hammer on.
Exactly like an agent would.
Yeah.
I know, right?
Damn, he's good.
He's operating on behalf of the American people.
This guy, this guy's seriously nefarious here.
Okay, Swanson, 1998, says, as a native California who fled to Tennessee, it's a night and day difference.
People go vote.
I don't care if it's for a rhino.
I'd rather deal with that than somebody who wants to jail me because I voted Trump.
I like it.
Bold statement here.
And it's very interesting.
It's a conversation a lot of people are having.
Disgrunneled vet says, oh, I just burped into the microphone.
Nice job, dude.
All Americans should listen to John Wayne's album, America, Why I Love Her, about
hyphen American.
He explains it perfectly, second track, the hyphen.
Is anybody familiar with it?
No.
John Wayne, like the old guy?
Gacy.
No, there's a guy that.
That was Junior.
Yeah, I mean, I know Theodore Roosevelt's stance on the hyphenic.
I'm assuming this is a musician.
John Wayne, like the cowboy?
That's what I'm saying.
At least a country song.
An album.
I'm looking it up.
Name the song please again?
I'll quick.
I said America.
I love her.
The second track off of America why I love her.
I kind of missed the days when we could just play copyrighted music at any time anywhere.
Before like ad revenue was a thing in like 2007, you could just play any song at any time on YouTube.
It was great.
Real quick, it's a quote by John Wayne, real quick, the old dude, sorry, the elder gentleman.
The hyphenate American is ridiculous, but that's what we have to put up with.
I think that any person that's in the United States is better off here than there would be where they came from.
Agreed.
I totally, and that's Deodor Roosevelt.
That's what he said.
He's like, look, we don't have room for hyphenate American.
You're either end or you're out.
One foot in, one foot out.
Basically.
It's not acceptable.
I remember a few days ago, I was like on Twitter, and I'd said, I don't even remember.
my point was.
But I was like contesting some point.
And then a guy replied to me.
And he was like, who are you to say, you know, who's American?
Who's not?
Like, you're being cruel.
And then I looked in his bio and it said Cuban American.
And I'm like, whoa.
You're not even all in.
Like, what are we even talking about here?
I like to me say that.
You know, I haven't all in.
Yeah.
Like, okay, it's like if you immigrate here, that's great.
We need to see total dedication in the United States.
Sorry, it's just it is what it is.
You know, that's disagree.
Take it up with Theodore Roosevelt.
Sorry.
It is what it is.
Take it up a teddy.
No.
If you can become a citizen of Earth
and give up your American citizenship, would you?
No.
Probably not.
Definitely not.
Like to represent Earth to Mars?
No.
I mean, the Americans are going to be the ones representing.
Yeah, I'll be an ambassador to Mars.
I'm happy to do that.
We could turn the Earth into the United States of Earth,
and it could all be like self-governance.
I feel like that's where we're headed.
I think that might be in the national security strategy
to eventually just take all of Earth.
Okay.
They'll do it willingly when they realize how awesome.
awesome it is to live free. I'll read one more here from Silas 5G Trump held a bee.
Nice. He did hold a bee. Do you guys remember when King Charles was visiting and the bee was
agitating them and then he picked it up and showed him. Oh really? Yo, I got stung by a wasp. Did I tell you guys this?
This story is nuts. You told me. I was driving with all my windows down about 20 miles an hour and
this was this wasp came in and hit me in the neck. I was like, I think that was a bee and then I was
like, maybe it was a flower. And then it stung me. I was like, ah, and I kept driving. And I was like,
if I just relax, it'll stop. And then it went deeper. I was like, so I pulled off. And the
guy fell on the ground. I like flicked it and he fell down. And, you know, every impulse in my body is like
crush and destroy pain. But I felt so bad for the guy because he didn't mean, he was terrified.
This is actually a metaphor for leftists. I think I might have mentioned this one day to you, too.
It's like, it stung me because it was afraid, not because it was malicious. And so I didn't destroy
I didn't kill it. It didn't want to hurt me. It was just, it just, that was the situation at the moment. So I helped him become free and helped him. And he got away as far as I know. That's right. He actually got detained by ICE shortly after.
So, yeah. So true. What was that? We got to wind this show down. We will be heading to our after show portion. It will be on Rumble. So make sure you're a Rumble premium member so you can join us for the after show. The Discord will be calling in. So make sure you join the Discord. So you can call in and ask this wonderful panel and our guests.
Any question that comes to mind, we will take literally any question.
There's just a thing as a stupid question in the Timcast Discord.
So with that, Mark, where can people find you?
Yeah, you can find me on X at Mark J. Herman.
It's also the same for my YouTube channel at Mark J. Herman.
I do a weekday podcast called Mark Splain.
It's live 2 p.m. Central.
I have no idea what the hell I'm doing.
I'm obviously not comfortable on camera, so it's fun to watch.
Hey, thank you very much for coming on.
Yeah, thanks for having me.
It's incredible.
Really great to meet you guys.
I've been a fan for a long time, especially Ian.
Okay.
I appreciate it.
I'm Ian speaking to me. I'm Ian. I'm Ian. I'm Ian Croslin. Get familiar because I'm going to be around for a long time. Let's just switch it up. All right. Ian, you give your outro. Hit it. Follow me at Ian Croslin. Also, graphing.com movie is coming out pretty soon. Pretty soon. I'm going to put the pedal of the metal on that one. So go to graphene. Dot movie and sign up for the mailing list. So you can get notified when this documentary is going live, man. Got a lot of good things in the pipe. We're going to be recording music pretty soon. Carter and I.
That's true. We are. We got two.
songs in the pipe or is it the pike?
I think the pipe.
One of those things, but yeah.
One of them.
Give your outro.
My outro, I mean, that's pretty much it.
I keep it conversational.
You can follow me at Carter Banks everywhere and at Carter Banks official everywhere else.
If you want to hear some music that me and your Ian are going to record and some that I'm
going to put out, you can find that at Trash House Records YouTube channel.
But yeah, let's, who do we go to?
Raymond, call in the air.
Call in the air.
heads.
Oh, Chris, give us your outro.
Oh, go read by Substack.
Chriscar.substack.com.
It's Car with a K-A-R-R where I write about movies and interesting people.
And I am Remeng G. Stanley, Jr.
I will suggest you sign up for the Discord.
When you get a chance, I will suggest you sign up for Timcast, IRL on the YouTube as well.
That way you can get little beanies in your chat.
And I will suggest you follow me, Raymond G. Stanley on X and in the world.
Let's go.
I love it.
And you can follow me on X and Instagram at Real Tate Brown.
Give me a follow, come hang out.
And we'll see you guys here shortly for the Discord after show.
See you there.
