Timcast IRL - HE WON'T GET AWAY WITH IT w/ Kangmin Lee & Davey Jax
Episode Date: February 14, 2026Phil, Ian, Elaad are joined by Kangmin Lee and Davey Jackson to discuss Don Lemon pleading not guilty to storming a church, an unhinged woman setting fire to an alleged ICE warehouse, a Portland man I...ndicted after allgedly planning to behead ICE agents, and Americans are pissed after an olympian competes for China instead of the US. Hosts: Phil @PhilThatRemains (X) | https://allthatremains.komi.io/ Ian @IanCrossland (everywhere) | https://graphene.movie/ Elaad @ElaadEliahu (X) Producer: Serge @SergeDotCom (everywhere) Guests: Kangmin Lee @kangminjlee (X) Davey Jackson @daveyjax (X)
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Joining us to talk about this and a bunch of other stuff, we got Kangam Lee.
What's up? Thanks for having me.
Who are you? What do you do?
I am the filling for Tim because we need some Korean representation out here.
And so I am the Korean representative for today.
My name is Kongman Lee. I am a speaker, a cultural commentator.
I have two goals in life.
It's one to make heaven full by sharing the gospel of Jesus Christ.
And also to defend truth and tradition while we own the lid.
doing so.
Awesome.
Dave Jackson's here.
What's up?
Davy Jackson,
stand-up comedian,
and alleged criminal
on the run.
Where can people find you?
Social media at Davey Jacks, yeah.
Awesome.
I like your outfit, man.
Yeah?
Yeah, I hope the camera's flipping
back and forth between the two of us right now.
We look like long-lost twins,
but not quite,
maybe like a little inbreeding.
I'm allowed to say that?
That was very smoothly done,
you are.
I'm at Ian Crossland. If you don't know that, I'm Ian Crossland. Check out my stuff at Ian Crossland on YouTube. You can get me on Rumble X. Send me tips on Rumble with the Rumble wallet, by the way. I'm ready to receive. And go to graphing.com. Check out this new documentary. I'm working on a graphene.com. It's nuts. Also to my left, working on Shabbat, the legend.
It's not very kosher of me. Good evening, everybody. I am Alad Eliahu, White House correspondent here at Timcast. And a good reporter, according to the president.
Kangman, thank you so much for coming on, your prolific tweeter,
so I'm ready to see that turned into some yapping on tonight's show.
Many are saying that.
Many say that I am Kongman, the rooftop Lee.
Many have said that, so looking forward to a great show.
All right, so smash the like button, share the show with all your friends.
Head on over to Timcast.com and join our Discord.
Head over to Rumble and become a member there so you can watch the after show,
which is Friday, so there's not going to be an after show today,
but you can watch Monday through Thursdays.
We do the uncensored after the show.
We could talk about whatever.
We don't have to worry about the YouTube censorship stuff.
But we're going to jump right into it here.
From NBC News, Don Lemon played not guilty to Minnesota church protest charges.
The former CNN anchor was inside a church on January 18th when protesters disrupted a service.
A pastor there, demonstrators alleged, worked for ICE, as if that justifies it, right?
From St. Paul, Minnesota journalist and former CNN anchor, Don Lemon pleaded not guilty on Friday to charges connected to his coverage of protests over federal immigration.
enforcement in Minnesota. I mean, I love the fact that right off the bat they're taking
aside, right? Like they're not saying that he was a participant. They're saying that he was
covering it. So they're poisoning the well right off the bat. But NBC continues. During the brief
highly procedural hearing, magistrate judge Douglas L. Miko reminded Lemon of his constitutional rights
and asked if he understood the charges against him. Lemon answered in the affirmative before the
judge said he was free to travel unless he were to violate any state or federal laws.
A prosecutor also revealed on Friday that authorities seized Lemon's phone during the arrest and have obtained a warrant so they can look into it.
Now, that I think is the actual interesting part.
Considering Lemon was, I mean, like I said earlier, he was, you know, if you watch the videos, he was very much a participant, right?
So he's going to use, obviously he's using the defense that, you know, it's the First Amendment right to cover this stuff, et cetera.
but he showed up with coffee for all the people that were the protesters.
You know, he was saying we.
He continued to use the collective.
And thank them.
Yeah.
Thank you for your, what a bunch of warriors, you know.
Yeah, impressive.
Support the troops.
You know.
But I think that that's the fact that they have the warrant for his phone is probably going to be some pretty damning evidence.
I mean, what do you think?
I'm just saying, I don't want to see what's in that phone, man.
If we know anything about Don Levin, man, I don't want to see anything.
in that phone.
On stinky fingers.
On stinky fingers.
Hey, but I don't know if you guys saw that video.
Sergio,
do we have that video?
There's a video going around
where there's a bunch of women,
like fat liberal woman outside of his,
where he's being,
you know,
whatever's happening in Minnesota
where he's there.
And it's just fat liberal woman
waving around dildos.
Oh, really?
I know this is a family-friendly show,
but I kid you not.
This happened today.
And I...
WNBA.
Don would be so proud.
And it's like, what are we doing here?
It's just, you know, fat liberal woman going around protesting.
Remember your constitutional rights, free the press, free the press.
And they're waving around dildos.
Does he even have press credentials still?
I mean, I think he does.
I think technically anyone that says that their press nowadays kind of can be press.
Yeah.
Particularly when you're not going into a place where you have to get authorization from, you know, from officials or what have you.
And they certainly weren't looking for authorization from the church.
They just stormed in and interrupted the service.
And, I mean, from what it looked like on the videos that I saw,
they were intimidating parishioners, trying to scare people.
Don Lemon made comments afterwards about how, you know,
he saw that people were intimidated and that was basically a good thing,
or at least that's what he was alluding.
I think he just had a crush on the pastor, dude.
I wouldn't leave that guy alone.
He was Chad.
I mean, that pastor was pretty much a Chad.
Supported ICE.
I love this country.
I believe he was in ICE.
He worked for ICE, if I'm not mistaken.
Not the one he interviewed.
It was a separate one.
Separate pastor from that church, though?
Yeah, from that church, supposedly.
That's why, by the way, I believe that church was targeted in particular because they, not
that that that makes it right, but that's the reason why they targeted that church.
I think it's such a bastardization of the First Amendment.
I think the founders saw that the First Amendment was being used to justify a bunch of
ICE protesters storming into a church and disrupting a church service.
I think they'd be very, very disappointed.
I can't speak for them, of course, but I think they are.
rolling in their graves because it is such a bastardization of what the First Amendment was there for.
And it's like the gall of these people to say, oh, it's your First Amendment right to go in and storm
a church while they're having a church service. It's like, is nothing sacred anymore. It's like, it's
insane. Well, not only that, just storming in and interrupting, that violates the First Amendment
rights of all the people that are in the church. Like, people are forgetting about the fact that,
you know, the protection of religious services or your right to express yourself, you know, or to
practice your religion, that's in the First Amendment as well. So that your, your desire to cover
the protest or your right to protest does not trump your right to, you know, to express yourself
in your religious service. Especially, it's a peaceful assembly. First Amendment protects
the right to peaceful assembly. So if you trespass and scare people with a loud, raucous
aggression, that's not really peaceful. So the idea is you're out on the street, you're not blocking,
activity and you're not
scaring people. Well look, as a
kid that grew up going
to church multiple times a week,
I would have loved if some
protesters stormed in during one of my
church services just to, you know, mix
things up a little bit, dude. Just try the monotony.
I really, yeah, just
wake me up, you know?
So I don't know my toes. You're waiting for this moment your whole life.
Literally, dude. I only have. Yeah. These churches, they're not a public
place, so I don't think most reasonable people would think they're fair game for like
First Amendment protests. But, but, you're only have my churches. I don't think, but, you're
But as far as the Don Lemon stuff goes, I don't know if it rises to the, you know, the occasion of, like, collaboration or whatnot.
I think what I saw was that he recorded them, knew about it ahead of time, which many journalists are tipped off ahead of time when protesters do stuff like this, both on the right and the left.
And then the bringing the coffee thing.
I don't know if that, like, rises to the occasion of collaboration.
I still think Don Lemon's a piece of shit, and I still think he engaged in some harassment.
And I think his goal was still to encourage the people there.
but I think it's like a dangerous standard to try to achieve.
I'm still old enough to remember when me and other reporters were covering the January 6th riot
and inside the Capitol.
And Alasha Schaefer in particular, I remember he, I believe he was in Nancy Pelosi's office even,
but he wasn't charged with anything.
Not that, and he shouldn't have been.
And some journalists get some protections here.
I think the punishment, the process is the punishment in this case with the DOJ going after Don Lemon.
And that's the case for a few other cases that they have going on well regarding Tish.
James, I think the punishment, the process is the punishment. And same with James Comey, I think
the process is the punishment. This is something Trump himself went through. So when he's throwing it
back in the faces of these people, I don't think he really gives a shit. What would you say to
people that say things like, well, you know, the law that he's being charged under protects
people that are going to abortion clinics, as well as people that are expressing, you know,
going to a religious service or whatever. And there have been a bunch of times where people have
been arrested or the cops of MOOCs to people that are protesting abortion.
move along, et cetera. If you get arrested for praying outside of an abortion clinic,
I can't see how this wouldn't rise to the same level of offense.
If he's going into the church, right? So if you're outside of an abortion clinic,
praying silently, right, or talking to people, you say, oh, hey, do you really want to do this?
Are you sure you want to have an abortion? If someone's going to do that and they're going
to get arrested for that behavior, then I think that Don Lemon going into the church,
I think that all the people that went into the church, I think that rises at the same level of
I think the protest leader that led the people into the church is being charged.
Also, I don't think people are pro-lifers.
Kingman, maybe you could fact-check me on this one.
So far as the people outside of the abortion clinics, they don't get arrested.
But I do think there was a group of people who went inside these abortion clinics, refused to leave.
Those people were charged.
The president eventually ended up pardoning them.
That doesn't justify the stuff that goes on in the church, and the protests who went into the church are being charged.
But for example, do you think the pro-life activist media person who goes,
goes into the clinic with the protesters should also be arrested if they're just filming it,
even if they do have an affinity for the pro-life groups?
Well, I don't think they should be arrested at all because I think they're saving babies.
So they're doing a great job.
Sure.
Not that I encourage-
If abortion is legal and you're obstructing these healthcare facilities from providing that legal service.
I guess there's like that line where, okay, is it moral, but is it lawful?
And there's a discussion to be had there for sure.
Because you're a big pro-life guy.
Yeah, I'm a huge anti-abortion guy.
I think it's unjust.
I think it is a modern day genocide that many people look over just because the babies are small.
But I do think that there have been cases of grandmas who are literally just praying peacefully outside of abortion clinics.
And they were arrested by the Biden administration.
And so it wasn't just only like super aggressive anti-abortion activists who go into the abortion clinics.
It's literally grandmas who are spraying outside, of course, vocally.
And they got arrested by the Biden administration.
Yeah, but what else were those grandmas doing?
You know, those grandmas can be real problematic sometimes.
I don't want to butcher this story.
I believe there is, I wanted to say, a pastor who went into.
Grock says that there have been people, yes, people have been arrested while positioned
outside or near abortion clinics in the United States.
These arrests are not for peacefully standing or praying silently without any additional
action.
The rest, typically stem from specific violations, physically blocking, trespassing on private
property, which Don Lemon definitely did.
Disorderly conduct, which that is what Don Lemon has done.
resisting arrest during protests, interfering with business operations.
So essentially it boils down to there have been people that have been arrested when it comes to abortion under the same law.
And so if if, if, so because of that, I would say that what Don Lemon engaged in absolutely rises to the same, same level.
Even worse, I would say.
I mean, you could, you can make the argument.
And it's like, I don't know how you wouldn't make the claim that he was, he wasn't collaborate.
I don't think you can make the claim he wasn't collaborating with them when he literally,
got them coffee and he was saying we we did this hey good job to them and congratulating them
and he went with them and the fact that i mean i just i'm sure you guys have seen the pictures of like
the children crying and um scared and there's tons of stories that come out from the people who
are actually there of you know these ice protesters getting really violent really in the faces of
children telling like saying obscenities in their face uh not letting them get go anywhere uh
I wonder, where is the line?
Let's say I was the journalist who was tipped off about this event and decided to, I didn't bring coffee and I didn't say we while being there, but I then otherwise recorded everything going on.
Should I be indicted for anything?
If that were the case?
If you were literally a bystander just recording, right, as a journalist, they may be ask.
Well, I would be, no, I would be trespassing, right, because I wouldn't have been welcomed there and probably, yeah, so at the very minimum breaking the law of trespassing.
Well, I do think, well, intent matters too, and also that's proven in a court.
law. But if you were just there to document what was going on, then yes, it's fine because
it's just journalism. But clearly Don Lemon had an agenda, I feel like, and it's just clear by
all available evidence that he was proud to be there and he was happy to be there and he was
happy to collaborate with these violent protesters and these agitators who went in and disrupted
church service. And so I think he should be arrested. I understand your point a lot, but I think
that the real facts on the ground, the fact that the government has prosecuted people for the
FACE Act, which that's the particular law that was broken, for things like inhibiting,
trespassing, et cetera, that standard has already been set. And so when the FACE Act was passed,
the inclusion of religious services and stuff, that was like a gimmy to get Republicans to sign on, right?
Like really, they were focusing on abortion clinics.
That's why it was created.
They were worried about conservatives and pro-life people, protesting or talking to people as they go in and be, and again, do you really want to do this, et cetera.
And so they threw it in there for the, for, to give a bone to conservatives because nobody protest churches, you know, unless it was, unless it was, you know, unless it was, you know, I can't, unless it was like Scientology.
I think they get, they get protests sometimes.
But otherwise, like for the most part, religious services are, are, are, were fairly benign.
and most people didn't, you know, didn't think it would ever come to anything.
And so I think that because of the history with the FACE Act,
I think that's, that precedent has been set.
And now I think it's incumbent on the Justice Department to actually follow through
and prosecute these people.
And I think Don Lemon has actually, you know,
one of the people that made this a national story.
Yeah.
If he received the footage, like if these protesters had strapped on GoPro's,
they trespassed, they scared, they did whatever.
And then they sent the footage to Don Lemon, and he's like,
oh, I'm going to report on this.
that's no crime there.
But if you, it's like a bank robbery.
If you as the reporter participate with the robbers to go commit the crime and you're
there with them inside the bank recording them, you've stepped over a line.
You're not just reporting now.
You're part of the process.
And that's my take on a...
But if you're tipped off to potential criminal activity going on in the future, so these
protesters will often tip off journalists to come cover their events.
Do you think they're what?
And the reporter has a duty to report that to law enforcement.
Okay.
I don't think they do.
I think that would not, it wouldn't make them a journalist if they did.
Well, I mean, it depends on the law.
I guess if it's a law that you think should be broken, you have a moral obligation to violate that law.
I mean, well, you don't know if a law is being broken.
Protesters tell you, hey, we're organizing at XYZ and we plan to do something here.
That's how they'll do it.
It's actually very common in the protest scene.
That's why you'll always see photographers and you'll get a ton of footage of stuff because they tip off the journalists ahead of time.
You don't know explicitly what's going to happen.
Don Lemon knew what was going to happen.
That's part of the problem.
Did you know what the extent of it was going to?
that happened? He knew that they were going inside.
And like the fact that the thing he does immediately as he goes in isn't to document what's going
on, ask the protesters, why are their protests? He goes straight to the pastor.
And so it's part of the scheme where you disrupt a church service and you go straight to the pastor
while he's giving a sermon. It's like clear what his intent was.
And the fact that he went straight to the pastor means that he was in communication with these
protesters because they ostensibly went there because the protester was allegedly
working with ice
even if this guy wasn't the guy
if there was a different
pastor that was working with ice
Don Lemon went to the pastor
because he knew that they were going there
because someone was working with ice.
Don Levin literally went with these protesters
to agitate this pastor
or a pastor who works at this
church to find out who is this pastor
who loves ice, works with ice
etc. And so I think it is very clear
that he went with clear intent.
That's not even bringing up Don Lemon's
personal politics which are of course very
very progressive and very leftist.
This is all stuff that we're talking about,
just the facts on the ground.
Never mind being, like,
mentioning the fact that it's likely that he didn't agree with the religious people
and he agreed with the protesters.
Like that's something that may come up,
particularly because, again, they have his phone,
they have a warrant, they're going to look into it.
And so if he was communicating with them and he knew about,
you know, knew to the extent that the protest was going to be,
then again, this only adds to Don Lemon's.
problems. Despite whatever fine details that we're going through, I don't think the DOJ will end up
charging him. And bigger picture here, I think this is probably the best case scenario for Don Lemon,
because he is a hero among his peers now. Oh, Donald Trump is coming after me. I'm fighting back
against the Donald Trump DOJ amongst all his gay friends in Fire Island. Now, you know who's fighting
back against the homophobic fascists in the White House? It's me, and they're coming after me, and I'm a gay
icon now. That same thing can be said about people that go to protest abortion clinics. You
You don't think that they would be.
I'm sorry, start for that from the beginning.
I was kidding my throat.
But the same thing could be said for people that protest against abortion clinics.
You think if someone goes through an abortion clinic and they're arrested, you don't think that they can be like, look, man, they're prosecuting me from my religious.
Because there's a couple of priests.
Kingman, maybe you know their name specifically because it's escaping me.
But it was these famous pro-life priests who would go around to these abortion clinics, go inside, end up getting arrested.
And it was because they repeatedly did that.
They eventually went to jail.
Trump pardon them.
But even you, a pro-life advocate, I suspect you don't even know the name of these guys.
I think we don't rally around the pro-life flag on the right as many on the left will rally around the anti-ice messaging.
And that's why I think he's becoming more of a hero.
People on the right, people in our country don't really care about pro-life issues,
and therefore they're less sympathetic to those breaking the law to bring attention to that issue,
as opposed to ICE and immigration.
People think they're totally justified in obstructing both ICE officers and, you know, even churches,
church services so long as it justifies and it makes them feel good about the cause that they're fighting.
I think that the I think that because the left is more vocal about this kind of stuff,
particularly now because Donald Trump's in office, the, you know, Roe versus Wade was recently
overturned.
I think that it's a hot button issue.
I think that because Donald Trump is in the office now, the focus on immigration and stuff
like that, that's a big deal.
But I think that they're probably conservative people tend to be just that a little more
conservative.
And I think that people that are pro-life, whereas they won't go and be so boisterous about
it, I think that they still will be like, oh, that was a good thing for him to do.
And if you're talking about optics.
But Lemon's going to experience the Jimmy Kimmel effect on this.
You're absolutely right.
I mean, Jimmy Kimmel had no ratings.
Then he gets canceled, you know, taken off air, comes back and blowing it out of the water now.
Same thing's going to happen with Don Lemon.
You're right.
He's a martyr for the cause at this point.
Is it consistent with Jimmy Kimmel, though?
Because I know that when he came back, he had a big pop because he came back.
But I don't think that his show like had a resurgence or anything.
He did have Don Lemon on, I think, right?
Didn't he interview Don Lemon or something like that?
Yeah, there you go, there you go.
I mean, yeah, I mean, people love a martyr, right?
People love the martyr story.
I feel like it depends heavily on the political issue
and whether or not people think it's justified.
On that spectrum, people decide whether or not
the martyrdom is worth it and interesting.
Right. But I think there is
where, as, yes, I don't want to make Don Lemon
this martyr for this progressive cause
and he's fighting against the fascist and the evil Donald Trump.
I do think that it is also incumbent
on the Trump administration and the Trump DOJ to set a precedent to tell leftists and progressives,
hey, we're not going to tolerate this.
And the more that we acquiesce enforcing the law that is in place and punishing people who
agitate and hurt people or firebomb buildings and things like that, the more that we acquiesce
to say, okay, we're going to stick to decorum.
We don't want to, you know, if we do it, like, imagine if they'll do it against us,
Like, I just don't think we're in a place in America anymore where we can kind of stick to those utopian ideals and this vague abstractions of principles when they're literally killing us and they're shooting us and they're celebrating it and they're bombing us.
And it's like, and nothing happens because, oh, no, it's fascism to arrest these people.
And so I think it is really incumbent on the Trump administration to say, no, we're going to have an end to this.
and all your leftist antics, your violent agitations and all these things, we're not going to tolerate it anymore.
And we need more of that heavy hand for Trump to rule with an iron fist.
They'll call him a fascist no matter what.
No matter what he does, he's going to be a Nazi, he's going to be evil Hitler.
So if they're going to call you that no matter what, the progressives are going to call you that no matter what,
it is incumbent on Trump, I believe.
And the DOJ, too, go and enact justice to protect those who are truly most vulnerable.
Does it matter if they fail to convict and are only able to indict these people?
And what do you mean? Like, does it matter? Like, again, he might not end up being convicted,
but if he's indicted, he has to go through in charge. He needs to go through the entire process.
If you're indicted, same again with James Comey, Tish James. If you're indicted, you still need to
defend yourself, even if you aren't convicted. And that process is the punishment in many ways.
So, you know, I mean, it's not the way the criminal justice system was set up. It wasn't meant to be
that, you know, we're just indicting somebody and therefore,
you are guilty, you know, you are innocent until proven guilty, but then you still need to hire a lawyer, go through the process, be stressed out about being investigated by the DOJ.
All your shit's probably being stared at by, you know, intelligence agencies and whatnot.
Right, but if the indictment's the point and there's no conviction, then what's the point?
It's like, the process is the punishment.
Right, but it's still like political theater at the end of the day and like, I'm just kind of sick of political theater.
I think that, I think to your point a lot, if they don't, if they fail to get a conviction, I think that people are going to look at the Trump administration as weak.
I think that that's already the kind of the right, the base of the right wing.
They're already upset with the Trump administration.
They're not doing deportations fast enough.
Trump's not doing this, not doing that.
I think that if they fail to get a conviction, it's going to be actually bad for the administration.
So I wanted to follow, I'm sorry to interrupt.
I wanted to follow up on the SAVE Act and get these specific details here because I think
it's really pertinent to what we're talking about.
So if I could please have 30 seconds to read this off.
So a Catholic priest who blocked access to a Planned Parenthood abortion clinic could face up to one year in prison after being found guilty
Monday of violating the Face Act on the morning of July 7th, 2020, Father Fidelis
McKinckinsky, 52, a priest of a church of renewal, effectively shut down to Planned Parenthood
in Greater New York in the town of Hempstead, according to the DOJ. He placed locks in chains
on the gated entrance and covered some of them with glue, and that prevented anybody from
getting through the gate and then accessing their pre-planned health care. Not even all of these
were for abortions. I believe he was convicted. And that,
eventually pardoned. I know you're sympathetic to the pro-life cause. Despite that, do you think
he should have been charged based on the actions that he took? I mean, the reality is we live in a
nation, and if we live in a nation with laws, we have to enforce those laws. I don't believe in
lawlessness. And if we want to reform the, if we don't, if we have unjust laws, then we need
repeal those laws. We can't have vigilanteism. Well, he'd be charged on this. Right, right, right.
So I just also think it wasn't just these guys standing outside. They may have been arrested,
but the people who were charged outside of these Planned Parenthoods
were doing more than just standing around
and trying to talk to people who were going in.
They were gluing and locking these doors shut.
They were saving babies, but I'm not endorsing it.
I'm not endorsing those methods.
No, but if you are sympathetic to that cause,
then hypothetically you would say those protests are justified.
Again, people protest around the country all the time
and their actions, people I feel like view them as justified
whether or not they're sympathetic to the cause.
Of course, of course.
But the difference is like, we're right and they're wrong.
Totally.
So, and I guess that's why politics is so difficult in this country because we don't operate from the same moral framework, not even like a semblance of a similar moral framework where the left wants to kill babies.
No matter what, the right is this amalgamation of different, you know, actions of like pro choice, but not until birth and pro life and they're like really anti-abortion.
And just like different people exist in the right wing.
But the commonality among the right wings that they love this country and they love America, where they're like,
as the left wants to burn it all down.
And so I think that's why it's very difficult
to have any sort of political conversation
in this country with those who disagree with us
versus left. But also, I think it's very important
then for us to understand why it's very, very
dangerous for the left to get political power again.
Because once they wield political power,
regardless of whether or not Don Lemon is convicted,
they'll use his indictment,
they'll use this whole process to say,
we're going to go after Trump.
And we're going to go after Trump supporters
and conservatives and things like that.
And so it is very important.
This is where I don't really agree
with a lot of the people on the right
who are, you know, the dissident right
who are like, oh, let's just let it all burn.
Just let the Democrats win.
Well, no, I don't want to see my fellow Christians
and my fellow conservatives
and my patriots locked up
like they were in January 6th
with like hundreds of grammas
in solitary confinement.
And to your point, like the way
that the Democrats are positioning themselves now,
if they were to like win
and, you know, like the decision rights says though,
let them win.
It'll get so bad.
and then people will wake up and then people will actually want to see something happen,
a strong man come in.
I don't think that that's a good idea because the Democrats are positioning themselves
where if they win, they're going to make it impossible for the right to ever win again,
like whether it be by expanding the court and getting rid of the filibuster and adding states
or what happened, you know, jurymandering or whatever.
So there's no representation for conservatives in Congress.
That's the goal of the left is to get.
get a permanent left-leaning majority in in Washington, D.C.
And they've done it in California.
Yep.
They've done it in Massachusetts.
They've done it all over New England.
So it's possible to do that for the whole country.
And then it'll just be like, well, okay, it was cool when we had a chance, but because
people decided, oh, well, we're blackpilling and we're mad that Donald Trump isn't doing
enough stuff for us.
We're just going to let it all burn down.
And if you let it all burn down, it really is the end for.
the right. There is no coming back from what the Democrats are planning. I think unpopular opinion
on that is don't even go after Don Limit. Just go after the people who perpetrated this, right?
Because you're just bringing more attention. It's the Barber Streisand effect with with Don Lemon at this
point. You are creating a hero. Leave him alone. Just act like he doesn't exist because realistically
he doesn't and just go after the protesters. Get more bang for the buck on this. I mean,
they have arrested the two organizers and the woke farmer guy that was doing his best to
actually intimidate people.
Just let Don Lemon fade into the black.
You know, no pun intended.
Holy shit.
I think it's part of their own-the-lib mentality where they couldn't let it go.
They had to go after Don to because he had a big name.
And the president was familiar with him.
And he was like, no, we have to take him down to.
And to their own detriment and to the Lemon's benefit.
Yeah, you want to exercise prosecutorial discretion from time to time.
because like you're just saying, you have a nation of laws.
If you don't enforce the laws, the nation kind of becomes a mockery of itself.
If it can't enforce laws.
But if it can and it chooses not to, there are situations where, like, what you were just saying,
Davey is like, yeah, maybe you don't like fan the flames.
Maybe, maybe, but the thing is now this is also precedent.
So if Lemon does this again, he'll get the book thrown at him, like, 20 years in prison kind of thing.
Because it's already been like, bro, you did it once.
Don't do it again.
Don't support illegal trespassing and promote it to a million people.
so I don't know if you could get away with like throwing the book at him the second time if you don't charge him the first time so it's kind of like look we charge you once before obviously you can't so I don't know I was gonna say you can't charge him for the same crime twice but if he does it again it's if he does it again again if someone can be charged for the same crime if they did another instance of it like if you murder someone and you get found not guilty for you murder another person you're not gonna be like well he can't charge him for murder anymore because he beat the first yeah but a stern talking to you know and then like
Hey, if you do it again, seriously, though, Dawn.
This time.
Like, we're really going to...
All right, we're going to jump to this story from KMBC News.
Woman seen trying to set fire to South Kansas City warehouse
tied to previous ICE detention proposal.
Let's see.
A woman was seen trying to set fire to a South Kansas City warehouse on Thursday,
the same site that had been proposing as a possible immigration detention center.
Video from our crew shows the woman igniting window areas at the building and flames briefly flaring up.
KMBC9 reporter Andy Alloch says he witnessed.
the woman throw what appeared to be a liquid onto the windows before the fire started.
I think we got some video here.
To KMBC 9's Andy Alcock and Andy, I know we'll get to this story in a moment, but we just,
you just saw a woman try to set this building on fire.
Yeah, we did, Chris.
She just left a few minutes ago, but if we take a look, you can see there's some windows
there along the south part of the building and there might be some scorch marks.
You might be able to see that fire did not really.
catch. It did burn for a little while, but it is now out. Platform Ventures is the owner of this
warehouse. Their statement they sent today says in part the sale fell through because closing
wasn't done in a timely manner. It's a sharp contrast to what we were told a month ago.
So, you know, I guess that kind of points to the fact that if you want to burn down a building,
you probably shouldn't try setting stone on fire.
You shouldn't send a woman to do a man's job. My dad would have that thing up in
Flames, right? Instantly, dude. Yeah, I mean, she just didn't know what she was doing. Especially
seeing that she had an accelerant, you know? It's not like, it's not like she was sitting there
with just matches. That was just lighter fluid, wasn't it? Yeah, it was just lighter fluid. She's
she's lucky she didn't set herself on fire. Is this the story? She squirted lighter fluid on stone and then lit the
stone and glass, yeah. Stone and glass. I guess you can melt glass at high enough temperatures,
but not with butane fire, I don't think. No, no. You gotta wonder what TikTok's set her off. I do wonder.
You have to charge it was a TikTok. You know it was a TikTok. You've got to go with attempted
arson, even if there was a zero percent chance
it could have caught. I think that's still actually arson.
Technically, it's still arson. She actually actually...
Yeah, that's arson. Just because she
was bad at it doesn't mean, she didn't do it. Just because it went
out real quick. If you hold like a bick lighter
up to the stone wall and you're like, it's not lighting,
it's not lighting. And they're like, arsonist.
I don't know. But one of the most screwed up parts about
this is that she was actually successful in
preventing the sale of the building to the federal
government. As I understand, the property owner,
can you scroll down a little bit? It was
paragraphs under the video. The property's owner
platform venture said Thursday
is no longer moving forward with any sale of the site to the U.S. government.
So, I mean, oh.
I think they said in the piece that it had already, I'd already fall through.
Yeah, the deal already fell through. Yeah, the deal had already fallen.
Before, yeah.
Oh, so it's just a moron.
It was just another misfire.
Another misfire. They are going after people, you're an ice agent.
It's not.
Also the focus of protests below the video, just, no, the video above that one.
The warehouse has been the focus of protests and public concern after report surface
that it could be.
So maybe during the process,
they helped encourage,
it sounds like during the process
of when they were trying to sell
to the government,
protests and attacks
helped encourage them
to not do the sale.
So in essence,
they actually achieved
what their main goal was,
which is nerve-wracking.
We got some video
for actually trying to do the,
oh, wow.
Oh, look at that muffin top.
Hot.
What is this video?
She's not even on camera.
Well, I don't know what.
It's just the,
it's the TikTok stuff.
here we go.
There she is.
Oh,
she's lit.
Oh, she brought multiple bottles of Excel.
Oh, multiple windows.
Setting fire to a building wearing sandals.
Yeah.
Yeah, this bitch should get put away for sure.
That's some crazy.
Genius.
Who is she?
What's the opposite?
Ray, lighter fluid on stone.
Fire is so dangerous, man.
I'm concrete.
Yes.
She really thinks she's doing something.
Like, she's like they're not going to find her.
You know, I'm just going to stand out here and try and burn this place down.
And nothing will happen.
to me because, you know, white women are feeling way too emboldened to attack, obstruct,
and now commit arson against ICE, DHS, and other federal officers.
It's outrageous.
Renee Good.
The way that our white people are behaving in our country right now is completely outrageous.
White women.
And wait, and like Alex Prattie.
I mean, white men too.
You're talking about me?
Talking about white men.
Yeah.
I'm talking about, sorry, where are you going to say?
I could see you protesting against ICE, and you look,
the part. You have the physiognomy. Oh, you'd look so good.
I'd like to sign, dude. And then I could see your evil
brother. I could see your evil brother
counter protesting you too. Just want all the ice to
come out. You guys are being opposite sides. What are you going to
start an intentional fight just for clicks?
Yeah, for sure. Ice. Ice!
What is going on? What is going on
with women these days? It's just, it is
absolutely insane. No, but like, seriously,
like, they think they're, like, Black Widow. They think they're
Natasha from Black Widow. We're going to beat
the bad guys. And then they just
commit the stupidest acts of
and terrorism and they literally get themselves killed.
And it is so insane.
And I said this, and this is a tweet that got me fired for my previous job, that
women untethered from healthy, masculine authority, they become hags and psychopaths.
Now, uh, I got fired for that because I said, I've seen worse tweets come out of
you.
No, because I've sworn you tweet about the Jews to.
Keep going.
I love the Jews.
I love all people.
I'm a Christian.
But no, it's because in that tweet, I said that, um, those, the majority of people who
are celebrating the death of Charles.
Kirk were women and these were a woman who are you know untethered from masculine authority they
don't they have daddy issues they don't have good families things like that right and it's like it's
it's true it's true so then the women untethered from healthy masculine authority they can't they can't
channel their healthy you know inner femininity and then they lash out and they become hags and
cyclopath like truly and then this is what rene good is like she left her previous husband and
then got married to another woman and started playing house and all that stuff and then she became
this revolutionary and started larping as this, oh, I'm going to beat the patriarchy and beat
Donald Trump. Oh, they're the fascist and the Nazis. We're going to beat and punch a Nazi.
And then she got herself killed running over an ice agent. And so all I have to say is like,
woman, I love you, but you just got to stop. Just got to stop.
Kingman, to follow up on that point, I know in our country right now, the political divide among
men and women is increasing, but it's not nearly as bad as the political divide between men and
women in Korea. What do you think we can do politically, socially to try to bridge these divides?
I mean, in Korea, if the men and women don't get along sometime soon, there won't be any Korea
left for us. I don't know. Do you recognize those divides and how do you think we can overcome them?
I think if you actually look at the data, the women in America are much more left-wing than the
woman in Korea. It's just that the men in Korea are just so much more right-wing.
Okay, fascinating. But it's like most women in Korea don't, they don't hate men. If you go to
Korea, you're just going to see couples everywhere.
Everywhere you go.
Yeah, it's going to be a guy and a girl holding hands, being really lovy-dovey.
You cannot escape it.
Even in the wintertime, maybe wintertime, the Christmas time, it's romantic, it's nice.
But when I was there this past month, there's just couples everywhere, couples everywhere.
But no children.
And that's the problem.
Like, they're not getting married because they essentially have the benefits of traditional
marriage, right?
They spend time together.
They're in love.
They have sex, all this stuff.
But they don't commit to each other because when they commit to each other.
because when they commit to each other,
there's still this understanding in Korean culture
that when you get married,
that the woman is the one primarily taking care of the children.
But, you know, the woman don't want to give up their careers.
And so because of that, they delay marriage,
and then they delay childbearing,
and so they're just not having children.
And if you look at the stats, too,
that only 2% of childbirths in South Korea
are outside of wedlock.
Whereas in America, it's like 40 to 50%.
So this idea of childbearing
is still traditional in Korea.
Korea where it's like, okay, if we're going to have children, we need to do it within marriage.
But they don't want to have children because it's going to be an impediment to their career.
So that's why they delay marriage.
They delay having children.
So if you look at the gender divide in Korea, it's not like women are out there like, I hate women.
And then women are not like, I hate men.
And then the men aren't like, I hate women.
It's not like that.
It's much more like materialistic in nature.
It's really, I would say, like, exacerbated by the extreme competitive.
of corporate culture and things like that in Korea.
Whereas...
Do you think it's an economic?
Is it economics?
Oh yeah, absolutely.
I mean, it is partly economic because the living wages and the wages in general in Korea
haven't really caught up to the cost of living.
So all things consider, it is still pretty cheap to live in Korea, but the wages are really
low.
And so there's that component too.
So they're all gold diggers.
Yeah, basically.
Korea's love money.
I'm trying to understand. I don't know. Do you think maybe men should contribute more to the upbringing of the children if that's preventing some women from...
Well, I think there's a lot of different parts and just a huge multifaceted.
You got to figure this out.
I know, I know, but I do think one part of it is the fact that Koreans are so mobile within Korea.
And so they can't form communities.
Korea has one of the highest percentages of people, of their population, living in apartments.
And if you know anything about apartments, you don't really talk to your neighbors typically.
People move in and out all the time.
And you're isolated.
So then if you're isolated from the rest of the world and your mother, you're trying to raise your child, but you're like isolated, you don't have help.
You don't have your parents.
You don't have your relatives.
You don't have other people in your life, your friends who can help you.
It's very isolating.
And so who would want that in a modern society to have children and then to raise them up in your own home?
And this is actually something we need to talk about in America too, where the idea of the nuclear
family. Of course, I believe in the nuclear family. But we need to understand that it does take
a village to raise a kid where asking a woman to just be alone with children all day by herself
with the children, with no help from her parents, from her siblings, from people in her community.
It's kind of sucks. Like, she's just by herself with her children. I'm not saying that's a bad thing.
Yeah, it's just unsustainable. Like, no one lived like that in all of human history. No woman has
lived like that. So if we want to go back to a traditional lifestyle for families and for marriages,
then we also have to restructure society and kind of take a step back, press the brakes,
and say, wait, wait, wait, wait, the way that modern society is structured, it doesn't allow
for traditional ways of living. And I think that that's really exacerbated in Korea because
Korea went from being one of the poorest countries in the world after the Korean War to rapid
industrialization to becoming now one of the richest.
And so there's a lot of problems there for sure.
You need to send you back to deal with this birth rate crisis.
Hey man, I love Korea.
Of course.
I love America as well.
Can you just explain all of this again but like in squid game terms?
We're not our Korean fans.
Basically Koreans need to get married, have more children.
Held houses if everyone's living in apartments.
Yeah, they just have to go back to more traditional styles of infrastructure and
community building and housing.
And so things like that too.
But I also think the culture is kind of shifting even in the U.S.
a little, maybe not now, but like I was in L.A. last year quite a bit.
And the number of women that I encountered that were like, I just want like a real man.
Yeah.
Like a masculine man.
Well, stop asking him to paint his nails.
Stop telling him to get in touch with his emotions.
It's not manly.
It's so ridiculous.
They're like, oh, a real man is secure with his masculinity.
So he'll let me paint all over his face and do his nails.
I'm like, no, dude.
I mean, men need to stop listening to women about what women want.
Yes.
Like, if a woman tells a man, this is what I want, she's not telling you the truth.
She's telling you what she thinks she wants, and what she actually wants is not what she's going to tell you.
Yes.
And every time.
That's really good to hear because I've heard that I would like to peg you so much.
And I don't know what they want, dude.
I've never been asked to be pegged.
That's a sticking point for you.
Maybe it's because I don't give off any, I don't know.
Well, there's potentially.
Grow your hair out, dude.
There's what the animal?
There's what the animal?
No, but I was asked to do porn, and it might have been gay porn.
There's what the animal wants, like the animal female, the animal male.
It's like, you know, animalistic what I want.
And then there's the brain, which is like, I want a stable, secure thing.
If you are nice to me during the day, that's what I want.
And it's like, you want an animal that's going to protect you.
Yeah.
And like, if I have to kill to do it, that's what you want because that's what you need.
That's there too, you know?
So it's like this.
It's all biological, dude.
And if you don't give them that, they try.
to light concrete buildings on fire.
It really is.
And women,
if you don't domesticate these women,
they try to burn down ice buildings and peg you.
So I think it's pertinent.
How are they're a big problem?
If you don't domesticate them,
they become like gay men,
and it's a big issue in our society.
You have to be able to tell women no.
Like, like women...
No matter how good you think it might feel.
You know what I mean?
Yes, no matter how good you might think of it would feel.
But seriously,
you can't sit there and just constantly say yes
and be a yes man for your, you know, for the woman in your life.
You have to be like, no, we're not doing that.
And if there's an argument, you have to stand on what you've said and be like, no, I said
no.
And if we're going to fight about it and you're going to be angry with me, you'll get over it,
you know.
Start warming up the back of your hand, dude.
I'm with you, brother.
For you.
Disavow, disavow!
The point is women...
I don't know.
I hear in Korea.
The point is women...
We love women here.
Women don't like a spineless male.
man. You know, very true. If you can't stand up to them, they're not going to respect you.
Some of them do like spineless men, and it's the ones with color hair and short banks. Yeah.
And they're typically very, very large. Except them piercing too, you know. Only so long as they're
on the SSRIs, but they hop off of them. I keep thinking about this, the fall of the Soviet Union is
being kind of a turning point for the limpness of the American male and probably female. Like,
we live in fantasy candy land since 89. Since the fall of the Berlin Wall, every American
was like, we own the world now. We don't have to fight to protect. We don't, we don't,
We have machines that'll do that for us.
And, like, dudes kind of just slathered into their video games and their entertainment.
We need another war to put balls back on the chest of American men.
We just see men to actually stand up and do things.
What I'm hearing here is, like, oh, you need to stand up to women.
You're not going to learn that from a woman.
No.
Not going to learn that from your mom or your female caretakers.
You're only going to learn from a man who says, like, yo, women are going to push you to do these things.
You have to be strong.
As men, people are always, for my, like, for years I've heard as a millennial or whatever, like,
oh, you have to be in touch with your feeling.
You know, let me let you paint your nails if that's being confident, being like, uh, at one with your sexuality.
But all that ever did was just like, you know, black pill a bunch of these kids into thinking,
okay, well, now I'll just be trans, I guess.
That's the easy way out.
Most guys have heard the phrase shit test.
Yeah, exactly.
It's like they're going to push your buttons.
They're going to push to see how you react.
And you, the best thing you can do, you don't want to get like angry and feed into that.
You have to be like, all right, no, you know, you have to be firm.
You don't want to yell and scream because that's getting emotion.
you're going to be like, okay, look, no, we're not doing that.
Whatever the issue is, don't feed into it, but you have to be able to stand your ground.
And not that I'm like some kind of like, you know, what's the dudes that are like?
Red pill.
Yeah, I'm not a former Marine.
I'm not like a Manosphere guy at all, but you do have to like be able to retain your frame.
You have to be like, okay, this is the way, this is the way that I see the world and I'm trying to do something that's good for us.
family or both of us. And I understand that you want this, but right now we can't do it and just be
able to not remain calm, not feed into it. And, you know, that's what, you know, positive masculine
energy is just like, no, we're not going to do that. You don't have to yell and scream.
It's being the voice of reason. Yeah, you know. Yeah. That's what we're supposed to. I'm not the most
alpha guy. You know, I get, they ask to peg me all the time. I'm clearly not the most alpha guy.
But like I, I, you know, me and my girlfriend, we have a, allegedly, we have a, we have a, we have
great relationship.
Lemon code it.
You know?
That's lemon maxing.
Lemon maxing is the new thing.
Hashtag that, let's get it trending.
There's nothing wrong with that, dude.
Lemon maxing.
Hey, that's a little lemon party here.
Yeah, you know, you just got to
you got to be able to be a man.
You know, start with like going to the gym.
Yeah, dude.
Take creatine every morning.
Learn how to frame log from your dad, dude.
Yeah, dude, you got to do.
Let's smack some frame log.
Yeah, get that hammer, smash your face.
I think there's something.
Whatever you got to do.
From your dad, dude.
Just tap on your face like this for hours.
You know, I kind of what you were saying,
Phil about like how the woman will aggravate the guy to get to them to do a thing
and the guy has to stay calm.
I think that it's like training for kids.
Now you've got a kid.
You can talk more on this.
It's like the woman will press the guy.
And she's like simulating what the kid is going to do to the guy because the kid's a wild animal
at first.
Like it's figuring out it wants it takes.
And so you as a man have to stay calm, push back and say,
no, this is the path.
And you're following me regardless.
and then deal with the outcome and not flip out.
And then when, and it's same for when the guy will push a woman,
there's a way that the man will test his woman too.
And it's like, it's the way that you would push against a child.
Anyway, I'll think of that second part later.
Stop saying push against.
Push.
Where the conversation is.
I think a lot of marital chaos is actually training for how are you going to handle this wild animal raising.
Like, can you handle it?
Yeah, but it's not just that.
It's like if she's going to rely on you to take care of her and take care of the family,
she has to be able to rely on you.
Like if you're going to be trusted, you have to be trustworthy.
And women are going to do different things to find out if she can trust you.
Well, that's where a lot of the Manosphere breaks down because, like, they don't realize that it's earned.
You don't just get to do that.
Yeah. Yeah.
You know, like, I'm not the best protector and provider, but I can do it kind of, you know?
And that's like, you just got to get in where you fit in, dude.
I've heard a lot of women talking about how, like,
women's like needs for a partner start with like security first and then attraction beyond that because the that's what they have all the shit test and everything like that is because they want to make sure like this person is someone that can be relied upon because back traditionally it would be like the father's family would give the woman to like another family in a sense like that's how it was and that's just like the modern representation of that is like can this person stand up for me and protect me and look this sounds kind of like we don't get a dowry that's unbelievable sounds kind of like a hippie thing that Ian would
said, but it's like if you want to be trusted, you have to be trustworthy. If you want to be loved,
you have to be lovable. That's something that you kind of want women to kind of internalize more.
Like if a woman wants to be loved, she has to be lovable. And that means don't go out and act like
a feminist that says, I hate men, blah, blah, blah, and then complain because you can't meet the nice
guy or find the guy. You know, it's like you have to put out what attracts what you're looking for.
So if you're a woman, you want to be loved, be lovable. God forbid a woman submit a little.
You know what I mean?
I've been having this mind example that I do in my where I think about it.
And like, okay, it's the year 1620 AD and the peasant woman has her husband who's got like warts on his face.
Maybe he's got some weird disease.
But they love each other so much.
And he's sickly and he's farming.
And then the prince comes and he's this evil wicked man.
But he wants her.
He wants her to be his wife.
And she's like, I can stay with my sick husband who will probably die and not give me a child.
Or I can go be with this rich asshole.
And like, how could you say no to the rich assholes?
Like you would obviously the guy's gonna give you money and healthy food for your healthy children a prolonged life. It's called hypergamy. It is and so that's like in reality you have to kind of even if you're the poor farmer you've got to somehow elicit the strength of the prince. And people think oh if I get rich that'll be but it's not just rich you know it's power. Dude you're just saying that because you have prince hair dude. Oh you know I was talking about actually talking about prince the whole time. Look at that. That's Disney prince hair if I've ever seen it. We're purple.
Oh, I thought you meant Prince.
No, no, no, not.
The artist formerly known as.
He's the group.
So I don't know, I'm always about, like, how do you emulate?
I mean, I usually just be myself and make people laugh.
But, like, how do you emulate strength without money?
You know, you don't need to rely on money.
Money's not going to buy you love.
Well, it'll give you security.
It'll buy her a house, which is her a house, which is her a house.
Locked walls where the kid's going to survive inside.
She wants a house.
Yeah.
A woman.
She wants security.
Yeah.
But then if you're inside the house abusing her, they're like, all that security is out the window.
So, yeah, if you're abused.
If you're abused.
using, right? You've got to be like the violent protector and the docile lover. And it's like you've got to be able to switch that on and off.
Dossil lover?
No, dude. Oh, my God. I don't know about dossil. When you're in the bed with her, she does not want you beating things.
I mean, I beg to be surprised. Maybe she wants to see if you can. Ian, have you seen what women are reading these days?
Yeah. I mean, women ask me to do things that I refuse to do. Like, it's a liability. They want to be
manhandles. It's disgusting, frankly. It makes me feel uncomfortable. It's
misogynistic. Let's go all the way. It's misogynistic with these women.
It's like, you want me to put my hands on you? Like, are you trying to get me and, are you trying
to catch me up in something? Are you trying to go to the police after this?
Dude, I have the most... Like, it's not uncommon to be asked to be slapped. It's not uncommon
to be asked to be choked. Like, those are like vanilla now among women. That's entry
level, dude. Yeah, no, it is. It is.
Choked and slacked. Not uncommon at all. I'm not speaking from personal experience, maybe I am.
but the woman, they always ask to be choked and slapped and things like that.
I have a past, too.
You know, I've repented.
I love the Lord.
But the thing is, like, these are the things that women ask for, and you look at all the literature that they're reading these days.
Like, it's like weird bestiality stuff with minotores.
I'm like, what is going on?
When that went kind of bust under the scene and was a big topic on social media, people, I forget who it was talking about it.
But the reason that it's like all these, like, animals.
animals now is because like men, feminists kind of have like looked at men and said men are terrible, but they still want the same kind of.
Animistic.
It choose the bear, dude.
Exactly, you know?
And so instead of having a man be the focal point of their lust or whatever, they've made it into these imaginary creatures.
Men are domesticated, animals are still wild and who knows what they could do.
That's literally the female mind today, the modern female mind.
Burn control.
Be the undomesticated man.
I think we're going to jump to the next story, but that's...
You definitely need a T-shirt that says docile lover, though.
Oh, that would be great.
And then turn around, be like, feral animal.
All right.
I've already said it's a lover.
Dossile lover and peg me on the back.
All right, we're going to jump to this story from the post-millennial.
I'm not sure how we got onto this stuff,
but it actually ties into the story that we were talking about earlier.
Again, from the post-millennial breaking Oregon man
indicted on terrorism charges over a plot to behead ice agent.
in Portland. That's a happy headline. A grand jury has indicted an Oregon man on new
terrorism charges stemming from an intricate plot to kill ice agents in Portland. Radin Tanner Coleman,
good Lord, that guy doesn't have a father.
18 of St. Helens faces new charges of first degree attempted domestic terrorism and second
degree domestic terrorism. The charges handed down by a Columbia County grand jury on Thursday
are in addition to the 13 original charges that included six counts of unlawful
manufacturing of a destructive device, six counts of unlawful possession of a destructive
advice, and attempted second-degree assault. Prosecutors said that Coleman did unlawfully and
with intent attempt to cause widespread serious physical injury or death, an attempt to destroy
or substantially damage critical infrastructure. Coleman, who was arrested on February 4th,
will be adrained on Friday afternoon, and Deputy District Attorney Joshua Pond filed a notice
seeking a harsher sentence per core records. According to a probate cause affidavit,
Coleman allegedly devised an intricate plan to follow Ice Agents home as they left the facility on Macadam Avenue and kill them, including by beheading and taking their severed heads as trophies.
His plan detailed utilizing night vision goggles to stock their whereabouts and wearing camouflage clothing to blend in.
Where does this guy get the money for night vision goggles?
This guy sounds awesome, dude.
I mean, he's committed to the bit, right?
Is he a Muslim revert with the beheading stuff?
I wonder where he drew inspiration.
doesn't look like it. I know, no, the revert.
You revert to Islam.
You revert. Don't convert, you revert.
Everyone's natural basis. Everyone's born Muslim.
Like everyone's in the womb is a woman.
You know, you know, all. Nice.
Investigators found Coleman in possession of surveillance equipment,
tactical axes, military knives, shovels, and homemade explosive devices,
including Maltaub cocktails, which were located in his vehicle during his arrest.
Coleman also had been making payments toward the purchase of an AR-15,
according to court documents.
He went with the night vision.
He had an AR on layaway, dude.
He's got strapped.
18.
You can get an AR for pretty cheap.
He's awesome.
He went to the night vision first.
Those things are...
Yeah, but he's 18.
I mean, so?
The night vision was cheap.
Night vision is not cheap.
Where's he getting this money?
Where's this 18 year?
This literally sounds like my closet.
This is great stuff.
I mean, obviously.
I'm not going to talk about...
Oh, well, okay.
All right.
The things that I own are similar to the things.
Oh, yeah, my closet.
I have a bunch of firearms and...
Yeah, but my closet.
I still have a box.
come out of it. That's how...
Pepper spray.
Listen, the reason
that I know Night Vision,
there's a reason that I know
Night Vision is very expensive.
Yeah, dude.
Especially that top level stuff, man.
It's 13,000 dollars.
It looks so cool, too. I want to wear
night vision.
It's a good question.
Sort of begs of a question.
But no, Homo, I want to wear your goggles.
So to, uh, to, to a lot's
point earlier, um, you know,
these, these leftists really are getting
far more brazen in their, in their attacks.
I mean, there's obviously all the attacks in
Texas on the, uh, ice facilities.
there was a couple, I think there was three immigrants that were, illegal immigrants that were killed when the shooter was shooting into the ice facility and he was trying to kill ICE agents, but he ended up, you know, killing illegal immigrants.
Do you think that this kind of stuff, or do you guys think that this kind of stuff is going to be more prevalent in the coming years?
Or is that, do you think that this is going to reach an apex soon and kind of peter out?
I don't know if we have a, I don't know if I specifically have a blind spot to this, only noticing,
this happening for leftist causes, and I'm maybe missing all the right-wing causes this violence
is done for. But no, I see this as like normalized on the left and encouraged by the left.
Shout out to, you know, going back to even Charlie Kirk not too long ago being murdered.
Obviously, there were two Israeli consulate staffers who were murdered in Washington, D.C., not too
long ago. And these, the firebomings of potential ice facilities or attacks on ice agents
or doxing of ice agents, it just doesn't seem uncommon. It seems to be normal. It seems to be normal.
and almost appreciated by people on the far left.
They believe the ends justify the means
and they think these people are genuinely evil
and they are superheroes fighting against them.
They think they're like, I don't know,
Batman or Superman punching like Adolf Hitler
in the face comic style.
And when you have people who are so self-absorbed
and so self-important,
I think you're only going to see more of this stuff.
So this really begs the question,
which TikTok did this kid see
before being encouraged to go try to, you know, kill ICE officers?
It might have been actually a Reddit post.
I don't know how you.
Have you guys seen...
Have you seen these Reddit posts and these memes from trans people?
They're like trans meme.
And trans meme humor is just literally shooting people.
Like that's all shooting and stabbing people.
And we don't condone that here.
We disavow all that kind of stuff, right?
But...
For people who bitch and moan about dehumanization all this time,
they sure love to dehumanize people who don't think that they are the opposite gender.
100%.
And like, you see, and it's not fringe and niche anymore.
It's like, it is mainstream on the left.
where these memes, these trans memes,
where they depict themselves shooting or killing people.
Like, they get hundreds of thousands of likes.
Hundreds of thousands of likes.
It's mainstream to justify the murder of Charlie Kirk on the left.
Not liberals.
I want to make a distinction between the left and liberals,
but leftists justify the murder of Charlie Kirk without question.
They feel unbothered by it.
Why?
Because he was a fascist who they believe was causing harm against them.
They believe his speech was causing harm against them.
It's so scary because there's millions of people
feel this way. Like millions of people who feel
this way that if you are a right
wing person, anyone to the right
of Hillary Clinton, you deserve
to die because you are
dehumanizing me and you are
taking away my rights and it's absolutely
bonkers. You know, we were making jokes about the
TikTok of the lieutenant governor
from Minnesota today because she
was talking about her
native name.
I forget what it was. Yeah.
I can't pronounce it off the top of my
head. But the point that I'm making is she's been
seen wearing a shirt that says protect trans kids and stacked on top. And there's a knife
in between protect and trans. And it's like this kind of stuff is not just discussed on Reddit.
This kind of stuff is actually valorized by politicians. Maybe they're not in D.C. Right.
Maybe the people in D.C. are smart enough to not actually call for violence. But there are plenty of
Democrat politicians that do. You have someone close to D.C. Jay Jones who had messages.
where he wished death upon
Republicans and their children.
There was the,
there's a guy in Texas running
that said that he's literally
running on a platform to kill Donald
Trump. That was the way that he phrased
it. And he was talking about
well, we're going to find him guilty. We're going to
arrest him. We're going to find him guilty and we're going to get
capital punishment. Didn't bother to mention
what crime he was going to
be charged with. Didn't bother to mention
what crime he had committed that
was worthy of capital punishment.
But he was making it very clear
that capital punishment was going, that that was his goal, that he was, get him elected,
and he was going to make sure that Donald Trump was brought up on charges that would lead to a
death penalty. And that kind of stuff is insane. Insane. And it's normal. I think that's what makes
Democrats, like, I don't like Republicans either, but I think this is what makes Democrats really
pernicious is that they know what they're saying is absolute bull crap. But they live off
the delusions of useful idiots who eat it up.
where these useful idiots on college campuses, on Reddit,
they genuinely believe that Donald Trump is worse than Adolf Hitler.
And so they believe that, yes, we need to go out and kill all the supporters of so-called
worse than Hitler.
And then this is why left-wing violence has become so normalized in our society,
where it seems like there is a left-wing attack in the West every other week.
Like, we just had a trans shooter in Canada.
target multiple children, murder multiple children, and somehow the left is completely silent about that.
But if you look at his posts, Matt Walsh was calling out that trans person, that shooter's posts years ago about, hey, these people are getting really radicalized on the internet.
And then nothing's being done because they are a protected class and we can't dehumanize them and they are somehow protected under civil rights legislation.
And to your point about the protected class stuff, like the Canadian media wouldn't even come out and say that it was a trans woman.
They were saying it was a gun person.
The gun person.
Yeah, the dance that they do only helps the trans people that are the shooter.
Like if you refuse to use the actual biological sex of a person because you're going to offend the trans community when it was a trans woman.
and it was a guy that, you know, shot these 10 people or something like that killed his parents,
then went to a school and decided to shoot a bunch of kids.
If the government and the media still won't come out and say, look, okay, this was a mentally ill person.
This was a person that had a disorder and was on drugs.
And they totally ignore that stuff.
And they say, oh, you know, it was, it was a, you know, it was a person, a trans person.
A woman in a dress is another thing that I heard someone saying.
A woman in a dress.
about a guy in a dress
that was shooting people.
The fact that the media still plays into it
only helps these people,
only protects these people
that are carrying out these hands crimes.
Did you guys see that Canadian police chief
when discussing the trans shooter?
They said,
we will respect the preferred pronouns
of this individual while she was alive.
And I was like, why?
Someone who goes around killing children
deserves no respect.
There was a video.
of someone saying the first victim in this situation is the trans.
It's ridiculous.
Because of how much they were bullied.
Dude, people are so heavily, extremely propagandized now.
I mean, Elon's right.
They believe they are fighting evil.
That's genuinely like the mentality that they have.
Unironically.
It's hard to emphasize how much they think that right-winger's are legitimately evil
and that they are saving the planet.
I think that that's like a, what I take is this is a global conspiracy to actually do this to United States to get it to destroy itself from within.
So to like to answer your question, Phil, is this going to keep happening?
I think the plan, it looks like, is radicalize the people of the United States by destroying their economy and flooding their country with fentanyl, weird petrochemicals, drugs, feed them crap, they'll eat it in the U.S.
They'll ban it in Europe, but they'll eat it in the U.S., make them androgynous.
And then, and then have the, make it normalize it.
And then when they fight, then the people are going to be like, the response to like radical, call me my pronoun is I would rather see you worst of the worst.
Are you kidding me?
You're going to push me to say something that I know isn't true.
Like you can't compel my speech and behavior.
So then what that will happen is it will radicalize both sides more.
And then I think you will see more of this up until people start begging for a technocracy to come in and use spy tech, global spy tech to make sure no one can do this kind of thing.
because we're all being tracked at every moment,
like what Larry Ellison wants to do,
make ours all tracked at every moment
so that we can't commit crimes.
And people will be,
even people on the right,
begging for this technology
to protect them from these crazy trans shooters.
And it's like, it's an op.
It's an op.
We're supposed to be free
and have gun rights
and protect our individuals, you know?
We have this video from Sky News
about this particular shooting.
Please say the attacker was dead
when they found her.
She had a self-inflicted wound.
And she matched the description given
in an earlier police alert.
female wearing a dress with brown hair.
That is extremely unusual.
It's rare to have a female attacker.
Insane.
I shouldn't laugh.
I mean, the fact that, you know, he says,
female attacker, right?
Like, it is actually not rare at all.
Female attacker with a jazz.
With a massive hog.
Yeah.
It's not rare for trans people to go and shoot up schools or whatever anymore.
Nowadays, it's actually very common to have trans people
that are attacking, you know, society in one way or another.
So the fact that that was Sky News,
the fact that the anchor for Sky News was not just,
you know, not just talking about what had happened,
but actually even trying to tell people that they, you know,
that this is a rare thing that because women don't do this.
And it's like, look, it wasn't a woman.
It was a, it was a guy.
I mean, a girl in a dress with brown hair,
might as well be Ian any other day of the week.
I do think there's a serious with mental illness.
and them being trans.
So we are seeing this increase in trans shooters.
And I think a big part of that is because they are dealing with serious mental illness.
And again, in an unironic in a serious way.
Absolutely.
I would love to stop focusing on the transgender aspect or transsexual aspect of the human.
Focus more on if someone is warped, if someone is broken mentally, if they've been, that's the problem.
Whether the mentally ill are being taken advantage of, the autistic people are being taken advantage of,
people who are confused about their identity are being taken advantage of.
Puberty is a difficult time.
time, particularly for women, and they are being taken advantage of. People that are compassionate
are being taken advantage of. It's the vector of attack of this machine is compassion. They're,
they're getting people to use their own feelings of empathy. Like, oh, there's this homeless,
dying, sick person on the ground. You wouldn't just leave them there, would you? Then here,
bring them all into your house. But even rolling this back to the, like, how do people get encouraged to
transition? It's, again, people who feel legitimately uncomfortable with their bodies, which can be
okay, but that doesn't mean you need to butcher your own body. So, again, it really is
taking advantage of retards, young women, and the mentally ill, because those people are the
most susceptible to think they have issues with their body and are the most likely to be
and most capable of being taken advantage of. Libby and all we were talking about this when we were
in Florida on one of the shows. The incidences of anorexia and bulimia have dropped, whereas
the incidences of trans men, trans women, or no, trans men has increased. A lot of it is body dysmorphism.
The trans situation that we've got going on,
it's actually a manifestation of a bunch of different things.
In females and women, it tends to be body dysmorphia,
whereas when it comes to trans women, men, it tends to be things like
autogynophilia and mental disorder, or other mental disorders,
but it's manifest as trans.
So if you're a man and you're having body dysmorphia, you're gay?
I mean, there's a lot of...
Are you just a bitch male?
There's a lot of gay people.
that are like, oh, you're erasing gay people
because you're telling young gay people
that actually they're trans.
And so there's a big portion
of the LGBT lobby,
the LGBT lobby.
LGBQ.
Yeah, that says,
oh, this trans stuff is actually erasing
gay people. It's an attack.
Well, that's why you've seen like a large part
of the gay population disassociate
from the trans movement. The other thing that I think is
really interesting is seeing some of the
detransition now where like
they they it was almost like a fad
at school and everyone was doing it
so now I'm you know and
you see these people that are detransitioning
and telling their story about that and the way they get
attacked by the trans
community is mind blowing
it's like
I'm talking serious threats
because what's worse than an enemy is a traitor
and so if they view you
as a traitor yeah view you with
so much more contempt than they do the enemy
right so they'll view us as the
enemy, the far-right fascists who want to take away their rights and everything and genocide them.
But then they see detransitioners.
Right.
And they're like, oh, you are with us, but now you betrayed us.
You're not just an infidel.
You're an apostate.
You know, getting people.
Oh, there you go back to the Muslim.
Seriously, you're an apostate.
It's different.
You look like a revert with that beanie on.
Hey.
Hey, dude.
I'm gay and a Muslim, dude.
What do you want?
Talking about getting people to turn on huge segments of society is like genetically
we're predisposed to genetically being like pointed at the enemy.
and probably because our ancestors, those were the people that survived.
They weren't the good guys, but they were the people that would mobilize the masses
and get them to kill a bunch of people.
And they're like, see, now we're in charge.
And it's like, it's so easy to manipulate people into hating and killing.
It's got to be we evolved to a point where we stop that way of being.
It's got to happen.
Like, if there's going to be a great war superseded by AI that, like, takes care of people
that are psychotic.
I don't know, man.
I don't like it.
That's how we turn men into men again, dude.
We go to war.
A big trip to Taiwan.
I don't know if Kingman wants to come.
I know they have some ethnic beef, but...
No, I like the Taiwanese.
I do like the Taiwanese.
You know, you're talking about detransitioners.
There was just a detransitioner that was awarded $2 million because her mother felt pressured by the psychologist and by the doctor.
The child was 15 when she started dressing like a boy and began social transition.
And then 11 months later was when she got surgery.
11 months you got it at 16 years old.
It's particularly pernicious for young women because when young women start puberty,
it's a very traumatic time for them.
They're used to being viewed in one way without breasts,
and now they're beginning to be sexualized,
and they just want to stay the way it was.
And they don't want to be viewed differently by their peers.
And that doesn't mean they're not a woman anymore,
but the way that it manifests in the way people try to abuse them
is by encouraging them to be men and telling them that they're men
and tricking them and saying a double mastectomy.
It'll go back to how things were beforehand, but it's not the truth.
And misleading young women, I think, is particularly traumatic.
And Davey, I think you were spot on.
Part of why they get so much hate, too, is because they delegitimize the cause so effectively.
So I actually know some detransistor.
Detransistors.
Dtransistors.
Hell, yeah.
And they all say the same thing.
When they were younger, they were going through puberty and felt like they were being taken advantage of.
I also know women with large breasts who, when they were younger, tell me like, hey, this really changed.
the way how I was being viewed by others and it made me feel very uncomfortable in my own body.
And I thought that I was a man, I was a man because of that, or at least not a woman.
But again, it's just, you know, the troubles of going through puberty, which again could be a very tumultuous time for people.
And it's really sad because these are our most vulnerable people in our society being and taken advantage of.
Thankfully, though, I think we are heading a little bit in the opposite direction.
Oh, yeah. Chloe Cole stepped out into the oncoming traffic and like blasted the world with the truth like four years.
ago. She's so awesome.
And now what? She's 22. Had her breasts
cut off when she was 15 or something crazy. Fast
tracked through. And you know, to that
point about, you know, that happening as
teenagers, if you talk to Normies, people that are
not particularly politically aware,
they'll tell you, no, that doesn't happen to kids.
They don't do it to kids. It's only... No idea, dude.
They have no idea. There's so much ignorance about
that. They're so confident. They'll attack you
in the comments on social. This doesn't
happen. This isn't a real thing. And then you
show them a couple of... Well, that's just like,
no, dude, it's very common.
I have no idea the kind of books that is being shown to kindergartners and preschoolers.
It's absolutely insane.
I really do think it's really sad because whether it's anorexia and bulimia or it's the modern social contagion of transgenderism, in regards to women, it's like all these young women all just want to be loved, right?
They just all want to be loved.
And all of these social contagions are just attacks on their very, very.
you know, rudimentary and, you know, just very basic desire to be loved.
And this is why it's like very important as men too, where, you know, I do rag on women a lot
on social media, but I really do. It's because I care.
You don't have a hot girlfriend, dude.
Yeah, that's true.
Yeah, that's true.
Yeah.
No, but I do care about the general well-being of women because I believe that men and women
should compliment one another.
And as men, yes, we need to call out the faults and the sins of women in modern society.
but we also need to step up as men and be show women that hey like there are good men who exist
where we can yeah we can be fun we can be crass we can crack jokes and all these things but we also
mean business and we will protect you when push comes to shove and to give them that security
and just to let them know like hey it's okay to be a woman yeah i i think that's really really needed
because healthy masculine energy compliments and brings out healthy feminine energy and then the vice versa
So, you know, healthy feminine energy brings out healthy masculine energy.
Are you guys familiar with that?
There was a trend or whatever that was going on on Instagram and TikTok where like a girl would be like, oh, what's going through my head and we're walking down the street?
And she's like, da, da, da, da, da, like not paying attention to anything.
And then she goes to, and it switches to her boyfriend that's like, okay, that guy looks weird.
We're going to move over here.
Okay.
Someone comes out at this door.
And it's like that really kind of encapsulates what a relationship should be like.
You allow, by being a man that will take care of your woman and protect your girlfriend or your wife or whatever and protect your family and take the responsibility that comes along with that.
You allow the woman to go ahead and say, you know what, I trust this guy.
I believe that he'll protect me so I can worry about things that, you know, that I can, you know, women that want to worry about.
Women don't want to worry about, you know, being attacked and stuff like that.
You hear women, particularly feminist and stuff, they say, you know, we should.
shouldn't have to worry about this and we shouldn't have to worry about that I shouldn't have to and
you know what to be honest with you you shouldn't you're right and it's terrible that there are people
out there that will take advantage of you and hurt you but we live in the real world and that kind of
danger has been a reality for all of human history and it always will be yeah and it always will be
and so that's that's why if you're a man you're responsible for taking care of your girlfriend
that's why if you're a man it is expected that like if some dude comes up you're gonna be the one
that gets in the way and gets punched in the face,
you know, and that's what happened.
Wait, I mean.
Rolls, jujitza.
I'm going to do the punching.
I'm going to do the punching.
I think you solved the issue to the female trans issue.
It's really just male love.
That's all they need.
Yeah, that's what I said in the beginning, right?
Like, women untethered from healthy masculine authority become crazy.
And so they just need good male figures in their life.
Yep.
And that's really all it is.
What are the boys become men need then?
Dude to put the porn down.
Do you need to become women?
Need to put the porn down.
They need.
Also, masculine love.
There's nothing wrong with that.
There's a lot of type of love, too.
It's an interesting concept because the Greeks broke it into eight different types of love.
You know, there's erotic love.
That's not, you know, necessarily.
There's, there's love of self.
There's love of the community.
There's familial love.
There's friendship.
Love of friendship.
There's flirtatious love.
And like, a child needs to see a man in exact all of those with his wife
in order to emulate and to know, like, it can be,
safe. Like, yeah, it's okay to be a girl. The best thing you can do for your, the best thing a man can do
for his children is to love his wife in front of it, like, not sexually, but like, in front of
them, treat your, treat your, treat your, your, treat your child's mother well. Yeah. And that's
going to teach the child how to treat women and, and, and treat the opposite sex. The, because the, the,
the kid's like, that's mom, right? Like, a little kid is like, that's mom, I love her. She's the best thing
in the world, blah, blah, blah. If he sees dad disrespecting her or being,
aggressive with her or just being crappy.
Like, he's going to think that's how you're supposed to treat him.
So the best thing that a father can do for a child is to love that child's mother.
Yeah, it conditions.
Love her openly and love her fully.
It conditions the boys to understand, okay, this is how I treat women.
And it conditions the girls to believe this is what I deserve.
Exactly.
Yeah, so it is very symbiotic.
Yep.
But also, at the same time, I do have a lot of trans friends.
And trans female friends, not trans guy friends, obviously.
No.
Hey, trans female?
Male or female friends?
They are now female.
Okay.
And some of them are hot, dude.
I don't think we can overlook that.
Why do I feel like you didn't say no to the pegging?
Hey, well, alright.
Hey, hang on, dude.
Dude, are you trans?
Whoa.
Let's not get that rumor started.
I'm gay and I'm trans and I'm Muslim.
Because both you and Ian are very pretty with the long hair, very silky.
I don't know, I'm a trans.
You're calling dudes pretty.
Dude, don't make me throw it on the table right now, bro.
I was going to say Koreans look the most.
Androgynous, so if anything, you might be the prettiest one at the table.
And it's actually funny.
No, it's, there's like, if you wanted to go trans, I think you'd do the most convincing job of anybody at the table.
I don't know, can you grow any facial hair.
You could not grow a mustache.
I can't, I can't.
You have two hairs on your chest.
That's the craziest insult I've ever heard in my life.
No, it's funny because I did go viral.
You're such soft skin?
Oh, yeah, I'd bang you, dude.
Absolutely.
When I, when I pissed off the Indians earlier last year, they made a viral meme of me,
where they took my profile picture
and then they put some makeup on me in a wig
and they're like, look, Korean men and Korean woman,
what's the difference?
What crazy viral?
So viral.
It's still going viral right now
where some kids in my church are like,
hey, is this you?
Like, even kids are seeing it.
The kids are seeing it.
You're just jealous, bro.
I know, I know.
It's a bad sign when someone's bringing up a picture.
Is this you?
I know.
It's so funny, though.
I used to do theater in like my junior year.
I played Laertes and Hamlet.
Oh, he's gay.
I look at myself.
You're going to love this story.
He didn't eat it.
It gets better.
And then I look at myself in the mirror and be like, I would make a hot chick.
But then that doesn't make me gay.
What?
All right.
You make me the next Blair White, dude.
We're going to.
Well, I do want to say one last thing.
I think I'm just a cross-dresser.
Blair said that one time.
I think everything we just discussed, it really does remind me of why I hate feminism so much.
Yeah.
Because it really breaks the bonds that daughters have with their fathers and wives have with
their husbands where, you know, you go to any wedding ceremony, right?
the father walks the bride down the aisle and then hands her off to the groom and people are like oh it's symbolic no it's literal it's literal because she goes from the protection of her father now to the protection of her husband yeah but feminists have convinced the woman that no you don't need no man you do your thing boss babe you go queen it's like no like like even feminists say we shouldn't have to live in fear yes you shouldn't but the solution to bad men is not
not to put down men, it's good men. And no matter how much women try to convince themselves that
they are as strong as strong as men, as quick as men, like, no, like in any situation, men will
always overpower women. So the solution to women's safety and their flourishing is not to put down
men and try to convince women that they can be like men and just make inferior versions of
men out of women, but as to encourage and honor good men, say, hey, we encourage, we encourage you
guys, we appreciate you guys, and we honor you guys in how you guys look out for us and protect us.
And that is the solution, I believe, really, to all the gender debate, where women need
to uplift men and men need to be willing to protect and provide for women.
Yeah, absolutely.
That's a great point.
We're going to jump to this story here from the New York Post, right?
Yeah, from the New York Post,
Olympian Ellen Gou's decision to snub U.S. and ski for China
is nothing short of a hypocrisy, and I agree.
The champion, it's easy being Eileen, Eileen, Eileen Goo.
Eileen, I think.
Eileen, Eileen, Eileen, the champion freestyle skiers.
Guys, we could fix her.
We could fix her.
She's happy.
The champion freestyle skiers said the other day
after she had to settle for a silver medal in an event at the Olympics
that sometimes it feels like I'm carrying the weight of two,
countries on my shoulders.
Yeah, deporter.
Gou would be carrying the weight of only one
country if she had chosen to represent her
native USA at the games rather than a
hostile totalitarian state.
Gou skis for China, a choice
that is a little like deciding
to represent a fascist country during the
1930s. China is bent on undermining
U.S. power and supplanting
Western values. It runs a
gulog and has established a surveillance state
that would make George Orwell blush.
A little like? I think she did
this in the last Olympic as well.
where she defected.
I don't know if that's the right word.
I'd give her my goo.
Did you say defective?
Hey.
This is the only thing on his mind.
I think she's a dual citizen, but she,
I don't know if China allows dual citizens, though.
I'd need to look into it.
Yeah, so from what I know is that she is suspected to have dual citizenship.
I looked this up because this was obviously a huge point of controversy this week,
especially among Asian Americans.
But it's suspected that she has dual citizenship,
but China doesn't allow for dual citizenship.
So she hasn't publicly ever stated what her citizenship status is,
but we can suspect that she is a dual citizen.
And I believe her mother is a Chinese woman and her father was an American.
Opposite, I think.
Oh.
Because her last name's goo.
Gu's not a white man.
Oh, fact check true.
Right. But just the fact that she has openly stated in her statements,
but also in her conduct at the Olympics by representing China,
that her primary allegiance lies with China.
That is wild.
And regardless of what you think about China, right?
Regardless of what you think about China,
her primary allegiance is to China.
That is a foreign state.
There is no reason for her to keep her American citizenship.
There's no reason why America should acknowledge her American citizenship
because she has abandoned it.
So it's like regardless of what you think about China,
regardless of what you think about her politics,
the reality is she abandoned her citizenship.
She is more aligned with and more loyal to China over America, so she shouldn't be an American citizen.
This is a point that I make a lot, and I wonder if it actually does have some kind of context with this particular story.
If you're a Chinese citizen or have family in China and you're in the United States, you're essentially a national security threat because China has no compunction with applying pressure to your family in China to get you to do something.
So I don't know for sure if you know, I don't know that she does have that this is the situation.
But it wouldn't surprise me one bit if the reason that she's skiing for China is because someone in China is like, you're going to ski for us or else we're going to throw your parents or your grandparents or your sister or what have you in jail if you don't.
And that's like I said, I make this point a lot.
If you're a Chinese national here and you have family in China, you are a security threat because whether it be getting a job or
or studying in some college and some kind of, you know, high-tech field or whatever,
like China has no problem doing everything they can to get you to engage in espionage on behalf of China.
The implications of that would be huge.
As I understand right now, that's North Korea's MO.
I haven't heard of as much of it come out for China.
This is definitely a bad example of dual loyalty.
However, I will say I think she's just doing what's best for her career.
I think she's just a young naive woman.
one side's Chinese, and she probably has some affinity for it, and the other side's American,
and she probably saw opportunity there.
She's probably getting sponsored by PRC.
Oh, yeah.
She's probably kicking up nice.
You're going to get way more money.
Look, China could use the metal.
Let's just say that.
They don't have a lot of great athletes over there.
But I will say this.
Right now we orient our military, orient our military, orient our military, getting ready for a potential
Chinese invasion of Taiwan.
if every Chinese national in America becomes this sort of national security risk.
I don't know really what that means for them and individual liberties in our country
because I would kind of foresee another Japanese internment camp V2 if that were the case.
And that's something that could potentially not be too far off.
So something to consider.
We also have millions of Chinese Americans, patriotic Chinese Americans.
Also, many of the Chinese and patriots that exist in our country were exiled for one reason or another from China.
So, for example, the people at the Epic Times, the fallen gong, as I understand, there's some sort of religious minority, among others that have been banned and kicked out from China.
But, no, it's a major concern, and her lack of patriotism is disgusting.
And maybe we just deport her.
Don't let her back in.
There's no way she grew up in China, right?
She grew up here.
Yeah, I mean, so it's just this posturing.
It's completely misguided.
Because someone that grew up in China, I tour with Zhao Ying Summers.
Oh yeah. She's Chinese. She's a U.S. citizen now.
But she loves America.
She's stealing jokes for China.
She is not stealing jokes. How dare you feel?
Your new name is Phildo after that one, dude. That's what we're calling you.
No. But, yeah, I mean, she loves and she is so grateful for the opportunities here.
Because she grew up in China, she experienced that life. This, this, she's, I mean, she's ridiculous.
Hot but ridiculous. It says that it's not even the best picture of her. She's believed to have dual citizenship.
But you can't, in China, it's illegal in China to have dual citizenship.
You're either Chinese or you're not.
They get it, dude.
Meanwhile, we've got a mayor in New York City who still holds dual citizenship.
Oh, he's, he's, yeah.
Yeah.
If they get it in China, they're doing a pretty shitty job because I would never want my country
to be anything like the Chinese society.
I think she's an American citizen.
It's ambiguous.
Her citizenship is ambiguous.
Well, I mean, the thing is China makes, you know, China does what's best for China.
So if it's good for China for her to have dual citizenship, then, you know, it's what
China's good to do a lot more.
research on goo, dude. I need to
look her up and do a deep dive on this.
This happened to last Olympics, too. That's why we're familiar
with her. Yeah. I have a friend of
mine from Utah. I think he's from New York originally,
but he literally lives in China and
gets paid money to teach Chinese
kids at a ski. A lot of the Chinese kids are just gymnasts
and they've put skis on their feet and say, okay,
now go flip that jump. And he teaches
them how to be that person. So, like, it's
not like they have, you know, natural-born
skiing talent in China that they
have readily available to them. So they have to
outsource, unfortunately, two Chinese
Americans. I think that's what we're seeing here. And I agree, like, dude, if you're going to choose
that, even though you have like, ha-ha, American-Californian accent, you're going to choose to be
Chinese, like, I mean, it's a pivotal point in history of doing that. So here's a question
ethically for you, Kengen, if you were going to serve in the Olympics of some sort of your
expertise in the U.S., you were like 70th ranked, but you were number one in South Korea,
and they wanted to primary you, give you all the money, would you go play for South Korea?
That's tough. That's tough. That's really tough because my situation,
is I was born in Korea and I was raised here in America but I most of my life I would wait you're a dual
citizen no I'm not so I was a Korean citizen but then in college I gave that up and I became an American
citizen no choice oh yeah dude renounced his citizenship my choice that's a real one right there so yeah
it's a little complicated though because as I understand the world a little more and I develop in my
political philosophy and my beliefs my affinity for Korea inevitably grows like as a right winger I
I believe in heritage.
I believe in ancestry.
I believe in inheritance.
I believe in these things.
And so when I think about my ancestry, well, I come from thousands of years in Korea.
I can trace my ancestry all the way back to my founder.
I actually visited his grave when I was in Korea last month.
And it's like, well, this is where I come from.
And so I'm still wrestling through whether or not I'm willing to give that up
to fully commit to being an American because I love America and I really do.
and I, but I still understand that I'm an immigrant.
I'm a guest.
And so, you know, people always say, I say things like, oh, foreign nationals or foreigners
should not hold political office in your country.
And they're like, oh, so you don't think you should be able to?
I'm like, yeah.
Yeah, I don't think I should.
I agree.
I was born in a foreign country.
And I should not be able to hold public office in America.
I agree.
Try that all the time.
Like, I don't think that vote, like, the vote should be universal enfranchisement.
I think there should be like a real situation.
Yeah.
Wait, let's rewind this.
No, hold on, on.
Ben, people always say they're like,
Oh, what, you don't think that you should be able, would you give your right to vote in a second?
In a heartbeat.
Because, like, if it meant that I, that we were going to have a class of citizens that were, like,
actually aware of what the three branches of government do and what their, what their job is,
those are they going to be the people that we're voting, as opposed to, like, every time Dick and Harry that,
you know, thinks that they're going to vote for a king, then, yes, I would absolutely give up my right to vote.
Because I'm one of, what, you know, 150 million people that can vote.
your individual right to vote is not that valuable.
So, sorry, go ahead, a lot.
I think there's a lot of cope surrounding foreigners being an elected office in the United States.
I mean, I think it's extremely patriotic what you did.
You came from a different country.
You were born in a different country, and you chose to abandon that citizenship because you embraced
American value so deeply.
However, at the same time, you think, I don't know, we should reject people like you from holding
elected office.
I think immigrants like you, people who, you know, chose to assimilate to the degree in which
they did is a good thing and kind of like the American dream. And if you had the opportunity to
run for office and the American people chose to elect you, then I think I don't see any issue with it.
We live in a democracy where people pick who their representatives would be. And frankly,
it's anti-American as I understand. We only have laws against the president not being good,
an American-born person. But as far as the rest of the elected officials go, Kingman, I think you
can be one of them, even though you weren't born in the U.S. of A.
Dude, I've also struggled with this myself because I was born outside of the United States and became an American as well.
But along with what a lot is saying, if you are becoming American, you have to learn a lot more about the country,
you have to learn how the system works, who did what when, basic history stuff that you need to know in order to properly represent America as an American, I would say.
And I've done all that stuff. Because I've had to do that, I feel like it made me much more, I have much more affinity for America.
I understand why America does these things and why America works this way.
And to be fair, we used to have civics classes, which we taught in this country, and we stopped that stuff.
And when we stopped that stuff, we started to see way more people would be like disenfranchised, feeling disillusioned with the country, feeling like, I don't really have anything to do with it.
So I think maybe it doesn't necessarily mean, like, we're more or less American than another person, but it does mean that, like, we care about this idea, which America is.
America is an idea and has always been an idea of other people from other backgrounds coming to bring forth the idea that all men are created equal under God.
I just think that's important.
I get what you're saying, but I just fundamentally reject that America is an idea.
America, America is a people.
It is a people.
If America's a people, are you included in it?
Well, I'm an immigrant, and so I think you can assimilate and have people become part of your people.
It's a culture.
It's like another analogy.
I always use Korea because, you know, Korea is, I'm Korean, I come from Korea.
But, you know, let's say we have Korea, right?
And then a Japanese person comes and begins, you know, learns Korea.
speaks Korean and assimilates into Korea.
Is that Japanese person Korean?
No, absolutely not.
But if that Japanese person marries a Korean and then for many generations assimilates
and to the extent like they're indistinguishable from other Koreans, yeah, they're Korean.
So there are immigrants who can assimilate and for many generations.
Well, they wouldn't be Korean.
It would be the offsprings down the line that you would perceive as being.
Wait, so one more thing.
So if America isn't an idea and a people, isn't that exclusionary to people like?
You?
Yeah, that's fine.
Okay.
It's a culture, I think, as well.
When I say an idea, I mean, it's a culture because it's shared beliefs, it's shared like
fundamental mores.
It is also people's home.
People have been born here, people live here.
I understand what that means.
I know exactly what that means.
I'm not trying to, to besmirch that anyway, but I am here to say, like, America is
important.
I even posted my Twitter yesterday being like, you know, if it means that America
becomes the shining city on a hill that it should be as this hope for humanity,
I would be like the first on the boat going back.
70s of Africa, bro. I'm out of here because I believe that America needs to succeed.
That's how much I feel.
The world needs it. It's so important.
The world needs the U.S.
The reason it succeeds is the U.S.
Because we take people like you and put them on the boat.
And you, too, like we need you as an American citizen.
We need the best people on earth because we're trying to create the best government on earth.
So I think you're fully, I mean, maybe you're an immigrant.
I think it's a, I don't you say fully, you're fully American, dude.
You probably understand civics better than I do.
Yeah, here's the thing.
Here's like my comment.
You're one of us.
Welcome.
Thank you.
Thank you.
I appreciate it.
What do you mean by us?
Wait, am I part of it?
I was born here.
I wasn't born in any foreign country like you two immigrants.
No, here's my point on this, where like America is a people.
And so when you start to get away from this idea that America, and like you can say America is an idea,
but you look at the Constitution and who was the Constitution written for?
Who was the country built for?
It was their posterity, right?
And so, yeah, it's for Americans and their posterity.
So the posterity, the descendants of those who built America.
Now, you can have immigrants assimilate, yes, of course, but the reality is people like me,
especially those who come from very different cultures.
And of course, there's a lot of similarities between the West and the East.
but you see this a lot with Somalian immigrants and African immigrants and Arab immigrants and all these things where, yes, you're going to have patriots.
Those who love America, I'm very grateful for America, not only for its economic opportunity, but for what America stands for.
It's traditions.
It's customs.
It's history.
It's myth.
It's legends.
Its values.
Yes.
But I'm a rarity.
I am a rarity.
You know how many times I've been called a race trader on the internet and online?
You know how many friends I've lost?
I think you Koreans have been the model minority, however.
No, but the thing is, most Korean Americans don't think the way that I do.
And this is where Korean Americans are, even the ones who agree with me, are still a minority among most Korean Americans who, yes, Korean Americans who moved here, yes, they all agree with me.
But the children of Korean Americans, the second generation, the third generation, they largely disagree with me.
They are very left-wing.
Asian-Americans, especially Asian-American women, are the most liberal demographic.
in America by far.
So, yeah.
So that's why I say it's like if I, me not being able to run for office prevents people
like Maisie Hirono from being in office, absolutely, absolutely.
And I don't see anything wrong with that because those who should make the rules and
enact legislation and lead the country should be Americans.
And in the same way I wouldn't want to see, you know, Indians or Japanese or all these
different or white people, God bless all you guys, lead and be in Parliament in Korea,
in the National Assembly in Korea, be the president of Korea, things like that, right?
So, you know, people say I'm a self-hating immigrant.
No, like, I love who I am, right?
I am Korean, but I'm so Korean-American because I grew up in America.
So I'm an American, but I'm Korean, so I'm still struggling through that identity.
Well, you're ethnically Korean.
You're not a citizen of the R-O-K.
Right.
You're an American citizen.
Right.
But anywhere, anywhere I go in the world, right?
They'll instantly recognize me as Korean first.
You know, when I go to Korea, they never speak to me in English first.
They speak to me in Korean first.
Why?
Because I look Korean and I come to Korea.
In Korea, they view you still as a Korean.
Yeah, absolutely.
That's fascinating.
Because it's just, that's who I am, right?
So I'm still struggling and I'm still wrestling through this identity crisis that I have.
But ultimately, I love America.
I love its Christian foundations, the rich history that America has.
I do not apologize for America's history at all.
people say disavowed this, yes, there were flaws in every nation's history, but I love America so much. But at the same time, I recognize that I'm an immigrant. I'm a guest. And I want America to, I want America to be America as much as possible, which is America for its descendants. And that's what I believe. I don't want you voting, but at the same time, I don't want any of us voting either.
We don't have an ethnicity in the U.S.
That's the difference about this country, like almost every other country on Earth, especially the older countries.
There's no ethnic thing to go back to.
I do believe that there was an ethnogenesis in America at its founding.
I do believe that it was mainly West Africans and white Anglo-Saxon Protestants.
And that was the ethnogenesis of America where, yes, like those West Africans and the, you know, the foundational black Americans, they call themselves.
But they, yes, they are American.
Americans. I believe that they are Americans, but there was a distinct ethnogenesis, I believe,
in American history when at the foundation of America, it was white Anglo-Saxon Protestants and
West Africans. Now, doesn't mean that if you're not of those lineages that you can never
become American, no, I don't believe that. Like, some of the greatest Americans in history
have been, like, Italian immigrants and things like that, right? But I think we have to be real.
I love the Italians. The Italians are great. It's funny you bring up Africans because I don't know
if you'll notice, but I had to go take an extremely long
pee break because of pool water.
I noticed. Yeah. And while
I was in there, I came up with the solution
to all of this, guys. This
fixes everything. We have to
get Kingman a
black wife. So that he
can then populate, hear me out,
so you can populate America
with Blasians.
Dude. I think, if
anything, we need more Eileen Goose. I don't know if we
need more... Who's a golfer again?
Tiger Woods? Yeah, I don't know. Do we
more Tiger Woods? Well, Tiger Woods is a little different. No, no, you just got to make sure you got the
right combo. Siky Fingers, Mr. Ward. Yeah, Blazian babies. How black? I'm finding you a black wife.
What do you think about that? Black women love me. They love me. I love that. I love that. I love
I love black women as well. I just, I don't think I'd marry one. Whoa. You never know. You're ruining
the whole thing. I know, I'm sorry. I'm ruining the, uh, you know what? If you don't like black women,
he can't even joke about that. He can't even joke about dating. If he doesn't like black women,
he cannot wear a quarter turtle like that. Absolutely.
Absolutely not.
Where's the correlation?
There's a direct correlation.
I think we all know.
Are you looking for a Korean wife?
Yeah.
Don't you want to marry a real American black woman, you know, who was descended from
a descendant of...
Look how well it turned out for Bill Byrd, dude.
That's what I'm talking about.
She's a Trinidad.
She's a Trinidad.
So would you prefer, I mean, we could go to Super Chats, too.
I think we got a boatload of people that want to chime in, but like, would you marry
like a Korean chick or like an American girl that's Korean heritage if you
Would you put your goo and goo?
I wouldn't put my goo and goo.
Unbelievable.
Yeah, what's wrong with you?
She's an American.
I'm no longer the gayest guy.
I am no longer...
The only other question I had.
You don't have to answer the last question.
What's the biggest difference between American culture and Korean culture?
The number one.
Koreans.
That aside.
Because I find imperialistic nature of Eastern Asia is very important in those cultures.
But I'd like to hear what your thoughts are.
I guess, like, American...
I think this is kind of the...
distinction between America and the rest of the world. But I think America is still very individualistic
versus Korea is individualistic in certain regards for sure, but they're still broadly collectivist.
And so there's so many things you can break that down into and different how that manifests in
different ways in society. But I think that's one way. Of course, you know, like the food we consume
and the language we speak. Even bigger than that, Koreans are patriarchal. They're a patriarchal society and a
patriarchal people with deep respect for their elders and particularly the men that's completely
lacking here. I've had some Korean friends growing up and that's one of the things that I really
appreciated about their society and culture, but it really can't be understated their respect
for like the actual patriarchy. Here in America, that's what they're trying to tear down.
It's because Confucianism was like the main religion before Japanese annexation and then during
Japanese colonialism, Christianity like boomed and so Christianity became the dominant religion in
Korea. But because of the Confucian roots, like Confucianism is very big on filial piety and respecting
your elders and your ancestors and very patriarchal. So that's why. But they're trying to do away with
a lot of that in Korea. Big mistake. Because a lot of the liberals are like, oh, we live in a different
era. Times are different. I think a lot of Americans need to travel to Asia. Like when I went to Japan
right after I got caught in TSA with a pew pew in my backpack on accident, while I was there,
what was shocking to me was the honor society.
I think that there's like this culture of honor, right?
Like you don't talk on public transit.
If you're on the bus or the train, you keep your voice down and everyone's very quiet.
They don't have public trash cans in Japan because your trash is your responsibility.
It's not on the public whatever to take care of that.
You've got to take it.
So there's this honor that I think we, dude, we need some of that.
America, when there's not a trash can around, people just throw shit on the floor.
Yeah, dude.
In Japan, they don't.
don't have a trash bag, they put it in their pocket and wait until they go on. Exactly.
I mean, we need some of that, too. Yeah, you go to India, like, trash is literally, it belongs
on the floor in India. But, no, I think that's actually, oh, man, some might say it's just
trash. That's actually a good point because, uh, when I was in Korea, whenever I go to Korea,
I can leave my laptop, I can leave my belongings. Yeah. Just anywhere, I just leave it there.
I go to the bathroom. I go do something else. I come back is there. It's always there.
Same thing if you go to a ski resort in the United States. That's a, uh, because who's not a ski resort?
Well, I mean, it's the truth.
You see all this expensive equipment.
Everyone just leaves it around.
That's true.
That's true.
All right, we're going to go to your Rumble Rants and your super chats right now.
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monday through thursday is uncensored where we can say things that will get us in trouble on
youtube which is still kind of annoying but anyways we're going to go to your uh your super chats
and rumble rambal rants right now uh Wyatt claddenberg says don lemon journalist or political
propagandist i think he's a political propagandist my my honest opinion i think that
nowadays the left and the right have have become uh so so ossified
and so separate that you, it's really hard to find people that are just telling you the news.
There might be some outlets out there that really do try to, to give you both sides of the story.
They're very few and far between, particularly because most people go to the internet for their news
and they go to places that kind of feed them things that they want to hear generally.
Do you guys have a different take on that?
The lines between activism and journalism is becoming increasingly blurred.
In my experience covering journalism, it's all activists, uh,
motivated reasoning with their journalism.
Why do you think people usually stumble upon the stories that they do?
It's because they're choosing to research into the things that they don't like.
So that line is getting scrubbed, not only on the left, but on the right as well, just writ large in our society.
There's no such thing as impartial, unbiased journalism, though.
Everyone has a bias.
Everyone has their own personal beliefs that, you know, motivate them to do what they do, like you said,
to look out for the stories and research the stories that they do.
And so there's no such thing as...
unbiased journalism. Oh, real journalism is dead. It's all propaganda. It's all to a certain extent
propaganda. It's just a matter of we have to be able to discern what is truth and what is fiction
and be able to kind of wade through, hey, like, this person has a left-wing bias and this person
has a right-wing bias and then just like get to the fullness of the truth.
Well, I think people understand that all media is biased. All journalism is biased,
and that's why you've seen this huge wave going towards independent journalists. Because at least
if I'm going to be getting biased news, let me get it from the people that I agree with or that
agree with me. And that's what's happening right now. And I mean, whether you like it or not,
it's kind of cool, you know, but I always say you don't hate the media and you don't hate
politicians enough. So true. That's absolutely true. Some people want to like know what happened and
other people want to know how to feel about what happened. That's a dangerous mindset. If you ever find
yourself wondering how you're supposed to feel about something, you probably don't need to hear about it
from someone else. But that's the majority of people though. The majority of people, though, the
majority of people want to know how to feel about what happened. And that's just how people are.
Because people, most people, even if they're politically inclined, they still defer to authority.
And because we all beings to, we all are, like, it's ingrained in all of us to be submitting
to some sort of authority. And we all in our own lives have authority figures that we all defer
to in certain aspects of life or even like certain beliefs. Like as Christians, they defer to
their pastors, children, they deferred to their parents, you know, Hassan Piker's audience
deferrs to Husson Piker, things like that, right?
So the reality is most people, and this is why we always have an elite class in society,
because the elite class end up being the people who are the ones who dictate the discourse
and things like that, and then the rest of the populace are the ones who kind of follow along,
whoever the leaders are.
And that's just how society is always structured.
It's just her mentality, baby.
Yeah.
Patriot Paladin says, I could go to another country, renounce my citizenship, gain new citizenship,
take office and subvert the will of the country.
That's why you can't become the president in the United States if you're not from the United States.
And I do think that that's a good argument for why people shouldn't hold office if they're a first-generation immigrant.
I mean, look, I know there are a lot of people that make us think about it one way or the other.
I don't honestly think that it's that big of a deal if you're like, look, if you're a first-generation immigrant,
you can't become, you know, a politician.
It's not a big ass to be like, hey, you know, wait until you're, you know,
or you don't do it.
Your kids could, you know, I mean.
Or at least just renounce your other citizenship.
I mean, Ted Cruz, for as much as I dislike him, at least he renounced his Canadian citizenship.
He was always an American citizen, because he was born to American parents, I'm pretty sure.
But he had dual citizenship in Canada.
So he just, so he was, he was, he had dual citizenship.
And he just renounced the Canadian citizen.
Yeah, you know.
I don't think that's at all ask, you know.
Look, if you go to another country.
and you become a citizen of that country
and they have a democratic process
and vote you in,
that's their problem.
I guess that's just how democracies work,
in my view.
I don't know.
I just defer to the founders.
I just want to go back to America.
I don't understand Kingman.
The founders didn't say
foreigners can't become citizens
and then, you know,
go through the Democratic.
Well, I guess the founding fathers
didn't say most people
who now can vote.
So I don't even know what I'm saying.
Yeah.
I mean, most of the states,
you had to be a Christian
to hold public office.
The founders would not recognize
the country that we stay in it all, 50 states,
what are we talking about,
like the expansion of power,
the Supreme Court, Judicial Review, what are we talking about?
Imagine if you showed a founder, hentai.
Oh my God.
Like, what?
Oh, they're like, this is blasphemy.
You're going to hell.
You need to go to church.
Go to church.
Let's see.
Is this an actual?
Dom 117 says,
in Timcast tradition,
my wife started labor for our fourth
and final child Eloin.
she'll say hi sometime tomorrow everyone else needs to catch up if we are to beat the commies absolutely
congratulations have those babies bringing another patriot into the world absolutely
let's see we got uh another one decepticon brian i think it is my wife and i are in the delivery
room waiting on our first boy to be born our wonderful and joyous blessing gabriel griffin
excited to be a father and raise another patriot god bless tim cast crew all right let's go let's go
I like the alliteration on the name, too.
Gabriel Griffin.
Yeah.
And G.
G.
Oh, yeah.
I hope the last name isn't, isn't Alan.
It doesn't start with a G.
Definitely not G.
G.G. Allen.
Uh, let's see.
Excuse me.
Angry old man says,
Squeeze the Lemon by Daniel Plissark,
available on all platforms.
I guess it's an ad for his,
uh,
hopefully his book.
I don't know.
Squeeze the lemon.
Uh,
Chief Corey Anderson says,
the DOJ should get information off of lemon's foam.
drop charges against him, then release a press release,
thanking him for his helping cooperation.
Two birds, one's known.
No one would trust Lemon.
I mean, like, yeah, if they're just like, hey, he was our guy from the start.
No, I wasn't, no, I wasn't.
You know, he'd be tossed under the bus.
He'd be ostracized.
They're throwing Will Stancel under the bus.
His white husband would divorce him, dude.
I feel so bad for that guy.
I don't.
I don't.
I just, I don't.
What's this Will Stansell?
Will Stansell's a, he's a leftist and he's been, you know, a very very
vocal leftist
and pushing is basically
every leftist
idea that you could possibly
have. Guess what? It wasn't enough. No, it wasn't enough. No, no.
He was attacked by ice professors.
It wasn't enough. Physically attacked, yeah.
Dude, if you can't be, if you can't be Will Stantel
and that's still not like left enough, like, yo, they're
coming for you. I mean, but that to your point though, like
it's not enough. Like as soon as someone believes that you have
somehow become a traitor, which we're talking about earlier.
then they ostracize you and they attack you, you know, with the full force of the left because they look at you as a traitor.
And they're like, look what happened to Steve A. Smith and Van Jones.
Oh, true.
The comments that they made around Charlie Kirk.
I mean, they went after those guys.
The left is absolutely ruthless.
And in today's climate, when violence is so accepted on the left, you know, just being on the left, you're in danger.
And this is part of the reason why cancel culture works so well.
that the first people that were getting canceled before it started making, you know, making its way into the broader society were people on the left. If you were in these niche groups or whatever, you said the wrong thing. People would pile on you, you know, because they've followed the Scotty K Fitness thing at all. I have followed that a little bit. I don't want to derail or anything. That's a perfect example of what you're talking about. He put himself in this echo chamber. And then come to find out, ooh, he's got a little bit of a background. So now, I mean, he's just crumbling. And they're.
They're more ruthless than the right will ever be.
They are absolutely ruthless.
They will go after you in every way they can.
They'll docks you.
The right's going after their own too now.
I mean, I've experienced it.
Because I didn't condemn bad bunny.
They're like, oh, well, I'm going to unfollow you.
I mean, it's lost.
Are there comments on the internet?
Yeah.
What was that?
What AI garbage comments?
If the people you're thinking of are just comments, don't trust any of it.
Any of it.
They might even be real people.
They might not.
Some of them were real people.
But to your point about like,
I'm going to unfollow you and stuff.
That's the extent of it.
It's like, all right, so people are going to, you know,
leave nasty comments on your ex account.
That's not the same thing as like, we're going to your house.
You know what I mean?
And that's the stuff that the left does.
The left shows up at your house.
They'll protest.
You know, you as a comic, they would protest your show.
Oh, it happened to me in New York, dude.
Oh, really?
They canceled all my shows in New York because I made a joke about Muhammad.
Peace be upon him, obviously.
But it wasn't forever.
Piss be upon him, yeah.
Okay, whoa, dude.
Hey, look, I'm olive snack bar guys.
Aloha snack.
Whatever it is.
You know, it sort of indicates like maybe those are the bad guys, the people that turn on each other.
And you would see, like, if you could step back from the whole game of humanity and be like, okay, I think that's the bad, those are the evil people.
Not that everybody's evil or bad, but like the people that will turn on each other because they're not in lockstep are pretty much the decepticons.
Ah, good point.
But you see, you see, Ian, they call themselves the good guys.
Yeah.
So they can never be the bad guys.
They call us the bad guys.
So we are always the bad guys.
So no matter what they do, they're the good guys and they are never evil.
We are always evil no matter what we do.
Dude, get a black wife already.
My God, bro.
Unbelievable.
Key is to, like, disassociate from good and evil and bad and good and, like, stop playing that
game because if you play that game, there's always going to be a bad guy.
Yeah, I think that I disagree with you because I think there always is going to be a bad guy.
Because, I mean, look, I'm not a Christian, but I believe there's something in the Bible that
says that good and evil runs straight through the heart of man, right?
Like, men can be, like human beings are imperfect.
and if you give in to your more base instincts and, you know, your sinful instincts,
you can become evil and even a good person can do evil.
You can stop preaching at me about the pegging thing, dude.
You can, that's fine.
All right, I get it.
All right.
I fear on 275 says, Elad, the whole martyr thing with Lemon, I think, was a complete setup
just so he could pull that card.
Following his firing from whatever news network along with the virtual fail of his show
podcast, martyrdom is his new meal ticket.
rise to relevance.
And the administration played right into it, if that is the case.
So it kind of sucks, but, you know, it's still a bitch to have the DOJ rifling through your shit.
And I wouldn't wish it upon any of my buddies.
So they still have to get a lawyer and there'll still be legal fees that are associated with him.
But again, we wouldn't be talking about him and nobody in the news would be talking about him otherwise if he didn't get charged.
I'll be honest.
I hope we never talk about him again.
I'm not, I mean, I don't hate the guy.
Have him on the show.
But I don't want to glaze this guy and make him famous if we don't have to.
We should bring him on the show.
I'm sure he'd decline.
I'm sure we've invited him.
He'd ask us a fee, and then when we didn't pay that ridiculous he's over and fee, he'd say, oh, they didn't want to play a ball.
All right, screw it.
We'll invite his husbands.
Hey, there we go.
Kimberly says, my husband Aaron and I are celebrating 11 years married today.
Congratulations.
Years ago, I became incredibly liberal and liberal, and it almost ruined our marriage.
Thankful for my husband who led me out of it, the liberal woman circle is a cult.
I'm glad you made it out with your breast.
Yeah.
Yeah, not only that, but I'm glad you to survive.
I'm glad you made it out with your marriage intact
because if it wasn't for the fact that you have a good husband,
he might have decided to boot show or not tolerated or whatever,
but it's good on you for changing your mind
and good on your husband for working through that.
Politics ending marriages.
Insane.
I don't even know what the fuck to say.
That is so crazy because I was literally thinking that as he was saying
because the liberal women's circle would have wanted her
to leave her husband because he is a fascist, obviously.
Right?
And that is so.
so toxic and poisonous, but I see it constantly.
Dude, threads is a hell skates.
It is a hell.
And it's not just threads, but like the blue sky is just as.
I have not even been on there.
It is a cesspool.
No, but threads is the worst.
Is it worse?
He came after me on threads.
And I kid you not, he just had all of his little bot followers.
Oh my gosh, he owned you.
Oh my gosh.
Look at him.
O'D you.
And I was like, oh my gosh.
And then on X, right, he gets completely distrauded.
destroyed in his replies and then I ratio him and on X.
So it's like once you allow conservatives to speak,
like it's fair, it's like fair game.
We're going at each other.
But the threads, like they continuously throttle conservatives.
And then it's just all the-
Well, that's shifting, though.
I think that was like an early thing.
And now it's starting to shift a little,
but it's still a dystopian hellscape.
Oh, it's all on threats.
I think also in some relationships,
people replace familiar, like their family with politics
and the people involved in politics.
and it's just not a match to be replaced with.
Also, I think as people get older,
and if they are divorced,
then they'll encourage other people in happy...
They'll become more political first
once you get divorced
because you have nothing else to do with your life.
And then you'll kind of like encourage the people in your sexes
to divorce the other one for political reasons.
Yeah.
And it's just all very sad and unfortunate.
Stay married to your significant others,
as much as you can, of course.
These online communities,
that's why they're so dangerous,
especially the left-moon ones that radicalize you.
Because, like you said,
they replace your natural affections and bonds with your family and your immediate community
with online ones with strangers, most of the times whose names and faces you don't even know.
It's just a digital cult.
That's all it is.
That's crazy.
MSUF15 says, we're you Taiwanese American here.
Many people aren't voting midterms because Epstein are discontent.
CCP is only afraid of Trump and his team.
Trump losing the midterms means a win for the CCP and a loss for Christians.
Look, I agree.
And I think that it's super important to vote.
People love to say, oh, this isn't the most important election in your life.
They always say it's the most important election in your life.
It always is.
The reason it always is is because we live in linear time.
The previous elections, you can't go and do anything about.
And the elections in the future, you can't do anything about.
The only thing you can do is vote in the election right now.
So, yes, it is the most important election ever because it's the one you can vote in right now.
It's the one you can actually affect.
I think we just had a Republican from Florida in Congress resigned.
there's truly a one-seat majority, depending on how you count Massey.
The Republicans are in deep shit, and they're going to lose the midterms, inevitably,
not only because other Republicans are demoralized right now,
but because that is the trend following one party winning the presidentiality.
The other party usually comes back in the midterms.
We will see endless investigations and impeachments once Republicans lose the majority.
So we're in for a very annoying lame duck second half of the Trump presidency.
Founding father 1776 says, I'm 30, and my fifth baby.
Luca arrived at 7.15 a.m. Amen. Awesome. I'm 32 with none. Thank you for letting us know.
That guy couldn't pull out of a wet paper bag. That's insane. Oh. And on that...
I didn't know women do that many anymore.
And on that note, smash the like, go ahead and share the show with all your friends. Go to rumble.com.
Become a member and going over to Timcast.com and join the Discord. Kang, do you want anything you want to shout out?
Yeah. God bless you all. Thank you all for tuning in. Remember that Jesus Christ is king and Lord over all.
and he loves you very much.
My name is Kongman Lee.
I talk about politics, culture, theology, all those things.
On my social, you can find me at Kongman J. Lee, K-A-N-G-M-I-N-J-L-E.
I couldn't do spelling there.
Spent too much time in Korea.
Just catch me there.
Going to come out with more YouTube content soon,
and I stream every Monday, Wednesday, Friday at 11 p.m. Eastern.
Nice.
Yeah, Davey Jackson, come to a stand-up comedy show,
but more importantly, go check out.
my YouTube. I did a documentary
about Dearborn, Michigan.
Just do, like, go to my channel
and search Dearborn Undercover. It's
really, really cool.
Hey, follow me, Ian Crossland, YouTube, Instagram,
and X. Go to grapheen.com,
check out the new documentary that I've been producing.
It's going to be great. The trailer's out now.
You can sign up for the mailing list and get that.
Remember, too, now is the most important
moment you will ever have. And that is always
the case. Tomorrow, it's still right now.
So take advantage of this moment.
Good evening, everybody.
I hope you enjoyed the episode.
I am Al-A-A-Hu, the White House correspondent here at Timcast.
Shabbat Shalom to everybody who observes.
Me and Serge are about to go get Shabbat dinner at a Waffle House, baby.
Let's go.
And I am Phil that Remains on Twix.
The band is All That Remains.
You can check us out at All That Remains Online.com.
We're going on tour starting in April on the 29th in Albany.
We're going out with Born of Osiris and Dead Eyes.
You can check out the music at Apple Music, Amazon,
Pandora, YouTube, Spotify,
And Dizer, don't forget, the left lane is for crime.
You can check out clips from Timcast all weekend long, and we will be back here on Monday.
