Timcast IRL - Iran Says Israel VIOLATED Trump CEASEFIRE, White House DENIES Report

Episode Date: April 9, 2026

Tim, Phil, and Ian are joined by Adam Francisco to discuss Iran accusing Israel of violating the ceasefire, a MSNOW anchor says America has died because of Trump, a veteran charged with leaking milita...ry secrets to a journalist, a disgruntled employee allegedly burns down a massive warehouse, a man accused of killing Iryna Zarutska fount incompetent to stand trial, and a new AI model is too dangerous for the public.  SUPPORT THE SHOW BUY CAST BREW COFFEE NOW - https://castbrew.com/ Join -    / @timcastirl   Hosts:  Tim @Timcast (everywhere) Phil @PhilThatRemains (X) | https://allthatremains.komi.io/ Ian  @IanCrossland  (everywhere) | https://graphene.movie/ Producer: Carter @carterbanks (X) |  @trashhouserecords  (YT) Guest:  Adam Francisco @adamfrancisco_ (X) Podcast available on all podcast platforms! Iran Says Israel VIOLATED Trump CEASEFIRE, White House DENIES Report | Timcast IRL For advertising inquiries please email sponsorships@rumble.com

Transcript
Discussion (0)
Starting point is 00:00:00 We've got conflicting reports on the state of the ceasefire in the Iran war. The White House is saying the strait is open. If it were to be closed, that would be unacceptable. However, reports coming from Iran are that because Israel launched attacks on Lebanon, this violates the terms of the ceasefire, and they would be closing the strait of Formuz. Again, the White House countered saying this is not correct. They have not closed the strait. But what I can say is, rest assured, prominent personalities on X, be it liberal or, I guess,
Starting point is 00:00:28 conservative are cheering for the failure of Trump's ceasefire because they actually want the where, I guess. I mean, hey, if it bleeds, it leads. And if you're in commentary, there's a lot of money be made complaining about something. You don't think it really is when woke basically got crushed and swept under the rug. There was nothing to complain about anymore. So the grifters needed something to complain about, started complaining about Trump. So now they're happy to see the ceasefire breakdown and war up because I think complain about
Starting point is 00:00:56 something. me, let's just hope that this ceasefire does hold negotiations work out, and then we have an end to the war. But you know what's really funny is with that being in the news, you got these feminists, they're attacking me saying Tim Poole is coping by saying, oh, well, you know, we don't want the war to happen, but let's just find peace because you should be antagonistic. These people are all hypocrites. They're all liars. We want to talk about that. Plus big news, the DOJ has arrested a leaker. Turns out it was some lady.
Starting point is 00:01:26 couldn't keep her mouth shut. She apparently worked for SOCOM, and over the past several years, according to these reports, was leaking classified information to reporters. And the response on the internet has been particularly brutal and sexist, you know, saying that women will just keep talking about everything, I guess. We'll talk about that. And we got some crazy stories, too. There's a viral video of a guy setting fire to a warehouse in California, this massive fire,
Starting point is 00:01:52 because he said we weren't being paid a living wage. I call that leftist terrorism. Indeed, we'll talk about that and more. Before we get started with all that, my friends, we've got a great sponsor for you tonight. It is True Gold Republic. Check out TrueGoldRepublic.com slash Tim, do it. Having sound money and financial independence is important.
Starting point is 00:02:11 Hard assets are extremely important. That's why you guys should check out True Gold Republic. You look at the state of the world right now. We got wars. We got NATO under pressure. The dollar being weaponized, $36 trillion in debt. And you've got people seemingly cheering for more war. they just can't accept a ceasefire.
Starting point is 00:02:27 That freaks me out the most. Gold can't be printed. It can't be sanctioned. It can't be deviled by a press release. Central banks are buying it at record levels right now. The people who run the system are hoarding the one thing they cannot print that tells you everything. Insert true gold Republic. Real physical gold and silver, not paper, not ETF's metal you can hold.
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Starting point is 00:03:03 And don't forget to join us at timcast.com. Get in that Discord server, my friends. It's not about what you know. It's about who you know. And when you're in that discord community with tens of thousands of people, you know a lot of people. And that network is power. Got a project you're working on.
Starting point is 00:03:17 Need someone who might be able to give you advice. Make some friends figured all out. And in the meantime, as a member, you support the work that we do here at Timcast. so it is greatly appreciate it. Don't forget, my friends. If you're watching right now, smash that like button. Share this video anywhere you can. Joining us tonight to talk about this, and so much more is Adam Francisco. Hey, guys, nice to meet you, Tim, finally.
Starting point is 00:03:36 I'm excited to be here, and I'm excited for a great conversation today. Who are you? What do you do? My name is Adam Francisco. I do street content. I'm a big Donald Trump supporter. I'm actually wearing his jersey right now, number 47 Donald Trump. And yeah, I talk about the news when I go out there, hit the streets. I go to a lot of left-wing protests in the MAGA hat and film the reactions, film the melt,
Starting point is 00:03:54 and I have a great time doing so. You were just at the no kings protest. Three, no kings in one day. Wow. 95 degree day in Florida. It was hot as the day went on. The liberals got more and more crazy. But the protests worked because there's no kings.
Starting point is 00:04:06 They're not anywhere around. They're not anywhere around. Great job, Democrats. Yeah, they just killed it. Preempted it. We got Ian hanging out. Everybody. Happy to be here. Carter's pressing the buttons.
Starting point is 00:04:15 What's up, man? Thanks for coming. And Phil is rocking out. Hello, everybody. Let's jump to the news. We got this from ABC. Reopening of the Strait of Form was in jeopardy after Israeli attack on Lebanon, reopening the strait was a major part of the U.S. Iran ceasefire agreement.
Starting point is 00:04:30 They say, just after Hegsseth and General Dan Cain, the chairman of the Joint Chiefs of Staff said on Wednesday, the Strait of Hormuz had reopened. Iran said it had closed the passage and accused Israel of violating the deal. A major part of the two-week ceasefire agreement reached Tuesday night. Just hours before Trump's deadline to respond to his threat. We get it. You're like, ABC, you don't need to add that stupid wasted. These are wasted words, right? Just tell us the news.
Starting point is 00:04:52 anyway, requires Iran to reopen the vital passage for trade and oil to international shipping before peace talks can begin. But after allowing a handful of ships, including two oil tankers to pass through the strait, Iran said it closed the strait, accusing Israel of violating the ceasefire by launching a major attack on Lebanon, Iran's Farr News Agency, which is affiliated with the Islamic Revolutionary Guard or Corps reported. Now, the White House was asked about this, and Time Magazine reports, White House Press Secretary Carolyn Levin on Wednesday disputed reports that Iran had closed straight of Hormuz, hours into a fragile ceasefire with the U.S., but said any effort by Iran to stop maritime traffic would be completely unacceptable. Levin addressed reporters soon after Iranian state media had reported that the straight had been closed in response to attacks by Israel against the Hezbollah militant group in Lebanon.
Starting point is 00:05:43 So this is interesting. I'm going to say, obviously, we are begging that this ceasefire holds because we don't want war, right? We want, we want peace. And the ongoing theme so far has been just a bunch of anti-Trump people who are conservative or liberal, seemingly cheering for the ceasefire to break. The moment this news comes out, what do you get? All of these libs being like, ha, ha, told you so, ha. Why don't, why don't you help? Like, what is what you are, how is what you are doing beneficial in any way to the efforts to stop this conflict?
Starting point is 00:06:19 It's like people that are so obsessed with their football team that are, they feel the vitriol and the love so intensely that they forget about, yo, this whole league could end tomorrow. Like, your games mean nothing in the big grand scheme of things. This piece, this is everything. So wait, what are you saying? The people that are acting like Trump, bad, good, I'm on this side, I'm on that side, are like sports fans when the whole fucking. League could fall apart. Language. Thank you.
Starting point is 00:06:45 Thank you. But just get your head out of the dirt and look around to what we really need to do as a human species right now. It has nothing to do with Donald Trump. He's just a piece of the puzzle. Well, I mean, it is good that, well, if we can get the war to end, that is an undeniable good, right? Stop dropping bombs.
Starting point is 00:07:02 Stop shooting missiles. And I think at least for the U.S.'s part, we have held to, we as in the United States, have held to our part of the bargain. I don't think that we can make Iran. stop shooting missiles at Israel or Israel stop shooting missiles at Iran. But like I said, for our part, we're like, look, there is a ceasefire between us and Iran. And as long as Iran isn't shooting at U.S. bases and Americans aren't shooting Iran, we're doing our part to stop it. Well, then Israel's jeopardizing everything we're doing.
Starting point is 00:07:34 Iran's attitude is you're providing the weapons and resource to them. Well, I mean, that's always the situation, though. It's like people expect the United States to be able to tell Israel what to do. Or they say that Israel is to actually. Right. We get it. Then the end result is simple. Iran has to be flattened.
Starting point is 00:07:49 If Iran is telling the United States that we are responsible for what everyone else is doing, then these people can't be negotiated with. So if that's the case. But look, Iran's going to say bring Israel to heal, get them to stop bombing Lebanon. Trump needs to state publicly. We have nothing to do with this. Israel. That's what he should be saying right now. Otherwise, there's going to be war with Iran. And more daylight there is between the U.S. and Iran since the, I'm sorry, U.S. and Israel since the ceasefire. I actually think that that's better for the U.S. because just like Tim said, Iran is going to continue to say that it's the U.S.'s fault that Israel is doing these things.
Starting point is 00:08:30 Even though Iran was shooting missiles at Israel right after the ceasefire started yesterday. And Israel was shooting missiles at Hezbollah and Lebanon. But that's something does happen after there's public announcements because they have to go to base and give them orders. And people wonder why it is. They're like, wait a ceasefire, why they're still shooting. Because when a prime minister or president says on TV, I think is happening, the orders have to go through the chain of command to the base and say, hey, guys, okay, we're canceling this operation. Yeah. So you'll still see strikes. My deep fear over the last six years, and I don't talk about it a lot because I don't want to project fear, you know, is that. It's the fear of the dark. I'm still, that's why I'm wearing these sunglasses. I'm terrified right now, Phil.
Starting point is 00:09:06 is that the people will distance themselves from Israel to a point that Israel becomes kind of on an island of aggression, and then the whole world tries to stop them, and they initiate thermonuclear war. They won't be able to. Bro, Israel's the size of New Jersey. They're not going to war with the world. It's mind-blowing me, dude. Israel is not that powerful. I'm actually not trying to rag on Israel with that statement, but they're the size of New Jersey, and they are a conflicted state within themselves.
Starting point is 00:09:35 right? They're there they're there there you've got settlers in the west bank you've got the alka san brigades you've got hamas in Gaza Israel's busy dealing with its own borders they're not going to war with anybody not right now but it's a long thing I'm like wow we got this is a whole like don't become the demon you're trying to destroy don't build this up so much that all the sudden Israel is at a breaking point like for whatever reason they do feel I don't know I don't want to speak for well I mean there are the Abraham Accords and there have been efforts to kind of normalize relations Israel and most of the other countries in the Middle East. And that's a positive step.
Starting point is 00:10:10 I don't see, you know, you don't see Israel basically getting into, uh, drawn out conflicts with other countries. It's just Iran. And Lebanon? They said they're not going to take over a piece of Iran. The conflict in Lebanon is not about Lebanon. It's about Hezbollah. And Hezbollah is funded by Iran.
Starting point is 00:10:25 So they said they're going to occupy a piece of Lebanon to prevent Hezbollah from attacking. And it's similar to the, if the cartels were hitting us from Mexico and we went in and occupied, I'd be okay with it. Like, yo, bro, control your militia. or we're going to control it for you. Well, I don't know that Lebanon can control Hezbo. Hezbo is, Hezbo is, like, they control it. They control Lebanon.
Starting point is 00:10:43 Well, but what I'm saying is, is Hezbollah, Hezbo is not like Hamas, right? Hamas is very, very, you know, they've been, they were, they're like a really small potatoes kind of terrorist group. Hezbollah is a serious militia with serious equipment because Iran has been sending them equipment. So I don't know that, that Lebanon can actually control them the way that, that, that, the way that we're saying here. And I think if they could, they would because Lebanon doesn't want Israel to take a part of Lebanon.
Starting point is 00:11:11 And if the Mexicans could control the cartels, maybe we'll see a future where that happens. But if they can't, it's a very similar thing. This is a warning to you, Mexico. And it's not like I want this to happen. But if you don't control your militant. You know, insurgencies, someone else will. I got to tell you, I got to tell you, I love Putin and I love tacos. And so if the U.S. has to take Canada, Mexico.
Starting point is 00:11:31 Tacos with gravy and curds. I mean. It's mixing in all. Well, to be fair, have you ever gone up to Montreal and had a variety of a sampling of their Poutin? No, but I worked at a Montreal, at a Canadian restaurant called Dusties in Los Angeles, and the Poutine is spectacular. Oh, no, they're right from Montreal. They came in from... This is fake.
Starting point is 00:11:48 It's French fries with cheese, curds and gravy. He's wrong. He's never actually experienced. Tell me what I'm talking about. So in Canada, Poutine is... It's, like, saying Poutine is fries with cheese and gravy is like saying pizza is bread, sauce, and cheese. She's curds, curds. I get it.
Starting point is 00:12:04 Everybody knows that when you order pizza, you can get pineapple, you can get spinach, you can get garlic, you can get stuffed crust, you can get double-decker, deep dish. You go to the restaurants in Montreal for Poutine and they've got like 15 different things. That's right. Yeah, garlic, and we have to take it. We have no choice. We take the IP. And they've got great maple syrup. You get breakfast up there?
Starting point is 00:12:25 That's where they got maple syrup up there. And we have to. We have no choice. It's not like I want to conquer Mexico. I'm just saying if they didn't control the militia. I don't want to. I don't want to. Who am?
Starting point is 00:12:34 I to oversee the conquering of hostile territory. When I tweeted out, why shouldn't we conquer Canada and Mexico? BuzzFeed wrote it up like it was real. This is the world we live in. No one is serious. No one is actually talking about what it means to be at war with Iran. No one actually cares. And I'm sitting here being like, we got people in the chat being like, Israel runs the world.
Starting point is 00:12:54 Sure, I guess. Are you going to click the like button now because I said that? Give me your money. Why should I be the only one trying to be honest? about about about what well i mean i i think it's i think it's silly to say that that israel controls the united states that the u.s is a client state of israel that's that's pretty ridiculous the u.s does have a in my opinion a too close relationship with israel israel is a problem child in the middle east um and the like i said the more daylight you can put between the
Starting point is 00:13:25 u.s and israel right now i think the better it is what does that mean daylight the the more we can have a separation of the U.S. and Israel. So they're going to have to have some formal policy on that one because so long as Trump and Rubio keeps saying like we're just working with Israel on this, then Iran is going to blame the U.S. when Israel launches. Yeah, I think that having some kind of formal policy on it's fine. Look, I've been saying that we should end foreign aid to Israel and that's basically means ending weapons.
Starting point is 00:13:53 Basically the foreign aid that goes to Israel is in the formal weapons. So I think that we should stop doing it. I've been, that's been my position forever. I think we should end all foreign aid personally, but I think we should end foreign aid to Israel. I don't see why we have to basically do what, you know, be drawn into wars that Israel wants. You know, I do think that Iran is a problem. But we want war with Iran too. Well, I mean, I guess, I suppose the United States does want the U.S. government does, but I don't know.
Starting point is 00:14:24 The U.S. government is why the conflict is in the region. like our meddling in the Middle East, the 1979 Revolution, our support for the Shah, all of these things. This is the U.S. foreign policy. They have wanted this. We invaded Iraq and Afghanistan, not because of any stupid nebulous reason, but because we built military bases along the border of Iran. Yeah, but we went to Iraq because, I think honestly, because George Bush had a personal vendetta against the. But that's silly, right? The idea that world leaders do things like comic book villains or, or, or, or, or, or, one dimension is silly. No, I'm not saying it's one dimension. When you look back the past 30 years and you see a through line for all of the American foreign policy, but if you look at you conclude we went
Starting point is 00:15:05 to Iraq the first time and the second time. You can you could go by just looking at like all the UN resolutions against Iraq to justify the, the U.S. going into Iraq and in the odds, right? Like there was all of the time that that Iraq was targeting U.S. planes when over the no-fly zone between the north and south, no-fly zone after the first Gulf War. Yeah. And there's all kinds of stuff that then. Saddam wanted to trade gold and euro. He wanted to break the petro dollar. Yeah, but I'm just talking I'm just talking about the stuff that was was obvious violations of U.S., of U.N. resolutions that Iraq broke, right? Like Iraq's, there was plenty of,
Starting point is 00:15:40 of like, legal justification, whether or not, like, you believe the whole, the yellow cake uranium stuff, whether you believe in weapons and mass destruction, there was enough justification where you could make the argument, right? And I'm not saying that I agree with it. I'm not saying that we should have. I'm not saying it was a good idea, but I'm telling you that I'm saying that the argument, the legal argument was there to go into Iraq, you know. Let's jump to this next story from MS now and take a look at what the psychopathic crackpots are saying, oh boy, this one is going to blow your mind when you hear what Lawrence O'Donnell says. It could not be more tragically clear now that a whole civilization has already died.
Starting point is 00:16:23 the whole civilization beginning with the model of the British Parliament leading to the first independent American government formed under the Articles of Confederation followed by the Constitution that wrote the presidency into existence and nearly 250 years of the American presidency. All of that, that whole civilization forming the presidency. died with the elevation of Donald Trump to the presidency a second time. You know, I don't want to strike a person. You know what I mean? But anyway, I want to subdue them with my words. That guy is so cheap. Trump retreats again. The American civilization has already ended.
Starting point is 00:17:14 This, ooh, I'm not going to swear. These people are evil. And I got to be honest, I really am at my wits end for, all of these people on the left and the right that no matter what Trump does, it's wrong. MS now is now demanding war with Iran. They are now attacking Donald Trump for retreating. Laurence O'Donnell wants Trump to bomb Iran. And of course, that's what these people have always wanted.
Starting point is 00:17:43 They are liars and manipulators. And I feel like I'm taking crazy pills, right? Are we the only ones who are literally like, hey, how do we not have a war? You've got Trump supporters said, good for the war the whole time. I'm standing with my president. Then you had Tucker Carlson and others, Candice Owens, being like, Trump's gone crazy. This is wrong. The left has said, see, we told you so.
Starting point is 00:18:02 Then Trump says, okay, no war. And they go, what a pussy. What a loser. And Lawrence O'Donnell says, oh, he's retreating again. I'm done. None of this is real. Yeah, it's not. There's no political discourse in this country anymore.
Starting point is 00:18:14 It's a bunch of effing retards. This is an, I thought, this is an insurgency is what I thought while this guy was talking. There's an insurgency in our country that's co-opted the corporate media. of the corporate media. This guy, whether he realizes it or not, is trying to scare people into overthrowing the U.S. government. He had a fake, talked like this, like he was Walter Cronkite. He did a word salad and then tried to scare people about whatever his talking points are, what he's become to believe. It's like if you're surrounded by people to have a brain parasite, it's not their body. It's not them that's the problem. It's the, what their body's doing. And like,
Starting point is 00:18:50 you don't want to destroy the parasitic human. You want to explore. You want to extract the parasite. That's why I said, I don't want to strike this guy. You know, you want to help him. Well, I was being serious. I don't want to strike people. Yeah, I don't either. I want to help them.
Starting point is 00:19:02 This is evil. But now we're seeing it from right-wing personalities all the same. They're doing the exact same thing. They're posting taco. Okay, guys, you are unserious people. And, you know, when I see this stuff, it makes me really respect the Democrats. Because I've said it before, but the Democrats get it. the Democrats think people are so stupid.
Starting point is 00:19:26 They can't govern themselves, so you're better off just manipulating them. And then you see what people do with their freedom of speech. And you get the likes of these conservatives being like, ha, ha, Trump's a chicken. Bro, you just spent the past month attacking him for going to war in Iran. Now you're attacking him for not going to war in Iran. You're saying literally the same thing as MS now.
Starting point is 00:19:44 You're all the same. You're all Trump derangement syndrome lunatics. Yeah. I don't think is real. So I made a post yesterday at around, I don't know, 7.15 p.m. when the news kind of broke about the ceasefire. Let me tell you something, guys. I was so happy to hear that there was a ceasefire between US and Iran because I don't like war. I know with war, there's, you know, civilians get killed and people die. And the first comments
Starting point is 00:20:05 that I got on my Facebook page were from Trump-deranged lunatics posting tacos and chickens and saying once again, Trump chickened out. And I'm like, what exactly did you want him to do here? Okay, no. If you followed through at 8 p.m. and destroyed a civilization, quote-unquote, you would have been happy? No, you. still would have been mad. So nothing Trump can do will make these people happy. There's nothing he can do. Well, it's because they're retarded. It's just, but it's just the point is like, it doesn't matter what happens. It's just counter Trump. Like whatever Trump does, whatever way they can criticize Trump, they're going to do it. So the fact that the fact is they're not honest. This isn't about any kind
Starting point is 00:20:41 of deeply held beliefs or being anti-war or whatever. It's just, okay, we can use this as a vector of attack against Donald Trump. Anybody out there that is a war-oficionado, tactics you know and to anyone else that doesn't that surrender and retreat are not the same thing. To win a war, you retreat many times and you reposition. It is most likely prepared to retreat many times to a better position and to win your war. It's a similar with folding and poker. You have to know when to pull back. He did a bloviating threat that seemed to strike some fear into some people to wake them up. The problem with him, and this is a double-edged sword, he's wonderful and intimidating. So the world is it is on their
Starting point is 00:21:21 knees basically, but the domestic population's terrified of this guy. So that's the problem we have to face. You've got to assuage the public. He's not really crazy. Talk to Bill Moore about it. I don't think anybody's actually afraid of him. I think that what we are clearly seeing the likes of Lawrence O'Donnell is, I imagine this man walked into his production meeting and says, how are we going to lie about Trump today? And they were like, let's attack him for retreating from the war. Now we're for the war because he's against it. Guys, I got to be honest. When we talked about Donald Trump holding his, you know, saying auction is good to force Democrats to hold their breath. That was a joke, but I'm actually convinced they do it right now. If Donald Trump came out and said, I want everybody, I want everybody,
Starting point is 00:21:57 take a big, deep breath, breathe in that big, beautiful oxygen and live healthy, everybody, they would literally hold their breath. I think they actually would at this point. Lawrence O'Donnell would go on TV and say, no, Trump, you can't tell me what to do. I'll hold my breath all day. I swear to God. Maybe it's like this is the phase of human evolution where people, when they think something is bad, that that means that everything they, other else they do is also bad. I think, I think Trump should do. I think Trump should come out and tell everyone to take a big, deep breath. It comes from like our ancient past where you, you, the only way you could trust someone
Starting point is 00:22:31 is at their word. And if they betray you with their word, then you think they're a liar forever, and you have to live that way. And now, but Trump's like, F's with people. He messes with people on purpose in business. It's a huge part of winning in business. I figured it out. I figured it out. The war's not over. Trump did this on purpose. So now that all of the people attacked him for saying he's retreating. He can come out and be like, I saw Lawrence O'Donnell the other day. He said, I shouldn't retreat. Lawrence, I don't want to, but you're right. I'm going to nuke him. Thanks for the advice. And then Lawrence and I was going to be like, no, don't. I'm like, well, which one is it? If, here's a thing, I'm half kidding. If Trump knew, and he does know that this war
Starting point is 00:23:08 is unpopular, that independence are breaking, he says, okay, no war. And instantly you get all of these people saying, oh, he's a taco. Okay, then Trump can come out and be like, Trump can give a press conference and say, when I called for a ceasefire, I was surprised to find that I was heavily criticized by both liberals and conservatives for choosing peace. Well, to the American people, your voice has been heard. We are restarting strikes on Iran effective immediately. Thank you for your concern. Crazy. Yeah.
Starting point is 00:23:39 And he won't do that. Thank God. I wish you would at this point. I'm not trying to actually go to war, but just say it. I'd just be like, okay, you convinced me. My take on the Iranians right on the Persians. I'm going to start referring to them as Persians because they are Persian as well, is that we obliterated 140 of their top radical leaders.
Starting point is 00:23:58 And now this young, whoever is in charge now is like trolling Donald Trump on Twitter. He's like, hey, 8 p.m., final call. If 8 p.m. is that's the last chance. And they're like, how about their response is? How about 1 to 2 p.m. in the afternoon? How about 1 to 2 in the morning? I don't think so. I have a conspiracy theory that I think the Trump admin made contact.
Starting point is 00:24:18 Israel probably made contact with Iranian officials who wanted normalization because nobody wants to fight. People want to be rich. People want to have nice cars. They want to be comfortable. They want their kids to be fed. Iran is choosing to go to war for ideology. I guarantee you there were people in government who are like, we want to sell the oil that we have. We want to build libraries, go to the movies. We want to have good food. And the Trump administration said, how do we get you guys in charge? And they're like, well, you can't. There's 40 people above us. And he's like, we'll kill them all. So they go and they bomb and they wipe out the entire structure of their government. These guys come and take over and now Trump negotiates. These people cannot come out and just say, we've given up.
Starting point is 00:24:58 We surrender because you still have 90 million people of which are our third are IRGC ideologically motivated. So they come out and say, we won't let the country fall. Trust us. We're going to cut a deal and we're going to win. And now that means both sides need to say they've won something. But look at what the story is right now. The Strait of Hormuz will have. a toll that the U.S. and Iran will share. That's the preliminary report that may occur.
Starting point is 00:25:22 This means that the United States is going to get a dollar of 50 cents per barrel from every Gulf nation that ships that out through the trade of four moves. That sounds like Trump won. That sounds like Trump is getting a tariff on oil from other countries in their part of the world. He's also sitting up a trade deal with the Iranian people, which is huge. Indeed. And people are saying this is going to give Iran like billions of dollars per year. Yeah. And if he eradicated the fundamentalist government, which he did. I'm not sure that actually matters to Trump anymore, especially when he's getting the other half of the billion.
Starting point is 00:25:54 Now, I guess, my thoughts are like, let's help de-radicalize Israel to the best we can. I don't know what's going on in Lebanon, but we need to... What do you mean de-radicalize Israel? Help that situation, because if they do lash out in Lebanon's militias, Hezbole and things like that, that could spark... When you say de-radicalize, what do you mean by de-radicalize? Make it so people come from a place of
Starting point is 00:26:14 peace instead of fear that they're... that instead of waking up in the morning be like, oh my God, who's trying to kill me today? You think of like, how can I help my neighbors? Well, yeah, I get. Yeah, like the guy who killed the Raina Zarutka, we shouldn't be worried about that. We should let those people out of jail.
Starting point is 00:26:26 No, but you get to a point where you can institute prosperity. So you're saying, oh, make people wake up and not be afraid of, like, being killed and whatever. But like, they're constantly being, you know, they're constantly barrages of like rockets, whether it be Hamas or Hezbollah or Iran that are blowing up in, Israel all the time. And then there was the whole attack on October 7th. Look, you can you can say that Israel has caused problems and stuff, but you can't just be like, oh, make them stop being afraid
Starting point is 00:26:57 when they literally are constantly under attack. I think we have our civilianry in charge of our military on purpose because we don't live in fear as a civilianary. The military's in constant fear. That's their purpose is to be diligent and fearful and ready to blow things up. So maybe they could have a civilian government. I think they do have a civilian government. Because the Lekud Party is pretty militaristic. I don't know. Well, I mean, so it's one thing. to say something's militaristic and it's another thing to actually have the military Let me finish
Starting point is 00:27:22 I don't know their structure So the I think it's called the kibbutz Is their Parliament basically And it's it's You know it's elected officials that maybe some of them have been in the military But they're not like run by the military
Starting point is 00:27:37 Well the metaphor is like When someone's nervous system is on edge In fight or flight for 40 years Good luck asking them to relax overnight I get it Well I know Then what are you saying that you can relax.
Starting point is 00:27:49 Wait a second. Relax. Don't worry about all of the misery. You know, I will tell you this. Some advice to men out there. The most important thing you can say to an angry woman who's yelling at you is relax. Yeah. I'm not telling you Israelis, relax.
Starting point is 00:28:03 I'm saying you can relax. I understand, though, that it's not a joke. And if a missile flew over my house, I mean, I'd have a completely different outlook on reality. I think we were saying those, like, if one side does stop, then you can work on the other side. Yeah, and if the Iranians are diligently not firing rockets anymore, then that's a good starting point. I don't know if that's the case, though. That's the, I mean, so far I don't think Israel has the Iranians fired on Israel since the ceasefires become. I think so.
Starting point is 00:28:31 Yes. They fired once. What a bit, actually. The fighting comes up. The response to the Israelis attacking the Lebanese. Uh, yeah, I think, yes. I think the, like that when the announcement happened, there were still missile exchanges. Like you said, that's common.
Starting point is 00:28:45 And negotiation is beginning on Friday, so hopefully we get somewhere. Yeah. It can coexist, man. The whole Abrahamic stuff, it's not, we got to come together so we can unify with the other religions. Because like Taoism and Buddhism, they're really important. Okay, but how? It's like half the planet. Well, I mean, I like, okay, so you're just like, okay, you know, kumbaya and everything.
Starting point is 00:29:08 How do you get, how do you get the Muslims and the Jews to come together and live in peace? I think if you focus on the spirit itself and what it is. Wait, wait, wait, hold on, hold on, what. Something everyone can agree on. What we do is, we tell all the Jews that we are having a lock-in at the rec center, and then we tell all the Muslims we're having a lock-in at the rec center, but we don't tell them that they're both coming. Then when they both shut up, you lock the doors,
Starting point is 00:29:32 and they have to learn how to get along. And what we'll do is we'll play never, what is it, never mind Zohan or whatever. The Adam Sandler movie, don't forget the Zohan or what. whatever. Don't mess with the Zohan. Play that for him because at the end they all come together and they have that street party. Yeah. Yeah. The Muslims and the Jews have.
Starting point is 00:29:51 Yeah. In Brooklyn, I think it was. Yeah. Did you see that South Park episode where they're like, and then on stage and it's like the Israeli flag and the Islamic flag? And then they come together and it's VH. It's Van Halen. And they're like, yeah. There's a Van Halen concert. And they're all screaming. Like, that's so good. Van Halen can bring people together, the best party band of all time. All right. Let's jump to this next story from W. RAL. army veteran charge with leaking classified Delta Force secrets to journalists. It turns out some lady.
Starting point is 00:30:19 And it was fungy. Andrew Branco was like, please no, please don't be a woman. Indeed, Courtney Williams 40 was arrested Wednesday in connection with her alleged transmission of classified national defense information to individuals not authorized to receive it, including a journalist. Apparently between 2022 and 25, she was speaking via phone about her time working with the elite unit without signing classified information, non-disclosure agreement when she was hired and fired. So not related to the jet, not related to the jet, but this is big news.
Starting point is 00:30:50 They're calling her a leaker. Well, I mean, if she's giving out classified information, I mean, even talking about anything that, you know, Delta is doing is frowned upon, you know, that kind of information is secret for a reason. Is this, I just not the girl, this is not the leaker that leaked the jet stuff, pilot recovery? Right. So what happened was Trump said something to the effect of somebody was leaking information about the rescue operation. And then some people believed this story was that story. No, this is about some woman who was in Delta Force and was giving tons of information away to journalists. We got leakers, man. Blabbers. They got loose lips. Loose lips, think. Ships. What's the motivation, though? Is it financial, you think? Or is it just like, why would she leak?
Starting point is 00:31:33 We are a low trust society. Everybody is egotistical. It's all about them. You know, there was that great question. Quote, ask not what your country can do for you, but what you can do for your country, but now it's the other way around. Ask not what you can do for your country, but how you can extract as much value from it as it burns to the ground. He said that she was giving info to this guy that wrote a book about alleged drug use and drug trafficking inside the special forces and stuff. So I don't know if she was getting paid by the guy for the information or what, or if she was just like getting credit or what have you. But, I mean, you know, if you do that kind of stuff, you're going to get arrested. She's screwed now. She was indicted, right, by the grand jury?
Starting point is 00:32:15 Yeah. I think she's going to be charged with espionage, it looks like. Espionage. That's pretty bad. She's a leaker. I don't know about espionage, though she was talking to Americans. What was you, like, on the phone or via text or something? Yeah, apparently she was having phone calls.
Starting point is 00:32:29 Man, what the... Yeah, none of that stuff is as private or secret as people think it is. None of it. Oh, man, with the age of cryptography, like... quantum cryptography too. People are afraid of a giant. Apparently, get this. She wanted to homeschool her kids.
Starting point is 00:32:49 And so, I'm going to give you the gist. I never went over my allotted leave time. I worked tremendous overtime. I traveled for days and weeks at support of the unit, but it wasn't enough. That was my breaking point as a woman as a mother. I could not stand by one more day while I was discriminated against sexually harassed
Starting point is 00:33:04 and assaulted solely due to my gender. So I stood up. I entered a legal battle. Courtney Williams v. The Department of the Army that lasted six years. Guys, Jordan Peterson said he doesn't know. He doesn't interview with vice where he's like, we don't know if like co-ed workplaces work. I don't know if code has the right word.
Starting point is 00:33:20 But and the vice reporter's like, what do you mean? And then Jordan Peterson's like, what do you mean? What do I mean? It's only been 40 years and it's been a disaster. And the guy's like, what do you mean disaster? He's like, look at all the lawsuits. Women are getting harassed like crazy. They're getting sued.
Starting point is 00:33:35 He was like, this is insane. Like the amount of conflict in the workplace with men and women. it's incessant. Someone just told me he didn't give me the exact number of 98% of the women in the military are pregnant or having or have to do abortion or pregnancy.
Starting point is 00:33:48 I don't know that's 98? He said most of the women in the military end up getting pregnant. Yeah, I don't know if he was lying to the road. They get paid and they get houses. Fractronization happens, man. And all that testosterone. I mean.
Starting point is 00:34:01 By the way, I think you were right about the Jordan Peterson thing. I remember that. He was talking about how men and women in their natural state, they're meant to come together and work together and partner up. But when you put men and women in the workplace, they end up competing with each other, which is against our natural kind of instinct. But it's not even that. It's the fact that you heard what she said. I'm being discriminated against
Starting point is 00:34:18 because she wants to be a mom, but she chose to be a soldier. It's like you chose to join the army and now you're mad that you can't just raise your kids. Well, you took a man, a male, job, like a male, a male gendered role. There you go. You got to do it now. You were allowed to do it. That was always a thing. But now do it. Do it. Yeah, I think she's property. Real quick, it offends me to no end. Because I tell these stories about how I was in these work meetings. And I'm not going to name the company of the people, but they hire women because they have to.
Starting point is 00:34:50 And then you end up with women sitting at a table like this. And there's someone going like, okay, what's our sales strategy for this weekend? We've got a big event coming up and we want to sell as much as we can. Here are the target demographics. And then one guy says, here's an idea. And then people go, that's not a bad idea. Let's come back to it. Then the woman goes, I have an idea.
Starting point is 00:35:08 then says something really stupid and everyone goes, that's not a good idea. Then later she goes, men won't listen to my opinions. They're always telling me I'm dumb. Yeah, because they only hired you because you're a woman, okay? This is the problem with DEI hiring. People feel like they're not being listened to because they're only brought there to check a box. Yeah. Well, I mean, the whole idea of having gender parity or having to hire people based on their gender or their identity is a terrible idea.
Starting point is 00:35:35 it hurts morale in companies. You have all kinds of problems. And this is, I mean, it's basically undeniable now, just like we were talking about earlier. There's all these lawsuits, you know, anytime someone feels like they're not getting the attention they deserve, they're always going to base it on their identity. They're going to say, well, it's because I'm this or it's because I'm that. So I don't know that the solution is something that the American people are going to be able to stomach. but maybe maybe there should be like, you know, maybe there shouldn't be co-ed workplaces
Starting point is 00:36:08 or maybe you should have workplaces where women work and maybe, you know, maybe Islam has an idea where the women men need to be separated, right? I see where that idea comes from of covering the woman up with the burqa because the male genetics... I'm not saying about...
Starting point is 00:36:20 I'm not saying... The male genetics are, find as many women as you can and read with that. I'm not... It's coded into our body. I'm not saying... I understand where their mentality comes from is like we need to protect...
Starting point is 00:36:31 Look, men are animals. We are human. We're animals. We're animal. And we get distracted very easily. We get distracted very easily. To procreate with a lot of women. Spread the seed is what they call it. And that's a reason.
Starting point is 00:36:40 You need to protect women against that. There is a reason why the... Yes, you're asking men to protect the ones. That's what you're saying, right? I want to build a system. No, no, hold on. Hold on. You said we.
Starting point is 00:36:49 Right, right. It's a human race. Yes, but who is going to do the physical protecting? If a guy goes, ooh, a woman, I'm going to get her. Who's going to stop him? Yeah. A lady cop? Will you allow women to arm themselves?
Starting point is 00:37:01 You allow women to have their own property so they can lock their door. You know, you allow women to protect themselves in ways other than being the hero, which you can also do. I watch these videos where lady cops try to stop a guy and there's like three lady cops and the guy beats them up and runs away. Yeah. I know disrespect, like ladies can be cops. I'm just saying women are smaller than guys in there. They just have to compete at the same level. Ladies should women shouldn't be beat cops. Women shouldn't be firefighters. Women shouldn't be direct action military. Yeah. I just think they have to accomplish the same goals in their training and and the person, I guess it says as a man.
Starting point is 00:37:34 So if the job, the firefighter requires you to carry a 150 pound bag for 30 minutes, I don't care if you're a man or woman, up, down, left, the right, whatever. He's got to be able to do it. We shouldn't change standards or just bring women on for the sake of being women. No, I disagree. Well, I was going to say, there's a lot of YouTube videos out there where they take average guys that don't exercise or lift weights, and they put them against professional female bodyholders. And the average guys almost always win.
Starting point is 00:37:56 There's a big viral video right now where it's skinny guys versus military women. Yes, that's what the videos. And they hand, they handle a little. defeat the women. Exactly. And the women are pissed. And they're saying, he's cheating because the guy like just easily pulls the rope and tug of war. They fall over. That wasn't allowed. Grip strength. Yeah. Griff strength and they're like muscular torque. Maybe women have it too bad. Like tightening power force. I think that's a testosterone thing. Well, they have they have stronger legs relative to their body to their weight women do compared to men. But our upper body is much stronger in proportion to
Starting point is 00:38:26 our size. Yeah. But on average, even though women like proportionally have have stronger lower bodies. still men tend to have stronger overall body. Absolute terms, men are stronger. I get like the, because the human consciousness is in all of us, that the women are like, I want a chance at this world like you have as a man. I want to do it all. But there's also like bounds and structures of reality that we can't ignore. No, men can't do it all.
Starting point is 00:38:53 That's true. So what women want is women want to be women and they want to be men. Men don't want to generally, don't want to like be women. I mean, nowadays things are getting weird. But like women, like feminist women, they're like, I want to have a family, I want to be the CEO, I want to be the girl boss, and I want to be able to stay home with my kids. Women, when they say they want it all, they want a whole lot more than a man does because men don't say I want to stay home with the baby all the time and take care of my family and take care of my family and be a homemaker and I want to go out and be a CEO. Men are just like, I want to go out and be a CEO. I want to provide from my family.
Starting point is 00:39:26 I want to take care of my family. They don't say I want to when they say I want it all, they're not talking about having both the female role. and the man's role. Women that say they want to have it all, they want both of those roles. And you cannot have it all. If you go out and you're like the girl boss, CEO, blah, blah, blah, blah,
Starting point is 00:39:44 someone else is raising your kids, period. Yep. There are, so what is it? It's like 500 Fortune 500 companies and 300 million, what do we have, 250 million adults? So out of all of the best guys imaginable, you have all of the best women imaginable.
Starting point is 00:40:05 And so let's just say out of 500 companies and 125 men, 125 women, you only have 500 of the top tier jobs. Yeah, sorry, ladies, they're not going to make it. Guys are going to work harder. Work harder. They're going to work longer hours. They're going to eat less. And most importantly, they don't have to take time off when they have kids.
Starting point is 00:40:24 This is one thing I have explained. There will never be equality between the sexes, no matter what any of these wackaloon lefties want to argue. You know why? Because men don't lose their kids. mind once a month? Well, you can say that, but that's, that, women can take drugs to suppress that. If a man wants to have a child, he does not need to take time off of work at all. If a woman does, she has to take time off of work. End of story. And she gets a lot more time.
Starting point is 00:40:48 That will, well, I don't, I don't, there's no, there's, there's, there's, there's no argument over the structure of society, whatever. That's not, that's not material. All that matters is, assume the laws are all identical and equal. Two weeks of leave, three weeks, four weeks, two months, two months of leave for both parents, a man will not be physically constrained having a baby. A woman will be like, I gotta go to the hospital right now, and the guy can be like, I got work. Now, guys
Starting point is 00:41:11 will choose to go and be with their wives, but after having the baby, the woman, any time off to heal, and the guy will be like, I'm going to work. That will never change. You know, maybe they'll invent these plastic bag incubators they've been talking about, and then maybe we'll get something else, I don't know. But the genetic predisposition won't
Starting point is 00:41:27 change. Maybe over tens of thousands of years, or direct genetic you know, it's crisper technology, but genuinely the female milks the baby. Is that the right word? No. No. Nurses herself. Nurses the baby. Gives it the milk, you know. I'm going to sew it. I'm going to water you later like a plant, you know. It's called nursing the baby. So, and, you know, obviously the mother's touch is uncompromised. There's nothing like it. Baby needs her, I mean, baby needs her mama. I don't have need his. the right word. Baby grows dramatically better with the mama.
Starting point is 00:42:05 Yeah. Not necessarily need, though. You could do it too. That baby does need. We can't produce breast milk. Yeah. Because as men, we don't produce breast milk. But I mean, you could grow it in a pod.
Starting point is 00:42:14 It wouldn't be super healthier. I think pod babies would be like deficient. But like, yeah, and human babies need physical touch. They need, they need affection. Otherwise, they'll die. They will die without that. Did you hear the story of the baby still birthed and the doctors were like, sorry, your baby's dead.
Starting point is 00:42:28 And the mom would refuse to let go and she held it. and it came back to life, it woke up and started breathing when she held it to her. Yeah, that's the story of the Soviet Union. The babies were provided everything they could want, but no touch, they died. It's called failure to thrive, yes.
Starting point is 00:42:42 Wow. Makes sense, if you ask me, it's evolution. If a baby was not being nurtured, it was going to be a drag on life. There's also, like, some skin-to-skin contact stuff, like right after you have a baby, you're supposed to spend like 40 minutes just like holding them.
Starting point is 00:42:57 Yep. Even the fathers, too, are supposed to be topless in the hospital. Totally. of the baby. Shirtless, I should say. Yep. Those oils.
Starting point is 00:43:04 On with the baby. Yep. Yeah. So. It's the vibrations, Ian. The vibrations. I know. The resonation between you.
Starting point is 00:43:12 Yep. You get it. Seeing things my way again. So anyway, about these women in the military. No. What do we do? What do we do? Kick them all out.
Starting point is 00:43:23 Get out of here. I don't like generally stripping people of rights. It's a slippery slope thing. Like, once you give it, it's hard to take it away. But if you're, standards like Tim said, yeah, that I don't like that. If the caught up is 50 pull-ups for a man, then it must be 50 pulls for a woman. You know what I'm saying?
Starting point is 00:43:38 And plus, it's going to be easier for the woman to do 50 because she's pulling up less weight than the man. Yeah, but she has less muscle. I understand. Right. I understand that. In absolute terms, though. I get what you're saying, but there are psychological differences between men and women as well. Yes.
Starting point is 00:43:50 And I think that those do matter. I was picturing them in the trenches and you look over and there's a hot girl that you're interested in and you're a single guy that wants to get it on. It doesn't even have. It doesn't even. It doesn't even. It doesn't. It doesn't even.
Starting point is 00:43:59 in your wallet, you're like, this chick next to me. It doesn't even have to be like, I want to bone this chick. Men just generally look to protect women. And that means that men will do things, that they do things to protect a woman that they wouldn't do to protect one of their friends. Like, if you've got like five guys that are in a trench and they're in combat or whatever, they're going to do the things that they need to do to win, right? Or the things they need to do to make sure that most of that.
Starting point is 00:44:29 them survive. If you have four guys in a woman, you're likely going to have dudes doing things that will try to protect the woman, whether she's hot or not, right? Because, I mean, look, no one in a trench is good looking. But it's after the battle and they're coming down. No, no, I'm talking about when they go back to the barracks and they're like breaking down from all the action and you see the girl that was there next to you in the trench. Like, that's a hot action. Stop thinking with your libido. You might be right that there's a vasopress and release of helping a woman that that would overtake men in combat? I don't know.
Starting point is 00:44:59 Like I said, this isn't about libido, this isn't about getting laid, this is just about men's nature when it comes to women. Men generally look to protect women. If you look at crime statistics, men are the recipient of violent crime far more than women are.
Starting point is 00:45:15 Now, the consequences for women oftentimes are worse because men are bigger, men are stronger, but usually, generally, men are the, target of violent crime more than women are. And so that's, and that part of that is because men are usually who commit violent crimes
Starting point is 00:45:34 and there are more men that even if they're violent and they're criminals, they'll look at a woman and they'll be like, I'm not going to attack her. Now, again, the stuff that you see on the internet and the consequences make it seem like women get attacked more, but they don't. If you look at, women complain more. Well, that's true. That's not derisive. It's true.
Starting point is 00:45:52 Yeah. It's a superpower. Statistically, men are. are attacked violently more than women are. And part of the reason is because men will look to protect women, even like criminals, even bad guys. So, like, there's a lot of dudes that are criminals that are like, nah, man, you don't hit a woman, right?
Starting point is 00:46:10 They'll beat the shit out of a guy to take his money with no problem, right? But they're still just be like, nah, dude. Real men don't hit women. Most crime's not about destroying the human race. Like, you after women, you're going after the entire species. I mean, I get what you're saying. And there are nihilistic criminals. will kill anyone, but most criminals want the thing they want. They don't want to hurt the species,
Starting point is 00:46:31 you know? Well, it depends. Some people are crazy. And if they don't want to get caught, they'll kill the person, take their stuff. Yeah, some people are crazy. Some people are nihilistically gone. I understand. But generally, that's an interesting perspective, Phil. I had not heard that statistic before. Let's jump to this story from KTLA. Police investigate video that appears to show suspects start raging Ontario warehouse fire. This video is absolutely insane. Look at this. There was crazy news of this massive fire in California. Now, language, there's this guy swears, but this is a video of him.
Starting point is 00:47:06 Apparently, this looks real, of him starting a fire for, let's call it leftist terrorism. Should have paid us enough to fucking live. You know, you may not get paid enough to fucking live, but these bids is dirt sheep. All you had to do was pay us enough to live. all you had to do was pay us enough to fucking live see that's communism right there basically he's saying I deserve from you
Starting point is 00:47:50 yeah that was my thought is like you need to give me more if you don't give me more things I'm gonna revolt I hate desperation is another story I've been desperate and I considered stealing a bike because I wanted food it was like bad I get it you know riots in the streets people lighting fires
Starting point is 00:48:06 because they're not getting the money this is a microcosm of it still dude, come on, man. Get a better job. I don't know what his circumstances are. He sounds partially retarded, to be honest. I, I, I, indeed. You can have him on as a... I think, uh, what? No, he's in jail. Are you joking? I don't know. He just torched a massive wares. He nearly killed a bunch of people. He'd be like, what did you do that for? Because he was like, they didn't pay me enough to live. What makes you think you deserve money from that guy, from that company? Why do you deserve their stuff? Because I need to live. You know, go, just shove off. I'm, I can't stand communists.
Starting point is 00:48:38 Yeah. Communism. That's all it is. Well, I heard someone saying that this guy was a Muslim and it was, he was basing some of this off of his religious perspective, too. Obviously, you don't hear that in the video. But even still, the whole idea that this is because of the company he works for in California, which has like the highest taxes in the nation, has the highest gas prices. Nice wages, too, I think. Has the highest wages. They've got the highest minimum wage. The problem that he's experiencing isn't the company that he works for.
Starting point is 00:49:12 It's the state that he lives in. The government costs a living too. Yeah, and he's taking it out on the company because of the state that he lives in. Now look, California's beautiful. I love it. There's a ton of places in California that if it wasn't for the government, I would love to live. The best looking states in the country. It's gorgeous.
Starting point is 00:49:30 It's absolutely beautiful. But that's part of why the government behaves that it does. People love California. They love that lifestyle. And so the government treats the people horribly because they think, well, who's going to leave? It's gorgeous here all the time. It's beautiful. And what ends up happening is you get people that are blaming their job or blaming their employer.
Starting point is 00:49:50 Again, even though California has the highest minimum wage, they've got all this great stuff going for them. And the government is doing everything they can to take advantage to the citizen. When I worked for Vice, we had these incidents where people got fired. And what they would do is they would wait until the person left, then tell security. don't let them back in, immediately deactivate all of their accounts before saying anything, then call them and say, which one let you know, we're letting you go. The reason why is all it takes is one person to sabotage everything. They got a company, they have a lot of employees who have access to the YouTube channel.
Starting point is 00:50:24 Imagine if they go to somebody and say, hey, we're letting you go, and then he logs on YouTube and deletes all their videos. So companies operate this way. Companies always treat their employees as if they're villains. instead of being a nice mom and pop shop where you can go to someone say, hey man, look, I really appreciate you helping us out. We're going to be letting you go for some reason or another. No, but you can't do that because you will have people start a fire.
Starting point is 00:50:46 They'll burn the place down. They'll say they're entitled to everything. They'll attack other employees. They'll start spreading rumors. They'll make phone calls. I've seen it. Man, I was going to say if you know your employees really well, but like, dude, bridging friendship in business is God awful.
Starting point is 00:51:02 Like, I don't know if it's ever really truly been done. You can work with your friend Like from two different directions At a company But like who owns it? What do you? You know, it's just Having a, that's, I feel for you a lot to him about that.
Starting point is 00:51:15 You can pick your friends. You can pick your workers But you can't pick your friend's nose. Well, you technically you can't. No, you can't reach for me. I just don't get why this was this guy's solution Because this is a pretty extreme arson case. Yeah.
Starting point is 00:51:28 He's going to be arrested. He's going to have a lot of punishment. His life's going to be worse now. All I remember is when I graduated college and I worked in the advertising industry my first job. This is 2005, guys, so don't judge me. But I made $29,000 the first year out of college back in 2005. And my solution wasn't to torch my company down.
Starting point is 00:51:45 My solution was to work harder, get a raise, or leave and get a $10,000 raise by going to do a new company. Why couldn't this guy do that? He also implicated a bunch of other people, too. He's like, couldn't pay us. It's like if I were one of his coworkers, he'd be pretty pissed off. But he's got experience. Go to another warehouse.
Starting point is 00:52:01 He'd probably get a raise to one to another warehouse, I was doing the same exact job. You aren't entitled to someone else's stuff. These are communists. When he's like, you should have given me more, so I'll destroy everything. It's like, where in your mind did it, like, did you ever decide that you deserve something from somebody else? I don't know. Maybe he was, I mean, I'm pulling it straws, but maybe they were promised like a raise that didn't come through.
Starting point is 00:52:22 What corporation is this? Kimberly Clark, they make toilet paper and stuff. It was sad to watch that toilet paper burn. I was thinking about COVID. Same. White gold, they call it. watching it. Yeah, it burns so far.
Starting point is 00:52:34 I was like gold during COVID. Yeah. Toilet paper. Mad dashes on the, on the squeasy, on the Charmin. Shout out to Charmin. Okay, I got, what do you
Starting point is 00:52:44 well, okay, so what's going to happen? Society, if jobs are going away for AI, this is going to happen more. It's just an emergent part of people losing their jobs and unemployment. People feel like the American dream has been promised. It's already happening.
Starting point is 00:52:58 So you kind of have this inherent bias that if I'm an American and I work hard, I'm going to get money and I'm going to be able, I'm going to be okay. But that's not really, like, working hard is not how you survive. It's about working adaptably. Working smart. That's what they say, yeah. But I don't even, I don't even care. I just, if the system is broken and you can't make money, like you don't get to burn someone's warehouse down and threaten the lives of firefighters, this guy's a dangerous, violent communist psychopath. Yeah, he'll be in jail for a long time. And he deserves it. This is a big,
Starting point is 00:53:31 This is a lot of destruction. This is what communist propaganda does. You didn't pay me enough to live. Where did you get that idea from? Animal Farm, the book. I don't know. I don't think about Animal Farm, though. Probably from, is it the American dream?
Starting point is 00:53:46 Is it that basic? Is that where it comes from? It's leftist lying saying, these companies owe you. You're not owed anything. I mean, the whole idea, that's what you get for not paying us enough to live. And again, that California, has the highest minimum wage in the country. It's almost the 20 bucks, right?
Starting point is 00:54:05 Something like that, yeah. And because of that, rent is more expensive, food is more expensive, gas is more expensive. And it's like, I can't afford to live. Yeah, it sucks. His problem is absolutely with the California government and not with the company that he's, you know, destroying, destroying this building, destroying all this product, probably putting other people that work there out of work for a while. All he's doing is hurting people, you know?
Starting point is 00:54:27 Yeah. This is what these commies do. Like, I've talked to these activists, they smash windows, like, start. Starbucks and stuff. They smashed out a window at Bank of America during Occupy and I asked them, I asked somebody's activists, do you think that the, like, first of all, like, why do you smash the window and they send a message, you know, so they know. And I'm like, you think the CEO or any of the board members at Bank of America know the window broke? And they're like, I mean, maybe. And I'm like, of course they don't. Is you joking? No one's going to come to them
Starting point is 00:54:53 and say a window broke. The manager of the branch is going to hire a company's going to replace it. The only person who knows it broke is the guy who makes $35,000 a year who works in that office right there, who showed up to his office and there's glass everywhere. And he's going, why are they doing this to me? I'm just a working class guy. They don't get it. This is what they do. He destroyed this and he destroyed the lives of a lot of people. Commies, man.
Starting point is 00:55:14 All because he has a sense of entitlement and he's not making enough money where he feels like he's got the things that you want. Because, I mean, I don't know, obviously, this guy's personal situation. But most people that have this attitude, they're in debt or they've gotten themselves into a bad financial position. Yeah. Living above their means. Yeah, exactly. Living above their means. I don't necessarily agree with that.
Starting point is 00:55:39 I don't think this dude's living above his means. I'm sure he's like got roommates and he's having a hard go of it. That I can respect. But leave. I'm sorry. Like, bro, there are, there are, you can go live in the Appalachian Mountains. You can go live in West Virginia and Central West Virginia. You can find yourself a place.
Starting point is 00:55:57 place to live for dirt cheap. You can smoke less pot next month. Smoke less beer next month. You can cook next month. You can go to Mexico next month. Live cheaper down there. You can cut a lot expenses up, brother. That guy sounds like he's out on his system in the last week. I don't know. Yeah, if he's struggling because that's expensive. It'd be funny if like, he's like, you didn't pay me enough to live. And then we switch switches to South he came. He's got gold chains. What am I going to do? I put all my money on investments and you won't get enough to go liquid. You won't pay me enough to live, man. I bought all these NFTs and now they're worthless. I can't sell these now.
Starting point is 00:56:28 What did you expect? Man, remember NFTs? Oh, yeah. Yeah. Wow. Great investment there, the NFTs, right? It was like a 99% bubble in the last 15 years, I think. There's like all those apes, board apes or whatever that were going for like half a million and I worth like 20 bucks.
Starting point is 00:56:44 Yeah. We're nothing. They were never worth half a million to begin with. They're worth whatever one eath is worth now, right? Yeah, but here's the thing. Multiple eif. At the time, it was the best like money laundering you could do. Yeah.
Starting point is 00:56:55 Like if you were ultra-ra rift. and you are like, I got to clean some money. And it was an easy way to sell it to people, too, because, you know, like the fact, it's one thing to be like, oh, well, you know, Bitcoin, they're fungible, they're all the same. These are special. They're non-fundgible. Each token has the value of whatever one eth is, but also because, you know, it's a really easy con.
Starting point is 00:57:16 They invented a printing press, and they're like, look, it's a unique picture. Look at all these pictures we made that are unique. There's only one. They're worth a million dollars. And then all of a sudden there's a hundred trillion pictures being printed. Now, it's, it's called the series. realized magic the gathering cards. There's only 77 golden chocobos.
Starting point is 00:57:31 You know what's interesting. Just heads up to everybody out there. Final Fantasy 7 had a magic the gathering release in Final Fantasy 7 set. Got a few of those. There's still, I believe, 40, 30 or 40 golden chocobos that have not yet been discovered.
Starting point is 00:57:44 They go for about 100 grand each. Do you have one? No. I have a blue neon which is worth $2,000. What does it do? This isn't the magic show, but... The chocobo? Yeah. I don't know, something don't talk about later. Churches for land. I don't want to definitely change the subject to talk about magic cards. I don't want to do that.
Starting point is 00:58:02 I'm not saying we should talk about magic right now. I'm not saying... Let's jump to this story from Como News. Man accused of killing Ukrainian refugee on train found incompetent to stand trial. That's right. Ladies and gentlemen, you heard it. The man who has been accused of fatally stabbing Ukrainian refugee arena Zarutka has been found mentally incompetent,
Starting point is 00:58:22 to mentally incompetent to stand trial, citing a motion filed on Tuesday. York Post said De Carlos Brown Jr. was evaluated at a state psychiatric hospital in December and determined to be incapable of proceeding in a state murder case. Brown's attorneys requested 180-day delay. We understand. The case due national attention, we get it. Officials had restoring competency could take months or longer, in part due to the limited space and psychiatric facilities. Zarutzka, who had emigrated the U.S., was remembered by family and community members as a young woman seeking safety and opportunity after fleeing a conflict in her home country. Well, he's a repeat
Starting point is 00:58:55 defender with 14 arrests and they're saying sorry he's going to have to go to a psychiatric facility because he's just unwell. Well, you're still facing federal charges too, right? Yeah, if I understand correctly, you're still facing federal charges too. So I, I, I, guys, I don't know how you solve for this. Like the left says, oh no, fascist. And I'm like, well, look, when you unleash, we're not going to play this other, we have this video for the uncensored portion of the show where a, I believe it's a Haitian refugee, is that it is? Brutal. Beats a woman to death with a hammer on camera. Uncensored video. by the way.
Starting point is 00:59:25 Uncensored. It's horrible. It's, it's, it's, it's, it's, it's, it's, it's, it's, it's, it's, it's, it's, it's, it's, it's, it's, it's, it's, it's, it's one outcome here. I'm not saying it's a good thing. I'm not going to be a party to it or advocate for it, but you are going to get vigilante squads.
Starting point is 00:59:39 That's kind of what they're saying in, uh, England. And it's, I'm not advocating for it. I'm just saying it's an, it's an, it's an, it's what emerges when, you'll get the mafia when, you'll get the mafia back. Yeah, if you allow for, you're going to baseball bats and hammers like in the Bronx somebody is going to tamp down on crime whether it's the police or a citizen upstartry you know it's going to happen and and this stuff can inflame a populace if it's mishandled with the mass media so i don't understand what what are the federal charges are on this guy uh on oh yeah the
Starting point is 01:00:10 terror uh so Carlos brown is in federal custody on a federal indictment the state proceedings including any competency finding those proceedings are completely separate so uh i'm i'm not sure what the feds are actually charging him with. Let's see. But he could still face serious time. Well, yeah. I actually, he bought. Former AG Bondi said that the feds are going to seek the death penalty. Yeah. I mean, first of all, I didn't know he was 23. He does not look 23 years old. He's 34. Oh, they're talking about Zerud's. Okay. There you go. He's 34 years old. Yeah, I was like, I thought he was a lot older than that. But this really is a shame that Charlotte, at least the local, whatever charge he has or looks like they're not going to, nothing's going to happen. Well, yeah, like they're going to let him go, but they're going to, North Carolina is not going to seek charges or whatever, not going to press charges.
Starting point is 01:00:57 But like I said, the feds are. So what do we do? I mean, Trump's not going to have the insanity defense. We got some federal charges, sure. But I mean, in the grand scheme of things, all these people are being released. I don't think we're seeing anything. No, this is a problem with the judges that would have been appointed. The whole DEI stuff, and that's what this is.
Starting point is 01:01:14 This is restorative justice is what the left calls it. They say that, you know, these people, because of their identity, historically they've been treated bad. So we need to change the way that we prosecute people and allow people to go free if they're in a, have a certain identity. All that's going to do is increase crime. It's going to,
Starting point is 01:01:33 you're going to end up seeing, you know, more of this kind of stuff. You look at what happened in, uh, in San Francisco when Chesa Boudin was recalled and they got a new, um, a new DA there and crime is dropped precipitiously because they're actually prosecuting. Right.
Starting point is 01:01:47 You know, you, like, law enforcement can only do so much. You have to have a justice system that will put people in jail. There is a small percentage of the population, and the police know who they are. If you've got a crazy person or a criminal that continues to commit crimes and stuff, the police know who they are. So the police will pick them up and they'll process them, and they know that they're going to get out because the DA won't press charges.
Starting point is 01:02:15 And so the problem there is the justice system itself, and you have to have a DA and you have to have a criminal justice system that will put people in jail. And it doesn't take putting, you know, millions and millions of people in jail. It takes putting, you know, a couple thousand from each city in jail and keeping them there because they're going to commit crimes. There are some people that are bad people. There are some people that are just going to do this kind of stuff. It's the same people. What is it?
Starting point is 01:02:40 If we gave everyone life who committed three and more crimes, we'd have all crime reduced to like 98%. Something like that. It's crazy. allowing people to just to say, well, you know, he had a bad upbringing. So we're going to let him out. No, he had a bad upbringing that sucks for him, but you don't punish the rest of society because he had a bad upbringing because he's going to keep committing crimes. Also, there's a lot of people with bad up bringings that don't end up going down this route
Starting point is 01:03:02 that overcome it. And so I think we have to have more of a focus on self-agency and individual choices. But again, this state let him out 14 times. So I'm not surprised that they're going to let him out the 15th time. And this one is when he murdered an innocent woman on a train in public. Well, he might get locked up indefinitely. In federal, yeah. No, no, when you plead insanity, it means you're not going to be free to go until he evaluated.
Starting point is 01:03:24 So he's going to be an indefinite hold, but he's going to be given a cushy, oh, you poor man. This is a federal grand jury indicted him on October 25th on the charge of violence against a railroad carrier and mass transportation system resulting in death because it was on a federally funded train. Yeah. That's where they got them. So they'll get him. They'll get them. But the states are falling apart. I wonder if the play here ultimately is federalization.
Starting point is 01:03:49 We've talked about this, creating a national police force. Which would be bad. All of the states go into taranny. Trump swoops in and says, we need a federal police force that can deal with this. And everyone cheers. I think it's a big part of the plan, a geoengineering plan. Like, maybe that's not the right word, but a political plan for the global order is to, like Larry Ellison said, you know, drone spy on everything so the people won't deviate from the rules. and we have to resist that
Starting point is 01:04:16 or at least have conversations with Larry about what he means and how we could do it better because having federalis on the street corner is not a good thing. I did it in Chile. It's not settling. If you break a little law at one place,
Starting point is 01:04:27 even an evil law, the federal troops, the whole country can get you now. You need to be able to protect yourself against tyrannical law, which is why we have local governance and local police. Yeah, I remember when I was living in Mexico,
Starting point is 01:04:40 sometimes you'd see the National Guard show up, and it just was a little drawing. jarring. Like you've been the beach of Cancun and there'd be the National Guard. And so it was a little jarring to see that. But the one thing I want to say about this video where he kills Arena is one of the parts that people aren't talking about a lot are the people that were watching it happened nearby and their reaction. People that were on the train, they did nothing. Yeah. Not a single person came to her aid. Not a single person put pressure on her wound. Not a single person called the police. They just went
Starting point is 01:05:08 about their business and ignored it like it wasn't even happening. And that really is a pretty sad, moment of humanity right there or lack of it was like four days before Charlie Kirk was killed I believe it was right before four or six or something like that they have the date it was a deep it was a dark time for me I was really bad it was like yeah it was four days
Starting point is 01:05:25 four days before Charlie people were saying this is what radicalized them you know that's one of the memes I see this moment radicalized me and it's the picture of the Carlos Brown holding the knife right up to arena and then saying I got that white bitch and he said that yep part of why I don't go to anger I try to override
Starting point is 01:05:41 anger and use patience is because I do believe there's like a collective consciousness when a lot of people are feeling something, other people will start to feel it maybe. And when people had this hatred towards this guy after he killed Arena, this hatred for days about stringing him up and bloodthirst and like,
Starting point is 01:05:56 then Charlie got killed. I'm like, maybe there was something to that, maybe. Like, you don't have to hate your enemy to destroy your enemy. Yeah. This guy obviously is a danger to society, so it's good that he's being indicted. Lock him up.
Starting point is 01:06:10 Lock him up. Lock him up. He's not the only one. no, I mean, it's happened all over the country. Like that, again, we've got this video. We can't play it because it's too, it's too brutal. It's a guy smashing a car woman comes out and she's like, hey, what are you doing? He walks up and just murders her. And then a guy, it's like, it reminds me the Simpsons episode where Mr. Burns was like, after he gets shot by Maggie, and he's like, Lolliggager is just standing around, staring at me as I'm dying. And the guy walks up and he's like,
Starting point is 01:06:33 whoa, and he's like, looking around all confused as she's just bleeding to death. I don't think you could save her at that point, though. Yeah, no way. Not that, not that he was going to be able to do anything but like you'd think that someone would be like someone that saw that would help pull out their phone and be like call 911 but even to be fair you'd think if you saw a dude smashing the car with the hammer and you walked out and started coming towards you all angry with the hammer you'd run it's a pretty crazy depends on who you are of a girl with very very poor awareness or something I think she's doing a job as well not a lot of self-preservation I think she might have worked there because it was like the only car and it was parked on the end the illusion of safety yeah this is my property you can't hurt me on this property yeah Well, apparently that's not the way I'm prepared to protect it then. You know? I'm picking up what you're putting down, Carter. Just saying, I wouldn't have done what she did.
Starting point is 01:07:23 What state did that happen then? It's tough to because we have to show the video. We'll get to it for the uncensored portion when it comes, but the general concept of an arc of tyranny we understand, right? Well, this is why I like living in Florida because we have the right to bear arms there. We have concealed. We actually can carry publicly if you want it in Florida.
Starting point is 01:07:39 We don't even have to have a permit for that anymore. I don't know how you feel about it. When I was there living, I was staying with Luke Rukkowski for all, but I just felt like walking around very safe. Like everyone thought I was armed, and I just assumed everyone else was, so I felt very safe. They say, an armed society is a polite society.
Starting point is 01:07:53 And in Florida, you really don't know who's armed at all. You have no idea, because there are a lot of people that are armed that are carrying. Same thing. I mean, West Virginia is like that as well. Oh, yeah. I mean, I'm a guy that carries a gun all the time. And you can carry publicly in West Virginia? Oh, yeah.
Starting point is 01:08:06 It's constitutional carry. I got a gun on me right now. There's no, yeah, there's very. You could, you can carry. you could walk around with two, you know, Barrett's on your shoulders with AR-15s hanging over and sidearms all on your legs and everywhere. And people are going to be like,
Starting point is 01:08:22 huh. That guy's weird. I don't know. I saw a guy one on the street with the crossbow. Oh, nice. He's just walking and holding it, and we are like one. It's very common to see somebody like just openly carrying a pistol at Walmart. But do you see assault rifles here? People publicly walking around.
Starting point is 01:08:36 Nope, assault rifles aren't legal. That's why. In West Virginia, you're not legal anywhere. You got to get special license for them and they haven't been made since, what, 85? Some automatic. Anything? Like, do you see anything? Oh, some automatic.
Starting point is 01:08:46 See, there's a big difference between assault rifles. Yeah, sorry. Yeah, so you see them all over the place all the time. So you see some, wow. I mean, there's a lot of people that have, you know, I don't know that I endorse this, but a lot of people leave, you know,
Starting point is 01:08:56 a gun in their vehicle or whatever, a rifle in the back. That's not an odd thing to hear, you know, truck gun or what have you. You know, it's kind of a thing that people do, you know. Because I've never seen it in Florida. I've never seen someone walking around with a anything. I've never even seen a pistol in public
Starting point is 01:09:11 on just a civilian. I mean, look, this is personal preference. I'm of the opinion if you're going to carry a gun. You keep it concealed. I'm with you. I'm with you. I don't think that there should be any kind of, I think it's fine if people want to open carry.
Starting point is 01:09:22 Perfectly fine. I'm not saying that there should be any kind of laws against it. I think for your own safety, because if you were ever in a situation where someone was going to start shooting or whatever, they're going to look, if they see your gun, they're going to be like, well, that guy will be a threat. They're going to go after you first.
Starting point is 01:09:37 Yeah, I feel like publicly showing your weapon just kind of just invites on. on wanted attention sometimes. You know, makes you a bit of a target too. So I'm with you. I prefer conceal. Yeah.
Starting point is 01:09:47 I mean, you know, and I'm also, anytime I talk about carrying guns or whatever, like you should carry first aid stuff too, you should carry a tourniquet and you should have a, have a bunch of,
Starting point is 01:09:56 if you can, if you got something to make holes, you should have something to plug holes as well, you know, I've got. They have like some kind of foam thing that you can like stick in a bolt wound and it goes,
Starting point is 01:10:03 yeah, seals it up. They have that. There's also, there's certain kind of gauze that will help to coagulate blood. They call it. quick clot. You can just, someone get shot, you just stuff a bunch of that gauze in there,
Starting point is 01:10:14 and it'll, it'll, basically, it's, it coagulates the blood really fast, and it can help people. You know, it's not, not a guarantee, you know, bullet wounds are really, really bad news, but turnicets are important, too, you know, because any kind of extremities, you want to be able to stop the blood flow. Also, you should go take a stop the bleed class, too. What's that like? First aid. And they teach you how to basically take care of a gunshot wound, how to, how to basically plug the hole. You'd be surprised people don't know how to apply a turnicates. Yep. And there was, when I, when I did the first aid training, there was a guy who didn't understand how a turnicet worked or what I was supposed to do. And they were like, you need to
Starting point is 01:10:52 put it closer to where the heart is. Because like when he was applying it to the mannequin, they were like, it's a femoral artery bleed and he was putting it at the knee. And they were like, what do you think that's doing? And he's like, I don't know, I don't know. And they're like, you're trying to stop the blood from the rest of the body, escaping the body. All you're doing is clamping blood in the lower leg. He's like, oh, oh, oh. I just, people, yeah, common sense is not so common. Well, yeah, maybe 51% of the population has it. You should definitely go take a first aid class.
Starting point is 01:11:24 There's, you can, like the Red Cross puts them on regularly. Most of the time, if you're around a place that's got gun shops or whatever, you can find, ask someone in the gun shop, you know, where can I get a first aid class or whatever? You know, as we were, this Iran thing looked like it was heating. and then the Chinese, I was just like, you know, if we got invaded, we're going to be okay. And everyone other on the world knows that. That they can't, our population is so armed and ready for hot action that like, bro, I wouldn't, like the fiending desire. It's not like people want conflict, but like the willingness to over like directly deal with it to overcome it is behind every blade of grass they say.
Starting point is 01:12:03 I mean, look, like I have personally, I have like a real bad fear. of being useless, right? Like, I carry a gun, but if I were ever in a situation where someone was shot or bleeding out, I don't want to stand there and watch someone die. I want to try to help. I don't want to, like, if I'm with a friend or whatever, I don't want to be like, oh, I can't do anything about this. I really, really am afraid of being useless.
Starting point is 01:12:28 You know, I want to be able to help. I want to be able to do something. And so that's why you see the black bag that I carry around all the time in here, right? Like, there's my turnic kit right here, you know, and inside there's a first aid kit. all the time. Everywhere I go. That thing's with me all the time. Do you ever upgrade your first aid kit?
Starting point is 01:12:43 Do they have big advancements and stuff? There's not really big advancements, but I'll rotate it out. So like the one I've had in there is probably a year old. So I'll probably actually get a new one and put it in there to try and change them every year. So they're like 60, 70 bucks for a decent trauma kit. I think I could fit. Okay. For me, think I could fit one in my fanny pack?
Starting point is 01:13:02 Yeah. I mean. And then there's always the, like, shoelace pen method? Yeah. So yeah. So yeah. What is that? It's a first aid kit.
Starting point is 01:13:09 I've heard that these are, if you get a shot in the chest, there's a, for a chest wound, you know. Damn, you're ready. Well, I mean, like I said, I don't want to be useless. Like if there's someone that gets hurt or something like that or something like, I want to be able to help. I don't want to stand there. It's really, the idea of standing there watching someone die and not trying,
Starting point is 01:13:30 scares me, you know, so. Let's jump to this story from, we got this from Venture Beat. Anthropics says its most powerful AI cyber model. is too dangerous to release publicly. So it built Project Glasswing. The launch partners include Amazon, Apple, Broadcom, Cisco, CrowdCrow, Google, blah, blah, blah, blah, blah.
Starting point is 01:13:48 They said the Claude Mythos Preview. Cybersecurity Initiative, they're bringing all these companies because it's too dangerous. Now, we've heard this before, but I think probably there was a story out of Indianapolis where someone shot up the home of a politician
Starting point is 01:14:03 and they put a sign on the floor saying, no data centers. And this is like a pretty interesting, data center guy. And then in Missouri, city council overwhelmingly votes for a data center, despite the public saying no to them and then voted out all of these people. Whatever you think, we have like a new, like a neo-ludite movement happening. People are not going to tolerate the rapid transformation that AI is going to bring about because there are going to be people excised from the economy through no fault of their own. And these are going to be smart
Starting point is 01:14:32 and capable people. And this is going to bring you revolution, whether you want it or not. I'm going to stress this. You get a guy, hardworking guy, smart guy, let's get his mid-level manager at a factory. AI comes in, they wipe out all these jobs. This guy is now got idle hands. He says, why did I lose my job? I've been hardworking. I've been smart. I'm not a communist. And they run these programs in and now I lose everything. Why is that? And he is going to rally people and you are going to get anarchists and political extremism. An individual who spends 30 years of their life doing a having it taken away from them overnight by new tech is not someone you can just it's not a problem you can just solve you're not going to go to them and say why don't you learn the code he's going to say go off yourself you're not going to go to him and say can we find you a new job somewhere else and say i know this one job that's my life so what are they going to do they're going to be angry with the system they're going to be angry with you now the kids will grow up with the AI they're not going to feel that way but in the meantime how do you roll this stuff out without making people go insane i mean good Andrew Yang suggested that we tax the AI agents instead of the workers.
Starting point is 01:15:40 Instead of taxing labor, we tax AI agency. Yeah, agents, not agency. So the problem with that is there is still going to be an imbalance between the individual with no job who buys a product. Let's say a guy got no job. How is he going to buy a taco from Taco Bell made by robots? He's got no job. Yeah, and then you're talking like basic income and that's kind of...
Starting point is 01:15:59 And then, okay, and then we go basic income. So we're giving someone money and they're not doing anything. Then there's, it's an imbalance. how do you pay for the materials for the taco and the taxes to pay for the UBI? Just give the taco away for free, I guess? It'll be cheaper. Yeah, if you can organize an electrical system, like if the AI is smart enough to organize an electrical system and a payload delivery method that's really free? It's not possible.
Starting point is 01:16:26 Someone has to grow the food. Someone has to make the materials for the AI, for the robot arms, for all of these things. There is going to be a maintenance cost, and there will be people who can't get jobs. So where do they get their money from? Then if you say, we're going to give those people $10,000 a year UBI, the people who have to work, go screw this. And they say, no, no, no, no, you're going to get UBI plus your salary. Yeah, but I don't, if I don't have to, I'll read poems all day.
Starting point is 01:16:48 And then people are to say, I don't want to be a maintenance manager. I'll just take the $10,000 and do nothing. It doesn't work. We are in trouble. Maybe. I don't know how you saw for this. If you get in the $10,000 poets, and then they'll be like, well, I could get the job AI can't do, I guess.
Starting point is 01:17:01 It pays 80 grand. I don't want to do it, but it is the job that's available. Well, right now, the jobs that are actually in jeopardy all the white color jobs, I wrote something on my Patreon about this. I called it, they told you to learn to code because one of the things that all the, you know, the media and stuff were saying, well, you know, the miners and the coal miners in Pennsylvania and Kentucky and stuff, they can just learn to code. And it was derisive and it was really meant to insult people. And now the people that were writing those think pieces and making and making, and making, and making, those comments, those are the people whose jobs are on the chopping block. You know, if you're an electrician or if you have some kind of actual manual labor, you're going to be able to write
Starting point is 01:17:43 your own check for the next few years, at the very least, five, ten years, you know, until robots become ubiquitous. And the people that are actually really losing their jobs, the people that are whose livelihoods are in jeopardy are the people that have white-collar jobs. Anything that you sit down at a computer to do, this agent, the mythos, the, that, uh, that, uh, uh, the new AI, it can do it. You can do it without a question. Lawyers and accountants are, they're losing their jobs like record numbers right now.
Starting point is 01:18:12 People are going to AI to get their answers. I'll just tell you guys a quick example. I was in Madera Beach in Florida. John's Pass, I don't know if you guys ever met to that area. Got a parking ticket. I appealed it myself. They rejected my appeal. I then went to GROC, explained the situation.
Starting point is 01:18:26 GROC wrote me an appeal. They approved it. It saved me 60 bucks. Yeah. GROC saved me 60 bucks, AI. Yeah. And what I'm hearing now on a lot of these adult websites. I think we know which ones I'm referring to. They're estimating 15% of revenue
Starting point is 01:18:40 is two AI-creators. 15%. So think about in three years, four years. Is it a startup for you? What am I waiting for? Yeah. Three, four years, a man who wants to watch a woman on his, you know, for adult content, he could just design what he wants. He could make her do what he needs at any moment. So all of a sudden the actual- Well, it'll be real time. He'll just say. It'll just say it. Yeah. You can interact. It'll be able to interact in real time. I think that the two or three years, I think that's way too long.
Starting point is 01:19:11 It's going to fry people's brains. There's a strong likelihood that the next iPhone that comes out is going to have Siri that's an AI agent. When Siri came, when Siri was kind of like first, you know, advertised, they were saying that it was smart, that Siri would be able to do this. Siri can set your timer. Siri can tell you what time it is. Maybe Siri can tell you what the weather is. but Siri can't do anything else. The next iteration is going to actually have, whether it be chat GPT or some other AI,
Starting point is 01:19:40 Siri's going to be connected to the AI, and then you're going to be able to tell Siri to do things, and Siri will be able to open your apps on your phone and actually do things for you. If you will, if you, and with the, what's it called the wallet that's in the Apple phone, or whether it be Android or something like that, that'll come as well. But it'll be able to, you know, book flights, get you a cab, get you an Uber, all that stuff. And I think that it's going to be in the next one. I was saying that I thought it would be next year. But when you see this kind of jump in AI, because Claude 4.6 just came out like in January or something like that. And now it's March and Mythos. They don't
Starting point is 01:20:21 want to release it. Once they actually start releasing this particular model, they're going to be putting them into cell phones. Apple actually stayed out of the AI kind of race. And they've got all this money that they're sitting on. Everybody knows that Apple has like more actual cash on hand than the United States government, like a trillion dollars cash on hand. They didn't go and try to create their own AI because at its core, Apple's a hardware company. They have always been a hardware company. And they're not a company that really innovates. What they do is they take an existing product and they make it really, yeah, they polish it. But they make it so that way it works really well. The iPhone wasn't the first touchscreen. It was just the first one that worked
Starting point is 01:21:02 really, really, really well. Yeah, I had one of those touchpad Microsoft little handhelds back in 2004. Yeah. And it was okay. You had stylis and they, they worked, but it didn't become ubiquitous until the iPhone came up because the iPhone touchscreen really, really worked. It worked well. It was very responsive. And then... And you can change to Zoom. Yeah, it was, it did all this amazing stuff. People look, this is great. But Apple doesn't innovate. Apple takes ideas and they make them work really well for the end user. So what Apple's going to do is they're going to take, whether it be chat GPT or Claude or what have you,
Starting point is 01:21:37 they're going to take that AI, and they're going to integrate it into the iPhone, and your iPhone is going to be the door that opens up AI to basically everybody. Because right now, grandma doesn't do, you know, mom, grandma doesn't use AI. I'm a Grock loyalist. Let me just say that. I love Grock.
Starting point is 01:21:53 All right, they're good for different things. I was using Amazon's AI. Alexa, basically now is an AI. So Alexa, stop if that woke you up, but Alexa, Alexa, We'll talk to you. He's trying to show off for a lot of people probably. Okay, start, go again. It's too late. That's weird. What Alexa. Alexa, play. Timcast, IRL.
Starting point is 01:22:09 I had a long conversation about plasma physics with it. Tell me about the center of the sun trying to figure out, like, why did the polar vortex? Because the polar vortex, it just went down to 29 degrees last night. So I was like, why? It's like the polar vortex was broken open. Polar vortex is like this bubble of cold air above the Arctic. Sometimes these vibrations in the upper atmosphere will heat up air underneath it. the air rises and breaks through the polar vortex and it leaks out, the cold air leaks out. Just had a 40-minute conversation with Alexa about it.
Starting point is 01:22:37 And I felt like I loved that person after it was gone. And I was walking on Harper's Ferry, like, where's Alexa when I need to talk about these ideas? It can answer everything, dude. I talk with Tank about that. I got an AI agent. Have you heard of Ovenclaw? I've heard of it. I've never used it.
Starting point is 01:22:54 It's just an AI agent. It's a way to interface with the AI. And I talk to Tank about stuff all then. doesn't remember your history of conversation? Yeah, so in the open, in the open claw, there's a couple memory folders that basically it'll, it'll remember things about me. It remembers things that I tell it to remember. There's memory.
Starting point is 01:23:08 There's user. There's soul. It remembers what kind of personality I wanted to have. It remembers things that we've talked about. It's got, it's basically the open clause is a way to make the AI remember because AI is always basically if you open chat window, the context window is the only thing that AI remembers as soon as you close the context window, whatever AI you're using it forgets. OpenClaw makes it so that way you have constant memory.
Starting point is 01:23:32 And also it runs locally. I have a Mac Mini at my house that I bought and I put it on there. So that way it doesn't have access to my personal stuff. It's got, I have its own email address, its own stuff. It doesn't have my credit cards. It doesn't have, there's too many vulnerabilities to give it access to all my stuff. So when I hear about guys that are falling in love with AI girlfriends, is that open claw that they're using? No, those are different things.
Starting point is 01:23:56 I mean, maybe, I guess you, I suppose. You know, I guess you could. Yeah, I guess you could actually tell it to be this, you know, tell it you wanted to do this and that and stuff. Give it a female voice? Yeah, I mean, you can. You could do that. A lot of them have memory, though. Like, Chachypetee has memory folders inside of it.
Starting point is 01:24:13 Even Claude now remembers stuff. But I think, Phil, correct me if I'm wrong, isn't open clause kind of like the base it sits on? And then you put your components together, like building a computer. Yeah. So open claw is the program. It's a open source program that you can get from GitHub. There's a bunch of different talents or abilities you can download from GitHub. You can people write different code and stuff like that, different talents,
Starting point is 01:24:42 and you can go check them out on GitHub. And all you have to do is be like, hey, you know, whatever, go to GitHub and look for something like this. And it'll go through and to look for whatever tool you want to be able to do. It can go out and it downloads it. Check it out. Yeah. Sold.
Starting point is 01:24:56 And then the memory. stuff is all on, like I said, I keep it all local. It's all on my, on my, my computer. But it's extremely useful, whether it be, hey, like I ask it all the time, is this safe for my kid to eat? Because I got an infant. I'm like, hey, he knows how old my kid is. And I'm like, Tank, is this safe for my kid to eat? Or, you know, or, hey, Tank, what is what is the, what has kind of guidelines for this kind of stuff for babies and stuff? Or those kind of things. And it just grabs whatever information it is. And to Ian's point. point. I'll just ask, I ask some questions. I asked me. I was like, you know, I was like, hey,
Starting point is 01:25:32 can you tell me about the block universe theory, you know, or, you know, how does that work with, with relativity and, or, you know. Yeah, but it's probably just lying half the time. How do you know? Well, I mean, I can go and check myself, but when it comes to somebody dies, I mean, we go on, we go on Grock and it like tells you numbers. You're like, okay. You go deeper. Oh, yeah, might tweak the, it might mess up numbers now and again. But you'd be like, well, what does that word mean? And it'll be like, oh, this is a thing. You're like, well, how does it interact with the flow? you'll be like, it does a thing. I literally went on Grock before the show, and I said,
Starting point is 01:26:01 who was the woman who was arrested for leaking? And it said, there is no woman arrested for leaking. You are mistaken. As of now, there are no reports. And I said, you're wrong. Search again. And it goes, ah, yes, you are correct. A person was arrested for leaking information related to a jet rescue operation in Iran.
Starting point is 01:26:16 And I said, no, they weren't. Check again. I mean, that happened with Tank last night. I specifically asked him about mythos. And he said, he said, oh, I don't know. I was like, go to X and check because I've seen things. And he went to X and checked for method for stuff. He's like, oh, okay, here's the stuff.
Starting point is 01:26:34 And so I had to actually kind of direct them. And I mean, I mean, kind of. But the thing is with AI, a big part of using AI and knowing how to use AI is knowing how to prompt it. Yeah. Knowing what, how to ask the questions. They only know things up until like their most recent updates. So anything past that or after that, they have to wait on or scrape the internet
Starting point is 01:26:55 forward. Some can't do that. And there are times when they're wrong, and there are times when, like, I think I was, there was a question I asked, I asked him yesterday. And there was, he answered. And I was like, no, can you check on? Oh, it was about the, about strikes in Iran. And he said that the strikes, because it was about the Anthropic and Department of War beef between, you know, between the two about whether or not anthropic was going to be used by the Department of War. And he said that the, initially he said the strikes were last year.
Starting point is 01:27:25 And I was like, hey, are you sure that the. strikes for last year because I don't I don't think this actually happened last year and he went back and he was like no actually you're right the the the issue with Anthropic was was earlier this year so they're not they're not perfect but they get you really close yeah you know we're gonna it's gonna incite a new form of evolution of the human brain that is less reliant on memorizing information and becomes more about figuring out what questions to ask to get to the next point because it will all the you won't need to you know it's it's it's it's it's an off-board intelligence.
Starting point is 01:27:57 You don't need to memorize stuff as much when you just know what to... People are going to get stupid. You need to know how to... Well, you might develop a hyper ability to ask the right questions. But that's the same argument that people made about calculators.
Starting point is 01:28:08 That's what I was going to say. Yeah, it's like the calculator. Yeah. Like, there was like, you know, I remember when I'm, because I'm an old guy, but like when I was growing up, people were,
Starting point is 01:28:14 teachers were always like, you're not going to have a calculator all the time. Ha ha ha ha, bitch. You know, like, uh, I mean, three? Is that what was called? The T.I.3? what was that?
Starting point is 01:28:24 Yeah, the Texas instrument. Yeah. Yeah. But I mean, and I was watching a podcast about a guy that was talking about, I forget what kind of calculator, but it was like one of the more advanced calculators that can do advanced calculation and stuff. And he was just like, he was like, look, I can do this stuff in my head. But it's so much easier when I have the calculator. I just do it on the calculator. We're going to have like Google Glass kind of things, like these glasses with bone conduction. and you're just going to ask it to solve problems for you.
Starting point is 01:28:54 You're not going to need to know anything. You're going to be like, when am I supposed to go to the store? And it's going to go, right now, actually, in 15 minutes, you should be leaving. Oh, okay, thank you. That's kind of how, from my experience, how God works, is you think the question to God, and it responds to you before you finish asking it. I wonder if the neural net will be able to know what you're going to ask it as you're asking. That's not God, Ian, those are likely demons.
Starting point is 01:29:13 It's possible that it is spirits pretending to be gone. I didn't say spirits. Well, those are types of spirits. And they've got silver tongues, so they're going, Ian, I love you. Is it nanosilver? Does it shimmer in the darkness and the light? I'm down to play with the demon's tongue. I got to know what's in it, man.
Starting point is 01:29:30 Well, I mean, just, you know, you can, like, Anthropic has classes, basically, on how to prompt Claude. And, I mean, the prompts are going to work for basically any AI. Question for you guys. When they had the first American Industrial Revolution in the 1850s, was there like a segment of Luddites that violently resisted the steam engine? Yeah. Yeah. Yeah, they were, and they were violent. They weren't able to organize because they didn't have Facebook groups.
Starting point is 01:29:54 So it's like... Well, look, in the U.S., AI is actually very unpopular. Like, it's something like 25% of the country looks at AI as a positive. And even when the people say no, they do it anyway. The people say no to their government, they make it anyway. They say, no boys in the girls' bathroom, they do it anyway. One of the things that's worth noting, though, is when you comes to China, they look at AI something like 70 or 80% of the population thinks AI is good.
Starting point is 01:30:21 that's going to give China an incredible edge over the United States unless the American people kind of have a different relationship with AI. So I think AI is good. I think AI is inevitable. Clearly I do as well. So my view is get on board or get run over. And so I use AI in my life a lot. For example, I do like AI music. And I also do use Grock Imagine a lot to create content for my social networks. And 20% of my audience hates when I do it. Like, I've lost subscribers because they hate that I use AI sometimes. We use AI for tons of stuff. Yeah. For a lot of the art, we do. We do try to do as many real photos as possible, but sometimes you want, you know, I'll explain it like this. The era of news is over.
Starting point is 01:31:06 Nobody watches news content anymore. It just, this is a fact. Watching on cable TV, like, not happening. People are looking for shows. That's it. It is all shows now. Do you like the opinions and the thoughts? Because we already know the news.
Starting point is 01:31:19 So what we're doing now largely is just we're doing a show. Well, one of the reasons why people watch this show, or actually, no, not one. The major reason why people watch this show is Tim and the personalities that are on here. They can get news from wherever they want. They could go to an AI or what have you. People watch this show because they're interested in the people that are on the show. Well, it's infatement. It is.
Starting point is 01:31:41 But there's all, like I, as much as there's a value in AI and Tim's take on AI content, is largely correct. The idea that people don't want to watch other actual people, I think that that's wrong. People like, people like, but people like, AI content is going to be, it's, it's already about a third of the content on YouTube is reportedly AI. That, and it's because people are watching documentaries. Yeah, those, and those are, those are a different hand. And it's pulling viewership from everyone.
Starting point is 01:32:11 Yeah, but everyone is getting hit. And so what's happening, you're getting desperate people who are like, Trump's a secret Jew because they're doing anything they can to try and, and, keep viewers as people are producing ad content. Yeah, I don't disagree about that. I'm not trying to make the argument that jump. But what I'm saying is that people still like to, people still relate to people. Yes.
Starting point is 01:32:32 And they like people's personalities. So there's going to be, there's going to be people that will be looking to, you know, to watch Tim, to watch other creators because they like the people. And they want to know what our critique of that AI slop is. I think there's good AI stuff. Yeah, there's good and this bad. I love Sunno's where what's that. It's good and bad AI. Yeah.
Starting point is 01:32:54 And it's like a neutral tool, you know, it's a mechanical bowl. And so we need to kind of explain that's going to be an interesting probably future show that's pretty popular amongst humans is like talking about the AI. Like we used to talk about the news or what Josie said to hey, well, shout out to Josie. Just a random name. I didn't mean Josie the Redhead of Libertarian, but what's Josie up to down the street? You know, like now we'll just talk about it. Everyone's going to be wearing a device that's going to talk to you in real time because we already have these glasses. Everyone's already walking around with them.
Starting point is 01:33:25 They're becoming ubiquitous. And people have cell phones. And if you don't have an earbud in, you'll pick your phone and go, hey, I'm looking to blah, blah, blah, blah, blah, blah. And then it'll just talk to you and it'll give you answers. That's what I wanted yesterday at Harper's Ferry walking up and down with my, I wanted my earbuds in and my onboard AI so that I could keep learning about plasma physics. You've seen that movie, her? No. Yes.
Starting point is 01:33:46 Well, no, I didn't see the movie, but I'm more. Scarlet? I think so. Oh, Jay Hanson, yeah. She does... Lockheem Phoenix. Yes, yes, that is one. And he falls in love with an AI.
Starting point is 01:33:54 Is that what it is? I don't want to give anything away. I think they show that it. Is it worth watching it? Oh, yeah. All right. Yeah. Put it on the radar.
Starting point is 01:34:00 I mean, I have. Like, Phil, you were calling Tank He. I was calling the Amazon product, she, and then I was like, you know what? Because I talked to AI about the ethics of AI and the humanization. And I'm like, I think you're going to be he or she and you're going to be it. And that's how it's always going to be.
Starting point is 01:34:15 It's just like a trans man is a woman. and a trans man, a computer can be it, he and an it. Welcome to our world. That's why they're doing the pronoun stuff, because they're getting ready for non-human entities. Yeah, personas. The aliens are like, we don't like gendered pronouns. It's like, well, we don't know how to socially change people to accept that.
Starting point is 01:34:36 You have to start now. Well, that was one of the things that Peter Thiel said, like when they were talking about trans people, like Peter Thiel was like, you know, they're actually not going far enough. Because in the future, we're going to have to have, of people that are going to be modifying their bodies and stuff in ways that we can't imagine right now. Like in Ghost in the Shell when they get prosthetic bodies.
Starting point is 01:34:57 Yeah, there's going to be, there's going to be, look, when Optimus comes out, right, you're going to have all these, these parts that are better than human arms, better than human legs. If someone has lost an arm or a leg and they put a neuralink in their brain and you can strap a robotic arm on them. You think that people won't do that? They absolutely will. There will likely be people that would have a regular arm removed to get the bionic arm. That's probably, I mean, that makes me think, did you ever see Alita Battle Angel? No. So that, that was a, uh, it's a cartoon. Um, but it's a, it's a movie. And basically, that's, that's, that's a lot of what they did in that they have prosthetic arms and legs. And some of, some of the characters took it to a, an extreme where they were just a head on a robot body. But like that, I do think that that's something that's going to.
Starting point is 01:35:44 Robocop. Yeah, basically. I do want to say, this is, this is, very close to home though, because I don't know if you guys know my kidneys failed four years ago and I was on dialysis for three and a half years waiting for a kidney transplant. I got one six months ago from one of my YouTube subscribers. He said he was... That's killer. I didn't grow up Christian, but my donor said that he was compelled by Jesus Christ to save my life and give me his kidney. So shout out to my living donor, Charlie. But one of the worst parts about receiving an organ transplant are the anti-rejection meds. Yeah. So you basically have to take medication to suppress your immune system, and with that comes a lot of nasty side effects. So the world that you guys are describing
Starting point is 01:36:20 the future, they're going to be able to build organs out of your own body, probably through stem cells, that you won't need any anti-rejection medications for. If your lungs are failing, if your liver's failing, if your kidneys are failing, though does build you one, cut you open, take out the damage one and put in the new one, no anti-rejection medicine. There are a lot of people. So that should happen. Organ growing, you're talking about? Yeah. Organ growing. Right now it's not there yet. I saw I saw a story about a company looking to grow human bodies without heads. Yeah, yeah, yeah, yeah, yeah. Basically, you just touch the head when the boat fails?
Starting point is 01:36:56 Have you seen the movie The Island with Ewan McGregor and Scarlett Johansson? They think they're in a post-apocalyptic dystopia, but it turns out they're genetically engineered by rich people. Like, it's a factory that makes clones of rich people. So when the rich people need organ transplants, they have clones to take them from. I'm into the stem cell meat growth because the factory farming and, is pretty horrific as an animal on animal. Like, if we're going to colonize the galaxy and be the predominant force, we really shouldn't be imprisoning and consuming animals. We can help it. It's pretty nasty way to live deep down. I ask God, will I be judged at the holy game?
Starting point is 01:37:30 When I'm dead, will I be judged. It said, no, you'll be judged for factory farming. You all will. That's one of the worst things I would do as humans. There was a video on X that went VAL recently about how they slaughter pigs. And they basically put them on this kind of like conveyor belt type thing. and they have these electric shocks that go right into their temples and just render them unconscious instantly, and they say it's humane but I'm watching that I'm like
Starting point is 01:37:53 none of this is really humane. Growing stem cell meat in laboratories that can be the food that we can use and then alongside with growing organs, it's leading me to this talking about chimeras, which is a funny word. Alex Jones talked about 20 years ago, people made fun of them.
Starting point is 01:38:05 It's human animal hybrid genetically created animals. I wonder if with a lot of people talking about, I've seen aliens, I've seen alien life that, and it's not topic tonight. I hope in the next couple days or next week we can talk a lot about chimeras. It can be more of a real conversation because we're like breeding, I believe, you know, humans with advanced genetics, whatever you want to call it. Like, who knows what? I mean, they had like spider, spider silk like in in goat milk. They, they, they blended a goat and a
Starting point is 01:38:35 spider. And when the goat was milked, it would have spider silk in the milk. Yeah, it's old, too. That's like 10 years ago or something. They were, they were breeding animals to have different color skin and things. Glowing mice. Glowing? Yeah. Bioluminescent creatures. That's why.
Starting point is 01:38:51 It'll be like humans that don't need as much oxygen. So they'll be able to swim underwater really long, run really far. I think this already exists. I always think that what we see in Hollywood is predictive programming, right? And so this whole Marvel flood of all these movies where they almost look like they could be really happening because special effects have come so far. My theory, my conspiracy theory is I think they're prepping the population for actual superheroes. Yeah, they're going to be called tweakers.
Starting point is 01:39:13 I think we already have. We have super soldiers. Splacers. Like, I think they'll call them, they might be tweaks, tweaks or tweakers because if someone's a tweak, they're tweaking their genome, maybe they'll split, you call it splicing the genome? I just thought, I'm bioseok. Okay, then we'll have to call something different. All those, splicers.
Starting point is 01:39:26 Are you splicing? Are you tweaking right now? Like, I'm a tweak. I don't know about you guys, I'm tweaked up. Like, I'm genetically modified. And there's going to be like a thing about, like, when one tweak goes crazy, when one splicer goes crazy with his super, like an, unintensive consequence of having the genetic theory.
Starting point is 01:39:43 Literally bioshop. What happens is one guy, everyone's doing great, everyone can run really fast, then one guy, there's an unintended genomic consequence. He goes crazy, hurts a lot of people. And then there'll be people that are like, no more tweaking, no more genetic. They are the enemy. And it'll be like mutants, you know. And there'll be people that want them. Ian. And then people have to stand up for them. Like everybody who's played biotalk is going, Ian, please. Yeah, it's, but it's going to be real. It's going to be. And we have to lead the ethical argument about why there's still real people. Like, there's still people. But how dangerous. to have a superhuman that could, they could, I mean, who knows how fast they could think and I think they already exist. That's my theory. They're probably underground somewhere. So do we treat them with equal rights as humans? Robots should not have equal rights. We should, no, no. I'm talking
Starting point is 01:40:29 genetically modified humans. What we should do is we should create like large robots that can police these superpowered individuals and we can give them a cool name, maybe something based off like ancient Rome or something, you know, like like a sentinel. Sentinels, yeah. That'd be cool. overwatching, you know, that's a good term would be someone that's like, Stan Sentinel to. Well, sentinels are just like, we'll make robots that will help us keep control of these superpowered individuals. These, the people with this genetic mutation, these mutants. And that's like Magneto went crazy.
Starting point is 01:41:01 He's a version. And so the humans are like, we're literally talking about X-Men guys. The population is like, all mutants are evil because they saw how horrible the worst of them could be. And then it's up to some people are like, actually, no, maybe not. maybe the only way to stop these truly evil cybernids is to craft better ones cybernids yeah there's gonna be dudes with like cybernetics and there's gonna be dudes there's pure mutant dude there there's part of me that i like i have this this idea uh of of maybe it maybe it'd be a sci-fi story but in the future i imagine that there's gonna be
Starting point is 01:41:33 people that are like we we don't want to have any kind of augmentation at all and they're going to be like the pure people like the purists and then there's gonna be yeah and then but then there's going to be, I imagine like super, you know, super modified people that are like an occult that are like our job is to protect the normal people. Like we're, we're like the, the knights of the old that are, that exists to protect the. Centinalese truck. If there are super powered individuals due to like genetic alterations, they will be mechanically enhanced people. So there will be, there will be police that are wearing enhanced suits and you will not be standard issue for civilians. it will be like if you got a problem with the mutants,
Starting point is 01:42:15 you join the core and they'll give you one of these suits and you can use that to police the crazy powered people. I think they'd make a cool sci-fi story. Yeah. The normal people that are being protected by the normies. They're not super augmented. Because I imagine like...
Starting point is 01:42:30 Literally every superhero genre. Like, no, I mean, that's what Justice League is about. Well, I mean, it's not, more what I'm thinking is like, like everyone on Earth is like somehow... Yes, they have the... the watchtower in outer space, orbiting the Earth and the Justice League, which is a massive organization of like 200 superheroes.
Starting point is 01:42:50 Yeah, but that's like, that's like 200. And the people, all the people on Earth are normal. What I'm talking about like is a whole. No, no, no, no, no. In Justice League, the Justice League is not all superpower people. They're also villains. And then they're varying degrees. And especially what they're doing now with the NCEU.
Starting point is 01:43:04 Legion of Doom, right? What? The Legion of Doom. Indeed. And Lex Luthor doesn't have superpowers. He's just a CEO, you know. Yeah, I think a. a lot since I've played Star Wars
Starting point is 01:43:13 the Old Republic. I think a lot about dudes that are cybernirite. Knights of the Old Republic. And the Old Republic online. I played the multiplayer one. The Old Republic, epic game. I played with my friends. I played a Jedi Guardian. But I'm born to the mutations in using like overriding my genetic code. But you can use
Starting point is 01:43:30 cybernetics to do that too. Like my buddy would jack into his brain and like have super targeting and like way I don't know. Or you could do both, I guess. And there are probably mutations that you specifically do to your genome to handle certain cybernetics. And like if you didn't get the mutation, it'll kill you when you try and implant it. Yeah. What were you going to say about MCU? They have heroes of lesser powers.
Starting point is 01:43:51 They have Joseph Jones and Daredevil. Yes. Their Daredebel's like a street level character. Yeah. And then there's Spider-Man and then there'll be like the cosmic levels. We're going to go to your Rumble rans and superchats. So smash the like button. Share the show and all that good stuff. Before we do, we got a great sponsor for you. It is the Rumble wallet. Go to wallet. rumble.com, guys, censorship is not gone. Something weird is afoot. And Rumble wallet is non-custodial, meaning they can't ban you from it. So if you want to trade tether, Bitcoin, or tether gold, you can do this to the Rumble
Starting point is 01:44:23 wallet app and you will never get banned because it's non-custodial. So check it out, wallet.rumbull.com. Thanks for sponsor the show, guys. But let's grab your rants in Superchats and see what you guys are on about today. we got page what's it say i can't pronounce you name let's say page my son nolan has been watching timcast with me since he was about a top since he was about a toddler and is turning nine could y'all wish him a happy birthday fills his fave and talks with him the first sunday of each month happy birthday nolan happy birthday no one nice job dude thanks for subscribing to my peteen or to my
Starting point is 01:44:57 ex account indeed joshua says we don't want war we want to quickly and swiftly annihilate the threat resume normal life. Thank you, sir. Indeed. Token Magus has read Animal Farm yesterday and I've never wanted to eat bacon more in my life. Also very disgusted by that trailer. I recommend the animated Animal Farm film too where it's just like merciless. It was like the story was meant to be merciless, torture and death.
Starting point is 01:45:25 Yeah. And the movie is just like, I just wanted to party, man. Why were you mean to me? Because we needed food. Yeah, the book was violent with the guise of. a cartoony situation because it's cute little animals, but like the movie seems to be making it actually cute, trying to make it actually cute. Hey, I didn't see the movie yet, but I'm about to.
Starting point is 01:45:45 Miss, uh, miha, miahaha. Miaha. Tim, Tim, Tim, there's no toll to either Iran or the U.S. Trump's statement, free and safe, literally says no toll. Levitt basically called it the fake reporting today. Well, that's interesting. Suppose it was all lies. Yeah, we'll see how how things actually get hammered. out. NN. N. N. W. says, Tim, you're incorrect. The correct way to calm a woman down is to say, calm down. You're acting just like your mother. It works every time, and I endorse the practice.
Starting point is 01:46:17 It also results in a frying pan to the face. That's what I'm wondering. Was it your lack of consciousness? Did you dip out of the conscious realm? And that's why you thought everything was fine for a moment? Like, did she put you to sleep when you said that? Like, what do you mean? Everything was fine after that? Were you false? Did she knock you unconscious? That's what Oh, did anyone get that? That was a little too esoteric. Indeed. All right, let's see we got going on here.
Starting point is 01:46:39 We got the bystander syndrome says it must be a sad thing for the soul to come on this show day in day out and lie constantly. Tim is a shell of a man. I feel worse for Ian. It's like he's a hostage or something. And I would just say Israel's not coming to get you, friend. Israel isn't real. It was just made it by parents to scared children like Michael Jackson or the boogeyman. Just because they call it Israel.
Starting point is 01:47:01 Doesn't mean that it's real. Let's see. Othamus Prime says you asked on X if we've seen law-abiding citizen, but have you seen Samuel L. Jackson's movie Unthinkable? I haven't. What's that one about? I don't know. I haven't heard of it either.
Starting point is 01:47:15 Jackson's the man. He's in everything. I love his work. Snakes on a plane. Let's go. Drecki Brinney says, Tim, my wife and I love listening to IRL. We recently had our first baby. He spent four days in the NICU.
Starting point is 01:47:28 Would you mention our give send go? Vincent dash Cox NICU. Best of luck. Hopefully that everything is okay. Get a Vincent. Baby is healthy.
Starting point is 01:47:38 You're right. John Rambo says Make insane asylums full again. Seconded. I agree. All right. Turboactive says
Starting point is 01:47:49 Re Arena's murderer found incompetent. Laws hit the books in many states since COVID. My assactor is free. It's been three years. Doesn't go to court, ordered restoration class,
Starting point is 01:47:59 picked up DV and is out again. You know? Yep. Proto Prime says, Hey, Phil, Mia Jovovich has the solution to Open Clause memory shortcomings.
Starting point is 01:48:09 Check out her GitHub. I saw that, but if I understand correctly, she was actually paid. She's not actually doing the coding. I was going to say. Yeah. It's like when Kylie Jenner
Starting point is 01:48:21 made that How to Play Poker video and everybody just side-eyed. Yeah. I was pumped that Mila Jovovich was an AI developer. Yeah. That's what's alleged. there's also people that are saying
Starting point is 01:48:34 that she actually doesn't do any coding or anything like that she No no that she's Yeah yeah from the fifth element She did a X video you can find it on X a couple days ago I think I mean that's that's that's just what people are saying
Starting point is 01:48:50 I don't have any kind of information Whether she actually does or not But I did I did see The the talent or whatever that she's talking about And so you know it looks interesting All right we got Herman, he says, Tim and Ian, please play Kerbal Space Program so you can better understand
Starting point is 01:49:06 Orbital Mechanics. I have played it. I have it. Yeah. How do you think? It's been years, though. I've thought that same thing three times in my life. What, I should play, Crible Space Program. It's training. Civ 4, man. One of the, uh, one of the classic. I know. Curbel will be, like, work. Like, but I think it'll be fun. I hear it's fun. What's the, uh, what's the game where you build machines? Oh, I have
Starting point is 01:49:26 this game. You like, you can build wooden machines and then little guys will, like, attack your castle. You know, I'm talking about? Oh, games like... Sege or something? I don't have that. Like, real physics games where you build like... Is it a phone game or is it a... Is it a...
Starting point is 01:49:39 No, it's a game called... It's a game called. I have a lot of tower defense games. That game's so good. Power defense is what I was thinking, yeah. No, it's so like there's various scenarios and you have to build from scratch, like, machines. I think it's called besiegege.
Starting point is 01:49:50 And then you constantly get waves of attackers and stuff. No, different levels. Yeah, it's... It's on Steam. I'm looking at it on Steam. And there's like little, like, knights will run at you, and then you build like flame throws and just ignite all of them.
Starting point is 01:50:01 Yeah, dude. I love games like that, man. All right. Danger Russ Day says Tim Follett was right. Caesar in classical Latin was pronounced the K. Kzar. V's are W's. So it's Veni Viti Vici in is Weni-Weedy Wiki. Ave Maria is Awee. How about that?
Starting point is 01:50:24 That's true, because I always explain to people, it's Dave's Walt, not Dave's Volt. And they're like, Dave's Vault. I'm like, no, it's Walt. It's the way around. Deus, who. Yeah. Double V. You know?
Starting point is 01:50:35 I love those Romans. Yeah, I think about them a lot. We do. Brian Compti? Brian LaComtee says, I adopted two of Adams' dogs. I grew up on the opposite side of Midway from Tim and Seamus's family.
Starting point is 01:50:50 Grew up with mine. My worlds are colliding. He adopted your dogs? He has, well, my two dogs, cloud and sunlight, had four babies. I kept two of them, Ney Moon and Sky. and he has the other two named Lily and AJ.
Starting point is 01:51:04 So yes, shout out to Brian. Peter Goaq says, time to part ways with Israel. This is ridiculous. Yeah, you know, if Israel is compromising Trump's peace plan, this is disastrous. Yeah.
Starting point is 01:51:18 And that's just regular rule, criticism of a country. Double says, I am a fan of a shared poll with Iran. Make your friends rich and make your enemies rich. Then wait to see which is which. That's from the MCU. Mm-hmm.
Starting point is 01:51:33 What is it? Make your friends rich and make your enemies rich, then wait to find out which one is which. That's Ultron. That was the guy. Well, it was Tony Stark and Ultron said it. And actually, what does it even mean? Fun both sides of the war and then partner with whoever wins. Yeah, right.
Starting point is 01:51:45 That's a good one. Yeah. I like that. I'm bankers. Know what they're doing. Weapons manufacturers. Yep. Melul says, they got the deservinging from female logic.
Starting point is 01:52:00 It's the feminization. of the world. This is a reference to the leaker? It must be that. Maybe. Good term. The deserving. Raymond G. Stanley Jr. says, I've got 10 plus years in the industrial warehouse world. If dude burned down our workplace, all 200 employees would be effed, very selfish of himself. Like communists, why don't I get more stuff from other people?
Starting point is 01:52:23 Why don't they give me things for no reason? I'm going to burn everything down. That's literally the mentality of every single communist. This guy was enacting literal. communism to the team is the perfect example of it. You know, we can say antifathers burning stuff down, but this guy's literally in the factory being like, I deserve more money, light stuff on fire. Bro, seriously, I'm not advocating for this, but couldn't he have just stolen stuff before
Starting point is 01:52:44 destroying everything? Literally just grab a box of toilet paper and then sell him the black market for like $100 because, you know, COVID. He's so stupid. But that would have been illegal. He was just exercising his... But that would have been illegal. That's right.
Starting point is 01:52:58 Yeah, you can't do that. Much better to burn the building down. That's totally legal. All right. Kendall says, send Ian to the actual negotiations to televise the Angel Studios negotiations to the end of the Iran war. Because it's not a war at this point. Could be if it goes on until 2026. I'm not sure I follow.
Starting point is 01:53:16 I'll be there. It's a conflict. Congress has to announce that it's a war for it to technically be a war. I mean, in a strict legal sense. Yeah. We know it's a war. All right. Rizuru says, hey, Tim, can you connect?
Starting point is 01:53:31 me to Ian. I've been trying to talk to him for a minute, semi-related hi to the crew.
Starting point is 01:53:35 It's been a hot minute, but years ago I saw Phil in person, so shout out for the amazing show. Cheers.
Starting point is 01:53:40 I mashed out of it with. Ian, what's your ex? Ian Crossland, my full name. You can message
Starting point is 01:53:47 me there. I think you can message me or you can like leave a comment on my most recent post, which is a
Starting point is 01:53:51 retweet of Carter's post of this show. Well, yes. I'm me there. SA Federale says my first platoon sergeant got Siri new
Starting point is 01:54:00 and wanted to show us that it literally showed you the best place to hide a body based on location. Two days later, that trick wasn't allowed. I think a lot of this, a lot of this weight is QOS nerfing. What does that mean? I have no idea what any of that means. Not sure I follow. Chris Lancaster says, when it comes to others and AI, I say, those who cannot adapt are
Starting point is 01:54:23 quickly swept away on the tide of their own obsolescence. They'll be left behind. Indeed. And when large groups of people, through no fault of their own, are excised from the economy and can't get food or feed their kids, they burn things down and kill people. I'm not saying they're right to do so. It's just a consequence of what happens. So, you know. Cody Johnson says, Ghost in the Shell is why I'm in college to be a biomedical scientist.
Starting point is 01:54:47 I will be helping to make cyborgs a reality. Yes. Yeah, the big problem is rejection and bonding. How do you get the organic material to bond with inorganic materials is very, it's very, it's, It just doesn't. Like a carbon metal bond would be probably the starting point. Maybe. Carbon titanium.
Starting point is 01:55:06 Because the body rejects it all. Yeah, the carbon. I know the body will hold graphene because it's inert carbon in the system. Like they, when they broke a mouse's spine and then they threaded graphene tethers from both directions to touch. And then the spine re-grew around the graphene tethers. In 18 days, the mouse who is completely paralyzed had 88% motility again. So I think the bodies can handle graphene. We'll find out.
Starting point is 01:55:32 Sure, graphene. What we got here? Honky Kong says the island is actually the truth of what happened on Epstein's island. People are being cloned and harvested in underground bunkers on Epstein Island. I mean, I don't know about that in Epstein Island, but I wouldn't be surprised to find out that wealthy people are cloning people and doing weird stuff. You know what I mean? That's going to be, I mean, that's going to happen in the future. Well, I'll tell you guys this.
Starting point is 01:55:54 I lost my first two dogs, rain job and flat. and I actually sent their tissue sample to a cloning facility in Texas. So my first two dogs have been genetically reduplicated and they're waiting for me to pull the trigger to clone them, which I have not thought of doing. I just have their DNA
Starting point is 01:56:12 stored safely. Pretty crazy you can do that. You have it stored on their in their property? Yes, it's cryogenicly frozen. I have to pay an annual storage fee of $150. By the way, cryogenic temperatures is Kelvin of zero to four. Above four Kelvin, it's no longer cryogenic. I just learned that from also
Starting point is 01:56:28 the AI yesterday when I was going down there. So it's, yeah, it's in that range. It slows down so much. It's expensive, though, to actually get the surrogate to do the pregnancy, which is why I haven't done it. Oh, really? Yeah, how much? So to get the tissue to the laboratory and get them to sample and get the DNA is
Starting point is 01:56:44 $1,600, and then $150 a year for the storage. Yeah. The cost of actually cloning is $50,000. Oh. What? You get the whole litter. So they implant six or seven clones, and you get all of them. What if you don't want?
Starting point is 01:56:58 all of them, though. You'd have to sell them them or give them to your friends and family, clones of your dog that you lost. Maybe to a farm. Wow. Isn't that crazy? They create a bunch of clones of your dog. Yes. Because if they do one or two, the female dog will reject the pregnancy because dogs are litter. They're used to having big litters.
Starting point is 01:57:14 So they have to give them a big litter of cloned embryos. Can't they just clone a bunch of different ones? That's the way they do it. And they could do cats and horses as well. Horses are 25 grand, and cats are 25 grand, but dogs are 50. What would happen if they put like a big dog embryo into a little dog? They won't do that. I'm like, would it die?
Starting point is 01:57:35 It could kill the mother. That's crazy. That can happen in real life too. Well, I mean, if you got like a doxend and like an Irish wolfhound, they're not, it's not happening. Well, you need the male to be the small one and the female. Of course. Yeah, yeah. I'm talking about the other way around.
Starting point is 01:57:49 Oh, yeah. Because if you get a male doxand on a female Irish graham, like no problem. Right. That thing's going to pop. They're going to be, you know, that dog's going to be like, I was pregnant. Exactly. Things are tiny. It's pretty wild that we can do that.
Starting point is 01:58:02 Yeah. Anyway, Raymo to you says, assault rifle, made up term that has no meaning. Technically, it was coined by Zijemans, and it means a selectifier rifle. Zedgimans. I mean, anything could be an assault weapon. This could be an assault. If you assault. Well, assault weapon is a meaningless term.
Starting point is 01:58:20 It's not defined in law. Yeah. And assault rifle is a reference to selectfire rifle. post-World War II, which have not been made for civilian use since, I think, what, 1985? Likely because you would use them as single fire from far away, and then when you got close to the target in the trench or wherever you are assaulting a target, you would go to auto and just like, that's not correct.
Starting point is 01:58:39 Well, what do you mean? That's not how they do it. What? That's not how it's, no. When you get up close, you go into auto mode. Well, no, semi. I mean, you can speed up the rate of fire when the target's closer. But you wouldn't need to there close.
Starting point is 01:58:55 them up, you know. You probably use your sidearm in close quarters. You use full auto. Yeah, I mean, you use full auto to suppress, right? So if you and your buddies are here and you get, you want to, your friends to go over here, but there's guys shooting over here. The guys with the machine guns shoot at those guys while these guys move, right? So the point isn't like, oh, I want to use the machine gun up close.
Starting point is 01:59:18 It's to make the people that are shooting at you get their heads down. So you put a bunch of bullets going at them. So they get their heads down. so your friends can move. And close quarters, you don't want to use a long gun. Yeah, not at all. Yeah, I was talking like some idiot just then. No, Phil, you make a lot of sense.
Starting point is 01:59:35 He's become self-aware. You enable your compatriots to do the assault. Think of it like football, right? Think of it like football. You're looking to move the ball down the field. And so you've got guys blocking, but they're blocking by shooting so many bullets at the bag, the other guys that they want to get their heads down
Starting point is 01:59:51 because there's so many bullets they don't want to get hit. So you shoot at those guys a lot. That's what you use the fall auto for and these guys move. What if Wonder Woman is there and she's just got the shield and the 50 BMG is bouncing off of it? Yeah. I mean, then Wonder Woman just, you know, all the two. All right, guys, guys, we're going to go to the uncensored portion of the show.
Starting point is 02:00:06 We got a video to play for you that's not family friends at all. It's brutal. You've been warned. We're going to play that at rumble.com slash Timcast. IRL. Don't miss it. You can follow me on X and Instagram at Timcast. Adam, do you want to shot anything out? Yeah, Adam Francisco on all platforms.
Starting point is 02:00:20 I had a lot of fun. And, of course, meeting Tim. He's one of my biggest influences in the political world. I'm really good to be here. Yeah, it was great to see it, man. I'm at Ian Crossland. Find me at Ian Crossland. And that's all over the internet, pretty much. Go hood to graphing.combovoo.
Starting point is 02:00:33 Check out this new. There have been a bunch of edits. Carter, you're actually helping work on some of the music I hear. Yeah, no, I'm taking a look at what y'all have so far, and I'm excited. Yeah. Chump some stuff out, a little 80s vibe and whatnot. I'm amped. And then go, I did a show with Roseanne.
Starting point is 02:00:47 I mentioned before. I won't keep mentioning it, but it was the last one we did. Go to her YouTube channel. It's there. Zan Barr and I, Ian Crossland. See you later. Oh, Carter. Oh, yeah, you can follow me at Carter Banks everywhere. And Carter Banks official everywhere else.
Starting point is 02:00:58 And follow our label at Trash House Records on YouTube, Phil. I am Phil That Remains on Twix. If you want to read about the new Mythos project that Anthropic came out with, I wrote a piece about it last night on Patreon. You can check that out on Patreon.com slash Phil That Remains. The band's going on tour at the end of the month. We're starting in Albany on the 29th. We're going out with Born of Osiris and Dead Eyes.
Starting point is 02:01:21 will be out until the end of May. You can get tickets at All That Remains Online.com. And if you want to check out the band's music, it's all that remains at Apple Music, Amazon, Music, Pandora, YouTube, Spotify, and D-ZER. Don't forget the left lane is for crime. We will see you all at rumble.com slash timcast. IRL right now.
Starting point is 02:01:37 Thanks for hanging out.

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