Timcast IRL - RIOTS Over Anti-White Murder In UK, GOP TAKING Over California w/ Patrick Casey

Episode Date: June 3, 2026

Tim, Phil, and Tate are joined by Patrick Casey to discuss riots erupting in the UK after the Henry Nowak bodycam footage drops, ballots burnt and voting center vandalized in California, normal people... are embracing MAGA, and Trump taps Bill Pulte for DNI after Tulsi resigns.  SUPPORT THE SHOW BUY CAST BREW COFFEE NOW - https://castbrew.com/ Join - https://www.youtube.com/channel/UCLwN... Hosts:  Tim @Timcast (everywhere) | https://www.shoutout.fans/timpool Phil @PhilThatRemains (X) | https://allthatremains.komi.io/ Tate @realTateBrown (everywhere) |  @TimcastTateBrown  (YT) Producer: Carter @carterbanks (X) |  @trashhouserecords  (YT) Guest:  Patrick Casey @restoreorderusa (X) Podcast available on all podcast platforms! RIOTS Over Anti-White Murder In UK, GOP TAKING Over California | Timcast IRL For advertising inquiries please email sponsorships@rumble.com

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Starting point is 00:00:00 Riots are breaking out in the UK after body cam footage was released of the anti-white racist murder of Henry Novak. The story's massively brutal. We got details of it back in December, but now with the body camera footage getting released, people are losing it. Here's the simple story for you. I mean, it's a brutal story, but I'll give you the quick version. A young man was walking down the street when he was brutally murdered because he was white. The individuals who murdered him conspired to cover up the murder, hide the murder up, and lie about what happened. When the police arrived, the murderers, the racist murderers, told the police that the man
Starting point is 00:00:36 that they had murdered, the victim, was in fact a racist perpetrator. So what did the police do? They cuffed him. When he said, help, I need an ambulance. I've been stabbed. He said, I don't think you've been stabbed, mate, as he lie there dying. Now, this has triggered a lot of people. Nigel Farage issued a statement saying, white lives matter. Indeed. That's a pretty bold statement, and people are rightly pissed off. The warning is a warning. I suppose for people in the United States is this is what happens when you have a constant narrative that white people are oppressors and are evil. The police will try to arrest the man dying who is the victim of the racist attack. So we'll talk about that. We do have big news here in the United States,
Starting point is 00:01:17 of course, it is the California election, but we're not going to get the results until around 11 p.m. Eastern time. So that's past our bedtime here. We will track what results are coming in. We do have some data. And Republicans are performing very, very well in California. So we'll talk about that. And then, of course, the war with Iran is heating up again. And there's reported rockets firing, landing in Kuwait, Iraq. And yeah, okay, here we go. Beirut. It's just, it's getting crazy again. Donald Trump's pissed. He called Netanyahu crazy. Who said he'd be in jail if it wasn't for him. So he's at his wits end. We got a lot to talk about my friends. Before we get started, though, we got a great sponsor, it's casprue.com.
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Starting point is 00:03:30 Thanks for having me on again, Tim. Yeah, I'm the writer. I've written for Chronicles Magazine, American Greatness, publications like that. Also the host of the Restoring Order podcast. People can find me on Twitter at Restore Order USA. Right on. We've got the boys hanging out, Tates here. What's going on?
Starting point is 00:03:45 I'm happy to be back, and more importantly, happy to be back with the great Phil that remains. Hello, everybody. It's good to be here today. What's up, Carter? What's up, Phil? What's up, Tate? What's up, Tim? Let's get into it. Here's the story. We'll start with this from the telegraph. This is massive news.
Starting point is 00:04:00 I know it's over in the UK, but it is terrifying. Police treated stab a victim as a racist while he lay dying. Officers handcuffed teenager as he bled to death after they fell for the attacker's wicked lies. Now, why did they fall for his wicked lies? Because that's the system that has been built in the West. that when the minority says they're the victim, the police default to white person bad. This innocent young man, 18 years old, Henry Novak, described as a soft, gentle soul, was walking home if you're hanging out with some friends, and this guy, a Sikh, stabbed him
Starting point is 00:04:36 with a ceremonial blade. The family helped cover the whole thing up, hid the weapons, lied to the police claiming he wasn't stabbed, claimed he was a racist to attack them. And so as he lay dying, they cuff him, the murder victim, as he lay dying. Now you get this, this is amazing, from iNews.co.uk. British far right agitators spark violence over Novak death. The Home Secretary has described disorder in Southampton as completely unacceptable after protesters through bins and flares at police officers. We've got this video of the riots breaking out.
Starting point is 00:05:13 And I wonder, do we have audio on this one? I think there's just no audio on it. Oh, it's just muted. My bad. He's saying. You can see the police have lined up. I won't call it the biggest ride we've ever seen or anything like that. What I will say, however, is that guys, when you just do the simple math here,
Starting point is 00:05:44 George Floyd was a known abuser. He was chewing on a speedball. He tried to use counterfeit money. He resisted arrest. And he died in the process. They found a lethal dose of fentanyl in this system, I'm sure. You know, many people are angry that he had the knee on his neck or, you know, in the neck area for as long as he did. But this is not a good person.
Starting point is 00:06:05 And they built statues in his honor. They painted murals in his honor. They rioted in foreign countries over the death of a U.S. man. Now we have a young white kid who was murdered and the police treated him as as the murderer, even though he was the victim. And we've got what, what does it look like 50 people? If this is the calculus, I'll tell you what's going to happen. I mean, there's going to be a default machine in place where police will just say, even if the white person is the victim, there is no reason to treat him as anything other than the perpetrator because of the political calculus. If a minority is injured or hurt or killed, you will get death threats, riots, and go to prison for the rest of your life.
Starting point is 00:06:49 If a white person is murdered, 50 people might show up if you're lucky. This is just another manifestation of the temperament there in the UK. You've got the Rotterdam or the rape gangs. I think it was in Rotterdam over there. And this is a similar thing. The reason they didn't prosecute the rape gangs is they didn't want to be accused of racism. You know, they didn't help this kid because they said that, you know, he's a racist and it was a racist attack. Basically, the default position is if a minority says something, you have to just say, just accept what they say is true and all of the consequences be damned.
Starting point is 00:07:22 It is good that one of the police officers has resigned. I don't think that's enough and it's not going to save public trust in the police force over there, though. Yeah, the officers need to be brought to justice because they're, I mean, it's a big counterfactual to say that had the officers at least attempted to save this kid's life. that he'd be alive. We don't really know. But the fact of the matter is that they didn't. So we should just kind of assume that it should be treated that they're responsible to some degree for for Henry Novak's death. But I think, yeah, it's you're right to bring up Roth for him. It's this insane mind virus that's kind of, you know, crept into the West where people would rather have all sorts of horrible things before them and their children rather than being accused of being racist, essentially. and, you know, the police in the UK are totally, you know, indoctrinated into or, you know, trained in a lot of stuff that we would, we would call DEI here.
Starting point is 00:08:18 They might have a different term for it over there. But yeah, it's basically an anti-white way of viewing the world. And they're literally trained to be police officers in that way. So when they showed up, it wasn't just, you know, the particular ideological inclinations of these specific officers that led them to do this. they were literally trained to be just on the lookout for racism. Like racism, that's the main thing that you need to worry about as a police officer. And Henry Novak, you know, maybe he'd be alive today if the British police weren't trained in this insane buffalo ideology. If they were just trained to, I mean, you think the guy's stabbed, it would be fairly easy to ascertain whether or not he was actually stabbed. Right. And you can tell it's a top, I mean, Tim brought up George Floyd the discrepancy between the reaction.
Starting point is 00:09:03 And that's so obvious insofar as there's pictures. and, you know, countless tweets from Kier Starmor taking the knees, deeply disturbed by the George Floyd death. I won't call it a murder. Obviously, it was just their death. And then the reaction to the Henry Novak thing, I mean, he made it sound like it was a car accident. He was like, oh, well, this knife wandered around and stabbed this kid. I don't know what happened, but this is just a tragic, unavoidable event,
Starting point is 00:09:25 as if this isn't the culmination of, yes, these DEI style policies that the police have implemented. By the way, this is a Western issue. This isn't unique to the United Kingdom. I know people in the United States get a little boastful. They're like, wow, you know, see, it's crazy over there. It's like we have a lot of the same problems here. Keep in mind, Derek Chauvin's still in prison right now because of the same motivating factor
Starting point is 00:09:43 that led to Henry Novak's death. Beyond that, the immigration, I mean, Kier-Starmor and all of his cohorts in the Uniparty have just flooded Britain with waves and waves of migrants from the third world. This guy, his religion says you've got to carry a dagger around with you. That should be a non-starter. If you're designing an immigration policy, maybe exclude the people that have to carry around a weapon with them to vanquish their enemies. Let's play this clip from Nigel Farage.
Starting point is 00:10:08 We need a change in culture. Enough of anti-white prejudice. A promotion of the idea that white lives matter just as much as black lives. An end to DEI and positive discrimination, but a country that treats everybody equally and fairly before the law. This is serious. This is urgent.
Starting point is 00:10:34 I fear for where our society would be in a few short years if we don't grip this and do it very, very quickly. I want to say in my sincerest condolences, the country's sincerest condolences to Henry's family. I hope this is the last time a British police force operates in this way. I don't think these people realize that these seeds that have been sown to create problems like this, started 20 years ago. And Nigel Farage saying, we got to put a stop to this right now. It's like, yeah, maybe if you sow some seeds,
Starting point is 00:11:11 maybe in 20 years you can reverse this. But you have a massive ingestion of people from foreign countries that don't like you. That will do what they can to harm you. And the problem is the political machine is deferential to these people. Politicians in the United States.
Starting point is 00:11:29 Like, look at Ilhan Omar, for instance. She has no incentive to stop fraud in her state or in her state. or in her city, because the fraud is the benefit of her countrymen. She talks about benefiting Somalia over the United States. They come here to extract from us. So what happens then when the police are challenged over something like this, the politicians are going to say, listen, my voter base, my constituency, they hate white people.
Starting point is 00:11:54 So act accordingly. And that's what you're going to get. You're not going to fix this because you created a voter block that is racist. Yeah. Yeah, I know. It's like you have the systemic problem. John Doyle makes this point all the time where he says you can't just ratchet back liberalism to an earlier stage and not expect the same outcome. People have this idea in their head. If we could just go back to the 1990s, you know, it was so nice back then.
Starting point is 00:12:14 To your point to him, the seeds were already sown, like nine times out of 10, well, 99 times out of 100. We're going to be back in this exact same situation if you just turn back the dial. It's a systemic, everything this is predicated on is just rotted to its core. In addition to that, to your point of the migrants, I mean, you see the cultural mismatch right here. I mean, this stabber, his family was helping him cover it up. I mean, the mom moved the knife into the house. Henry Novak, it appears that he's in their front porch area. That's what it appears to be.
Starting point is 00:12:43 But we know for certain the mom hid the knife. They're disgusting in Punjabi, him and the brother going back and forth, like, how are we going to cover this up or how are we going to convince the police that this was, you know, he was being racist or whatever. That's a complete cultural mismatch. I mean, think about in the United States and the United Kingdom with that shared culture that we have to a large degree. What is the reaction when one of us commits, you know, some sort of crime?
Starting point is 00:13:04 Look at the Tyler Robinson case. The dad turns him in. You know, we have this culture of accountability. It's like, yes, we're kin. Yes, we look out for each other. But if you've done something wrong, you've got to be held accountable for it. But in these cultures, it's not that way at all. They look out for each other.
Starting point is 00:13:16 They cover up for each other with Elon Omar. You know, we're scamming because we're all one team here. We're not actually part of this greater American project. We're one team inside of this. We've got to get what we can get ours, so to speak. Yeah, I mean, I made a, I related a story that I'd heard about I think he was a Somali in Maine was talking to the person that the congressperson
Starting point is 00:13:36 and said they were accused of some kind of some kind of fraud or whatever and he said to the Congress person he's like look we elected you so you need to make sure that nothing bad happens to us essentially saying we voted for you so you have to make sure that we can break the law and that's something that's normal in a lot of places in the world I know a lot of people in the United States don't like to hear these kind of things
Starting point is 00:13:58 but like if you go to like India or you go to some places in South America if you get a job the guy that gives you a job expects indefinitely you give him like 10% of your pay if you go to India and you want to get your your lights turned on you go to the owner of the property
Starting point is 00:14:14 and pay him and he goes over to the electric company and he bribes the guy to turn it on for turn the electricity on it's not the same kind of culture here and culture matters absolutely there's so much that people in the first world take for granted and not having to bribe someone to get your package from the post office is one of those things. And you talk to people, there's an interesting guy, Giant Bandari. He's kind of like a Misi's guy.
Starting point is 00:14:37 And he grew up in India, but he moved over to, I think, Britain when he was like 10 or 15. And, you know, one of the few immigrant, you know, examples where they're like, thank you for saving me from my homeland, basically. So he goes on podcast and he talks about that all the time about how, you know, Westerners just don't know what it's like. The corruption in the third world is massive. And one thing I wanted to point out, too, is a lot of these third world countries, it's kind of the funny thing about Ilhan Armour talking about how she's representing Somalia. Somalia, she totally is. And that's, you know, she's a horrible, you know, person shouldn't be in Congress. But in Somalia, Somalia is not like a very united country.
Starting point is 00:15:14 In a lot of these third world countries, they're divided by, you know, ethnic groups, even within the same ethnic groups, tribes, clans, families. Yeah. And people forget that we, getting rid of that stuff in the West, getting rid of clannish, is one of the reasons that we're able to have, like, what we consider first world civilization here. So when you bring in these people that they're not just coming from a different religious or ethnic background, but, you know, the clannish, like, mindset, people just can't relate to that in America. That's kind of why you see this stuff here. They just immediately start conspiring to cover up this murder. And, yeah, it's no good. We don't have the clans.
Starting point is 00:15:48 We don't have any kind of white clans, you know what I mean, with any kind of garb they might wear, they identify each other, just the clans aren't a thing, you know? And we're not calling for them to come back. To your point, I mean, it took a lot of time to put the lid on that kind of stuff. I mean, you know, infamously, you know, a lot of the Scots Irish that came here, even the Highland Scots, you know, they were part of these clans and that feuds, you know, boiled over and that can be only one. But even that was like the tail end of it.
Starting point is 00:16:12 I mean, we're talking about a system that was broken up 500 to 1,000 years ago in Europe. And so it's not, it is not dramatic or an over-exaggeration to say, no, these people are quite literally 500 to 1,000 years behind the West. in so far as they're still dealing with the clannishness. I mean, you were talking, you know, in Minneapolis, in the primary, they were discussing how even within the same ethnic group of Somalis that came here, I'm not, this isn't my domain, Somali demography, there was two clans that diverged in voting patterns.
Starting point is 00:16:42 One clan voted for Jacob Frey and the other clan voted for the Fatay guy, whatever his name was Omar Fetay. So the clannishness, they're going at it even when they come to the West, like still to some degree. And congrats, we've just imported that to the United States. a thousand-year-old civilization, you know, a sizzling story from a thousand years ago. What I think we're dealing with right now is I feel like a lot of people have checked out. And who said this?
Starting point is 00:17:08 There was like a viral video where the guy said, The American Dream Today is to get as much money as possible to isolate yourself, to insulate yourself from the chaos. Yeah. And that's what I think we're seeing happen right now. I think many Americans have resigned themselves to we're cooked. right? Gas prices are really high right now. The economy is very, very bad. And I, you know, there's a lot of diehard Trump supporters that are saying, no, no, everything's fine, but it is not fine. And I think, you know, when I talk to regular people, their attitudes are just like,
Starting point is 00:17:40 I checked out and I'm trying to just get mine before it's too late. I think the AI problem is causing a lot of this as well. Like, the view that people have is the end is nigh, and they're shoving their way, knocking people overboard and trying to jump onto the life raft. before the Titanic sinks. Yeah, I mean, this is the thing. I think why you are seeing a bit of existentialness around President Trump, I think this is part of the reason why people do get so frustrated is because people do accurately understand that he in many ways is our last chance.
Starting point is 00:18:10 I mean, I understand, you know, it's never over until it's over, but insofar as returning America to the state that people remember it in, I think people truly do believe that Trump is the last chance, and I think that's accurate. And I do think he's doing a lot of good work. in many ways. But it is true that if Trump is unsuccessful ultimately the end, I mean, what victory looks like changes. I mean, it's a different calculation. The narrow for victory becomes much narrower, possibly what we can extract from that will look a lot different. And so that's where
Starting point is 00:18:39 I do understand a bit of the existentialness around Trump to the point where people get extra critical. Sometimes those criticisms aren't fair, but sometimes it's like fair enough. I get it. I mean, I do understand why people are like, this is our last chance. Tate, you're kind of sounding like a panicking right now. I'm really disappointed. No. I agree with a lot of what you're saying. And I think what you're mostly saying is like people feel this way. Maybe that's not necessarily it could be justified. It could not be justified.
Starting point is 00:19:04 That's what they panic so much. Yeah, yeah, no, exactly. It's, I think a lot of people have been red-pilled over the course of the last decade. And at a certain point, you realize that you're not going to get the America of the 50s back, or I guess the 90s is what the average conservative looks back to is the golden age before we, you know, kind of entered the Caliuga. But it, yeah, people do have that. of mind. But I think it should be remembered that, you know, when Romney lost in 2012, people
Starting point is 00:19:29 were thinking there were a lot of conservatives were like, it's over. We're never going to win another election again. So like, you know, the show is going to go on. But yeah, there is a lot of a lot of, a lot of dooming out there. Yeah. And it's not to doom to say like, oh, it's all over. It's just Trump really is kind of that core American slash stand. And I think this is why he's absorbed every patriot in the country into his coalition. And then everyone that hates him, hates patriots by extension is because I think they've accurately understood that like this is the time. This is like the- Well, Trump is such a such a like a world historical figure that it's perfectly valid to wonder in the absence of Trump like what are we even going to have, right?
Starting point is 00:20:07 Exactly. And but the important thing to keep in mind is like, you know, God willing, Trump's going to live another decade or two and he's going to be a kingmaker in American politics. And he's going to continue. Just imagine that like multiple decades of American politics dominated by. Well, his parents live quite long, so he's going to be around. He's got great genes, and, you know, he's really red pill, too, because he doesn't work out, remember, because he has this theory that the human body is like a battery. It has a finite amount of energy. So he just takes it easy. He doesn't work out.
Starting point is 00:20:35 So he's got a ways to go, I think. I'll tell you what we get. We got the story from ABC News. Right now, guys, as we're recording this show, the California elections are underway. It's a big deal because the Republicans seem to be doing particularly well with Steve Felton and Spencer Pratt. The story just the other day, burned ballots and vandalized voting center prompting. investigations ahead of Tuesday's California primary. Now, this is a jungle primary, which means the Republicans are likely to advance because
Starting point is 00:21:00 they are doing as well as they are. But who knows if they'll win the general, what we see from this election will give us some insights into the midterms. But the question just before we launched this segment was, what is it, you know, what's it going to look like without Donald Trump? And I'm going to tell you my thoughts on this with Trump going after Massey, with Donald Trump being this kingmaker, his endorsements carry weight. I genuinely believe that we are headed towards without Trump, it is going to be tribal chaos. You know, if you think a multicultural
Starting point is 00:21:34 democracy versus a constitutional republic is bad, wait until you have seven left factions and seven right wing factions and everybody just disagrees. I think we are currently in a place where regular Americans have checked out and said, I need to just get mine before it's too late. Donald Trump represents the last American president. He represents the last of the American culture and tradition for better or for worse. What I am saying is I believe that the people who are behind Trump are the let's go America, USA, USA, they believe in this country. And there are many other people that support Donald Trump that don't care of that much. And then there's everybody else that thinks this country is evil, bad, or who cares anyway? And without Trump, I don't know what you end up with,
Starting point is 00:22:23 but the faction of diehard Americans who believe in the Pledge of Allegiance and the Star-Spangled Banner is diminishing. And I think Trump is the last, he's the last vestige of this. Well, and it's actually kind of crazy how, yes, I mean, without Trump, you're looking at what, you know, Jeff Bush, the Republican nominee. So we'd be, you know, probably entering the second Democrat president in a row. Trump steps in. puts a check on that very obvious direction that we were going. And you're actually seeing this reverse to a degree. I mean, there's been a lot of data coming out in birth rates and these sorts of things.
Starting point is 00:22:55 And there's a lot of white pills there. There's a lot of reasons for optimism that Trump isn't just making changes at the policy level. And there's a lot of positive changes, clearly. But beyond that, there's a kind of cultural shift where I think the primary reason why, for example, you're seeing white birth rates go up is because for the first time in 60 years, white people see a future in this country. I don't, I'm not so convinced that it's all downstream from Trump. I think that, I think that, I think a lot of it is, is internet culture and people, young people that have kind of made these decisions.
Starting point is 00:23:26 Not that Trump doesn't have his finger on the pulse of kind of the issues that, that have really plagued the U.S. the past 15 years or something, but I don't know that he's the guy. Well, I think it's because Trump took the boot off of the neck, which allowed that environment to facilitate. insofar as if you're entering President Hillary Clinton, insofar as that would exist, it would be a much more adversarial, much more nihilistic culture, where I think Trump has taken the boot off the net, given everyone breathing room,
Starting point is 00:23:51 and it's allowed a healthier sort of culture to develop. I think you're right about that, but I think that the attitudes towards, just towards like racial identity and stuff like that, that stuff was coming before Trump. I think that a lot of that is... Would you agree he galvanized it at the very least? Yeah, I think that he,
Starting point is 00:24:11 I think they did. I mean, look, I didn't have a particularly strong opinion about immigration. I didn't have the media had really kind of made the topic something that no one touched. And so I didn't, I wasn't really aware that we had the problems that we had until Donald Trump came in. Obviously, Joe Biden made it glaring and made it something that, you know, everybody in the U.S. That was an American citizen was like, hold on. You know, it didn't matter if you really doesn't matter if you're white or Hispanic. We're black. It's like, everybody's kind of like, yo, we need to stop this. You know what's funny is because I didn't really believe any of this stuff in 2008 with the
Starting point is 00:24:50 rhetoric that Obama was an existential threat to this country when the Republicans were like, he's a socialist and he's going to bring about the end. And I'm like, oh, this is the stupidest thing I ever heard. And I'm looking back being like, oh, yeah, look at that. That was the beginning of the end. Oh, it's so true. I mean, like, I know it's almost a bit like catchy to say, but it is true, like the big-haired church ladies were correct. If anything, they were a bit too conservative on their predictions of how these policy changes would have manifested. I mean, you know, I remember when gay marriage was legalized, the fear was, well, they might start adopting children. And it's like, look where we are now. And I mean, it's like the most obvious
Starting point is 00:25:22 example in the world. But again, this is why Trump was so massive because what you're saying, I think a lot of people, maybe it was simmering below the surface. People would have these conversations between themselves, certainly like within their families. But Trump gave people the permission to discuss these things openly. Where even Trump's most vocal critics out there, like your Tucker Carlson's, like your Candace Owens, et cetera, et cetera. They only exist because of Trump. This entire, everything that we are interacting with at every level, right or left, exists because of Donald Trump.
Starting point is 00:25:49 I think you guys are both right. I agree that a lot of, all of these people are downstream from Trump, but I think what, uh, what Phil's saying, not to speak for you, but I'm going to do that, um, is basically there was this like wave of opposition to like immigration and anti-white discrimination. And that's kind of how Trump won because he, he was like an avatar. or this opposition of decades of, I mean, you could say specifically to, you know, to terms of Barack Hussein Obama, but also just decades of this stuff. Well, I mean, what do you think, what do you think had more influence on the culture, like more substantial influence on the culture, Donald Trump or poll?
Starting point is 00:26:26 It's hard to say because, I mean, so much of poll was, I was on poll before 2016, so like I definitely have to agree with a large part of. Yeah, yeah, yeah. So I found it in 2012 during the time of the Trayvon Martin George Zimmerman. Back when B was good. Yeah, yeah. I found B in like 2008 and even back then it wasn't good. He was never good. I was still a new fag.
Starting point is 00:26:48 Yeah. No, but I think that's true insofar as, yes, this was emerging. It was certainly simmering below the surface. I think that was a movement looking for an avatar. And I think Trump... I think that's right. Without Trump, it wouldn't have been as big of a kind of title wave. Yeah, where they probably would have...
Starting point is 00:27:04 found an avatar at some point, but Trump just so happened to be a generational figure that it just kicked in overdrive and now we're in this completely alternative timeline. Even in Britain, even in Britain, they have hope. Like all across the West, even if they're, again, the biggest Trump critics, they have to attribute it to the fact that the United States is the forerunner of Western culture and that Trump has changed it and that gives them sort of permission. But Jeff Epstein basically created Trump and MAGA, right? That's what leftists believe, yeah. You take a look at what Trump's base is, what he represents politically. He's a moderate.
Starting point is 00:27:39 He's politically moderate. He has, we call him like Bill Clinton from the 90s. The fact that we're at a point in this country where Bill Clinton from the 90s is considered an extremist threat and fascist threat does not show that Donald Trump is a fascist. It does not even show that America has moved left. it shows that America opened the door to non-Americans with dramatically different moral worldviews. And if you put it very simply, and imagine you got a red balloon and a blue balloon, the blue balloon is the immigrants, and it's very small. The red balloon votes. We believe in America.
Starting point is 00:28:16 We're split between, you know, Bill Clinton and, you know, Bob Dole or whatever it might be. George W. Bush and Al Gore. But over time, as the immigrant balloon gets bigger and bigger and bigger, it's effectively I am legend. Yep. What they ruined about that movie. And you know what I learned recently is that they actually shot the ending properly. And then the test audience was like, we don't like it. So they're like, okay, we'll just ruin the ending.
Starting point is 00:28:42 If those are not familiar, I am legend. Give you the simple version. Vampires are biting people and turning people into vampires. So this dude goes, I'm going to go kill all these vampires. So he goes around killing vampires. Sooner or later, he gets captured and locked up, looks out the window and notices something. Every single person is a vampire. And then he realizes when everyone is a vampire, you are the monster.
Starting point is 00:29:06 The human being who lurks while children sleep and murders them while they're at their weakest moment. He's the boogeyman. He is the legend. The point is when you open up your borders to unlimited immigration, it doesn't matter if the country's political views go left or otherwise. What matters is you're bringing in people who are left. When you're bringing in people who don't care and their only interests is get mine and burn it
Starting point is 00:29:30 down. Who cares? So what happens? I go home to Chicago for the 4th of July and they don't do fireworks anymore. I go home to my hometown neighborhood. Ain't no kids playing and no fireworks going off. The baseball field is overgrown and has soccer goals now. Baseball's gone. When I was a kid, they have four baseball diamonds and they were surrounded every weekend morning with kids playing baseball. And that's gone now. And it's really simple. The kids are still there. People had less kids, that's true, but they're still kids. But the problem is, when you go to the city hall meeting and say, we vote to have Little League on Saturday, you get a bunch of Haitian migrants, a bunch of Guatemalans and Honduras and say, none of us knows or cares about baseball. So we vote no. And then
Starting point is 00:30:13 baseball is gone. That is what has been happening for some time. Donald Trump is the small pocket that represents what this country was 20 years ago, what the American tradition is. It's the last vestige. I think that when Trump is gone, you're going to have what you're going to get some kind of globalist balkanization of the United States that we're already seeing. Minneapolis becoming little Somalia where their politicians explicitly state they will extract from public coffers and send that money to Somalia. We see that the Haitian migrants in Springfield, Ohio. We are getting pockets of little miniature cities from different countries and they extract the value from this country and send it out. That's a lot.
Starting point is 00:30:54 what we will get more of. That's what's currently happening unless Trump wins. Well, I mean, to your point, I mean, look, this is why if you took that demographic core that voted in the 1980s, you know, we saw these massive Reagan landslides. If you isolate the last election results for just white and black Americans, Trump is winning at dictatorial numbers. And that's including black Americans who like vote Democrat by like 90, 95 percent, depending on which year it is. So again, the actual core American population, the American population that existed in 1980 is overwhelmingly pro-Trump. Who is the count? counterbalance here? How are Democrats even
Starting point is 00:31:26 sleep on play? It's immigration, it's people that they've imported. I think we're winning. Total calculation. If you just isolate that actual American population that existed not even that long ago, it's MAGA all the way. I mean, it's a Republican-heavy... I think we're winning. I don't add to what you're saying. I think
Starting point is 00:31:43 the reason why we saw so many moderate former liberals become conservatives. Like how is urban liberal punk rock Tim Poole as a kid, skateboarding, now a, you know, voting with Republicans and considered to be conservative, It's not that I'm conservative. It's that I am the traditional American liberal, and Trump is the traditional American moderate. And conservatives and liberals are looking at him saying he represents America rather imperfectly, but he still kind of does. And the Democrats represent the destruction of America. They represent Ilhan Omar and Rashid Thelay. They represent that Yasimin lady saying, my hoo-hoo hurts, so I can't work and need time off. And we're like, this is just getting absolutely crazy. California, Aaron Bass was a communist who went to support the communists in Cuba in the 70s.
Starting point is 00:32:29 Lord help us, this is insanity. And that's who's trying to take power politically. But I will say this, I think we're winning. I think the crushing of USAID, I think the redistricting, I think the moves being made by Trump. And we're going to get into this. But Bill Pulte being named D-N-I, let's go. I got a lot to say about that. Donald Trump is basically saying, I got a sledgehammer, and I'm going to use it.
Starting point is 00:32:54 Does it mean it's a guaranteed victory? No, but the fact that DNC is broken in debt and Democrat donors are funding insurgency shows they know their power will not come through American institutions. Republicans are winning on that front. So I would not be surprised if come this November, Republicans crush the Democrats. I wouldn't be surprised. I'm not saying they will because historically, you know, there's very little reason to believe the Democrats won't at least have some victories. But considering the fact that donors aren't showing up, money talks and BS walks. So right now, with redistricting and the current change in the polls, I believe the swing is
Starting point is 00:33:30 210 Republican seats versus 207 or is it 206? Democrats have to win substantially more toss-ups to take the House. They're not going to flip a Republican state. That's insane. The idea that Democrats win every state and flip Texas or Alaska is crazy. Maybe, but I doubt it. And now Maine's in jeopardy because Graham Platner is a sex pest Nazi and even the Democrats don't like the guy. So Democrats are in chaos. Trump is getting these procedural victories across the board. The challenge right now is the economy sucks. Gas prices are too high and everybody knows it. But there are a lot of people that say, listen, there are a lot of people that are die hard for Trump that are just going to say, shut up, everything's great.
Starting point is 00:34:13 Trump must win. And I get that. And that's why they rejected Massey. Because Massey was more of a principled guy and a realist who would say, no, we can't spend money that way because of the deficit spending will be nuclear for the United States. We'll be spending more on interest. Trump's plan, you can't do it. And my attitude was with all due respect to Massey because I do like him. He's a friend of the show. We will not exist as a country. And I, and I, and I, you're basically saying, we have, we have, we have, we have, we have the death of the nation by choices A or B. And I'm like, well, if we choose choice A with Trump, it's a little slower than choice B. And maybe if we choose A to try and stall the decline, we can pull out of the tailspin and maybe recover something.
Starting point is 00:34:51 But if we go for the sit back, do nothing and let Democrats run roughshout of the country, there won't be a country in four years. Yeah. So everything I'm seeing Trump doing, I see, I say is imperfect, but I understand. And I'm going to throw it out there on the Iran stuff. We got to get to the Iran stuff, but I want to talk about Bill Pulte in a second. Trump moves in Venezuela, takes control of the largest oil producing country in the Western hemisphere, probably the world outpacing Saudi Arabia, surrounds Cuba, goes to war with Iran, cutting off China and many other countries from their oil imports because the straight of foremost is closed. We see this yo-yo effect where Donald Trump says, we're going to have a deal, no,
Starting point is 00:35:27 we're not going to have a deal, no, we're not going to have a deal. And I'm just sitting there being like, Homeboy doesn't want a deal. He never wanted to do. He knew the straight was going to close. That's why they took Venezuela and now he don't want to deal. So a lot of people are doubting that call with him and Nanyahu, and I wouldn't be surprised. But we are now poised to be the largest oil exporter in the world. Why did Donald Trump pegseth? Why did they blow up those narco-traffickers in the Caribbean shuffling to Europe? Because we need clear lanes for the Gulf, because we are now the principal oil exporter of the world. Trump is reorienting global energy around the United States.
Starting point is 00:36:01 All of this I see as a massive benefit to the existence of this country. And without that, we give away all our money. We pay for gender studies in Pakistan. We get overrun by third world migrants. Honduran farmers coming to the southern border are not going to replace middle managers. Gen Z can't afford to buy houses.
Starting point is 00:36:17 They can't afford to, they can't find working jobs. They are listless, marrying their anime wifu's and becoming Heikikikikamori and living in their basements. That is the end of America if that happens. The only thing we can do is reverse it. And I will say the surprising thing is, of all of the people that espouse a message that is actually pushing in a positive direction for young people, the unfortunate reality for the deep state machine is Nick Fuentes has a massive beneficial effect on young people, despite, I would also agree,
Starting point is 00:36:44 a somewhat detrimental. However, young people who are looking for purpose see an angry young guy like them who wants America to succeed. And I believe there's many things wrong with Nick Fuentes' his worldview. But if you take a look at what the corporate press is telling young people, you're racist, sit down, shut up, or be killed, like we say in the UK. And then you take a look at the likes of Andrew Tate and Nick Fuentes. Young people look at those guys and they feel like they have hope and an opportunity. And if you got a problem with those two guys because they also espouse other bad messages, I would say, yeah, you're right. Who else did they have? Honest question. Who is the strong principled American who is saying we will fight for American values?
Starting point is 00:37:23 I suppose Trump, but he's 80. So if you're a 20-year-old guy, if you're Gen Z, who are you looking up to as a strong guy, literal, physically strong, mentally strong, and not going to take any garbage, and who's going to tell these people, we will fight on your behalf? The challenge is there's very few people in media. The corporate press is happy to ride the whole thing down into oblivion as the country burns to a crisp. But again, I don't want to be too blackbilly.
Starting point is 00:37:49 I do think Donald Trump's efforts are going to pan out well. what I would add is, while the Democrats don't have much charisma on their side, Hassan Piker is the best they can do. The Wright's got Rubio, who's a little vanilla pudding, but maybe America needs a little vanilla pudding. That's okay. And J.D. Vance, who is a little, I would argue above average in the charisma factor, but ain't nobody anywhere got what Trump got. And we need somebody who got that X factor and got what Trump got. That should be one of our most, the most important things we do right now. Because I'm going to tell you, J.D. Vance don't got it. Ruby, I don't got it.
Starting point is 00:38:25 Well, I mean, to your point, this is why everyone is, like, evaluating alternatives, especially young people, et cetera, et cetera. But what Trump's demonstrated time and time again is that he is not just the most viable political vehicle that we have for our ideas, but he's the only viable political vehicle that we have for our ideas. And so far as he's the only one winning elections. Like, you know, everyone's like, oh, Thomas Massey, this or such and such, you know, you name it. Well, none of them can win elections. None of them can fundraise. None of them can actually excel in politics in the way that President Trump has. And that's crucial. I think that's why, going back, it's the most viable political vehicle we've
Starting point is 00:38:59 have. To your point, I mean, we're having these conversations insofar as like, oh, victory is actually within reach, reach, reach, out, and touch it. Like, we're really close. To your point, I mean, I wish that, you know, without mass migration, then you and me could be going to the mat right now on abortion or something. You know, we have to deal with these, you know, existential threats. Trump is the guy. You know, it really irks me on the abortion thing is just that the last like, I would consider myself to be the traditional 90s Democrat pro-choice. I think abortion is wrong. I think it's bad. It should not be as contraception. There should be limits on it. But I think there's going to have to be some type of legislation for when it actually is a medical event. And so I don't like the phrase pro-choice
Starting point is 00:39:42 in that regard because it's used by the left for the stupidest of abortion arguments, abortion to the point of birth, for any reason, for contraception. All of that is nonsensical. But the most annoying thing, is just how, I know it's not the right word, but it's frustrating how unlearned and ignorant progressives are on the issue of abortion. They have no idea what they're talking about at all. I watch these videos all the time. I watch these debates. I watch these progressives try to argue it.
Starting point is 00:40:08 And I'm just sitting here being like, I really do think when I hear their arguments, they are nihilists who want to burn everything down for no other reason then. Burning things is sometimes fun. Well, they believe. And being anything but a conservative, whatever the opposite of a Christian conservative is to them, they view that as good. So it's, yeah, abortion isn't the main political issue for me, but hearing about progressives or even a lot of liberals now talk about it versus how, yeah, just kind of like the Clinton line, what, safe, legal and rare?
Starting point is 00:40:38 Like, that's obviously not, you know, fully in line with Catholic or Christian theology. But these days, the way they talk about it, it's like they're almost like gleeful. I think it's like a good thing to have one. And it's pretty sick. Well, the thing that really kind of solidified that exact perspective in my mind was the whole Michelle Wolf Schacher abortion thing. Like in the 90s and stuff, it was it was fairly compelling to be like, we want to be safe, rare and legal. The rare part was something that they focused on. Right.
Starting point is 00:41:06 And then, you know, after 2000, 2005 or whatever, it became, you know, the left really got control of the narrative building machine in the United States. And they really started to be like, well, we should celebrate. this. This isn't something. We don't want women to feel like they shouldn't have got one. Yeah, they didn't want there to be any stigma on killing an unborn child. And so, yeah, killing a non-born child. So the whole like shout your abortion, celebrate it and stuff, really just it was so ghoulish. And I had a conversation with a girl. That was very, very pro-choice. And I was like, look, you know, generally I'm fairly pro-choice as well myself, but like, you're not going to convince people that you actually believe.
Starting point is 00:41:49 in protecting women when you're doing things like this, right? This is, you're going to come across to people as just straight up ghoulish. That's what it is. It's like, you know, the dictionary definition of ghoul is someone that celebrates death. And it's like, you can't, you know, you can't articulate this kind of, this kind of, you know, this kind of celebration of abortion and not come across as just incredibly cold and incredibly have no regard for human life. What's that movie with Woody Harrelson and I think he's like a Marine,
Starting point is 00:42:27 him as other guy, they have to like inform people of the death of their husbands and sons in war. I haven't said, I've only seen clips of it. Yeah, I know you're talking. But man, this is what, I think one of the challenges we have culturally is that we are permanent children. the fact that there are, I mean, God, could you imagine, I'm just, just look at the 1950s
Starting point is 00:42:53 where dudes in their 20s looked like they were 50 and their hands were calloused. And today you got these Nancy boys who they can't stop being bald. They wear hats 24-7. They never dress up. They complain on the internet non-stop. They got soft, squishy hands. Can you believe? They have no family until what, they turn 40.
Starting point is 00:43:14 It's unreal. And I'm being stuff to get the purpose, the audacity. Because I don't want to insult other millennials who are in the same position as I, joking aside about my silly beanie or whatever is that I'm doing. The family thing really does hit that we were children for too long. It's fascinating. I see this image. I saw a picture on Reddit, and it was like six generations of women.
Starting point is 00:43:37 And because all of them had their first kid when they were 18 or 19 years old, which is a little bit young. It is. Because the average age, I think, was like 20. or 22 historically for humans, but 18, 19 was not unheard of. You were an adult. You were out of high school. You were a woman. You married your high school sweetheart. You had kids. He got a job. And so you've got a great, great grandma, a great grandma, a grandma, a mom, a daughter, and a baby. And it's like, it's crazy that today millennials are just straight up not having kids
Starting point is 00:44:08 and they're acting like permanent children. And so what happens is to that point I bring about that clip where, you know, they're, I forgot, you guys probably know what the movie is and you, you'll say it in the chat. But there's like, they get pulled over. And then the cops like, you were speeding and they're like, we need to go inform, you know, a mother that, that her son died. And he's like, yeah, well, you shouldn't be speeding. And then I forgot, I forgot the actor, but he says, you know, why don't you do it? Why don't you go tell them so that, you know, and take your time, that way maybe they hear about on the news first and then you can greet them. I see, I see a story like that. And you understand.
Starting point is 00:44:43 the nature of reality and what it means to be a man, what it means to be a human, what it means to be a mother, the true suffering, the hardships in the world that are ignored by the majority of squishy cookie dough millennials who've never seen hardship. They grew up with snowplow parents who made sure that everything was safe. It's fascinating that millennials, we talk about how when we were kids, our parents would ground us from the house. They'd say, you're ungrounded, like you're anti-grounded. Don't come home until the street lights come on. We'd go play in the mud. Today, kids, there was one little,
Starting point is 00:45:16 there was a 10-year-old kid who was walking to a dollar general one mile from his house. The police picked them up and arrested the mom for negligence. That's where we're going because we live in the society where people are permanent children
Starting point is 00:45:26 terrified of everything. And I think this does not bode well for us. You get Antifa. You get ICE riots. You get this stuff because these people do not know or care. You know, I'll put it simply.
Starting point is 00:45:40 I, I think it's fair to say that there is a general empathy an individual without children can have to understand what it would mean to someone to hear that their child died. So before I had my daughter, I understood it was painful. I understood it was one of the most horrifying things. I watched a video where a dad was holding his son who died, I believe it was a car accident, and he's wailing like it's haunting. This man is holding his son who's dying in his arms.
Starting point is 00:46:08 I empathize, but I did not feel. the same thing. Now I have my own daughter, and now it's internal. So it's not just me trying to be like, I understand that you're in pain. Now it's like the real fear of what would of what if something happened to my child. And I would just say the, the murderous rampage that I would go on, should someone wrong, someone harm my child, the whole world will pay. It will be devastating, the likes of which no one has ever seen. That is the emotion that I have within me. There are millennials, and I believe many of them,
Starting point is 00:46:47 who don't have the capacity for empathy, and it's also Genzi, nor do they have the understanding because they don't have kids of what that would be like. So when Lake and Riley dies, they don't care, and they tell you to shove it.
Starting point is 00:47:01 When Henry Novak dies, they don't care. They tell you to shove it because they do not have empathy for you. They think you are evil. They think you are evil. are white oppressors, and they don't understand what it means to have a strong emotional familial connection.
Starting point is 00:47:16 And so what we end up with is, we end up with a generation fighting to burn the country down and they mock you as your loved ones die. Like when a guy sitting in the stands cheering on Trump gets shot and killed because somebody hated Donald Trump and then these liberals, progressives, they go on their show and they laugh about it in your face. Now, don't get me wrong, there are some conservatives who do it too, but it's a generality on the left and a tendency on the right. That's what what terrifies me about the current state of politics in this country. Yeah, I think there's a lot of truth to that. And it's really no secret that the demographic
Starting point is 00:47:51 that votes left most consistently and in the greatest amount is unmarried, childless women. And, you know, I think, I think what you have there is they end up their, their maternal instinct ends up that that should be directed towards children is projected onto, you know, the third world masses that are trying to come into the country. And so, like, refugees basically become their kids. And it's a very, very sick. Yeah, I think it's even deeper than that is, like, yes, they see these third-worlders as their kids.
Starting point is 00:48:22 And then their kin, right, like, their ethnic, you know, cohorts, white people, they view them as, like, a pesky brother or like a cousin, like a relative that's kind of like, right. Yeah, yeah. I think it's like a double-pronged thing going on there. That video, you see the one of those female members of Congress being like my period, hurts and so I should get paid time off. I'm not exaggerating what they said. I believe you. I haven't seen it though. But the funny thing is like it sounds laughable what I just said. But that was a
Starting point is 00:48:47 I'm paraphrasing literally they said. Now I can say it in a more disrespectful way like a bunch of winching naggy ladies complain their hoo-hoo's hurt and they don't want to work anymore. But what they did was they held the press conference and she said my menstruation hurts so much I should get paid time off. And I'm just sitting here thinking like we have become a nation that is demanded of all able body people, we do labor, we give up a portion of our time and energy for the fringes of the minorities. Now, I will say this with the utmost respect for those that are paraplegic or quadriplegic. I sympathize and I am sorry for the injuries or the conditions that have led you to be wheelchair bound. But that's about 1.5% of this country that is wheelchair bound. But we have mandated 100% of
Starting point is 00:49:37 public accommodations must be constructed in a way that cater to 1.5% of the population. That is an absurdity to me. We should not be a nation or a culture that caters to a, that literally will allocate funds and development for all constructs over 1.5% of this country. And you know, it's funny. The Democrats like to say something like, you know that there's only like 0.3% of the people in this country are trans. Why do you care so much? And my response, responses because of that point three, that's your number. I think it's less than that. We've mandated 100% of businesses create new bathrooms. So you were asking 325 million people to adjust the economic position of this country for something like several thousand. That's why I
Starting point is 00:50:26 care. Y'all are nuts. We are wasting energy resources because of this. If somebody in a wheelchair wants to go into a building, they should plan for themselves. how they must because they are the outlier in the circumstance. We should not make it incumbent upon the entirety of the country to accommodate accidents, injuries, or the fringe minorities. It's insane. It's always funny when the left says that about trans people, because I remember as a millennial kind of like an old head moment here, even when I was in college, I couldn't
Starting point is 00:50:58 have told you the difference between like trans, like a cross dresser, like, is that just like a gay guy and a wig? And I mean, the red pill is like basically, yeah, that is what it is. but obviously the left has this whole methodology for how these things are different but like no one would really know what like a trans person is
Starting point is 00:51:14 if it weren't for the left shoving this stuff in our face for the past like yeah not even 15 years like the past 10 years like it's a relatively recent thing reminds me of like how much so much?
Starting point is 00:51:23 And then they're like why do you care about this so much? It's like dude you're making everyone the best to ask to me to the best reason for people to say that they care about this stuff is because eventually and people will say oh no this would never happen blah blah
Starting point is 00:51:34 but eventually as people that come from the internet and are familiar with like 4chan and stuff, you know eventually they're going to say, you're bigoted if you won't date a trans person. And then, that's where we've been. I understand that. But what I'm saying is it'll become the norm where everyone makes an argument. There's the only the left.
Starting point is 00:51:52 Only the furthest, only the people that are furthest on the left say that you're a bigot if you won't date a trans person. I would, I would bet you that we got a Polaroid of Kayla, a Kyla on the wall there. I'd be willing to bet she would disagree with you. I'd be willing to bet she'd say something like, but trans women are women. When I asked her what a woman was, she said it was a feeling. Yeah, that was, I had a massive problem with that.
Starting point is 00:52:14 She makes the argument that she's like, no, I'm a normal Democrat and the woke people have caused problems for the Democrat Party and blah, blah. She makes that argument. And then she goes and she makes all the same arguments that the far left makes. So we have transgender liberals saying that the left has gone too far, basically. No, she's not transgender. She's not trans. No, okay. But the point that I'm making.
Starting point is 00:52:35 Like the things that are extreme or on the farthest left, they, if the, at when the left is in control or when the left is basically writing the narrative for the country, that stuff becomes mainstream. And if you, if you are a bigot, nowadays, if you're a bigot, like we were talking about the stuff in the UK, excuse me, being a bigot is basically the worst thing you can be. It's worse than being a criminal. It's worse than being a murderer. Yeah. So if at some point in the future, you're going to be considered a bigot because you won't, date a trans person as a straight man. Right.
Starting point is 00:53:07 Like that's something that all of society has to worry about. Let's jump to this story from the Washington Post. And my friends, let me tell you this. This story is hopium. If you're a Trump supporter, the news I'm about to deliver to you should make you jump up on your table and start tap dancing with excitement and joy because it's looking like we're about to get some big, big victories. I know Roseanne said she won in military tribunals, but we just weren't getting it.
Starting point is 00:53:33 Well, Donald Trump has appointed a new acting director of national intelligence. And ladies and gentlemen, it is Bill Pulte. And you want to know why this is tremendous good news. And you want to know why so many people are freaking out from neocons on the right to liberals and progressives. Because Bill Pulte is a guy who meets Donald Trump. Donald Trump offers him a job as the head of housing finance. What is it, FHF, what is it, FHSA or whatever? Yeah.
Starting point is 00:54:04 They probably mentioned it in here. And look at this picture they got him. They got to get the worst, the worst picture. But you know what? I love it because he looks like a bulldog. Yeah. Here's what I got to say about Pulte. Donald Trump said,
Starting point is 00:54:17 we want accountability for these corrupt political forces that try to destroy me and you, our supporters. And what did we get? You know, we got the call me indictment. But here's the, funny thing. The most vicious in Trump's of Trump's appointees was Pulte, who as just a housing director, got several criminal indictments over mortgage fraud. So everyone's sitting around wondering why it is
Starting point is 00:54:48 that we are not getting indictments of clear, for these individuals for clear criminal activity. And the best we can get is Comey because he put seashells on the beach. And then they say, and is this the best we can do? Mortgage fraud? People who have to legally claim residents in their state were claiming residents in other states. They don't get me wrong. Good find on Pulte's part.
Starting point is 00:55:10 With the limited position granted to him, he found those crimes and said criminal referral. I am extremely excited over what he will do as Director of National Intelligence because he's going to be like, he's the guy who sits down and Trump says, I want action taken. get me these indictments for these crimes.
Starting point is 00:55:30 He's the guy who says, I will find you every page and every book of every actionable crime and evidence. He got mortgage fraud indictments. What do you think he's going to do as DNI? Well, I mean, there was a story in Reuters a few months ago where the inspector general was complaining because he kept bypassing him
Starting point is 00:55:46 to start jamming. He jammed up Eric Swalwell for like a few months. I mean, this is a guy that he's just like, okay, like does anybody really care about the housing, whatever his title is? It's like, no, we like to Trump for a reason. He's getting after it. And so yeah, I agree. And everyone's like, well, he never was an Intel officer. And it's like, who cares? Who cares? FHFA, sorry, federal housing finance
Starting point is 00:56:07 agency. And they choose this photo of him looking so gruff and furled brow. And I know Bill. And he's like, he's a regular dude. You hang out with him. He doesn't always have this gruff look. But they are, they are losing their minds over this. And they know why. They know that if Donald Trump says to Pulte, go through the files, find me, find me the crimes, find me the evidence, he's going to get it done. We're going to, like, listen, the mortgage fraud stuff was interesting because it's real, but it's often overlooked. So you have these people, these, you know, there was, there was, um, Schiff, there was a Leitia James, but basically the just is this. You got a person who is legally required to live in the district or state or city they represent,
Starting point is 00:56:49 but they were filing mortgage loan applications claiming to live in, other jurisdictions to get favorable interest rates. That's mortgage fraud. Pulte found that. Yeah. He found it. He looked through the files. It's actually terrifying him having, being DNI and getting oversight to all of the,
Starting point is 00:57:09 all of these files and paperwork on people. And he's cut through to because if people remember the original Comey story, it's been months now, as people may have forgotten, is he actually, you know, the Eastern District of Virginia, the attorney that was going to prosecute the case, got. ousted and they brought in a different attorney. That was Pulte. It wasn't Trump. It wasn't, you know, whoever. Trump was just giving the directive. So they just do what you need to do. Get the job done. He's like, I don't have time to be dealing with this right now. Go get the job done. And Pulte said, yes, sir. And he was the one that actually got Siebert ousted from that attorney position.
Starting point is 00:57:39 So like this dude is cutthroat. Again, there's that Reuters article or the inspector general's like, he keeps bypassing me. It's like, because dude, just get out of the way. You're like competing our patriot moment here. And yeah, I mean, like, look, again, people are going to pearl clutch. Oh, he has no, you know, he has no experience. working in Intel. Again, who cares? Like, Pulte's here to do a job. Fair enough. Fair enough. Yeah, I think Trump just wanted a loyalist. I think Tulsi Gabbard probably did a reasonably good job, but at least the stated reason was that her husband has cancer. So she's stepping down from that. And Trump is probably like, okay, who's loyal to me who can do a decent job here? So I've heard people say that, uh, yeah, DNI is actually not the most important position. Yeah. I'm not too familiar with like
Starting point is 00:58:22 the day-to-day stuff. I don't imagine we'll hear too much about what he's up to. But at the very least, I think he's probably just like a solid loyalist to put in the position. And he's retaining his housing rule. That's what people are missing. He's retaining his previous position while also being acting DNI director. I mean, again, is he going to be using like, you know, draconian measures to jam up guys over mortgage rod? No, to your point. I think the main reason here is he's like, okay, I need someone to hold down the fort until we could find a replacement. Pultz he steps in here. But again, we saw with Blanche, Trump just makes an upgrade, gets a loyalist in, and it turns out, go figure. When you pick Loyalist?
Starting point is 00:58:56 Blanche is very soft. You pick loyalists and they start cooking. Go figure. I was, I was winging like a little bitch on this show because of the Newark ICE protests being like, why won't they do anything about this? And then Blanche did something about it. And I was like, I stayed incorrect. Yeah. I mean, I remember, you know, even this is kind of a common line that people will say on a lot of different conservative shows where they'll even say like following Kirk, like nothing was done.
Starting point is 00:59:15 And it's like, yes, we didn't get the high profile arrest that I think people were anticipating. But again, if you start combing through what actually went down, what the DOJ's moves were following the Kirk assassination, I mean, they got Antifa listed as an FTO. I mean, people don't quite understand how massive that is. Not just the fact that it's like a name we've given them, but now that gives the DOJ the abilities to go after anyone that they suspect is aiding Antifa. Like imagine if there was some guy in Detroit and he was pledging allegiance or saying he was supporting Al Qaeda. He would get his phone tap, they would comb through, make sure everything is up to snuff here. If you're aiding or supporting Antifa in any way in this country, you are now on the scope.
Starting point is 00:59:52 You are now on the radar of the DOJ. Let me read this. I love this. Wapo says, Pulte's appointment was greed with alarm by Democratic lawmakers and former intel officials who voiced concern that his record of doing Trump's bidding could lead to abuses within the powerful, but traditionally nonpartisan, U.S. Intel community. That's a really funny joke you wrote there watching the Post. Nonpartisan. That's real good. I laughed.
Starting point is 01:00:16 I did. Well, look at the second line there. Frightingly, he's got more of a platform. Yeah, man. When I saw the news break, I saw ALX tweeted it, and I just started busting out laughing, being like, wow. If Trump made Palti the AG,
Starting point is 01:00:34 let me put it this way. I'm an ish talker, right? I come on the show and I'm like, man, if they put me, I'd be arrested people up. No, he actually will do it. He actually will do it. Lanch has been arguably the biggest upgrade, as far. It's actually kind of almost a blessing in disguise where, you know, when things got a bit
Starting point is 01:00:51 rocky, all the people that were one foot in, one foot out in Trump just immediately bailed and like you basically just shook off all the panikins. And there's something to be said about that because now the current mood in the Trump administration is max loyalty, right? Like, we need max loyalty. If there's a position open, we're just putting someone in that we know is going to be loyal. And what's ended up happening is you're just getting really effective guys put in all these positions. Because again, you know, one criticism people have of Trump and this has been true since the first term is sometimes some of the appointments are more political than they are just like to carry out the agenda.
Starting point is 01:01:21 And in an environment of max loyalty, you're forced to pick guys who are like, yeah, Trump, I'll get the job done. You tell me what needs to get done. I'm on it. I'll move heaven and earth to get it done. What do we do? How do we get the next Trump? You have to have someone.
Starting point is 01:01:36 It's not, it's not a tangible. It's not something you can actually say, you can find. It's, it would just happen. Yeah. Well, no, no, no, hold on. Like, I agree with you. The idea is we, if it exists, it needs to be found. That's the point, right?
Starting point is 01:01:52 Maybe it's Spencer Pratt. Well, that, that's actually an article that was written, I believe it was today, that it said the biggest threat to J.D. Vance is Spencer Pratt. Because he's, he's got kind of that X-Factor. I don't know that he's got what Trump's got, though. See, the thing is Trump also has a weird, is weirdly shaped. you know what I mean? Like he has that forward lean and he weighs like 230 pounds and he's six foot three. Well, it's its abs, but then he's kind of got a weird posture.
Starting point is 01:02:22 Actually, there's a meme about this. I'm not going to bring up to the after show, but you know. Yeah, we think we can all know the anatomical proportions involved here. No, I mean, there's something. Everyone seen that one. Yeah, I know. And there's something to be said like, I think why people are saying Spencer Pratt reminds him with Trump is not policy.
Starting point is 01:02:37 It's not really anything outside of. He has this ability on the debate stage that we haven't seen since Trump, where you're watching it. and you're hearing these two clowns talk. And then Spencer Pratt almost like include you in on the joke where you're watching and you're like, these people are crazy. And then typically what happens in these debates
Starting point is 01:02:51 is the Republican gets up and he goes, well, this is why, you know, they've failed and we need like, you know, to cut taxes or whatever. Spencer Pratt just gets up and he does like that and everything. And it kind of reminds you of Trump. It's not a, it's not the next Trump because there will be no next. That'd be like there's a next Napoleon.
Starting point is 01:03:05 It's like, no, but you can find someone that can fill that vacuum. I think that's the better question. You know what I think it is. And the reason why there may not be a next Trump is that Trump is an avatar of a movement. He is boisterous. He's charismatic. He's loud. He's got gravitas. He's got name recognition. He's tall. He's a large man. He's commanding.
Starting point is 01:03:25 The issue is, you know, Joe Rogan commands a large audience. Massive. They're big fans. There are a lot of people that, you know, are just die hard for the guy. But he certainly does not have the following that Trump does. I don't think anybody in the world does. Donald Trump has, what is the estimate's like, 50 million people that are right or die or Trump in these elections. So he wins these elections because there's moderates who shift right and there are conservatives willing to vote for him. But he has this massive base of people who are like,
Starting point is 01:04:00 I'm going to agree with him no matter what. And I wouldn't say all of those people are culty. A lot of them are culty for sure. The issue I think is that there's disparate cultures in the United States. There's no unified national culture anymore. So how could there be someone like Trump to rally a large group when all of the ideas are so dramatically different? Trump was able to convince Dave Smith to ignore Miriam Adelson in the 2024 election.
Starting point is 01:04:30 It's true. I'm not trying to disparage Dave. Dave endorsed Trump at the time because he was more hopeful over what Trump was representing, despite the fact that Miriam Adelson gave Trump 100 or allocated 100 million towards his reelection, benefiting him, with some reports saying she did it because she wanted Israel to annex the West Bank, which flies in the face of what Dave and many of these Israel critics believe, but he was willing to get behind him regardless. And I don't think Dave was unaware of what was going with Miriam Madison and what Trump's campaign represented, though he does regret it now, that I understand. Trump was able to get libertarians to push aside some of their core values for what he represented. I don't know that's possible moving forward. Well, because it's libertarians are like massacists, like they enjoy losing.
Starting point is 01:05:16 And any time that they can sense that their policies, because Trump, I mean, if you're a libertarian, no one has extended more political victories to you in your entire life than Donald Trump. I mean, just. Ross Oldbrick. Ross Oldbrit, I mean, we point out the fact that he's cut all these federal workers, he's gutted USAID, et cetera, et cetera. So it's like they're throwing their toys out of the prank. because they're not, it reminds me of the pro-life lobby. The pro-life lobby does this too, where Trump has delivered you the biggest victory of your lifetime with like getting Roe v. Wade overturned.
Starting point is 01:05:42 And then they're like still nitpicking because these people, all these other people that have been included in this coalition, so to speak, they thrive off of being contrarians. And as soon as they start realizing, oh, actually I'm in power, that makes them uncomfortable because it's no longer sexy, it's no longer edgy. They can't, they can't Monday morning quarterback. You know what it is? You know it is? Americans, I think people in general, but because I'm an American and I look at American
Starting point is 01:06:02 culture, we're addicted to pain. I, I, I, I, I, I, I, I, I, I, I, I, I, I, I, I, I, I, I, I'm always me is periodically, it will switch my feed to the four you feed. So I'll like, open up X and I'll be seeing all these tweets and my brain will be lighting on fire in, in overstimulation and anger. And, and the reason is every tweet will be like some political pundit saying something psychotic like Kyle Kalinsky, that dude, I just mute him because he's just become psychotic. I cannot, for the life of me, stand any longer seeing Candice tweeting at, you know, Erica Kirk, and then, you know, Kyle Kalinsky tweeting at Joe Rogan.
Starting point is 01:06:51 And the entire feed is just people, like, imagine you walked into a like a McDonald's because you were like, man, you know what, I just want to get a big arch. I mean, it's so big, I don't even know how to attack this thing. But you walk in the door and it's just 12 people. staring at you going, the whole time you're going to be like, I'm going to leave. That's what it feels like. And then I look and I'm like, why is it on the four of you? And I swipe away and it's all back to normal. My normal following feed, it's Reuters and CNN and there are sometimes antagonistic posts I see from people I follow. My point is, why is it? You know, Kyle Kalinsky's a really
Starting point is 01:07:24 great example. I praised Kyle in the past because he was in this debate and someone claimed that Carl Benjamin was like a neo-nazier or white supremacist. And Kyle said, stop, stop, stop, Carl, Carl is not a white supremacist, okay? And I saw this clip from Kyle, and I was like, oh, he's a good dude. He's a progressive, but he's not going to lie about Carl Benjamin, who's a friend of mine who has real values and beliefs. And he said, Carl believes these things. He disagrees with this, but he's not a white supremacist. He's not racist.
Starting point is 01:07:51 And then I was like, Kyle's a good dude. And I praised him quite a bit. Now the dude cut his hair off, bleached it. And all he does is post on X, the most psychotic vile things you can imagine. And that's what, and Crystal Ball, too. The way that Crystal Ball and Kyle have just talked about Joe Rogan when he gave them a platform, he was totally respectful, totally cool with them. And then they just, you know, just totally slime them. Every chance they get, they're just dishonorable people and they have no redeeming value, in my opinion. Kyle
Starting point is 01:08:24 Kaczynski is, he doesn't say anything insightful. He's not an intelligent guy. He doesn't say anything that's beyond the boilerplate, left wing kind of narrative. And he's also just a kind of a bad person. Here's, I got, I got to tell you guys. I think the X algorithm is trash. And I don't know. I think Elon needs to consider this. But the problem is everyone's addicted to pain.
Starting point is 01:08:50 So the X team looks at the algorithm and says, how come we don't get the same kind of traction as Instagram or TikTok? And, oh boy, dude, I got stories for you guys. This is, this is, we, we, I'm freaking out. Okay. So real quick. So the X team presumably says, we need to push people to the algorithmic feed that shows in the things they're more likely to engage with.
Starting point is 01:09:11 And what is that? Vile, psychotic political conversations. Now, I follow a lot of poker and skateboarding on X2. Poker's actually really big on X. And I'm happy for this because X needs non-political things. And even that is all just nasty stuff. Like people just insult each other the whole time. So here's the thing.
Starting point is 01:09:29 I have a post and I was making about a Claude. I said, I'm not a big Claude user, but holy F, was this hilarious. The extent of its image generation, I asked it to make a picture of a family, and it made what looks like a child's attempt at using like a vector graphic program. And it's like, I can't make images, but I drew this vector graphic for you. And I thought it was hilarious. It gets 10 retweets. I have 2.6 million followers.
Starting point is 01:09:54 It gets 10 retweets. Now, of course, people might say, well, I don't want to retweet that. That's fine. The issue actually is, and everybody knows this, it no longer recommends posts you make that are not going to get a certain amount of traction. This is the game with YouTube. The key with YouTube is to get as many clicks as possible in the first 10 minutes. It's the same with all of these social media platforms. So here's what's happening, right? Let me scroll down to some of my tweets have more traction. I said, Spider-Noir is great. Good show. Nick Cage is the best. 85 retweets, 125,000 retweets. 158 comments. I do not like. like using X to just quote someone and insult them and spit in their face like so many of these pundits do. But I know that if I do political things, I'm going to get a lot more traction. So on a post where I said, let's go, it's a call, she says Spencer Pratt's odds to advance in the Los Angeles mayoral race have risen to 80%. And I just quoted it like, let's go, 1.3K retweets. If it is political, and that, and help the respect, I'm not insulting anybody because I don't like
Starting point is 01:10:57 getting into flame wars. I don't like looking on Twitter and seeing people just spam blasting. So I know that if I do contentious politics, I will get way more traction. And I do have some insults on here. I tend to. Let me tell you something crazy. So a homie of mine broke up with his girlfriend. This is going to terrify you guys. It's a horror story. So they break up. He's down in the dumps. He's talking to the homies and he's saying like, man, I just, she was, she was, just, I cared about her so much. We were into the same hobbies, but she was just so awful to me. So we're sitting there having lunch, and he goes, dude, and he shows me his Instagram.
Starting point is 01:11:39 It's a black square with white text that says, she was using you the whole time, you need to get away from her. And he's like, and the username is just like some random string of texts. And he's like, this is the only thing I've been getting. Everything on Instagram since I broke up is nothing but these words. weird posts saying she betrayed you. And it's like, it'll be a screenshot of a Twitter, of a tweet or an ex post. And it'll be someone saying like, this is what women do. You should realize it by now. So we go out to eat and we're talking everybody. And he's like, look, and he opens
Starting point is 01:12:14 Instagram and he starts swiping. And all the suggested posts are women are evil, women are bad. And I'm like, bro, what is going on? Like, he's not like, this dude plays video games. He's not into like anti-women content or anything like that. Now I'm going to tell you something real creepy. And everybody's known this and everybody's experienced this, but this one freaked me the F out. So the other day, I'm hanging out with my daughter
Starting point is 01:12:39 and she's, you know, goofing off. And I take my phone and I'm like, I want to show her some old Disney stuff, right? I want to play A Little Mermaid. That was Disney, right? Yeah. And I played part of, was it part of your world?
Starting point is 01:12:54 Is this song? I love that song, right? So I picked my phone. phone up, played part of your world, and I showed it to my daughter, and she watched as Ariel sang that amazing musical number. I'm going to get food. And what is Instagram now spam blasting me with? Tons of videos of mothers singing Disney musical songs to their daughters or to their babies. And I'm just like, dude, my Instagram feed is skateboarding clips, poker, and like comedians. sometimes it'll be snowboarding or skiing.
Starting point is 01:13:32 Those are the things I watch. That's the algorithm that I seek out. Abruptly and randomly, for no reason my algorithm changed. Now, I know people say, well, maybe it's because you saw a video and you sat on it. No, that's not correct. There was no instance where, so I opened my phone. I go to Instagram. I clicked a little magnifying glass and I just get that full feed of things.
Starting point is 01:13:52 And then I select things that I find interesting. Usually it's going to be skateboarding or the things that I'm into. all of a sudden it's just full of pictures of women with babies. And I'm like, this is weird. I'm scrolling through it. I'm not clicking any of them. I go to my home feed and I'm scrolling down. And then all of a sudden it's a woman with her baby and she's singing part of your world.
Starting point is 01:14:12 And I'm just like, okay, now this is too much for me, dude. I'm like, I'm ready to go to meta and just like smash the computer, whoever is doing this or how they're doing it. But everyone's experienced this, you know, where it's like you'll be sitting in a room talking about something. and then all of a sudden your Instagram feed is selling you ads on whatever as you were talking about. Literally something Phil mentioned last night came up on my Twitter today. Last night I was like, I've never heard this person's name before, but now I'm seeing this randomly just listening to the conversation. The machine is in control. I keep getting black people meet.com ads.
Starting point is 01:14:45 What's going on there? I think someone that's based on your Google searches, though. Yeah, I think it's just what I talk about. So is this it, right? Some might say, well, Tim, you searched YouTube for a part of your world, but I didn't search mother sings part of your world to infant daughter, which is what I did, I just searched for the video, and then why
Starting point is 01:15:03 is Instagram synced with YouTube? Are they key logging everything we do? Did you guys know that modern smart TVs take screenshots and send them to marketing analytics companies? When you are watching TV... What's even the draw of the smart TV? Like, okay,
Starting point is 01:15:19 I can watch CBS on my fridge now. Why is... Wait, you watch TV on your fridge? Yeah, because there's like these fridges now. I get that, but the smart TV is just your TV. I know. I'm just saying, like, put the smart TV in the fridge. I'm like, what's even though, like, things have just gone too far.
Starting point is 01:15:36 I think, you know, it's true that Goyam have gone insane because it's like, what is going. I mean, it's unbelievable what's happening. People are strapping. That's true. Jews don't use smart TVs. They don't. Well, it's like a Shabbat thing or something. I don't know, but it's getting out of control.
Starting point is 01:15:48 Only on Saturdays. Yeah, it's totally ready. I don't know why my toaster is on the internet, to be honest. Yeah. They were like, connect your toaster to the internet so that you can make toast to the morning. You can connect a Roomba to the internet. What is the point of that? Well, that wouldn't actually make sense.
Starting point is 01:16:01 This is why I'm excited. You want to be able to remote control your room, but I get it. This is why I'm excited for the Palantir Tech, because my fridge will be playing, like, Trump at it's the whole time just fire me up in the morning and I'll be ready to take the day. I think it's going to be a beautiful thing. Well, my favorite thing about the Palantir Tech is that leftists who have contraband in their refrigerators will get arrested. Yeah, literally that's going to happen.
Starting point is 01:16:18 And it's going to be cilantro. They're going to knock on the door, and they're going to be like, you know, under executive order, you know, 19361 from Tim Pool, president now in the year 20. You're like RFK, there won't be enough meat in the fridge, and they'll just send the Gestapo. No cilantro. That sounds kind of like a woke take. I don't know. Salantro is woke as it comes.
Starting point is 01:16:35 Literally, like, the defining factor of woke is liking cilantro. But you're both playing into the mass migration terms of the conversation. It's coriand. That's the point. The reason why leftists are trying to import the third world is because they're trying to get more cilantro in the country. Yeah. And Trump is trying to shut it down because he wants less cilantro.
Starting point is 01:16:49 That's why. Think about the countries. But it is cilantro. Think about the countries that put cilantro in their food. those are the countries that Trump has said no to. It's true. Yeah. Now, if it's Lingenberry, you're welcome.
Starting point is 01:17:03 You can come on in. Just Israel factor into this in some way? I need to know. They're not big cilantro people. No, okay. Makes sense. Interesting. No, it's just central in South America and India.
Starting point is 01:17:15 You know? Okay. Yeah, got to get that cilantro out of there. Okay. I mean, they just, not to go into this discourse, but yeah, the spicy thing. Like, it somehow makes me like a failure. if I don't want my wings to be like burning my mouth off. I mean, it's like, you know, I'll take the mild thing.
Starting point is 01:17:31 That's, spicy is woke. It is. I genuinely believe that the spicy food. I love spicy food, man. On planet earth. It's meant to, it's meant to humiliate the white man. That's what it is. Because it's like, there's been so many realms.
Starting point is 01:17:43 It's like an anti-white, uh, humiliation. Like, look, like, let's just be, you know, there's so much anti-white rhetoric going on. I'll drop like a little pro in here. Like, we're kind, we do some pretty good things. So they're like, how do we humiliate them routinely, regularly at every meal? Make everything spicy, make everything miserable. That's how they do it. And it's working.
Starting point is 01:17:59 Every time I eat spicy food, I feel like a failure. All the spices that make food spicy is actually intended to cover low quality food. That's true. It covers up the bad quality of the... It's annoying to me when they add capsacea and the hot sauce and claim it's hot sauce. No. Real hot sauce has to come from the plant. End of story.
Starting point is 01:18:18 So it's like you go to these hot sauce stores. I actually like spicy food. But it's probably because I'm part Korean and we like kimchi and we like putting chili powder and stuff. But you go to these hot sauce stores and they'll be like the hottest ass blaster. And you grab it and the ingredients are like ghost pepper. Okay. And then it's like Carolina Raper and you're like, okay. And then it's like capsaic extract. No. Garbage. You're cheating. Yeah. You're just making a chemical irritant. And every time they interview these people that like are making these synthetic peppers somewhere in North Carolina, they're always like deeply unstable people.
Starting point is 01:18:50 Like every single time. They're the same people that are just like obsessed with firearms, not for like a base Second Amendment tradition, but just because they're like trying to overcompensate for something. It's the same overlap where it's just like, let's do the... Like tattooed soylenials that are really into it. Yeah, exactly. It's just the faux tough guy routine. And I'm just like... I know. Like anybody who's got a tattoo.
Starting point is 01:19:09 Talk about losers. I was referring to like this specific type of, you know, like Harry Potter tattoos. Like you know? Well, you know, the people that are like, they're really tattooed and they like craft beer. And I'm not just like hipsters generally, but like... Beard. Yeah, and they wear like flannel, but they're not like, you know, just like super left wing.
Starting point is 01:19:29 It's like a left wing. It's like people that listen to Chapo Trapp House. I know. I'm just imagining. People who like Larp is working class. I know. People that live. I was not like, imagine being at a like a craft brewery in Maine and you're sitting across
Starting point is 01:19:42 from Grand Platner and you're like, I'll do the mild wings. And he goes, oh. People that live. You're talking about people that live in the city but wear a lot of Carhart stuff. Yeah, stuff like that. And that probably applies to some of my friends here. So I guess I got to be careful with, you know, these broad categories I'm attacking, but, like, basically. Have you ever noticed that about D.C.? Like, D.C. culture has the worst culture of any place in the country.
Starting point is 01:20:04 It's basically, like, if you want to fit in D.C., you got to wear khakis and North Face. I mean, look, we could elevate standards a little bit because, I mean, some of these cities are getting completely out of control. It's, like, it's like a D.C.C. Everyone's wearing a suit around. Like, people are running all the time. If you're not wearing a suit, they're wearing a North Face vest with khakis. Yeah, you know, I'm like, I'm kind of, I mean, because I'm like a, you know, old school conservative. So I'm like, you know, it's not too bad. You got to just wear like a t-shirt and jeans. I don't know.
Starting point is 01:20:30 It's the Brooklynification of every major U.S. city is really getting frustrating where like, you know, every bar is like a fake British pub. Every restaurant is hot chicken. The next, so this is actually interesting, like sociology is every U.S. city is usually about 10 years behind Brooklyn. So what we're experiencing now in Kansas City or something is what was going on in Brooklyn 10 years ago. Now what's in in Brooklyn, it's like, you know, your, you're a bath. and these sorts of things. So in 10 years, really? Yeah, yeah.
Starting point is 01:20:57 So in 10 years you're going to go to like gay bathhouses? Kind of. Yeah, I would say it's derivative. Yeah, yeah, yeah. I'm part of Brooklyn. Oh, like the Russian and Turkish bathhouses are in. So I think in 10 years. Wait, wait, wait, millennials just go bath together?
Starting point is 01:21:07 Pretty much. Yeah, so you're going to go to like, yeah, you're going to go to like Tempe in 10 years. And it's going to be bathhouses. It's going to be like, so taric right way. You're making it sound like there's no choice here. I'm going to be like 50. And I'm going to be like, oh, let's go, let's go to Tempe for a vacation. and when we get there, it's going to be a bunch of 20 and 30-year-olds being like,
Starting point is 01:21:26 you want to bat-bait together? I'm going to be like, not really, you won't have a choice. The menu items at these grand platinum restaurants are brutal. It's like, can I just, you want to order a chicken sandwich, but it's like, you want to order the sloppy sucky off sandwich? And you're like, can I just do the chicken sandwich? Like, do I have to this humiliation ritual of reading off the menu names? You know what really irks me, too, is like, when you go to these hipster restaurants
Starting point is 01:21:47 and they'll be like the big badass barbecue backside burger. And it's too big to eat. you're like, bro, I just want to eat some food. Oh, and the fries come out in the mini-friar basket. And they're, you know, when they give you the thin ones, it's like, stop. And you know, Graham Platner's just loving that. That's his element when he's in there. He's just loving.
Starting point is 01:22:04 He's got, yeah. There's a restaurant in Arlington called a fire-ass tie. And I always see, I've like literally never gone there entirely just because of the name. The best restaurant you will ever go to is a strip mall with those generic red letters saying Chinese. That's it. There's no name. You don't even know how to find it or tell. someone where it is and you walk in and it's Chinese food and there's a little Asian lady and they just
Starting point is 01:22:28 you watch them do the walk right there. I'm sick of these like you walk down a street in New York and it's like yeah, flaming ass tie and the next tour it is big ass bomb burritos. You're like, stop. Stop. You know what I want? I want a commercial where literally it's just like a guy is selling an object and he'll be like I represent Spindrift. It's a delicious drink. It's sparkling water with a little fruit juice. I recommend you try it. I'd be like, thank you, sir. I will consider that. And say you turn on, it's like they're trying to sell, it's that stone toss comic where it's like, here's our latest ad campaign and it's a white and a black dude making out. And then the person's like, how will this help us sell cheeseburgers? And he's like, cheeseburgers?
Starting point is 01:23:07 Yeah, literally. That's modern culture. Yeah. It's like you find a restaurant and it's called Bigass Bomb backside burritos and you go and it's a haircuttery. You're like, I don't know what's going on anymore. Maybe, maybe I am a bit more black pill than I thought about America's like, and then on the right, like the right coded version. of this. You go in there and it's like, welcome to the gun restaurant. You go and you're like, I'll do the AR-15 fries and can I do the, can I do the Tower 7 sandwich please? That's how Lauren Bulburt got her start. Tower 7 standards. Yeah, literally. And like your, your cups like a hauled out grenade. Like it's just, I'm like, can we just get a normal? Oh, the
Starting point is 01:23:41 worst is the barbershops, the right wing barbershops or the right-wing coated barbershops where it's like the man's salon. You want your glass of whiskey? And I'm like, yeah, I'm sorry. I'm sorry, I'm I'm trying not to get trashed at the barbershop. Thank you very much. And also, you shouldn't be drinking. You're putting a razor to my neck. I know that there are people sponsored by dude wipes that are friends of ours and the various shows that have the dude wipes thing. But like, bro.
Starting point is 01:24:05 It's literally a cucking ritual. It literally is. Like, guys, just give them some rough single ply. Guys aren't going in there to like pad their butts, you know what I'm saying? Apparently they are. That's true. I know. I'm some kind of old out-of-touch foggy. I was going to say, we're hating on American restaurants here. I think it's important to remember, though, that America has
Starting point is 01:24:29 actually, like, a great underground food scene. I've been seeing a lot of videos online lately. You know, they do this thing, these underground chefs where they get these containers of Kool-Aid, right? And they put the pineapple inside. American Ingenuity. Yeah. And there's a lot of good stuff like that. What do you think the Golden Age look like? That's the Golden Age. That's right. And that's the Trump effect, too. That wouldn't have happened. Crumble released a new drink that has, like, 86 cramps of sugar in it. Cool-laid pineapples.
Starting point is 01:25:00 Yeah. There you go. Black excellence. Big Beck who love a snack, so let me show you how I made mine. You want to drink your pineapple juice, add some sugar, then add your Kool-A package. Add the Kool-Aid back to the jar and let it refrigerate, and y'all, I see why y'all paying $20 for the... That's it, huh? Okay, so I've wondered how much they're paying for these $20, because it seems to me like something you could just make super easily.
Starting point is 01:25:21 on your own, but people are paying $20 for those. This is a big problem. You know, people talk, what's the problems of the black community? They're like, well, it's the fatherlessness or it's the crime. The biggest problem is they're constantly scamming each other with food. Like, I don't know if you've seen what's going on. They sell plates to each other for like $35. Yeah, and they're constantly scamming.
Starting point is 01:25:37 Yeah, and the reason they charge so much is because it's EBT, so they're turning their EBT into cash. Oh, is that what they're doing? Yeah, like a lot of this stuff, like, I mean, okay, so I'm sure there's like some appeal of like, you know, a local plate, and like maybe your neighbor's like a good cook. Like, okay, a home-cooked meal that you can buy. This is me being charitable. But like, yeah, it's people cooking this stuff with stuff they bought using EBT. Right.
Starting point is 01:26:01 So that's kind of... Do you think we cancel the EBT, the country would just burn to the ground? No, I think everyone would lose weight. There'd be less Kool-Aid pineapple concoction. So here's the thing. Remember when they said like no more soda on EBT? They had to lower the, and like, chips and stuff. They had to lower the prices because they were inflated due to EBT.
Starting point is 01:26:20 Oh, this is. This is why, like, oh, I caught so much flack from, like, people on the right for this, because it's, like, it's another goym moment. And when they were trying to push the rotissory chicken and, like, allow it to be used for EBT and food stamps and stuff, I was like, this is the dumbest possible decision to make, because it's so obvious what's happening here. Who was on the forefront of that? It was like Sarah Huckabee Sanders.
Starting point is 01:26:41 Fair play. She's trying to get hers for Arkansas. But Arkansas, Tyson Foods and Walmart are by far the two biggest companies there. Okay, well, Tyson Foods, what's in it for them? Well, they produce the rotissory chickens. Walmart. What's in it for them? They own Sam's Club.
Starting point is 01:26:53 They own Walmart. And what's their loss leader? It's rotissory chicken. We're subsidizing a loss leader. And then you had all these people who were like, well, isn't that better than if they're buying chips? I'm like, raw chicken's already on EBT. Like, what do you mean rotissory chicken? It's sitting in plastic all day.
Starting point is 01:27:08 It's filled with sodium. It's horrible. It's like, oh, the raw chicken is horrible from you. I'm sorry, Trump is just not brutal enough. He's not. And maybe, you know what I would love to see? If after the midterms, I'd love to see Republicans win, and then Donald Trump just he gives a state of the union, you know, in January and he's just like, or did they do it in March?
Starting point is 01:27:27 What is it? Is it March? I think it's March, yeah. Yeah, because it's like the historical tradition of the original inauguration. Trump just comes out and he says, we won the midterbs. I have no risk of impeachment and I only have two years left. So EBT is gone. We banned it outright. No more welfare.
Starting point is 01:27:46 Good luck America. And then he just walks back. I'd be like, let's go. The problem is we've got these politicians who are like, well, you can't touch Social Security because then the boomers will vote against you and you'll lose political suicide. And you can't touch EBT because then you'll lose large swaths of urban voters. So we just need someone to go in there and be like, nah, I'm getting rid of all of your entitlements. They're gone. Bye. Good luck. I mean, I remember George Bush tried this. It was like, well, the problem is he'd already expended a bunch of political capital in the Iraq War so we couldn't get this across the finish line.
Starting point is 01:28:16 But he wanted to privatize Social Security. And he got all this pushback. at the time, the main opposition to it was, oh, well, it's going to cost a lot of money to accumulate all the stocks and index funds and whatever to support the Social Security. Well, it looks like the dumbest decision ever because what happened to the S&P 500 following the mid-2000s? It exploded. It would have paid for itself in like eight years, I think, is what I saw the estimate was. Now there's no people and it's insolvent. Yeah, I know. And so it's like, you know, we could have really solved a lot of problems here. But yeah, to your point, I mean, it's the third rail of politics. Democrats, Republicans can't touch it. They tried it in
Starting point is 01:28:49 France and everyone rioted. So it's like you really just do for that, which, you know, it's funny. I remember these, you have a least like debt hawk people and I would kind of roll my eyes at them. But like the older I get, the more I'm like, they kind of have a point like we are kind of screwed here. Like it's getting pretty bad. As far as like, you know, we're having to take on quite a lot of debt to keep entitlement spending going. And it's like, okay, well maybe, you know, maybe boomers should just, I don't know, pick themselves up by their bootstraps. Maybe they should downsize. I know a poster put up some great photos on the border of some cheap homes that they could potentially purchase. I used to be very much a fiscal hawk and and I kind of got to the point where I'm like,
Starting point is 01:29:25 this is a, this is a pointless endeavor. Making a stink about this, like making it, you know, consistently talking about the debt and stuff. It's like, look, no one is going to do anything about it. Yeah, literally. Because there is just no political incentive to actually do anything. No one is more black pill than dead hawks. Like when you talk to them, like it's over. It's, I mean, it is. I mean, right, it's, you know, 40 trillion. I'm as massy on, you know, we're spending more are spending as much now on interest as we do on national defense. And that's going to increase, obviously. In what is it, 233, the benefits have to, they have to start cutting people's benefits.
Starting point is 01:30:02 Then you're going to see real, you're going to see, you know, boomers start to freak out, you know. And there's no young people that are going to care at all. They're going to be like, F you guys have done this to yourself. The thing with Social Security is like when we hit it, I think it's 2032 is the estimate is when the fund, right? The fund that pays for Social Social Security. security will go bankrupt. Well, they're just going to kick the can further down the road because what's going to happen? We actually had this problem, I think, a few decades ago, where the fund was running out in Congress just bit the bullet. What they did was they just allocated spending from
Starting point is 01:30:29 other departments, other entitlement spending packages, and then put it into social security. The boomers are going to get theirs. Yeah, they're going to find a way. That is number three right now. The top 10 of the light items for the U.S. budget is Social Security, Healthcare, mainly Medicaid, followed by debt. Interest on the debt. Did you know that two? Did you know that 2% of our annual budget goes to dialysis? To dialysis, 2% goes to dialysis. I think the problem is like, so Trump wants housing prices to stay elevated because boomers want their, they want value in their investments.
Starting point is 01:31:06 So Gen Z can't buy houses because of this incongruence. Boomers are going to live for a really, really long time. How are young people supposed to buy houses and have families if houses are being retribuneration? if houses are being retained by an older generation who no longer needs them. Yeah. It could be solved by, you know, increasing the supply of houses and getting rid of the illegal. That would decrease the value of the homes held by boomers. I'm talking about it could be, it could make it more affordable for young people.
Starting point is 01:31:35 But yes, I understand. And there's many ways to get housing prices down. But Trump doesn't want them to go down because he wants boomers to see an appreciating asset and then vote for him. young people don't vote. So they should be the most powerful voting block because they typically outnumber the old generations. But now Gen Alpha is half the size of Gen Z. So they're going to have zero power.
Starting point is 01:31:56 My prediction is when Gen Xers, when silent generation is gone, it's going to be principally boomers and Gen X on Social Security, they will vote to tax Gen Alpha like at 100%. And I mean that hyperbolicly. But they have to because the labor pool will not be big enough to fund. Social Security at the levels they want it to be funded. So there will be a policy that says, young people don't need the money. They're young. They can live with their parents. They should pay a higher tax rate until a certain age to fund Social Security. And they're going to make it even worse because they're trying to abolish property taxes. So in all these states are going to have to
Starting point is 01:32:33 crank up the taxes on actual taxpayers. So that way baby boomers don't like because they just got tired of paying taxes on their houses. And like it's a total bait and switch. I mean, I remember when I was like talking about this on the show. I had all these people that were like millennials or Gen X said or homeowners and like, no, I'm getting screwed too. Like, I support this. And I was like, I understand what you're coming from, but I promise you, when this starts manifesting in a policy, it is not going to shake out the way you think it's going to shake out. Everyone was right back here. What did I say? It was going to be a massive give to the boomers. As they said, Nancy Mays coming out, all these other prominent GOP figures came out and they said,
Starting point is 01:33:03 we're going to suspend property tax for seniors. And it's like the group that like probably needs the least relief. They should just be downsizing. And then to Tim's point, all this is going to do is just skyrocket the housing price. because again, the supply is going to completely retract because there'll be no more, there's no more explanation or no more incentive to downsize when you're older. Let's say California, Prop 13. No one sells their homes there,
Starting point is 01:33:26 and the housing market in California is through the roof. I mean, there's a variety of other reasons, but one of the main reasons is Prop 13. And it's like, you see it coming a mile away, and it's one of the things like Phil talked about. There's nothing you can really do about it because we're going to do, like, combat the voting bloc for the Democrat and the Republican parties.
Starting point is 01:33:41 Yeah, it's really the tension between liberty and democracy you know, Peter Thiel wrote, like, I think a famous essay a few decades ago about how some of these problems, and he's, you know, coming at it from a libertarian perspective, right? Some of these problems are not going to be solved. You just can't democracy, like, really is an obstacle. But, I mean, you can't really extricate yourself from democracy. So that's kind of why I take issue with Thomas Massey. Like, I agree with where he's coming from on a lot of these fiscal issues on, you know, foreign aid or whatever. But when he holds up something like the big beautiful bill saying like, oh,
Starting point is 01:34:14 look at all this, it's not cutting enough, and whatever. It's like, you know, it's fair to say that he's grandstanding, because, like, he's got to know that there's no chance that you're going to see these massive cuts that he's looking for. Especially because the context was, like, Doge had just failed, basically. Like, sorry, Doge didn't really work. And so we just came out of, like, we created an entire government program whose entire job was to cut out
Starting point is 01:34:34 excess spending. Right. They failed in a lot of ways. It's not their fault. They had, like, some of the best guys in Washington. It's just the Washington bureaucracy makes it impossible to make cuts to a lot of government programs. So we had just come off the heels of realizing we're stuck in many ways.
Starting point is 01:34:49 And then Thomas Massey was like, I'm going to throw a wrench in this, which I think ultimately was just... Yeah, you just have to, you know, politics is the art of the possible, right, Bismarck, I think famously said that. And what that means at the end of the day is you have to understand like what can be accomplished and what can't. And if you're operating in a fantasy world where you think that you can solve certain You know, America, it's still possible we have a bright future, but certain problems, like,
Starting point is 01:35:15 at least in the short term, are not going to be solved. And that doesn't just apply to- - Well, it'd be really nice to those serious people talking about. This problem with Massey was like, okay, I even agreed with a lot of things he was saying. But again, when you start attacking, back to the original conversation we're having, the only politically viable vehicle to deliver on your ideas, and you start throwing your toys out of the prime and attacking him, it's like, yeah, it's a way for him to get publicity, yeah, for himself. So it's like, if you would just stay, loyal to Trump and then put, that's what, people don't realize how many, like, for example, Israel is this big thing. Do you think he was the only congressman to vote against aid to Israel? No, there was like
Starting point is 01:35:49 19 of them. The reason you don't hear about them is because they're not like trying to grandstand. They're just staying loyal to Trump. They realize he's the most viable political vehicle for their ideas. They stay loyal and then they push that issue within MAGA. That's how you do it. That's politics. That's how you operate within politics. But when you just want to be like a podcast. Yeah, nobody, nobody cares about how to operate within politics, at least at least not when they're, you know, launching tweet after tweet after tweet about how, uh, how much they hate Donald Trump because he didn't deliver, uh, you know, a hundred million deportations in the first year. Right.
Starting point is 01:36:20 Look, and that's something that I talk about on the show all the time. Like, nobody wants to talk about how the sausage is made. Nobody, nobody wants to talk about what's actually possible. And the point that you make that, that Donald Trump is the most viable political vehicle, that's something that is totally lost on most of the people that are P-Oed. They didn't get exactly what they want. There is no better option. You know, Trump said, I got to teach you people how to win.
Starting point is 01:36:42 I mean, he went to the libertarian convention. She was speaking to them, and they sort of booing him because he disagreed with him on a pet issue. And he said, okay, have fun getting your 2% in every election. Yeah, that was funny. I wonder if what happens is you get this corporate press. And eventually, people start asking questions that the press won't answer. They refuse to answer. So people start saying, like, the media's lying about half the stuff, right?
Starting point is 01:37:01 So the internet comes along. And, you know, you get the cool kids who are basically like, we want legitimate conversations, real authentic news and information. So this creates the rise of many podcasts. Then a bunch of grifters say, I'm going to do this too, but they're not good at it. So they just fake it and they lie and they make fake news. And now we're at a point where we are worse off because of social media. We had this early period where people were like, I know I turn the news and they're not telling me the truth. So we found alternative voices and honest people.
Starting point is 01:37:32 But then you get this phenomenon. One thing I've brought up is that there are people, what they'll do is they'll take an episode of this show. they'll cut things that I say, then take an episode of the Young Turks, they'll put my head in one of those like graphic boxes next to Jank Yugar, and they'll edit it to make it seem like we're debating each other on an issue. It's wild, and they'll get 50,000 views from doing it, and that's money, that's money. So I'm just thinking about right now, like, I was watching that Jubilee thing with Dave Rubin and that Parker dude was on it. And the arguments from that Parker get a job are basically like eighth grade textbook arguments, well prepared, but extremely
Starting point is 01:38:12 rudimentary and misunderstanding the function of a society. But if you're not prepared for these basic questions or how to answer, like how to respond to these tactics, you will look foolish. And regular people don't react to sound arguments. They react to the appearance of sound arguments, which is why a lot of these online debaters are not genuinely trying to understand reality or solve problems, they're trying to make you look stupid. There's a lot of tactics in that. One of the most famous that people know about is the Gish Gallup. If you're debating someone, just say as many things as possible, as fast as possible, so they
Starting point is 01:38:45 can't respond to you. And then if they try to, you can say, let me finish my point. You're interrupting me so they can't actually address what you're saying. Another thing you can do is ask something that is clearly and obviously nonsensical. That's what Parker does. He asks something that doesn't have a functional answer or a deep answer. The example I'll give is the one that went viral where Dave Rubin, he was asked by Parker, what is one metric by which you can say Trump has improved the economy.
Starting point is 01:39:12 And Rubin makes the point that he's been for a year and a half. The big, beautiful bill only just got signed, so the effects of that. And then all Parker does is just ask him the same question again. And when Dave doesn't have an immediate response, all of the liberals start laughing. The purpose of that clip is so that an ignorant liberal who doesn't understand the function of society, sees them laughing at Rubin and then says, I don't want to be laughed at. Or for some people, they'll be like, he must be right because Dave didn't have an answer. Parker's intention is not to have a rational discussion to solve our problems.
Starting point is 01:39:48 It's to talk quickly and ask you questions that don't have functional answers that you can't answer. So I don't necessarily agree with Dave Rubin because I think you can actually see with the elections, the shift in the economies based on policy. But if the question is, what is an economic metric by which you think Trump has improved the country, that's a loaded question that misses the point of what the function of a country is. So to give you an example, I think the economy is bad. I think Trump's policies have ultimately resulted in some short-term losses that clearly
Starting point is 01:40:21 comparable next to Joe Biden. But let's take a look at the big picture. To answer Parker's question for you, when he asked Dave Rubin this, one metric I can cite that has been improved in the economy is the decline in ill. illegal immigration. And that was the second biggest issue in the 2024 election. Trump solved that problem. And the reason why it was a big problem is that people were feeling economic pressure from it, so it overlapped with the economy. Now, you might say that the economy is worse off because of tariffs. Joe Biden flooded this country with illegal immigrants so we could get a short-term
Starting point is 01:40:51 economic boost. So it looked like jobs were coming in, so it looked like economic activity was happening. But it was at the cost of social cohesion, which ultimately will be a detriment to this country. So the question, name one metric that Trump, by which Trump has improved this country of the economy, is a fake question. It preys upon the ignorance of an individual that thinks graph go up means country improves. So this is the problem we have with podcasts and social media is that there are a lot of people that are no longer, and I'm not going to pretend like corporate press is good or anything like that, but the people need to get their information from well-reasoned arguments from honest actors who are trying to understand and might have reasonable disagreements
Starting point is 01:41:30 and be respectful. Instead, what we have is these fake internet debates where everyone just acts like they're flabbergass and the other person's a moron. And it's the worst, most cringe-inducing content. I can't stand it, but it's entertainment. So a lot of these people love it. And I'll just say it like this. We had Adam Kano over on the show. I asked some questions about free speech in the UK and Islam. Tens of millions of views on that clip. I was getting blown up left and right. We had Luke Beasley on the show, I roasted him over January 6, goes massively viral. I'm not interested in having someone come on the show who is dumb as a box or rocks who doesn't know what they're talking about, so that it looks like I'm smarter than them. I want to have people on the show that we're going to have
Starting point is 01:42:07 an honest conversation about the functions of this country and our government in the future of this planet. The problem is that's the least entertaining form of political content. People just want to see me, whether I'm right or wrong, insult someone who they disagree with as a symbol of the things they feel oppressing them getting smacked down. That is going to result in social discohesion and ignorant people voting for dumb policies, which is what we had for some time. Yeah. I mean, the ignorant people voting for dumb policies is basically standard procedure for the past at least 50 years, and it's causing massive problems, which is why I'm an advocate to limit the franchise as much as possible. Yeah, I mean, like, you know, people will always
Starting point is 01:42:51 vote in their self-interest. Well, typically they'll vote in their self-interest. the problem is when there's massive Gibbs on the line. And that muddies the waters. And then all you have to do is just say, well, I'll just keep the gravy chain flowing. And then you're not sure going to absorb all this. The biggest mistake is having illiterate people in politics. When you say illiterate, you mean actually can't read.
Starting point is 01:43:09 Figuratively illiterate. Okay. People who, you know, it is a challenge, right? Would, you know, imagine you go to, you're in the operating room and there's a group of surgeons and they say, we have to remove the appendix or this person will die, let's put it up for a vote with the people that are standing out in the park. That's how our country functions. And, you know, it's not going to work out very well. The worst thing is when a handful of the people come into the room and say,
Starting point is 01:43:38 don't worry, I'm a surgeon, I went to school and got a degree, and they didn't. Or the degree was from a fake school. Or Pfizer comes in and says, just agree with us. The appendix can stay, give him this drug instead. You said, you got a boss. We have a lot of problems in this country. I think what we need is strong moral fortitude community. And, you know, you find that more with the Trump side than any other side, unfortunately for the liberals. They seem to just, you know, like the libertarian party is a good example of this as well. I described the libertarian party is a collective of individuals that want something gross and illegal to be legal. So they form under one group of libertarianism, claiming that they believe in freedom, but it's really just, if you go to
Starting point is 01:44:25 a libertary convention, you know what I'm talking about. There'll be some weird pervert guy being like, I think this weird thing should be legal. I'm like, you're not a libertarian. You're just a creep. You're a weirdo. And that's why they nominated Chase Oliver, like principal weirdo. The libertarian party has many, many problems. You saw the excise New Hampshire, right? Yeah, the only party was actually doing it. the place that's having the most success for libertarian policy in the whole country and they're just like, oh, we don't want to
Starting point is 01:44:55 associate with you because you guys are mean. I think if you are sincerely a libertarian, like you should be thankful for the libertarian party because that's just like a corraling of all like the news on serious people on planet earth. And then all the libertarians are actually like somewhat serious just operate within the Republican Party. Exactly.
Starting point is 01:45:10 Because the libertarian party, like I said, you go to the convention and I'm looking to all these different groups and I'm like, so you're libertarian? I think raw milk should be legal. And I'm like, okay, what other policies are you just interested in? Well, you know, I don't know. There's that classic clip, the classic clip where they're asking the panel their thoughts on driver's licensees. Right. Yeah, yeah.
Starting point is 01:45:28 One guy was like, I need a license to cook toast in my own damn toaster. And then Gary Johnson gave, by the way, the only guy's won an election on that stage. And he gets up and he says, I don't know, I'd like to see a little competency before someone drives. And he just gets to. Everyone starts booing. Yeah, it's such a good thing. And the guy in the diaper comes on stage. It's like, it's kind of fun to be on. honest. Like if you... Do you remember when... We tailgate it the next Libertarian?
Starting point is 01:45:50 They asked Austin Peterson. I think it was, what did they ask them, if people in America should be allowed to sell heroin to children? And he goes, no, and they boot him. Very freezing. I'm like, dude, this is what happens to go to a libertarian convention. There's a guy, and you're like, what's your principal position? He goes,
Starting point is 01:46:07 I want to sell heroin to kids. And you're like, I don't want that. I just don't want wars, and I want lower taxes. And it's like, well, then vote Republican, I guess. But then you get wars. So there's nobody to vote for it. The whole, like, you know, the whole purpose of the libertarian convention is just to illustrate to the American people that their ideology is actually more incoherent than we previously thought. Yeah. All right. Let's grab some of these comments, Rumble Rans, Superchats, and all that good stuff.
Starting point is 01:46:32 Smash the like button. Share the show with everyone you've ever met. Join us at Timcast.com because the uncensored portion of the show is coming up at 10 p.m. If you want to watch, you've got to be a Rumble premium member. But as a Timcast Discord member, you can call in and all of your chat. appear on the screen for better or for worse. All right. Shade P says brick by brick, relatively objective. So it's proof we're living in crazy times. There is a man with hostages and an explosive in a Chase Bank right now. And it's not even tracking as national
Starting point is 01:47:02 news, let alone as a headline. We did have this pulled up. We did. We know about it. But you are correct. We are desensitized, demoralized, and brain fried. There are much bigger stories right now. the 90s, this would have been the biggest story would be on every news station they'd be like, this is crazy. Yeah, America's like loki a GTA server now. Like I was, I was like following the news with Trump and the war and everything. And then I was scrolling Twitter and there was an emu'd
Starting point is 01:47:28 on the loose terrorizing Maryland. And I'm like, this is just awesome that like no one cares about this. We're in a simulation, man. 50 years ago they had folk songs about him. They'd be a hero. Yeah. Shnage Barry says, I voted today but I'm pessimistic. It's hard to vote when you see how brainwashed people are. Voting based
Starting point is 01:47:45 on race instead of policies. Let's go Chad or Hilton. Did you see that, remember that video of the guy who asks the black woman at the pride parade when she transitioned? And she's like, I'm a woman. He's like, no, I know. Yeah, you're a woman. But like, how was it transitioning for you?
Starting point is 01:48:01 And she goes, do you think I'm a man? And he goes, no, no, no, you're a woman. Like, we totally support you. I get it. Like, that was an epic troll. He has another one where he's like an Indian guy. And he's interviewing him in L.A. And he's like, so who are you voting for?
Starting point is 01:48:14 And was it, was it L.A.? who was it? I think it was L.A. I don't know. He asked who he's voting. Yeah, yeah, yeah, yeah, yeah, yeah. And he's like, Nithia Rahman. And he's like, oh, why are you voting for her? And he goes, well, she's Indian, you know, and he was Indian. And he's like, oh, okay, okay, cool, cool. But you know, there are a lot of people that, you know, like they'll vote for Trump, they'll vote for Spencer Pratt. And he's like, yeah, he's like, how do you feel about that? He's like, I don't know, you know, not very good. And he goes, well, a lot of these people are only voting for him because he's white. And then he goes, yeah, yeah, for sure.
Starting point is 01:48:42 And he goes like, what do you think about that? And he's like, well, I think it's bad, you know? And he's like, yeah, voting for someone based on their race is bad, right? And he's like, yeah. And I'm just like, this is what you get. Yeah, literally. Yeah, the tribe. Vote counts as much as ours.
Starting point is 01:48:56 You know, it's funny is that like the white racial awakening happened in the 2010s maybe. And it was split in the two directions with the left white people being like, man, white people suck. And the right-leaning white people being like, stop ragging on white people. and then also white nationalist. But it's going to be a funny wake-up call, or I don't even know if it'll be a wake-up call, to white people when they're getting stabbed by an eight-inch ceremonial blade and then called the oppressor.
Starting point is 01:49:24 Yeah, literally. I mean, yeah, I mean, I was making the point on Twitter is, you know, the main difference here, obviously, is the United States of Waccability. And, you know, this is, like, people are very concerned about the fact that America doesn't have walkable cities, but the upside is the Sikhs can't get to us with the ceremonial knives. But the downside is they use their ceremonial trucks to kill us now.
Starting point is 01:49:41 It's a huge problem. And there's actually like a degree of seriousness to that because, again, same thing happens after that. Massive cover up. They all join together. Make sure that no one in the DOT hears about this is a huge problem. And yeah, like on your point of, you know, the way people are interpreting it, I mean, you know, there is the, again, the data coming out that the white births have gone up.
Starting point is 01:49:59 And, you know, a lot of people are saying, well, this is a good thing. You know, you want to see, like, the core American population just, like, go away forever. Like, I think most honest people can admit that would be a little sad. But the left-wing reaction from left-wing white people, they were just. like, this is great news. They were, like, really upset because they were like, it was great news that we were declining. And they asked one girl who was, like, saying, well, I can't wait for whites, like, disappear. And she was white.
Starting point is 01:50:24 And they're like, well, what about you? And she said, I would just kill myself. And I'm like, fair enough. She's committed to the bit. But that also, like, kind of demonstrates that it is suicidal. Ultimately. Suicidal empathy. Indeed, man.
Starting point is 01:50:36 All right. We got this, John Rambo says, many millennials who didn't serve rode the coattails of industrial war machine. life was good, easy. Yeah, I don't know. When I was 22, I was homeless, sleeping on floors. The economy had crashed. There were no jobs. I remember I went to apply it to be a dishwasher at a small diner in Chicago.
Starting point is 01:50:55 And I had his single sheet printed out resume. I was, how old was I was, I was 22. And standing in front of me was a guy in a suit with the briefcase. And there was like, there's at the counter. And I'm like, I don't know what he's doing. He walks up and I hear him say, I'm looking to apply for the dishwasher position. and he puts his briefcase down, opens out a pants of resume,
Starting point is 01:51:13 and I just turned on and walked out. But it was funny because the response I got from everyone was being like, dude, there's no way they were going to hire that guy to be a dishwasher. They were going to hire you, a young man looking for minimum wage job to wash dishes.
Starting point is 01:51:26 And I was like, yeah, but it wasn't just about that. It was just like kind of hopelessness. Blackpilling to see someone that, you know, kind of distinguished. Yeah, I mean, millennials, did we have it super easy? I mean, I don't actually know.
Starting point is 01:51:40 We had the 2008. financial crisis and that hit for me. I'm 37. I was, yeah, I was what, like 18 or so then? So it's kind of like a rough time to have the economy just kind of take a turn for the worse. Yeah. But Zoomers had COVID. So it's not that I'm dashing, you know, Gen C or anything. Yeah, but millennials had COVID. You know what I mean? Yeah, yeah, we did too. I mean, they had it at a younger, more formative time. But yeah, like, other way, that was six years ago. I know. Yeah, COVID hit my freshman year of college. But like, you know, I did get some benefits from it. Like, when all the school was at home, like, you really?
Starting point is 01:52:11 didn't have to do very much work. Okay, so I take that back, Gen Z. They had it easy because of COVID. And like one point for the Zerries as far as like that we do have a bit of, you know, agility or able to navigate this is like we can just like scam each other. Like that's kind of the nice thing. We're all just scamming each other all the time. My daughter is going to be doing like hard labor.
Starting point is 01:52:30 She's going to be like tended to the chickens. She's going to be planting vegetables. She's going to be moving. She's going to be doing farm work. And it is not good for a person. in school for a child to not do work to sit around. Sure. Especially during formative years.
Starting point is 01:52:46 So I say that with somewhat a bit of facetiousness, but I fully expect to have my daughter doing chores and doing work for everything. There will be no snow plow parenting. It's going to be like if you want something to earn it, do the work, no sitting around. I think that's like one of the biggest white pills, honestly, is the fact that every single new parent that I'm speaking to, like, almost bar none has said something similar as far as, like, no, my children will not have iPads. My children will learn to work.
Starting point is 01:53:09 They'll learn to earn things. And I'm like, every single new parent, just in the last three years is saying something along those lines, that actually gives me a lot of hope for the generation coming up right now. You know, what we're doing is, like I said, is we have a bomb shelter where we're going to live for 30 years, pretending the year is 1990. And then we're going to emerge after the fact having my daughter only lived the natural 90s childhood the way I did, which was the perfect childhood, fight me. Yeah, I mean, because some people like do have this bit of helplessness. I'm like, well, what are you going to do? I'm like, that's kind of one of the nice things about how, like, the, the, world we're in is you still, like, you don't have to put, again, TVs on your fridges. Like,
Starting point is 01:53:44 you can just, you can still live like an analog, um, lifestyle. Like, no one's forcing you to not do so. And I think the only thing that maybe you need to have to operate in the modern world is like some level of smartphone. Beyond that, like at your house, you have total control over how much internet there is in your house, et cetera, et cetera. All right. We got a fool's journey. He says, a relegare religion to tie back to bind to thwart from further progress. Guber Mayor plus men's is government, mind control. Both were rendered unto man to make us self-police. Interesting.
Starting point is 01:54:19 D. Alders is a simple example of the difference of having a kid is the scene in half-blood Prince when Lily in her last moments tells Harry she and James love Harry as a parent that rips your heart out. For sure, but what kind of took it away from me is how Voldemort was like dumb as a box of rocks. You know, you see that meme where it's like
Starting point is 01:54:38 how awful of a villain was Voltaire? He couldn't kill a baby. It's like you can pick it up and drop it. They're fragile. Yeah. It's like, imagine if Voldemort was just like, this is the baby? Don't, okay, problem solved. Instead, he's like, oh, oh, and then like blows up and turns into smoke or something, I guess.
Starting point is 01:54:59 I'm not clued in on the Harry Potter alert. I don't think I've ever seen a Harry Potter man. I mean, I gotta be honest, Harry Potter is one of the dumbest stories ever. I was like, it makes literally no sense. But it was fun as a kid reading it because it, you know, You're a kid reading a dumb book. You know what I mean? Yeah.
Starting point is 01:55:14 But like, there's so much in Harry Potter that is just really dumb and makes literally no sense. But, you know, J.K. Rowling, she made great IP. She'd, you know, been very popular. But there's just so many holes. Well, it became like... Apparation in the flu network, coexisting makes no sense. And then in the later movies, because appellate, like, teleporting, basically, exists. No one's using flu network.
Starting point is 01:55:35 And it's like, a hundred years ago, everybody just teleported wherever they want to go. But in the future, everybody has to travel through chimneys. There's a lot of stuff like that. Yeah, I like the books as a kid growing up, like reading them in elementary school. And with the girl I was seeing, we watched the movies, you know, like a few years ago. And I was like, man, I can't believe I was into this.
Starting point is 01:55:52 This is, like, really bad. And it's like a lot of small stuff like that that you notice now, maybe not so much as a kid, but also just every, every book or every movie is like kind of the same thing. Like, oh, you know, you, in the last book, they defeated, like, Voldemort's latest manifestation or whatever. Then like, okay. back to school and like you know exactly what's going to happen like Baltimore is going to like find
Starting point is 01:56:13 some new way to get back and it's like they did like 10 books of that or something. Not to mention the Marauders map breaks the whole series completely. Like so the Marauders map is invented I guess by like, you know, Serious Black and James Potter or whatever. Or they have it for some reason. I don't know. I think they made it. And it reveals the names of everybody in Hogwarts walking around.
Starting point is 01:56:38 and then it's Fred Weasley and was his twin brother Bill No Bill was the older brother Ron? No no Ron was the main character with Harry But the twin brothers They have the map I guess
Starting point is 01:56:53 They give it to Harry And it's like You never notice that your 10 year your 11 year old brother Was sleeping with a guy Like The plot is Harry's like It doesn't work anyway
Starting point is 01:57:05 Because there's a name of someone I know to be dead It's like Peter Petigrew and he's like, how could that be true, Harry? And then that's how they figure out that Peter Pettercru never died. And it's like, so, you know, Ron's brothers are like looking at the map and they're like, well, there's that guy sleeping with our 11 year old brother again. So whatever, I guess.
Starting point is 01:57:22 Yeah, I noticed it kind of became like star signs for Reddit atheists because they'd be like, oh, I'm a Gryffindor. It's so me. That is so me to a T. It's unbelievable. All right. Let's grab some more. We got. Captain Crispy says, I've been listening to you for years. I just want to support you guys and let you know. I appreciate all the hard work.
Starting point is 01:57:39 Appreciate it, good, sir. Always, always appreciated. Let's see what else we got here in the old superchats. Forsec Sprite says, just saw Steyer Santa Ana, his major selling point, stopping Trump's DHS power. I asked his thoughts on Spencer and Bianco after his limpy handshake. He said, Spencer was a weird dude and Bianco was a wasted vote. Then I said I got Bianco seeking tokens.
Starting point is 01:58:03 Seeking tokens? What is that? Interesting. You know, I know some. I know somebody. I'm not going to put her on blast, but she made a video campaigning for Nithia Raman. And in it, she touted all the good things that Nithi Raman has done in like her career and her job. And I said, okay. And then she just insulted Spencer Pratt. And I was like, you know, I would have infinitely, I would have respected this infinitely more if you actually brought up Spencer Press arguments. If your argument against Spencer Pratt as he has no public administration experience, you can make a legitimate argument by saying, here's why I like Nitha Raman.
Starting point is 01:58:37 She's in the city council. She's made proposals, blah, blah, whatever your argument may be. I don't like her. I think her proposals are bad. But if you made that argument, and then he said, Spencer Pret has legitimate grievances. His house burned down. He is upset and rightly so. But that will not translate into functional governance. That would be a respectable argument. Now, humbly, I disagree. I think change is a good thing. But I don't respect is that when someone just lies about what Spencer Pratt is doing and why he's doing it. Just tell me the truth. Give me your argument. I'll consider it. This is politics. Lie cheat and steal for power. That's what people do. consistently. Indeed. All right. Marushia says, what's not being talked about in NJ is how Muslims are slowly taking over communities like Patterson,
Starting point is 01:59:18 even displacing other ethnic enclaves such as Koreans in Fort Lee. I'm glad Icer and Newark, but the issue is everywhere. Yeah, Patterson's rough. But I'm not worried about the Koreans because you know what happens when they get surrounded
Starting point is 01:59:31 and they go on their rooftops. Yeah. That's true. Very true. They do it. We had a day off in deer. born on the tour and it was it was the worst day off of the tour yeah you forgot your rare rug yeah pretty rough yeah happens all right let's see what we got to yeah all right
Starting point is 01:59:51 texas sister says for women with bad menstrual problems that's what paid sick time and vacation time is for i have migraines and for years had to take all my sick time and vacation time i just i just literally don't care i'm sorry like i'm not going to play some stupid game here's the nature of reality if a woman and a man apply for the same job, and the woman says, my hoo-hoo hurts and I need time off from work, they'll say, okay, the position's been filled. That's it. And there's going to be a guy who's going to be like,
Starting point is 02:00:20 my hoo-hoo only hurts if it gets kicked. I'm going to be like, just don't kick it and you can keep working, right? Yeah, no sick time. Welcome aboard. But no one talks about the sperm cramps. I mean, I think we can all let this table attest to the sperm cramps. It's just that men don't bitch about it. We don't complain about it.
Starting point is 02:00:34 It's brutal, but I get really bad ones. It feels like barbed wire wrapped around my junk, twisted, and one day I was at a bodega buying bread, and I woke up surrounded by medics asking me if I was pregnant. It's true. Yeah. Yeah. Because my sperm cramps were so bad. But yeah, we don't see us going on. It's just that men are so strong, they never bring it up.
Starting point is 02:00:56 But it is. If it's not a cold, it doesn't hurt us. I do want to see Alex Stein do a press conference about eating Taco Bell and complaining about how he needs extra time off because he likes to. eat Taco Bell every month. That's kind of valid to be fair. No, my argument is this, before we go to the uncensored portion, you don't get to simultaneously argue that, one, men and one are equal, two, that women deserve extra paid time off because they're not equal. Three, that anybody, whether they have a uterus or otherwise, can be a woman. You don't get to argue these things at the same time. So it's like, women should, okay,
Starting point is 02:01:29 I'll tell you what, if I'm a guy and I'm in California and they pass it law, I'm just going to be like, put me down as women. I get three days off extra per month, right? If you say you're, how can you have sex-based protections when you claim anyone can identify with any sex? So how can you claim women should get extra paid time off when a guy can just say someone to get paid time off? It's just nonsense. We're going to go to the uncensored portion of the show at rumble.com slash timcast. I or else. Smash the like button, share the show with everyone you've ever met in your life.
Starting point is 02:01:57 Join us at timcast.com. You can follow me, of course, at Timcast everywhere. Sir, would you like to shout anything out? Yeah, if people want to follow me at At Restore Order USA on Twitter, I'm there, and they can go to Patrickkasey.com to find my podcast. Thank you. Yeah, you can follow me on X and Instagram at Real Tate Brown. And I'll be here tomorrow on Rumble at noon
Starting point is 02:02:19 for the Timcast Daily News Live, and I am a Restoring Order subscribers. Make sure you guys go check out Patrick. It does excellent work. I think he's just consistently right about everything. So if you ever feel like quite made your mind up on an issue, I'd recommend just going over there and getting corrected. Solid advice. I am Phil that remains on Twix. The band is all that remains. You can check out our music on Apple Music, Amazon,
Starting point is 02:02:39 music, Pandora, YouTube, Spotify, and Deezer. We are playing Warp Tour on, I believe it's June 14th. It's a Sunday here in D.C. So you can get your tickets at Warptor.com or I think you can get them at All The Remainsonline.com, too. Don't forget the left lane is for crime. Carter. That's so sick, man. Warp Tour is legit. I'm Carter Banks. You can follow me at Carter Banks everywhere, at Carter Banks official, everywhere else. follow the label at Trash House Records on YouTube. Let's go to the after show. We'll see you all over at rumble.com in about 30 seconds. Thanks for hanging out.

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