Timcast IRL - Timcast IRL #259 - Biden Says He May Finish Building Trump's Wall In Hilarious FlipFlop /w JosieTRHL

Episode Date: April 7, 2021

Tim, Ian, and Lydia host Ron Paul libertarian commentator Josie, also known as The Red-Headed Libertarian to discuss Biden's decision to build that wall, a cartoon artist who thinks Jordan B. Peterson... might actually be a Nazi, Biden's decision not to enforce vaccine passports at this time, a former CIA director who really believes aliens are real after seeing a plane PAUSE in midair, and a crazy theory about why Mars is red. Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices

Transcript
Discussion (0)
Starting point is 00:00:00 At his latest press event, I suppose, we heard one of the most powerful statements from the president about building that wall. Strangely, it wasn't Donald Trump. It was Joe Biden, because he wants to restart construction on the wall because there's been an ongoing crisis at the border that's been exacerbated by Joe Biden himself. Talk about amazing hypocrisy and an amazing I told you so. What do you say to all these people who voted for biden where it's like oh you know all that stuff trump was doing turns out it was working and then you voted for biden to do something else and within a few months he realized what trump was doing was working now you got the b team because donald trump compared to joe biden was it i hate to say it but donald trump was the a team now you get get the B team. So Joe Biden's only recourse, I suppose,
Starting point is 00:00:45 is to do exactly what Trump was doing. It's amazing. He's actually going back on all of their promises. He said, we're not going to build that wall. We're going to stop building it. Beto O'Rourke actually said, tear the wall down. All the activists were like, shut down these child migrant facilities. We had AOC saying these are concentration camps. And it's not my opinion. It's expert analysis. Where's she at now? She's tweeting that concentration camps are actually just influx facilities with controversial records. Boy, that's one way to put it. Amazing. We were only a few months in and Joe Biden has already realized that Trump was right. How incredible is that? So we're going to talk about this, among other things. There's another really funny story. Apparently, Jordan Peterson is like the basis for the Red Skull in the new Captain America comic, which for some reason, these woke leftists
Starting point is 00:01:35 love defending Nazis. It's the weirdest thing. Of course, they'll call it conservative Nazi. But when it comes to literal Nazis, like the Red Skull, they're like, let's model him after Jordan Peterson, who is a mainstream and popular personality among regular people. Sure, they might try and claim that Jordan Peterson is fringe or whatever. But if you actually look at Jordan Peterson and the coverage has gotten, New York Times bestseller, new book coming out, he's appeared on talk shows, not super political, not super controversial. That's what they're claiming is the bad guy. That's creepy they're claiming is the bad guy? That's creepy stuff. We'll talk about it.
Starting point is 00:02:09 Joining us today is Josie, the redheaded libertarian. Hi, thank you for having me. Yeah, do you want to just give a quick little introduction? My name is Josie, and I am on Twitter at the E-T-R-H-L. You're a libertarian. I'm a Ron Paul libertarian. I'm a real libertarian. Not any of that LP crap. Oh, those are fighting words.
Starting point is 00:02:31 The Libertarian Party was yelling at me. The Libertarian Party of Texas was yelling at me. Remember when Joe Jorgensen tweeted, it's not enough to not be racist. We must actively be anti-racist. You know, I got blamed for that. You got blamed. I got blamed for that. I have nothing to do with that abomination. But someone thought that I tweeted that for some
Starting point is 00:02:50 reason. I have no idea who tweeted that. I don't know. I don't care who tweeted that. Joe Jorgensen tweeted it. No, it was people who work for her. Right, right, right. Oh, they thought you were. So they thought I worked for her and I tweeted and it was a rumor that I tweeted that. And I'm like, that's bizarre. But yeah. I just loved the idea of the Libertarian Party telling people what they must do. Yeah. That's kind of the opposite of what you're supposed to be preaching.
Starting point is 00:03:13 Remember when that guy got on stage and took his clothes off? Yeah. The Libertarian Party is great. The Libertarian Party is just devolved. Oh, the Libertarian Party. Oh, my God. Were they, at one point, awesome, like regular libertarians? Yeah. They used to be normal.
Starting point is 00:03:27 Now they're not normal. Yeah. Now there was like, apparently a couple of years ago, there was a debate over whether or not an individual should be allowed to sell drugs to kids. Oh, yeah. Austin Peterson. Shout out. Yeah, right.
Starting point is 00:03:39 Was that his argument? No, that was him. He said no. Are you nuts? He said everybody booed him. They booed him when he said no when he said no because he wouldn't sell the drugs to the kids like that's a line man no i mean there's like dude there's there's things that that the libertarian party nowadays skews to the point where like i don't even like to associate with it you know i, I started this as a Ron Paul libertarian, a small L, you know, understanding property
Starting point is 00:04:07 rights, self-ownership, personal responsibility, accountability, and the non-aggression principle. And it's devolved into this like Marxist, like all the talking points. How weird is that, right? It's like the worst part of wokeness, but with like pro-corporate authority. It's the opposite. And so if you think about, for instance, like we want to abolish the borders, that's right out of the Communist Manifesto. That's chapter two. You can go ahead and get it from the library or your Marxist neighbor and read it.
Starting point is 00:04:43 Chapter two, it talks about abolishing nations, abolishing borders, taking that stuff down. And it's like, you know, there should be a path to immigration, an easy path to immigration. You should, you know, like show up, say, hi, I'm a stonemason. Here's my family.
Starting point is 00:04:58 I fled Venezuela. Please let me in. They go, all right, let's do fingerprints. Oh, you're not a terrible person. Go in. You can't all right, let's do fingerprints. Oh, you're not a terrible person. Go in. You can't get benefits for six years. Yes. You know, figuring out where they can survive and not be tossed randomly into a gutter is
Starting point is 00:05:12 one of the big problems. Yes. So all the open borders people, it's like, send them to the ghetto. Like, no, we want to fix that. So we'll rag on the Libertarian Party. Oh, yeah. We got Ian Easton. What up, everybody?
Starting point is 00:05:23 Ian's wearing a brown shirt. Ian Crossley. Hanging out with this awesome periodic table of the elements with a piece of each element. The best? Except for the radioactive ones. Yeah. Yeah. It'd be bad for you.
Starting point is 00:05:32 A few other choice elements. But there's literally a piece of each element in this acrylic. It's very cool. But does every single radioactive element emit gamma waves? I don't know. Because it's the alpha and beta particles. I guess they emit gamma radiation. I don't know enough about it. the alpha and beta particles. I guess they emit gamma radiation. I don't know enough about it.
Starting point is 00:05:46 You're the chemist, though. Me? I'm not. We also got Lydia Presson Buttons. I am pushing buttons in the corner. I'm Sarah Patchlitz.
Starting point is 00:05:53 And Josie's hair makes my hair look completely brown, not red at all. So I'm enjoying this red-haired company. We absolutely must talk about Joe Biden
Starting point is 00:06:01 wanting to build that wall. Before we do, my friends, smash that like button, subscribe, hit that notification bell. We are so close to 1 million subscribers. And with your help, we will get there. So thank you all so much. If you're listening on iTunes or Spotify, leave us a good review because it helps as well. But go to timcast.com first and foremost, become a member to get access to members only exclusive posts, even full episodes. We've got
Starting point is 00:06:23 a huge library of content that we've been expanding and building up now. We're doing about four per week, which means we've been doing this for a few months. There's probably several dozen videos that you could watch from all of your favorite guests like James O'Keefe, like Seamus from Freedom Tunes and Jack Murphy and even Michael Malice. And you will get that if you become a member. But becoming a member helps support the show in the event that we get banned. This is where we will have all of our content and uh we had to set it up because as you've as you've seen with like steven crowder for instance yeah they're they're getting ban happy and it's possible but we got we have a bunch of really awesome stuff in the works i'm having uh pitch meetings with people
Starting point is 00:06:55 about doing shows and doing movies and just actual contents we might actually have a content library of tv shows and stuff should be a lot of fun. Again, Timcast.com. And again, smash the like button, share the podcast. Let's talk about Biden building that wall. We have the story from the Daily Mail. Biden now wants to restart construction on Trump's border wall to plug the gaps with kids camps way over capacity and a new surge of migrants coming from Guatemala. This is amazing. Joe Biden actually shut down the construction as soon as he gets in. Because people like Joe Biden and the people who voted for him. Look, I'm trying to be nice.
Starting point is 00:07:33 I'll be respectful. I understand a lot of people just didn't know what they were voting for when they voted for Biden. They hear something. There's no logical basis to it. It's just an emotional reaction. The wall is racist. Donald Trump is the Cheeto dictator. So the wall must be stopped. So Biden gets in and goes, yeah, come on, stop the wall.
Starting point is 00:07:50 You got to get the straight razor in the barrel and then banging on the fence to make it come down. And then he stops construction. And then all of a sudden we're dealing with this massive border crisis. Why? Because Biden basically signaled to all of these individuals in other countries, open for business. What did Biden say? More tournament deportations for 100 days. He lost that fight, but he still said it. So these people are thinking, under Trump, they're going to throw you out. At least you can try and get some media pity under Joe Biden. So here they come. Now, Joe Biden has no choice but to reopen the child detention centers. He's putting children under bridges in McAllen, Texas, sleeping in dirt.
Starting point is 00:08:30 And now he's going to rebuild the wall. I got to say, I wonder if the Trump supporters are going to be like, all right, we'll take the win on that one. You know, we were worried we weren't going to get the wall. And now Trump's going to build the wall. So how very strong leadership from Joe Biden, right? Yeah right yeah you know he actually said that he inherited this crisis it was exactly like this we just didn't hear about it because the media never would have smeared donald trump that's right that's right no never is it because of like a global recession that we're getting this influx of migrants or have we always well so there's there is there are seasonal waves that's true and jo And Joe Biden tried claiming there's no crisis. You know, it's it's it's seasonal wave. Come on, man. And what's actually happening because ABC, I think ABC and NBC journalists interviewed some illegal immigrants who are like, oh, it's because Joe Biden says he's going to be nice and he's giving us an opportunity to come. So you actually had, I can't remember who it was. I think it might've been CNN where they were like, you can't deny this. You've actually have,
Starting point is 00:09:28 oh no, no, no. I'm sorry. It was Jonathan Carl. I think he was talking to Brian Seltzer. Brian Seltzer of CNN was like, these are right wing talking points. And this guy from ABC is like, no, it isn't. Our reporter went down and the illegal immigrants said it's because of Biden. Well, there you go. you vote for a guy who screws it up and now the best he can offer is trying to do what trump was already doing it is true that the words of the president have resounding impact like when trump was like get him out of here hit that guy or something at a rally and then you saw started to see this wave of people punching people he said something like you know i would hit him you know, I'll pay the legal fees or something like that.
Starting point is 00:10:07 Someone decked a guy at one of his rallies. So it does. And if Biden mentioned that, even in passing, I can imagine it would definitely be affecting people. So there's, you know, there's one of the big problems with Trump during his presidency. But he did stop that. That was early in his campaigns. And then he was like, no, no, we can't do that. We'll let the police handle it.
Starting point is 00:10:22 Because he realized, like, no, I can't tell people to do something like that or support in any way. But with Donald. Sorry. I think some of that was going from being a celebrity, you know, celebrity businessman, like, well, like guy, friends of everybody. The first time he was ever booed was going down that escalator. Never been booed in his life.
Starting point is 00:10:38 So I think a lot of that was how he would have behaved as, you know, a personality. And then being like, oh, my gosh, I'm running for president. I can't say things like that anymore. However, because of things like that, imagine what these other countries must have been thinking when it's like, imagine you're, you know, like Iran or something. And they're like, we need you to go and have this meeting with Donald Trump. And the guy goes, what am I going to say to that guy? That guy's crazy.
Starting point is 00:11:02 No matter what I say, he's going to be yelling at me. And it's like, I'm not getting anything done. And so all of these countries are probably on edge every time they would meet with Trump or have to meet with the US because they're like, Trump is just going to demand
Starting point is 00:11:13 and there's nothing you can do to convince the guy. Now they got Sleepy Joe. Now they're all laughing and high-fiving each other. And they're like, yes. So imagine how everyone is feeling. You've got a lot of people
Starting point is 00:11:24 who want to come to this country. And I said this before. I'll say it again because I love saying it. I have infinitely more respect for illegal immigrants who are willing to crawl through, you know, walk through vast swaths of desert, risking their lives, going on a thousand-mile journey because they think America is that awesome. As opposed to these woke leftists who are like, America is racist and awful. Our health care is awful. It's like, OK, tell that to the people who are dying to come here, who are like surging at the border.
Starting point is 00:11:52 So I digress. These people want to come. They're regular people. They clearly see the rhetoric of Donald Trump was very extreme. We're going to send them back. You got to stay. We're going to build a wall. And they're like, you could risk this huge journey and they're going to We're going to send them back. You got to stay. We're going to build a wall. And they're like,
Starting point is 00:12:05 you could risk this huge journey and they're going to, they're going to kick you out into Mexico with the remain in Mexico policy. Now with Joe Biden, it's like doors open. Let's roll. That's right. How much more of the wall do they have to build? Well,
Starting point is 00:12:21 Biden wants to plug up some gaps. So like how complete is it? Are you guys familiar with it uh it's about i think last the last number i read was like 700 miles i think was it yes no that's correct yeah 700 yeah and what what they tried doing was smearing trump by saying like trump proposed a big beautiful wall 30 foot concrete from sea to shining sea and they were like you're not going to build 2,000 whatever miles of wall. Then what happens is when Trump gets in and he finally gets the funding, he starts reinforcing
Starting point is 00:12:51 select areas where there's serious problems, trafficking, smuggling, et cetera. And then they started claiming Trump's only replacing existing wall, which was the craziest lie because the wall, the wall, air quotes was like two pieces like two two by fours and an x shape with another two by four on top did you guys ever see the wall with your own eyes i've just seen pictures of of both i went to tijuana south there right by uh south south california and man it was junk it was like wooden posts going out into the water like 40 feet around like you could just swim out around it and go. Yeah, I've been to various points on the border. In the past few years, I was in Mexicali in Calexico, I think is the city's name.
Starting point is 00:13:33 And it's really amazing how it's actually in some ways rather porous legally. Like people just walk back and forth every single day like normal. So like some people in Mexico are like they walk up and they're like, here's my ID. It's like, what are you coming for? I'm going shopping. Have a nice day, sir. And they walk into the US, they go shopping and they go home. Where are you going? I'm going home. Have a nice day, sir. But yeah, you could see the wall and we went a little further out and you could see the I can't remember exactly what it's like fencing. You see the trucks driving along it. Well, so was donald trump wanted a big concrete wall and i guess cbp and ice they were like cbp said you don't want a wall because we need to see on the other side of it so they're like what if we do like fencing and then a wall
Starting point is 00:14:14 on top and they're like we need to see on the other side of it they made windows like you can walk through the wall yeah yeah just open like a regular old window with sliding glass doors well so so trump so so the media claims trump didn't build the wall mexico obviously didn't pay for it trump tried claiming the trade deal was gonna you know pay for whatever but uh he built select secure fencing triple layered in some areas so you've got one big fence a smaller fence and a smaller fence razor wire and cbp vehicles driving in between the two particularly secure well they were doing construction on joe biden stopped it and then boom border crisis yeah i heard that most migrants come
Starting point is 00:14:52 in uh via airplane i don't think that i don't think it's most oh but i think it's a lot okay they like flying to chicago well they they fly in on tourist visas and then stay yeah they're they're never leave yeah there are a bunch of other issues too that are legit. Like, what do they call it? Like, what is it called? Pregnancy tourism or something like that? Oh, yeah. Birth tourism.
Starting point is 00:15:10 Birth tourism. Yeah. Oh. Yeah. Where they fly and have a baby. Yep. Yep. So a woman will be, you know, on the verge of giving birth.
Starting point is 00:15:18 She'll fly here. You get three to six months depending on what your visa is. And they just wait, have the kid. The kid's a citizen. It could be. What do you guys think should be the criteria of immigrating to the United States? Hunger Games. If you've got to compete and only the person who survives
Starting point is 00:15:33 gets the citizenship, I'll watch. Obviously. I'll start it off. I think they should speak English. That's my number one. Really? Why? Because otherwise, I just want people to assimilate into the culture. That is a good point. Really? Why? Because otherwise, I just want people to assimilate into the culture.
Starting point is 00:15:46 That is a good point. Assimilation is a good point. I wonder maybe if they should commit to learning to speak English. Yeah. You know, like something on those lines as opposed to already knowing the English. They might not have the means to learn it. I understand the point, but I kind of feel like maybe Americansicans should learn more languages too and so that's racist you're saying that americans should learn more languages no cultural appropriation yes we speak english if we
Starting point is 00:16:15 learn spanish it's cultural appropriation i read that somewhere so it must be true remember those ladies who were making tacos in portland or whatever yeah they got shut down and the story was like they would look through the windows at Mexican restaurants to like see how things were done and that was stealing. And I'm like, dude, most of these restaurants, there's like – they have the abuelita making the corn tortillas in front of everybody to show you it's like real fresh. And it's just – it's like corn flour and water. You know what I mean?
Starting point is 00:16:40 And you just like – and you put it on the thing. It's just authentic when you got the nice little grandma. She's making it for you. went to one place was awesome right when you walk in there's like the the grill and there was a little you know mexican grandmother and she's smiling and waving and she's making tortillas and i was like this is going to be the best taco i've ever had but apparently i'm not supposed to like that oh it's great like you you have these these restaurants and they're like we want people to you know enjoy this stuff anyway going back to the main point.
Starting point is 00:17:06 Dude, look, we have Mexican restaurants all over the U.S. It becomes a part of our culture. We're the great American melting pot. I do get your point about speaking English because if people can't talk to each other, it's hard for them to work together. So I saw that when I went to Sweden, when you had the Somali migrants and refugees from 20 years ago, when they weren't properly integrated, they created their sort of own community that didn't work properly with the Swedish, you know, like community. And so it created poverty, it created poverty, it bred crime. And then the Swedes were super racist. And they were like, Oh, those people are bad. And it's
Starting point is 00:17:40 like, dude, you took people from a war torntorn country who were desperate. Good for you. I appreciate that. That's a good thing to do. But you then just drop them in a city center somewhere and left. And these people have no idea how to speak Swedish or get jobs. What were they supposed to do? You can't just do that. Saving the people was a great idea, but it's like half-assed.
Starting point is 00:18:01 And that's what's happening now with the left and the open borders people. They're like, let them come in. It's like, okay, after they come in and there's 90 miles of desert what do we do next i don't know when cbp picks up this kid and he's sick and dies they blame cbp for it should they just let the kid die in the desert they give you these half answers they're emotional there was like there was one group of people that put food and water randomly out in the desert and they got arrested for it, for littering. And it was this big thing on the left where they're like, oh, how awful are police?
Starting point is 00:18:29 It's so insane. They're trying to save migrants. I'm like, dude, you can't go into the desert and just put food and water on the ground and think you're feeding someone. Animals will come or you're just quite literally putting garbage out that no one's going to eat. It's the craziest thing. Emotional,otional responses.
Starting point is 00:18:45 And now here we are, months out, and at least Joe Biden's not tweeting mean things. Refugees I find a little different. I would be okay letting refugees in regardless of the language they speak because that's a different situation. But immigration, that's where I start to draw the line. Economic migration, I hear what you're saying. I guess the issue is
Starting point is 00:19:05 like in the place where i grew up everyone spoke polish some people didn't even speak english you know what i mean so there there are issues of integration if a large portion of an area can't communicate with like the gas station attendant what about uh ilhan's district dearborn no no no she's not dearborn that that's michigan that's sorry i'm totally across that yes um so but i'm thinking about dearborn i think dearborn michigan it's pretty much like you it's like you feel like you're going through another country when you go through dearborn but they speak english enough yeah and so it works like i went to i've been to dearborn a couple times and a lot of the businesses it's written so they've assimilated i've never seen it i've just we were talking about
Starting point is 00:19:47 um the swedish community and i was wondering if america had one i would say it was very similar in that you go there and or at least when i went there there are areas where everything's in arabic and you go to a restaurant but they can speak english and i had a great time i can be completely honest i understand maybe there are some concerns you are some concerns about maybe gangs or extremism or whatever. When I went there, went to a car wash, everybody was really nice. Went out to eat.
Starting point is 00:20:10 We went and got Mediterranean food. It was amazing. It was legit. Made by people who knew how to make falafel and hummus and all that good stuff. So I don't know. It is an issue of how can one community work with another community or the greater community if they don't understand each other.
Starting point is 00:20:29 But I'm not entirely convinced that that can't be navigated somehow like it's the worst thing in the world. You know what I mean? I don't think people need to – I'll put it this way. I don't think they need to be fluent in English. They need to be able to communicate. We need to be able to communicate with each other to a certain degree. So I don't know how you solve for that. I do agree with you on the refugee point, though.
Starting point is 00:20:51 Economic migrants who are coming here for work and for jobs should be able to interact and work with other people. And that requires probably a basic level of English because we are a predominantly English-speaking country. Yeah. Yeah. basic level of english because we are a predominantly english-speaking country you know yeah yeah it's good to be able to work but i also think there's a huge part of life that is not work i basically live for my work i really enjoy working and i like being able to talk to all you guys but at the same time if you want to be able to actually be a part of the culture that you're in you have to be able to speak well enough in the language that whatever country that you're in that you have to be able to like go out and meet in groups You have to be able to meet other people who already live there. I do think that fluency is a huge benefit to people who come to the U.S.
Starting point is 00:21:30 I wonder if this multiculturalism is something that's been in America for a long time. And I wonder if it's one of the reasons we see things in the United States we don't see in other parts of the world in the same levels. So actually, that probably makes no sense. I was going to say, like, when you look at certain police brutality instances, it's interesting if you go to a country like Sweden or Norway, which are overwhelmingly white, and they say, oh, but we don't have these things. And I'm like, perhaps there's a, you know, race plays a role, and there's like some kind of racism that can go in any direction that doesn't
Starting point is 00:22:04 exist in a homogenous community where they all agree speak the same language do the same thing it's not necessarily about race it's about i guess familiarity but i guess my point was that in the united states like there are segregated neighborhoods all over chicago it's it's all totally segregated no joke you cross you go from archer on the south side you go past cicero and the billboards are now in Spanish. You go the other direction. And then you got a bunch of signs in Polish. So how are these people going to, you know, interact or work with each other when they're just like very distinct and separate culturally, morally, and linguistically?
Starting point is 00:22:37 I feel like that could lead to an inability for people to come together and work together. For sure. Familiarity is key. Like if this isn't a race war, if anything, it's like a class war or familiar. Like you tend to be afraid of what you don't understand, the unknown, you know, and language plays directly into that. And a bias towards the in-group. So if you're an English-speaking American, you have a bias towards people who are like
Starting point is 00:23:02 you. And those within, you know, the Polish community in Chicago aren't going to be able to branch out and work. Their jobs are in their community. That's why their community, there's no way to go up. They're kind of stuck in that circle. There's no opportunities outside because you don't speak the language. But the older generation.
Starting point is 00:23:21 So what happens is the kids all speak English. Like Luke, for instance, he was on the show for a little bit and then he just abandoned us. Yeah, he left. Because he's a cold, callous individual. He just went to Narcopolco, Mexico. He went to Florida, I guess. But he was born in Poland. He moves here.
Starting point is 00:23:36 He grows up speaking English. He talked about how it was not so easy for him because when he came here, he didn't. But then he did, and now he's extremely, in my opinion, extremely important American defending American values. So that's why I'm not super concerned necessarily with people coming here who don't speak the language. If they can function and they can work and they can be a part of the community, their kids will grow up,
Starting point is 00:23:58 and it's really just about if we're doing right by our kids and teaching them the important values. However, I guess that's not something we're doing entirely at this point. A lot of people don't want to have kids. They're talking about, oh, I can't raise a kid in this environment. It's like, if you don't have kids, then who's
Starting point is 00:24:16 going to have kids? It's going to be like idiocracy. A lot of it, too, they're excusing themselves to be able to extend their own childhood. A lot of it is not that they don't want kids. Maybe in a different life they'd want kids. But right now they're very, it's a me generation. It's very, it's the most selfish generation ever.
Starting point is 00:24:34 I think the idea of childhood is a modern creation. So it's interesting when, I can't remember what it was, a Republican was like, kids need jobs. And then the Democrats were like, you want to go back to the 1900s, putting kids in factories? And it's like, no, but kids should do work with the family.
Starting point is 00:24:53 Right. But more than that, I think kids should spend more time seeing what their parents do for a living, understanding the real world, and we should be treating kids like adults. The problem is, as generation to generation has come and gone, it seems like it used to be you had a kid.
Starting point is 00:25:13 The kid had to grow up fast. There was war. There was death. There was famine. Stop crying. You're 13. You're a man now. And that's like pretty brutal.
Starting point is 00:25:20 And we're like, nah, we want to be kind of chill. But we keep pampering the next generation. Oh, yeah. Now it's like kids are – I say kids. Now you got people who are 26 years old and they're like just getting out of college and they've never had a job in their lives. It's like, dude, you're 26. Amazing.
Starting point is 00:25:36 I learned how to cook when I was 14. I didn't even realize this. I just realized this a couple days ago because I'm a bit of a chef, a cook. I love cooking. I love the smell. I'm making this. And I used to work at a chicken shack when I was 14. I think that directly contributed to my ability
Starting point is 00:25:50 to understand food. I didn't even think of that. You've got to learn, teach. You learn young, too. I went to South America. The kids would be boat captains at the age of nine. You'd go down the Amazon and they'd be full-on running the show, nine-year-olds. Imagine being 15 from one of these countries. You come to the United States and'd be like full on running the show. Nine year olds. Imagine being like 15 from one of
Starting point is 00:26:06 these countries. You come to the United States and you've been a boat captain running your own business. And then you come here and you see all these 15 year olds like sitting around picking their nose and you're like, wow, how are these people going to like, you know what it is, man? It is it is capital city Hunger Games, man. Affluenza. It is.
Starting point is 00:26:22 Yeah. Yeah. Americans in general are suffering from affluenza as a whole. A judge adjudicated that affluenza was a thing. Right, right. But listen, that's like the specific case. It's kind of like I roll my eyes at that ruling is ridiculous. But think about Americans in general, 15-year-olds, 16-year-olds, 17, 18-year-olds who don't have jobs and never did.
Starting point is 00:26:43 I had a job at 14. And before that, I was a volunteer at the YMCA. What was your job at 14? Uh, fast food. Perfect. Yeah. At 14. But how are you, how are you legally allowed to do that?
Starting point is 00:26:53 Because you could work at 14. I'm, I'm older than I look. Like a worker's permit. Yeah. When did they change the law to be that you had to be 16? Shortly after I started working. Oh, even with a worker's permit? I was able to.
Starting point is 00:27:04 I don't know. Actually. I didn't get a worker's permit? I was able to get a worker's permit at 14. I worked in my family business when I was really young. Yeah, and a lot of kids, I mean, I come from a family, a lot of them live up in rural Vermont, and they all own farms, and those kids have been collecting eggs from the chickens since they were five. That's my first job. Yeah, you've got to have a sort of responsibility, a personal responsibility
Starting point is 00:27:27 to become a well-rounded person. When you don't, you end up with a bunch of woke, me first... You lack. You end up lacking responsibility and accountability and that's kind of why
Starting point is 00:27:36 America's in chaos right now. No one takes any responsibility for what they do. That's why it's crazy to me when people come over off gas and they'll be like... They'll look at my work schedule and be like, you're crazy. And I'm like, I think you're crazy, man. Like no offense to some of these people, but like I used to work every weekend as well. Now weekend is partially administrative with some time off to relax, go out to eat or
Starting point is 00:27:58 whatever. But it's like I work, you know, eight to four and then I work seven to 11 every day. And in between all I'm doing is like eating or exercising it's like all of my time is consumed and i'm like what would i do if i wasn't working like what do you do for fun i don't know like what do you mean you don't know do you like just sit there yeah my mind man meditation no no you blank out your you blank your mind it's awesome that's weird you get younger weird to me regeneration i don't know about that yeah i think you have a hobby and you do your hobby and i mean you'd raise your family if you have a family and yeah i mean i know there's a lot of people without purpose and so uh that's that's kind of a cancer right now in america too because they they think they find a purpose is something you just want to commit your
Starting point is 00:28:40 life to like a lot of people especially the older generations their purpose is their family they have you know they've set money aside they just dote on their family they they love their family they spend time with their family but you get a younger generation and their purpose is the next big drama and that's their they commit their whole life to this this is they're going to go to protest the wall and that's just their that's their purpose that's their whole life they put everything into it until that passes and their purpose is gone so then they have that drop speaking of purpose yes let's talk about this story from bounding into comics excellent marvel comics author ta nahisi coats compares jordan peterson to the red skull
Starting point is 00:29:21 in the latest issue of captain amer. And this plays into purpose, accountability, responsibility. And for some reason, the woke left desperately trying to defend Nazi ideology, probably because they share that ideology to a great degree. Those that aren't familiar, the Red Skull is quite literally a Nazi scientist in the Captain America comic. He was the villain for Captain America, and it was written when, you know, like World War II and stuff. so Red Skull's a Nazi in this latest iteration the Red Skull is apparently
Starting point is 00:29:48 a YouTube self-help guru who is telling people to like the 10 rules for life or something and I just love the idea how insane
Starting point is 00:29:58 this comic is let me see if I can I'll pull up here it is right here check it out Captain America he's in this hospital
Starting point is 00:30:04 and he says so let me guess your brother he's in this hospital and he says, so let me guess, your brother, he disappears into the internet and when he comes back out, he can't stop talking about his new theory of the world
Starting point is 00:30:13 and that theory comes from one man, the Red Skull. And look at this laptop. Chaos and order. Carl Luger's genius, the feminist trap and it's the Red Skull
Starting point is 00:30:23 saying 10 rules for life. Wow. Very obviously Jordan Peterson. Could you imagine if like the internet actually allowed a former Nazi scientist to go on and preach like extremism? They barely allow conservatives to say learn to code. Like they're going to allow the Red Skull on the internet. Is this real? Is this a joke?
Starting point is 00:30:42 No, this is real. This is real. This is the real life. Sorry. Look, this is real. This is real. This is the real life. Sorry. Look, dude. Listen. This is important. When you live
Starting point is 00:30:51 the most privileged, pampered, affluenza life and then along comes a psychologist who's like, hey, clean your room. That's violence.
Starting point is 00:31:02 It's painful. Be responsible. No, no, no. But seriously, these people are wads of cookie dough. They are puffy little pink marshmallows that you touch them slightly and it leaves a dent
Starting point is 00:31:12 and they start screaming because they've never experienced sensation of touch before. So you get someone like Jordan Peterson who's like, clean your room. And it's like, how dare you tell me to do work?
Starting point is 00:31:23 Work is not real. It's offensive. Genuinely, I believe these people feel physical pain when someone calls them a name because they've never experienced it before. It's like the first time in their life, they're feeling a negative emotion because someone doesn't like them. These are people who grow up and they're given a trophy for everything. They go to school and then, you know, they answer the question wrong. That's okay. Here's your trophy. And they're like, yes, there's my dopamine rush. Get it wrong. You get the award anyway. Now they're older and they finally graduate college outside of their bubble, you know, bubble. And then they're like walking down the street and some guy goes, you suck. And they go, and they just like drop to their knees and like start
Starting point is 00:32:02 hyperventilating or Jordan Peterson writes a book where he's like, if you want to be better, take responsibility for yourself. Stand up straight. Stand up straight. Don't let anyone ride your back. Yeah. That's it. He's amazing. Clinical psychologist, professor, vocal advocate for human rights.
Starting point is 00:32:20 Brilliant. And Red Skull. And apparently a Red Skull. And a Nazi scientist. Good job, Jordan. Can you imagine Captain America, his persona is opposed to classical liberalism and responsibility? Don't see it. It's the antithesis.
Starting point is 00:32:34 Right. It's like Captain America may as well be Hydra at this point. Although they did that at one point, I guess. Who wrote that comic? Ta-Nehisi Coates. Coates, yes. He's an activist. Oh, he's an activist is writing marvel
Starting point is 00:32:46 comics yeah a cult uh occultist journalist you know cult dogma um racist i would say you know they try to use language for all their arguments what's what's the i don't say nazi you know they like to use that word but it it's become rather meaningless. Like, they call Jordan Peterson a Nazi, and it's like, he's a, he complains about the Nazis. He's a classical liberal psychologist who tells people to be responsible for themselves. That's like Nazism. So, these people are something
Starting point is 00:33:15 very similar. They hold a lot of the same belief structures and values, right? They're pro-segregation. They, like Ibram X. Kendi, for instance, said, the only solution to past discrimination is present discrimination which is like identitarianism which overlaps greatly with the nazi ideology and you have classical liberals who are like be responsible for yourself you know the rights are for the individual and things like that they're trying to villainize those who believe in freedom
Starting point is 00:33:40 and liberty because they're authoritarians it's like you know and they want people to bow to their cult so it's it's no surprise they're trying to liken jordan peterson to the red skull the crazy thing about it though is what they're effectively doing is they're making nazis look good which is the creepiest thing about it jordan peterson's popular he's a famous guy he's a mainstream personality the left might call him controversial but he appears on talk shows talk shows about a variety of issues. So for them to be like, the Red Skull is a Nazi and this is Jordan Peterson, it's like, are you trying to make it look like Nazis are mainstream and accepted in society? Apparently, yes. Yes.
Starting point is 00:34:17 Because they want to use that as a boogeyman. So they soften the view and they defend it. So over at the comic, I'll show you a little bit more. This guy says, Captain America says, it's the same for all of them. Young men, weak, looking for purpose. I found the flag. You found the badge. They found the skull.
Starting point is 00:34:37 He tells them what they've always longed to hear. That they are secretly great. That the whole world is against them. That if they're truly men, they'll fight back. And bingo, that's their purpose. That's what they live for, and that's what they'll die for. It's kind of funny, this idea that, like, individualists are more likely to die for their ideals than a collectivist.
Starting point is 00:34:56 I kind of don't know if that's true. You know what I mean? Like, a communist is going to be alive. The hive is willing to expend the drones way more readily than the individual. The individual will defend their lives to the last foot. But maybe individuals recognize the importance of individual action and that if they don't stand up, no one will. Whereas collectivists are like, someone else will do it. Why should I have to?
Starting point is 00:35:21 So yeah, maybe. I keep thinking that the Red Skull superman are going to do a crossover what uh michael malice and jordan peterson oh they did an interview a couple days ago this is a little off topic i want to get it out now that jordan peterson is the red skull yes and of course it's so dumb enough coming to view it is really dumb i i'm almost aghast and yeah the left can't meme. They really can't. Wow. There's more.
Starting point is 00:35:46 They say, later at the conclusion of the issue, Red Skull's followers proceed to overwhelm a wounded Captain America before he is rescued from his attackers
Starting point is 00:35:53 by an armored Sharon Carter. In turn, Red Skull takes footage of Roger's defeat and proceeds to use it in a propaganda video appealing to the various racist and terroristic groups
Starting point is 00:36:02 who've taken up his message by offering them a metaphorical sword of manhood. He says, what has happened to the men of the world is truly one of the great tragedies of our time. Once the American man was a conqueror. Now he is but a caretaker and a caretaker of what he stands for some amorphous dream, a dream of nothing.
Starting point is 00:36:21 But what I offer you is more than just some petty dream, more than a life of tending the hearth. No more shall women be summoned to fight your battles. I offer steel for your spine and iron for your gut. I offer you the sword of manhood. Oh, that's so cringy. This sounds like a take
Starting point is 00:36:39 on Jordan's explanation of the meek shall inherit the earth, meaning not the weak. What it actually means is that those with a large weapon that choose not to use it, those are the meek, and those are the people that are usually the most respected and the ones that... They have self-control.
Starting point is 00:36:54 Yes. Yep. And obviously this guy destroyed that message and made it sound like he's trying to weaponize people. Well, that also lets you know that he's a threat. His words are a threat. Yepordan peterson is threatening to them that's why they have to be like nope he's a nazi and i'm gonna meme about it because i'm good at that maybe i also kind of think that they're just really dumb and so they need something to be a villain and they don't know so they choose jordan peterson
Starting point is 00:37:22 and it literally makes no sense because if if you actually look at Jordan Peterson, he's like, Nazis are bad. And they're like, well, that clearly means that Jordan Peterson's a Nazi. So I'm guessing he probably sat there and he's like, all right,
Starting point is 00:37:33 who are some, um, self-help, you know, who, who are some mainstream conservative? Um, I,
Starting point is 00:37:40 well, everybody, they don't like as conservative, but you know, who, who are like, you know, he's pro masculinity. So, so who, who are like, you know, he's pro-masculinity.
Starting point is 00:37:46 So who are some big voices that are pro-masculinity? Because masculinity is evil right now. They are feminizing the military. They want nothing to do with masculinity right now. That's bad. It's all toxic. All masculinity is. So you think, I wonder if he sat there and they kind of went over different mainstream,
Starting point is 00:38:03 you know, men who have a podium and just landed on him by like a roll of the dice too. And we're like – Where does this lead to if our comic books, our movies are telling men not to be masculine? They're saying masculinity is toxic and they're trying to prop up people like Brie Larson who's just like a really mean person. I imagine it's like idiocracy did predict social justice. For those that have seen the movie, you guys have seen Idiocracy, right? No. Part of it, no.
Starting point is 00:38:31 The idea is that evolution stopped rewarding the strongest and simply rewards those who reproduce the most. That's us. So like stupid people are having tons of kids, and smart people are like, now's not the time. So in 500 years, everyone's really dumb. However, what they didn't account for is wokeness so i'm imagining if all of these media outlets are saying be effeminate essentially don't be masculine masculinity is wrong jordan peterson's a bad guy eventually you're going to get a bunch of dudes who are
Starting point is 00:38:58 the epitome of toxic masculinity and society is going to be a bunch of wimpy frail scared and effeminate men and then the strong men will just walk in take over yeah no one's gonna be able to do anything about it that is one way um also another different direction would be like if if people start creating new art forms new comic books new a new comic company comes out with a new set of heroes that are legit like more understandable and relatable. And we diverge evolutionarily. I don't think Homo sapien is the end of our route. Now we're going to become robots.
Starting point is 00:39:30 Yeah, some of us will become robotic humans, cybernetic. Some of us will become psychic. Some of us will become more animal. And some of us will live on Mars. Some of us will live in orbit with larger bodies. It's all comedy. I don't know what that has to do with comic books. Well, some of these weird critical race people might evolve into some bizarre self-hating race of violent humans.
Starting point is 00:39:51 I really don't think that's a possibility because that would take hundreds of thousands of years for a divergence at scale. But also, I think technology is speeding up our evolution. Right, but that's because we're incorporating technology into our bodies, which could ultimately mean we transform into some kind of robot creatures. And television. Television rapidly evolved us. But I want to say this in regards to Captain America, and you mentioned new comics and new movies and new shows. So one of the things I'm doing is actually just,
Starting point is 00:40:15 I've received a few pitches for TV shows and movies and stuff, and we're on the verge of basically greenlighting a comedy series, which is, it's going to be on TimCast.com, I imagine. And we're just going to start doing more of that just making cultural stuff that's fun funny it's not woke it's not going to be culture war stuff it's just going to be funny stuff it'll probably poke fun at politics but i look at this who cares about captain america anymore i gotta be honest no one like dude it has been 70 years you know what i mean like at a certain point do they make new comic books with new heroes and new
Starting point is 00:40:45 arcs and new stories or do we just keep rebooting the same characters and then just trying to make it relevant for some reason sorry dude i like the movies but here's the thing about the mcu they did three captain america movies and then captain america did the avengers they brought them all together and then he's like quit. Because at a certain point they realized Captain America in the movie can't carry on anymore. So then he goes back in time and boom, he's gone. Tony Stark. He does a bunch of movies.
Starting point is 00:41:14 Obviously three Iron Man movies, four Avenger movies, plus he was in Civil War. And then they were like, Robert Downey Jr. has run his course. We can't keep using Iron Man anymore. Time for him to move on. There'll be a new one like they do with Spider-Man. Sure, sure. In the MCU, they need a new character.
Starting point is 00:41:31 And they're bringing old characters to life. They probably should have new characters. Sure, fine. But at least in the MCU, they recognize at a certain point, we've exhausted this character. We retire them. And unfortunately, the MCU is Stanley Stanley made all almost all those characters
Starting point is 00:41:47 the Hulk the thing I mean he made all the Fantastic Four so I think they're trying to maybe keep him alive too like in spirit by keeping to
Starting point is 00:41:53 you know reboot his vision like WandaVision just came out it was bad yeah I thought WandaVision was terrible
Starting point is 00:42:00 yeah did you see it I watched it through I didn't really have a strong feeling I just got told I look like the look like she just tortures oh yeah you do yeah she got that a lot she tortures 3 000 people and she's the good guy and the first three episodes are just waste of time the first three episodes i was like are we gonna keep watching this i turned it off i just yeah we didn't watch it and then i and then i kept checking i kept like waiting for social
Starting point is 00:42:23 media posts and then once i saw the show actually started at episode four I was like okay I'll watch it now. And then I was kind of like they really drag it out and waste your time.
Starting point is 00:42:30 Anyway look I digress. We need new characters. We need new stories. We need new heroes.
Starting point is 00:42:38 But I'll tell you if I make new characters new stories I'm not making it for Marvel. That was Stan Lee's company.
Starting point is 00:42:43 You know what it is? Disney owns it now. Stan Lee and Jack Kirby and who else there was a henley i mean he did a lot of art there but there was a handful of kirby back in the day what did kirby do uh he was one of he created a bunch of the characters so back in the day you had these these these people and they were geniuses they were they were visionaries they were like i got an idea it's this guy and when he gets mad he turns into a big green monster. I believe he originally wasn't green.
Starting point is 00:43:07 I think he was like gray or something. Then they were like, the printing isn't so great. It's like heavy on the ink or something. They changed him, something like that. Could be wrong. But we grew up with that being normal. We grew up with the ideas of these superheroes just existing, whereas back then they were new and exciting. And it was like, wow, Superman. You know Superman
Starting point is 00:43:25 originally couldn't fly? He could just jump really high. Then there was a period where he could shoot a small Superman from his hand. See, they weren't afraid to experiment. They were like, let's do a comic where Superman can fire a Superman from his hand, and it's a little version of himself. Probably
Starting point is 00:43:41 the stupidest power I've ever heard of in comic book history. That's the Patronus, right? No, the Patronus is like a ball of hope and happiness. Takes the shape of an animal. So I hate... Respect to J.K. Rowling for creating a universe that was not the same.
Starting point is 00:43:58 And you see how successful it was. That was incredibly successful. We need that stuff. So here's what I think we end up seeing. We have a bunch of regular people who are not the geniuses that are that were stan lee right and so all they can do is take what someone else made and move it around and you end up with the lowest common denominator this jordan peterson comic is scraping the bottom of the barrel so hard they've ripped through the bottom layer of wood, and they're just pulling up dirt. They're not even getting barrel anymore.
Starting point is 00:44:27 They just don't even realize they're in the dirt right now. Nobody's going to eat that, dude. That's not food. The wood chips weren't food. You're done. Not only have you repurposed Captain America to a ridiculous degree, now you've made Red Skull a classical liberal or something. Then he's alt-right, I guess.
Starting point is 00:44:42 It's the weirdest thing. To not only repurpose it to such a degree that it's stupid, but then try and spin some mainstream critique that doesn't even work. It's one thing if you were like, the Red Skull is still a Nazi
Starting point is 00:44:55 and he's got a plan to steal all the gold from Fort Knox and Captain America must stop him. You're like, all right, kind of generic, I guess. But it's about a Nazi and a guy fighting him.
Starting point is 00:45:04 Now it's like he's on the internet making YouTube videos. And it's like, wow, you've reached a whole new level of stupid. There is a metaphor between Hitler and the YouTube blogger. Because Hitler basically was the first dictator to use mass media. And whip a nation into a frenzy with video. Propaganda. Yeah. He was a propaganda master.
Starting point is 00:45:23 But Jordan Peterson? No, not Jordan Peterson. They could have picked any one of these alt-right dudes. I think they just think that Jordan Peterson's alt-right and they equate alt-rights with the Nazis. They are closer to Nazi than Jordan Peterson is. Oh, gosh, yeah, definitely. They're all about collectivism and that's what the Nazis were all about, the fascism of that. I would highly advise watching Jordan's breakout video where he's speaking to a group of students outside about not forcing compelled speech.
Starting point is 00:45:47 That's so key. And he was saying, I've studied the Nazis. I've studied the totalitarian dictatorships of the communists. It begins with compelled speech, forcing people to use pronouns. Do not do it. Well, there was a guy who was ordered to stop referring to his child as his daughter, And he got arrested for that, right? I believe so. Yeah, it was a contempt of court, I think. Yeah, so they were like, you have to refer
Starting point is 00:46:10 to your child as a boy. And he was like, no. And then they were like, you're under arrest. And then Jordan Pino was like, I told you. And here we are. Doesn't it seem like everything they do is a reflection? Like they talk about words being... Projection. No, reflection. Listen, listen. Listen, listen. So it is a reflection like they talk about words projection projection no reflection
Starting point is 00:46:25 listen listen okay listen listen so it's a reflection because everything they say they're like we don't want to be racist all we're going to do is break up white people and black people we don't want any kind of hate speech all we're going to do is separate a parent from its child because they use the wrong words there it's an inversion of what they're telling us they're like we want to be more kind and more compassionate. We're going to invite people to cross a desert and die and be trafficked for the sake of our compassion. That's why they say it's projection because they're
Starting point is 00:46:51 complaining about what they do. They're saying other people do this awful thing that they actually do. This makes me think about libertarianism. We were just talking about this. Why I'm reticent to force my political views, no matter how benevolent I think they are, on other people. Because I know that is a phenomenon
Starting point is 00:47:07 where we reflect our own negativity or project or refract or whatever. So I have this kind of hands-off approach to what I think other people should do. But sometimes there's such tragedy being invoked that I feel like I have to. But so does this guy, and that's what he's doing with this weird comic.
Starting point is 00:47:23 Where do you draw? I mean, you're explicitly libertarian. Actually, I want to use this to launch off something you were talking about earlier pertaining to the COVID vaccine passports. Oh, yeah. And you brought up something really interesting that I immediately was like, nah, you can't be right about that. So let me do this first.
Starting point is 00:47:37 We got some news from Fox. Biden administration will not require COVID-19 vaccine passports, White House says. Jen Psaki says there will be no federal vaccinations database. Now, this is kind of to assuage the fears of people who think the government's going to mandate everybody get a vaccine passport, but they've long said we can't do that, we won't do that. The private sector will do that, which is still interesting because I'm not sure the private sector can do that because of a lot of laws that already exist, non-discrimination laws, the ADA, et cetera. But I bring this up because we're talking now about libertarianism, authoritarianism, and what the government is or isn't allowed to do
Starting point is 00:48:13 and what we should support. So we'll do a hard segue, I guess, because I want you to bring this up. You mentioned that the COVID vaccine passports are not legal because of... So we have a right to medical privacy. Wait, wait, wait, wait. Just use the fancy buzzword. Oh, I'm a god. I got to build up the suspense for it. All right.
Starting point is 00:48:32 So in 1973, the Supreme Court determined that we are entitled to medical privacy. And this was a 7-2 ruling. Roe v. Wade determined that we are entitled to medical privacy, and this was a 7-2 ruling, Roe v. Wade determined that we are entitled to medical privacy. So Roe v. Wade and the vaccine passports contradict each other. What? Yeah. Interesting. I didn't know that.
Starting point is 00:48:56 But in their ruling, they said, your medical history is your private? Yes. They used the 14th Amendment, and they said, the government cannot your your you to expose your medical history like we can't control that we can't you you are entitled to your medical history that's i've heard the 14th amendment thing but what would that stop a private company i guess theoretically i guess you could sue because a private company has no right to your medical history? Yeah. Denying you a service based on medical history would be a violation of the ADA. It's crazy because they'd have to go through you to get it. So they couldn't go through your doctor because that'd be a violation of HIPAA laws if they
Starting point is 00:49:37 went through your doctor. Right. So they'd have to go through you. So it'd have to be up to you to expose that. But I feel like you could bring a civil rights violation against against them trying to make you expose your medical rights to like buy milk right there was a big thing with masks where people started saying that they had they were like they put out these fake cards where it's like i have a medical condition and protected under the americans with
Starting point is 00:49:58 disabilities act and then they would go and walk around and if someone just was like you had to wear a mask like no i don't I don't. I have this card. Okay, sure. Look, the cards are not real, but I think the idea actually is. It's like, imagine if a store was like, you can't come in here because your legs are broken. You know, we don't want to risk the lawsuit if you fall and get hurt. So they say the same thing. Well, we require you to be vaccinated.
Starting point is 00:50:20 My medical history and what I can or can't do is none of your business. And that goes into the bigger question of they've said, if you're pregnant, don't get the vaccine. They said, if you, uh, if you have allergies, you gotta wait. And, you know, Joe Biden recently announced he's up to the timeline so that every adult can get the vaccine by April 19th. But what if your doctor tells you for this reason, we don't think you should. My doctor told me I shouldn't. Why is that? Because I have a blood condition. Interesting. So now you're, now you're going to go to a store and they're going to say, you need a vaccine passport. And then you can say, it's none of your business. What my doctor told me and why is none of your business. And what's going to happen?
Starting point is 00:50:53 What do you do? I'll probably get kicked out. Well, that would be a violation of the Americans with Disabilities Act, wouldn't it? Yeah. I mean, I think the Americans with Disabilities Act is very specific with what they consider a disability. Like, like my my blood condition isn't like I'm not sure what's on there, so I don't want to misquote it. But I know I know I couldn't get disability or Social Security or anything from what's the matter with me. So I wonder if that is required, because if you're also immunocompromised,
Starting point is 00:51:26 that should be taken into account as well, because I probably won't get it because I am. Yeah. So look, the ADA, adata.org says, the Americans with Disabilities Act became law in 1990. The ADA is a civil rights law that prohibits discrimination against individuals with disabilities in all areas of public life, including jobs, school, transportation, public and private places that are open to the general public. The purpose of the law
Starting point is 00:51:46 is to make sure that people with disabilities have the same rights and opportunities as everyone else. The ADA gives civil rights protections to individuals with disabilities similar to those provided to individuals on the basis of race, color, sex, national origin, age, religion.
Starting point is 00:51:58 It guarantees equal opportunity for individuals with disabilities in public accommodation, employment, transportation, state, local government services, and telecommunications. So I wonder if they would argue that, you know, employment, transportation, state, local government services, and telecommunications. So I wonder if they would argue that... Okay, so actually it says in 2008, the ADA was signed into law
Starting point is 00:52:12 and became effective on January 2009. I'm sorry. Yeah, so it's the Americans with Disabilities Amendments Act. It made a number of significant changes to the definition of disability. The changes in the definition of disability apply to all titles of the ADA. So I have to go through all the changes, but I'm curious if your doctor says, I'm sorry, because of your condition, you are not able to get this vaccine. She said, I wouldn't recommend it. You got to take your doctor's advice. I know.
Starting point is 00:52:41 Yeah. So for everybody listening, if your doctor says you should listen to your doctor, back says you should listen to your doctor, because I think, you know, you don't want to be getting advice from people on the internet. According to that, what you just read, it didn't say anywhere in there that like a restaurant can refuse, cannot refuse service to someone because of a disability. It sounds like that law doesn't protect. It does. Public accommodation means restaurant, but it's a private accommodation.
Starting point is 00:53:02 Public accommodation means like a service provided to the general public. So a restaurant is a public accommodation. But it's a private accommodation. Public accommodation means like a service provided to the general public. So a restaurant is a public accommodation. Because it's a store. Because it's open to the public. Interesting. So basically a private shop would be like members only. You can't come in. Public is a sign saying open.
Starting point is 00:53:17 So if somebody walks into your restaurant, you can't accuse them of trespassing unless you warn them first. If you have a private – if you have a closed private membership-only restaurant and someone walks in, it's trespassing. Typically, you still got to warn people it's trespassing no matter what. But the general idea is if it says open and you're allowing people in, it's a public accommodation. I mean actually it's more nuanced in that even a private membership business can still be considered a public accommodation. Like if someone says, I would like to join and become a member, and you say you can't because you're a disability, then they can sue you and say you're denying them a public accommodation. Could it be like this is a COVID vaccine-only restaurant? That's what I'm wondering. I really don't know.
Starting point is 00:53:59 It depends on the definition of disability. So I would imagine that means some kind of medical condition. And if you have a medical condition that prohibits you from getting the vaccine, this is why we want herd immunity, because some people can't get it. Right. Like there was this viral, this is viral tweet from this woman. She's taking a picture of herself getting the vaccine. She's 14 weeks pregnant. Have you seen this? Yeah. I don't know if it's real. So again, take it, take it all with a grain of salt. And I absolutely want to make sure I preface a lot of these stories. Don't take one story as evidence of widespread anything.
Starting point is 00:54:29 Anecdote. Yeah. Talk to your doctor. I do personally know a pregnant woman who has gotten the vaccine. And she's fine. I haven't heard anything. Yeah. There you go.
Starting point is 00:54:37 She's fine. In this viral meme, a pregnant woman gets a vaccine and then a few days later has a miscarriage. And it could happen. It could be. Right. Honestly, miscarriages, when they happen, they later has a miscarriage. And it could happen. It could be, honestly, miscarriages. When they happen, they usually were going to happen anyway. At 14 weeks, though, you're out of the first trimester,
Starting point is 00:54:52 which is when 90% happen. And then, so, I mean, it could have just been a coincidence. It could have been related to the vaccine. We don't know that. It could have just been all ready to happen. Well, there were, in I think the uk doctor said if you are a pregnant woman wait if you have food allergies wait yep talk to your doctor first and so right right then it's like what are we going to do are we going to deny someone access
Starting point is 00:55:16 to the by milk and bread because your doctor says no i think i don't think we should that's a civil rights violation yeah i think so too human rights if they were like, you have to weigh a certain amount to come into the store. Because we know that obesity is a contributing, like causes large amounts of death every year. So you go to Walmart and they're like, ooh, you're too heavy to come into this store. Or if someone has the flu. Like 70 or 80% of COVID deaths were obese. Yeah. Large number.
Starting point is 00:55:42 That's alarming. Were obese. Yeah. Yeah. Large number. That's alarming. We're obese. I mean, and that's why I think America is having such an issue with this because we're so fat. We're fat guys. I think so. There's a lot of excess. That's sad. And such an important part of this puzzle.
Starting point is 00:55:58 If you look at like the Mediterranean, they're not anywhere. And people are like, well, that's because they're social distancing and wearing masks. No, that's because they're not anywhere. And people are like, well, that's because they're social distancing and wearing masks. No, that's because they're not fat. I saw a meme where it was like two lines going to two different kiosks. And one line was like shots and pills. And the line was saturated. All these people were in the changing lifestyle. Yeah.
Starting point is 00:56:16 Yeah, I saw that. Can we talk about fats on here? Yeah. This is interesting. Disability is defined, according to this website, as a physical or mental impairment that substantially limits one or more major life activities, a record of such impairment, or being regarded as having such an impairment. That's interesting because the vaccine passport is what would make it a disability.
Starting point is 00:56:36 If right now your doctor's like, here's our advice to you, and you weren't advised because of your blood condition, you shouldn't get it. So that's not a disability. But if they then say, everyone, all these businesses have to have vaccine passports, all of a sudden now it is. It's restricting you from a major access to services and stuff like that. Interesting. And then you'd be able to get disability insurance because you couldn't go to the store.
Starting point is 00:56:58 I wonder how that works. You've got to hire someone to do it for you? Yeah, I don't know. I mean, my blood condition, I don't create red blood cells. So that's why i'm so pale and why i get winded going up the stairs but that's um that's that's mine and i mean you can't really see it you can't really tell um i don't want to you know carry a passport around with it that tells you know the stranger at the supermarket what's the matter with me i mean yeah so this is the issue i take with the libertarian party because the government isn't going to be the one starting the vaccine passports they're they're oh no we can't do it and they can't 14th amendment great all these laws sure
Starting point is 00:57:34 but a private company can and then what happens oh thank heavens it's not the government it's just it's just walmart and amazon amazon you want to buy something online it's like before delivery driver can come to your house you must prove you're vaccinated otherwise you're putting our drivers at risk yep it's like well uh what am i supposed to scan your qr code enter your vaccine number and then that's a private companies will do yeah well that's um that's the difference so i was talking earlier about libertarianism how it's the spectrum from anarchy to constitutionalism it's just a matter of how much government is necessary and how much government is needed so um so an anarchist view
Starting point is 00:58:14 would just be like nope we're just you know they can do whatever they want until the cows come home and there's nothing we can do and you know it's like oh for instance it's like with what's going on social media oh they're like create another we're at a point where you need to create another internet yeah at this point like you can't create more um more social media because they do that like parlor did that and what happened gone yeah you know so so we're at a point where it's like well why didn't you just create another internet and so it's like okay maybe elon musk will get on that i don't know but um trump yeah trump trump could get on that i don't know but um trump yeah trump trump could get on that i mean there they could happen but you're going to be bound
Starting point is 00:58:49 to those rules too so it's just a matter of like i like i said i'm a minarchist so i believe in justice and defense that's that's really the limits of what i believe um to be the government's role for enforcing the constitution um and so i would have to think at it from that perspective okay so are people like where's justice gonna like are people gonna be is there gonna be an injustice here like if people are not being served if people can't it's is there an injustice should the government government interfere because of this human rights injustice? Essentially, if you can't buy food or if you can't, this is where it gets a little sketchy. This is why I think the Libertarian Party is pro-authoritarian.
Starting point is 00:59:36 Yes, they are. They're like the pawns of authoritarian, corporatist, monopolist power. Yes, they are. You have massive multinational corporations, and they're going, oh no, the government is being mean to our overlords. It's like, what? If you're actually for libertarian views, the little l, like true opposition to authoritarianism, it doesn't
Starting point is 00:59:54 matter if it's a corporation or a government. They're both organizations, just in different capacities. The government is organized. It's an organized group of people who do a thing. A corporation is the same. They have structures. They have a hierarchy. They have control. Some companies are co-ops. Some non-profits some governments are democracy some are autocratic some are i mean you had that guy what was that name in what was that guy's name in uruguay uh jose mojica was that his name i'm not sure he was like the president he lived on a
Starting point is 01:00:19 little farm he had a little car and everyone loved him oh yeah i remember him yeah yeah so you have some governments like that yeah government is not the same thing everywhere and corporations aren't the same thing everywhere. Both can monopolize power and cause problems. I happen to lean against, you know, the reason communism and socialism are bad is because it's a bunch of people sitting down going, I have an idea.
Starting point is 01:00:39 Let's centralize all the power with one group of people. It's like, that's a really bad idea. And then the problem I see with ANCAPs and and the libertarian party is they're like we should allow major corporations to slowly accrue power so that a small handful of individual elites control everything and i'm like what's the difference if your life is dictated to to you by someone else so we need to restrict corporate power and government power but you know we don't we don't we don't get the way the left has typically being like the corporations are bad and the right being like government is bad i'm like hey hey hey they're both bad you guys are just both awful yeah yeah they're both yeah
Starting point is 01:01:15 well they both are just awful well if you look at what what these corporations are like we could have thousands and thousands of competitors like you know we could have like everybody everybody out there competing against each other and what was i saying that there are what there's there's like 10 10 businesses 10 corporations that just own everything they just own everything and what are some perks that they have they have um they they get billions in subsidies billions they they get special protections by the government. And then, you know, they buy up their competition. And so there's language in the 14th Amendment for government-granted monopolies, which if you're given the money and you're given the protections,
Starting point is 01:01:58 you're probably granting their ability to exist. Yes. So there's language against that that that those should not exist. And that's just not being enforced because too many of these politicians are dirty and they're profiting off these corporations. They're in bed with the corporations. So why are they going to...
Starting point is 01:02:17 They're going to get a job once they get out of office. Yeah. It's a hard job, man. You're fundraising nonstop. Lobbyists, maybe. You don't get paid that much money, but then afterwards you get this permanent access pass to Capitol Hill, and all of a sudden now you can do lobbying.
Starting point is 01:02:30 Yep, they can lobby. These government-granted monopolies, they're supposedly du jour monopolies, meaning by law, the government is instilling. But these aren't du jour monopolies. These aren't like Twitter. It's not a government-granted monopoly, even though the government subsidizes.
Starting point is 01:02:46 To be honest, I don't know what they subsidize with Twitter. But it's a de facto monopoly. They are by fact. It's not by law. They're not legally monopolized. They just have monopolized the social sphere. If the government admits that they're, what did you say, du jour? Yeah, du jour.
Starting point is 01:03:00 Du jour monopoly, then they have to abolish them. Exactly. So they're just going to exist de facto. I hear a lot from the laissez-faire capitalists or ANCAP types, and they'll say things like, Tim, you're not talking about a real capitalism. Real capitalism, you're talking about corporatism and the government's interference, which creates these monopolies. It's only because of special access and special rules that the government holds back the competition
Starting point is 01:03:22 and props up these big companies. And that's kind of true with Section 230, for instance, empowers those that are massive to get away with whatever they want and then destroy their opponents. But I'm like, the idea that this isn't real capitalism just sounds like utopian to me. It's not real communism. Sure. That's not real capitalism.
Starting point is 01:03:39 I'm like, listen, capitalism is infinitely better than communism in a million different ways. Unfettered capitalism outright will eventually see power coalesce around a small handful of people with or without government regulation we need to stifle that concentration of power i don't necessarily know how taxes is one way yeah yeah the problem is it just powers the government then you know what i mean and the government just then grows and becomes massive and then they effectively just create a revolving door between the massive multinational corporations and themselves i mean you gotta elect people who are gonna be like all right you're a monopoly we need to call you that we need to get rid of you and also they're all puppets at this point the government's
Starting point is 01:04:16 centralized too which is a problem they exactly it's a monopoly the government is a monopoly it's a monopoly on violence and the ability to take money from people we didn't have the technology a bunch of bunch of millionaires imagine if netflix had a group of like people with guns that they would show up at your house and be like you have to give you have to sign up for netflix and you're like i don't want to too bad yep that's where here we own it is yeah yeah so if the government made a social media site and then they're like you have to sign up well you're automatically signed up in the social In the UK, you have the TV licensing fee or whatever. Everyone has to pay it.
Starting point is 01:04:47 Unless you don't have a computer or a TV. And it funds the BBC, I guess. We're in a weird place where centralized government, it still kind of works. Well, no. I mean, it kind of works. But we're building tech that allows us to decentralize the way we vote, the way we interact with each other via television, internet video, and things like that. No, you only think that, bro. Well, we're on the cusp of like a new way of – like Putin and Biden could get on a YouTube video chat tomorrow and have a two-hour live stream together.
Starting point is 01:05:13 Sure. That's not decentralization though. That's pure centralization. He doesn't – Putin doesn't have to fly to DC. We don't have to centralize anymore. That's semantics, bro. No, we can communicate from afar. Right.
Starting point is 01:05:24 When we're talking about decentralization, we're talking about distributing power between different nodes not one point biden and putin arguing is pure centralization of power then they're talking to each other you're talking about spiritually or psychologically yeah putting all the power in an individual yeah but actually centralizing the four like washington dc used to be the centralized point of our power structure no longer longer. We can, the government can function from anywhere and probably does. It does. That's why the people storming the Capitol, it's like, what were you thinking? That was so stupid.
Starting point is 01:05:51 Right. We're going to enter this building and that's it. It's like, no, that's not it. It's the internet exists. What are you doing? Yeah. It's those people. So maybe a government, I have a feeling a government will be built that facilitates
Starting point is 01:06:03 the technology and i don't i don't i suppose it's up to the people i think the blockchain stuff is valuable i think crypto is valuable but if you think that these technologies are decentralized i got a bridge to sell you you think that the u.s government just sat back and watched bitcoin grow exponentially and did not buy large portions of the blockchain and set up servers all over the place. Maybe they did, maybe they didn't. Okay, maybe we can say the US government
Starting point is 01:06:32 is inept and that's possible. But I kind of feel like there's probably confidential stuff we don't know about. We know China was buying tons of Bitcoin. I'd be willing to bet the US tried to buy 51% of whatever network they could and they're constantly doing whatever they can to maintain control of that network. Because if they got 51%, then they own it.
Starting point is 01:06:52 Not decentralized. Sure. Well, we're not just relying on blockchain. There's other decentralized networks like Interplanetary File System, IPFS, and new ones that keep getting built. And 51% is better than 100 well no but what i mean is all they need in order to control 100 of a network is 51 of the computers okay that's why i guess why i said on the cusp we're not at a point where we have a decentralized system but you know that is a light at the end of the tunnel maybe or a light in the
Starting point is 01:07:22 distance decentralization require like interstellar colonization. What effectively allowed us to break away from the British Empire was the distance. 3,000 miles away, it was very hard for them to enforce anything. Yeah, and if we don't have a decentralized system when we colonize Mars, it will be solar war. So we have to for our survival. Solar war. I don't know if we do that. We do not want the be solar war so we have to for our survival solar war i don't know if we do not want the first solar war i don't know if we'll get to that point because you know colonies on mars or wherever else they're going to require a stream of supplies yeah yeah yeah they're not
Starting point is 01:07:59 going to be able to survive on their own without resources coming in for some time maybe in 50 years 200 years we'll have biodomes and we'll be taxing them and be like we send you your supplies and they're like not anymore they throw all the space tea into the into the space harbor on mars there's so much they eject it into space yes all that iron on the all that red dust is iron oxide yeah yeah there's a lot of iron on mars they make martian swords with it send them back to earth but then the military is like we don't sword fight anymore so they don't buy them and then mars is like what are we supposed to do and we need food and so then we buy them anyway as like
Starting point is 01:08:33 a goodwill gesture to like make it seem like we actually are buying something when in reality just like arbitrarily making them work in exchange for resources they declare independence and they'll die oh okay all right you know what story was written we're gonna talk about some serious stuff but you know what no we're not speaking of mars and aliens and whatever other nonsense we've been talking about check the story out from the daily mail former director of the cia james woolsey says he was skeptical about aliens until a friend's aircraft was paused at 40 000 feet and he hopes we can be friendly to the other creatures if they exist.
Starting point is 01:09:07 Let me say that again. Until a friend's aircraft was paused 4,000 feet. What does that mean? Tractor beam? What friend is he talking about? Let's read. A friend's aircraft. I thought that he said he saw a friend's aircraft get paused. Whoa!
Starting point is 01:09:23 I mean, he could have had a stroke. Yeah, possibly. I was just watching Star Trek earlier, and it was the episode where time keeps freezing. Have you guys seen that one? I've seen them all. They're in the runabout, the shuttle, and then all of a sudden, Deanna Troi is sitting there, and everyone just freezes, like stops in time. And it's because there's fragments of space-time continuum moving, like shattering all around
Starting point is 01:09:44 them, and they're moving through them. Oh, my God. So, anyway, to then hear, like, shattering all around them. It's like a mushroom trip. Oh, my God. So, anyway, to then hear this story, I'm like, whoa. That's what happened. That's brilliant. That's crazy. Check it out. Wolsey said that stories always seemed pretty far out to me.
Starting point is 01:09:55 But there was one case in which a friend of mine was able to have his aircraft stop at 40,000 feet or so and not continue operating as a normal aircraft. What was going on? I don't know. Does anybody know? Wolsey said the source was someone I respect. John Greenwald Jr., the host, pointed out that the other former CIA directors have said they are open to the possibility of alien life. In December, John Brennan told a podcast he felt it was arrogant to believe that we were
Starting point is 01:10:20 alone in the universe. Life is defined in many ways, Brennan said during the December 16th episode. Now, hold on. This story comes out, right? Another story came out. Another story comes out around the same time. What's up with this?
Starting point is 01:10:31 NBC News. Drones that swarmed U.S. warships are still unidentified, Navy chief says. The military is expected to deliver a report later this year
Starting point is 01:10:39 to Congress on the unidentified aerial phenomena. This is from April 5th, 1124 p.m. Just last night, they published this story. A bunch of naval destroyers have tic-tac-shaped objects hovering for 90 minutes at high speed just sitting there beyond commercial drone technology.
Starting point is 01:10:56 And they don't know what it is. So Marco Rubio talked about it. And he was like, whatever's going on with these things flying over our military installations, it's like a national security breach. Like our security has been breached, and we don't know what it is. It's a major threat to this country. Then we get this story coming out where this dude is like, oh, yeah, my friend's aircraft was frozen at 40,000 feet. What is that?
Starting point is 01:11:17 All right. So I think that there's – Aliens. So I think this could be three different three different things and i'm gonna probably forget them as i list them but um one i mean there could be some technology that china made that got in because they're targeting the military bases they're not no normal people are seeing this people in the government are seeing this people in the military are seeing this i'm not seeing it you're not seeing it you know okay, it could be aliens that are like,
Starting point is 01:11:45 all right, we've targeted the uranium. I have no idea. So it could be aliens. All right. Okay. I'll put it out there. Could be aliens.
Starting point is 01:11:53 We could have aliens. All right. It could be that they do know what it is, but aliens are more interesting. Yes. So it's going to distract us from whatever it is that is trying to kill us. Or it could be that they just put stories like this out while they're passing draconian legislation. So we're distracted.
Starting point is 01:12:13 I don't know. I got to look and see what's going on in the legislature right now. Yeah. It could be that Earth is a zoo. You know, the great zoo hypothesis. Oh, yeah. You guys know about Fermi's paradox? Lightly. The general idea is like, if the
Starting point is 01:12:26 universe is so vast and massive and life does exist, then shouldn't we have found some evidence of intelligent life somewhere else at some point? And so then there's a bunch of answers people propose like, there's the great, I think, what's it called? The great barrier or something? I don't know. The great filter, sorry.
Starting point is 01:12:42 That all life at a certain point wipes itself out for some reason. One of them is the zoo hypothesis that earth is effectively a zoo and that we're in a big cage where the aliens come to watch us and giggle at the stupid things that humans do i think south park called it reality tv that earth was just a reality tv show for the aliens and they all watched and laughed at us and then they canceled us they're gonna blow the earth up i remember that yeah yeah there's another really creepy really creepy um idea of what what could what it could be why we haven't seen anybody because the more intelligent beings out there know that there is something that there is something bigger and worse than anything in the universe
Starting point is 01:13:21 they know what it is and they don't want it to find us. But we're stupid. The darkness. Yeah. There's something out there they know about. They don't want it to find them. But Earth's like, hey, let's look for... Yeah, let's look. And we're sitting there going like, hello.
Starting point is 01:13:37 It's like the friend who walks, like the friend walks into the old cabin where the murderer is. Yes, exactly. He's like, Janet, where are you? I'm over here. And the murderer is like walking up. Is anybody here? I? I'm over here. And the murder is like walking up. That's exactly.
Starting point is 01:13:47 I don't have anything on me. That's a theory. Run. They trip. That theory. Also, it has a name. I don't remember what the name of the theory is,
Starting point is 01:13:54 but it was like, kind of give me chills. The first time I read it, I'm like, wow, we're dumb. We're like yelling into the darkness. We're like yelling.
Starting point is 01:14:00 Hello. I don't like the Fermi paradox theory that if life is here, then why haven't we thought, shouldn't we have found it? Because we just found out ice was on Mars like six years ago and that there's likely life within the frozen water and on Europa as well, one of Jupiter's moons. And we also speculate as to would intelligent life develop EMF technology and broadcast anything? It's really funny that we're like – We just started using radio waves and now we assume everybody to be using them. emf technology and broadcast anything it's it's really funny that we're like dolphins we just started using radio waves and now we assume everybody to be using them i think it's a waste
Starting point is 01:14:30 kind of a waste of money to a certain degree like we're building these giant space telescopes that i understand to look at stuff but then we also have sati search for extraterrestrial intelligence where we're looking for like radio waves and stuff it's like that's still cool it's something we should still do and i guess the hope that we'll find alien life is a good motivation to do it because we'll probably discover other things but this idea that in the past 100 years or 150 years we started using radio waves and now we're assuming other intelligent life would use the same technology they could be using like light light fidelity technology you know we have that now as well where like fiber optics for instance they could use a laser that flickers to broadcast data and
Starting point is 01:15:10 we're not going to see that from far away you know something that i was hearing that i don't know too much about this but one thing that i heard that they shoot out into the universe is like math because math is like universal i mean unless you live on earth when two plus two is five but but they try to they they cast stuff like that out one plus one is two you know like things that make sense to everybody you know it is we're in a simulation oh there's no other intelligent life because we're in a simulation and what we're seeing these tic-tac things they're they're game management mods you know they're they're they'reic Tac things, they're game mods. They're game managers.
Starting point is 01:15:47 They're admins. So it's a nondescript vehicle, a Tic Tac, that can move around seemingly outside the laws of physics because it's a moderator. If you think about when everything really went to H-E double hockey sticks was when they turned on the atom smasher. The Large Hadron Collider. It was 2012. And then we got forced into the Trump dimension. Yep, yep. when they turned on the atom smasher. The Large Hadron Collider? Yeah. It was 2012. And then we got forced into the Trump dimension? Yep, yep. And at the same time, they repealed and replaced the Propaganda Act.
Starting point is 01:16:14 At the same time, they turned on the Hydron. Can we make this movie? Is there a filmmaker out there who wants to make a movie about the Large Hadron Collider fires and it causes a big ripple? It rips. And the space-time continuum blankets the Earth. And then all of a sudden it's like you see Hillary Clinton walking up to accept the win on election night. And then all of a sudden it just flickers. And then she turns into Trump.
Starting point is 01:16:40 And they're watching in a protective sphere as reality is being changed around them. They're like, what have we done? I think, yes, there is. And partly because you just called for it. So I wonder if alien life is out there. And as soon as we say alien life, come to us, it's like, I want to go in that direction. Like inspiration strikes. Here's what I'm imagining.
Starting point is 01:17:02 Like all of these world leaders are in this protective space-time bubble as they're about to fire the Large Hadron Collider. And then they watch reality shift around them and like Hillary flickers and then turns into Trump and now Trump's the winner. And they're like, what have we done? And the world leaders are like, we must fix this. And they try to fire up the Large Hadron Collider again. But then a magnet breaks and they're like, oh, no, the machine's broken. We're trapped in this dimension. And so then they have to spend four years accusing Trump of
Starting point is 01:17:27 being a Russian spy. You must know they walk, walk, walk, walk, walk, and they're like, what have we done? It's broken, fix it, walk, walk, walk, we must, bit, bit, bit. And then they're like, we're running out of power, and they're like, no, we're trapped in the reality where Trump is president. There was some kind of an animal that got into that area.
Starting point is 01:17:43 A squirrel. A squirrel. Or a monkey, I don't know, some kind an animal that got into that area. A squirrel. A squirrel. A squirrel. Or a monkey. I don't remember. Some kind of animal that got into the Hadron Collider. A monkey chasing a squirrel. I'm like, you know what? I'm like, someone turned themselves into this thing to stop this from happening, and they're
Starting point is 01:17:56 dead now. It's a squirrel, and it's chasing. It finds an acorn. The acorn's bouncing down the hill, and it's chasing after it. And then it falls into a vent. The squirrel jumps in, and the squirrel's in the Large Hadron Collider. And it's falling right when he gets to the middle of it. The proton goes right through and mixes with squirrel protons of some sort.
Starting point is 01:18:14 Oh, gosh. It explains so much. And then it causes a ripple. Anti-matter explosion plus squirrel. Yeah. Plus squirrel. But in all seriousness, there was an animal that did get into the Hadron Collider. Really?
Starting point is 01:18:25 Yeah, I'm telling you the truth. Oh, my. Any idea what kind of animal? I can't remember, but somebody can look it up. I remember reading this story about a dude who was in a, not the Large Hadron Collider, but he was in a super collider. Uh-huh. And something, a proton, a single proton, like, went through his head.
Starting point is 01:18:40 Oh, my God. And it messed him up in a really weird way, but didn't kill him. It just, like, screwed with his brain. Oh, my gosh. What if they've done that to, like... Because it, him up in a really weird way but didn't kill him it just like screwed with his brain because oh my gosh what if they've done that to like particle around they did that to all the dems yeah everyone just got a single proton fired through their brains now they're all like everything is woke i heard this um this inken scientist explaining the reason the pyramids are there is because protons are flying at earth from outer space because our the earth's magnetic core is negatively charged because it's just iron and so the protons fly through the
Starting point is 01:19:10 surface of earth through our bodies causing free radical damage and then when they get close to the center of the earth the positive energy at the center forces it to repel and go flying back out and back through our bodies again so they built these pyramids to channel the positive energy on its way back out and focus it through a point to gather it from the surroundings so it didn't cause free radical damage on the humans.
Starting point is 01:19:31 The Egyptians were so smart. I have an easier answer to why there's pyramids all over the place. Why is that? Because people who didn't know that much, it was the easiest thing to build. Let me stack rocks like this. There you go.
Starting point is 01:19:44 You build a structure. You stack some rocks. Yeah, it might have been like also a tomb, also a battery. It was capped with gold, which is a superconductor. Well, it looks like there's water channels inside of it. And if there's a charge, like if the water was called- You're watching too much ancient aliens. There's this thing called the telluric current in the earth that's like this low-frequency
Starting point is 01:20:02 magnetic current that flows. And apparently, it's strong under where the pyramids are. Tesla was working on it. Telluric. Earth current. Interesting. It's an electric current that moves underground or through the sea. Telluric currents result from both natural
Starting point is 01:20:17 causes and human activity. And the discrete currents interact in a complex pattern. The currents are extremely low frequency and travel over large areas at or near the surface of the Earth. Interesting. Wow. I don't know.
Starting point is 01:20:30 Wikipedia says it's true, so it must be true. Tesla was tapping into it and trying to send electricity through the ground, and people obviously wanted to sell their copper wires, so they shut that down. But I think this technology might have something to do with that, with these drones or these things that we're seeing flying around. Like what? They're charged by it? Possibly. have something to do with that with these drones or these things that we're seeing flying around like what they're charged by it possibly or or it's on board fusion or it's like a light or it's like a like a light refraction that we think is a craft i don't know maybe it's just like solid
Starting point is 01:20:54 state batteries yeah that someone developed and we don't know about it could just be someone could have just developed it i mean they're watching the military forces and they're watching you know north korea and they're watching all the targets. But what if it's just some dude in his basement? I mean, that's like Lex Luthor level stuff. Having these drones that defy modern technology. Like Jeff Bezos? Maybe.
Starting point is 01:21:16 Jeff, I love you and you're not Lex Luthor. But your shaved head makes you the ultimate. And I've been thinking about it too. Mark Zuckerberg, he's a really cool guy. Nothing wrong with him. Mark Zuckerberg, just great super bezos awesome amazon wouldn't be experimental drone technology yeah man i love how it's like very obvious we don't like that i wouldn't be surprised if bezos has like a secret lab where he's doing crazy dude i mean that is the story the guy who's doing global shipping drones helping all these people also secretly spying on american military bases it was funny when i tweeted elon musk i was
Starting point is 01:21:50 like i was like hey elon why haven't you built an iron man suit yet and he tweeted back building starship and i'm like all right fair point you know it's like high point hey you know that's actually an acceptable he's doing the shield thing is that he's building he's building a ship to go to Mars. Didn't S.H.I.E.L.D. have a space and orbit Nick Fury's... No, they're the helicarriers. You're thinking Justice League had the Batman thing in space. Okay, so he's doing Justice League first.
Starting point is 01:22:14 He's going to Mars. Well, so if we follow the DC timeline, then what I think is supposed to happen is Elon Musk will send a crew to Mars who will accidentally uncover an ancient temple where a bunch of invasive aliens were frozen by the Martians who will then be awoken by the astronaut, take over his body
Starting point is 01:22:30 or assume his form, come to Earth, and there will be a secret invasion. There's a well-known theory that, I mean, facts are not endorsements, but there's a well-known theory that there was some kind of nuclear war between Earth and Mars, which used to be colonized.
Starting point is 01:22:47 Well-known. Yeah, because of what? It's established. It's an established theory. You can look it up. So, yeah. So it's that there was some sort of nuclear war, some sort of war between Earth and Mars, which used to be heavily colonized, and that's why Mars looks the way it does now.
Starting point is 01:23:02 Wait, wait, wait. When did you hear about this? When did I hear about that um i i think i was in a youtube rabbit hole at three in the morning a long time ago no because this is from newsweek march 22nd viral mars conspiracy theory video claims humans lived on mars and destroyed it and there it is youtube rabbit holes yeah so you can go ahead and read that that is that was interesting a video in which a TikTok user claims humans once lived on Mars, but rendered it uninhabitable in a nuclear war has gone viral. Thanks, Newsweek.
Starting point is 01:23:31 It's the news that's fit to print. Thanks, Newsweek. The false, but entertaining. The false. Thanks for letting me know it's false. Oh, cool. Yeah. But entertaining theory also states this war would have caused a nuclear winter, which
Starting point is 01:23:41 is responsible for Mars' popular red color. Iron? What? I don't think so. It has currently been liked more than 230,000 times and shared nearly 10,000 times. That's not even that many shares. I know. That's nothing.
Starting point is 01:23:52 I didn't like it or share it. I just read it. I think that. It has been watched 979,000 times. What? That was from early. Our video with Alex Jones has double the views on this. Yeah, right.
Starting point is 01:24:02 This is not. This is. This is viral. Someone was bored. This is the stuff that is viral. Someone was bored and they wrote a article about it. This is the stuff that comes up when everybody else is shadow banned. I wonder if people used to live on Venus. You guys ever think about that? Wait, wait, wait.
Starting point is 01:24:12 I'm sorry. I got to read this. The theory explained by user Crackheadjoedirt. Oh, cool. So you know it's... Oh, my God. It's verified. Was put forward in response to the question, what's a conspiracy theory that absolutely blows your mind?
Starting point is 01:24:27 Crackhead Joe Dirt states, Mars isn't naturally red. Want to know what can cause a planet to turn red and change after a couple million years? If enough nukes were to go off on a planet, the first thing that would happen is a nuclear winter. Nuclear winter is the aftermath of nuclear blasts causing ash that is so thick it blocks out the sun. Nuclear winters can last anywhere from 100 years and a thousand depending on how much ash is in the atmosphere. After all the natural resources are drained up from the nuclear winter, the planet turns red
Starting point is 01:24:52 from dust. My theory is that we've come from Mars after we drained all its natural resources and destroyed it with nuclear bombs. That is the stupidest thing I've ever heard. The red color is iron. That you can... That was very weirdly weirdly worded yeah after the resources are drained up what the heck does that mean it turns to red dust
Starting point is 01:25:12 what you meant by that venus makes way more sense not mars no mars is for sure because the sun's expanding slowly so it used to not be so hot on venus well no venus is hot because of a greenhouse effect there's those They thought there were all these cometary impacts on Venus. It turns out they're like explosives from the inside. Like it cooked so hot
Starting point is 01:25:31 that it blew out all this goo outside of itself. And there's all these like explosive holes where its insides blew out. Hold on. Let me tell you a better conspiracy theory.
Starting point is 01:25:39 Mars makes no sense because Mars is too small. It has no magnetosphere is my understanding. So it can't maintain an atmosphere. So the solar radiation just rips away the particles and blasts them off the planet. So we can't terraform it if we want it to. It's the oceans that
Starting point is 01:25:52 cause the field. Unless I guess, no, it's the iron core. It's partly, ocean contributes a lot to it. So I guess what we would need to do is like drill to the center of Mars and then get like Ben Affleck and the gang to launch those nukes in sequential order like in that movie. Armageddon. I'll tell you what's better.
Starting point is 01:26:07 This is sad. Okay. Look, I'm sorry, crackhead Joe Dirt. I appreciate your attempt, but let me school you for a second. Humans started on Venus. And Venus was Earth-like. But a runaway greenhouse effect from mass consumption and carbon emissions resulted in global warming. And the pollution started creating acid rain,
Starting point is 01:26:25 the ocean levels started rising, and then once the American military, well, I shouldn't say American, but once the Venetian, Venetian, whatever, Venus military of one country realized what was happening, they created the Ark Project, where they took the DNA samples from as many animals and species as possible
Starting point is 01:26:40 and put it onto a giant space vessel called the Ark that would ferry as many people as possible and many animals and creatures to Earth to get here because Venus was being destroyed. So they flee. And then the Ark project comes and the great flood sweeps over Venus, wiping out all civilization from global warming. And then they land on Earth. And then what do we see in the fossil record?
Starting point is 01:27:02 The pre-Cambrian explosion. All of a sudden, around the same time, the fossil record? The Precambrian explosion. All of a sudden, around the same time, the fossil record just, boom! Tons of different animals. Why? Because the Ark Project dropped a bunch of the critters, and then they started populating and then all started dying around the same time, so now they appear in the fossil record as this great, unexplainable elite. I don't
Starting point is 01:27:19 actually believe that, but come on, let's be real. It's a way better conspiracy theory than we lived on Mars. It might explain octopuses. We don't know.'t know dude for real they look like the brain and stem creature inside our bodies and there's like weird dna stuff and there's just they don't make sense for earth yeah looks like a jungle planet that got superheated it really looks like it used to be a jungle planet we landed a drone there and it got i think the russians didn't it got crushed and just like melted or something yeah i was i was watching this video where they claimed that we could make floating cities on venus because the gases are so dense
Starting point is 01:27:51 that we could make like floating platforms on gas just heated by like the geothermal heat from underneath i think it's a hot planet wow that's a lot of energy potential to boil water yeah well you know we're on earth we go to Mars, but Mars can't sustain an atmosphere, is my understanding. So what do we do? We're just trapped on Earth. You want to know
Starting point is 01:28:09 what's really scary? You want to know the scariest thing? Europa. The universe is expanding, right? So eventually, on Earth, once the universe expands to a certain point,
Starting point is 01:28:18 you won't actually be able to see any stars or planets or galaxies or anything because they'll be so far away that light traveling towards us is just, doesn't reach us anymore. You know what I mean? So there are going to be potentially creatures
Starting point is 01:28:30 on this earth, maybe, in a certain amount of time, they're born into existence and they look up at the black sky and they see nothing and they think, there's nothing. So are we just getting prepped for that with all this light pollution?
Starting point is 01:28:40 No, look, we can look at the stars and we understand the universe exists because we can see the light that has reached us. But if the universe expands to, if it keeps expanding, eventually it'll be too far away for us to even see because the light will never reach us. All they'll have is our records and the teachers will teach the records until the records become racist and they're not allowed to teach them anymore. It'll be faith. It'll be magic to them. They'll be like, we know it doesn't exist because you can look at, there's nothing there. It was a bunch of dreams and hallucinations of these people.
Starting point is 01:29:05 But here's the thing. If you can't see the stars, you can't conceptualize the concept of outer space and stars. So you'd have to take it on faith. No, but the concept wouldn't exist. What if there was something where like, you know, interdimensional elves would randomly appear and then one day, you know, a thousand years ago, they all died off. So it would come out. It come out.
Starting point is 01:29:22 Plus leprechauns don't exist. Yeah. It would be. It would become a myth. Right. Right. You know, way thousand years ago, they all died off. So it would come out like... Plus, leprechauns don't exist. Yeah, it would become a myth. Right, right. Like, you know, way distant out there, there are these things called stars, and, you know, eventually it would fade into... And they would make movies about, like,
Starting point is 01:29:33 stars coming to Earth and, like, giving people magic powers because they wouldn't understand what it actually was. I think the universe is rubberbanding. So it is accelerating now, and it's getting bigger faster, but it will eventually
Starting point is 01:29:45 slow back down and start to come back together and then pop again. That's called Big Crunch Theory. It was disproven a long, long time ago. I think there's a lot
Starting point is 01:29:51 of those happening like popcorning all over the multiverse. They initially, we had Solid State Theory. Do you know what Solid State Theory is? The universe is
Starting point is 01:29:59 and has always been. Then we had eventually Big Bang, the Big Bang Theory that the universe is expanding and from that we had a lot of people theorize something called the big crunch that if the energy is being pushed out at a certain point could it start coming back in a better way to explain it is if gravity attracts wouldn't at a certain point everything condense into singularities and then
Starting point is 01:30:18 all start moving back towards each other wasn't stephen hawking that was disproven wasn't he one of the ones that disproved he didn't he he thought everything was shrinking and he like wrote a whole thesis on it and then he's like now i'm gonna disprove my own theory and he wrote a whole thesis on how it's expanding yeah so uh basically where we're at now is that the universe is actually accelerating faster and faster and faster as if the ball is rolling down the hill. At no point will the ball just stop and then roll back up the hill. If it goes down and then goes back up and then back down and back up, you might start to see it because gravity is actually a pressure. It's pushing.
Starting point is 01:30:54 It's not a pulling force. It's a pushing force. So it's possible that things are being expelled into a universe that's actually trying to push them back, but they're still in a rate of acceleration and will eventually be pushed back together. So I guess it is still a hypothesis. When you look it up, they just basically say it's a hypothesis.
Starting point is 01:31:12 That's good. There's something called the big bounce. Propose that it keeps going back and forth. A big bang, big crunch, big bang, big crunch. That's interesting. Big bounces. Yeah, big bounce. Hey, regarding what we were talking about earlier,
Starting point is 01:31:22 I think the CIA has given us disinformation. I think that's just rampant what the CIA does. You think that they're giving it just to distract us and keep us like talking about aliens while they do their dirty work? Yes. And some of them maybe are truly deluded and making crazy theories or they did hear from a friend something. I don't trust like hidden sources.
Starting point is 01:31:40 Well, I know one of the sources that red flagged me was the John Brennan. Yes. Yeah. What happened? sources well i know one of the sources that i red flagged me was the john brennan yes yeah what happened but in the article it said john brennan says that we're stupid to think or arrogant to think that we're the only species as soon as they quoted john brennan i'm like john brennan is just dirty swampy i love john brennan me too yeah you know i would love you know it'd be like the best evening ever what bezos zucker, Zuckerberg, Brennan. Yeah. You know, just hanging out. Barack Obama.
Starting point is 01:32:08 Yeah. Just all these heroes. Great lines. That'd be awesome. Smart. Bill Gates. In a sauna. So it's hot.
Starting point is 01:32:14 Actually, you know what would be really great? What? In a sauna with Brennan, Bill Gates, Zuckerberg, Bezos, and Alex Jones. Oh. Oh. That might actually be fun. That'd be awesome. Yeah, you'd have to wear like a shield, though, because you'd go off.
Starting point is 01:32:30 I'd pay for that. Super heated Alex Jones. I'd like to be in this sauna at this time while whatever this conversation is begins. Buckets of cold water. I'd watch it on pay-per-view. Yeah. Pay-per-view. Yeah, yeah.
Starting point is 01:32:42 Put a GoPro in there. All right. How about we go to super chats everybody my friends if you're listening right now and you really want to help out the show give us a like because your comments your likes your engagement you're basically telling youtube the show is good so when you do that it really does help us out don't forget to subscribe hit the notification bell because subscriptions often don't matter all that much notifications do and just share the show with your friends if you think it's good
Starting point is 01:33:06 because that ultimately is what really helps us grow. And go to TimCast.com, become a member, because we'll have a bonus segment coming up after the show for members only. Let's read some of these super chats. We got Ramshill says, Ian Crossland, I used to watch your YouTube videos when I was in high school. People don't realize how much of a legend you are. Thank you, Ramshill.
Starting point is 01:33:23 I got a comment the other night they're like i remember when this video came out when i was six oh wow and now i'm 21 that's weird time is weird time is weird time is time is weird they're growing up swinging panda says my province is going back into phase one lockdowns our premiere is a total tool alberta is a joke appreciate your freedoms, America. Well, when you're out in the middle of nowhere, I can walk around and do whatever I want. We have chickens. We were just sitting there watching them do chicken stuff.
Starting point is 01:33:52 Yeah, the chickens are at the age where they're jumping on top of their houses. A couple of them are. And it's like, what are you doing? What are you doing, chicken? Why are you jumping on your house? And they just stand there. Yeah, so for a long time, they were really scared.
Starting point is 01:34:03 Now, a couple of the big ones, I'll put my hand near them, and they'll just look at me and peck my finger. Awesome. Yes. So for a long time, they were really scared. Now, a couple of the big ones, like I'll put my hand near them and they'll just look at me and like peck my finger. Awesome. Yes. Yeah. Because they're like today. Well, I know this guy.
Starting point is 01:34:11 I'm glad you've been there for them. I was not really around for their childhood. The chickens. Yeah. Last two weeks. I was there a couple of days. Yeah. They don't know you.
Starting point is 01:34:19 They grow up so fast. They'll remember me. All right. Lester Leo says Trump promised to build 1000 miles of wall in eight eight years 450 miles of walls were built before he left the uh left house he was on schedule yeah so that was on schedule right right on schedule yep he fulfilled a promise i guess i mean he did that in four years yep he wasn't as bad as they made him out no god no oh my god jose pereira says it's not a wall. It's a large, tall structure that separates boundaries. Okay.
Starting point is 01:34:47 Thank you. A narrow, yes. Influx. More clarification. Not a serial killer says, supporter since the beginning. Been following Tim since Wall Street. Please shout out my man Brent's comic, Take the Monkey and Run on Kickstarter. Oh, there you go.
Starting point is 01:35:03 Take the Monkey and Run on Kickstarter. All right. take the monkey and run on kickstarter oh there you go take the monkey and run on kickstarter all right the lukewarm gamer says do you think the fall of comics as the go woke has as they go woke has anything to do with anime and manga are getting more popular in the west as they are not woke probably i definitely think so what do i want to watch woke captain america complaining about bigotry or like some dude who's a pirate and like can punch dudes from really far away and another guy who's like a swords guy with a sword in his mouth and he's like cutting people with it attack on titan's pretty weird too i don't know like people turn into giant monsters my daughter got me uh watching this anime uh uh something neverland somebody knows what it's called i don don't know. The Something Neverland. Someone will say it.
Starting point is 01:35:48 It's about these orphans who all live with this woman. And she's sending them out to be adopted. And they love her. They call her mom. And apparently she's sending them to monsters. To be eaten? To be eaten. Oh.
Starting point is 01:35:59 Yeah. That's nice. And then they find out. And they find out about it. So now they have to escape. Oh. But I'm like, the promise never land. The promise never land. Isn't it infinitely more interesting than Captain America being like, are you a racist?
Starting point is 01:36:11 Yeah. Yeah. See, I'd rather watch that with my daughter than have her. Did you guys ever see Stan Lee's Superhumans? No. Yeah. I did watch a couple of them. He started a show where he would go around Earth and look for people with real, like
Starting point is 01:36:24 one guy could like magnetically stick pans to his head. One guy could put bison to sleep with his energy. He had this contortionist guy was the host. I mean, that's Stan Lee. He got tired of the bull, of the crap, and was like, I'm finding real superhuman people of which there are. He was special. He was cool.
Starting point is 01:36:41 That's a big loss. People that could get super hot and cause steam off their wet shirts and stuff yeah we got the political commentator says shout out to Josie she's awesome and I for one am proud
Starting point is 01:36:49 that she isn't party approved much of the libertarian party now is a joke unfortunately if you're a real libertarian she's the one you gotta follow
Starting point is 01:36:57 that's true who said that the political commentator the political commentator yes we follow each other there you go. Aw, thank you. Aaron says, this is for Ian.
Starting point is 01:37:07 I know you're not crazy about having kids, but if you asexually reproduce, you should name your son Lil Ian and your daughter Lillian. Oh, Lillian. That's clever. Yeah, I think I did see Ian the other day butting. Yeah, he was. Yeah, he's kind of butting a little bit. I'm into it.
Starting point is 01:37:22 It was just coming and then it fell off his arm and then eventually grew legs and ran off. I think that we are fungus that ate other fungus. Like what happened was in the tide pool, there was all this plant matter and then there were all this fungus. And some of the fungus ate plant matter and stayed fungus. Some of the fungus ate other fungus and became animal. Oh. Why do you think that? Because I'm crazy.
Starting point is 01:37:41 Totally crazy. I'm just using logic. All right. I'll accept that explanation. Too much fungus. Totally crazy. I'm just using logic. All right. I'll accept that explanation. Too much fungus. All right. So Super for Education says alpha and beta particles are also ionizing radiation, not just gamma rays.
Starting point is 01:37:51 Ah, okay. Right. All right. Let's see. Bobby Lane says, Tim, please look into the EPA's plan to ban modified cars, even if for use on racetracks. If there are any car enthusiasts, please sign the RPM Act that SEMA is putting together. Interesting.
Starting point is 01:38:08 All right. Let's see. What is this? Gerg C says, Tim, congratulations on being around such beautiful people. Please be careful when purchasing land in the future. Make sure the land you purchase includes the mineral rights. Oh, I know all about that. Oh, yeah. A lot of land in rural areas, they've already sold
Starting point is 01:38:24 the mineral rights and they try to sell you surface rights. And all of a sudden, one day, some guy shows up with a bulldozer and he's like, I got the contract. I own all about that. Oh, yeah. Yeah, a lot of land in rural areas, they've already sold the mineral rights and they try to sell you surface rights. And all of a sudden, one day some guy shows up with a bulldozer and he's like, I got the contract. I own what's underneath. Yeah. And then there's like restrictions on like
Starting point is 01:38:33 you have to allow them certain access and oh, so dumb. All right, let's see. Realm Explorer says, Star Trek Deep Space Nine, season three, episode 11 and 12, past tense. Crazy how close this two-part episode is to reality now and in the near future.
Starting point is 01:38:47 Realm explore haunted, abandoned and exploration videos. That sounds fun. I definitely want to fund that too. So some urban explorers going around to old abandoned stuff. I think one of the things we want to do is we talked about doing the Paranormal Podcast. But I think I want to get someone to go over and explore the the monsters of west virginia because there's a bunch there's like mothman like sasquatch yeah yeah i remember the mothman yeah i do i was watching the show on travel channel the other day it was like the scariest places in the
Starting point is 01:39:14 u.s or something and they did this really funny thing where they would interview someone in broad daylight and it was really not scary at all but they would hold the camera at an angle pointed upwards and then do something called feathering where it makes the rim around them look dark. And then they would just drop the brightness so it looks dark out and the camera's at an angle and point it up. And then they would put eerie music. And I'm like, it works. So it's like a guy standing in the forest like, my dog went outside and, like, he got eaten by something. And then it's like the camera's at an angle.
Starting point is 01:39:42 It's going like, dun-dun-dun-dun-dun-dun-dun-dun. And I'm like, this is crazy man. There's this dude named Bradley Garrett. You can follow him on Twitter at Goblin Merchant. He's been on Rogan before
Starting point is 01:39:51 and he's an urban explorer. He has written books about it. He would go under London like deep under London. There's different layers. Oh yeah. They got like a throne of skulls
Starting point is 01:39:59 or something. They got catacombs all over the place. Oh yeah. It's awesome. Dude you want to hear crazy stories? Yes.
Starting point is 01:40:04 So I've been to the catacombs in France because they have like a tour. You go down and you go into this one approved area and there's just like dead people, skulls and bones all over the place. But you can actually go down deeper. I think what happened was in Italy, they needed a place to like get rid of bodies. So they built catacombs, right? There was a party some college kids were having and and they went down into a very not far in part of the catacombs.
Starting point is 01:40:28 They were in the beginning, I guess you could call it. And some girl went to go take a leak. And so she went around the corner, took a leak, and then forgot how she got there, took a wrong turn. They found her weeks later, starved to death, dehydrated, just dead in the catacombs. Because it's miles. She got lost. Oh, my God.
Starting point is 01:40:44 Yup. Don't be dumb. Oh, my gosh. What a nightmare. The catacombs because it's miles. She got lost. Oh my god. Yup. Don't be dumb. Oh my gosh, what a nightmare. The catacombs. Has there been a movie made? Could you imagine? What a place to die. Oh. Being lost in this monster. And the panic takes over in the darkness. And you're surrounded by dead bodies. Oh my god. No reception. Why would
Starting point is 01:40:59 you do that? That's crazy. Drunk? Yup. She was drunk. She was drunk and she took the wrong turn and then one wrong turn and you're gone and they were like she's gone two weeks later they went and found her and she was just out of dehydration i guess she's like yeah oh no anyway yeah horrifically awesome james harrelson says the portland fire bomber who was just indicted for last summer's terror rights he is from Indiana and his name is Malik Muhammad
Starting point is 01:41:26 maybe Nation of Islam just like the Capitol Hill barricade guy who also was from Indiana I got my tinfoil on Tim well speaking of tinfoil if you haven't smashed the like button
Starting point is 01:41:36 one thing you can do is go to TimCast.com and click shop because we have the limited edition tinfoil gorilla available that it's very much the same as the regular
Starting point is 01:41:44 I am a gorilla shirt but he's wearing a tinfoil hat. And the I Am A Gorilla is written in black letters instead of white letters. I think this one will only be up for a little while, and then we'll eventually take it down because it was just a special edition. Same thing is true for the Diamond Hands gorilla, which is, we got that one right there. That one's right here. Yeah, that's where he's the Wall Street guy, and he's got a cigar, and he's holding stacks
Starting point is 01:42:02 of cash. This one's a misprint. It's a little too dark. Yeah, this was a misprint. It's a little too dark. Yeah, this is misprinted. It's a little too dark, but it's okay. You can see he's got the cigar. I like he looks so happy. He's got these diamond hands gorilla men.
Starting point is 01:42:14 That guy is a character waiting to be fleshed out. We should make a show about he's a gorilla who goes around telling people to enjoy life. Gorilla tactics. He's going to be a psychic gorilla who tells people how to improve their lives and offers them self-help. Gorilla warfare. And tells them to be responsible for themselves. And he can smash stuff like a superhero.
Starting point is 01:42:31 Yeah. Yeah, of course. I'd already read this before I'd read The Red Skull. Yeah. And he meets parody versions of Captain America and explains to him that he's got to allow people to explore ideas and be free. That everyone he
Starting point is 01:42:45 doesn't like is not a racist right exactly he lived in a cage until he was like 16 and someone let him out of his cage and so ever since he wants to give back he's inspirational he lived in a cage but what happened was he gained his superpowers because while he was in the cage in the dark he began meditating and through the power of meditation he gained enlightenment and then started levitating in his cage. And when they found him, the cage had already dematerialized and he floated out to the sun. He developed connection to alien races
Starting point is 01:43:12 through the meditation. Interdimensional aliens. Yes. Through the DMT network. Now we have a universe. Yes. Wait, that's a better idea. Let's make a superhero comic
Starting point is 01:43:22 about a gorilla who took DMT. He didn't know where he was getting it, but he was eating acacia plants. A regular gorilla walking around, and it's just really boring looking. And then he just stumbles over, sits down, and eats ayahuasca. We can make a group of gorilla superheroes. One of them could be... Yes. One of the stock traders.
Starting point is 01:43:37 Both. I'm sorry. Let's not stop there. I am here for this content. A gorilla is minding his own business. Meanwhile, a podcast host is on a trip in Africa and drops DMT not realizing it and the gorilla finds it and takes it
Starting point is 01:43:50 and then his mind just goes and then he gains access to the interdimensional network and the elves endow him with super intelligence and psychic powers well no there's a problem with this what's that because that's the start of Curious George and it was deemed racist because the white man brought the-
Starting point is 01:44:07 The man in the yellow hat? The man in the yellow hat. Okay. Ted. Wait, wait. Ted gave Curious George DMT? No. Ted gave him purpose.
Starting point is 01:44:15 Oh. Yeah. So this is offensive now. And the VR goggles. Have you ever seen the video of the monkey with the VR goggles? I have not seen it. Some people say it's animal abuse, but the monkey's going crazy. Kind of a cool video of the monkey with the VR goggles? I have not seen it. Some people say it's animal abuse, but the monkey's like going crazy.
Starting point is 01:44:27 Kind of a cool way. The monkey's like all about this. How is he going crazy? He's just like. Oh, my God. Check the video. I guess that was him going crazy. I thought you were going to say like he was trying to climb the walls or something.
Starting point is 01:44:44 He's freaking out. This is crazy, okay? Awesome. All right. Vegas Girl says, Tim, you should have Donald Trump as a guest. Yes. The problem is Trump would instantly get us banned because they literally banned Trump. He's a voice disguiser.
Starting point is 01:44:57 Yeah. Yeah. And it'll clearly be Trump when he's on his solo. It'll be like, we'll pixelate his face. And he's talking like this. Look, I'll tell you what happened to this election. Okay.
Starting point is 01:45:07 The radical left. The radical left. Like, we know who that is, right? Facebook is like, can we ban him? What if, what if,
Starting point is 01:45:14 what if we put on Facebook it was clearly not Trump, but we claimed it was? Would they ban us? That'd be funny. Like, if it was just a silhouette of a guy who looks like Trump
Starting point is 01:45:21 doing the same thing with his hands. the algorithms would ban you. Have you seen the Trump playing the accordion videos? Yes, I have. yes i love them they're the best thing in the world i love it it's so much boring now with biden i guess we can make fun of his speech impediment or something oh that's just sad they have i mean snl is trash but they have some i love snl but but clarify yeah i love them but they have um you I love SNL. Yeah, I love them. But they have some impersonators
Starting point is 01:45:48 on there, but they're always trying to give it a cute spin to how nice he is, you know? Instead of calling out the... But David Carvey actually did a good impression of him. It was just on an interview. You know who the worst was? Alec Baldwin.
Starting point is 01:46:04 It's like he wasn't even Trump. I don't understand what he was impersonating. It was imperson on an interview. You know who the worst was? Alec Baldwin. It's like he wasn't even Trump. I don't understand what he was impersonating. He was impersonating the idea. Right, right, right. People would actually watch Trump speak. It was the caricature that they were impersonating. Remember that Trump movie that came out like eight months ago? It got all this attention for like a week and then just disappeared.
Starting point is 01:46:18 Trump movie? Yeah, it was a movie about Trump. And like some famous guy portrayed Trump. Oh, yeah, yeah. Yeah, and it made him look all vile. It was like soft core adult stuff, yes. What? Like, yeah. It made him look all vile. It was like soft core adult stuff. Yes. What?
Starting point is 01:46:28 Like, yeah. Okay, so it was like left wing revenge fantasies. Nonsense. We got to read some more of these superchats. We got Bobby Bob says, We were told the Patriot Act was for our own good and safety and is needed. Sure. Look at what it got us and the Middle East.
Starting point is 01:46:40 They say the same thing about COVID passports. Dude, I'm not down for patriot act bs and stuff yeah it's called patriot though adam collins says tim i live in maryland and i just renewed my license to get the real id i had to use my voter id as identification i just thought you would like to know huh it's double racist huh punk rock fox says i live in dearborn michigan best food the east side is lebanese while the south is Yemeni. There are cultural issues between the two Arab groups. Lebanese assimilate, while the Yemeni do not.
Starting point is 01:47:10 Interesting. Yeah. Thank you for clarifying that. Yeah. Brian Shink says, shout out to my podcast, Shooting the Dirt. Is it a gun podcast? Don't do that. Zachary Kale says, it's very important you understand something.
Starting point is 01:47:23 I have extensive experience with fentanyl. What you need to understand is how you take F when you bite on the street. It's so easy to OD. I'll tweet to Ian the specifics. Love you, redheaded libertarian. Aw, I love you. The Gaelic Bat says, Tim, I'm surprised you didn't mention April 5th as first contact day. I thought you were a Trekkie.
Starting point is 01:47:42 Tsk, tsk. Big fan of the show. Also free the code. I said it was Trump day. I thought you were a Trekkie. Tsk, tsk. Big fan of the show. Also free the code. I said it was Trump Day. And so here's what I did. I tweeted today is 4-5, which will forever be known as Trump Day in honor of the 45th president. It got like
Starting point is 01:47:56 2,300 retweets. Everyone's laughing. And a bunch of lefties are like, no! The next day, then today I tweeted today is 4-6, which will be forever known as Biden Day in honor of the 46th president. Tomorrow is Kamala. No.
Starting point is 01:48:08 No. I was like, no. Some people got it and they were like, that was an excellent setup. Because I quoted the other day, like, that was a thing I was doing because, you know, Kamala Day is tomorrow. So 4-7. They're saying in Star Trek lore, 4-5 is the day that Zephyrin Cochran's warp drive caused the Vulcans to... To notice Earth and come here.
Starting point is 01:48:29 Wow. Yeah. After a nuclear war and then authoritarianism and then the police were being... Were given drugs. Star Trek lore is crazy, man. Police were given drugs for what? Yeah. So there was like a period in Star Trek history where on Earth, everything was very authoritarian.
Starting point is 01:48:44 And the cops would have these drug things. They just like oh like super soldier type i think it was more like narcotics yeah i could be wrong but there's an episode in the next generation where q is wearing this like police right uniform with drugs on it talking about the pathetic history of earth or whatever oh yeah tng is amazing yeah really that's why i haven't got into a d space nine because it was so good I don't want to I mean DJ's 9 is good Really
Starting point is 01:49:07 Yeah dude DJ's 9 is great The Dominion War Come on Voyager's okay You know I saw the first one Enterprise
Starting point is 01:49:14 Because I like Scott Bakula So much I thought Janeway Was a good captain I guess a lot of people Didn't like her Yeah But you know
Starting point is 01:49:20 The next generation Is the best Yeah Can't argue with that One Patriot says Jordan Peterson is a hero. He saved more lives than BLM ever will. He saved my life.
Starting point is 01:49:29 He inspires millions to face their shadows and become their best self, which terrifies leftists because they want people to stay in the victim mindset. Dude, for real. I was in such a dark place in 2016. When they said Jordan Peterson is a threat because of what he speaks. He's great. Chris DeLuca says legit the best I've ever had was a taco truck run by a woman who spoke no English. I spoke no Spanish.
Starting point is 01:49:51 Google Translate for the win. Best food ever. Yeah. Nice. Yeah, man. I mean, you grow up in certain places and you'll pick up bits of different languages. I mean, especially in any major city. In New York, you're probably going to learn some Spanish
Starting point is 01:50:05 and there's tons of people who speak different languages. You'll probably pick stuff up. That's a great American melting pot, man. Julie Simone says, I support legal immigration and agree with Ian.
Starting point is 01:50:15 People should be able to speak the language, especially working in public service. Taxpayers shouldn't have to struggle to communicate with a person at the post office
Starting point is 01:50:22 in California. Shaking my head. Good point. All right, let's see. we got too many super chats we have so many joseph henson says the fact that anne mccaffrey gets ignored says it all for these movie companies writers have been getting worse since the strike everyone forgot about because some people did something interesting who's the strike yeah i don't know. Who's that? I'm not sure. I do remember the strike, though. What is it?
Starting point is 01:50:49 The writers all went on a strike. Yeah, and it killed a bunch of shows. It made them all crazy. Yeah. Oh, yeah. I think Lost was happening in that time. Oh, wow. So there was like one season of Lost.
Starting point is 01:50:57 It might be season four. That's just trash. It doesn't make any sense. Yeah. Yeah, I remember that. Mm-hmm. All right. Let's see.
Starting point is 01:51:06 Brandon Gilmour has been listening for a little over a year now. Love the channel. Can I get a shout out for my band Under the Gallows? We just released a new song. A few new songs. Oh, excellent. Good job. Great.
Starting point is 01:51:16 Josh says, I am a gorilla. Glad to hear it, Josh. Jalapeno Ketchup says, so awesome to see Josie on, but I hope Figaro is getting his dinner on time tonight. Who is it who's figaro figaro is my tuxedo cat he's a norwegian forest cat so he's big and he's fluffy and he's friendly and he's more popular than i am oh wow i like those cats those long hair yeah i love those long hair big yep yeah he's amazing yeah so cute will beasley says luke went out for a pack of cigarettes and never came back. Yeah.
Starting point is 01:51:46 Yeah, I was sitting here and he was like, I'm going to run up to the gas station and get some cigarettes. You need anything? And I was like, just a host for the show. I was like, yeah,
Starting point is 01:51:53 just a co-host. He was like, all right, I'll see you in a few minutes. And that was it. He was gone. I'm so betrayed. I'll never recover. Just a co-host.
Starting point is 01:52:02 Luke actually did. He came out to hang out. He wasn't planning on coming on the show yeah he's gonna be for like three days and we yeah yeah he's like i'll just come hang out on the way and then i forgot what happened someone canceled i guess and i was like hey luke we had a cancellation you want to come on the show and he was like i don't know i like being tied down no just it was for one night and he was like i don't know if i want to do it and then i was like it's one night dude we'll do the show he's like all right cool and then we did the show and then
Starting point is 01:52:24 i was like well you're still here but i just come'll do the show. He's like, all right, cool. And then we did the show. And then I was like, well, you're still here. Why don't you just come on again? And then all of a sudden he was on every single show for like two months. The audience loves Luke. Yeah, Luke's a good dude. Most people love Luke. Oh, yeah. Let's see.
Starting point is 01:52:36 88 Games says, Tim, you've basically explained the plot of Gundam Wing with Space Colony War. Hey, oh, there you go. Oh, this is interesting. Ryan Berkabyle says tap one land create one one squirrel token pretty powerful land i love it that's a very powerful candelabra of tonos much what that untaps it yeah but it only is a one time that is you can probably break that though make a bunch of squirrels what could you use to repeatedly untap well you got your your uh instill energy i? Well, you got your Instill Energy.
Starting point is 01:53:06 I'm old school. Do you got anything that could sacrifice a creature to untap a land? Adam's deck, basically. Probably. Untap unlimited lands. Then you can just tap the land infinitely. Untap a land, draw a card. What are we talking about?
Starting point is 01:53:15 Magic the Gathering card. SB says, Tim, check out the DS9 episode Tribunal. O'Brien experiences the Cardassian justice system. Propaganda and predetermined verdicts. Very topical now. Yeah, dude. Excellent show. Nova Zero says, wrong.
Starting point is 01:53:29 51% attack is crap. Government buying into only strengthens crypto. Get a SME. There is the tech, the infrastructure, and the market. Don't recklessly lump them together. Andreas Antonopoulos is my recommendation. He's a Bitcoin. He's a big-time Bitcoin guy.
Starting point is 01:53:44 All right. Well, there you go. Andrea Rojas says, Hi, Tim and team. Will you guys ever go on tour? Have a live show with audience? I think it would be awesome. Thank you for all you guys do.
Starting point is 01:53:51 We have a 40-foot fifth-wheel trailer because Luke convinced us to get one. And the idea is that we can actually have this studio set up in an RV. The plan is to drive out one weekend to like Nashville, do shows there all week, and then Friday night do a live show at a venue, then drive to Austin, same thing, then back to Nashville, then back home. Probably other, that's the first idea we have. There's just so much insane stuff happening in so many meetings that it's very, very difficult to actually do anything. And I like, I've got a lot of time. So I'm actually,
Starting point is 01:54:29 we have like three big projects for one, the creative enterprise that is going to be timcast.com. So I am talking with some people about producing a pilot for a show and then maybe having an exclusive comedy show, like full TV show legit on timcast.com. Then we're also going to be hiring news editors, writers. And I said, I was going to be doing this fact checking thing where we write news organizations. And that's a a project and the third most important thing is the fediverse open source subscription service plugin for people's websites yeah that's to me like a huge priority i heard yeah i heard that the center browser type way of going is not necessarily the best i sometimes it is here from one person but apparently that's that's that's dangerous because i'm saying puts a lot of stress on the company.
Starting point is 01:55:10 An app, open source, free for everybody that you put on your website and it creates a subscription service. It's happening. Whether we're involved or not, it's going to happen. So let's do it. I want to do it. The idea is then you don't need Patreon. You don't need any of these services. You'll just need your financial service provider.
Starting point is 01:55:24 If you're running a business, maybe go to a bank, get a merchant account or you use one of these existing financial services online. And then all you got to do is plug in, and people can sign up. And then on the first of every month, whoever is using this open source stuff, you'll see your charge go to all your favorite creators on their websites. So you're a member of their sites instead of being a member to like Disney or whatever. So then you're getting a big plethora of content. We work with minds when we were building our sorting mechanism. We, you basically, you'd be subscribed to who you're subscribed to, or you can see everyone at some point, but then you can filter outwards. In addition to the things you want to see, like what's trending, hashtag this,
Starting point is 01:55:57 you can pick specific words that you want to not ever show up in your feed. So we could do something like that too, for search algorithms. I mean, the idea I guess is not only can you have your own subscription service that no one can ban you from, people can donate monthly to your website to get access to your content. So your own private Patreon, I guess, but it also networks all the other websites. So if you look at Discover, you'll see Ian's website, you'll see my website, you'll see Josie's website. And so it creates the social networking aspect just through each individual website. And then we create
Starting point is 01:56:26 a directory website, you know, a node showing all the different websites. Like a torrent site. And basically you go there and you can see people posting things and you can follow certain channels, but we don't host any of it.
Starting point is 01:56:38 Just an API redirect. So then no one can ban. So they could come to us and be like, you're hosting this guy's kind of, we're not hosting it. It's just showing you a directory of existing content like iTunes does with podcasts.
Starting point is 01:56:47 That's smart. That's the plan. But it requires some know-how for the individual who has to buy their own server space, have their own domain and all that stuff. All right. Tom's Pants says, Soviet scientist Anatoly Bogorsky is the guy who took an accelerated proton to the gourd. His story is really sad, even though he lived. Yeah. Didn't it like make him go crazy?
Starting point is 01:57:04 Like it just messed his brain up in a crazy way? Yeah. An accelerated proton to the gourd. Yeah, that would be extreme brain damage. Some happen. I'll have to read more about it. Yeah, definitely. Let's see.
Starting point is 01:57:19 Coloblyson says, the Fermi Paradox says, we've not found other life because we've studied less than zero point and then a bunch of zeros one percent of the universe there you go Chris says there is also accounts in the Sumerian text that Sodom was the result of nukes the ancient texts have an eerie sci-fi feel to it yeah what was that story where it's like you know I think it was like God said don't look back or you'll turn to a pillar of salt or something Sodom and Gomorrah. Lot's wife. Lot.
Starting point is 01:57:45 Oh, yeah. Yeah, his wife turned into salt. And so the ancient aliens people are like, it's a nuclear weapon and they're telling you to run because if you stop and turn back and watch, you'll get vaporized.
Starting point is 01:57:52 Interesting. Okay. And so the translation over generation for generation, it's you'll be turned to ash. You'll be disintegrated. It turns into a pillar of salt. Oh.
Starting point is 01:58:04 Were Sodom and Gomorrah next to each other? Were they near each other? I think they were close by. I heard that Gomorrah was on top of a salt mine. Oh, interesting. And that all that... What's that gas that it's produced? Carbon monoxide?
Starting point is 01:58:16 Yeah, yeah. No, it's flammable, whatever it is. Methane, maybe? Methane? Caused a giant explosion that destroyed the city. Interesting. And they thought it was God. Oh, wow.
Starting point is 01:58:24 And then somebody was like, yo, that dude was doing that other dude, and that lady was doing those dudes, too. explosion that destroyed the city interesting and they thought it was god strength and then somebody was like yo that dude was doing that other dude and that lady was doing that those dudes too and so like then it blew up i don't know man but sounds to me like i was like people were probably like don't do that or god's gonna strike you down don't and then the place blew up i mean it's a it's a lot of like you know humans didn't understand what's happening so they correlated what they could maybe like some they watched like some old guy who got bit by like a crab bit his butt like or snapped his butt and so he's like shaking and dancing like crazy like screaming in pain and all they see is like there's like this guy going like and then a thunderstorm happens and they're like oh rain dance rain dance yeah it's just crab and
Starting point is 01:59:00 the old guy's like no no it's a crab he like you know his picture on my butt when i sat down and they're like we saw this guy dance and then it rained man it's rain powers we saw pattern we had to go with it that's right curtis b says nightly convo in short tim the left says i'm right the right says i'm left ian what happened my vibration was focused on the fed lids yes amazing josie i'm a little libert lil l libertarian and honey badger there you go that's summarized the whole i know exactly who that is. That's the whole thing. How do you feel about breaking up the Federal Reserve, Josie?
Starting point is 01:59:29 I think Ron Paul should do it with his bare hands and his baseball bat. All right. Richard Carlson says, did you snatch the Ark idea from Doom and combine it with the storyline of Titan AE, LOL? No, I'm talking about like Noah's Ark. I'm just making a sci-fi version of it that a bunch of people had to build a giant ship to escape a giant flood and took two of each animal with them. And that's it. So Michael Brogan says, Tim, your Venus Ark project sounds like spoilers Horizon Zero Dawn, which would be awesome.
Starting point is 02:00:00 Horizon Zero Dawn is amazing. It's an excellent video game. And it's an excellent video game uh and it's similar those aren't familiar there's a self-replicating ai that is basically stripping out organic matter and turning it into machines and they realize they can't stop it at this point and it's going to wipe out all organic life on the planet so instead of trying to save the planet what they do is they bury in these big laboratories machines that will terraform the planet back after the original AI dies out.
Starting point is 02:00:27 Wow. Because if there's no more matter left, then they'll have the activation of a new AI that starts rebuilding. So there's robotic deer, like robotic bears, trying to recreate the ecosystem. And then machines start cloning humans, and then they're born, and then society emerges.
Starting point is 02:00:42 And so they're all, like, very tribal, but they have, like, remnants of ancient technology of ancient technology love it yeah it's crazy stuff good game the game's fun too really really what's really amazing about it in my opinion is that it's a new unique gameplay where you got like a bow and arrow but you're fighting robots so how do you actually like take out a robot with a bow and arrow hitting key points and like breaking panels off and then damaging the you know critical components this is a brilliant game really good stuff all right see jeffrey perrine says battle star galactica was called adam's ark very much like your theory i want to help you make art and show what's uh and show what's a good email to reach you um i don't know for pitches we have
Starting point is 02:01:21 jobs at timcast.com which is probably not the best but it's probably the best for now it's just really difficult to get uh to that point to start taking on you know legit full pitches and stuff so i guess you can try jobs at timcast.com chad dovey says hey tim and cast i've been writing a comic and just found the money to pay an artist i was wondering if i could send you guys my first comic love what you do and thank you yes at timcast.com i think in the contact section yeah there's a p.o box you can send whatever you'd like send us uh things so long as it's appropriate i suppose that because it goes it goes to a mailbox austin scott says the epa has been raiding aftermarket car shops and finding finding vehicles that are track only they may have no cats but the past but they pass emissions. See Lund Racing's YouTube video. Look into the RPM Act. It means so much.
Starting point is 02:02:08 Interesting. Yeah, second time I heard about that. Frank Perez says, Tim, you should have Allison Morrow on. She used to work for Network News, and now does YouTube videos consider it? I will look into that individual. I'm not super familiar with her. Just Jenny says, shout out to Trevor. Hey, Trevor.
Starting point is 02:02:24 We were pretty we were pretty mean to you now but we're cool it's not personal we're all we're all friends i love you trevor actually we're pals now he can hang here daniel rodriguez says did everyone know that tim skateboards now you do you do wow there was a funny there was a funny thing on twitter where someone was like i bet simple doesn't even really skateboard he probably just pretends and i've got videos that have like so my buddy buddy Brett Novak... And I always shout out his channel. It's YouTube.com slash Bradgic.
Starting point is 02:02:48 And then he always messages me because he's like, all of a sudden I saw a bunch of subscribers or something. What is it? YouTube.com slash what? Bradgic. B-R-A-G-I-C. So there's a bunch of videos. There's one from when I was 19. It's one of the first videos uploaded to YouTube.
Starting point is 02:03:00 It's from, like... It was recorded December of 2005 or something. And it's one of the first videos on YouTube, get youtube i guess it's me skating in a warehouse i'm like 19 and it did it had a few thousand views and then because my name's at tim pool a day to chicago warehouse now it has like half a million i love that it's just it's a super old video that youtube keeps recommending to people what is time yeah yeah but then i have a couple clips from them that are like legit. Like one's a nollie half hard flip, late flip.
Starting point is 02:03:28 And one's a hang 10 hard flip. And then at the end I do a hang 10 hard flip late flip. So it's all there. We actually did film one years ago, which was a full hang 10 hard flip late flip segment, but I just too hard to do. It's like a legit hard trick. Not deep fake.
Starting point is 02:03:43 No legit. Yeah. Real real trick. Yeah yeah i got all the wacky tricks in the book all the weird stuff a lot of people don't want to play skate with me back in the day because you're too good because i do because like everybody can do kick flip nollie flip switch flip fakie flip it's like all the basic tricks and so i would watch people play skate and i would do like i did a few of the s game of skate like back in the day like competitions and it would be like the guy the person i'm up against is like really good and he'd be like i'm gonna do a pop shove it now i'm gonna do a switch pop shove it now i'm gonna do a front
Starting point is 02:04:12 side shove it and i'm like dude this is so boring and a waste of our time because we both know we can do all of these tricks you're just hoping i make a mistake on a basic trick so i'm like i'll tell you what i i was playing skate against this one dude, and I did a trick. It's called a hang ten hard flip. And the dude immediately looked at the judge and was like, dude, come on. And the judge was like, he did a trick. And I'm like, I know these people can't do these tricks. So if I can get five tricks that I can never mess up, I will win in five minutes.
Starting point is 02:04:40 You're talking about the video game? No. Oh, skate. Playing skate is where you do a trick, and your opponent has to do the same trick. Oh. If they don't do it, they get a letter. It's like horse.
Starting point is 02:04:49 It's horse. Right. It's called skate. So if I would do, I would do cancel flips. So you do a kick flip and then you use your heel flip to make it go the other direction.
Starting point is 02:04:58 Nobody knew what that was at the time. I could do all the different late flips. So it was always just like forward flip, hang ten hard flip, nollie half hard flip, under flip, heel cancel flip. And then it's like I win in five tricks.
Starting point is 02:05:11 I'm done. I show up, I do the tricks, I win. And they just look at me like, okay. And I'm like, yeah, I know you can't do those tricks. I'm trying to win. I'm not trying to sit here for an hour doing pop shove-its, man.
Starting point is 02:05:19 But anyway, I digress. Nombot says from Champaign, Illinois, love you guys. And TNG is indeed the best. All right. We'll do one last super chat right here. Let's see. How do you pronounce that?
Starting point is 02:05:32 Oh, Mythic Rogue. Shaller says, hey, Ian, do you know Bill Hicks' young man on Acid Joke? No. I know Bill Hicks. Young man on Acid Joke. I don't know that one. I like young men just in general as people, and I like acid. There you go.
Starting point is 02:05:46 Ergot. Ergotamine it comes from, lysergic acid. A fungus. So Roosevelt Media News says, please see international news reports about strange fibers in the disposable face masks. I saw something about that. What is that about? I didn't see much about it. We'll look into it.
Starting point is 02:06:01 We will. My friends, maybe we will look into it. It'll appear at TimCast.com in an exclusive members exclusive members only segment which will be up in about an hour or so so make sure you go to timcast.com become a member we're we're legit like i'm i'm i'm saying this is going to be like a full-on streaming service man it's not just going to be like talk radio or whatever it's going to be shows movies documentary series and we're going to start making a ton of awesome stuff so if you're a member and it's like $10 a month, I'm going to use the money that we get from you guys to keep making stuff.
Starting point is 02:06:27 I'm not interested in infinity pools. I'm not going to buy a spaceship or anything like that. I'm not going to build an Iron Man suit. I'm going to make cultural content that is good for everybody, that is fun, that is entertaining and exciting with new superheroes, new concepts with interesting stories. I'll tell you this. Check out my music video, Will of the People.
Starting point is 02:06:44 It is an original song I wrote and an original concept for a video. A lot of people seem to like it. Maybe you'll like it, but I think it's a really great story and we got it animated. And so this is an example of some of the stuff we want to make,
Starting point is 02:06:56 which I think you'll actually get a, you'll get a kick out of. So that being said, make sure you subscribe to this channel because we're very close to 1 million subscribers. And with your help, we will all make a Google, give us big, shiny, golden plaques, and then everyone will get one and we'll hang them up and it'll be great. And hit the notification bell,
Starting point is 02:07:12 share the show if you really do like it. That's the best thing you can do. And whenever you like and comment, it helps because you're telling YouTube like, hey, this is a good show. We like interacting with it. You can follow me on social media, Timcast. My other YouTube channels are youtube.com slash Timcast and YouTube.com slash Timcast News. This show is live Monday through Friday at 8 p.m. So, of course, we will be back tomorrow. Tomorrow is going to be fun because we for sure have Brandon. Brandon Tatum.
Starting point is 02:07:35 We normally don't announce guests because then we get a cancellation. It's kind of a bummer. But that's going to be an excellent show. I think we can talk a lot about cops and guns and stuff. Yes, this is perfectly timed. Yeah, so I'm super excited that he's coming. And Josie, do you have anything you want to mention before we go? You can follow me.
Starting point is 02:07:50 I have a new page. You can follow me at the, T-R-H-L, that's T-H-E-T-R-H-L. And I'd love to see you all again. I've missed everybody. It's like ATM machine. Yeah. Yes. Pretty much.
Starting point is 02:08:08 Yeah, right. Automated transaction machine machine. Pin number. Teller machine machine. Thank you for clarifying. Thank you, Josie, for coming. You guys can follow me at IanCrossland.net. You can check out all my socials from there.
Starting point is 02:08:19 And shout out to all the elements on the periodic table. I don't know. Shout out to the elements. From what we came and when we go. Yes. That's great. I love it. I want to shout out the elements on the periodic table. I don't know. Shout out the elements. From what we came and whence we go. That's great. I love it. I want to shout out the elements on the periodic table. Why have I never thought of doing that before?
Starting point is 02:08:30 That's wonderful. Thank you, Ian, for that thought. I'm Sour Patch Lids on Twitter and Mines and Real Sour Patch Lids on Gab and Instagram. We will see you all over at the TimCast.com exclusive members-only segment. Thanks for hanging out. Bye, guys.
Starting point is 02:08:42 Bye.

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