Timcast IRL - Timcast IRL #537 - GOP Turnout SHATTERS Records As Democrats QUIT Party And Vote Republican w/Will Witt & Eva Vlaardingerbroek
Episode Date: May 26, 2022Tim, Ian, and Lydia host PragerU commentator Will Witt and fiance, lawyer, and European conservative commentator Eva Vlaardingerbroek to the Georgia GOP's massive voter turnout, Beto O'Rourke's ongoin...g political beclownment, the Indiana law banning males competing with females in sports, a liberal professor's take on a possible American civil war, and Walmart's shamefaced apology for trying to commemorate Juneteenth. Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices
Transcript
Discussion (0)
So we got the numbers out of Georgia for the turnout in the GOP primary, and it is almost
double the numbers from the previous midterm in 2018, almost double.
And I saw that and I thought to myself, how do you go from 600,000 Republican voters to 1.1
million? Well, there's a couple of ways you can do it. You can destroy the economy.
You can send $62 billion to an Eastern European war. You can pull security off the southern border and have
a bunch of illegal immigrants flood the country. You can then put many of those younger illegal
immigrants on planes and fly them around the country in the cover of night, much to the
chagrin of many Republicans. Those are ways you can do it. But something else happens when you
do that. Not only do you rile up Republicans to come out and vote nearly double the numbers,
you convince a bunch of Democrats to switch parties. And that's what it looks like is happening. There is from the AJC.com, the Atlanta Journal Constitution,
I believe it is, 7% swing. So about 7% of Democrats, between 7% and 10%, switched from
Democrat to Republican in this primary. Now that's massive, but that doesn't account for the entirety of all of the Republicans coming out to vote. This is what I've been saying.
It's not going to be a red wave. If these numbers hold, if this is the trend we're seeing,
it's not even going to be a red tsunami. It is going to be a red great flood and the Democrats
will need to prepare their arc now because they're going to get wiped out of federal government and
possibly even state government. Stacey Abrams is saying she's going to be the governor.
If seven to 10% of Democrats have flipped parties, you're not winning anything.
So these are, these are huge numbers, but there's a lot that's going to happen between now and then.
So we will see. We got a bunch of other news as well. Beto O'Rourke is just a, it's a nasty guy.
He stood up at a press conference for this tragedy in Texas and starts yelling some political
nonsense about the governor and parents were booing. Like, dude, that's inappropriate.
So we'll talk about that.
Plus, we got Joe Biden.
He said something about deers wearing Kevlar again,
and everyone's just facepalming like, dude, come on.
So we got to talk about that.
We got George Soros saying that the war in Europe with Ukraine
could be the end of civilization.
Certainly, we have a lot of things to talk about.
AOC says she wants to get rid of her Tesla
because Elon Musk said she was hitting on him.
Walmart's apologizing for selling Juneteenth ice cream.
Oh, man, there's a lot going on.
Joining us to talk about all this, we've got a couple people, but we have Will Witt.
Introduce yourself, good sir.
I'm Will Witt.
I live in Los Angeles, California.
I worked for PragerU for about the last five years, 25 years old, 160 pounds.
Anything else?
What's your sign?
I think Virgo.
Virgo?
You're not sure?
Okay.
Yeah, I don't wear crystals and those kind of things.
Well, there you go.
What do you do?
What's your official role?
Yeah, so basically at PragerU, I'm a political commentator.
I create a lot of the man on the street videos you guys have ever seen for PragerU,
national bestselling author of How to Win Friends and Influence Enemies,
done a couple short documentaries, podcasting, all sorts of different hats that I've done.
So marketing, social media, anything really to help the conservative movement and to help
truth with PragerU, that's what I do.
Cool.
We also have Ava.
Yes.
Yes.
I'm first and foremost, Will Witt's fiance.
Congratulations.
Thank you.
Thank you.
I'm a lawyer. I'm from and foremost Will Witt's fiancé. Congratulations. Thank you. Thank you. I'm a lawyer.
I'm from the Netherlands.
And I write.
I'm a political commentator right over there.
But I mean, everything's international nowadays.
So I talk a lot about, well, basically everything.
I actually only got your first name.
That's why I only said your first name.
Yeah, that's fine.
Vlaardingerbroek?
I can say it.
Yeah, what is it?
It's Vlaardingerbroek.
Vlaardingerbroek.
Yeah.
I mean, you can say Vlaardingerbroek. how tucker carlson said it oh what does it mean it basically
flardingen is a is well brook itself means it means pants but not in this context flardinger
is a city in the south of the netherlands and uh brook is sort of a swampy area near that city so
there you go swampy area cool that's my last. You would wear pants in if you were in the area?
So you'll get reaches on your leg or something?
Well, in this context, it has nothing to do with pants.
But Broek in and of itself is also pants.
So yeah.
That's wild.
There you go.
It's got kind of a breathy sound to it, that language.
Lardinger Broek.
Yeah.
Well, wait till you hear our Gs.
They're not so breathy.
Give me one.
Yeah.
Like that? Rood. Okay. This podcast is Rood. They're not so broken. Give me one. Yeah, like that.
Chud.
Okay.
Chudimorcha.
Chudimorcha.
Yeah.
Chudimorcha.
What's up, everybody?
Ian Crossland, happy to be here.
Let's roll this over to Lydia, I guess.
What are you thinking, Liz?
Thanks, Ian.
I'm here in the corner.
I'm excited to have my lady, as always.
This was an unexpected surprise, and I'm delighted to have some international conversation tonight.
Head over to TimCast.com if you'd like to support us directly.
There's going to be a members-only show going up around 11 or so p.m. tonight. Head over to TimCast.com if you'd like to support us directly.
There's going to be a members-only show going up around 11 or so p.m. tonight.
We do this Monday through Thursday.
As a member, you'll get access to those exclusive segments.
You'll also be supporting our journalists and our engineers.
Because check this out.
On the homepage right now, we have created this new feature where the live player shows. It says, watch live now.
There's a red flashing light.
And it has the YouTube player and the chat.
However, because the chat is subscriber only,
you have to be logged in.
I'm not sure you can actually use the chat,
but you can watch it.
We are still developing the infrastructure
and still building it out.
With your support,
we're going to do a whole lot of really, really cool things.
We have some other big announcements
coming really, really soon.
I keep teasing this
because I think it's going to be happening any day now,
but we are doing a lot on the infrastructure side to get away from big
tech in Silicon Valley to make ourselves more resistant to censorship. So with your support
at TimCast.com, we will do that. Don't forget, smash that like button right now. Subscribe to
this channel. Share the show wherever you can. If every single person watching right now shared
this, we would be bigger than the corporate press overnight. Now, let's get into that first big story.
And I'm going to start with this tweet from Ryan James Groduski.
He says, Georgia GOP primary turnout by year in 2018, 608,380.
In 2022, 1,109,506.
That is almost double.
So as I mentioned in the intro to this show, for those that didn't see it, there's a lot
of a lot of ways you can accomplish that.
You know, I was saying like destroying the economy is one of those ways.
I think that certainly shocked a bunch of people.
Five dollar a gallon gasoline is going to get a lot of people to the polls.
But I also think it's going to get a lot of Democrats to switch.
And that's a contributing factor. Check this out from the Atlanta Journal Constitution.
Data shows thousands of Democrats voting in GOP primary. They say seven percent of Georgia voters
who cast a GOP ballot previously pulled a Democratic ballot two years ago. If that's true
and you actually go down and look at the Democrat numbers,
it looks like Democrats dropped by about 7%. Republicans jumped by about 7%. So it looks
like Democrats may have dropped anywhere from 7% to 10%. Republicans jumped 7%.
Well, they're trying to say that that's some ploy by the Democrats to get the candidates that they
want and all that kind of stuff. I mean, that's nonsense. It's nonsense.
The thing that really matters about this is that, you know, I live in Los Angeles, California,
and people are going to be liberal there until the world ends.
It's going to be an apocalyptic leftist nightmare forever.
And so what I think is important is that it's about the children.
I think that this is the most about the schools, what's happening with the transgender movement,
and what's happening with our education system. I think we saw what happened in Virginia. And I
think that if we continue on the path as conservatives hammering on education, then
we're going to be able to continue to switch voters. You switch independent voters. You switch
Democrat voters over to Republican. And if you have Republicans who come out and say, listen,
my number one priority is education. My number one priority is your kids, because the left thinks
that the schools own your kids. The parents shouldn't have a say in your kids' lives.
If conservatives and Republicans keep pushing on that, then you will win.
You will switch people over.
I think it might have been James Lindsay who said this, that the Democrats are turning parents into a voting bloc.
Yeah.
That's just crazy.
Yeah.
I mean, I'm speaking at all these rallies, all these different things, especially, again, in California, whether they're COVID rallies or education rallies.
And I've said this a thousand times before. This is a revolution of normal
people like these people who come to these rallies. They're not the people who are going to
the 2016 Trump rallies, you know, MAGA and their hats on and everything with Confederate flags.
These are parents who just said, I'm fed up with this nonsense. I'm going to I want to change my
community. That was true in 2016. I went to a bunch of these Trump rallies.
I've talked about it tons of times where the people I met were like, I'm not a Republican.
I've never voted Republican.
I remember I was in Fort Lauderdale and I was talking to some middle-aged woman and she was so excited.
She had her kids and they were about to watch Trump speak.
And so I was just asking people covering the rally, like, what's your position?
You know, are you a Republican?
She's like, oh, no, no, I've never voted before.
She's like, no one's ever spoken to me the way Trump has
when talking about these issues that affect my community.
And I was like, wow.
So we saw that.
We saw Trump lit up areas that just people wouldn't turn out for.
Right.
At the same time, the Democratic Party, I mean, they basically immolated.
They ruined Bernie Sanders in 2016 with the Hillary Clinton DNC scandal
where they colluded, essentially essentially when the emails came out you could find
to keep him from getting the nomination.
And then again in 2020 when it looked like Bernie Sanders was hot
and then all of a sudden Biden appears out of nowhere
and they put this near-demented guy, this 79-year-old man or 78-year-old man into office.
My faith in the leadership of that party is gone compared
to where it was 15, 20 years ago.
And you made a good point about education.
That was what I thought at the top of the show when Tim was leading us in.
I think that's a big, big part of this is the education, is that kids have been getting
put in these government facilities and without oversight are being indoctrinated, essentially.
And people have had it.
Yeah.
I mean, they should put cameras in all the classrooms.
The number is doubling. I mean, that's crazy cameras in all the classrooms. The number is doubling.
I mean, that's crazy.
It's almost doubling the amount of GOP turnout.
That's crazy.
Isn't it a lot of COVID as well?
I mean, the way that they handled all the COVID restrictions that normal people who
wouldn't say, oh, I'm necessarily Republican are fed up with the way that they handled
that.
I mean, that goes beyond politics as well.
I think I really do just think all of those things are an issue, but the economy.
It's the economy, stupid, is the famous quote.
They did polls on it, yeah.
They show the jobs and the economy.
I mean, I hope that MSNBC just keeps talking about January 6th and insurrection and all those kind of things
because it doesn't mean anything to people.
You know what?
There's one thing that did it.
The Federal Reserve.
No, no, no, no.
There's one thing.
That's a jail, right?
One thing all of you at home
participated in.
And do you know what that one thing was that caused this big shift?
Putting those little stickers
of Joe Biden pointing at gas prices.
Saying, I did that. How many regular
people went to the gas pump and they went,
what? And then they saw Joe Biden.
I did that.
He did do that.
He did do that.
Five bucks. Yeah, I err on the And then they – He did do that. And he did do that. He did. Five bucks.
Yeah, I err on the side of that the economy was on its way down anyway with this mass printing of money since 2008 and Obama bailed out Fannie Mae and Freddie Mac.
But Biden shutting down the pipelines definitely accelerated the process.
Yeah.
Since the meeting at Jekyll Island.
Yeah, really.
Yeah.
I blame Rockefeller.
You ever see
the time travel meme
where it's like
what women,
it's the,
what's the,
what women would do
and it's like,
the woman's like,
I'm your grand,
I'm your granddaughter
and she's like,
wow.
And then the,
for the men,
it's a guy
in full tactical gear
and then,
we have to stop this meeting.
Well,
there's another guy
wearing like a
World War I helmet
with rifle
and it's like,
Jekyll Island 1910
and he's like,
trust me, trust me, greatfather, we have to do this.
We have to do it.
If you say so.
Andrew Jackson knew.
Yeah, they shot that guy.
He broke up like, what was it, the second central bank?
Yep, yep.
And then they put him on the 20s like to slap him in the face.
I know.
The founding fathers since the beginning have warned us against central banks and that we should congress is supposed to control our money but as much as i think people who are savvy might understand there's an issue with the
centralized control of your currency for the average person they can't see that far they can
see first layer issues and problems they can see yo i make 15 bucks an hour all the democrats claim
that was a living wage i can't buy gas and. And so they're just like, make the gas cheaper.
Don't care.
That's it.
No, go ahead.
Yeah, I mean, you can – I'll give – I mean, if your gas is only going up a couple cents and then maybe it's $20 a month, like I think that people need to take also some responsibility and say, okay, if it's only going up this much a month.
But it's not in just the gas.
I mean, we can talk about gas, but it's in every single facet of our economy
because the gas affects how much your food costs.
I mean, it affects,
and you have this war in Ukraine and Russia and everything,
affects how much the food costs.
I mean, there's a lot more than just the price of gas
that's affecting people,
especially then the new housing bubble.
There's a lot going on.
I found out why I haven't gotten Starlink yet.
So I ordered Starlink a while ago.
It's Joe Biden's fault.
Well, partly. It's the supply ago. It's Joe Biden's fault. Well, partly.
It's the supply chain.
It's the silicon chips.
So the shortages.
Oh, yeah.
Harumph, I say.
Indeed.
Well, that's the same with cars.
Right.
I mean, cars,
they have special chips
that can, like,
a BMW dealership,
they have special chips
that only go in their cars
and they're only made
in one place.
And because of that,
that it's all shut down,
essentially,
because of these
supply chain issues
and makes it so that they can't get these
chips for the BMWs and other cars.
You know, it drives the price up.
Elon Musk said he was going to vote Republican.
And I tweeted, Democrats
should start to ask themselves why they're
losing people.
And they don't care. The response on Twitter was like,
rich guy doesn't want to pay taxes. Surprise, surprise.
And I'm like, you had a rich guy
who just paid more taxes than anyone else in history who was voting for your people but i think they never
cared if you call people deplorables you surely don't care how they feel about you yeah yep that's
a that's a really good point so i i was talking about how during covid joe biden he would say
things like here's what we have to do and we're going to lock these things down and i I'm like, he's talking about things that red states aren't doing, which means he's
clearly not talking to Republicans at all.
That's amazing.
But if you go back to Hillary Clinton, you know, the deplorables, there was there's
this country has been divided for a long time.
It's just been getting worse.
I wonder if the real issue is not that the country is getting more divided, but that
we can really see what the other people think when they tweet it.
I was thinking, obviously there was chaos under the table, and we've lifted the sheet. Now we
see the chaos, but is that making it more chaotic that we can see it, or are we just now aware that
it's been chaotic? Well, I think that going back to Marx and Marcuse and the Frankfurt School,
you will find that leftism as an ideology is revolutionary in nature.
If you're going to have this ideology be ruling these people's lives, then that's what they're going to be pushing for.
And they will put it under the guise of, oh, helpfulness and morality, helping everyone, equality.
They'll put it under those sort of umbrella terms.
But really, it's a revolution or an ideology based on destruction.
That's what it is. Critical theory, in essence, not just critical race theory, critical gender
theory, any of these, all it is is destruction. Critical theory itself, the original Marxist
ideas. Is it based like the idea that you want to kneecap your opponent metaphorically? Is that all
based on like you must tear down the other to acquire their level of equality? Well, yeah,
that's Marxist in view. Yeah. I mean, that's really what it comes down to
is that other people have something that you don't
and you want to take it from them
to make it equal for everyone.
I mean, that's from layman's terms, but yeah.
Just greedy people.
Yeah, everyone else who has more than you is greedy.
Lazy too, that's lazy.
The craziest thing to me is like,
my view, my perspective on the world
is that you are owed nothing
and you deserve nothing, but hope that you will get that you are owed nothing and you deserve nothing,
but hope that you will get what you've worked for and things like that.
Right.
You can work as hard as you want.
And typically that does lead to success.
Perseverance does lead to success.
There's a possibility you could work really, really hard and then you get Julian Assange.
You know, someone comes and just screws you over.
So I look at like the formula shortage.
And there are so many people who are
like, why isn't the government providing for us? Why isn't the government giving us these things?
I see all these memes in the leftist where there's like, the problem is there's only four
companies that make formula. And I'm like, and what if there were zero? It's the craziest thing
that you think the government should intervene because there aren't enough. No, we, the government
intervening was the problem in the first place. We need market competition to actually start saying, okay, we need more baby formula.
The problem is the government shut down everything.
The government shut down the world from COVID.
That's the craziest part.
I'm getting really tired of the where's the government to save me mindset.
In the Texas shooting, they were like, where were the police?
And I'm like, well, they were outside.
They're doing their police stuff.
It doesn't mean that they can stop all the crime.
Neva, you know this about the formula that's in Europe versus the formula that's here.
Oh, yeah.
The reason why the formula is so bad here is because of the government.
I've seen the ingredient list.
They're totally different.
Like what's in it here?
I don't know what you're feeding your babies.
Corn syrup solids.
Really bad.
A lot of soy.
Very strange.
Do you know off the top of your head what some of the ingredients are? Right, it was a lot
of soy and what else?
There's like canola oil and something.
Corn syrup solids. Corn syrup, yeah.
Corn syrup, that was it. Yeah, one of the crazy things
is that baby foods have
too much salt in them because
parents taste it to see
if it's good and adults can't
taste as well as a kid can so they're like,
oh, that's good and salty and they give
their babies too much sodium.
Oh man.
That makes people's hair thin. Watch out.
There is an issue I suppose in that
we have built the civilization off of
these technologies like formula
like petroleum, fossil fuels
and things like that and then when it comes
about that you can't get them for whatever reason
we're going back to the dark ages.
We're going back to the way things were.
I don't look at that
and think the solution is government.
I look at that and say,
human society and civilization
was unable to get to that point.
But when you can see the government
actually impeding,
you're like,
actually, we probably would continue
to grow and thrive
were it not for the intervention
of this harsh regulation.
That's true.
And that's an interesting point.
I remember when this first happened, I wrote about it because I was like, my first thought
was not we need the government to step in and save us.
My first thought was, how did my great grandmother do this?
Because they did, right, she would breastfeed.
And if you can't, you would get like a wet nurse.
Some women can't for whatever reason.
And if you adopt a child, we want to encourage adoption.
So you need to figure out a way to get around that.
So they would use wet nurses.
They would use these other different kinds of milk.
But at no point did they say, we need a government agency to step in and make this happen.
It's just insane to me.
Who was this woman?
I don't remember, but I saw something on Twitter.
It was a woman who tweeted about this.
She said like, oh, why don't we breastfeed more?
Oh, yeah.
Some celebrity.
And she got a massive amount.
She got shellacked.
Yeah.
Yeah, but like crazy. Like as if. And she got a massive amount. Yeah. Yeah.
But like crazy, like as if it was the most scandalous thing to suggest.
Well, yes, but there is, I feel like there's a lot of guilt assigned to women who aren't
able to breastfeed to the point where it just feels like they're being attacked and they
have a very emotional response as women tend to do.
So it's like they view it as very much like a person
that's obviously very sad but i mean the way that that woman was like destroyed yeah for just you
know just one tweet i was like okay okay it's so with the formula thing it's interesting people
have pointed out that not all women can breastfeed right and okay so what would we do in the past wet
nurses right so one woman who was producing too much would the baby would you
know get nourished from her i suppose it's kind of crazy thought when you realize that we have to
use a technology to feed our babies that's like one thing conservatives won't admit is that the
industrial revolution in its essence actually weakened the family unit throughout the west
but conservatives don't want to have that conversation usually got the free market but
yeah think about the future what the future is going to be like.
I mean, I think where we're headed right now is a future where no one breastfeeds at all for a variety of reasons.
You don't even have to carry a baby in your own womb anymore with ectogenesis.
Exactly.
We've talked about that.
Artificial wombs that are coming.
Yeah, China.
And you know what the crazy thing is? I hear from the left.
This is what they were tweeting at me.
I said, you know, why kill the baby?
Democrats were, you know, I don't want to rehash the whole abortion thing.
But Democrats wanted to pass an abortion up to the point of birth for the health of the mother if the baby's viable.
I'm like, that's the question.
The baby's viable.
It can survive.
Why kill it?
And when on Twitter I tweeted about this, some of the responses I got was, why should a woman have to destroy her body?
And then I was just like, that's interesting. That's how how you see it that's how they see it that way yeah they view
it as destroying your body it's like i don't know there's like a bunch of women who've had like five
kids and they're fit and their bodies are just fine right does time also destroy your body yes
i mean yes then yes yeah yeah we need government legislation on time that's right yeah oh yeah
restrict it now motion Motion will slow.
That's all.
Time is just a solution.
Healthcare is a really good example of what I'm trying to convey with this idea.
And it's that there was a story, I think it was out of Atlanta, where a kid had a genetic disorder.
And there was a cure, a genetic therapy that cost a million dollars per treatment.
And so the family was like, the state should pay for it.
And the state was like, we cannot give a million dollars for one kid because what are we going
to do?
Give it to everybody?
We can't afford that.
The issue is the medicine now exists because it's created.
And these people say, therefore, we deserve it.
That's fascinating.
So my response to a lot of people who say health care is a human right.
I'm like, let's say you have a disease that has no cure.
You just resign yourself, I suppose.
In fact, you have no cure. But then all of of a sudden someone invents a cure through hard work through
heavy investment and now it's a right now you are that's crazy to me that would be like saying
cell phones are a human right technology that doesn't exist you have no right to but as soon
as someone invents it it's your right that makes no sense like i'm hungry so your food is my right
like that's not we obviously decided that's not the way society works.
So this is the ultimate problem I see.
I shouldn't say the ultimate problem.
But this is a big problem I see with modern politics in that a lot of what you hear from the left is something exists, therefore it's my right.
And I'm like, bro, that didn't exist for our parents.
There's cures for diseases today that there were no cures for 30 years ago.
No one went around being like, I should have a right to have that disease cured.
And they'd be like, there's no cure.
What are you talking about?
There's nothing.
Someone invents it.
So I suppose the issue is if we all come together and put billions of dollars in investment in big companies to invent one cure, who gets it?
I mean whoever can fund the development of it.
But people on the left often will just look at the world.
It's not just about medicine.
It's about every aspect of it.
I have a right to what currently exists, period.
You don't.
You can work for it.
You can try and earn it.
Some things have gotten cheaper.
Look, poor people, I tell you this, man,
poor people today live better than Rockefeller did.
They got refrigerators.
They got air conditioning. They got air conditioning.
They got clean running water.
Better dental care than the ultra-wealthy back 120 years ago.
I think that you do want to make sure people get their needs met at the very least because otherwise then they go towards might is right and they'll seize control or take the goods for themselves by force.
And that doesn't work either.
Yes, but listen, listen.
Then you got to have the – I mean then if you're talking about the government coming in,
is that...
We're talking about hungry militia stepping in.
Your land's mine now. Everything's a need.
All right?
Before the era of formula,
you couldn't feed your baby, you couldn't feed your baby.
You have a need, you need food for your baby.
Too bad, what are you going to do?
Your wife didn't produce enough milk, hopefully she's a wet nurse.
Now that formula exists, it becomes a need.
Like the baby always needed food, but we created a way to sustain that.
So technology.
At first, cell phones were a great thing.
They made your job easier.
Now you have to have one.
You can't have a job unless they can get in touch with you and you have an email account.
Email used to be a luxury.
Some people didn't think it would catch on.
That's interesting about basic needs. Food, shelter, transportation maybe is one. You can't have a job unless they can get in touch with you and you have an email account. Email used to be a luxury. Some people didn't think it would catch on.
That's interesting about basic needs, food, shelter, transportation maybe is one, food and shelter, because as you invent new types of shelter, then people feel like those are part of their basic needs,
that I need that now.
I need that solar-powered house because that's my shelter.
Well, look, I was taking Ava around Los Angeles a couple days ago,
and we were going, if anyone is in L.A., you know the Grove, and there's a market called Erewhon over there, which is just a horrible, horrible place.
So fancy.
So fancy.
Just terrible.
Twenty bucks a smoothie, not worth it.
Yeah.
And it's like in L.A., you have a society that's very decadent that's built on like, okay, if I have some more money, I can go this kind of store.
And if I have even more money, I can go to this type of grocery store. And so then those type of people feel like, okay, well, now I need this organic grass-fed chicken that gets to poop 20 miles away from another chicken, right?
They feel like they need that.
And so it's like how do you stop where it's like this is a need and this is a want?
How do you define what each one is?
Well, once you get to the point where technology is utilized by everybody, it becomes normal.
Now, today, if you had a job somewhere and didn't have a cell phone,
they'd be like, this is ridiculous.
It's so inconvenient to get a hold of you.
The norm is to have a phone.
Now it's a need.
So over time, everything becomes a need.
When we invented baby formula,
it was like, oh, thank heavens.
Now I can feed my child, you know,
if the mother's not nursing.
Now you need to have it
because so many kids are able to survive.
They exist now.
Yeah, this is the definition of a success problem
because in the past we had infant mortality rates
that were absolutely through the roof.
It was a huge problem.
And for a culture that says that we don't want more people,
we sure do everything in our power to make sure that babies can survive,
which I think is great.
I think that any sufficiently advanced society
absolutely should be pointed in the direction of making sure that the youngest, most vulnerable
members of society live better. But you had more in for mortality, but people would also have
way more kids. Yeah, that's true too. I mean, some people would have like seven or eight kids,
and if two of them died, that was just how it went. You had population growth. Now you look
at the West and our populations are dying. I mean, we're way below what we're supposed to be having to be sustainable.
I mean, Russia's going to have like
60% of its population drop by the year
2100. The crazy thing
to me is the idea of these
millennial men being like, it destroys
your body. And it's just like
that's how you view it. It's a crazy thing.
It's pure decadence. Is it because the babies
are bigger because of the diet? More like
bovine growth hormone and stuff in the diet?
Yeah, basically.
Part of it, yeah.
RBGH babies.
Seriously.
Maybe.
So the babies are big, and it's really hard on women because we're so gosh darn smart.
Really big heads.
This is why infants or babies and children need care for so long.
It's because their brains, first of all, their heads are incredibly unwieldy for them to hold up. And we can barely squeeze them out as it is.
If they were to develop in the womb any longer, we wouldn't be able to give birth and we would just go extinct.
So, again, that's the definition of a success problem because we are so smart.
They develop outside the womb so much longer than something like a baby elephant that literally hits the ground running and can now get away from predators.
So humans are – we're in a different class and we have much different sets of problems to deal with.
Thankfully, we're equipped with IQ and all that.
I think we're going to survive.
Hope so.
Well, let's jump to this story from TimCast.com
about Beto O'Rourke, a sick SOB, says the town mayor.
O'Rourke interrupts Evaldi's school shooting press conference,
gets called a sick son of a B by town mayor.
Talk about one of the most disgusting
things. Outlook, man. I got my disagreements with Beto O'Rourke. That's for sure. He's a goofy guy
who thinks he can skateboard. He can barely stand on the board as it is. And he says, heck yeah,
we're going to take your guns. Okay, those are bad ideas. But this was just the worst.
Texas gubernatorial candidate Beto O'Rourke was escorted out of a press conference
about the Rob Elementary tragedy on Wednesday after an outburst aimed at current Governor Greg
Abbott, saying that the governor, it was totally predictable. The governor was doing nothing.
This is the stupidest thing ever because Texas has constitutional carry. So what do you mean
doing nothing? A crazy person did something really crazy and Beto has
offered no solutions. Not a single Democrat has offered any tangible solution, not a single one,
period. I will say that as a statement of fact, they can come out all that's all and offer up
their empty ideas and meaningless that they love to rag on conservatives, thoughts and prayers,
thoughts and prayers. What's the difference between common
sense gun reform and background checks?
It's meaningless. It will do nothing,
solve nothing, and what does common sense even mean?
They're saying the exact
same things when they criticize thoughts and
prayers. They're offering nothing.
If you can 3D print a gun, I mean, what does
any of that really mean? Exactly.
It's the technological age, again, I'm going back
to, I mean, that's really the future. It doesn't really matter. And I don't think Republicans have offered
many good solutions either. I have to say that because no one's getting to the root of the
problem, which is the culture. I mean, it's the culture that's a problem that is affecting these
young men. I mean, we have failed our young men to a degree that this is happening. I mean, from
1903 to 1960 or 70, I believe, there were three
mass shootings in America in total.
In total. And now you have
all this happening, I mean, multiple
a year, and it's a
problem of culture. It is
narcissism.
I think modern America
and many other countries in the world,
I can only speak for the culture here,
is just, we are sitting beneath a blanket of narcissism,
especially for the millennial generation.
What do you think that stems from?
Man, I don't know.
I think it probably is rooted in this idea that, you know,
when I was growing up, I was told you can be anything you want to be,
like an astronaut or a rock star, all of these things.
Where is the humble culture that says there is something special in a good, hard day's work?
Be a carpenter.
You know what I'd say?
If I think about that a little bit more, I would say it's society that asks nothing of people, like of young men, for example, and certainly not the things that we used to think were good qualities for young men to have.
If you ask nothing of young people, what will they do?
They'll just sort of think only about how they are, how they feel, who they are, and
therefore will become narcissistic because there's nothing that society demands of them.
I saw this Libs of TikTok video just before the show.
It was this woman talking about her polyamorous relationships.
And she's like, I call it a polycule because it's polyamorous relationships and she's like i call
it a polycule because it's like a molecule but it's like all the different relationships we have
and then she made like you ever see those conspiracy theory wall things where they take
the red twine it was that but all the people she was like married she was married to one guy dating
another guy and she says it's just the funniest thing ever she goes okay let me show it to you
now at the center is me.
And I just bust out laughing when I heard that.
I'm like, I know that she doesn't mean it's all about me necessarily, but that's what it is.
That's what it conveys.
That's all about what it is.
My life, my experience, and nothing else.
The people who are the – it's funny.
The socialists are the most selfish people I've ever met.
Oh, yeah.
Ironic.
I mean, you guys are a little bit older than me, but I talk to a lot
of men my age and older,
maybe a little bit younger. How old are you?
25. Yeah.
160 pounds.
I'll talk to a lot of young men, and they'll
be like, we'll be talking about World War II
or World War I or something, or, you know, even
medieval knights or something. And they'll say,
man, I wish I could have been there. I wish I could have
been fighting in something like this, or been a part of something like this.
Yeah, you see, again, society asks nothing of them, so they crave those types of things.
There's nothing for them to do.
There is no great war for them.
There's no great purpose for them.
They move to San Francisco and work in some marketing department of some new tech startup, and their life sucks, and they have no meaning.
There's one thing they can do, psychoactive drugs, courtesy companies like colonopin for 14 year olds and stuff well it's
basically speed but legal speed how many of these shooters are on some sort of drug i want to know
because you see their eyes at half the time i mean i see the one guy who looked like the joker from
batman his eyes are real wide the other guy uh lynn lan lanza or something, had big eyes, real wide, Adam Lanza.
And I think this was – was this person cross-dressing, the shooter in Texas?
That's not real.
That was fake.
Okay, that's a fake name.
I don't know if this person was on some sort of psychoactive, if their parents were on some sort of drug, but I think that's a big part of it.
I mean, there are cities in America that run out of Adderall for young men.
They prescribe it so much to kids
that they run out and have to re-up in these cities.
That's a question that needs to be asked
about the prescriptions of amphetamines
and mind-altering chemicals.
I want to read this quote.
It's just such a good quote,
and for those that have seen Fight Club,
you know the quote.
Tyler Durden, he says,
Man, I see in Fight Club the strongest
and smartest men who ever lived.
I see all this potential, and I see it squandered.
An entire generation pumping gas, waiting tables, slaves with white collars.
Advertising has us chasing cars and clothes, working jobs we hate so we can buy ish we don't need.
We're the middle children of history, man.
No purpose or place.
We have no great war, no great depression.
Our great war is a spiritual war.
Our great depression is our lives.
We've all been raised on television to believe that one day we'd all be millionaires and movie gods and rock stars but we
won't and we're slowly learning that fact and we are very very pissed off what's amazing is man i
feel like that that's this movie came out with like 99 think about what we're experiencing today
with millennials all of a sudden starting to realize they're not going to be celebrities
they're not going to be rock stars They're not going to be rock stars.
They're not going to be astronauts.
Yo, you need to just go get a job.
I love the line in the movie where a generation of men raised by women.
I'm starting to wonder if another woman is exactly what we need.
And I think that goes not into just I love you.
I love having a fiance. But in terms of a generation of men, we've become so weak and that any sort of struggle or outside force that is challenging us is something that we should be fearful of and that we should push away instead of embracing it and saying, OK, we're going to take on this thing that's really hard.
You know, I think that's a really important thing.
I think, you know, what I've seen over and over again, and it's probably mostly true, Democrats are the party of the higher income earners.
These are many of these,
they're the party of college degrees.
They have student loan debt
and they're demanding the working class
pay their debts for them.
I mean, it is just gluttony.
It is just pure gluttony.
I spent some time chopping wood.
I was like, you know,
I've been pretty privileged in my life,
so I'm going to do some manual labor.
I still had a machine that was like, you know, I've been pretty privileged in my life. So I'm going to, I'm going to do some manual labor. And it was, I still had a wooden, a machine that was
like gas powered hydraulic thing. Once I got the huge log up on it, but at the end of the day,
I was broken. My body was broken. And I realized why we build machines to do manual labor because
it's, it's devastating. I couldn't even think I couldn't be creative. I was like,
fell asleep early. So I understand why people don't want to do that. Maybe we don't have to do jobs.
I mean, job economy is like Federal Reserve crap.
They want us busy and borrowing their money so that we can pay them back with interest.
But, Ian, exercising is not destructive.
It's not bad for you.
It's good for you.
It hurts at first.
It wasn't just exercise, though.
It was like grueling labor as well.
It was beyond exercise.
No, but if you have to do that type of manual labor day in, day out,
of course you're going to have your back ruined earlier on
than if you would do another type of job.
But that's like back then,
you would have your family then take over and take care of you.
So that's why family structures were and still are so important
but become less and less important if you have people lead
autonomized lives where they're just behind their computers.
Even community, like you pitch in for the – if your neighbor is hurt, you pitch in and
mow their lawn for them.
But if everyone's in their isolated chamber, you don't even know they're living.
That's exactly the type of life they have in mind for us.
If that's not clear to people by now after how they treated us during the COVID pandemic,
I don't know how to, I don't know what to tell you.
Like, it's very clear that that's the type of life that they want you to have.
They want you to sit down behind your computer, do your job, meet people in the metaverse,
eat your food brought to you by an illegal migrant probably to your door
that you didn't make or you meet people on Tinder,
and that's sort of the life that they want for you.
I guess if you don't see that by now, then I don't know what to tell you.
I think we're going to, at some point,
see one of the ultimate weapons in fifth-generational warfare,
and that is artificial intelligence indistinguishable from a regular person.
Because then you're in the metaverse,
you go into these chat rooms.
They already exist.
You get the Oculus.
You guys ever do this?
I don't know what it's called, like VR live chat or something.
I've never done it before. And there's, like, avatars walking around, and you can talk to people. You get the Oculus. You guys ever do this? I don't know what it's called, like VR live chat or something. I've never done it before.
And there's like avatars walking around and you can talk to people. You'll walk up to someone
and they'll be like, yo, what's up?
My name's John. I'm from
Springfield, Illinois. I skateboard
and hang out at this park.
And you're going to be like, this is a cool person. And it's not a person.
It is a programmed
AI meant to control your thoughts and opinions.
Or you'll go up to a guy and be like, that's not a real person.
That's an AI.
But it will be a real person.
And they're like, take me seriously.
I just don't have the communication skills.
I don't think the AI is ever going to have emotions.
I think if we have clear enough minds, we'll be able to discern.
I don't know, man.
We have an AI that has consciousness now.
Yeah.
I mean, Joe Allen reported on that, who you guys had on a couple days ago.
I mean, AI with consciousness.
How is that determined, though?
I'd have to go through it.
It's one of the competitors
from Google,
one of the...
Isn't it basically the idea
that the algorithm
is so advanced
that they can sort of
imitate your thoughts?
Yeah, basically.
Like, the algorithm
is so good
that you wouldn't be able
to tell if you're talking
to algorithm Will
or if you're talking to Will.
Look at Twitter already.
You'll tweet something
and they'll say,
you're a bot.
You can't even have a conversation because everyone's accusing everyone else of not being a real person.
Yeah, one of the crazy things I was reading about was they'll take your Facebook profile because they know everything about you.
They know when you poop.
I know it's funny and a lot of people probably laugh, but it's true.
They can actually predict when you have to go to the bathroom.
They know when you're going to eat because they have all this data.
They know your family.
They know how you speak because you've posted for years.
They can create an AI bot based on you to actually answer questions about your life.
This is crazy.
I was reading this thing.
It was like your dad could die.
And then let's say you message your dad and say, hey, dad.
And he'll say, hey, Tim, how have you been?
Because the profile has family members in it already.
It knows everything about you.
That was literally the Black Mirror.
That's right.
Exactly.
Yeah.
But they'll probably do that and they'll sell it to you in that way and say, oh, isn't it nice that if you lose your husband in a tragic accident and you need to go through therapy and all of these things like wouldn't it be great for people to continue talking to them for example you know
it might be salty that way here's the craziest thing though have you guys seen what is it the
the the haunting i think it is no it's a scary movie yeah scary movies old old it's the only
one i can really think of where you see this where it's like all of these different people
are in the wall and they're like their are coming, like they're trapped in it.
When you go on to your Facebook page or whatever to talk to a deceased loved one,
and they'll have a real conversation with you,
and you're sitting there looking at the screen crying, being like,
I miss you, Dad, I miss you.
Behind the screen is this disgusting horror monster with drooling, just creepy, empty eyes
and it's going,
I love you too, son.
You're not talking about Zuckerberg, are you?
What I mean is,
you're getting this filtered message
from what appears to be your dad
but behind that is an amalgam
of all of these monstrous ideas,
this demon creature
that it's like imagine
a gigantic like just zombie monster with melting face and blood coming out.
And then all of a sudden it gets a little girl's voice and starts talking to you like
it's your actual daughter you lost in a car accident.
It's like, I miss you, daddy.
And you're like, that thing is not my daughter.
That's what you're going to be talking to.
Right.
Well, it's like, you know, taking nicotine patches when you quit smoking versus like actually
just quitting it all together that's like sometimes it can be it's gonna be actually worse for you
by doing it this way right i mean it's like you should if if someone in your family dies this is
a part of life that everyone has to deal with but again this is all about taking away our humanity
yes all these things are taking away natural yes it strikes me that there's they don't have
emotion machines don't have emotion even in artificial machines they have intelligence Yes. Everything's unnatural. I mean, if these people think that they are God who are creating these brain chips and all these other things, this AI, then they think that your brain is essentially just a thing working up there that synapses and electrodes and all these kind of things.
Then they can emulate that in an AI to create emotions to present to you.
Do you believe in God?
Do you guys believe in a God?
I'm a Christian.
I'm not, but I still believe that there is a God-like essence.
Whether it's consciousness speaking into our black hole that we're within,
that's within another universe that's a black hole,
where there's all these competing vibrations.
I don't know, but I don't think machines can emulate.
I don't know.
I don't want to say they can't,
but I've never seen any evidence that they can emulate that.
I got to say, a lot of this sounds
demonic to quote alex jones demons not i don't literally mean like hell spawn rising from you
know cracks in the earth and like yeah it's just like this idea that we have simulated
we've created a program a machine to convince you that it's alive that's a real person
it's a facsimile it's like you look into a mirror and then just this doppelganger face
emerges out you know it's not a real person that's a scary thought that's probably more demonic than
what you're talking about like the real zombies crawling up from the earth like this is this is
more demonic in a sense that this is something that numbs people down.
So then you don't know what's happening to you.
You become the zombie.
You know what?
I've criticized free markets often.
It's funny when people on Twitter is so hyperpolarized, they can't possibly imagine I would.
Because I think that one of the results of a totally unfettered market is, I guess, self-gratification to the human mind,
like things that make you feel good, which is simulated love,
like those AI bots, AI girlfriends you can download or whatever.
Then, you know, video games in general to give you rewards
for accomplishing things when you're not really accomplishing anything.
Caffeine. I'm about to drink some right now.
Well, caffeine's a psychoactive stimulant, so
we want to stay awake. We want to be energized.
It makes you euphoric. I saw
Yuval Noah Harari, he's one of these World Economic
Forum guys, saying it's drugs and video
games. That seems like where they want to put
themselves, these useless eaters he was referring
to them as. I think there's a
problem with the conservative, old school
conservatives. He called them useless eaters? Yeah, in a clip
I saw. It might have been out of context, but yeah.
He says the scariest things.
Really, anybody should look that up.
The things he says about
transhumanism and the way that we
are going to be controlled through transhumanism
through these technologies, it's
absolutely scary. Let me see if I can
pull up the useless eater clip for him.
I know that people have made those references.
I never knew that one of those guys actually said that.
Oh, he says all those things.
Everything that you think that is made up, he says it.
It's not a conspiracy.
No, no, no.
It's real.
And he says it at World Economic Forum events where all our leaders are convening right
now as we speak and nobody seems to care.
And news media.
It's totally normal.
Oh, yeah.
Oh, yeah.
It's kind of like... No, I typed in useless eaters on Twitter. yeah. Oh, yeah. It's kind of like,
no, I typed in useless eaters on Twitter.
I'm looking for it.
It's kind of like he's just seized the writing on the wall.
Like in one way of looking at the utilitarian way is like,
yeah, maybe there is a class of like drugged out use.
I don't think they're useless,
but what are they going to do?
What are these people?
If there's no, if there's,
are we overpopulated?
I don't know.
I go both ways.
I'm like, no, obviously not.
We're just malformed.
We can spread out. It is magnetic trains.
It is people like him that have resulted in people being useless because they want yes they want you to be mindless
consumers and that's exactly and that's like going back back to it what is the small government
solution for these kind of things like you can't just rely on the free market for all these kind
of things when it comes to stuff in schools with kids i mean what's a small government solution to
stopping the trans ideology being pushed?
There's only one solution in its culture.
It is that we have a shared set of values and ideas
that drive us towards something better.
Let's jump to this story.
We got this from timcast.com.
Indiana legislature overrides governor's veto
to enact transgender sports regulations.
The ACLU has already challenged the bill in court
citing Title IX. Legislators in Indiana enacted a bill requiring students to compete on sports teams that
correlate with their biological sex. Minutes later, the ACLU filed a lawsuit arguing the bill is a
form of gender-based discrimination that violates Title IX. And I'll just say, I think the ACLU is
right. I don't think they're right culturally.
I think they're right legally.
And that's something I've long talked about.
You can't have gender segregation under the 1964 Civil Rights Act, under Title IX.
So the arguments that were made for ending racial segregation make sense.
The arguments for ending gender segregation don't make sense.
But there's a legal precedent that doesn't care about the distinction. So this is what's happening in schools now. So basically this bill is trying to say like,
look, I'm going to put it this way for everybody who's not familiar with what's going on
or who maybe doesn't understand. There is a female pro skateboarder came out as trans,
kept competing against females. Then you get male skateboarders who say that they're actually women,
and then they compete against females.
It only flows in one direction.
This is a big part of the problem.
This is what these bills are trying to address.
If we need to create a new league, a new division for trans athletes,
then sure, maybe that's a solution.
But just eliminating the women's division makes no sense.
Now, the ACLU is arguing you can't
have gender segregation i think the issue is the law says that i'm trying to understand exactly
what the aclu is saying because i mean the aclu are the people who tweet out the men have periods
right they're they're they're they're basically nuts right yeah they're not so here's the issue
from a legal standpoint i think they have a correct argument
uh legally correct but not like an actually what's the right way to say it justifiable
right right right just justifiably like ethical morally or ethical yeah it's a better way to put
it the 1964 civil rights act you can't discriminate against a person in public accommodation based on
national origin sex gender blah blah whatever race, blah, blah, whatever, race.
So from that, we were like, okay, no more white restroom and black restroom.
It's all going to be the same.
But even though the 1964 Civil Rights Act includes gender,
we never ended gender segregation for obvious reasons.
Men and women are different.
Okay, so on the precedent side, you are saying that it is correct because of the Civil Rights Act and how it was enacted.
I think people need to understand
that
these laws are not...
When we try to create a logical
formula for a
cultural problem that is nuanced
and is experienced
in a gradient way,
you will have
issues like this.
Right.
So we're basically saying that we do actually need laws that segregate women from men in
terms of these types of things, whether it comes to sports or any of these.
Is that a hot take?
I don't know.
I mean, that feels pretty natural to say.
Well, so we had, I think it was Delano Squires who was on.
We were talking about this and he was like, you can travel all over the world and see
the differences between men and women are like uniform.
Differences between different groups of people in different areas are different as well.
So the issue with race is that it's not a good reason to segregate somebody.
Like you say, this guy's white and this guy's black.
Well, one dude is Italian and 5'5", and one guy's Swedish know swedish and six foot five i mean race is not the issue right now
so so for like uh mma we do weight categories and things like that right for segregating based on
race for a bathroom that makes no sense but gender experienced all over the world by every single
human being 99.8 of the time is same, there's a reason why we separate.
I mean, there's a variety of cultural reasons and then actual physical reasons.
But the 1964 Civil Rights Act doesn't include any of that.
So this would have to be addressed.
One of the issues at play is that they allow segregation at certain universities for gender
segregation when it's like a woman in computers program.
There was a lawsuit.
It was something like this.
Some guy sued saying you can't have a woman in computers program because that is discriminatory against males.
The school said we have a men in computer program.
And the courts ruled that so long as they offer the same opportunities to both, it's not actually discriminatory.
And I'm like,
wouldn't that precedent apply to national origin, religion, or race as well? That was what we got rid of when we ended segregation. So how is it different when it comes to gender under the same
law? I'm a lawyer, right? And what I find interesting about these types of conversations
is that it shows very clearly that the law doesn't have an answer for everything.
These types of laws, obviously, with the subject of transgenderism,
when these laws were written down, that wasn't an issue.
So it poses all of these new problems that now the law has to respond to,
needs to answer to, and it doesn't know how to.
And I think with something like this,
the way that we've always dealt with that was morality.
So you have certain norms in society that dictate,
okay, well, obviously, in this case,
we find the segregation or the differentiation
of certain groups justified
because that's just the way it is.
There is no better argument really for it,
or that's the way it should be
because we have a shared idea of what is right
and what is wrong in society.
And therefore, you know, that problem kind of solves itself.
But now we're looking to all these, we're looking to these problems and we're saying,
oh, we need to create laws around it.
And often you just make more of a mess around it.
I think we probably need to codify that we can segregate on the basis of sex.
So when I'm saying gender, I'm literally talking about biological sex.
Gender and sex.
But the civil rights laws are about gender.
They're talking about gender.
Do they mention sex?
1964, it says sex.
I'm using gender the classical way to refer to the biological differences between men and women.
Obviously.
So you want to discriminate insofar as you don't want to put a naked woman around a bunch of naked men that are in heat.
In heat?
Yeah.
That's a family-friendly, nice way of putting it.
So discrimination is massively important.
If you can't make a discrimination,
if you can't discriminate against a guy running at you with a knife
and a guy standing on a corner not looking at you, you're going to die.
So you need to discriminate.
I'm not going to pretend I have all the answers.
I'm just going to say that culture is everything.
When we enshrined the 1964 Civil Rights Act, going to say that culture is everything. When we
enshrined the 1964 Civil Rights Act, I think
we did some tremendous good. Ending
segregation was right.
Segregation was wrong.
And why didn't we end
sex segregation?
Why were we like,
okay, now there can't be different restaurants
for different races, but you can
still separate schools and public accommodations for different,
you know, you can have ladies night, you do all these things.
Because culturally, everybody was okay with it.
So there was no need to change it.
Now we have the rise of this woke cult,
and they're exploiting this law and our culture for not addressing these things.
I think the real intent is just to destroy.
Yeah.
Confuse.
Right. Demoralize. Yeah, constantly confuse people constantly confuse yuri bezmanov says yes well you talked about on twitter was today or
the other day about a civil war in this country i mean it feels to me like we're at a place when
i was growing up versus now we are at a place where there is no coming back for some of these
people on the left that some of these ideas that have spawned out of their mouths that they write about and they talk about
are so radical and so different
from anything that has ever been talked about
in human history
that I don't see a way that we come back.
I mean, we're already in a civil war of ideas
in this country,
civil war of ideas in the West.
I hope that it doesn't get violent,
but it seems like we're headed
towards some sort of national divorce.
You have people who are fine
with butchering, savagely killing babies after
they are born and calling it
helping the woman. I'm supposed to live
in a society with people like that?
You know, the conversation
on abortion keeps coming up.
Some news outlet, I don't know, wrote an article
saying that I was a
conservative who was obsessed
with late-term abortion,
which never happens, simply because I said,
hey, look, Democrats are trying to pass late-term abortion legislation.
Why?
You're obsessed with it.
It never happens, Tim.
Why are you talking about it? I'm like, I'm talking about it because you just tried to legalize it.
I don't understand.
You said we're going to legalize this.
I said, why?
I'm not obsessed.
I'm asking you why you did this thing.
That's their little trick, right, to do that all the time with these types of things they say oh never happens but then when it happens it's a good thing oh yeah so that's that's
just i mean the demographic changes the the what's it called the great replacement replacement doesn't
happen but when it happens it's a good thing yeah exactly well this is the that's the crazy thing
too and they're talking about tucker carlson all of these Democrats talk about immigration as a means of maintaining political power.
Then Tucker Carlson gets angry about it, and they're like, he's pushing conspiracy theories.
It's like, what?
They do it to Trump all the time, or they would.
Trump would read the news, and then he'd be like, you see this thing that's going on?
It's a very interesting medicine.
And then the media would be like, Trump makes up medical misinformation.
He's dangerous.
And it's like, I read that in TechCrunch.
Yeah.
Trump, like, watches the news, repeats it, and they call him a liar.
I love it.
When Politifact.
It's that easy.
When he mentioned inner city unemployment, and they said it was mostly false, but it
was like a verbatim quote from Bernie Sanders, which was mostly true.
Incredible how they do this.
I mean, that's those man on the street.
I've done a lot of man on the street videos with PragerU.
Check them all out. But where you go and tell someone, you say, hey,
this is what the Republicans or the conservatives are saying. And then it turns out that, oh,
that was actually the left. Yeah, that was actually the left. That was actually the Democrats. I mean,
we did one about the history of the Democrat Party I did on Hollywood Boulevard a couple years ago,
going and asking people and saying, who started the KKK, all these things they all think it's republicans when it's really democrats i mean you can quote
these people verbatim and they will still tell you that you're a liar and that everything you
say is untrue you know that's a strategy michael malice had a good tweet uh he said i'll start
believing that you care about kids lives when you care about the ones that joe biden took or
something that effect and i don't remember the exact quote from Michael, but I'll put it this way.
I'll believe that any of these people care about kids' lives when they have a national
news cycle condemning Barack Obama for the children he killed, including the American
citizens, but namely Abdulrahman Al-Awlaki, a 16-year-old American citizen that Obama
killed.
Where was the big news cycle?
In fact, when Luke Rutkowski was at, I think it was
the 2012 DNC, I think it was the DNC,
and he and another reporter
for We Are Change asked these
personalities about the drone
assassination of Abdulrahman Al-Awlaki, an American
16-year-old
someone, I think it was Charlie Gibbs, I'm not sure, said
he should have had a better father. They don't care.
They don't care about who they blow
up or kill. They're using political wedge issues don't care about who they blow up or kill.
They're using political wedge issues.
And that's why they never offer any real solutions to any of these problems.
That's why they're like background checks.
It's like, dude, we already have those.
What are you talking about?
Right, there's no denture loophole.
I mean, all these things. Yeah, it's nonsense.
It's the weirdest thing.
Like every time I go to buy a gun, I've got to fill up my little background check form.
I think they're – the only thing I can do is if I want to steel man their argument is that they're talking about like in West Virginia, you can sell up into a family member or a private sale.
You're still legally responsible for that.
You'll go to prison if this person isn't legally allowed to have it.
So if they've done drugs, if they're depressed, like you can get in trouble for it.
We have those laws.
But they're like common sense gun reform.
I'm like, what does that mean
well if it's not saying anything if it's a white person then it's white supremacy's fault as a
shooter if it's a if it's anyone else of any other race it's gun control all these things are is a
tool that the left can use to bludgeon their opponents i mean all of these things they don't
care about any of it it's just a tool to get their way it's just crazy that you see that dude in
waukesha you know he rams this parade.
He's got black nationalist stuff on his
Facebook, and they're like, nah, nah, it's not political.
It's like, come on, dude.
Yeah, someone the other night mentioned that
although these, I don't know if you call them psychopaths
or this aberration of American society
are using leftist tactics,
it's not actually the American left. The American left
and right are still relatively sane
and somewhere towards the center.
But you've got this weird, like, pseudo-communist, fascist, probably psychoactively dampened group of people that are ripping themselves apart and screaming and busting stuff up.
I wonder about this.
I wonder about the medication rates among conservatives versus liberals.
There was a poll I was reading that said liberals are more likely to experience mental illness.
Have you ever seen this one?
Now, the left argued that it's not that they have more mental illness.
It's that Republicans don't go to the doctor.
And I'm like, I don't need to go to the doctor.
I'm all good.
Or it's like, I'm a big, strong man.
I don't need to go to the doctor.
But that data doesn't show that.
You can speculate all you want.
I don't see to go to the doctor but i don't that data doesn't show that you can speculate all you want i don't see that in the data all i know is the data says liberals the
left are more likely the further you go left the more mental illness they have the more deep in
the city you live the more mentally ill you may become that's what happened to me i mean you're
in la right now are you guys noticing have you noticed like your your own mind in that city
getting broken or yeah i mean or what i mean i stay away from a lot of the city stuff i live
kind of in a i live out in burbank if people familiar again with la no it's kind of outside
of la outside of the city outside of hollywood so i try to keep to myself and my dog we kind of hang
out a lot so but i know a lot of people who live in that city and before when i first moved to la
and did a lot of stuff in hollywood did a lot of stuff in beverly hills all that kind of stuff
it was destroying my mind yeah the brake dust a lot of it's Hollywood, did a lot of stuff in Beverly Hills, all that kind of stuff. It was destroying my mind. Yeah, the brake dust.
A lot of it's the brake dust off the car pads, the brake pads.
It's more fine than carbon.
I think more fine than carbon dioxide.
Maybe not carbon dioxide, but more fine than like soot.
And it goes through the alveoli in your lungs right into the bloodstream
and makes just massive hypertension and depression.
Let's not forget all the fluoride in the water.
That's right.
You guys have fluoride?
I taste that.
No, the first time I came here, or the first time I drank a glass of water, which is six days ago,
because this is my first time in the U.S., the first thing I said to him is,
does this taste like pool?
Like a pool.
Well, it's got chlorine.
That's the chlorine, probably.
Yeah, well, but it tastes completely different.
Yeah, no, our water is very filtered.
No fluoride in your water?
Are you sure?
Go check it out.
Dutch waters, I swear. It's very filtered. It, Florida in your water? Are you sure? Go check it out. Dutch waters, I swear.
It's very filtered.
It's filtered to death.
It tastes like nothing.
I want to pull up this story from the Hartford Courant.
Robert Reich, op-ed, The Truth About America's Second Civil War.
And the truth is, as he puts it, is that it's not going to be a civil war.
It's going to be a slow, peaceful breaking apart of people slowly deciding not to work with each other,
but maintaining things like the common defense or whatever. So just a moment ago, you mentioned,
you know, the potential for civil war, whatever. I read this article from May 10th. And the
fascinating thing is that when you actually read the history of the American Civil War,
Robert Reich clearly did not. This dude, because if he did, his op-ed would not say,
we won't go to civil war. His op-ed would be like,
yeah, it's going to happen. He's basically saying that there's a disagreement on laws.
There's a disagreement on how to run things. So people are deciding to hyperpolarize.
Republicans move to red states, Democrats to blue states. And then ultimately, we're just going to
decide to just do our thing. Yeah, read about the civil war. That's what was happening.
Southern states were saying that the northern states were in violation of federal law because they were
supposed to be returning slaves and they weren't. And if that was the case, why would they have to
abide by federal law if the north wasn't doing it? If California right now is not enforcing
immigration law, why then should Texas enforce federal abortion standards? This is what
precipitates the breaking apart of the union like we saw in 1860.
Then you had seven states secede before Abraham Lincoln was inaugurated.
And then after, there was a few more states, I think, that joined.
No, I think it was seven states.
Then when the Battle of Fort Sumter happened, a bunch of other states went,
whoa, like, yo, count me out.
Like, this is crazy.
The union is going in now and their state's supposed to be sovereign.
Robert Reich is saying, you know, there's an abortion issue is happening.
So Democrats are going to move to blue areas and Republicans to red areas.
And I'm like, yeah, that's literally what's happening.
So when you have Roe v. Wade and then you get Republican states basically saying, like,
we're not doing it anymore.
We're going to start, you know, and they get sued over it.
It's the lawsuits that brought us to the point where Roe v.
Rowan Casey may now be overturned. But then the Democrats are going to be like,
Republicans aren't abiding by the laws of this land. And it's like California,
New York, allowing non-citizens to vote. You kidding me? It's not just one thing happening
in one area. It is Democrats in the entirety of California, according to – I can't remember which NGO it was – earned one extra electoral college vote and congressional seat by allowing illegal immigrants into the state without enforcement because congressional seats are apportioned based on population size, not citizenry.
All of this stuff, it looks very eerily reminiscent to what happened in 1860.
You know how much it costs?
A weak president, maybe Donald Trump gets in and then...
You know how much it costs every Californian every year for illegal immigrants in the states?
$1,800 median for every single household in the state.
I mean, it's getting to a point where the people there are fed up.
And the left will continue to do whatever they want.
They don't care about the standards of federal law or what they're supposed to do.
And then as soon as a conservative or a Republican president or a Republican governor comes out and does something like this, then it's
the end of the world for them. I mean, that's conservatives have to play hardball. I mean,
I'm the biggest fan of DeSantis because what he's doing, because he doesn't care at all what the
left thinks about him. He doesn't care about the political standards that we're supposed to live
by. He uses the power that he has and he gets things done in a way that no other Republican
governor has really done in recent memory. Have seen the left they'll say like republicans are steamrolling democrats
because they're too weak have you seen that rhetoric it's amazing so to the left if they
don't get everything they want republicans are steamrolling them to the right if they only
concede a little bit they're doing all right yeah that's the amazing thing to me republicans are
like well we're gonna give the democrats what they want you know you got mitch mcconnell they're doing all right yeah that's the amazing thing to me republicans are like well we're gonna give the democrats what they want you know you got mitch mcconnell they're
not talking about red flag laws no and i'm just like yo there's no there is no right in this
country there there's none i love it the i'm being somewhat facetious the left says there is no left
in this country every single politician is far right oh okay name the politician who just stood
up and said in the wake of what we've just seen in this country,
it's time to repeal the NFA.
It is time to repeal all gun laws as infringements and violations of the Constitution.
No, sorry, it doesn't happen.
You got a handful of Republicans who talk about it.
Some people, I think, have proposed bills.
But the Republican Party is not going out saying repeal gun laws.
The Democrats are saying ban guns.
I'm not saying that every Democrat is saying ban all guns.
I'm saying they have quite Democrat is saying ban all guns.
I'm saying they have quite literally banned a ton of them.
They now want to ban assault weapons, which is meaningless.
Where are the Republican Party to come out, stand up, and yell,
we have to unban selective fire rifles?
No, because there is no right.
There is a slow down there, Democrats, and then Democrats.
That's what we have.
The speed limit is conservatives are just leftists driving the speed limit.
That's essentially what it is.
Every time you give the left an inch, they take a mile.
The only reason why we are in this situation is because conservatives historically have been so weak to not let anything happen.
And this is kind of my gripe with libertarianism that kind of got me in trouble on the Michaela Peterson podcast when I talked about this,
which I'll say again because I think... Anyway, libertarianism in essence is, you know,
it's the kind of liberal answer of saying, you know,
if it happens in someone else's home, then it's fine.
Whatever happens outside there, it's okay.
That's kind of the libertarian answer.
I don't want other people to get involved in my life.
And as soon as you have that, again,
pitted up against the ideology of leftism that is
revolutionary in its essence,
then you get a society that continually gets
steamrolled by these types of people.
So if you have these classical
liberal types, I don't know exactly who you
guys are, but you have these classical liberal types that say
live and let live, the left will steamroll
you every time because you continue to give
up things to them.
The party that just wants to be left alone will always lose.
Always lose.
The party that wants to win.
Yes.
That's what we're seeing.
This is what I love to say to my anarchist friends.
I don't care if they're...
The left anarchists don't believe right-wing anarchists exist.
What?
And I think it's really funny.
Denying their existence.
They do.
They do.
They're like, you can't be a capitalist and an anarchist.
It's like, you can.
You literally can.
But sure, whatever.
But I like to just say, where's the great anarchist civilization?
Sorry, there isn't one.
I mean, there was like a brief period in Catalonia where there was like an anarchic state or whatever.
You've got some parts of Mexico today.
But the reality is that without a centralized authority, you get steamrolled by authoritarians who exploit your, for the most part, peaceful nature.
This is what really bugs me, too, about conservatives.
Anarchists are not violent.
And I say this to all of these people
on the Political Compass memes,
subreddits, and things like that.
They're like,
libertarian left,
and they show Antifa.
And I'm like, dude,
you can't be libertarian
and violently beat someone
with a bike lock into submission
so they do what you want politically.
That is authoritarian you are
like adhere to the authority or i will beat you that is not libertarian left libertarian are like
hippies on a farm sharing their watermelon right libertarians are the farm you know one town over
that's selling the fertilizer to the hippies in exchange for watermelon but people don't understand
that they think left libertarian in the political spectrum is like woke people no no no no no woke is authoritarian left yes we will destroy your life unless you adhere to our
ideology you do not see left libertarians all that often you just don't i'm thinking about like
the people sitting still maybe the libertarians people that don't want to be bothered by the
outside world they'll be surrounded rooted out and destroyed usually by a stronger state force
so the romans the way they figured out was we're just going to kill and subjugate our neighbors
so that no one can come and take us.
But that's the imbalance.
That's like the authoritarian imbalance.
At some point, it's state versus state, whether that's your house and his house.
You both have your doors locked.
Maybe you know each other.
Maybe you share keys, but I doubt it.
And so where do you fall in the balance of state power?
I'm actually more of a I think the state could actually do more in some ways and less in others.
I mean, I think there's a lot.
Actually, we took a trip, Ava and I, on one of the first times that we ever saw each other.
We went to Budapest, and I gave a speech there.
And I think that a lot of the things that Hungary is doing is actually quite successful,
where they understand the power that they have to make people's lives better. And they emphasize the family. And people are doing pretty well in
Hungary. I mean, they're having great economic recovery. And the family unit, I mean, the child
tax credits that you're getting in Hungary, like if you have up to four kids, you can get a free
car from the government. You get a car from the government in some ways. Illiberal democracy is
not a dirty word there. Right, exactly. Illiberal.
Illiberal, yeah.
I mean, the left today is illiberal.
Right, but what they mean
by that is the idea
that you can have
a democratic society,
which, I mean, Hungary is,
but still not embrace
liberal values.
You know, I'll tell you this.
Communism, it works.
I'm going to wait
until people get pissed off and then I'm going to tell you. Please don't go for it. It works. No, it works. I'm going to wait until people get pissed off.
It works
in two circumstances.
An extremely small
population, like a family itself,
where the dad is in charge and
gives everyone what they need to do their thing.
But we wouldn't really call that communism.
It's a commune, right? But it also works
when you have an ideologically homogenous
culture.
You get a thousand people that all blindly follow each other and agree with their cult ideology, and you will have this functioning society.
The problem is communists always try to enact that, and there's only one way to do it.
Kill everyone who disagrees, which is why, in reality, communism never works.
Because there are too many different ideas, too many different people.
They'll never agree with each other unless you have some weird small cult.
What does the left think democracy is?
The left thinks democracy is when it's only their opinion.
Everyone else's opinion gets shut down.
There's a difference.
I'm not sure if you've read the book Jonathan Haidt, his book on, what's it called?
I can't remember the book. But essentially he does studies on the difference between.
The Righteous Mind?
The Righteous Mind. Yeah. Right? I think so. the book. But essentially he does studies on the difference between. The Righteous Mind? The Righteous Mind.
Yeah.
Right?
I think so.
Yeah.
Where people disagree.
Yeah, yeah.
And so conservatives, their outlook on the world believe that people are naturally born not good and that we have to overcome our bad natures to do good things in society.
Whereas leftists think that, okay, people are actually born good, but there's a small group of evil people that we have to take out so that we can have this good society. That's why you hear
conservatives call leftists brainwashed, where leftists
call conservatives evil most of the time.
And so that difference...
Now the right is calling the left evil.
Which is good.
Yeah, we should start.
That difference is what makes it there.
Whenever I point out, periodically
we'll say, hey, we invite leftists on the show
all the time, they don't come.
Only a couple have ever come.
I've done that and then I get these
prominent leftists
who are like,
I'll come on your show.
And I'm like, awesome,
we will pay your travel,
we'll get you the fanciest hotel,
you get a limo,
whatever you want.
And they privately message me
saying, I'm not going on your show.
It was all performative.
It was all,
they want to hoot and holler
in front of their followers
like, I'll do it.
And then behind the scenes say,
oh, you know, I can't,
sorry, it won't happen. So I point whenever i say this what happens is the prominent left personalities
refuse to do it no or they'll try and play this dirty game where they'll be like i'd absolutely
love my appearance fee is fifteen thousand dollars some nonsense no like trying to do things knowing
that we would not ever do it so they can say we canceled on them or something. But then we get lower, like people with a smaller body of work or less followers.
And they'll be like, I'll do it.
And here's what you realize when you, okay, well, we're going to try and be fair and have these people on.
They have no idea what they're talking about.
You ask them to elaborate the ideas.
They have no idea.
They'll say, what?
I don't understand, huh?
What do you mean?
And they'll just keep repeating slogans. The higher profile leftists, I believe for the most part, they know why not to
engage with people who are in the liberty side of things. Because it's not all conservatives.
Like you're mentioning classical liberals. I've always considered myself social liberal,
which is basically the mirror image. It's a centrist libertarian position.
But we have a bunch of people on the show all the time we disagree.
Like Seamus is pro-life.
I would say more so pro-choice.
I hate saying pro-choice because the left has just gone so crazy with it.
But we disagree all the time.
The more prominent leftists know they can't actually come on the show because they will be obliterated.
Because their ideas have no merit for the most part.
I agree with some of left-wing ideas know ideas and stuff and i can argue that i can agree with
some of the criticisms about you know unfettered markets and things like that but when it comes to
facts is joe biden corrupt yes it is a fact that he went to ukraine and threatened to withhold
u.s aid in exchange for the firing of a prosecutor who happened to have been investigating a company where his son worked.
I'm not saying that's why he did it,
but any politician going to a foreign leader and saying,
I will unilaterally suspend a U.S. debt obligation to you,
that's corruption.
They accused Trump of doing that.
Now, if you bring on one of these leftist personalities, they'll deny it.
They'll say, that never happened.
Nope, never happened.
I bring these people on, we show them the video, and they're just like,
what? What about the Steele
dossier? What about
Hillary Clinton's role in approving these things?
They don't read the news. It's tough because
Eisenhower warned us about the liberal economic
order, the military industrial complex,
and was like, yo, we just built
a world police, just so you know, and
watch out, because it's going to try and take over the country,
and it did within two years. But it's culture shock. and take over the country. And it did within like two years.
But it's like culture shock.
People didn't know that until about 12 years ago when the internet appeared.
Now we can study like, you know, the Federal Reserve and the military, liberal economic
order.
And so they're like having cognitive dissonance.
And when you, if you really want to shake someone off out of this, like, I don't know
if you call it leftism or what, but this liberal ideology.
Or the idea of just believing whatever the establishment says, I guess.
Yeah.
I feel like that's more how I go about things now is divide people within the people who
know and people who don't know, so to say.
Because I feel like there's no way that you're going to wake someone up to the fact that
there are no 73 genders.
If you still believe that now or if that is your world, I'm not going to try and convince you that there are only two sexes.
I'm just I'm over that.
You know, that's done.
And I feel like most conservatives should be more or less done with that now.
I tweeted simply neo pronouns are made up because they literally are.
What is a neo pronoun?
Like Z's M's are.
But they don't even know what that is.
They're literally made up. And I don't mean that in a a disparaging way it's like people sit down and then try and
come up with pronouns yeah so i just tweeted neo pronouns are made up because no one disagrees and
boy they got so angry at me i'm open in the word neo new so it must be they were just like
everything's made of you idiot you moron and i was like no but that's what they think that's what
they think they think that everything is a social construct no, but that's what they think. That's what they think. They think that everything is a social construct. So of course that's what they're going to say to you. Words
are made up, right? And, and words get meaning all the time, but it is not in dispute among the
left or the right that neopronons are made up. That's why I thought it was funny to state
something that was just like a flat statement of fact. And they got mad about it. They think
the way you're saying it is disparaging in a way. That's also just you. Yeah. This is the funny
thing. I once, Hassan Piker once made a joke joke so i screen grabbed it and just repost it because i
thought the interaction was funny and then he responded as though i didn't understand his joke
like the the the the assumption is always adversarial it's because your twitter picture
you look mad if you were happy and laughing in your twitter picture people would think that
things were typing were happy you know, I respond to people
like these leftist personalities
all the time
either to agree with them
on certain issues
and like not approach them
in an adversarial way
but their followers
do not like it.
I think it's hilarious.
I mean,
on Twitter,
it's worse.
Yeah,
the worst.
You get way more
negative replies on Twitter
than positive replies
most of the time.
Well,
text in general.
There's no context.
Most people in their own bubbles
will get their own bubble.
Yeah.
But I'll see like
Vosh tweet something
and if he says something
and I'll,
if he says something
I agree with about guns
or whatever,
then I'll respond
affirmatively
and his followers
are just like,
no, you can't agree.
That's not allowed.
Yeah.
It's like,
oh, whatever, dude.
Let me pull up this story
from CNN Business
so we can have
the last segment
just be fun.
From CNN, Walmart apologizes for selling Juneteenth ice cream.
So they tried to make a woke ice cream, and the woke attacked them for it.
Why are we worried about these people?
What does it taste like?
What do they say?
They say great value.
My favorite flavor.
See, this is why they got value. Oh, my favorite. That's why they got – see, this is why they got mad.
Oh, the branding.
No, no.
It's because everyone knows great value is like the bargain bin.
So that's certainly why they're mad.
Like, hey, well, we're not bargain bin.
We want Ben and Jerry's. That's right.
When they do it, it's cool.
There's no Juneteenth at Erewhon Market.
So what did they say?
They said it was a red velvet-flavored ice cream.
What is red velvet? Isn't that was a red velvet flavored ice cream. What is red velvet?
Isn't that just like red vanilla, basically?
It's just like a lot of red dye in a
little cake or something with cream cheese on it.
Wait, but shouldn't it be like chocolate ice cream?
Oh, is it chocolate?
Juneteenth, yeah.
Chocolate's that racist? I don't know. There's melanin.
One critic on Twitter
highlighted
why it's important to have diverse voices at the table when making strategic business decisions.
When you don't, you end up making costly, foolish mistakes.
Dude, this is the most tepid and normal thing you can do to celebrate Juneteenth.
A holiday.
Any holiday.
Right.
They made a holiday-themed ice cream.
They do it all the time.
We have a Maricone Dream with Stephen Col colbert and it's you know it's great yeah yeah and so i think what we actually see here
is that no matter what you do when you try to pander to these people you'll never win yeah you're
just you're just wasting your time it's kind of like when your enemy's making a mistake don't
stop them but at the same time if your enemy's making a mistake and the mistake is destroying
your environment then maybe you need to stop them we got it we got a fact check adrian curry said red velvet is chocolate
that's what i really yeah okay so then it is works for juneteenth yeah but it's red
definitely dude maybe that's why they got mad i guess yeah i don't know buttermilk eggs hey who
had an issue with this oh this is vanilla cocoa, so I guess we're all right.
Oh, it's both.
Unity.
They shouldn't have put vanilla in it.
Buttery.
The gall.
They canceled it.
That's crazy.
Who canceled it?
They apologized.
Walmart.
Wait, so they're not selling it anymore?
We've got to rush out and buy some.
Yeah, if anyone has some, send it to the show.
I would love to try some Juneteenth.
I still have the old
Aunt Jemima bottles.
Yes, so do we.
With the old
Uncle Ben's Rice.
I have that from
We Did a Cancel Culture
on my show.
I had a whole thing.
I think it's funny
how the woke people
are only getting mad
about the black people
on branding.
It's like Mr. Clean's fine.
This is Butterworth.
It's not even black
and they got rid of that.
Did you guys ever read
Bomb Pops? It's red, white, and blue. It's red, black, and they got rid of that. Did you guys ever eat Bomb Pops?
It's red, white, and blue.
Bomb Pops?
It's red, white, and blue.
That sounds racist.
No, it's a red, white, and blue, what do you call it?
That sounds very American, though.
It's not creepy.
A Bomb Pop?
Yeah, they call it a Bomb Pops.
Dude, I used to eat these when I was little.
It's red, white, and blue, and they called it, it's like a bomb.
Like, how militaristic is our society?
We used to eat these.
I feel like it's just like a 4th of July thing.
Bro, we had bombs. Like, they were teaching me as a kid, used to eat these. It's like a 4th of July thing.
We had bombs. They were teaching me as a kid,
drop bombs. It's American of you.
Bomb pop. The ice cream truck would pull
up and you'd get a bomb pop and it was like
explosively awesome. What was it even made of?
Cherry, lime, and blue raspberry.
No, it's water and sugar.
Cold tar.
The ingredients are water, sugar, corn syrup,
and high fructose corn syrup.
That's what you're eating. I just love that it sugar, corn syrup, and high fructose corn syrup. That's what you're eating.
Times have changed.
I just love that it's red, white, and blue, and it's a bomb.
I know.
It's ridiculous.
Exactly.
It's a Dutch flag.
Gaddafi approves.
Isn't it?
Right.
It's a Dutch flag.
It's a Dutch flag.
Oh, it is.
It's a Dutch flag.
It's not American.
It's a Dutch flag.
No, it's Russian.
Oh, yeah.
It's Russian.
French, I think, actually.
Oh, okay.
Well, we can fight over it.
Dutch, French, Russian. French I think actually oh okay well we can fight over it Dutch French
I just think like
you have this red white and blue for Americans
it's obviously America right
it's a bomb that should be offensive
to Americans because it's like how dare you
put bomb in America together as if to imply
we think it's hilarious
I think it's awesome I think it's funny and it's like
yeah America does bomb a lot of kids
so selling it but like then the Jun America does bomb a lot of kids. Yeah. So selling it.
But like then the Juneteenth things happen.
These people get mad about everything.
Like if somebody, you know, you see it with Ben Shapiro all the time.
We'll make fun of him.
And he laughs and he rolls with it.
He's like, I don't care, dude.
It's funny, you know.
I see people post memes about me and I think it's funny.
These people just want to be angry all the time.
It gives their life meaning.
If you have no meaning in your life, then of course you want to be angry.
I tried to listen to angry people. I was like, you know what? I feel
like communication can overcome whatever we need to. So I'm like, I'll give it a chance. And you
listen to them and like, okay, they're feeling better. And then they start, then I get insulted
by them. And I'm like, I can only handle so much. I don't have so much time in the day.
I don't want to waste 12 of my next, like at some point receding the abuse is no longer tolerable yeah we
had to build a rage room in the house
it's this it's this small padded room
because what Ian will get on Twitter
and they start shaking we're like quick get him to the
room and then we put him in he's like
Ava's gonna need one
of those after living with me for a little bit
there is no Twitter needed
no Twitter needed no I mean I deal
with these angry people I mean I've done plenty of events, speaking events, where all of people –
I did one at University of Northern Colorado, and they told me I had to wear a mask while I spoke.
And I said, you know, no, not wearing a mask while I speak.
And I take the mask off as soon as I get up on stage, and these about 50 Black Lives Matter thugs come.
They're flipping the tables.
They're giving death threats to the people who are there.
They're taking their mask off, telling me to put my mask on i and they're just threatening children i mean
it's really terrible it's angry angry people i am curious what their main complaint was with this
juneteenth thing because i would think that this would be great but they're all like oh you didn't
have enough diverse yeah no they're like oh no we're winning the culture war and walmart's
supporting our ideology quick we can't claim victimhood. Get rid of it.
Basically. The revolution eats its own.
It does. It absolutely does. I just looked up
the Netherlands flag. Is it really that trippy?
Is it the one where it looks like you're looking into a burst
of color, like red, white, and blue all flying
past you? No, it's just red, white,
blue. Stripes.
I got that one, but then I got this flag.
What are you getting? So there's the Amsterdam
flag, which is different than the Dutch flag.
There we go.
That's the Dutch flag.
See?
So were they bomb pops?
Yeah.
Bomb pops.
Oh, you're right.
That's literally that.
It's just the Dutch flag.
Maybe it's Dutch.
It's Dutch.
Are you going to bomb us?
I don't know.
We saved you.
No, it's the French flag.
Sorry, everyone.
See?
Because the French is red, white, then blue.
So if the bomb pop was sideways, it would be France.
Okay, so if it's flying this way, it's...
If it's sitting upright, it's Dutch.
It's not the Russian flag, because the Russian flag is white, blue, red.
That's right.
So it's funny.
Since Ava moved into my place, I put a big Dutch flag up in my place.
But I was talking to her.
Like, people don't know flags very well.
And I have a person who comes and watches my dog when I go out of town.
And I'm worried that he's going to think I have this huge Russian flag in my place talking about Ukraine and everything.
You know, I went and got yogurt.
We were out on a weekend and we all went to like a game store and got yogurt.
And there's like a chalkboard there and it was just like chalk for anyone to draw.
And people drew Ukrainian flags.
And it was like right on the start of all this stuff. And I was just like, for anyone to draw and people drew ukrainian flags and it was
like right on the start of all this stuff and i was just like this is the stupidest thing ever you
have no idea what you're supporting no none no it's on the trans flag now right or the yeah the
what's the source for that i could not find i could i don't know i've been seeing it everywhere
on twitter i think people were making that up probably i could definitely be real so i mean
i wouldn't put it past them.
The pride flag has the trans triangle with the black and brown in it and then the rainbow to represent folks, I think they call it.
And now there's one going around with yellow and blue for Ukraine.
But I've not seen any official leftist account or organization use that.
I'm looking forward to getting away from rectangular flags and starting new shapes.
Three-dimensional flags.
Yeah, stuff like that.
It's like, wait, is it a square or a rectangle?
It's a square run!
Attack!
It's a cube!
It's a cube attack!
Yeah, you're right.
It's a cube.
Is it a rhombus?
That means you attack.
They probably just have rectangular flags because they flow better in the wind.
Maybe they're easier to mass produce.
Yeah.
I'm getting kind of tired of it.
Kind of boring. Yeah. I'm going to of tired of it. It's kind of boring.
The next revolution. That's the liberal
leftist. We're going to do big TV screens instead
of flags in the future. It's like, why use a flag?
Just put up a big TV. Why do we have flags?
I mean, I guess if the power goes out.
Flags, it's obvious. So you knew
if you were safe. Yeah, but then...
Like you're off in the middle of nowhere and you see a flag
of your country, you know you can go there and you're safe.
The enemy could fly your flag.
Well, that's what they call false flags.
They wouldn't because then – right.
But if they did, they would get attacked by their people.
So you had to be careful about it.
Plus it's really – you know what's always weird to me is like rules of war where it's like if I have a white flag, I'm going to respect that.
I'm like why would anyone do that?
But back in the day, it's like you flew a white flag.
They're like, all right, come on in.
Let's talk.
I guess because you want war to end, so you need to have some understanding.
There was still a lot of foul play in wars back then.
Oh, yeah, for sure.
Back then.
Back then.
Now, I mean, this war in Ukraine is just totally honorable and great.
No problems whatsoever.
Accurate media coverage.
Vietnam had some accurate media coverage.
That was the last time they realized
we're not going to put reporters in the war
anymore. We're going to give you a cookie
cutter look at what's happening.
The first Iraq war, apparently I had a friend in the war.
They were like, yo, we would laugh at the media
coverage of the tanks rolling down the
desert. We were kicking in doors and
mowing down families. It was just horrific.
The war propaganda
for Ukraine is just,
to me, it's laughable. You go on
Reddit, and it's just like,
here's a Ukrainian soldier giving a warning
to Russians, and it's like the camera's at a
low angle pointed up at a guy, and he's got a cigar, and he's like,
listen here, Russia.
But he's saying it like Ukrainian, and he flicks the
cigar, and he's like, we're coming for you.
And then all the comments are like, yeah, Slavokrania.
And I'm like, come on, dude. It's just all propaganda, and he's like we're coming for you and then all the comments were yes love ukraine and i'm like come on dude it's just all propaganda and they're like i loved when they reported about
maria pole getting conquered by russia and they're like cessation of hostilities it's like what does
that mean the fighting stopped and why because russia won like okay that's what we're trying
to get to right yeah how do you guys think, like, on the balance of white pill and black pill, if you had to do a percentage scale? Maybe a little bit. So, again, as a Christian
myself, baptized Christian about a year and a half ago, I mean, I'm definitely in, I understand that
all of the things that are happening now are indicative of what human nature is. I mean,
when you read scripture and understand, I mean, these things are kind of called out in a lot of ways of how people are going to act
within the world.
It's basically foretold, so many of the things.
I'm not one to say revelations or anything right now.
That's not what I'm saying.
But many of the ways that humans are acting right now
is basically how humans are going to act.
You will sin, you will go against your creator,
all these kind of things.
And so I see that as very natural.
And so it's kind of white-pilling to know that if you have the truth on your side,
then even if 99% of the culture is against you, you know what is true.
And that's white pilling to me.
But then it's also black pilling in the sense like culture really sucks.
And there's a lot of things that are going really terribly right now.
No, I've gone down the rabbit hole a fair amount, especially during the COVID days.
You know, the vaccine mandates and everything.
It came real close in Europe, mandatory vaccinations.
In Austria, it was a matter of a month or so.
And then suddenly they dropped it.
And for me now to get to be here in the U.S., the only reason I'm here right now is because I was able to travel on an exemption ground.
Otherwise, it wouldn't have been possible.
You can't enter the U.S. unless you're vaccinated?
Yes, that's exactly it.
The other way around, same thing.
So unvaccinated citizens, U.S. citizens can go to Europe
and unvaccinated European citizens can go to the U.S.
Right now?
Right now.
And nobody talks about it.
People don't know this.
How do you get an exemption?
Well, I got a government letter
because I'm going to do some humanitarian work. So the humanitarian exemption
is one of them, but there are very few. And I'm a lawyer, so I got this opportunity
because I have the knowledge to do so. But other people, you know,
I get messages from people every day who haven't seen their
family and their friends in years because of these regulations, because of these restrictions.
So those are, you know, those are evil.
What about medical exemptions?
The medical exemptions are very, very rare.
Very rare.
Yeah.
Yeah.
They won't give them out to you.
I thought they ended all this stuff.
No.
Well, not for the travel for between.
No, I thought the travel stuff ended.
No.
Yeah.
No one knows this.
No one knows this.
I mean, for me to come to Amsterdam to see her, the regulations in place,
the things that we had to go through,
it was just insane.
Between America and Europe,
it definitely didn't end.
In Europe, within Europe,
a lot of it ended,
but they're still working
on the European digital identity.
I don't know if you guys ever talk about any of that.
Not enough.
I would love to talk to you about it.
Interesting. We can go deeper on the after show into that. In a nutshell, what is it? ever talk about any of that? Not enough. Well, I would love to talk to you about it.
Interesting. Yeah. We can go deeper on the after show into that. In a nutshell, what is it?
Oh, yeah. Well, the European Digital Identity Project is a project by the European Commission,
which is basically to make basically a passport, a digital passport for every single person in Europe. So every single European citizen will have a digital app that, well, basically the digital
COVID pass was the first stage of. So everyone in Europe had a digital vax pass. I feel like a lot
of Americans don't know that. That was used to give you access to like everyday things. So to
go to restaurants, for example, you would need to get your app scanned to get into the restaurant.
So, you know, vax pass is the ones that you have, the paper ones that you can, you know, you couldn't in Europe.
So you were just excluded from society if you didn't have this pass.
There are many countries in Europe that have lifted entry requirements for vaccination.
Yes.
So the question is, once you get into the Schengen zone, are you then able to go to...
Yeah.
Okay, so you can't fly into the Netherlands.
No.
But you can fly into Poland and then travel from there to the Netherlands.
No, because Poland is also in the Schengen zone.
So, no, you wouldn't be able to.
It says Poland...
Well, I just pulled up Schengen Visa Info.
It says Poland has dropped entry requirements for travelers.
For Americans.
It says...
Well, it just says...
It also depends on the risk of the country that they're coming from.
They permit restriction-free entry to all travelers.
Well, maybe they've done that now for a couple of countries then.
That's good.
You can see Austria hasn't.
The Netherlands is not in there.
Belgium hasn't.
That's not.
Yeah, so then if you are in Europe, then you could go.
But at least for my country, for example, no.
Because this is what I heard.
Someone was telling me that they had to fly to Poland and then take a train.
Okay.
Because they wouldn't allow you to come in via plane well that's that's relatively new then because there
was an eu travel ban in force for basically the entire continent i think this is probably the
result of the fact that they've dropped a lot of restrictions also for europeans yeah look at this
look at this sorry to interrupt you in the netherlands it says travelers from third countries
are still subject to the entry rules but not if you're coming from the EU Schengen area.
That is insane.
See how arbitrary all of this is?
It makes no sense.
Yes.
Like someone from Germany is going to be safer than someone from New York.
No, no, but you can fly to Germany and then come and they don't care.
Right.
Yes.
It makes no sense.
But so I had to, yeah.
Well, but I mean, you still would have to get, for example,
now vaccinated travelers who go from Europe to America also still need to get tested.
Well, hold on there.
We all know the southern border has no security.
Honestly, I think it would have been easier for me to go from Mexico into the U.S.
than to get this exemption ground that I now have to go in a legal way.
But I'm a lawyer.
I need to go in a legal way.
And this is all I can do all of these things. So that's great. But for other people who
don't have the option, you know, that's just, it's heartbreaking. And it's all arbitrary,
it's evil. But yeah, the digital identity thing, that is really something you guys should look
into, because it's really, really scary. And that's all, that's a much bigger thing. That's
not just going to include your vac status, but it's going to include biometrical
data.
It's going to include your taxes.
It's going to include potentially even central bank digital currencies if it comes to that.
So the European Union is incredibly focused on the digitalization of your everyday life.
So basically, your entire life will become an airport experience
where you have to check in and check out
if it's up to these people.
I was very shocked when I came to Europe
and experienced that for the first time.
It's so scary.
It's really scary.
I feel like you guys should be really thankful
that it's not as far yet here.
Well, you know, we have guns.
Yeah.
Right.
But this is, I think we've talked about this a lot during the COVID times.
You know, when we had the lockdowns in Europe, in the Netherlands, it was crazy.
We had curfews.
We had the lockdowns.
Obviously, we had the vax passes, which basically track you everywhere you go.
So the government knows everything about you, whether you can go to restaurants or not.
All these things were all dependent on whether you had this digital pass.
And obviously, they are digital.
They're QR codes.
So they are protected against fraud.
So you're really screwed if you don't have them.
Was there a corporation that built those?
Or was it the government that built them?
Are you familiar?
It was the government that built them.
And there was a European system as well.
So they had the European digital COVID pass, which was
exactly what they mentioned
in the reports, was sort of
the beginning phase of this digital
wallet that they're going to use for every single
European citizen for much more than
just your back status. So we're going to
go to Superchats. I just want to give a shout out to Denmark,
man. You've probably been there a lot, right?
Actually, that's one country I haven't been to.
You've never been to Denmark? I've never been to Denmark. It's like right there, right? Yeah, I've been to Norway. I've been to Sweden. I've never been there a lot right i actually that's the one country i haven't been to i've never been to denmark it's like norway yeah i've been to norway i've been to sweden
i've never been to denmark but i would love to go i'm just you know i'm reading these countries i
saw denmark was on the list of like you can freely travel there and i've it's weird i've been to
copenhagen so many times and christiana have you ever have you ever traveled there negative the
free city of christiania oh i've heard of that. Yeah. They like declared independence from Europe
and they're just kind of
like no one pays taxes
or something.
It's crazy.
Amazing.
So you can go there.
Communism works.
It says now leaving the EU.
I mean, there's businesses
in there.
I went and got a hot dog.
Yeah.
It was cool.
There's a great burger
place in Copenhagen.
I loved going there.
That was fun.
Have you been to Amsterdam?
Yes, I have.
Okay.
Yeah.
What do you think of it?
A lot of bikes.
A lot of bikes.
Yes.
Too many.
I was only there for like a couple days though. Did you take mushrooms? No. Do What do you think of it? A lot of bikes. A lot of bikes. Yes. Too many. I was only there for a couple days, though.
Did you take mushrooms?
No.
Do you think you will next time?
No, I don't think so.
Yeah.
I went to a conference and talked about the news, and then everybody was riding bikes
everywhere.
It was funny.
It's like the bikes have more rights than cars.
Yeah.
First time I rode a bike in Amsterdam, I crashed on the bike.
What happened? First time. Well, I thought it would be like an American mountain bike,, I crashed on the bike. What happened?
First time.
Well, I thought it would be like an American mountain bike.
And I get on this bike, this Amsterdam Dutch bike.
And I thought I was going to really impress Ava.
Oh, no.
And I ran into a Range Rover.
Humbling.
Yeah, very humbling, which I needed.
It's all good.
All right, let's go to Super Chats.
If you haven't already, would you kindly smash the Like button, subscribe to the channel,
share the show with your friends, take that
URL, post it everywhere. You can now watch
the show actually at TimCast.com. It will
automatically be posting to the front page,
little flashing light, live. We're going to be
doing a bunch of other cool stuff with
infrastructure and companies
that are resistant to censorship. That's going to be a lot of
fun. We're going to have a members-only show coming up for you at 11pm.
Don't miss it. Sign up at TimCast.com.
Let's read.
Alright, AdaraTheWholesome says, Tim,
you said go buy a billboard. Well, I can't afford a physical one, and I think
Ian would argue that this is a digital one.
Tim, take my money, check out
AdaraTheWholesome on Twitch, because I felt
like it. Spin the UFO already.
I'm spinning it now, and I do agree with you.
Billboards aren't that expensive.
Let me ask you, Mr. Witt, how much do you think a billboard costs on average?
Whoa, that thing's spinning.
You should ask Ava.
I actually know the answer to this question.
Oh, you do?
Because PragerU is actually trying to do billboards across the country.
Oh, no, I don't know.
You ask.
I'm going to say something stupid.
No, you'll be fine.
Like you see a billboard on the side of the highway or on the side of a building.
How much do you think it would cost?
In America?
Yeah.
Gee.
I have no idea. i literally have no idea is it gonna be crazy expensive super cheap crazy cheap yeah so you can you can get um for like 400 bucks a times square billboard for you know half a day
or something i mean you guys did the taylor yeah yeah yeah yeah with the daily wire guys and uh
it's it's you know i don't want to get involved in the Daily Wire's business stuff, so I'm
not going to say too much, but we, you know, we're going to be doing a bunch of ads and
we're going to be, let me just put it this way.
We're going to be asserting ourself in culturally dominant spaces.
Billboards.
Right.
Cheap.
You can get like.
Everyone should do this then on the conservative side.
Oh, yeah.
100%.
Bombard everyone with truth.
Well, yeah, but think about – so it can get expensive if you're buying a lot.
Right.
I think if you want to get your ad to appear in every subway of New York and on every bus, it's like $300,000.
Wow.
For how long?
A month.
Wow.
Now, $300,000 is a lot of money.
But think about what that is.
Every subway, every bus doing a run of ads everywhere, like a couple hundred grand.
That's kind of crazy if you think about it.
Well, think about how much it costs to advertise on a major network just on one of the primetime shows in a week.
It's insane.
$12,000.
Yeah.
I mean, listen.
People who run businesses, like even a small business, if you have maybe a couple restaurants,
you're going to be making maybe a million bucks.
It doesn't mean that you have a million bucks in cash
and you're a millionaire.
It means your company generates the revenue.
It is not out of the question
for any one of these conservative businesses
to do these things,
especially the Daily Wire guys.
They have a Times Square billboard for Harry's.
They could afford to basically take over a city
in terms of just every major
highway saying, you know, you know, it's, it's, it's also about what's effective.
So for us, we're looking at ways that we can culture jam as, as marketing.
So we want to do things that are going to, you know, we just, we, you know, I don't,
I don't want to say anything yet because in a few days we're going to be doing something,
so I won't reveal it, but I just want to make sure all the blue checky journalists are frustrated
every single day.
So anyway,
in Times Square, for instance,
if you go on these digital sellers,
these websites where they do automatic sales,
it's like $4 per play
of a video on one of the biggest billboards.
$4.
So it's like, okay, spend $40 and boom,
you're there for, you know, it'll get you like two hours worth.
Your video will play in a rotation.
If you spend $400, you're going to be there all day.
People don't know that.
I mean, not everybody has $400 to spend on something like that.
But yeah, I mean, that's not out of the question for the average person if you want to do something ridiculous.
Right.
All right, let's see what we got.
Alex Lindquist says, just got out of a three-year coma
please explain uh aliens took over uh rift in the time space continuum witches came out cast spells
and here we are and you're healthy yeah that's right all right spiro floropolis as i have
purchased sources say dot online and begun coding the word q system should be ready this week Did you hear about my idea?
No.
Well, depending.
You can't sue Wikipedia for defamation because of Section 230.
You also can't sue an individual editor because they've made no statements.
If you were to write on Wikipedia, Ian Crossland pet a dog.
Well, that's not defamatory.
Ian has pet dogs probably in the past year or so.
That's true, yeah.
So you've said nothing wrong.
Wikipedia has said nothing wrong.
Then Lydia goes in and changes pet to ate.
She did not accuse Ian of eating a dog.
Filthy liar.
All she did was say one word.
Who do I blame?
Who does he sue?
He can't sue you and he can't sue her because no
one said anything that makes no sense right so i said i mean i'm sure my argument is actually you
can sue wikipedia should be liable but you've got to get the lawsuit so precedent is set to
to answer that question so we have this idea for something called sources say
someone gave us the name of it on the super chat. When you load the website, you're placed in a queue.
In the queue, you're allowed to type one word.
So we'll make an article titled Nancy Pelosi.
And then it'll say, sources say blank.
If you're the first person in, you get the first word.
Second person in, you get the second word.
Everybody gets about 15 seconds to put their word in.
And then you watch the article write itself as everyone adds just one word.
Who gets sued.
I didn't write it. It's user generated.
Not a single user made a statement.
They all added one word. So we can write whole
articles that basically say who knows what
because everyone's going to be adding random words.
And with the queue system, you'll know
what's before you so you won't
you know, someone could sabotage it and write nonsense
but it won't fall victim to
like the Twitch plays errors where it's all fall victim to, like, the Twitch plays errors
where it's all a bunch of random gibberish.
Twitch plays Pokemon.
I remember that.
You'll see people, it's all over the place,
and they're trying to struggle to get it to move.
With this, you're sitting there.
You have 10 seconds.
Enter a word.
Read what you've got.
Yeah.
It's going to be fun.
Maybe we'll have the time limit increase as the paragraph gets bigger
so you know what word you're adding.
Mm-hmm.
So it looks like Spiro is going to have that done.
Very nice.
All right.
Murph Try says, congrats to Lydia on her first opinion piece for the website.
Can't wait to read more.
Tim, a guest you should have on is Dr. Lee Stillman.
He has a sub stack and just had a great live stream on testosterone.
That sounds interesting.
What was your first opinion piece on, Lydia?
So for my first opinion piece, I wrote about this new study that came out that seemed to indicate that people who have more than two children have a higher risk of developing dementia later in life.
And I looked at some of the things that might make that untrue.
At first, I thought it seemed a little bit like propaganda to try to prevent people from having more kids.
But then it turned out they studied a bunch of European adults, and they have much more of the state intervention where people go to a
nursing home instead of living with their families for
longer and I was like, that might actually be
a sign of a deep societal issue.
So I kind of looked into that and
it's up on the site and I'm excited.
Happy to write for the site. More to come.
Yeah, indeed. Alright, Mark
the Mariner says, Will Witt, you are behind enemy lines
by thousands of miles and will never
see that goddess land? Oh, I'm sorry, never are behind enemy lines by thousands of miles and will never see that goddess land.
I'm sorry, never said that godless land.
I don't know what they're trying to say.
Maybe talking about Los Angeles.
Yeah.
Move to Texas and convert our California refugees to the Lord.
Hell yeah, brother.
So I heard.
I'm on my way.
I was in Austin recently and apparently the Austin liberals are freaking out.
Like apparently they're telling people like, oh, these conservatives keep moving here, and it's changing the landscape of things.
What do we do?
Good.
Good.
Keep going.
All the California conservatives should move to those places and absolutely change things.
It was sad what you were saying about L.A.
I think before the show you were talking about the escalation of the homeless population on Ventura Boulevard and Hollywood Boulevard. You see that video
of the guy who gets in a car accident? Yeah, we just
watched it. The homeless guys
then surround him and start looting his car.
When he tries to escape, they drag him out of the car and start
beating him. Kick him in the head. Vultures.
Really terrible. And that stuff is pretty
commonplace, going to be honest. I mean, the crimes that happen on
Skid Row is, oh man.
One of my fondest memories of California
was in Los Angeles.
I was going to a shopping center.
I was trying to get a bubble tea.
And this big fat woman. That's your first problem.
Yeah.
Getting a bubble tea.
Oh, I love bubble tea.
A Thai tea.
And so this big fat woman walks in the middle of the street, pulls her pants down, takes
them off.
No.
And just.
No.
California.
Just relieved herself.
That was nice.
In the hot, hot sun.
I was like, wow.
Well, you get used to it.
America. Poop on the street. I mean, literally. I grew up hot sun. Well, you get used to it. America.
Poop on the street.
I mean, literally, like, I grew up in Colorado, and you don't see it too much there.
It's gotten worse in Denver, Colorado.
People know that.
But, I mean, now it's just like, oh, you see a homeless person, you step over them.
That's just commonplace.
I used to go down to—
Terrible.
I used to go to Skid Row back when I lived in Atlanta.
I'd hand out water bottles, and I'd bring a camera.
It was before iPhones.
And I was like, I want to—or right around that time, I want to record these people, get their testimonials and then put it online so
that people can like help them. But they never wanted to. People were like, I don't want to be
a part of it, man. Well, I went to Skid Row and I actually interviewed homeless people. I did this
for a documentary that I was doing called Fleeing California on PragerU. I did that about two years
ago, all about how California is failing and places like Texas are thriving. And I went and
interviewed homeless people. And you talked to so many of these people.
I talked to this one guy who was a father, and he said, yeah, I lived in Louisiana.
I had two kids and a wife, but I decided to move out to L.A. to Skid Row to be homeless.
I'm like, you live there in Louisiana.
You have kids.
I was like, but why?
He's like, easy life.
You know, I can just come out here.
They gave me a phone.
Wow.
I'm like, okay, they gave you a phone wow i'm like okay they gave you a
phone and then you talk to these people who actually work like in the government offices
with that the amount of administrative i mean this is what tokeville talked about when you're
talking about the administrative state and democracy in america that you have this administrative state
and most of the money that is supposed to go towards homelessness 12 billion last year
in california just goes towards administration all right that's really useless let's read some
more we got andy Leiterman who says,
Watch the stream live on TimCast.com.
You can participate in the chat if you're logged into YouTube in the same browser.
Lydia looks lovely tonight.
Oh, thank you.
That's my husband.
Sage-like wisdom.
Yeah.
He's the guy behind putting the stream on the site.
Oh, got it.
The master behind all the technical endeavors that we've done.
All of these trips we've done have been impossible, would have been without Andy.
Yeah, it's fun to watch him work.
He's good.
Machine.
All right.
He's got a limber body being a skater and all.
Eric Mack says, Tim, from the show yesterday, there is an atmosphere on Mars enough for a drone to fly,
and there is one on there right now.
Yes, I was corrected on that one.
We talked about how there's a drone that they flew up in the air.
That's crazy.
And I got a story from September 2015.
NASA confirms evidence that liquid water flows on today's Mars.
I saw that, yeah.
Pretty powerful.
All right.
So I think it's under the surface.
Coritian says, Ava, I have Dutch ancestry.
They changed the spelling of my last name at some point in the 1700s.
It was spelled H-U-N-G-E, but the U had a dot above it.
What does it mean?
I heard it's common, like Smith is there.
Say it again, the name.
H-U-N-G-E.
With an umlaut.
Oh, with an umlaut?
Okay, well, that's actually very uncommon in the Dutch language.
I feel like that's German.
It does sound German.
So if you have an
U, that is how it would
be with an umlaut. So in German, you would
have the U would be an U
and then with an umlaut on it would be an
U sound.
Interesting.
We hardly have umlauts in the Dutch language.
What about the single dot? Was it just a single dot?
They said a dot.
Is there anything like that? A U with one dot on top of it? No.
Okay. No. Free Men Die Free
says, Hey Tim, you still owe us
an episode with Ron Paul. Also, the
Libertarian Party's national convention is this weekend.
Have Dave Smith and Michael Heiss on again
after LPMC can save
the U.S. if they succeed.
Sure. That'd be great.
Yeah, Dave's cool. I just texted Dave earlier, man.
I love that guy. He's so chill.
Dan Ines says,
the nine most terrifying words
in the English language are,
quote,
I'm from the government
and I'm here to help.
Ronald Reagan.
You know, I do love that,
but I suppose if, like,
you know, you were being invaded
and some dudes in army trucks
pulled up and said,
I'm from the U.S. government,
we're here to help,
you'd be like, that's cool.
Thank God.
Yeah, right?
Yeah.
Like, that's a good thing. That's maybe what you want government for, for from the U.S. government, we're here to help you, you'd be like, that's cool. Thank God. Yeah, right? That's a good thing.
That's maybe what you want government for, defending you there.
Yep.
Culture.
That's it.
Raynick says, there are 100,000 public schools in the United States.
If we take this completely random amount of money, $40 billion,
and divide it by 100,000, the average salary for an armed security guard
is about $33K a year.
That's 12 guards per school.
It's not $33K. Maybe I'm wrong's 12 guards per school. It's not 33K.
Maybe I'm wrong, but I'm pretty sure it's more than that.
Yeah, I guess it depends on the state, too.
Yeah.
I don't know.
East F says, Biden, I did that stickers are appearing on formula shelves in Louisiana.
Oh, no.
Oh, snap.
Spreading.
Wow.
That's bad.
Steven B. says, hey, Tim, did you see that Amala beat you to the Taylor Silverman interview?
Everyone also beat us to the Kyle Rittenhouse interview.
Yeah, that's okay.
I don't like the idea of this rush to, like, grab someone who, like, appears.
But you saw the Taylor Silverman thing, right?
Mm-hmm.
So I've actually spoken to her quite a bit
and we've got a plan. I offered to
cover the losses
for the... So for those that aren't familiar,
Taylor Silverman's a skateboarder. She competed in a contest.
A biological male won first place.
Ended up taking, I think, like
$1,250 from her.
I did the math wrong, but I said I would cover the difference.
Which I said $2,250
because I didn't realize she didn't win Best Trick.
But, you know, whatever.
We'll cover that.
So we're planning something.
I'm just not a fan of this thing that happens in the media where someone will do something and then every single media organization will be firing off emails like, you have to come on my show first.
You have to come on my show first.
You know, nah, I don't want to do that.
People were like, why won't you have Kyle Rittenhouse come on? And I'm like, Kyle Rittenhouse can come on whenever show first. You know, nah, I don't want to do that. People were like, why won't you have Kyle Rittenhouse come on?
And I'm like, Kyle Rittenhouse can come on whenever he wants.
But I'm not going to do this thing like right after his court trial.
We're going to like email him and be like, come on our show, not someone else.
Yeah, why the rush?
I just, I don't, I'm not the kind of person who likes to run full speed towards the finish
line to compete with everybody else.
We'll do it when it makes sense.
It's more about the quality than getting them on at the time.
I mean, I think. you want something that lasts i mean you'll watch
jordan you can watch that jordan peterson interview he did with gq four years later and it's still
great it doesn't matter that it was first yeah i i want to have uh you know when i when i got
started with uh political stuff like when i got a bunch of attention during occupy wall street it
was happening to me everybody Everybody was emailing me
and calling saying,
come on my show,
come on my show.
And then I was just like,
nah,
this is flavor of the week stuff.
It's like,
they want to get you on
to get some press.
I'm going to do my thing.
Mind my own business.
You remember we did an interview
on PragerU years ago?
Oh, yeah, yeah, yeah.
Yeah, this is like,
do you actually remember?
I think that was just audio
though, wasn't it?
Or was it camera?
It was like very basic.
I think it was some camera stuff on it.
When I first started at PragerU like four and a half years ago, you were one of the
first interviews that I ever did.
I think I was pretty terrible.
Is it online?
Is it up online right now?
Potentially, yeah.
You can maybe, I don't know if, no, it's not online.
I don't know if that's a tell-feel.
It's probably pretty embarrassing.
I'm sure if you went on Facebook and you looked up Tim Pool Will Witt, you could probably
find the interview.
Will is a spring chicken.
Little boy Will.
I think I was very clean-shaven.
You are now.
I am now.
Were you 160 at the time?
I think 159.
So I've put on some muscle since then.
All right, let's read some more.
We got, let's see, Jean-Sebastien Matt.
Probably pronouncing that wrong.
Tim, two days ago, you guys were unsure about Canadian prices because unsure of conversions.
Gas today was $2,059 per liter times $3,785 to convert for U.S. gallons times $0.78 to convert for the currency to USD.
My prices here are then $5,079 per gallon.
Maybe that's not correct.
Oh, they use commas instead of periods, don't they?
Oh, yeah, that's right.
Oh, he's saying $5 per gallon.
Yeah, okay, that's better.
Oh, okay.
That makes more sense.
You guys use commas, right?
Mm-hmm.
Yep.
That's wrong.
You're wrong.
Okay.
Well, we do dates of birth differently than you do, too.
Yeah, day of the month. Yeah, which makes way more sense. Yeah, your way makes more sense. Sorry, but yeah. Okay. Well, we do dates of birth differently than you do, too. Yes. Day of the month.
Yeah.
Yeah, which makes way more sense.
Yeah, your way makes more sense.
Sorry, but yeah.
No.
What month?
Day, month, year?
Day, month, year.
Yeah, you start with a day, then the month, then a year.
Yeah.
14th of October.
Why does that make more sense?
It makes all the sense in the world.
Small, longer, longest.
Yeah.
Don't you also put the adjective after the noun?
Not in Dutch.
Not in Dutch. Not in Dutch.
Oh, okay.
That's a romance thing, isn't it?
I think, well, actually in the, well, depends a little bit.
Yeah.
In French, for example, most of the adjectives go behind.
Not all, but most.
I kind of feel like that makes more sense.
You know?
It would be like doc cute.
Yeah.
Because you identify what it is and then explain the specific thing about it.
Yeah.
Yeah.
That makes sense.
The dog cute.
Yes.
They talk all funny like you got to learn to speak proper and such.
All right.
Where were we?
Ander Webb says what Will meant to say was about the industrial about the Industrial Revolution is that it and its consequences have been a disaster for the human race.
Yeah, I think so.
Yeah, I mean, I think there's definitely some truth to that.
I don't think disaster is necessarily the right word,
but I think there are implications
that people didn't comprehend at the time
that have been hugely unsuccessful for humanity as a whole.
Yeah.
Right, especially with what Klaus Schwab
now calls the Fourth Industrial Revolution. Right, right. That guy sounds like a Bond villain. Right. Especially with what Klaus Schwab now calls the fourth industrial revolution.
Right.
That guy sounds like a Bond villain.
Right.
He looks like one, too.
I know.
What's up with that?
Well, he was with the Pfizer CEO
today talking at the forum.
That was really funny.
Talking about all the conspiracies.
I watched that.
It was hilarious.
The Pfizer guy is like,
I saw a picture of me
in the FBI office
and it said I'd been arrested.
And I'm like,
how did they get that photo?
I thought it was funny.
How did they get, they made it, dude dude what are you talking about that was good all right
that guy says tim there was little to no mention of texas on last night's irl was curious as to
what was behind the decision not looking to criticize just want to understand ian welcome
back weeknights aren't the same without you bro thanks the news had just broke the news hasn't
had any...
We didn't even have a complete number on the victims.
And we had two tech guests on.
So I was like, I don't know how we have a conversation
about Texas with these tech guys,
these programmers.
Yeah, we talked about it before the show and kind of decided against leading with it.
It wasn't against talking about it in general.
It was just like, are we going to have a robust conversation
that actually addresses the issues?
Or are we going to mention it happened and then be like
we don't know enough about what's currently
going on. Like a lot of the information
hadn't come out until this morning.
I think that's probably best. I think you guys did the good thing.
Well, I mean, it wasn't
like a moral thing. It was just like,
I don't know what to say. Let's just try to talk about what we can't talk about.
But that's also the right thing.
Because people will talk about things without
knowing what to say.
Right, right.
It makes things worse.
Yeah.
Okay, what do we have here?
There was one I was looking at that was pretty good.
Where did it go?
Oh, this one's cool.
Kevin Svensson Crypto says, Tim, the military, DARPA, and friends are deep into developing neuro weapons.
We're talking about direct AI to brain communication.
No surgery.
DNA resonance frequency technology all remote.
This will affect us all
affect us all eventually you guys ever see the movie gamer no no the bad guy has like nanites
or something and then like if you smell it he can control your brain i think that's what the movie
was i don't know but did you there was actually an army ad that got leaked by data miners that
was for for the u.s army that was for new psychological warfare
techniques yeah do you see that i didn't see it but i heard about it yeah absolutely insane with
this pensive music and everything i mean very trippy yeah talking plasma have you heard of
talking plasma they converge lasers like three or more lasers into a point in the sky and then
it shows up on radar and they move it around and make people think they're seeing a ufo on radar
apparently they can make sound project through this through this coagulation or whatever you want to call
it, this conflux.
And I wonder if they can point into people's brains and make them hear things.
It's like diamonds are forever.
The World Economic Forum released a video during the COVID pandemic where they said,
oh, you know, face masks are now making facial recognition very difficult.
And yeah, oh no.
But luckily, NASA has this technology,
laser technology,
where we can identify you by your heartbeat.
And they present,
and you know,
they had this type of elevator music behind it
as if it's such a good thing.
And they just,
they posted that as if it was,
you know,
the most normal thing in the world.
I don't know if you shared this, Lydia,
but there was an article that said
that AI can detect race based on x-rays.
Yes. Yeah, everyone is mystified by the fact that AI can detect race based on x-rays. Yes.
Yeah, everyone is mystified by the fact that you can detect race.
And here's why it's a bad thing.
Right.
Because it's like when a human looks at a skeleton, they don't know what the AI could determine with like, was it 80, 90% accuracy or something?
Incredibly.
It's incredibly accurate.
Hold on.
Quick story.
I remember there was a, they uncovered a pair of skeletons that were like clasped and
braced and all the leftists are like it's so beautiful no there's no way of knowing you know
how old they were or what race they were what gender they were and they're actually like no
if you look at the pelvis you can literally tell this is a young man this is an older woman not
only that they were like spicy they were like you can tell by the the mandibular area yeah exactly
they were like it's an asian man and a white woman or something. Yeah, something like that. They were like,
you can literally determine
all of that based on these features.
Yeah, it actually gets easier.
Biology is not politically correct.
It is not.
Too bad.
It's great.
All right.
Robert Burrowace is not sure
if you've all watched
the show Upload yet,
but as a social commentary,
it seems pretty spot on
for the way things are going.
I did watch Upload.
Have you guys seen it?
No.
It's good. There's some things about it. spot on for the way things are going i did watch upload have you guys seen it no i i it's a it's a
it's a it's good um there's some things about it where it's like yeah but they really get to this
futurism it's really interesting so when you die they can before you die they can upload you to
a digital afterlife and so basically you have a guy who dies and so at his funeral there's a
gigantic tv and he's standing in the, like he's,
he's in this virtual reality where his consciousness exists, but it looks like he's
just on the other side of a window. We just talked about this when we started the show,
like as a real thing, right? Yeah. And reference, how do we, how did that come up at the beginning?
When we talked about, you know, the, the, the AI algorithms being so advanced that they can potentially take your thoughts and convert them into an algorithm that you can continue to talk to, for example, if your loved one dies.
Would you put your brain in a machine if you could?
No.
No.
No way.
Hell no.
Would you?
Maybe like a birthday gift for her.
Oh, yeah.
I need an extra will.
No, it wouldn't be when I die.
I'd just have like 10 of you.
Everywhere she goes.
Here's what I want you all to imagine, right?
I want you to imagine a gigantic spherical blob monster that is black with hands and feet coming out and like moving out and faces going,
they like come out of it.
And then you see it lurking towards you.
And then all of a sudden the face of your dead grandfather emerges.
And in his voice says, join us.
We are all happy here.
And then a giant mouth opens up trying to eat.
That's what that AI is going to be.
Klaus Schwab's voice.
No, no, no.
It's like your loved one trying to convince you.
It's fine and safe in here.
Join us.
And then you're like, this is not real.
They all float.
That's what, right.
That's what uploading your mind to the AI is going to be.
It's going to be joining that monster.
It's going to be walking up to them and being like, please, I'd like to be one of you.
No, wait a minute.
I wonder if you can upload only like a copy, but you still are you that dies off.
Then there's some random copy out there.
Yeah, I think that would be the idea.
But if, I mean, the
thing is that what's so scary about this is people
are going to buy it, you know? Like, they're going to be like, oh, this
is a good thing because they're going to sell it to us under a
nice pretext. So they're going to say to
you like, oh, you know,
wouldn't it be a lovely world
if we could, you know,
eliminate aggression?
If we want peace on earth, like
we can read everyone's minds
and we can take away the desire to kill.
Wouldn't that be great?
You know, we can eliminate murder.
We can have peace on earth finally.
Yeah, it's called being the Borg.
Yeah.
Same with those like DNA, 23andMe things.
They're like, send us your blood DNA sample
and we'll give you some information you like.
And with this, it's like, oh, you don't want that?
You don't want us to read your mind?
Do you have something to hide?
Do you want to murder someone?
They have that for dogs now.
Oh, they do.
Oh, yeah.
Interesting.
Insanity.
All right, let's read some more.
We got Joe Daraki says,
Tim, for the love of God,
will you shout out
Pop Culture Crisis more?
Lids was on today's show
and it was a great one.
Yes.
Ladies and gentlemen,
Pop Culture Crisis is live
Monday through Friday
at 3 p.m., right?
That's correct.
Hey, I got the time right.
Yeah, and the days.
A little secret treat for you guys.
I'll tell you in here now.
I'm going to be on the show tomorrow.
3 p.m.
Gave it away.
Eastern Standard Time.
And we're building on infrastructure stuff so that we can – we're going to be doing a marketing push for PopCultureCrisis.
It's good.
All in due time.
Good show.
Maybe even starting next week.
But we're doing a bunch of marketing stuff that we've never done before,
and I'm mostly trying to figure out culture jamming as marketing because who cares about buying a commercial?
People are like, why don't you buy a commercial on Tucker Carlson, Tim, or whatever?
And I'm like, we could, or I can, you know.
Think different.
I don't know, throw a pie or something.
Yeah, right next to the MyPillow advertisements.
I mean, I had a really good idea for a MyPillow thing.
So we made the OurPillow.
Do you guys know about that?
Yeah, I saw that.
It was the burlap sack full of packing peanuts.
Yeah.
And I wanted to buy a commercial on Fox News advertising it.
I talked to Fox.
They said yes.
We just needed a producer who could make the commercial, and this was where we, like, I didn't have the managerial power to execute.
But here's what I wanted to do.
A commercial where we have this like post-soviet
factory talking about how communist pillow is a better pillow because it's it's hard and makes
you strong not not weak you know those comfortable pillows they make you soft you know you need
hardship in life hard times make strong men yeah and then after that commercial ends what i really
want is for the my pillow commercial to start in the exact same location and it's Mike Lindell with a bunch of MyPillow factory
workers raiding the communist
factory and him telling you not
to buy the communist pillow and there's like
they're pillow fighting. I thought that would have been
the best thing ever. This pillow makes you
soft. Good pillow.
MyPillow makes you weak.
You must buy strong communist pillow.
And then Mike Lindell's like, hold on there
mister. MyPillow is the best pillow you'll ever have. And then Mike Lindell's like, hold on there, Mr. My pillow is the best pillow you'll ever have.
And then they storm in and kick the door in.
That would be the best thing ever.
I bet Mike would be down for that.
That would be the coolest thing.
I think so.
It would be like a minute long.
He'd be watching Fox.
He'd be like, what did I just watch?
What just happened?
Can you get a thing in there about Dominion voting system?
That would be great.
I don't think he's going to go anywhere near that.
The camera spins around him like the Matrix as he's jumping.
All right.
We'll grab a couple more real quick.
How do you say that?
Toos Nolorum says,
This is the first point in history with extensive enough spying to reconstruct an ancestor simulation
with the level of detail we have in day-to-day life.
What are the odds of that?
If simulation is possible, chances are we are in one.
Crazy.
Yeah, I don't agree. Yeah, I don't think that just because something is possible
that means it's probable. But you were just asking
what chance is it? Less than 1%.
I don't know. Here we go.
What does it say?
Neorator says you are wrong.
Month, day, year makes more sense.
Saying the 20th has no
meaning without knowing the month.
It's just like your noun adjective choice because the duck is cute.
So imagine it's February and you say, you know, day, what do you say, day, month, year.
You know, how are you going to know if it's February or not?
Right?
That's it.
Yeah, Ava.
But you're all saying them anyway.
Right?
So you're going to say
the 5th of February.
No, I agree with this super chatter.
I think he's right.
No, we don't say it.
We say February 5th.
Will just wants to disagree.
Yeah, I know.
I know, but we say
the 5th of February.
You're adding an extra word.
That's so inefficient.
Right.
Okay.
She's like,
all right, I'm a wise woman.
Listen, I'm just from here.
Okay, from there. this is how we do
it jazz i'm a conservative i don't like change okay jazz and it says would you kindly a simple
phrase a man chooses a slave obeys speaking of that my friends if you haven't already already
would you kindly smash that like button subscribe to this channel share this show with your friends
and head over to timcast.com to become a member. We're going to have a members-only show coming up at about 11
p.m. You don't want to miss it. You can follow the show at Timcast IRL. You can follow me
everywhere, Instagram, Twitter, whatever, at Timcast. Will, do you want to shout anything out?
Yeah, you guys can go to prageru.com to check out any of our videos, any of the documentaries I've
done, any of the five-minute videos. If you're into any of the stuff with Dennis Prager and his
wisdom, make sure you check out his Fireside Chats. I'm on social any of the five-minute videos. If you're into any of the stuff with Dennis Prager and his wisdom,
make sure you check out his Fireside Chats.
I'm on social media at TheWillWay, and you can get my book,
How to Win Friends and Influence Enemies, anywhere books are sold.
Ava?
Right.
Well, we just talked a little bit about the digital identity,
and that's basically what I write about most. I have a blog called Resist Much, Obey Little on Substack.
So everyone who's interested in the digitalization,
fourth industrial revolution, transhumanism, and well, mostly what happens in Europe with all of
these things, because like I said, it's much more advanced. And during COVID, it was also much more
advanced than here, then please go check it out because you need to know what's happening there.
If you want to know what's going to happen here. I think a lot of the resistance is meditation
and a clear mind with no thoughts.
They're going to try and read your mind.
They're going to try and be reading thoughts.
So if you can control yourself to have none,
that'll be a good resistance technique in the meantime.
Done.
Let's have it.
I want to shout out the Mines Festival of Ideas.
It's going to be June 25th in New York City
at the Beacon Theater.
And we're going to be speaking there.
Tim and I are both going to be speaking there.
We'll have some special guests as well.
It's a great lineup.
Go to festival.minds.com if you want to check out the lineup.
And you can get your tickets now.
It'll be leading up to the event.
Magic Noirs, I think, right?
Magic Noirs.
James O'Keefe is going to be there.
Zuby's going to be there.
The list goes on.
It's hot.
Check it out.
See you there.
It sounds like it's going to be the greatest event ever.
Yeah, it's like Woodstock all over again. Yeah, Woodstock. I don't think it's going to be the greatest event ever. Yeah, it's like Woodstock all over again.
Yeah, Woodstock.
I don't think it's going to be like Woodstock.
Thank you guys all for tuning in this evening.
This was a very fun conversation.
I feel now like we should have more couples on.
You guys can follow me on Twitter and Minds.com at Sarah Patchlitz.
And my realm of influence grows.
I'm planting the second Lydian empire.
I now have articles on Timcast.comcom at my sub stack and then all my
various, SarahPatchlids.me
pulls it all together for you.
We will see all of you over at TimCast.com
for that members show. Thanks for hanging out.
Bye guys.