Timcast IRL - Timcast IRL #575 - Leftist Democrats ARRESTED, Fake Being Cuffed In Pro Abortion Protest w/Keean Bexte

Episode Date: July 20, 2022

Tim, Ian, and Lydia host investigative reporter and journalist Keean Bexte alongside of Daniel Turner of Powering The Future to discuss AOC's photo-op with the non-existent handcuffs at an abortion pr...otest, the House Democrats new plan to install four new SCOTUS justices and get rid of the filibuster, the Daily Wire surpassing Disney in the podcast charts, the racist Muppet (maybe), Edward Snowden's prediction for whether we'll eat bugs, and the Dutch farmers revolting against the WEF's insane climate policies. Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices

Transcript
Discussion (0)
Starting point is 00:00:00 Squad members and many Democrats were protesting outside of Supreme Court for abortion rights, and they got arrested. And here's the best part. AOC and Ilhan Omar pretended they were handcuffed. It's a weird story. I know that's why we wanted to lead with it and talk about what happened with this protest and the arrest because they faked being handcuffed, probably for a photo op. We're also learning the much more important stories that Democrats are pushing a bill to pack the Supreme Court because they know they're losing. They're also learning the much more important stories. The Democrats are pushing a bill to pack the Supreme Court because they know they're losing. They're likely not going to win in November. They know they're likely
Starting point is 00:00:29 not going to win in November. So they said, okay, it's time to pack the Supreme Court. Take what power we have and just force these things through. Now, there's a lot of news going on today. We got that. We got Ron DeSantis apparently is within range of Trump in the polling and things are starting to move really well for Ron DeSantis in is within range of Trump in the polling and things are starting to move really well for DeSantis in terms of the presidency.
Starting point is 00:00:48 We'll see if he actually is competitive with Trump as we move forward. I mean, we're still two years out. We are an eternity away from the election, but for some reason, it's just getting crazier and crazier. And then my favorite story here, Disney is, I'm sorry, not Disney. Netflix is bleeding subscribers, which is laughable. Go broke. And Disney has been surpassed by the Daily Wire's podcast network, which is also hilarious. And I'm happy to hear it.
Starting point is 00:01:13 So we've got a lot of awesome stuff to talk about. Before we get started, my friends, head over to TimCast.com. Become a member to support our work. Because the big announcement that I've been making in every video now is that we have removed PayPal from our website. If you are a timcast.com member
Starting point is 00:01:29 and you use PayPal, you're fine. You'll still be able to log in and everything will be normal. Every new member that signs up, it will default
Starting point is 00:01:36 Parallel Economy which is supported by Dan Bongino. I believe he's involved to a certain degree. I don't know exactly his role. He was one of the creators. One of the creators
Starting point is 00:01:44 of Parallel Economy. Is that what he is? Yeah, one of the founders. of the creators of parallel economy is that what he is yeah one of the founders wow well hey glad to hear it and rumble's also involved parallel economy is a censorship resistant payment processor because we mean it we've got a lot of stuff in the works from making new shows to doing big ad buys to expanding this platform timcast.com to take the culture that we're building the ideas that we have the values we have and turning into something the values we have, and turning into something very, very massive. And first and foremost, we said, we don't want to get banned, and we don't want to support companies that hate you and I. Giving them money so they can facilitate the service is a problem. So we got rid of them.
Starting point is 00:02:16 Parallel economy right now. When you sign up at TimCast.com, you're supporting us, you're supporting parallel economies, efforts to displace PayPal and other big censorship platforms, and Rumble doing similarly. So I'm really excited that's the case. And, of course, as a member, you'll get access to our after-hours show, TimCast Uncensored, on the front page of the website every day, Monday through Thursday at about 11 p.m. We put those up. So support our work at TimCast.com. Don't forget to smash that Like button.
Starting point is 00:02:43 Subscribe to this channel. Share the show with your friends. And, ladies and gentlemen, joining us tonight to talk about all of this, a couple of guests. First, we have Kian Bextie. Hey there, Tim. How are you? Who are you? Well, I am a reporter for the Counter Signal. I'm based out of Canada. And lately, I've been covering stories about energy security, food security, and that sort of has all culminated in the Netherlands where we're seeing this Dutch uprising. It's just very similar to what brought me out here last time when I came to talk about the convoy in Ottawa.
Starting point is 00:03:14 They're doing very similar stuff, and they are a rowdy bunch of protesters. So it was really exciting to be there and see the tactics that they were using, burning bales on the side of the road. Like bale IEDs. I've never seen anything like it. Whoa. Do they burst or something?
Starting point is 00:03:29 Yeah. They put fireworks, I guess, in the middle of the bales. And as the bales burn down, it gets to the fireworks, lights them off, and then loose hay just explodes. It was crazy. That's crazy. We've got to talk about that for sure. Yeah, for sure. The food shortage stuff.
Starting point is 00:03:43 Yeah, absolutely. So that's what we've been covering and happy to be here. Right on. We also got that stuff. We've got to talk about that for sure. Yeah, for sure. The food shortage stuff. Yeah, absolutely. So that's what we've been covering, and happy to be here. Right on. We also got Daniel Turner. It's great to be back here. Daniel Turner, Power of the Future. Daniel Turner, PTF on all platforms. Powerofthefuture.com is the organization's website.
Starting point is 00:03:55 And thanks for having me on. And John Hale, new hat for you, buddy. He's my hat friend. Right on. He's got a hat friend. Who always asks me about my hats when I'm on your show. It's going to be a good conversation, a combination of conversations, farming, food crisis, energy, very interrelated. And as we lead with this abortion protest, I just want to point out the American people, according to Gallup, view economic issues at 40.
Starting point is 00:04:17 Forty percent of Americans think it's the most pressing issue. Economic issues are. And abortion is at one percent. Yeah. And climate change was even less than that New York Times poll that came out yesterday. Zero percent of Republicans, zero percent of Hispanics, zero percent of African Americans. Basically, it was 42-year-old brown graduates with a degree in, like, poetry. That was all who cares about it.
Starting point is 00:04:39 I would have assumed it was, like, middle-aged white women. Yeah, who went to Brown and studied poetry. That's the ones who care about climate change. All right, right on. And, of course, Ian's women. Yeah, we went to Brown and studied poetry. That's the ones who care about climate change. All right, right on. Hi, everybody. Ian Crosland here at iancrosland.net. Happy to be here. Let's keep going. Yeah, and I'm also here in the corner.
Starting point is 00:04:54 Happy to be here with these two-headed gentlemen. One from the U.S., one from Canada. So I am stoked. We'll get into what trouble we can get up to tonight. This is a great story we're starting out with. Right on, everybody. Let's jump to this first story. We got TimCast.com breaking multiple members of Congress, including AOC, arrested over pro-abortion demonstration outside SCOTUS. Take a look at this here picture.
Starting point is 00:05:15 Why, AOC's hands are behind her back. And she's smiling. Looks like she's being arrested. Well, she was arrested, but she staged the handcuffs. She faked it. Take a look at this. We have this Daily Mail circled it. She pretended to be handcuffed.
Starting point is 00:05:31 And you know what Daily Mail says? I love this. They're like, mock cops by pretending they've been cuffed. Mock the cops? What does that mean? Why would the cops be mocked or care about that at all? No, what they're doing is people on Twitter are seeing photos of them with their hands behind their back and they're going
Starting point is 00:05:45 whoa, they handcuffed AOC? They handcuffed Ilhan Omar? People who are not paying attention will just see photos on the news of them with their hands behind their back as if they were cuffed when they weren't for dramatic effect. And then AOC walks a few feet and then like when she's out of range of the camera she does a big
Starting point is 00:06:02 power fist or whatever. Red salute or something like that. You know, it's just so fake when they look back it's so fake man like you see that picture of bernie sanders getting pulled out of like he was like civil rights activist getting arrested on the street like it's real chaos and then they're going to juxtapose it with this and be like aoc faking being handcuffed looking back like what no they think that in 20 years she's going to show this photo and be like, I fought for abortion rights. Look at this picture of me. It's like when Joe Biden was arrested in South Africa for protesting the right in Esalen Mandela.
Starting point is 00:06:32 Remember that? That's right. At least he tells the story. There's no evidence that he was. But he was arrested. Joe Biden claims he's been arrested like five or six times and there's no documentation of it anywhere. But every time he tells a story, he was arrested somewhere. But you know what? I got to say, everyone should find themselves someone who loves them as much as these folks love abortion.
Starting point is 00:06:50 I know, right? Like they love – They do. There was a whole talk about how we're not pro-abortion. We're just pro-choice. No, you all love abortion. I thought you were going to say find someone who loves you as much as these people love themselves. That's true.
Starting point is 00:07:03 That's true. Well, that is abortion though, isn't it? But, yeah, these folks. Well, you know, and she has a history of fake photo ops, right? I mean, the white pantsuit one at the detention facility that turns out was a parking lot. That's actually a fake? Yes. It's just so hard to believe that someone would do something so stupid.
Starting point is 00:07:23 But, like, she went there and pretended to be upset about something that wasn't happening? Or was, let herself be upset about what she was imagining in front of her or something? And brought her camera crew with her and took all the photos and had carefully chosen outfits because you go to the desert wearing
Starting point is 00:07:39 white Chanel pants suits and yeah, the whole thing was totally staged, but it worked, right? Because as Tim was saying, if you are a naive leftist and you think she's a hero, you just see those photos and you say, she's the best.
Starting point is 00:07:53 And now they're going to do the same with her handcuffs. Maybe I'm from Canada and I have a different angle on this, but it seems like that couldn't have turned out worse for her because now there's this meme going around where whenever anyone's crying about,
Starting point is 00:08:04 they broke a nail, that's the picture. It's her cut out white pants suit crying about it. That was one photo. She's like... Or Terry the roller skater from Reno 911 saying, I was murdered. That's the other one for her.
Starting point is 00:08:20 It was an empty parking lot and she's crying. This one right here. She's just so awful. Yeah. You know? When they write the history, they could either erase all the fake stuff and be like, remember when she was protesting and got arrested and handcuffed? Remember when she was crying for years? They could do that and try and manipulate the past.
Starting point is 00:08:40 But if it stays transparent, it's going to just look so bad. Well, I think to be fair, haven't you ever been at a big venue or something and parking is really hard to find? And there's a big fence on the other side. There's a ton of parking spaces. You know you can't park it. You just break down. You're like, I want to park my car. I want VIP parking.
Starting point is 00:08:57 No, like going to a Cubs game in Chicago and you got to find parking and you're driving around and driving around. You're like maybe sooner or later someone's going to move and they don't. And then you just see that parking lot with the fence all the way around it and you just walk over in your white pantsuit and start crying. I've got to see the 34 members who were arrested. AOC is clearly from New York.
Starting point is 00:09:18 Ilhan Omar is from Minnesota. Nothing in terms of abortion law has changed in their state. We've got the list here of the Democrats who were arrested. You can decry like the national right that you think was erased, which obviously is a falsehood. But for Virginia, where I am from, for Maryland, for California, most states, nothing has changed. Not only that, for many states now, they're paying for people to come to their state and have an abortion. So AOC should celebrate.
Starting point is 00:09:47 New York is probably having more abortion than it did before World War I. Well, here's the crazy thing that I'm thinking of with this stuff is if Texas says abortion is illegal and a man says to the – like a man and a woman hook up, a woman gets pregnant. Where babies are made. Woman is eight and a half weeks pregnant. I'm sorry, eight and a half months pregnant. And then says, I'm going to terminate, but I can do it in Colorado, not in Texas. So this is a viable baby, able to survive on its own. And she flees the state without telling anyone to go to Colorado to abort it because there's no restrictions.
Starting point is 00:10:23 This guy goes to Texas and says, help. She's kidnapped my child. He's viable. We could deliver the baby. She doesn doesn't need to kill it but she doesn't want it so she's going to kill it the interesting thing is because we talk about this a lot if a woman did that to a baby that was two inches forward out of her womb but
Starting point is 00:10:38 the same gestational period she'd be hunted down for kidnapping and attempted murder but the same baby of the same gestational period in her womb, she can drive out of state to Colorado to kill. But this is crazy right now because this is exactly how it is. This could happen right now. In Texas, you can't do it.
Starting point is 00:10:56 In Colorado, you can at eight and a half weeks for any reason. I'm sorry, I said weeks again. Months. Like almost to the point of birth. Colorado has no restrictions. What would happen right now if a woman did that? If a woman was pregnant and went to Colorado and said, I don't care. A doctor could deliver the baby and get it out, C-section or whatever, but you're like, no, don't care.
Starting point is 00:11:18 Trudeau was doing this in Canada as well. They're calling for Americans to come and try abortion tourism, help our economy because he's destroyed it so much. And yeah, you can come on up. And in Canada, I don't know if you know this, but we have zero laws. I guess it's just the Colorado case. There is no law on it whatsoever, nothing on the books. You can kill that child up until it's breathing air, which is shocking, I think, probably to a lot of Americans. But it's shocking to any...
Starting point is 00:11:47 Does that happen? There's definitely been cases of it, yeah, especially where there's not a lot of... Especially out east, where there's not a lot of people drawing attention to the tragedy of it. You know, in Alberta, where I'm from, there's a lot of agencies that are willing to help young mothers so that they can actually deliver the child and give it a good life
Starting point is 00:12:14 or even put it up for adoption if that's what's required. But out east, a lot of those supports don't exist because abortion is second nature to eastern Canadians. I got to think, I'm not an attorney, so those listening who are are going to correct me.
Starting point is 00:12:29 I have to think if in that scenario that you raised, it would be no different, and I know a baby is not drugs, I know a baby is not whatever, I'm not trying to make light of the pregnancy, but I have to think the rule would apply that if there's certain states you can smoke weed and some that you can't. If I cross the border and I smoke weed in that state and I come back, you can't say, well, you did something wrong. Not in that state I did. If you can take your kid to a movie at NC-17 at one state as opposed to another, and I take my kid to Colorado
Starting point is 00:13:01 and we see a movie there, we come back to Texas and they say, that's illegal. Well, in Texas it's illegal, but in Colorado it's not. I have to think there would be nothing done to the pregnant mother. No, because whatever ultimately happened, happened in a different state and Texas's laws don't have jurisdiction in that state. Sure, and the feds would have to get involved and this is where things get crazy. So the woman goes to Colorado and she terminates the pregnancy, kills the texas says that's an illegal illegal and she says not in colorado colorado so what if colorado said you're allowed to literally kill a person that's all of a sudden okay like the issue
Starting point is 00:13:35 is what would happen if the woman took gave birth and then literally grabbed the baby ran and got in the car and just drove to colorado still like literally after just delivering and she's, you know, whatever, like kind of messed up and hurt or something. And then gets to Colorado and then goes to an abortion doctor who kills the baby. Like it's a murder, right? So what does Texas do if a person kidnapped a child and murders it? What would Texas do? Contact the feds? And what if the fed says we won't intervene?
Starting point is 00:14:02 Then what? I honestly don't know. Like what happens? They'd get away with it i mean uh i'll just put it that way there's uh people need to understand this about crime in this country the feds have a threshold i believe it's literally called the threshold where if a federal crime is committed but doesn't reach a certain level they don't care like a certain extremity of crime? Like the way it was explained to me is federal securities fraud in the amount of $400, feds won't care about.
Starting point is 00:14:34 They're not going to waste any resources over something that small. They'll ignore it. But if you're somebody whose life savings was stolen by someone and it was a couple grand, the feds probably will do nothing as long as it was interstate. And the states will be like, we don't have jurisdiction in that state. Sorry, can't do anything about it. If you legally register for a handgun and you happen to be the president's son, the feds don't care. No, exactly. It doesn't matter. There's degrees and there's tiers. That's how it works. So my question is, Colorado
Starting point is 00:15:02 says it's illegal. I'm sorry, Texas says it's illegal. Colorado says it's illegal. I'm sorry, Texas says it's illegal. Colorado says it's legal. That's a really weird circumstance. Like, it is a night and day difference in morality. Imagine if Indiana said, you're allowed to kill people. Have fun. And Illinois said, you're not.
Starting point is 00:15:20 So a woman took her 12-year-old child to Indiana, bashed him over the head, and then drove back to illinois and said wasn't illegal like i'm pretty sure they're still going to be like we don't care you murdered that's why we have federal laws saying that murder is illegal no matter what state and you could argue that maybe there should be federal laws about abortion just to make it easier but but here's the issue what if the federal government says we're not getting involved we don't care then the states could decide who where murder is legal like a state could say you're allowed to murder in our state i mean that was the premise literally what they're doing according to conservatives colorado is allowing limitless abortion after the point of birth so like i can't let's use canada as an example like what if someone drives from wisconsin
Starting point is 00:15:57 into canada because there's no limits and then like as they're giving birth they kill the baby what is someone going to do this is a really good example because this is where there is no international resolution because it's two different countries. If the federal government says we side with Colorado because Biden basically has, and we're not going to intervene, I wonder at what point does Texas say, like, we need to be able to do expeditions, essentially, to extradite people who kidnap people and murder them. Dude, if another state was doing expeditions
Starting point is 00:16:28 into my state, I would fully support the governor's removal from power and some sort of military action. From your state? If a state went rogue and started invading and attacking other states because of their zealous beliefs, I would fully support a national
Starting point is 00:16:43 and multi-state offensive against them to make them stop. Let me ask you this. Someone kidnaps your significant other and then murders her 10 miles away across state lines, what do you do? It would become federal offense at that point. And the feds say, we don't care, Ian. Go away.
Starting point is 00:17:02 Well, it's murder. That's a different story. We don't care. Go away. Well, then justice has failed at that stage. What do you do? Yes we don't care, Ian. Go away. Well, it's murder. That's a different story. We don't care. Go away. I mean, well, then justice has failed at that stage. What do you do? Yes. Literally, that's what's happening right now.
Starting point is 00:17:09 It's not murder. It's not literal murder. Abortion's not murder. Okay. Well, Seamus thinks it is. Conservatives think it is. You can think things that aren't real. It doesn't make it real.
Starting point is 00:17:16 Okay. What's the penalty if you aborted a child in Texas now that this has changed? What would be the penalty? Oh, I don't know. I think it's like trafficking abortion or something like that. My point is, Ian, your morality is irrelevant to the question of legality. Correct.
Starting point is 00:17:32 If in Texas they say it is illegal to do, and the people of Texas agree with the law that is illegal and amoral to do, and someone commits that crime somewhere else and the feds don't get involved, what's the reaction going to be? Do we let people from other states literally kill our children that's their perspective you might not agree
Starting point is 00:17:49 with it you're like not colorado's right they're wrong well eventually someone's going to grab a bunch of guns get on the back of a motorcycle and drive in and they're going to go stop it's not right it's not right and wrong like you said it's not morality issue it's a legal issue and uh i just it is the premise of of the famous dread Scott case. I'm going to get the states confused. But the whole premise of Dred Scott, which was a terrible decision by the courts, was that they took this African-American guy, Dred Scott, from a free state to a slave state. And they were like, well, now that you're in this state, now you're a slave. And he was like, no, I'm not. I'm actually from Wisconsin. And they were like, well,
Starting point is 00:18:24 you're in Missouri now, and now you're a slave. And he's like, but I'm not a slave. And the courts decided, well, you are. The state's jurisdiction were greater than – it doesn't matter what – in Illinois or Wisconsin, you were free. You're not free here. Dred Scott said that descendants of Africa had no rights to citizenship. So it was way worse than just that. Well, no, but I mean like, but the premise of it was this person's stature, status, depended upon what state he lived in.
Starting point is 00:18:50 Yeah. The courts ultimately decided that the states had the jurisdiction to change his stature. Of course, it was a terrible decision, but it's the same about this unborn baby. Does the baby's stature of life, viability of life,
Starting point is 00:19:03 does its persona depend upon the state? Maybe, but that's not what I'm bringing up. I don't think it's relevant. I'll ask you this, Ian. Do you believe that Seamus thinks abortion is murder? Well, he's told me that he thinks it is, so I've got to take him at his word there. All right. Okay.
Starting point is 00:19:17 So let's just ignore the context around it and say someone kidnapped Seamus' child and is trying to murder it. What do you think he would do to stop that murder from taking place I don't know this is this is what I mean like I don't see a like I don't see a good outcome to the fact that you have states like where there are people who are literally like it is murder and I will not allow it Louisiana tried to kind of fight homicide but that's that's zealous like it's is murder and I will not allow it. Louisiana tried to codify its homicide. But that's zealous. Like, it's not murder legally. So for you to say, well, I think it is, like, sorry, buddy, you know, take a step in line. Like, wait, you know, it's not murder. I'm looking at a Politico article right now and they say Texas has a trigger ban.
Starting point is 00:19:58 So anyone who performs, induces, or attempts abortion is guilty of a second-degree felony if the fetus survives and first-degree felony if not a first-degree felony is punishable by life. What's the title of the statute? What's the violation? What's the criminal violation? It just says first-degree felony. I'm not sure what that is. So I guess the crime would be the crime of abortion. Yeah.
Starting point is 00:20:20 Which is after like 14 weeks. I don't know what Texas's number is. No, I think after like 14 weeks. I don't know what Texas's number is, but I think Texas is period. Anyone who performs, induces or attempts abortion, which would be. I guess we have to look under what statute does it fall? Because I'm curious if it falls under a murder statute. Louisiana tried to codify it as homicide. They backed off.
Starting point is 00:20:39 So, Ian, when you say it's not murder. Well, right. Legally, I would argue it doesn't fall under homicide, and they're trying to do that. Regardless, though, if people don't care about the distinction between the word murder and the word abortion, and they view it the same way, you saying it's not is completely irrelevant to what the law of Texas and Oklahoma is. It sounds like an argument towards postmodernism. Like, well, if I believe it, then that's my truth, and so that's real. Sorry, guys. In Texas, though, it's obviously considered a very serious crime, and there's serious crimes that I think a lot of people would go to great lengths to prevent, not just murder,
Starting point is 00:21:15 dismemberment of a limb or any sort of rape or abuse or child abuse. People would step in and violently protect their- I mean, another way to question it is some states, the age of consent is 16. In some states, it's 18. How do states handle it if a person takes a 16-year-old across state lines to a state with a lower age of consent? When you come back, you go to jail. You get charged. Now, I guess the question is, will Illinois do anything to go to Indiana
Starting point is 00:21:44 to rescue the minor if the feds won't? I don't know. I'd have to look into the history of the law. I wonder if anybody knows. We'll put it this way. A 16-year-old who is a minor in one state is taken by a 25-year-old to a neighboring state with a lower age of consent, and they say, we're never coming back.
Starting point is 00:22:02 What will that other state do? They're like not in this state it's legal in your state it's not they're like well you kidnapped a minor from our state even though it's legal in that state and that's that's possible like some states actually have those differences if the feds don't get involved do you think the parents of the 16 year old are going to be like guess our kids kidnapped yeah or do you think they're going to be like hell in high water i am getting my kid back. If the kid actually got kidnapped, if the kid went of its own volition, does it have the authority to...
Starting point is 00:22:29 Minors can't consent. So then it would be a federal crime if someone took a 16-year-old across state lines. And if the feds said, it's not a crime in that we're not doing it, we're not involved. If the feds said, we will not intervene, do you think the people of the state where the kid was taken from will just sit back
Starting point is 00:22:44 and be like, well, that sucks? Or do you think they're going to be like, please help me save my child? They were kidnapped. Like I'm saying these circumstances could happen in some capacity already. They probably will. They probably already have. And so I'm sure people probably have a bunch of references they may bring up. I'm wondering like where we go here because what's happening now is illegal abortion and legal abortion
Starting point is 00:23:07 are so legally distinct and like stark night and day. In Texas, it is a legal period. In Colorado, there is no restriction at all. It is so different that like you've got a very serious crime that the feds will not intervene in because there's no federal statute on it.
Starting point is 00:23:26 So what happens when a person flees the state pregnant with a child of a man who doesn't want the child to be killed, and then the child is killed in another state that allows it? There's no federal involvement because there's no federal statute. So what happens? The person just can't come back to texas well then is texas going to be like well if people start fleeing the state and killing the children of these men we will do nothing about it you're going to get a the system can't sustain itself that way it's just i don't know what happens at that point it's pretty rough i kind of put myself in the mind of that guy like a dad who's got an eight and a half month old baby in gestation and
Starting point is 00:24:03 the woman that wants to bring the baby to term and raise it the mom's like no i don't want a baby to get dad's like well they're divorcing baby the guy's like i'll raise it i want this is my son i want it and the mom's like no i'm gonna go kill it the guy has no no right to stop her like grab her by the shoulder you know you can't he might in texas they might might i don't know if they have a right to do it like legal right her from committing a crime or something? Yeah, because it's – She's expressed intent. He calls the police and says –
Starting point is 00:24:27 Leaving state lines isn't a crime. After that, it's off the table. This is crazy territory, man. It is. It's amazing in America. Because imagine the woman's not going to get abortion and the guy is just like, you ain't leaving me. So he calls the police and says she's trying to leave to get an abortion. It's like a red flag law.
Starting point is 00:24:39 Right. I don't know how you deal with a circumstance. It's crazy. I don't know how you deal with a circumstance. That's why Roe v. Wade, I thought, made sense, is because you can't leave it to the states to figure out where murder, where killing is going to be fine. Can I just walk over there and kill him then if I can't do it over here? That's why we had this blanket rule of like, no, you just can't, or yes, you can. No, you can't.
Starting point is 00:25:01 Whatever. It wasn't. It wasn't. The Roe v. Wade was like, states can't decide. It's already decided for you. No, within a certain amount of. It wasn't. It wasn't. The Roe v. Wade was like states can't decide. It's already decided for you. No, within a certain amount of time. And then Casey changed it to viability, which made it nebulous, which resulted in a bunch of states having different periods. So it was totally different.
Starting point is 00:25:14 People would be like, in my state, it's 11 weeks. In your state, it's 15. So I'll just drive across state lines. Same problem. The overturned Dobbs resulted in them saying, you need to codify at the federal level through Congress to figure this out, which they don't have. So now we're in really dangerous territory. But let's let's let's advance. I don't want to keep harping on this one issue because we've got others.
Starting point is 00:25:33 Take a look at this story. That's also rather depressing. House Democrats tout bill to add four seats to the Supreme Court. This is them just saying we can't win politically. We can't win your votes nuke the system and give us the power and if they actually try to overturn or bypass the filibuster to stack four more seats and give joe biden four appointees man this country just implodes what do you what do you think what do you guys think will happen if, let's say, in the next session or whatever, they say we're doing away with the filibuster, we're pushing this bill through, it gets pushed through, and then Joe Biden goes, one, two, three, four, new Supreme Court justices.
Starting point is 00:26:15 What do you think the reaction would be? Yeah, well, this is theatrics because Manchin and Sinema already said they would not tank the filibuster. They don't have the votes for it. And Manchin and Sinema both came out would not tank the filibuster. They don't have the votes for it. And Manchin and Sinema both came out and said they wouldn't allow court packing. So they know they don't have the votes in the Senate. The House doesn't have any jurisdiction in this area, right? Only the Senate approves or confirms justices. So this is desperate for November to say, hey, vote for me because I proposed a bill to add four justices to
Starting point is 00:26:45 the Supreme Court. This is all theatrics. It's terrible. The scenario that you're painting is bad and we shouldn't be playing these games. It reminds me of like playing with your – you have a lot of brothers. I was the youngest of a whole bunch. It reminds me of playing with your brothers as a kid and when you're the baby and you keep changing the rules because it's like not fair.
Starting point is 00:27:00 You can only throw red ones and you have to close your eyes and it's like by the end the rules are so stupid but it's basically because you throw red ones and you have to close your eyes. And it's like, by the end, the rules are so stupid, but it's basically because you're a loser and you don't want to lose. You want to prolong the game, and that's what they're doing. They just keep changing the rules to prolong the game. I suppose it's fair to say, obviously, it'll never happen. No. But we didn't think Roe v. Wade was going to get overturned either.
Starting point is 00:27:19 Well, some people did. Yeah, but most people didn't. Ruth Bader Ginsburg was one. She thought it would be overturned eventually. There were a lot of conservatives. They were like, there's no way they'll do it. They won't do it. Some people thought it was going to happen, but most people didn't.
Starting point is 00:27:34 I mean, maybe we had conversations, but I thought the attitude most people had was like, man, I don't know. I don't think they'll have a spine for it. Roberts will be opposed to it. And then it happened, and I didn't think it was going to happen. But I will say, at the very least, the bare minimum is we're at the point where Democrats are just basically saying, torch the system and give us the power, regardless of if they're able to get it or not. And so if we keep moving in this direction, it's only a matter of time before it spills over. And then there's – I mean, I got to be honest, I already think we're in the territory of,
Starting point is 00:28:07 you know, it's just about seizing power regardless of what matters for the American people. Yeah. And what's frustrating about this is that Roe is a clearly very dramatic decision.
Starting point is 00:28:17 It's got a lot of impact. I'm not at all making light of it. But there have been a lot of Supreme Court cases which have way more impact on the average American without them realizing it that were decided poorly. Kelo versus New London is the one that always comes to my mind, which was about eminent domain, right? And the right for the government to seize your property for the promise of additional taxes. If you go to Times Square,
Starting point is 00:28:39 New York right now, you'll see all these signs because the governor of the state and the mayor want to take over about 300 businesses around Penn Station because they want to build a new 15 building complex. And they're like, well, this is my little pizzeria. And it's like, well, we're going to take it because of eminent domain. And they legally have the right because of Kelo versus New London. It happens all the time. Eminent domain is how government seizes your property because Tim wants to build a condo there, and the condo will generate more taxes than your little farm. That's crazy. That's a lot.
Starting point is 00:29:10 A terrible decision. So my point is the courts have made terrible decisions in the past. Dred Scott was one of the terrible decisions. Korematsu was one of the terrible decisions. But we've never responded with, well, therefore, we have to blow up the courts. So it shows you not just the pettiness of the left right now, but it shows you the real ignorance of them. Politics is a slug match. And sometimes you win and sometimes you lose. And the system prevails for 246 years. But the fact that they're like, well, now we don't want to play the game anymore.
Starting point is 00:29:37 It's cultural decay. It really is. And how do you repair that? I don't know if you can. Take back control of the money system. That's a good start. Like you said at the beginning of the show, 40% of people think the economy is the biggest problem, whereas 1% thinks it's abortion. 0%, what was the other one you were talking about? Climate change.
Starting point is 00:29:54 0% thinks it's climate change. 0%. But how many people are going to try and nuke the system for the economy? Well, I don't want to nuke it. I just want to fix it. No, no, no. I'm not saying you do. I'm saying there are people who are looking at abortion
Starting point is 00:30:07 at maybe 1%, but those are people who are willing to throw firebombs at other people. Don't put power in the hands of radicals right now. Yeah, well. There might be a time
Starting point is 00:30:15 and a place for it, but not over abortion. It's what's happening. We need to focus on the economy. AOC, 13 million followers, and she's growing, and she's with that fake handcuff thing.
Starting point is 00:30:24 It's clearly she's just trying to manipulate people for power. She pretended to be handcuffed. Photo op. Thinks like if she can get enough people behind her believing in her, then she can do the right thing. Right thing? When has she done the right thing? I'll use subversion to get people on my side and then I'll do the right thing.
Starting point is 00:30:40 The one thing I've agreed on her with was when she said someone, police maybe, opened the doors from the inside. But she's only saying that because it personally impacts her. I'm saying because I care about what happens to this country, what happens to the people. She wants to legalize psilocybin and MDMA for study, and that's probably because she likes it. It's the whole premise of that great show, Ozark. Spoiler alert, I apologize.
Starting point is 00:31:01 But the whole thing is we're going to do all these evil things because ultimately we'll do good with it. Right? And we just do evil thing after evil thing. But like one day, or it's the premise of The Godfather, right? One day we'll be legitimate. So in the meantime, I'm going to kill all of these people. But in the end, and I think that's sometimes how they think. Ultimately, when I have everything I need, all the power, all the wealth, I will do good.
Starting point is 00:31:22 But to get there, I'm just going to have to kill several people or I'm going to have to do fake photo shoots or bomb the system. She does it like, yeah, we talk about her fake photo shoots. And people just believe it. They just keep believing it. She keeps doing it. They keep believing it. Yeah.
Starting point is 00:31:35 I don't know, man. The funny thing is, is that members of the House, besides the Speaker, I mean, they're really not very significant. No offense to them, but like anyone who's worked in D.C. in the political, like one member of Congress, and they're not supposed to be, right? They're not supposed to be powerful.
Starting point is 00:31:51 That's the problem. Heck, you began the broadcast by saying, you know, 2024, it's a long ways away and we're already talking about it. We're already talking about it because everyone knows how damn powerful the President is.
Starting point is 00:32:02 That's why I disagree with you on Roe. I don't want power in D.C. I want power in the states. I want way more influence of my governor and my mayor because I can have impact on them. Heck, I could run into the mayor of this town walking down the street, but you're never going to run into the member of Congress. It's actually kind of a joke, you know, and you're never going to run into the president. We shouldn't want these powerful. AOC shouldn't be powerful.
Starting point is 00:32:24 And the fact that she's like, but I want power to do good. Whoa. That's exactly what the founder is. I don't think she wants power to do good. Come on. Well, in her mind, good. No, I don't think so. I don't think she's thinking that.
Starting point is 00:32:31 You think she just wants power? Yeah. I don't think she thinks to herself like I'm a good guy at all. I don't think she thinks that much. Possible. I think she's just like more followers. Well, she is the prime example of using the ends to justify the means. And I think based on her photo ops, we can really see.
Starting point is 00:32:46 And based on the amount of power that she has, like she's a super social justice political figure. And she's not using that power for good. Like she had a small amount of power and she's not doing good with it. I see no reason to believe that if she was given a greater deal of power that she would do anything different with it. I don't know, though. I guess she could change her tune. But I have yet to see people really make introspective changes like that on this big of a platform. Well, if I was
Starting point is 00:33:08 Kirsten Gillibrand, who's the senator from New York, which is the next high powerful position, I would be very much afraid. Remember, she ran for president in 16. Remember, she had the pride t-shirt and there was that meme. Exactly, there's a meme of her pretending that she's really big on these issues. She got crushed
Starting point is 00:33:24 in the primary. But she's done nothing since. It was a meme of her pretending that she's really big on these issues. She got crushed in the primary. But she's done nothing since. It's been six years. I mean, she's a non-entity in the Senate. And if you're Kirsten Gillibrand, you should be petrified to think AOC does have 14 million followers. And we're talking about her. And did you ever hear Kirsten Gillibrand's name even before? No, not really.
Starting point is 00:33:43 You've heard of AOC. Yeah, absolutely. So, I mean, she's going to keep climbing, but I just hope she climbs only within that hellhole I used to call home, which is New York. No offense, New York. I still love you. I think Colbert asked her if she was going to run for president.
Starting point is 00:33:57 Is she old enough to run for president? She will be. She will be. She will be. She's got to be 35. So she could run because by the time the election, like a month before the election, she would be 35. So she could run because by the time the election, like a month before the election, she would be 35. So she could be campaigning all day and night.
Starting point is 00:34:09 I think what would happen, and maybe someone will tell her that politely, is she would have huge momentum. But ultimately in the presidential, you've got to start talking, and she would embarrass herself because she's really not very smart. I think she should do it. I think maybe some of her advisors will tell her her flame will go out so poorly. It's like Kirsten Gillibrand or like Kamala, although Kamala Harris became the vice president. Her own state didn't vote for her because she was so bad in the debate. Right?
Starting point is 00:34:40 So you can run for president, but you will expose yourself. When people critically ask themselves, like, who's qualified to be president of the United States, it's not going to be a bartender. You know? Like, I appreciate the work that bartenders do. I really do. But when moms and dads are going to the ballot box and saying, do I trust an accountant or do I trust a bartender to run this country? They're going to pick the accountant. Yep. Yep.
Starting point is 00:35:05 Yeah, or someone who at least has a deep understanding of the country and a deep appreciation of it. Now, the thing I dislike about her, which I dislike about the modern left right now as a whole, is they have genuine disdain for this country. They don't like the country. They think the country is racist, sexist, whatever. They don't celebrate. They don't have red, white, and blue, right racist, sexist, whatever. They don't celebrate.
Starting point is 00:35:25 They don't have red, white, and blue, right, like that New Yorker article. Yeah, they don't celebrate what America is. They think America needs to be deeply transformed. You know what I love? I love that they hate this country. It's racist, white supremacist, evil, fascist, homophobic, but they desperately want more people to suffer along with them coming across the southern border.
Starting point is 00:35:49 The left's motto, misery loves company. We hate this place, so you should come here. Is that it? You're so right about them hating the country, though. In Canada, it's the same thing. If you see someone flying a Canadian flag, you know they're a conservative. Right. Which is like, what?
Starting point is 00:36:03 I don't know if it's the same. Is it? It is. It's exactly the same. If you fly an American flag you're a... Right. It's the same in the UK as well.
Starting point is 00:36:09 It seems like everywhere throughout the West there's this mindset that oh we hate this because we've never known anything else. We've never actually known suffering or struggle.
Starting point is 00:36:17 We've never lived in Russia. We've never lived in you know any of these small countries that are really fighting like Myanmar. Like we haven't seen it and we're just like
Starting point is 00:36:24 ah it's gross. Well it's still MAGA month. That's true. That's true. You gotta have that are really fighting, like Myanmar. We haven't seen it, and we're just like, ah, it's gross. Well, it's still MAGA month. That's true. You've got to have that American flag as your profile picture. It is. That's why it was so funny to see Prince Harry today at the UN. LARP as an American. Exactly, talking about how we've sacrificed our democracy under threat.
Starting point is 00:36:39 And you want to say, six greats, great, great, great, great, great, great grandfather caused all this to begin with, right? If he weren't a bad guy, we probably would still be part of you. It's not his fault. So it's direct line to your six-pack great grandfather that we're here to begin with. So just shut up, Harry. Honestly.
Starting point is 00:36:56 Well, shut up, Meghan. That's not Harry. I'm kind of like, I don't like crapping on these people, Prince Harry, AOC, because I feel like they're massively influential and powerful. And if we don't work with them, the entire system is going to get smeared. Is he powerful, though? I looked at a picture of the United Nations when Harry was talking, and it was empty. I don't think people actually think that this guy is an intelligent, thoughtful person.
Starting point is 00:37:23 I think they think he's someone that goes on Oprah and can get clicks. But when serious people need to listen, they don't. Yeah, he's just like he walked away from the royal family. So he's an example of freedom over power kind of person. I don't know if he's a freedom over power person because he still seems to... Let me fix my camera a little bit. We're getting Daniel's hat. There you go.
Starting point is 00:37:46 He still seems to really want a lot of that power that he willingly gave up by leaving the royal family. And his wife was an actress in America, so I feel like they were trying to be like Princess Diana or something. I think that's what was going on there. I think Ian is a plant trying to reconnect us to the crown and subvert the revolution. I think this is the Canada off the British monarch's teat. Let's do it. How do we start? I think this is the bigness of your heart.
Starting point is 00:38:12 I'm actually a fan of the monarchy. Oh, my gosh. Yeah, no, I think that if we just drop tradition. I mean, I respect your guys' decisions as freedom-loving Americans to leave. I get it. But part of me, you know, if you don't value that tradition, and like the Queen back then when you guys left, there was a reason why you did it.
Starting point is 00:38:30 But now the Queen doesn't have any strong political power, especially not the Governor General that's the head of state of Canada. So just getting rid of it is just playing into the leftist hands who want to destroy everything that attaches us to our past. I don't know if I agree she has no power. I mean, she just doesn't use it. Perhaps. And so you might just think she's not using it as well.
Starting point is 00:38:53 She might be on the phone call with Trudeau and she'll be like, do it. And he goes, yes, ma'am. There's something in that red box that she gets every day, right? She's looking at something. Well, think about it. The UK was facing an an uprising i remember was like 1800s or whatever so they created the house of commons i'm not big on british history and so like if you're a monarch and you're an absolute ruler and people are screaming off with
Starting point is 00:39:16 their head what's the smart way to deal with it you say okay here's what we're going to do we're going to tell them we're going to give them power and share it and be democratic and parliament all that stuff and create the house of commons and y'all will just do as you're told or we'll kill you and then what happens is the people are like yay we won and the queen just keeps her mouth shut as she rules from the shadows the house of commons was 1341 all right i was wrong about that i think that was king john now i could be wrong about that but maybe it was a 13 richard was after king john yeah after king john uh but king john signed the magna carta which was basically saying you know you have the king has to have
Starting point is 00:39:49 some rules um and then every every monarch from king john down has ceded an amount of power one way or another from either letting parliament exist to not fighting a war against his own parliament or and then you get to where it is now. But I'm not saying that you're wrong. What if the conspiracy is the Queen is secretly the Queen? There's a lot of active investigations into what sort of power she exerts over the British parliament. I don't think that that really extends much to Canada at the time. But a lot of her influence,
Starting point is 00:40:24 she doesn't ever not sign a bill that's put on her desk, but her staff are routinely reaching out to government as bills are being put forward and offering their advice, and their advice is often... Like Canada? No, the British Parliament. They're much more interested in that. I don't think she gives Canada much of a thought. I bet she does.
Starting point is 00:40:45 I'm sure she does all of them. The queen is the queen. It's British Columbia. The idea is we know she's a queen, but we just don't think she does anything. And it's like, why do you really think that? It's not that far-fetched to think the queen actually just makes a phone call and says, hey, we're doing this. You should do this, too.
Starting point is 00:41:02 And they say, okay. Yeah. I mean, it's Her Majesty's prisons. It's Her Majesty's armed forces. Right. It's hers. It's all hers. Which is pretty cool.
Starting point is 00:41:12 I'm glad we don't have her. Don't get me wrong. I think she's a lovely woman from a distance. Yeah. All the Commonwealth countries are woke. I really think she's great. I think she's done a great job over the course of 70 years or whatever it's been. But I'm really fearful what comes after her, what happens with Prince Charles.
Starting point is 00:41:31 I like Prince William a little bit more than Prince Charles, but Prince Charles is like right up there with the rest of the World Economic Forum. I don't know if you want to get into that. I often tweet photos of Charles' many properties and the ones he will inherit because also he cares deeply about the climate issue. And it's wonderful to care about climate change from like your 30,000-acre estate with servants. And he's like, oh, this whole garden is organic. It's like, yes, you have 400 servants.
Starting point is 00:41:59 I don't get how we're talking about Prince Charles. We're talking about Prince Charles inheriting the empire of Britain as if it's okay. It's not okay for a person to own that. I've spoken like a true American. You sound like a traitor to me. Let's talk about some good news that involves the royal family. Let's do it. We have a story from the Daily Mail. It has to do with Meghan Markle a little bit.
Starting point is 00:42:18 Will going woke make Netflix broke? Streaming giant could see shares slump further after losing 970, 000 subscribers as it was blasted over canned megan markle cartoon and transgender pregnancy comedy what oh weird well okay well here's the good news i mean that i guess get woke up broke jeremy boring of the daily wire tweets daily wire just surpassed disney to become the sixth largest podcast publisher in the country per pod track that's awesome.
Starting point is 00:42:53 This is one of the biggest get woke, go broke yet. Did you know that Netflix predicted they would lose 2 million subscribers? And they didn't. So good for them. But they already know they're going to be going broke. I don't know if it's because they're going broke. From the Meghan Markle fallout? I don't know.
Starting point is 00:43:08 I think it's probably because Stranger Things ended too. Oh. So that was part of it. Is that an ad? Is that an organic ad? That is a real Netflix show. It's an ad show. Oh my god.
Starting point is 00:43:17 About a man who gets pregnant. Yeah, it's weird. As they do. But everyone was like freaking out. Like, they made a woke movie. And I'm like, bro, Junior wasn't woke. Remember Junior with Arnold? Oh, yeah.
Starting point is 00:43:27 He gets pregnant. Oh, good Lord. It's like, did you watch the trailer for this? It's not about being transgender. It's about a guy who gets pregnant. It's like Junior Part 2 or a reboot or something. So what's the plot there? He finds out he got pregnant, and they're like, well, we don't know how it happened,
Starting point is 00:43:40 but it did. He's like, oh, no, and then it's a guy who's pregnant. Where does the baby come out? I think they mention that in the movie no his ass or something oh gosh that's great i'm just but i'm pretty sure you would die it's like kindergarten yeah but look look look disney definitely get what go broke they wanted to play the groomer game they can win it yeah now daily mail i'm sorry daily wire is bigger that's kind of crazy if you think about it the daily wire is only what seven years old yeah very young like seven decade i think yeah it's kind of crazy if you think about it. The Daily Wire is only, what, seven years old? Yeah, very young.
Starting point is 00:44:05 Like seven. Less than a decade, I think, yeah. It's kind of crazy. That's remarkable. Here's what I see happening with the Daily Wire, Netflix, Disney. These big companies stood atop this massive shining hill. And everybody looked up at the shining people on the shining hill and said, I long to be atop there with you.
Starting point is 00:44:21 And then one day, people started walking off the hill while screaming about weird stuff that made no sense daily wire was like guys we can just walk up like we they're leaving we'll walk right up they walked right up and now they're standing there and they're like well look at that we're just yeah these people like walt disney spent his whole life walking up the hill grinding getting to the top and then once he's there okay now he all right, son, would you like to take a helicopter up here with me? So now the kids that never had to climb the mountain are on the top of the mountain. They don't understand the struggle.
Starting point is 00:44:53 And people like Ben Shapiro and Jeremy Boring have climbed the mountain to get there. Those are the people we want on top of the mountain that know how to climb a mountain. And the rest of it is just a skin suit. It's a corporate skin suit. And it's the same as we were just talking about some of these politicians and the rest of it's just a skin suit it's a corporate skin and it's the same as we were just talking about some of these politicians and the aocs there isn't a lot
Starting point is 00:45:09 of respect for the the patrimony for the what was built before i arrived i forget the name of the current ceo of disney but he arrived with a hundred years of this and other people built and all you have to do in terms of the idea of patrimony and custody is you have to hold it, cherish it, grant to try to expand it, but don't destroy it. And since they didn't have to climb that mountain, to use the analogy, since they didn't have to work hard to become members of Congress, they don't have a love for it. They don't have an awe of it. So they think it's easy to just destroy it.
Starting point is 00:45:40 Pack the Supreme Court. Destroy and put transgender cartoons on for five-year-olds. And it's like, well, wait a second. This isn't yours. You're just the custodian of it. But nope, I'm going to destroy it. Maybe it's just as simple. I mean, people don't want to work for someone else's project.
Starting point is 00:45:54 They want to make their own. Yeah. Well, they're making their own all right, but they're destroying someone else's in the process. We entered this era of meritocracy with the internet where people could make their own channels. One of the things we often run into with hiring is that it's like, oh hey, we need this job and we need someone who's good at it. And it's really hard to find someone who's good at it
Starting point is 00:46:13 because anyone who is good at it starts their own company instead of working for someone else's. So we're in that era of meritocracy. The internet has democratized the process by which people can contract, get hired, or make their own thing. So who's left to work at Disney? Woke weirdos? Nobody wants that.
Starting point is 00:46:28 Meanwhile, people are launching their own projects, starting their own YouTube channels, or at least trying to do so. Yeah, we talked about Maker Studios before the show. I was involved with these people, Lisa Nova, Ben Donovan, Dan Zipinski. We had The Station, 2007 YouTube, all these really popular Phil DeFranco, Dave Days. We all came together to form this internet union of people, which was the station. Then it became Maker Studios when it became a company. Then Disney bought Maker for a billion dollars. And they thought they were getting all the talent, all the people that had been working through Maker.
Starting point is 00:47:02 But when they bought Maker, all those people were like, yeah, you don't. They left. And then they realized we have the name, Maker Studios, but we don't have the talent that made maker studios great this is the funny thing like there's things on youtube called multi-channel networks which are mostly defunct these days and they'd be like sign with us and we can get commercials put on your video so you make money and we get a percentage of it and then you'd be like okay well i already have ads on my videos why should i sign with you and they say we'll protect you we can talk with of it. And then you'd be like, okay, well, I already have ads on my videos. Why should I sign with you? And they say, we'll protect you. We can talk with YouTube.
Starting point is 00:47:28 It's a real advantage. And it'll be like X amount of time. They have no control over your content. They can't make you produce content. You're not signed to them with obligations on producing records or videos or anything like that. It's just literally, let us rep your ad sales for you. Disney buys it.
Starting point is 00:47:44 I remember when I was working at Fusion, there were people who genuinely thought, they were like, when we're going to do this new project, why don't we pull up our maker talent pool? And I'm like, what does that mean? And they were like, they pulled this PDF
Starting point is 00:47:57 showing all of these YouTubers on maker. And they're like, we can get any one of these people. And I was like, sure, you can get literally any actor you want. You want to get Brad Pitt, just pay him. And I was like, sure, you can get literally any actor you want. You want to get Brad Pitt, just pay him. And they're like, what do you mean? And I'm like, these people don't work for you.
Starting point is 00:48:10 You bought nothing. You bought the rights to sell ads and their content, and you don't sell ads. You're a production house. And they were like, you mean we can't get these people to be in our shows? I'm like, well, yeah, if you ask them and pay them. But at that point, you might as well ask Brad Pitt or Tom Cruise. And they were like, huh? They genuinely thought buying the network was like buying a record label.
Starting point is 00:48:30 Like the record, like you were signed to this record label. You have to produce two albums. We want this album. No, like they could quit at any moment. You had no rights over any of it. So these companies have been completely insane from the get-go. And I think the big issue for the most part is two things. One, they think wokeness works because they don't care. And merit is driving people of real talent away. I mean, why would someone want to work for Netflix? No, and I wonder how many of these people have hired all of the woke HR reps
Starting point is 00:49:02 and the woke vice president of what's the acronym for diversity inclusion? D.I.E. D.I.E. Is that what it is, right? That if you're the CEO, you just hear these people yammer at you all day, all day, all day. This is what we have to do. And ultimately, you cave. But, you know, what's going to change them is stock prices. Look at, you know, right before the show went on, we were looking at Disney stock.
Starting point is 00:49:23 I remember where it was, where it went up to, where it is now. I mean, it's down almost 50%. That has to tell boards of directors to say, I don't care about your, you know, if you think transgender cartoons. 66.25% year to date. If you think transgenderism is the most important thing going, the markets clearly show something else. And so you've got to go because I don't care about transgender. I'm saying this if I'm a board member.
Starting point is 00:49:49 I don't care about trans. I don't care about any of this crap. I care about making money. And right now you are not making us money. So you have to go. But Daily Wire is making money. So I want to know why they're making money and why we're not.
Starting point is 00:50:02 Ultimately, that's what the board is going to be pushing. Here's what it is. I had a friend who played in a band once. I have a friend who plays in a band. I want to know why they're making money and why we're not. Ultimately, that's what the board is going to be pushing. Here's what it is. I had a friend who played in a band once. I have a friend who plays in a band. I don't really talk to a lot of my old friends anymore. But they played weird experimental music.
Starting point is 00:50:17 And they were like, we're going to make it big, man, because this is the future. And I was like, dude, no, it isn't. I was like, I understand the idea of doing experimental music, hoping you find something new that becomes popular. But pop music is pretty cut and dry. That's why people like it. I was like, look, right now, you're trying to sell a product to people, right? You want them to come buy it. So what's someone going to buy?
Starting point is 00:50:39 Your experimental new spinach and cheese ice cream or chocolate? And they're like, well, spinach and cheese is gross. And I'm like, maybe. Have you ever tried it? No. Okay, well, maybe it's not gross. And I'm like, maybe. Have you ever tried it? No. Okay, well, maybe it's not gross. You don't know. You never tried it.
Starting point is 00:50:48 How about matcha green tea? Hey, in Japan, they got a ton of that stuff. You've never tried it. You don't know if you'll like it or not. It sounds weird, though, right? It's disgusting. Exactly. You don't like it. It's not good.
Starting point is 00:50:56 So I said, why don't you guys, if you want to be big and famous, if that's your goal, why don't you make a product you know people will like? Now, you want to do something new and unique. So you're not just making chocolate ice cream. You're making like chocolate with salted caramel, like something – it's a little different. Like salt in your ice cream? Yeah, but try it. It is pretty good.
Starting point is 00:51:16 It's pretty good, yeah. This is what Netflix is at right now. So what happens is you've got an ice cream company that makes delicious cookie dough ice cream, and everybody wants to buy it. But cookie dough ice cream is making people fat. So along comes these young people who are like, you're making people fat. Young people don't like that. What they like is fresh vegetables.
Starting point is 00:51:33 You should make our ESG ice cream. Zucchini cucumber. Zucchini cucumber surprise. It's the right ice cream to have. And then all of a sudden no one's buying it. But don't worry. You're not actually correct, but you are morally correct.
Starting point is 00:51:48 And the company implodes. And then what happens is the Daily Wire comes along and they start selling chocolate ice cream again because these people decided not to. You can't just think we're going to do this ESG stuff
Starting point is 00:51:59 and it's going to work because we are on top. No. There's two mountains. There's ESG, which is a pile of garbage and then there's everest and you're like well if we're on a pile of garbage we're still on top yeah sure on a pile of garbage so go for it leave the mountain behind leave room for for timcast.com
Starting point is 00:52:16 for daily wire for other channels to start rising because you've walked away from it that's what they're doing yeah in the name of esg other garbage. It really was in the 90s. You remember probably similarly. They decided what people were going to like next. It was the marketing companies, NBC, Disney, CBS. They were like, okay, what's the next big thing? Frizzy hair and hairspray, whatever. Now it's democratized, I guess is a way to put it.
Starting point is 00:52:41 And you can't keep controlling the mind. It doesn't work anymore. People are free. Their minds are free. Now it's become much more apparent what works and what doesn't. But in your ice cream scenario, which is what Disney is, the company implodes because no one wants their ESG ice cream. But they still have production facilities, ice cream making machine, distribution networks that have value. So someone will swoop in and take it.
Starting point is 00:53:07 I'm saying when it comes to Disney, their theme parks have value. Their studios have value. Someone's going to swoop in and be like, we can't lose the value of these things because you're running a crappy product. I know you at home, and maybe all of you here, have been driving down the street one day
Starting point is 00:53:24 and have seen an auto insurance company in a building that looks suspiciously like a Taco Bell. You've seen those, right? Or a Pizza Hut. And it will be like family insurance center and you're like, that's a Pizza Hut building. Because at some point, the Pizza Hut went out of business. But there was a building there and someone was like, we can use it. We'll take it. It's cheaper than building one.
Starting point is 00:53:49 All over Chicago, you see like it's obviously a taco bell but it was turned into something else and you're like that's kind of funny that's what we're going to see with disney yeah they got the ice cream machines yeah but they're just cranking out broccoli and cheese ice cream i mean broccoli and cheese is good but as ice cream i don, right? But they're also pumping out broccoli and cheese ice cream, but it says chocolate on the label. Right. Like Thor. Lying. Isn't, it's not, all these Marvel movies are like, you can call it whatever, but it's just a crappy. Well, like.
Starting point is 00:54:15 It's a junk. That's a little too much. Like Thor movie was weird, but it was Thor, but it was like kind of not Thor because they just made it wacky and wild. And it was like sorbet with the colors. Yeah, they could have called him Gore and made him have like an orange helmet instead. Or was the bad guy. Oh, okay. Then Lore.
Starting point is 00:54:32 They could have called him Lore and it would have been like a silver helmet. Well, it's a skin suit. It's a skin suit. So Disney's got the facilities to produce all this stuff. Eventually they go out of business like Blockbuster. All those machines will be lying around and people will be like, how much for that $10,000 camera? $20? I'll take it.
Starting point is 00:54:48 Well, there is some great statistic. I'm sure we can pull it up. But of the 100 top companies in the year 1900, I think only one or two are still around. Wow. So companies do rise and fall, right? I mean Standard Oil is gone. General Electric is still around, but it's not one of the top 100. Yeah, but I bet it's like
Starting point is 00:55:08 they all consolidated into one company. That's what's happening with the banks. They're consolidating. It was all steel. Isn't that crazy? So Disney probably you know, I mean, odds are it's not going to last 100 years. You think it'll get bought by BlackRock? Yeah. Everything will be bought by BlackRock. I wonder if BlackRock is going to buy an entertainment company. The Dutch
Starting point is 00:55:23 farmers are being bought right now by BlackRock. What's that story? Oh, we should talk about this Dutch farmer. Or they're trying to buy them. We should talk about this Dutch farmer. I mean, some of these are still around. What? Standard Oil, Westinghouse, Ford, Union Carbide, General Electric, DuPont, Standard Oil, AT&T.
Starting point is 00:55:40 Standard Oil, you said twice. How's that work? But they're not sold like the top 100. Oh, yeah. It's in there twice. It is. Standard Oil, NJ. Standard Oil, NY. but they're not sold like the top 100 oh yeah it's in there twice Standard Oil NJ Standard Oil NY New Jersey New York
Starting point is 00:55:50 Standard Oil is Rockefeller's oil company that got broke up it was basically the first multi like a monopoly court case where they developed antitrust to stop Rockefeller all the top companies are manufacturing and resources now what are the top companies we sent that all to China that's right thank goodness it'll be weird like and they're not American either Companies are manufacturing and resources. Now what are the top companies? We sent that all to China.
Starting point is 00:56:05 That's right. Thank goodness. It'll be weird. And they're not American either, which is a little bit confusing. Monsanto got bought by Bayer. Bayer is one of them. General Motors. Sears. They have Sears on this list, but I think it's unfair to say they still exist.
Starting point is 00:56:18 I don't think they do. Because Sears basically does not exist. Dow. Dow. Dow. You know that company Dow? Dow Chemical. And they call it the Dow Industrial Average, as if Dow, the company, has some sort company Dow? Dow Chemical? And they call it
Starting point is 00:56:25 the Dow Industrial Average as if Dow, the company, has some sort of influence. Dow Jones? Yeah, Dow Jones. But isn't that just the same guy? Isn't that just an acronym or something? I guess.
Starting point is 00:56:33 I would think it's an acronym. I'm going to look it up. Yeah, I'm curious. It's the same corporate name and Dow is like, they make high fructose. I mean, they make like crazy stuff.
Starting point is 00:56:41 I think you need to Google that before you say something like that because you may just be wrong. Yeah, they might just be happen to be a happy coincidence. Oh, yeah make like crazy stuff. I think you need to Google that before you say something like that because you may just be wrong. Yeah, they might just be – Sometimes people have the same name. It happened to be a happy coincidence. Oh, yeah. You never know.
Starting point is 00:56:49 Just because my name is Tim Pool doesn't mean I have anything to do with him. But I did change my name to Tim Pool, by the way. Well, that's what cracks me up about when you find like this healthy bar made by this company, which is owned by Coca-Cola, which is owned by – and it's like so truly not like this – I mean, maybe the bar itself is healthy when you're like, this is some local organic. It's like, no, it's not. It it's really not like this. I mean, maybe the bar itself is healthy when you're like, this is some local organic. It's like, no, it's not. It's all made in a factory.
Starting point is 00:57:07 Dow Jones, or more precisely, Dow Jones and Company is one of the world's largest business and financial news companies. Yeah, this is Dow Jones Industrial Average. It's the same thing. So he basically has co-opted the economy by creating this industrial average nonsense and naming it after his own corporation. Dow's insidious. Is Dow Dow? Dow Chemical is Dow Jones? Dow Jones. Yeah. No, he's not. Herbert Henry Dow
Starting point is 00:57:34 created Dow Chemical and Charles Dow created the Dow Jones. Are they brothers? They may be cousins. Maybe. Not the same person though. Maybe they were secretly married and no one knew about it. Yeah, what were their names again? Like Ilhan and her brother.
Starting point is 00:57:47 Henry Dow. Did you say one of the guy's names? Henry, yeah. Henry Dow and then the other guy. All I know is that they all used to own great mansions along Fifth Avenue. They're from very different places, so I don't think they're related. One's from Canada, Belleville, Canada West, and Charles Dow is from Sterling, Canada. I don't know.
Starting point is 00:58:03 Are you related to the guy from the movie? I don't know. I was going to say. It might be fakeling. I don't know. Are you related to the guy? I don't know. I was going to say I would have met him. It's nice when you can like divest your responsibility by having like a distant family member do it for you or your son.
Starting point is 00:58:16 Yeah, you know Joe Biden Hunter Biden is growing into quite the conspiracy. That's great. Just go with it. Herbert Henry Dow and Charles Dow. Yeah. How far back does it go? The Dow's. How far back does the conspiracy go?
Starting point is 00:58:28 Dun, dun, dun. Let's talk about this story. Oh, this story's crazy. Yeah, so dumb. Family of girls seemingly snubbed at Sesame Place hires lawyer,
Starting point is 00:58:38 considers lawsuit. What? So it's a slow news day and the country's collapsing. So how about this story? Rosita, is that the name of the weird, stupid Muppet? Rosita. Oh, the green one.
Starting point is 00:58:49 Rosita was walking past two little black girls who waved and reached out their arms and Rosita waved no. And then everyone erupted on Twitter like, Ben Crump, didn't he tweet like you're racist or something? I think so. Yeah, everybody was tweeting about it. Part of me right now wants to just like turn this off and go play Spelunky or something. Honestly.
Starting point is 00:59:06 We live in such a stupid, stupid place. It is entertaining. Yeah. I like it. At first I was like, that seems kind of rude. Why did she do that? But then I was looking at what she did before. She did the same thing to someone else.
Starting point is 00:59:19 She was like, she put her hand up. Let's play the video. Don't give me. Here's it. Did she not touch children or something? She doesn't give hugs. She just high fives. So look, they're like, we want hugs. She's giving high fives. No, no, no. She's like the video. Does she not touch children or something? She doesn't give hugs. So look, they're like, we want hugs.
Starting point is 00:59:26 She's giving high fives. No, no, no. She's like, nope. High five. No, no, no. Yeah, she shakes her hand. So the woke crowd is now mad that people aren't touching children. I feel bad for those little girls.
Starting point is 00:59:34 Do you see her face? She should have high-fived or it should have high-fived. She's like, I just wanted a hug. But they don't hug children. They don't hug anybody. Because they'll get sued if they hug them. They can't slow't slow down they're like oh it's not a parade yeah and then everyone would want to hug and you can't stop yeah you can't stop you know then you get diseases from covid or whatever but cooties i feel bad like they just wanted to hug it's kind of sad but they went
Starting point is 00:59:58 went nuts saying it was racist this is so crazy man this is where we're at right now. You know what we need? We need Norm MacDonald back. We just need his commentary and everything. He'd be like, what? Do large green monsters have racial bias towards young black girls? I don't know. I don't have a lot of familiarity
Starting point is 01:00:20 with. What is Rosita? What is it? Is it a bear? It's a puppet. Oh, wait. She says she hugged the little white girl next to us. When I complained, it looked at me like I'm crazy. So is that it? I would need to see evidence of that. Yeah. Sesame Place said the performer wearing the Rosita costume
Starting point is 01:00:36 gestured no several times in the video, not at the children, but rather in response to multiple requests from someone in the crowd who asked Rosita to hold their child for a photo, which is not permitted. I can't stop. That's not what it looks like yeah go back she says uh no she shakes oh that's right she the head looks down and the mouth is where the eyes are right i think so i don't know you say no to the kids they're lying that's sad yeah i don't know maybe it's sad but like you can't see on video the rosita hugging a white kid or whatever but i don't know maybe that happened
Starting point is 01:01:05 i think that's on hunter biden's laptop video yeah we should get into it for sure i have long suspected sesame street of being overtly racist and this just confirms what we've already known that muppet monsters just plain don't like brown people and that's that's wrong i mean the whole premise of sesame street from the beginning was multiracial. Like literally like from like when it was started in like 72 or something. That's what made it so groundbreaking is that like in the – well, first of all, it took place like in the Bronx on a stoop, right? Or like in Brooklyn and it was in an urban area
Starting point is 01:01:38 and everyone was multiracial from like the very first episode. Remember when they did the first homeless Muppet? Oh, yeah. And then everyone was like, yo yo oscar the grouch be living in a trash can now that trash can counts as a house yeah i don't know man this is this is just the the absurdity that we live in it's like you see these videos that video to portland where the the two people are fighting outside of their cars and the white woman's like you're mad about your oppression you're not mad at me and he's like what get out of my face you colonizer and I'm just like
Starting point is 01:02:08 that's amazing I'm here for it it's fun watching them fight with each other it's fun but it kind of feels like we've been Yuri Bezmenov you know what I mean they've planted the seeds of discord and now people of fractured psyches are fighting with each other over their nonsense
Starting point is 01:02:22 well then you have to ask the question, would this have happened anyway? Is this like a result of human nature? I personally think it's a result of having too much free time, too much money. And these are like blessings that have been taken to an extreme. Like now we have nothing to do. We're bored. We have no way to feel special other than being victims. This is like a terrible place for a society to be in.
Starting point is 01:02:43 And we're just too lucky for our own good. We celebrate victimhood. We do. That's why they're trying to sue this little green monster. That's so dumb. They're clearly just looking for victimhood. They lack it and they want it to be because of race. They have nothing else, which is really sad. It is.
Starting point is 01:03:00 I agree with you. This comes as the result of not having real problems in your life. It's a lot like, again, climate change. Yeah. Right? These are the causes of privilege. If the worst thing that happens today to you is that you think your child was snubbed by a fake green monster,
Starting point is 01:03:17 then life's not too bad. Life's great. That's why they're so angry because it is the worst things that ever happened to them. Yeah, that's true. Future's going gonna be nuts you know there's gonna be like humans are gonna be big balls of fat and jelly sitting in hover chairs they're gonna have you know food tubes
Starting point is 01:03:33 where they can snap their fingers and have literally anything they're gonna be literally gargling ice cream with like vitamins in it and then one day there's gonna be a small burp in the like just the two burps and they'll start screaming and freaking out because the burp was the worst thing they ever experienced i i have to say when they were talking about dystopias i had no idea that our dystopia was going to be like wally that
Starting point is 01:03:54 is the closest thing to the way it's actually going to be that i've ever seen we need something like wally to bumble through our freaking wheelchairs and throw us all but the people in wally were chill yeah they were just floating around like whatever. That was way off. Soft people floating around in chairs would be super angry about just the stupidest nonsense ever. They'd be like, they'd get their
Starting point is 01:04:16 slushie or whatever from the robot and they'd look at it and it would be like a millimeter less than they wanted. Then they would start crying and say they were attacked and it's violence. I was murdered. I was murdered. That's right.
Starting point is 01:04:28 Except all the food is really made from bugs. Yeah. And it's just got flavorings. It's got Monsanto flavorings that taste like steak or that taste like chicken or beef. Well, that's where we're headed. But it's all just made of insects. That is where we're headed. That is.
Starting point is 01:04:40 So why don't you eat the bugs, Daniel? You have a farm, right? Yeah. Oh, you have a farm. I know certain cultures do eat them. I don't want to eat bugs. I'm not saying you can't eat bugs. Why not?
Starting point is 01:04:51 Are you a racist? I'm like a green monster. Yeah, how are you? Don't you know that 80% of the world eats bugs? Yeah, like I said, a lot of cultures do eat bugs. Is that a real statistic? But they're not eating bugs because they want to. It's because they're poor.
Starting point is 01:05:06 Wealthy people don't eat bugs. They eat cops. They don't eat bugs. They that a real statistic? But they're not eating bugs because they want to. It's because they're poor. Wealthy people don't eat bugs. They eat carbs. They don't eat bugs. They eat them as novelty. They eat the best part of the cow. Celebrities are like, I'll try a chocolate-covered cricket. Is that what you eat? They do. It's something novel. But I think when it comes to food and what you're doing and
Starting point is 01:05:21 highlighting with the Dutch farmers and what I do in the energy space, it's very much related. Food insecurity is a growing problem. Holy crap, we haven't even started to eat this year's food because we're still growing it. We don't even know what prices are going to cost. I get asked all the time about gas prices, but we haven't harvested this year's wheat yet. If there's any to harvest, if there's any fuel to harvest what little we do have, that's going to harvest. Exactly. If there's any fuel to harvest what little we do have. I know.
Starting point is 01:05:45 That's going to be fun, huh? So the real food prices are bad now, but the real kick is not going to come until October, November. Yeah, but look. Wait until the fertilizer shortages kick in. Well, they already did. They already did. I think it will be a continual crisis.
Starting point is 01:06:01 Next year is going to be worse. Next year's harvest. Because, yeah, Russia is not going to stop. Like the Russia-Ukraine stuff is not going to stop. But, you know, I've got to say, I'm very frustrated with you guys. Look, no one cares about food and gas. They care about racist Muppets.
Starting point is 01:06:13 And abortion. Racist Muppets getting abortions. That's something Netflix should do. Racist Muppets stopping abortions. That's the problem. Can racist Muppets stopping abortions. Oh, snap. That's the problem. Can racist Muppet men's get abortions? Racist male Muppets get abortions?
Starting point is 01:06:31 Elmo gets an abortion. Elmo. Gosh. Oh, jeez. Oh, that's the needs all. Oh, no. Is Elmo female? Sure, why not? What is Elmo?
Starting point is 01:06:41 Does it matter? Elmo's a dude, right? I think Elmo's a boy. What? Elmo is a boy's name, isn't it? St. Elmo's fire. But men can give birth now, Daniel. That's true.
Starting point is 01:06:51 That's true. They're so closed-minded. Of course. That's like tickle me, Elmo. Abort me, Elmo. I was going to say it. I didn't. Don't say it.
Starting point is 01:06:59 Thank you. How far out do you think we are from children's dolls that can get abortions? Two months. That's a tough Barbie. Didn't they do a doll that menstruates or something? Pregnant male Barbie. I believe. Pregnant male Barbie? I believe. Not sure. You guys can
Starting point is 01:07:15 check me on that. Pregnant male Barbie? Disturbing. I wouldn't be surprised. Frumpy Barbie? It's all part of grooming kids, right? They got to. Someone just banned Groomer. What platform? Reddit.
Starting point is 01:07:27 It wasn't. That story was fake news. Oh, it was? Yeah, what actually happened was that a single subreddit said, hey, stop doing this. And that was it. Well, Pink News wrote an article about it. And then Pink News claimed that Groomer was calling all gay people pedophiles or something. Like, no, just you, I guess. Just you. Yeah, that's weird. groomer was calling all gay people pedopete or something like no just you I guess just you yeah
Starting point is 01:07:45 yeah they said that it's a groomer is an anti-LGBTQ slur and I'm like no no it isn't just the groomers but like the joke I made the other day or the point was there's like a creepy guy looking at kids looking at his lips and then you're
Starting point is 01:08:02 like you point to him and you're like hey you groomer you get out of here and then he walks over next to the group of gay guys and goes hey he's he's making fun of us and it's like no i'm not making fun of them i'm telling you to get out of here those guys are all right they're true they're minding their own business i don't care yeah yeah uh pregnant ken is satire just for the record but i would put it at like six months out i definitely see that happening it does sound like like a Babylon Bee toy. Yeah, it does. But the whole world sounds like a Babylon Bee article at this point, to be fair. But you raise a great point, though, about what we are talking about, energy issues, food issues.
Starting point is 01:08:38 But we do love to get distracted by what's the benefit for getting married. Oh, yeah, that's right. I woke up the other morning, and usually one of the first things I do, which is a terrible habit, you look at what happened while I was asleep, pulled out my phone, started. First five stories were all about Ben Affleck and Jennifer Lopez getting married, and you're like, really, something else must have happened last night. Well, here's the reality. Edward Snowden says we are all going to eat crickets. Yeah, he had an interesting tweet.
Starting point is 01:08:59 People are like, I'm not going to eat the crickets. Oh, you're going to eat the crickets, brother. They're going to be everywhere. They're going to put them in hot pockets. Your kids are going to be like, Mom, Mom, I want eat the crickets. Oh, you're going to eat the crickets, brother. They're going to be everywhere. They're going to put them in hot pockets. Your kids are going to be like, Mom, Mom, I want the pizza crickets. He's not wrong. I saw this conspiracy theory. If you can call it that.
Starting point is 01:09:12 I don't know. They said in order to get people to eat crickets, you got to make them hungry first. Because if people are hungry, they will eat anything. So now we're looking at these food shortages. We're looking at what's going on with the Dutch farmers. Dutch farmers being told not to farm. At the same time, they're telling us a food shortage is coming. How the does that make sense?
Starting point is 01:09:30 It doesn't. So we are going to all starve. Maybe not us here and many at home might not if they bought their emergency food. Oh, that's right. But y'all are going to be eating crickets. You know why? He's right about the Hot Pockets. There's already a company in Canada.
Starting point is 01:09:42 Have you seen this? The President's Choice. Why? They put crickets in it? They sell bags of crickets. No, no, no. I'm talking about there's a chip company that puts cricket into their snacks so that you're like inching your way there and that extra crunch.
Starting point is 01:09:57 So imagine you get like, they're like Cheeto Puffs and you eat a Cheeto Puff and it's made of corn and cheese and stuff. You're like, this is good. So they mix in maybe like 5% cricket, added cheese and stuff, you're like, this is good. So they mix in maybe like 5% cricket, added protein, and then you're like, this is good. You do that for a year or two and you keep increasing the level of cricket in the food and then eventually everybody's eating cricket.
Starting point is 01:10:13 You do that with cattle and like barley and molasses. You just increase the ration until they're able to eat it. They're going to call it something else. They're not going to call it cricket. They're going to call it like... Escargot. Like escargot. You're eating sna Escargot. Like escargot. Escargot, yeah.
Starting point is 01:10:26 It's like you're eating snails, but it's escargot. It's going to be called like arachniprotein or something, you know, like... And you're eating spiders or whatever. It's chitin, so they'll call it... There's going to be a whole... Yeah, chitin. There's going to be a whole marketing campaign about how you eat lobsters, so why would you not eat this?
Starting point is 01:10:40 This is just the crickets of the city. I don't think... Look, people ate high-fructose corn syrup and never knew what it was. No one came to them one day and said, we're putting this in your food. They just started eating it. And they're like, oh. So chitin, there you go.
Starting point is 01:10:52 You're going to be ordering a burger and it's going to be like 87% pure beef with extra chitin. And you're going to go, I don't know. And you're eating cricket. Well, you eat carrageenan, which is an ice cream. That's actually from seaweed. And it gives ice cream like its shape. It helps keep its shape after it melts a little bit, which is really interesting.
Starting point is 01:11:08 If you don't know that about the fact that seaweed is an ice cream, kind of gross. Not really. I don't know. There you go. Grilis. They're going to call it grilis. There you go. Yeah, depending on what they use.
Starting point is 01:11:16 Cricket, juvenile grilis campestris, and it's going to be like the ingredients of your chips. It's going to be like whole corn, cheese enzymes, grill-less protein. And you're going to be like, oh. And you're not going to think twice about eating the crickets. Big banner on the side. Now with 5% more grill-less. That's right. Oh, boy. I mean, grill-less sounds pretty good, right?
Starting point is 01:11:40 Grill-less. Grilled food, yeah. Yeah. If you like, have you tried grilled grill-less? You're going to be like, what's grill-less? It's like a grill thing it's like a thing they do in the grills man
Starting point is 01:11:47 like what I ordered cheeseburgers and it was 90% beef 10% grillis what's that oh it's like it's for grilling and they'll do commercials
Starting point is 01:11:53 where they're like grillis burger I got a commercial for kelp burger not good gross yeah not good ew
Starting point is 01:11:59 I like you know like mushroom and black bean mixes with like you know vegetables and stuff that's pretty good. Seaweed. But they try and do all sorts of stuff. But ladies and gentlemen, you're all going to be eating the crickets whether you want to or not.
Starting point is 01:12:10 You will not be able to hide. Yeah. In Canada, President's Choice is selling a PC cricket protein bar. Grillians, they call it. Grillians. We were right. I was right. Oh, my God.
Starting point is 01:12:21 Holy crap. No way. That's amazing. I just DM'd it to you on Twitter. That's awesome. Grillians. That's incredible. I just DM'd it to you on Twitter. That's awesome. Grillions. That's incredible. How do you spell it?
Starting point is 01:12:27 G-R-I-L-L-O-N-S. They slightly altered it. That's great. That's insane. And this is on their website. I thought this maybe was... Grillons. Yeah, Grillons.
Starting point is 01:12:37 Cricket Grillons. It's Grillons? Yeah. G-R-I-L-L-O-N-S. PC Cricket Protein Bar. Yeah. Chocolate. Yummy.
Starting point is 01:12:44 Who wants to try it? PC Cricket from Nutritionix. Dun, dun, dun. Cricket Grillin's Powder. I was close because the cricket was grillis campcertris or whatever the word is. It's only 90 calories. Yeah. Cricket doesn't taste good.
Starting point is 01:12:58 You're already finding the advantages of it. Not only does it taste great, it's healthy for you. It's low in calories. No, it doesn't taste good at all. It doesn't taste great? Cricket doesn't. So we ordered cricket powder, and then Ian made a bread with it. Ooh.
Starting point is 01:13:08 Gross. And it's really astringent is the way they describe the flavor. It's sour and bitter. Bitter, yeah. Yep. Sour and bitter. If you season it, I think it'll be fine. Put on chips.
Starting point is 01:13:18 Put some salt in it, maybe some vinegar. Yeah, but you diluted it. You did like half cricket, half flour. It was too much cricket powder. Too much cricket. Yeah, if I'd done more wheat flour mixed with a little bit, half flour. It was too much cricket powder. Too much cricket. Yeah, if I'd done more wheat flour mixed with a little bit of cricket powder. It's too much cricket powder. I agree.
Starting point is 01:13:30 I'm okay with cricket. I'm not too worried. You know, people eat, like you said, lobsters. They eat birds. They eat cows. What's next? What would you eat? First guy to ever eat an oyster you knew was crazy.
Starting point is 01:13:43 Right. Someone looked at that thing and opened it and they were like, eat it. I'm not eating it, but I love oysters. Early humans ate random stuff anyway. They were like, well, I'm dying. I'll eat this rock. It's better than nothing. Eat this bark.
Starting point is 01:13:56 I like the joke. It's like every time you eat mushrooms, you need to give thanks to every human who tried mushrooms so you knew which one was safe to eat. Yeah. Yeah, because they died. They're like, I'll try it. But I mean, up until the Industrial Revolution, Dutch farmers and power of the future, the majority of the world was hungry all the time. I mean, hunger drove war. It drove economies.
Starting point is 01:14:20 Kings were hungry. Everyone was hungry. Yes, yes. People lived in hunger. But a lot of the wars were fought over just making food taste better. Yeah, true. Peppercorn. They were like, that ship's carrying peppercorn.
Starting point is 01:14:30 Fire! Attack it. Yeah, yeah. Seize the peppercorn. And they'd bring it to the king and he'd be like, oh. And now we just have it on like every diner table. Oh, exactly. I don't care.
Starting point is 01:14:39 But for the miracles of the fossil fuel industry and modern technology. And we can argue at the 30,000-foot level, should we use fossil fuels in the cultivation of our agriculture? I'll have that conversation. Should we? But we do. And yet these people, as I'm going to have to explain to you, you know better than I do, but the World Economic Forum and the Klaus Schwab's and the John Kerry's are like, we shouldn't.
Starting point is 01:15:04 And Holland's going to lead the way or Sri Lanka is going to lead the way and all these countries. And now it's all of a sudden, it's like, well, wait a second. But we do use, although Sri Lanka more than Netherlands. Netherlands is more of a land seizure, right? But Sri Lanka, well, we're not going to use these anymore. Well, now we're in famine. And we, the John Kerry's, the Klaus Schwab's from 7,000, 15,000 miles away, look at it and say, boy, this is terrible what's happening over there. But if you're a Sri Lankan and you're in true famine,
Starting point is 01:15:31 how did your experiment go? Because Klaus Schwab is not going to stop eating steaks. No. He's not going to be the one putting crickets on his hamburgers. How old is that guy anyway? Ancient. Yeah, he's probably like, I only have like three years left anyway,
Starting point is 01:15:47 so I will eat filet mignon until then. I can't believe I was told someone said they liked Porterhouse better than Tenderloin. I'm like, that doesn't make sense to me. But it's true. People do. I look at a menu and I'm like,
Starting point is 01:15:57 why have any other option? Because some people just like T-Bones or... I like New York strip. Strip steak. I mean, it's good, but maybe it's a cost thing. Maybe you don't want to spend the money on tenderloin. I don't know. Why don't they just feed the cow crickets?
Starting point is 01:16:10 There you go. That's cow, by the way. Why don't we feed our food crickets? People are like, I eat pork. Well, we're going to eat pig. Just say it. Call it pig. Cow. I'm eating pig tonight. I don't. I'm going to eat cow tonight. Crickets, man. I have no personal issue with eating bugs. I have an issue with people being forced to eat bugs or tricked into eating bugs.
Starting point is 01:16:26 Or anything while they still eat steak. Yeah. It's going to be like V for Vendetta. Yes. When she's like, is this real butter? Oh, I've never had this since I was a child. How did you get it? He's like, I stole it from Chancellor Sutler's personal supply cart or whatever.
Starting point is 01:16:39 But it's also not just like them being tricked into eating crickets. It's them being forced to eat crickets because that is the only food that's been made available to them. They lose out on the choice. And over time, I think you're right about them putting in pizza pockets. It's like beef is not going to be affordable to a middle class family, much less anyone below. And then the response is, well, we have these cheap crickets here. You can feed your kids. You can feed a family of six with these.
Starting point is 01:17:11 So whether it's them knowing it or not, just the fact that they're- Why crickets, though? Aren't there better-tasting bugs? I'm sure roly-polies taste better than crickets. Are you going to try them? Pill bugs, for those who don't live in Chicago. I don't know. You guys call them roly-polies or pill bugs?
Starting point is 01:17:25 I have no idea what the roly-polies are like a cartoon. Potato bugs I think I called them. No, no, no. Potato bugs are different. Potato bugs. Pill bug.
Starting point is 01:17:31 Maybe crickets don't have anything in them that is inherently dangerous. What about grasshoppers? Certain bugs. Slugs are deadly. Don't ever eat a slug. Oh, yeah.
Starting point is 01:17:39 I heard a story about the guy who ate it off the ground as a dare and then died. Yeah, so there are certain bugs you can eat but maybe crickets are totally clean.
Starting point is 01:17:45 Escargot is pretty good. I don't know. One of the projects for TimCast.com as you guys expand is you need to have like a fun press accountability component where you go up to reporters who wrote glowing stories about the future who were proven categorically
Starting point is 01:18:01 wrong and ask where they are. Like the people who wrote about Sri Lanka. 2025 will be the cleanest country or the richest country in the world per capita. Or the Paul Krugmans who were like, the Internet's going to be gone by the year 2000. The press, when it comes to climate issues, food issues, socialism issues, they always write these glowing reports about how great things are going to be in three years. Everything falls to pot. And then they're like, ho-hum, new story.
Starting point is 01:18:29 Yeah. Well, I think it was Tucker that was bringing up that like Myanmar, I believe it is. Sri Lanka. I'm sorry. They're the ones who had the best ESG scores in the world, followed by like South Africa. I'm like, these places are not doing well. So I don't know what a high ESG score looks like, but it is not good for the people who participate.
Starting point is 01:18:47 To find this story from the guy, I know I texted it to myself because it was so great, but this was the guy who wrote the story about how Sri Lanka is going to be the greatest country in the world in a couple of years. Here it is, Jason Hickel. Hey Jason, I hope you're listening.
Starting point is 01:19:03 Jason's got 200,000-plus followers on social media. He's a professor. He's got lots of things in his professor, UAB, blah, blah, blah. But he wrote the story about, yeah, Sri Lanka, what's going to be the whole thread about how great Sri Lanka is going to be when they adopted all the CSG stuff. And you want to go find Jason Hickel and say, Jason, where are you now?
Starting point is 01:19:25 Because you know what? There's a Sri Lankan dad who's feeding his kid crickets because they're frigging starving to death. They're probably licking rocks. Are you? Yeah. It's not even crickets. Are you good?
Starting point is 01:19:34 How are things for the Jason Hickel household? Let's go in there. Yeah. You know? No compunction. No sense of, boy, we really took a turd in the bed with this one. They just move on. You know what, though, man? took a turd in the bed with this one. They just move on. You know what, though, man? It's all the big cities.
Starting point is 01:19:48 And after these past several years of telling people to get away from cities, at a certain point, it's just like, I don't know what else to do for you. Look, you can't grow food. You can't grow enough food to feed your family in the city. You move out of the cities. You move to the middle of nowhere. You learn how to take care of yourself.
Starting point is 01:20:04 And you can start creating your own food so for instance like for breakfast I eat eggs straight from my own chicken's butt granted we give the chickens feed but we also there's also the bug technique
Starting point is 01:20:13 where you put the wood on the ground and then every morning you lift the wood up and move it and the chickens run over and eat all the bugs you let the chickens graze in the grass and eat the bugs all day and the berries
Starting point is 01:20:21 and then they poop out the eggs for you then in the winter you slowly run out of chickens as you eat the chickens all day and the berries and then they poop out the eggs for you. Then in the winter, you slowly run out of chickens as you eat the chickens. We got a ton. We got like 30 or something out there now. It's crazy. We started Cocktown. I don't know if we told you. We got too many roosters. It means rooster.
Starting point is 01:20:37 I don't know what you guys are laughing at. That's not a laughing matter. No, it's not. We got too many roosters and the roosters can't live together with girls. Yeah. So we moved all the things. Just don't call it cocktown.com because, well, you can. That's a good name for a website.
Starting point is 01:20:51 But it is a good name for a website. It may be taken already. It may already be taken. Don't Google it right now, everyone. No, don't do it, Ian. No, no. Ian, do it. I'm not going to cocktown.com.
Starting point is 01:21:05 Oh, my gosh. It exists. Okay. There you go. Strictly for adults only. Yeah, you're right. That's not... Show me your...
Starting point is 01:21:12 Okay, yeah. We have all the berries out here. We had wild black raspberry and it's such a weak plant. It got strangled out by the surrounding plants and it was like,
Starting point is 01:21:21 it's a bummer. The wine raspberries take over everything and they're everywhere and they're delicious. uh it's crazy living moving out of the city and now it's like maybe five percent or even actually not even i think maybe around like 20 or 30 percent of the food i eat probably comes from my like my own source like it's it's the chickens i eat i eat their eggs for the most part it's like breakfast it's their eggs yeah and then i have dinner so it's i say like 20 because it's just the eggs and then i'll have dinner later and the dinner is more substantial for the most part that's a decent
Starting point is 01:21:54 amount when we were gardening it was much less but i would do like eggs and like peppers and stuff when look when it hits the fan we got look at this story. It's from CBC from 2019. Cricket beer. Ladies and gentlemen, when it hits the fan, you are going to be eating cricket. And we're going to have fresh eggs because we moved out and we got more space. We got away from those cities. But the cost of living in a city is nuts. It's $5,000 per month on average for an apartment in New York City.
Starting point is 01:22:23 For that cost, you can buy yourself a mansion, five grand. Or a 100-acre farm. Or a 100-acre farm. That's where I am. And then you can just slowly start figuring out how to – use the luxury of the modern era to figure out how to survive on your own before it's too late, man. Because we got amazing tools and electricity.
Starting point is 01:22:45 And so the chickens, we don't need to have chickens. We like having chickens. The chickens are funny. We film the chickens. People watch chickens. And then we eat the chickens' butt bounty. Those eggs every day. Yeah, we got so many.
Starting point is 01:22:55 It's crazy. Butt bounty. That's what it's called. The bounty of the chicken's butt. We brought up the Sri Lanka stuff and also the Holland stuff. Like, what happened exactly to bring this famine on is there is it would you consider a famine at this point in holland yeah uh no no not in holland there's i mean there's this massive shortages in grocery stores um so that's but that's not the definition
Starting point is 01:23:17 of a famine um what's going on in the netherlands right now is the prime minister and the court system there are pushing this policy of reducing nitrogen emissions by 2030. So by 2030, the nitrogen emissions have to be down by 30, 40%. And to do that, that means farmers are going to have to cull their herds because there's a lot of nitrogen emission throughout the whole process of raising cattle, pork, and all this. So by culling the herds, they lose their profit margins. Farms aren't the most profitable ventures you can go into. Most people are in it because their families were in it for a long time. So they do this job and they say, okay, cull 30% of the herd.
Starting point is 01:23:59 They no longer can afford to keep that land. And for some reason, keep in mind, the Dutch government has said this is only going to be in effect in environmentally sensitive areas, which just happens to be around big cities and coastlines, high value real estate, which has caused people to say, well, why are you targeting us? Why do you want the land? Is that what you really want? And it's become clear that that's what the Dutch government wants. They want to evict these farmers. They don't care about the food. They want the land. And these are farms that have been in families since the 13th century. Like this is Europe we're talking
Starting point is 01:24:32 about, right? It's not even America where the farm that we're on right now or the farmland that we're on has been farmed by Americans for 200, 300 years. Back there it's been 900 to 10 centuries. So it's pretty tragic what's happening there, and it's even more tragic that the mainstream media isn't giving them a fair shot at saying their piece. They're immediately taking the government's side and saying,
Starting point is 01:24:57 you know, they're extremists, just like the people that went to Ottawa. They're racists. They have no idea what they're talking about, but in reality, they do know what they're talking about. And if you're not trusting the farmers with our food supply, I don't think you should be trusting
Starting point is 01:25:13 journalists. So this is a kingdom. It's the kingdom of the Netherlands. Yes. So the king is orchestrating this? No. It's run by a government, by a parliament. So we've got a food shortage. We've got a fertilizer shortage.
Starting point is 01:25:30 We've got fuel shortages. They don't know if they'll be able to have enough fuel to harvest what they did grow, let alone if they could grow anything at all because of the fertilizer shortage. They're telling us that the surrounding countries outside of Europe are going to be in serious crisis because of the lack of food because they won't get imports from russia and ukraine and when so lebanon may start turning into sri lanka and then they tell the dutch farmers stop farming if the food's already stopped production why do they need to stop cut down the nitrogen you know these countries are eating themselves alive it's self-immolation it is
Starting point is 01:26:04 self-immolation and it's just like joe b. And it's just like Joe Biden cancels Keystone XL and then gas prices go through the roof. It's like, why did you do that? You knew what was going to happen. I mean, you didn't know, maybe you didn't know Russia was going to go to war in the Ukraine, but you knew what would happen with Keystone XL. And now leaders around the world from Sri Lanka to the Netherlands and Canada, Justin Trudeau is doing the exact same thing, putting limits on fertilizer use in our country. By 30%, he wants to reduce fertilizer use. And what does that mean?
Starting point is 01:26:32 Well, half the planet is fed by fertilizer in one way or another. 50% of the planet's mouths ingest food because of fertilizer, which is, frankly, a gift from God. From Russia. Yeah, well, from Russia, from lots of places. And now they're saying, well, Justin Trudeau is saying specifically, let's reduce that by 30% to help the environment. Well, that's reducing food output by a substantial margin.
Starting point is 01:26:57 There's no technology that replaces fertilizer. You don't just plant crops more straight or give it more water. Without the fertilizer, it doesn't grow and you don't feed people. And then the question is, who's not eating? Who's not eating? Well, I'm eating. I bought emergency food. I ain't got anything to worry about.
Starting point is 01:27:11 And the funny thing is that suddenly it's nitrogen. That's what I would like to know. When did we decide nitrogen was this thing that had to be regulated? Because we always heard about methane. But methane is when it comes to the fossil fuel industry. So it's like, well, we can't have oil and gas because it's methane. But when it comes to farming, it's nitrogen. It's like, oh, well, how come it's not methane well, we can't have oil and gas because that's methane. But when it comes to farming, it's nitrogen.
Starting point is 01:27:26 It's like, oh, how come it's not methane? Because they don't have any oil in Holland. But they do have farms, so nitrogen is what we have to control. And you're like, well, that's odd.
Starting point is 01:27:34 Where was the decision that nitrogen is suddenly this, just like CO2, carbon? Remember Joe Biden said at the Scotland Climate Summit that he was going to work with the leaders around the world to rid the atmosphere of carbon. That would destroy the planet.
Starting point is 01:27:48 Exactly. And all the plants of the world were like, please, no. Like everything alive. But we've decided carbon is bad. And you want to say, where does this come from? Like what is the driving impetus of this? Oh, it's not about nitrogen or methane or carbon. It's about land.
Starting point is 01:28:05 It's about power. It's about power. It's about, oh, now it makes a lot more sense. Soon they're going to be regulating oxygen. Exactly. That's the next one. Yeah. This is just an enormous power grab. It's a land grab, and Europe is going to have land grabs because Europe is small.
Starting point is 01:28:19 No offense to our European friends. We love you. But continental Europe is smaller than America, obviously not much smaller than Canada. There isn't a lot of land there to begin with. So land is going to be their biggest problem, but Europe's power. Did you guys see the viral video of the man in his bin full of water in the U.K.? No. It's a hilarious video.
Starting point is 01:28:39 Why is he in water? Because it's the hottest day in history in the U.K. So he took his garbage bin and he filled it with water and he was sitting in it. Good for him. Is that Dankula? Some guy pulls up in a car and he's like, you're in the bin. And he's like, yeah. And he's like, why?
Starting point is 01:28:51 And he's like, I'm enjoying the day. And he's like, but you're in the bin. And then the guy like, I'm pretty sure it's fake, but it's hilarious anyway. But it's like the UK doesn't have air conditioning. I don't know if you guys know this. Europe doesn't. Yeah, it was crazy. I went to the UK for a speaking event. They put me in a hotel
Starting point is 01:29:05 on the top floor. It was like third or fourth floor. And it was like 90 some odd degrees. And then I was like, guys, I have to go to a speaking event and I'm drenched in sweat because it's so hot up here. What am I supposed to do? And so they're like, we'll try
Starting point is 01:29:22 and figure out a box fan for you. I'm like, that's not going to do anything. It's like, people are crazy. But at least they're green by stuffing everyone who's super sweaty into public transit so they stand shoulder to shoulder with people who smell like socks. I have an article from seven years ago. Europe to America, your love of air conditioning is
Starting point is 01:29:38 stupid. I really have to say, I wonder if they still think that now. Yeah, which journalist wrote that? Let's name and shame it. No, they're going to say that our use of air conditioning created more carbon emissions, which made the planet hotter. I agree. Yeah, which journalist wrote that? Let's name and shame it. No, they're going to say that our use of air conditioning created more carbon emissions, which made the planet hotter. I agree. Yeah, for sure. It's always our fault.
Starting point is 01:29:50 We just need to plant more trees, man. Yeah. You know, trees, they eat carbon. It's a lot of the air. You just have to ignore all of these fake metrics because it's a much more nefarious agenda that has nothing to do with the environment or the planet. You know, I think climate change is an issue.
Starting point is 01:30:06 I think pollution is an issue. Whether you believe in climate change or not, I think human pollution is awful, but it's really just the cities. And so, you know, we've talked about this with people like Michael Malice, and where we come to agreement is cities are too dense, and the cities produce a ton of waste. Like, if you had one guy, let's say 100 people, and they're spread out over a mile each person, and they all take a dump, right? All at once, right? When you drive 100 miles, you might
Starting point is 01:30:36 notice every mile there's some poop on the ground, or you might just be like, I didn't even realize. Imagine if those 100 people all got together in the same city block, formed a circle, and took a big dump. Yeah, you would definitely notice that. And the density of the human waste would cause ecological problems. This is what's happening with these big cities. They're gluttonous, immature, whiny resource hogs. It's extremely resource intensive to get food into New York City. The roads are congested.
Starting point is 01:31:03 There's break dust and smog and pollution. But you've got to get that food in there. So now people are spending five grand per month on average to get an apartment. The cost of living is through the roof. And then you move out of the city and it's like really easy to get to the grocery store. Way less wasteful. This is the thing about people
Starting point is 01:31:20 who live in the countryside, right? More likely to have their own source of food, even if it's a little bit. People out here, they got chickens. I'll see houses, they'll have like two or three chickens. And I'm like, they're getting some of their food on their own. The chickens will go and eat bugs or grass, and then they'll get eggs from it. That's a little bit of making their own food.
Starting point is 01:31:37 They're more likely to have solar power. It's harder to get solar if you're in an apartment in New York City. So you have the houses out in the middle of nowhere and people have more renewable energy sources. I just look at the people who are living out here and it's like well water. Yes, my family had a well. So they're not creating these big sewage wastes. The septic system is handling the waste and then putting the leach water out. Which are the people who are pushing the climate agenda though?
Starting point is 01:32:03 The people who want to fly around in private jets. The people who, most of them live in the city. Right? They're the ones, like you said, they are huge energy sucks. And they tell you. You live on the 87th floor of a building and you don't think that requires tremendous fossil fuels? Did you see, who was it, Kylie or whoever, she flew
Starting point is 01:32:19 Oh yeah, private jet. She flew in a private jet for 12 minutes. And it was funny because they said that she drove a half an hour in the wrong direction to get to the airport for a trip that would have taken 20 miles, 26 minutes to drive. Oh, my gosh. So, like, it took her longer to drive to the airport to get on the plane to fly, like, 20 miles or whatever. That's a very short – two airports very close to each other. Yep.
Starting point is 01:32:43 Oh, yeah. Wasn't it Elon Musk who jumped from San Francisco to San Jose over the bay? It was like a 10-minute flight. That's incredible. Hey, it's an hour, two-hour drive with traffic. That flight was five minutes. That's great. And if you're Elon and you're like, hey, time is money, baby.
Starting point is 01:32:58 Let's roll. Yeah. That's how it goes. And I don't begrudge them that privilege. I don't begrudge them. I. I don't begrudge them. I don't believe fossil fuels are bad, so I'm never going to say, well, we all have to do our part to conserve. I just don't buy that argument.
Starting point is 01:33:12 What I do begrudge are people who do that who want to deny the rest of us that opportunity, like the John Kerry's of the world who right now is in some German resort in the Alps planning the climate conference, And he flew there on his private jet. And he's like, but we have to get rid of our fossil fuels. It's like, well, you're never going to not eat steak, right? Same with you. I'm sure Klaus is at that meeting. Right? And I would love to know
Starting point is 01:33:35 what the caviar selection that was there. Somebody said, Tim didn't grow that Vita Coco. I mean, that's technically correct. It came out of a chicken's butt. It did. It's just a Hawaiian chicken. We actually have a big coconut palm tree and peaches and mangoes
Starting point is 01:33:52 and it's all... It's hot enough here. I didn't say all of our food was grown by us. It was great having the garden. Your water is? Oh, yeah. Filtered, pure well water. It's amazing. Is it well water? Oh, yeah. But it's like super purified and then minerals added back into it. That's great.
Starting point is 01:34:08 Yeah, and then for Freedomistan with the new studio, it's basically off the grid. Are you going to pump fluoride into the water systems? Oh, we do. Yeah, we do double the fluoride. Good for you. I know you like to do those things. The new space we have, the new space has got its own pond that we're going to clean up. It's got well water, obviously.
Starting point is 01:34:27 There's a pond right there. We've got solar power and backup batteries. So we're going to try and be as self-sufficient as possible. It's not about saving the planet. It's about just not getting disrupted when we're doing work. But, you know, hey, I can then be smug and make fun of all the city urban liberal types
Starting point is 01:34:46 and be like wag my finger at them based on their own standards awesome no everyone should be as self-sufficient as possible I'd love to have a small nuclear reactor in my backyard
Starting point is 01:34:54 yes that'd be great it would be fantastic and we thought about it because again when Back to the Future came out at the end
Starting point is 01:35:01 he's got his little Mr. Fusion right in the back of the car we thought that's what the future was going to be, a little tiny nuclear reactor in the back of your car. We weren't afraid of it in 1984 whenever that came out, but we're afraid of it now. All right, we're going to go to Super Chats.
Starting point is 01:35:14 If you haven't already, would you kindly smash that Like button, subscribe to this channel, and share the show if you do like it. Head over to TimCast.com. We're going to have a members-only show coming up at 11 p.m. Uncensored, TimCast After Hours. But until then, we will read your Super Chats. Let's see what we got. James Eaton says,
Starting point is 01:35:32 When will your album be out, and will there be an option to buy a signed copy? Man, we didn't really plan any of that stuff. We were thinking, like, August 21st or something, the third week of August and some of the songs are just really really great we'll see there's like one song totally done
Starting point is 01:35:52 there's one song that's really close to being done there's like five songs that are like moderately done we'll see man it'll be cool I also kind of felt like doing albums is dumb we're not in that era anymore maybe we'll do a vinyl press or something. But people are just going to go on Spotify or Pandora to listen to it or something like that.
Starting point is 01:36:10 Or iTunes or whatever. So we'll see, man. All right. Let's see. Chibineo says, Tim, please examine H.R. 1808, a highly restrictive bill to limit firearms ownership in an extreme way, before the judiciary tomorrow. I will look it up. I will look into it. HR.
Starting point is 01:36:29 Travis Jackson says, how long until we get the Chicken City animated chickens to do the Biotrust spot? Yes. I don't know. Let's do it. All right. Raymond G. Maga Stanley Jr. III says, AOC's big smug smile is pure lunatic narcissism. Yep. Juicy Smollett. Yeah, that was crazy. It's just so
Starting point is 01:36:50 creepy to see her faking being handcuffed. And Ilhan Omar did the same thing. It's all for photographs. The cop should have been like, put your hands down. Put your hands to your side. He should have actually cuffed her, but on the front. Put your hands around the front. We're going to cuff you
Starting point is 01:37:05 and then just not do it. Yeah. All right. Justice Forrell says, hey, Tim, wait until a poor man in Texas forces a woman who makes more money than him
Starting point is 01:37:14 to have his baby and then she has to pay him for alimony and child support. The left will scream about unfairness and will never see the irony. Hey, that's crazy, too. Ha, ha, ha.
Starting point is 01:37:25 And we're getting there. Shifted paradigm. Zach Orton says, Tim, you should try to get Mark Dice on your show. He's very knowledgeable about government and things that are purposefully hidden from society. I'm pretty sure we've reached out to him several times. Mark's great, but he's one of those very busy people. He's a busy fella.
Starting point is 01:37:40 He's a busy dude. Love to, yeah. It'd be great. Mark Nice says, This reminds me of the zone of death in Yellowstone where murder could theoretically happen and you wouldn't get prosecuted for it because there is no residence in that district
Starting point is 01:37:52 to fill a jury. Really? Is that true? I'm sure. That sounds like an urban legend. Theoretically. Yeah. Well, I don't know.
Starting point is 01:38:01 The feds would come in and have you try you in a federal jurisdiction or something. Not enough people to fill a jury. Tetra says, hey, Tim and crew, wife has a rare dental condition that needs surgery. Would appreciate all the help we can get. Go fund me slash rare dental condition needs treatment and surgery. Well, good luck.
Starting point is 01:38:19 That's long, but yeah. Good luck. Yeah, man. Raymond G. Maga, Stanley Jr. III, says, Bleeding Colorado may be the new Bleeding Kansas. Look, I'm not saying any of that stuff is happening, but I'm just like, what happens
Starting point is 01:38:29 if that scenario does arise? I mean, that would be just an untenable situation. Like, the Texas government says, sorry, man, your kid's being taken to be killed. Ain't nothing we can do about it. It's going to get crazy.
Starting point is 01:38:43 But we can't prevent good laws from being enacted out of fear of how that law will be interpreted or used in the future. You can't say don't build a beautiful church because someone may burn it down. So you have to pass laws that are just and right. Understanding that in the future, it's going to be muddy and dirty.
Starting point is 01:39:04 That's society, but it's still the right decision. Sorry, Super Chats. No, no. It's like people who say that they're scared of getting a dog because they know the dog's going to die and it's going to be sad. So you give up a decade of love. When you're sad, your dog dies.
Starting point is 01:39:19 It's not a bad thing. It's like all of that gift of joy given to you by the dog being released all at once. You've got to pay your dues, man. Sad enough to the dog, how many people do it with a human being? All right. I can't possibly date someone or fall in love or get married because the person may hurt me one day. Yeah.
Starting point is 01:39:39 Wow, that's a great way to live your life. That's terrible. Oh, tragic. Yeah. All right. Anwar Abu-Baker says, I tried finding the statute relating to abortion that indicates you can abort up till birth in the state of Colorado. Can't find it.
Starting point is 01:39:53 So I looked it up. It's the new abortion bill they passed, and it's just there's no restrictions in it. Yeah. That's the issue, is that the bill they passed just does not have any restrictions. So I was reading some website about it too and it was talking about how there's nothing codified preventing these things tattered shield says sent a super chat a while ago about goblin tokens and made a video on it
Starting point is 01:40:17 it's a post called tim learns about goblins also anyone who voted for biden has no right to criticize the way trump spoke that's a fair point you can criticize trump like he had a potty mouth and it's like yeah and joe biden's got a demented mouth i don't know there's there's equal issues there i suppose josh as i award ian no points and may god have mercy on his soul that's a good quote though kemlove says ian is saying just because you think something it doesn't mean it's real is exactly what's wrong with this country Augusto says
Starting point is 01:40:50 Ian is right murder is defined by the state there is no federal government law against murder is that true? I don't know that sounds crazy
Starting point is 01:40:58 no that sounds right though no interesting yeah I don't know someone look it up yeah there's normally when I think about it when they go to federal court, it's usually on like violation of civil rights, right?
Starting point is 01:41:09 Yeah, it's interstate commerce stuff. Yeah, but that's a great – again, that's why we need some good lawyers. You have good TimCast super fans who know these things. Kaipok says, stop bashing Colorado. We did not vote for this. Didn't Colorado vote for this? I don't know. Well, that's what they're getting.
Starting point is 01:41:29 Maybe you should vote Republican, I guess. All right. Seeds of Truth says, what makes me aggravated about Ian is that he has no courage to stand for or value anything. Nothing is worth dying for or fighting for, and no idea is worth asserting for him. A man with no chest. I'd love to see you make some YouTube videos and put your face behind those words.
Starting point is 01:41:50 Oh. Maybe he does. Maybe he does. Yeah, send me a link to your YouTube channel. Make 1984 Fiction Again says, Ian saying killing a baby is murder is postmodernism. You cannot agree on words. You are the poster child for postmodernism.
Starting point is 01:42:03 Right back at you. I said not that killing a baby is postmodernism, fellow, but that calling something murder when it's not because you feel like it is, is postmodernism. Joseph McFarlane says, Tim, the jurisdiction issue you presented to Ian is precisely the type of event that kicked off the Hatfield-McCoy war, and lawful courts were involved in all actions prior to that kicking off.
Starting point is 01:42:27 I don't know a whole lot about that. Yeah, look that up. I just remember the Bugs Bunny episode about it, but I don't think that was based totally on fact. Patriot says, Ian just made the same argument about abortion re-Colorado v. Texas, that slave
Starting point is 01:42:43 owners made for the legality of the treatment of and sometimes killing of their slaves. It's not murder because they don't have rights. Actually, that's right. You saying it's not murder because the state defines murder and they're not defining it as murder
Starting point is 01:42:56 is exactly why slave owners were allowed to kill people. I'm making a legal argument. They used legal arguments for that too. It doesn't mean that legal arguments are wrong. And my argument stands as well that eventually people stormed into those states and started, like John Brown, shot multiple people in the face. Yeah.
Starting point is 01:43:09 And my argument was Dred Scott was a legal decision. It was the wrong one, but that's what the law said. And so, yeah. Yeah, we are dangerously close to a situation like a John Brown bleeding Kansas kind of circumstance where some dude just says they're literally trafficking women, kidnapping the children of these guys to kill them. And they're going to go up and someone's going to be a fight over. What if a woman, a pregnant woman drank alcohol and the baby miscarried and then they murdered her? They killed, they executed her for murder. It's crazy. I don't think that's a good thing. Let's not go there.
Starting point is 01:43:45 So this is actually happening. It's not an issue. Where? There are mothers who are getting very long prison terms, and they're saying it's all because they miscarried, and you read it, and it's because these women knew they were pregnant and did things like meth voluntarily. They just continued with their drug use, and their baby died, and they're like, that's actually a crime.
Starting point is 01:44:03 You should be more careful about this little person who's dependent on you. Not alcohol as such, but hard drugs. Alcohol's a hard drug. Guy Allgood says, federal law specifies what happens over borders by the Constitution. The legal term you're looking for is called sovereignty, and each state holds dual sovereignty with the federal government. There was a period like 10 years ago or longer where a bunch of states started asserting sovereignty, like being like, we just want to make sure everybody knows this.
Starting point is 01:44:30 Yeah. Look that up. All right. Carpe Donctum. Is that the Carpe Donctum? What? It says if you can figure out how to drive across state lines to buy weed, you can do it to kill your baby.
Starting point is 01:44:40 True. Man, that's crazy. All right. We'll grab some super jades eric miller says texas abortion is illegal colorado abortion is legal the feds abortion is on our the feds abortion is on our radar well the biden's defended it so i mean let's let's look at it this way what happens if okay so i gave you a scenario right now i got a crazier one what happens if a woman in texas gets pregnant and uh and then starts fighting with the guy eight months on, and she's like, you know what?
Starting point is 01:45:09 I'm getting rid of this baby. I can't live with this guy. And she goes to Colorado. The guy calls the local police and says, help, help. She's kidnapped my unborn son and plans to abort him. She then posts on social media like, ha-ha, you'll never stop me. I'm going to do it. I'm in Colorado, and I'm allowed to.
Starting point is 01:45:22 And then President Trump goes, excuse me, we're sending in colorado and i'm allowed to and then president trump goes excuse me we're sending in law enforcement and feds to stop this what if the feds actually do intervene on behalf of texas for a violation of the law and then do go and arrest her what's colorado gonna do you think that they should be like the law of the place where your permanent address is should be what applies to you that's that's i mean, that's what I think would happen in Canada. I just think, like, what if the federal government said, we're going to go in and arrest this woman to bring her back to stop her from killing this kid?
Starting point is 01:45:54 Is Colorado going to be like, okay. Or are they going to be like, you can't come here and take someone who lives here? Yeah, they can't. The federal government's not involved. The federal government threw their hands up in the air with overturning Roe v. Wade. They're not. No, I'm saying what would happen if donald trump gets elected and then says we will protect the child and sends in federal law enforcement to arrest the woman for kidnapping and you arrest the federal law enforcement with local police and welcome to civil war yeah uh no man when the or you just don't comply like you lie to them you
Starting point is 01:46:22 move them around like what they would do when the feds would go try and bust dispensaries for weed in California. We saw an ATF agent get arrested. He was trying to serve a warrant, and he wouldn't comply with the police, so they arrested him. Not really the same thing. That was more of just like if a cop tells you to put your hands up, don't go, but I'm a cop. Shut up. I got to think the states would win because look at sanctuary city laws on the state level when the state says we're not going to tell the feds that we have illegal immigrants in our state yeah and the feds are like you're
Starting point is 01:46:50 hosting illegal immigrants and the state says we're not going to say anything the feds never come in and guns a-blazing saying we're going to get them anyway the feds back down i gotta think the same precedent would happen that although the feds have jurisdiction the states have seniority is my hunch because it's a state law this is this is interesting again not a lawyer dense alloy says ian what about california murder statute on the books if someone kills a fetus it's murder how do you rationalize that 30 odd states have the same law so i think yeah in california if like you punch a woman in the face and she falls down and the baby dies, you get murder for the baby too. If you kill someone else's baby, that's illegal killing.
Starting point is 01:47:33 But if the woman wants to kill her own baby in an abortion, that's not illegal. So it's not murder. So this is where there's a fracture of the moral logic. If the woman takes an illegal drug and kills the baby, does she get charged? As Lydia pointed out, that's been happening. So it's like, if the woman kills the baby through a mean other than at an abortion clinic, it is murder. But if she asks the doctor
Starting point is 01:47:55 to do it, it's not murder? The same outcome? I don't know about California law. It would be a state-by-state law. The question is, would using a coat hanger count as a murder then? I don't know. I don't know what the law is crazy stuff man no easy answers to any of this stuff but the point is killing the baby in the woman is murder in like 30 odd states he says if i killed her baby without her permission yes it would be murder probably everywhere but like imagine having a seven-year-old kid and being like i'm allowed to kill it
Starting point is 01:48:24 it's my kid yep like that's the moral failing there's a logical fracture that makes no sense you can't just be like a woman can decide to kill her kid unless it's escaped the two inches of her gullet birth yeah she can like so here's the thing a woman can cut herself open take the baby out and then kill it like okay oh how about this a woman can cut herself open, take the baby out, and then kill it? Like, oh, how about this? A woman gives birth on prom night and throws the baby in a dumpster. She goes to prison. Yeah, because it's born. That makes no sense. It's not illogical.
Starting point is 01:48:54 It's just the way it's written. This is the point I made on Twitter that triggered the left. I was like, what if a woman is like speeding to the abortion clinic and then she gets inside and she goes, quick, quick, I need an abortion before it's born. Oh, no. And then she gives birth right on the floor of the abortion clinic.
Starting point is 01:49:09 It's like, ah, too late. Well, Ralph Northam was like, we'll have a conversation. We'll keep the baby comfortable and have that conversation. That's why my dad was always pro-choice up until 18 years of age. Because he was like, you all should have been aborted. Sometime in high school, he's like, we should always have that. I mean, dad's militantly pro-life. He's Catholic.
Starting point is 01:49:26 But that was his joke. He was like, if you're going to allow abortion, you need to give me at least like another 16, 17 years after birth. That's spicy. Yeah, like what about what Northam said? Yeah. Like, now you can literally kill the baby after birth. When he said the baby would be delivered, made comfortable.
Starting point is 01:49:41 Baby's made comfortable. A lot of the mother and the doctor have a conversation. About what to do next, yeah. About whether or not to execute the living child. Oh, what do you mean? It's not legally wrong, so it's not execution. It's abortion, right? No, no. The baby's already born. It's not an abortion
Starting point is 01:49:56 at that point. Legally, he's saying it would be. Right? That would be like saying a post-death killing. If they're dead, you can't kill them. If they're born, you can't abort them. If the state says you can abort a baby outside the womb, Ian, that's your argument. That's not an abortion. That's a kill.
Starting point is 01:50:12 I mean, abortion could be considered a kill, but it's a non-abortion kill at that point. No, you're wrong. The state doesn't say that, and the state defines murder. Well, abortion is the termination of a pregnancy. If the pregnancy's over and the baby's born, then abortion's gone now. It's no longer part of it. If Northam says it's post-birth abortion, then it is.
Starting point is 01:50:28 It's not murder. If he says it, then it must be real. That's literally what you argued, that it's not murder because the state has defined it as murder. I'm making your argument to you. Maybe it's not a murder in that state. I don't know. Well, Virginia was proposing that. It didn't go through, but that's what they were proposing, which is pretty radical.
Starting point is 01:50:43 I think it doesn't matter what they can write down on paper like if you kidnap someone and force them to work for you you have committed you are committing an atrocity against humanity regardless of what legality it does matter what's written down because if you're gonna want to go to war with someone and kill their civilians or kill their military age men uh you can't do it it's murder but if you sign the paperwork now it's legal triton 54 says says, Tim, the trial of the murder of David Dorn started yesterday. Just something I thought you might want to keep an eye on. Ian, you seem to get a little emotional a few days ago. I hope you're doing okay.
Starting point is 01:51:15 Yeah, I'm a little distraught with the negativity of, like, hating on people. But, you know, one day at a time. Keep breathing. All right. Mr. right mr obvious says dropping 50 big ones youtube removed my 4chan hunter biden iphone story it got 100k views and was done in a mock documentary style claimed it was harassment and cyber bullying baloney i'm mad as hell and i'm not going to take it anymore i'm speaking out hey i appreciate it man thanks for the super chat and uh oh good luck i don't know tina collett says collette my prediction is that biden will sell our wheat harvest causing a booze shortage there will be violent riots but no molotov cocktails oh no oh geez adrian curry
Starting point is 01:52:00 says ian is a nice guy thanks ad Adrian. Ian is too nice of a guy. That's your biggest problem, is that when your heart is so big, you don't know how to control all of its borders. Ian is too nice of a guy. Joe DeRocky says, I am super charting this. Super charting. Just so Tim will say, watch Pop Culture Crisis Monday through Friday live, 3 p.m. Eastern, 12 Pacific. Yes.
Starting point is 01:52:26 P.S. Ian kills it on PCC. Oh, then you might want to watch Thursday afternoon at 3 p.m. Pop Culture Crisis. We're doing a big Times Square thing again, and we're going to have a big Roberto Jr. rooster up on Times Square. Finally. And I posted that, and people were like, that's so dumb, it's a waste of money. And I'm like, I know it's funny, but it's actually part of a big TimCast.com ad thing we're doing. So putting Roberto Jr. up there is going to actually catch a lot of attention and be really worth it.
Starting point is 01:52:49 People are going to be like, why is there a giant rooster? What is this? Then it's like a bunch of other ads. Don't put the URL to Cocktown.com on the ad. We don't own that one. Maybe Cocktown.org. Cocktown, excuse me. Cocktown.net. .org is the right one, though.
Starting point is 01:53:05 .org. I really believe.org is Cocktown. Excuse me. Cocktown.net..org is the right one, though..org. I really believe.org is probably already taken. We're going to get in trouble. I'm still laughing at that. Ozzy the Terrible says, Tim, need to have movie watch night with Soylent Green. They live, Idiocracy and Demolition Man and Dr. Strangelove. The cult is merging the stories together.
Starting point is 01:53:23 They were telling us what they wanted to do. A, D, and V for Vendetta 2. It would be cool if we could get the rights to do something like that. Like live reaction to movies like Mystery Science Theater, but not just comic, but political shows and stuff. I don't know
Starting point is 01:53:40 if we can do that for copyright reasons, though. If someone could make Brondo, though, that would be great. Yeah, Brondotes it's what plants crave tommy uh grasshaw says a porterhouse is a t-bone with new york strip stick on one side and tenderloin filet on the other side oh yeah it is delicious but the filet mignon is just so better medium rare just melts in your. A true free thinker says, I would gladly pay you Tuesday for a bug burger today.
Starting point is 01:54:10 What was that guy's name? Wimpy. Wimpy? Wimpy. I would gladly pay you Tuesday. And then Tuesday comes around and he's like, well, I'll pay you now, but I still want a burger, so give me the money back.
Starting point is 01:54:20 Okay. Jacob Perez says, Tim, in Mexico, there's a local Aztec delicacy enjoyed in states like Oaxaca where grasshoppers are fried, marinated in lime juice, salt, and garlic. You know, not for me.
Starting point is 01:54:34 People can be wrong. That's true. That's true. Sometimes entire countries as well. Yeah, that's true too. Is there like a weird thing that Americans eat that other countries think is nasty?
Starting point is 01:54:44 Yeah, like deep fried everything? High fructose corn syrup. No, everybody loves that. A lot of kind of stuff. Is there like a weird thing that Americans eat that other countries think is nasty? Yeah, like deep fried everything? High fructose corn syrup. No, everybody loves that. A lot of chemical stuff. Yeah, high fructose corn syrup. Sodium benzoate. Splenda, I think, is terrible. Oh, yeah.
Starting point is 01:54:53 The EU has a long list of stuff that's not allowed in the EU that we eat here. Yeah, it has like uranium in it. Yeah, we were looking at that right before the show. Uranium? Yeah, there's a whole list of stuff. Something like chocolate chip cookies have have cadmium in it. And yam fries? Or what was it?
Starting point is 01:55:08 Sweet potatoes. Yeah, sweet potatoes. Really weird, right? You think they're healthy. They're not healthy? No, so they can have unhealthy deposits of heavy metals. Depending on where they're grown, I'm sure. All right.
Starting point is 01:55:20 Kevin Brandt says, can I get a shout out for my birthday? The D is silent in my last name. Also, what happens when a company pays a Texas employee to get an abortion? Oh, wow. That's interesting. Like, Amazon's got employees in Texas, right? Yeah. Facilitating criminal activities.
Starting point is 01:55:39 That's what the $4,000 is for, to leave the state. Like, I'm pretty sure if you're in Texas and you give someone money to commit a crime somewhere else, there's still a crime there. I don't think so because if I was in a state where a drug was illegal and I'm like, I'm going to go to another state and do it, they don't care. You're paying them to do it. That's what I'm saying. So imagine being like, I want you to commit X. Here's money. Go do it and do it across the state line.
Starting point is 01:56:04 I'm pretty sure it's still illegal do it and do it across the state line. Pretty sure it's still illegal. If the transaction happened in the state. I would assume it's similar for America, but in Canada, we charge Canadians who go and fight for ISIS. That crime was over there, but when they come back, you still charge them
Starting point is 01:56:20 with terrorism or murder or whatever it is. This is going to get weird. The way it's implemented. I don't think Texas is going to invade Colorado. All I know is that if I was a dude living in Texas and I worked for Amazon in today's world culture, every week I would need my $4,000 for another abortion. I would go to HR because, like, how do you know I'm not pregnant?
Starting point is 01:56:37 They're getting sued for this. I would go to HR, like, every week you can't get pregnant that often, but how often can I get pregnant? I can get pregnant every two months. I would go and be like, I need another four grand abortion money. Well, what's the limit? Thank you. Abortion allowance.
Starting point is 01:56:49 Maybe they say one per a certain amount of time. So are you saying I'm a slut? Is that what you're accusing me of? These companies are being sued. I can't sleep around? These companies are being sued for discrimination because they're offering a benefit only to females. That's true. And that's sexual discrimination.
Starting point is 01:57:02 So if they're going to offer a medical benefit in that degree, it has to be equal to men and women. Yeah. Interesting. So I would get it all the time. No, I think the argument is simple. It's like, well, my girlfriend needs it. Oh, perfect. Yep.
Starting point is 01:57:14 Give me the money. They might say that we don't pay for it. Like, we don't pay you. We pay for the trip and the expense and the bill when you submit it for reimbursement. Okay, cool. Yeah, I'll be in Colorado for four days. I'll be at the Four Seasons Denver having my abortion. I mean, here's an interesting question then.
Starting point is 01:57:32 What happens if a doctor in Colorado forges invoices and just sends them to Amazon in Texas? And then it's like, well, the feds, it's illegal here, so do something about it. I mean, it's fraud. I don't think there's really a lot of forgery or fraud in the medical profession. Yeah, you're probably right. That's not a thing, yeah. I don't think invoicing fake medical
Starting point is 01:57:54 procedures, I don't think that's a thing. Yeah, you've got to be honest to experiment on people. Tim, live in the now. Live in the reality. Stop making up these hypotheticals. Right, right. All right. Ian Kinney says, you should check out the World Economic Forum's First Movers Coalition, headed by John Kerry.
Starting point is 01:58:09 They're going to be attacking a lot of industries. Yikes. Calvin Rams says, not pro-choice, but I worry that women who now have to give birth will have disdain for the child. Hope they embrace it. Could bring them happiness. I believe that probably like 99% of
Starting point is 01:58:25 women who have the kids will not feel regret or anger or disdain. Maybe not 99%, but the only, like, it's really simple. Like, obviously, if you have the kid, you're gonna be like, I love my child. I'm glad I didn't do it. And if you do abort it, you're like, I don't know, there's no kid to love. So it's funny when you see women who get abortion say, it was the greatest choice of my life. And then women who are like, i thought about getting an abortion and changed my mind and it was the greatest decision of my life it's like well yeah because your life is what it is now and you're content doing what you're doing like you will be happy with kids for the most part some people aren't that's why i say for the most part the rectifier says tim thank you for
Starting point is 01:59:00 everything you do my brother recommended your channel a few months ago i've since felt the need to run for office to try to make a difference. Here, here. Glad. Go for it, man. Best of luck. Change the world. Mama says taking a minor across state lines is a federal crime and the feds will prosecute.
Starting point is 01:59:15 Abortions will likely fall under the Interstate Commerce Clause. That's interesting. The federal government might not say it was for the abortion. They might say for an illicit service illegal in the state in question so i have to wonder i have no idea how any of that will work victor reznov says who says trump will do anything about cross-state abortions did he do anything to stop or address the 2019 riots what is is giving you this? You mean 2020 riots? Yeah. I mean, I guess the riots in 2019 as well.
Starting point is 01:59:47 Yep. Joshua Renner says, I've been to an orphanage in Quito in the 90s. Saw a photo of a baby abandoned in a shopping bag covered with fire ants, dropped off by cops, the infant like that, to the orphanage. Wow.
Starting point is 02:00:01 Oof. It's bad. I don't know, man. I don't know, man. This is getting absolutely crazy my friends if you haven't already would you kindly smash that like button and uh subscribe to the channel head over to timcast.com we're going to have a an uncensored after hours show coming up at 11 p.m tonight you don't want to miss it and when you sign up you're signing up through parallel economy
Starting point is 02:00:21 which is uh dan bongino's involved in it. You said he was a founder? Yeah, one of them. One of the founders. Yeah. It's a censorship-resistant payment processor, which means we are taking the steps to challenge Silicon Valley's stranglehold over big tech. We want to change it. When you sign up at TimCast.com, you're helping them, you're helping us, you're helping change that system. The goal with TimCast.com was we're going to make more shows, like members-only shows, TV shows helping us, you're helping change that system. The goal with TimCast.com was we're going to make more shows, like members-only shows, TV shows, documentaries, comedy specials, to start challenging Disney and Netflix and Hulu.
Starting point is 02:00:52 To put it this way, we're not going to make woke content. And instead of me telling you, just cancel your Disney now and sign up for us, you could, you should, fine. I'd rather not have you stop watching shows you like, and just for the three shows we have, I want to make more shows and prove we're going to have excellent content that is worth your money because that's
Starting point is 02:01:12 how you really win regular people over. Y'all may be mission driven and say I'm going to sign up for TimCast.com because I believe in this. But how do we get the regular people who subscribe to Netflix to stop doing it? We need to give them meaningful alternatives. So head over to TimCast.com and again smash that like button. Would you kindly. And you can follow the show at timcast.irl. You can follow me personally at timcast.
Starting point is 02:01:31 Kian, do you want to shout anything out? Yeah, I would love if everyone went to dutchuprising.com. That's where we're publishing all of our content. I mean, it's grown from the Netherlands to uprisings around the world, but it really started with the Dutch and all of our coverage about what's going on with the Dutch farmers there, you can check it out and pitch into our coverage as well. We're all viewer-funded, so it goes a long ways. Daniel Turner, Power of the Future, Powerofthefuture.com, Daniel Turner PTF on platforms if you want to talk about the radical green movement
Starting point is 02:01:58 and the importance of energy and the love of fossil fuels. Or if you love farmers, Bristol Farm Virginia on Instagram. Bristol Farm Virginia for your favorite sheep farmers and their fun and cattle as well. But it's a fun little Instagram. You have like goat's milk and stuff like that? No goats, sheep.
Starting point is 02:02:16 Sheep and cows. You know, we decided not to milk the sheep because it's just one more thing to do. So in time, you know, we'll build out. You got to do. In time, we'll build out meat and wool for now. Sure. Get some sheep.
Starting point is 02:02:32 Buy a whole lamb. In November. What do we do? Put it in an open pit? I can bring it to you. You spin the thing? We can give it to you butchered and vacuum sealed and you can get all the different cuts or I can give you to you. You spin the thing? We can give it to you butchered and vacuum sealed, and you can get all the different cuts,
Starting point is 02:02:47 or I can give you the whole darn thing. What if you just came over to Freedom and stand with the whole darn thing, and we just roasted it outside over a pyre or something? Happy to do so. Some massive fire? That'd be sweet. Yeah. Easy.
Starting point is 02:02:59 That would be like, you know, brutal. Very Game of Thrones-esque. Cottagecore. Primal. Primal, that's the word. So one big spit with that, exactly. And then a little tiny one with little tiny crickets. A little tiny spit over here.
Starting point is 02:03:18 One crank that turns like 16 little things all at once. Cricket rotisserie. And we'll get another small one with a broccoli for the vegans. Exactly. Exactly. So Bristol Farm, Virginia. It's a wonderful, wonderful Instagram, and great to be here with you all.
Starting point is 02:03:33 And like I said, I am serious. Your biggest problem is you have a big heart. When you have a huge heart, you have lots of borders, and you can't control your borders, and all the bad gets in, but all the good gets out. And Ian's biggest problem is that his heart is very, very big. When you have a small heart like me, you can control it very, very well,
Starting point is 02:03:48 but then there's not an awful lot of love to give. So you would much rather have a big heart than a small one. You might be right. Sometimes I think about the horror that I would inflict on my enemies, but that's... I try not to have enemies because I don't want to inflict horror on humans. So let's hope that we
Starting point is 02:04:04 don't go to that place ever and keep things nice, calm, and peaceful. See you guys later. I'm Ian Crossland, iancrossland.net. Bye. For sure. One of the ways I stay positive is by following Bristol Farms on Instagram. It is very cute and sweet. The evenings, the summer evenings with the little lambs is just
Starting point is 02:04:20 freaking idyllic. So hopefully that will continue for you guys and hopefully the world doesn't fall apart and hopefully we're all at peace for the rest of our time on Earth. You guys can follow me on Twitter at Minds.com as Sour Patch Lids as well as Sour Patch Lids. I get the Sour Patch Kids now. That's right.
Starting point is 02:04:36 Now it makes sense. Oh my gosh. You just figured it out. It took them all the way through the show. I stock the Sour Patch Kids on our table because I am Sour Patch Lids. That's why. That makes sense. We will see you all over at TimCast.com. Thanks for hanging out. Bye, guys.

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