Timcast IRL - Timcast IRL #753 Man CONVICTED OF MURDER For Defending Self From BLM & Antifa In Austin w/Kara McKinney
Episode Date: April 8, 2023Tim, Ian, Hannah Claire, & Kellen join Clint Russel & Kara McKinney to discuss Daniel Perry being convicted of murder after defending himself against antifa, swimmer Riley Gaines being attacked by the... far left, and how social media has created the "Great Awokening." Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices
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So, man, crazy day.
We were talking about this guy, Daniel Perry, the other day, and he got convicted.
If you don't know who he is, he's the guy who was driving Uber in Austin wearing shorts, flip flops and a T-shirt when far left extremists surrounded his car, one with an AK-47 pointed at him.
And then he fired in self-defense.
They opened fire on him.
He fled, called the police, and they claimed he attempted to, he wanted to murder these people. And so he was convicted. Right now, many prominent personalities
are calling on Greg Abbott of Texas to pardon this man. He was convicted in Texas, in Austin.
And I got to tell you guys, I keep having people, you know, they'd said to me over and over again,
before we relocated from New Jersey, they're like, you got to go to Texas, man.
You got to go to Texas.
Everyone's going to Austin.
And I was like, Austin is like the California of Texas.
Why would I go there?
Why would I want to be in Texas in general?
And while there's a fair point, it was a purple state.
Now it's turning red because people moved there.
So I accept that.
But at the same time, look what they're doing to people.
We're going to go over this story.
This one, this one's kind of crazy.
And then to get into the details about what's going on at the same time, this guy's going to
jail. You have Riley Gaines, the swimmer who's speaking out about men competing in women's
sports, being physically attacked, forced into, into hiding in the university of Kentucky.
And these conversations need to happen because what is the left doing? They're holding up seven
fingers as they storm the
capital of tennessee claiming that the mass murderer in nashville is a victim that's their
narrative and they'll keep playing it yet the man who was defending himself while just wearing t-shirt
and shorts in his car was it was at a gunpoint at him he is the bad guy so we're going to talk
about all of that before we get started my friends my friends, head over to TimCast.com.
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We've got a couple people joining us tonight.
We've got from OAN, right?
We've got Karen McKinney. Thank you for having me. I'm so excited to be here. Absolutely. We've got from OAN, right? We got Kara McKinney.
Thank you for having me. I'm so excited to be here.
Absolutely. Who are you? What do you do?
So my name is Kara McKinney. I host Tipping Point on One America News. I've been doing that
for about three years. Started with the company about six years ago, writing and producing in
the newsroom. So it's been a fun journey up and up to wherever we go next.
Right on. So you've been tracking a lot of news
you know a bit about what's going on ever yeah the stuff we're talking about today you know ever
since i was little i kind of started like um debating teachers that was my biggest thing so
i kind of like that i i find it fun i kind of thrive in that right on cool well we got a lot
to talk about and then we also got in the uh the reserve chair we got clint he's back clint russell liberty lockdown as well as tower
gang co-host maybe one day soon a tim cast employee we'll find out um poker with the boys
poker with the boys baby let's go uh tim and i played today and we wiped the floor with everybody
so i feel like we're we're on a good that's right that we we were we were doing a little test run
and uh wiped the floor with everybody as per usual. And so, yeah, that's the plan.
We're getting everything built for Poker with the Boys.
So Clint's here.
We're having him on the show while he's here.
And then we got Hannah Clare hanging out.
Hi, I'm Hannah Clare.
I'm a current TimCast employee.
I'm a writer for TimCast.com.
I'm Ian Cross.
And some days are dark.
And sometimes we talk about the dark, spinning depth of the black hole that we're surrounding.
But listen, sometimes you get a white pill.
And that was today when Vivek Ramaswamy was on the Culture War podcast with Tim.
If you haven't seen it yet, it's on the Tim Pool channel.
Man, they went for two hours.
Vivek is running for president in the Republican Party.
And the guy has solutions.
Really impressive.
Yeah, I'll stress that too.
YouTube.com slash Timcast or on Apple and Spotify,
the Culture War podcast. Vivek really is one of the, look, I was honest. I said, I think I'll vote
for you in the primary. Donald Trump will win and I'll vote for Trump in the general. And he's like,
okay, we'll see, we'll see. But in terms of knowing what's going on, having solutions and actually,
I mean, he was talking about defunding the fbi about firing most
of the federal reserve really gutting these things foreign policy stuff he went all at it so but
brilliant dude exceptionally and you really got to see him to know like it's worth watching just
to understand the words won't do him justice you got to see the to to understand he made this point
as we were talking about algorithmic manipulation he said something like people what did he say he said people thought the ai monster was gonna be a robot with laser
eyes but it's not it's dylan mulvaney it's people who are manipulated by the algorithms into becoming
things that are out of sync or disruptive to society well let us keep each other in check
and not become the disruptive force uh that we so fear uh yeah we also have kellen over here what's
happening fridays are the best days. What's up, guys?
It's Kellen.
Let's get this thing started.
All right.
Here's the first story from the Daily Mail.
Army Sergeant is convicted of murdering Black Lives Matter protester by shooting him dead
during July 2020 riots in wake of George Floyd murder.
Daniel Perry, 37, a 37-year-old Uber driver and Army Sergeant, was driving through downtown
Austin on the night of July 25th, 2020.
He ended up in the middle of a BLM march and in an altercation with protester Garrett Foster.
Full stop. That's not what happened. Daily Mail's wrong. Foster just walked up to his car with a
rifle, pointed it at him, and then this guy fired back. That's it. He didn't like yell at him or
anything. Nobody was yelling. Perry shot Foster dead, claimed it was self-defense, but on Friday,
jury found him guilty of murdering Foster. There's a few key details which need to be mentioned. First, I will say there is a
widespread push from tons of conservative personalities calling on Greg Abbott to pardon
this man, and I agree. Not like this guy. Look, this guy certainly said some things that I find
questionable in the past, but that has no bearing on the fact that he's an Uber driver, he's wearing
shorts and a t-shirt and flip-flops, and a guy wearing a vest with a rifle and a mask
marching with BLM points a gun at him, and then he fires in self-defense.
If they were going to say, you know, reckless endangerment or something, I'd roll my eyes
and be like, well, you know, they're getting a whatever.
But murder and life in prison?
That's what they're going for.
They say he was driving through, found himself in the midst of a protest.
Blah, blah, blah, blah, blah.
Let me scroll down.
Defense lawyers said that Foster raised his AK-47 at Perry and that Perry fired in self-defense.
Witnesses have said during the trial that Foster never raised his rifle at Perry.
Well, of course, the witnesses are BLM protesters.
Of course, they are likely to lie.
A jury found him guilty.
In their closing arguments, they insisted he had no choice
but to shoot Foster five times
as he approached Perry's car
with an AK-47.
Prosecutors said Perry
had plenty of choices,
including driving away.
Full stop.
How many stories have we heard
where people who drove away
were accused of hit and run
or something because people
are banging on their car?
So, did he?
And they opened fire on him.
I don't care.
If you're rioting and you're carrying weapons
and you approach someone and they panic because you're pointing a weapon at them, sorry.
And of course, I just don't believe the BLM people. However, they say Perry also said that
in Texas, you could get away with shooting them. They mentioned his social media posts.
That's probably what got him. You should not say that stuff.
Perry's phone showed he was texting a woman shortly before the encounter with Foster.
The woman he wanted to meet up with sent him a text asking for money.
This is an age-old story about a man who couldn't keep his anger under control.
It's not about police.
It's not about protest marchers.
It is.
There's video.
I'm not going to play the video.
But look, people have a right to keep in bare arms.
People have a right to march down the street with those weapons.
You don't have a right to be part of a group that has committed several acts of terrorism over the previous days.
And then surround someone's vehicle while pointing a rifle at them.
That's just that you've crossed the line.
And so my response to all this is it's a horrible story.
I wish it didn't happen.
It sucks.
But how is putting this guy in prison going to solve anything?
It's a sensitive story. And I didn't happen it sucks but how is putting this guy in prison going to solve anything uh it's a sensitive it's a sensitive story and i don't have a lot of data on this i really what it comes down to was this guy pointing the gun at him or not and we only
have witness testimony because if he has the gun and it's like at an angle right past pointing
right past the guy and he's moving towards the guy it could give the illusion that he's cut up
that he's pointing towards him.
But, and I don't know
how far away were the witnesses.
All the testimony I've seen
is that he approached the car.
How do you get him on murder?
Murder?
Because of the idea
that he premeditated it
or had intent
with that post on social media.
And so, let me read this.
Protesters didn't know anything
about Perry when they attacked
the car and boxed it in,
said Doug O'Connell, who was defending Perry. O'Connell argued that Foster was dressed for battle at the protest, including wearing a neoprene vest, carrying an AK-47, a club and a knife. Perry was wearing a T-shirt, shorts and flip flops. Garrett Foster is dressed for war. Daniel Perry is dressed for the beach murder means intent if they want to say reckless endangerment or negligent homicide
i'd be sitting here we'd be arguing the legal merits no they convicted him for intentionally
going to this guy and killing him i think and i think because as you're bringing up with the
social media posts and they're trying to say see aha he wanted this chance to do what he did
i think what it actually shows us his mindset is like, oh my gosh, look how scary these, you know, these rioters are, these looters are, you know,
the different social media posts that he had. So when he turns the corner, and I think during the
trial, it came out that there was evidence that his car was slowing, because all the witnesses,
as to your point earlier about the witnesses saying, well, he didn't point the gun. Well,
the witnesses also said that he sped up into them. And I think they said, oh, we just heard
tires screeching and this and that. But then I think the evidence of the trial showed
that his car was decelerating.
Correct?
Decelerated to let a quadriplegic woman
use the crosswalk.
They are lying.
Yep.
So he turns into and he's like,
oh my gosh.
And his mindset is,
I've been following this for months now.
How scary.
I don't want to be the next guy to die.
Oh my gosh, a gun's in my face now.
I think that more accurately describes
why he has those past social media posts
rather than
what the prosecutors are trying to say is that, oh, he's a bad man looking for a fight.
And other witnesses have testified that they had called the cops saying this group is carrying
guns. We've asked them to leave. We can't do anything. I mean, all the outlets are describing
as like they're marching. Everything's fine. But like, put yourself back into this summer of 2020.
It was an extremely turbulent and violent times in major
cities across America. And people who were sort of caught in the crosshairs, residents who lived
in the area, just had to wait and hope that nothing that fatal would happen. And unfortunately,
in this case, it did. And I wonder if his defense was smart enough to bring up this story
from Deseret police arrest two after man shot during provo
protest that's right blm ran up to a truck for no reason literally none this guy wasn't this wasn't
a truck driver chasing anybody down it was a guy driving down the street blm extremists ran up and
shot the guy in his car june 30th 2020 and they say two people who were arrested Tuesday night in connection with
the shooting of a motorist. About one month later, this army sergeant was driving down the street in
Austin when he was approached by a guy with a gun and shot back. And that context, I think,
is extremely important for the jury to understand. This faction of individuals, their ideology,
they have been committing acts of terror. They have been killing people. And only a couple of weeks ago, walked up to a motorist and shot him.
And here I am in my car, is what I'd say.
And they were walking up to me and I said, here we go again.
That's the gun.
He points it at me.
But you know what?
It doesn't matter because they're in Austin.
And I think any I find it laughable that people are like, you got to move to Austin, man.
And I was like, no, no, you don't.
You do not want to live in these places.
You will go to prison when they try to kill you and you try to defend yourself.
Yeah.
And it seems so obvious that it was self-defense in this particular instance.
But what I would like to know is there's been other pretty egregious police killings of
litany of minorities as well as white people since the Biden administration came to power.
You have not heard from Black Lives Matter in terms of protests and riots and things like that.
And what that tells me is that it was catalyzed somehow.
And we still don't have answers as to how that came to pass.
And I would like to know.
You mean the riots of 2020 was catalyzed?
Yeah, the whole summer, man.
It was crazy.
It was like three,
it was basically 100 days of just misery and insanity.
And I just don't buy the organic nature of that.
And for the life of me,
I wish OAN or some organization
that's actually interested in getting to the truth
would dig into that
because it seems like there's a story there
and I don't know what it is.
What were you going to say?
Oh, go ahead.
Oh, you're going to be much more interesting than me.
I was just going to say on one point, yes, it kind of reads like, you know, color revolutions and stuff where these big moneyed interests that they go out there and they're able to kind of fund and they can kind of put money into it.
They can kind of get people amped up and out there on the streets.
I think Foster was on the streets, I think, every day pretty much for a month or two. Yeah, exactly. So he kind of was like a full time protester slash writer at
that point. One thing that I do think is interesting to perhaps bring up here is that I know he was,
I know, I think reporting says he was a boogaloo boy, right? The Foster, so I know they have big
gun culture, right? However, he was rolling with BLM. And of course, we saw a lot of that kind of,
you know, mix in the summer of 2020 with the riots. But it's interesting to me because with BLM and other
left-wing groups, one of their hallmarks is pushing for gun control. And it's interesting
that it's only specific groups. It's only like law-abiding regular Americans that they want gun
control for. You see the Chas, for example, Antifa and other related group, Johns Brown's
clubs, the rest. It's interesting that when they set up their little Chas, what did they first do?
They erected a border. They patrolled that border with armed guards and they deported anyone
they didn't like from the area and you see that over and over and over with these groups so when
they say gun control they don't really mean gun control they just want to be the ones with the
guns and the people they don't like not having the guns in this case Foster and friends having guns
and the Perry and his friends not having guns boom And then we saw in Wisconsin when BLM protesters cheered and clapped
as a man was arrested in his own home.
I thought they were supposed to be against the cops.
No, no, no.
When the police come and arrest you,
they are clapping for it.
That's where we're going.
That's where we are.
Yeah.
Disturbing.
So what are the odds you think
that Abbott steps up and does something about this?
I think it's actually pretty high.
You know, because I'm look, this is violent extremists.
They've killed other people before.
There's 20 plus deaths.
There's 19 plus deaths directly tied to the protest and an estimated 32 in the periphery of the riots.
I shouldn't say protests, riots.
This guy in his shorts and t-shirt convicted of murder
something's wrong here uh abbott needs to just pardon yeah well let me let me say one quick
thing in defense of the boogaloo boys which will be very unpopular but uh many of them are
libertarians and many of them are hard to a guys and many of them were out there just to defend
the protesters from the police.
However, if you're going to approach someone and you're protesting in the middle of the street and you have a vehicle that is now stopped and surrounded and you approach them with an AK-47 or whatever sort of assault rifle.
Well, I don't even want to say assault rifle.
The scary looking guns.
Not a good idea.
It's not just that.
The Boogaloo boys have uh been praised for for they're not they're not directly antifa or blm no they're not but if you are marching with antifa and blm
there's no distinction sorry these people have firebombed buildings they have killed people
michael reinhold in portland with a blm communist tattoo on his neck, shot Aaron Danielson twice in the chest.
And then you're like, you know what?
I'm going to march with these people.
It's like, well, with a rifle and you pointed at someone
and people are pointing on the chat.
There's a video of him holding the weapon at high ready.
He's got the gun ready to go.
If a guy approaches you at high ready with a rifle at high ready, man,
in the middle of a riot and you're stuck and you can't move,
you've got to assume the worst what choice i'm not trying to incite stuff but like what what are you supposed
to do in that situation you have to protect yourself yeah you can either just put your
hands down and and stick your chest out right at the tip of his gun maybe but like what's the
other choice here no consider the gas consider the options exactly you have to hit the gas
drive through in which case you're going to get an attempted homicide charge.
Or you fire, in which case you're charged with murder and apparently convicted.
Or you just cross your fingers and hope that the dude's not going to fire back.
This is beyond just happening to somebody in a vehicle with BLM.
We saw the parking garage attendant in New York who a guy literally shot him twice.
Fighting for his life,
this man wrestles the gun away and then shoots
the would-be murderer
and then he wakes up being criminally charged
attempted murder in a hospital after nearly dying
and he's crying. He was crying in bed saying,
I don't understand. This is a nightmare. What's happening? Why are they doing
this to me? Because they're evil
people. They are evil.
There's no question i'm
sorry ian it is a fact if a man is on his deathbed after being shot twice and he's crying saying why
why why god it's because brag is an evil person and the only reason he backed up that prosecution
is because people who are good stood up and said don't you try it and then he backed up and said
no okay okay we're gonna stop do you think utilitarianism is evil in general well it's the man it's to a certain
degree but let me make this point what's happening to this guy daniel perry i was surprised to find
out the trial was going on how did we not know about this how is this story which is similar
to kyle rittenhouse different in many ways completely just under our because there's no
video no video there is
video what is it good video is it enough to know what's going on no i mean from what i've read
everyone is saying it's not super clear even the police body cam footage responding to the incident
is like a little ambiguous i mean the defense called uh their own ballistics expert to try and
analyze the video and i think that's one of the reasons that uh kyle rittenhouse was able to not
get lost in sort of the immediate that Kyle Rittenhouse was able to not get lost
in sort of the immediate media backlash that would have inevitably followed him because
so many people could point to this video and say, look at it like you can't spin this.
It's pretty obvious what happened here.
Yeah.
Look at this story from Deseret.
How are we supposed to live in a country where you hear the news about BLM for no reason
shooting a motorist who i believe i believe
was a woman you can see it and people are mentioning in the chat and then what do you do
you know what look man you want to live in austin fine at a certain point i've got i'm getting to
the point where i'm going to be like oh did another person get convicted of murder for
for trying to save their own life no sympathy sympathy. I'm sorry, dudes. Look,
I'm not going to say
it's easy.
For a lot of people to get out of cities, very, very
hard, very, very difficult.
But I'm just at the point where I'm
like, I mean, how many, it's three years
on. Three years since the
Summer of Love. And I've been saying
even two years before that, you need
to get out of these cities. They will do this to to you they will arrest you for what blm does yeah if there's a democrat da you're
in trouble and there are people who are still like i'll be fine i'll keep my head down it's
like okay well when that happens and they do come and arrest you don't expect me to to offer any
assistance do you think one of the biggest things is because those who are on, I guess, right, libertarian, various assorted groups, is that we kind of don't like, you know, state power so much. So it's more like elections come by, we're not as into it as say, this uh this this trial a lot of people weren't as you know paying attention to it as much so i think that happens a lot because even if you
get out of cities you could be in a smaller town where you know everyone seems to be kind of maybe
more conservative and you think wow i feel really safe here everyone supports law enforcement and
then before you know it you didn't pay attention to your local elections and now you're like how
come this da is letting everyone out how come my you know and on but but the the the issue is it's not bad enough and so there is one simple reality if
you are holding on to a skillet and it burns your hand you will let go the issue is the damage and
destruction that is occurring in cities is not is not escalating to a point just yet where people are going to drop the pan, i.e. get out.
Now, let me give you an analogy, right? You grab a, you put in your oven mitts and you grab a tray
of fudge brownies from the oven and you're holding onto it and you're trying to figure out where to
put the brownies down and you can feel the heat is making its way through those mitts.
What happens if you don't put it down right now?
Eventually, the mitts can't stop the heat.
It burns your hand.
You drop the pan.
Maybe it's Pyrex.
It shatters in the ground.
And now there's a disaster zone.
When instead, you could have been like,
okay, I got to just set this down anywhere I can set it down.
It's getting too hot.
What's happening right now is we're at that point.
People are still in these cities and we can feel the heat, but they're going,
look, the heat that I'm feeling, the pressure that I'm feeling in the city does not reach a
level where I'm willing to experience hardship to get out. And I mean it, hardship. I'm not
saying it's easy. It might be the most difficult thing you've ever done. But trust me, the people
who have said to me, like, you look, man, I got a house. I can't sell it. I don't know how to move.
Trust me.
When bullets fly through your daughter's window, you will pack up and leave and go sleep under
a bridge or something like that.
You will be like, OK, that is too hot.
And so my point is simply this.
I'm not passing judgment.
I'm simply saying I understand why people are not going to leave their homes until the
bullets come through their windows.
But you know what?
It's already happened to a lot of people are not going to leave their homes until the bullets come through their windows but you know what it's already happened to a lot of people yep and so like that guy in wisconsin
sooner or later the cop will come to your house they will search your home they will charge you
with whatever they want because you pissed off some blm activist group because they know who
you are you watch this show and then you're going to be like it's too late now yeah now the da is
going to be like mr smith don't leave the state and you're going to be like, Mr. Smith, don't leave the state.
And you're going to be like, now what do I do?
I got to say real quick, I'm reading Scott Horton's pre-release of his new book.
It's like 500 pages on the history between Russia and Ukraine.
It's incredible.
But the reason this correlates, and there is a correlation,
he breaks down all of the color revolutions that happened through the Eastern Bloc nations
that were CIA backed.
And I can't tell you how reminiscent it was of living through 2020.
And it just it strikes me as a color revolution.
I'm not saying it was one, but it felt a hell of a lot like one.
When you read about them, it's crazy.
It's uncanny.
Honestly, what defines color revolution?
Usually they're labeled by a color.
So it'll be like the orange or the rose or the red and things like that.
But there's a litany of them that happen in Eastern Bloc nations, like the breakoff nations from Russia after the fall of the USSR.
And usually it deals with electoral processes that are manipulated in some fashion.
I'm not saying that's what happened in America, but that is what the CIA was
responsible for. I want to read this comment
from VisionStorm. He says,
Tim, quote, I'm not passing judgment. I'm just saying
I have no sympathies if you have no means to leave your state.
No, you completely misunderstand, perhaps intentionally.
What I said is
for those who poo-poo
the idea and say, ah, it's not that bad.
That is to whom I'm saying
I have no sympathy if you've made this choice.
I'm also saying, I understand for some people it is too difficult to do.
It's very difficult.
And then I'm also pointing out that at a certain point, it doesn't matter how difficult it
is or the consequences, you will drop the tray, the glass will shatter and it will create
a problem for you.
This is what I'm saying.
If you are holding something too hot, shattering glass on the ground is the last thing you want to happen.
If you are living in a house and you are like, I have nowhere to put this thing down.
The moment BLM shows up to your house and sets a fire, you will flee your home with your kids having no idea where you're going.
It's not a question of your means to do so.
It is a fact if your life your loved one's lives are threatened you will go
and sleep in a tent in the woods before you let a violent mob kill you i like that's it like i
don't think there's any human being who's going to be like oh antifa's here what are they yelling
they want to kill me i better just sit here especially when you have kids you're going to
be like we're abandoning this right now so my view is it may be the most difficult thing you have ever done.
If it were me,
I don't want to give anybody financial advice.
If it were me,
I would sell my house for whatever I could get for it and move to move out to
the middle of nowhere.
That being said,
I am fully aware of when we moved out of Jersey,
it wasn't the most difficult thing for us.
You know,
I,
I had a successful YouTube channel.
I had money that I'd saved up.
And so after saving for about a year or two, and I'm like, I think we better YouTube channel. I had money that I'd saved up. And so after saving
for about a year or two, and I'm like, I think we better get out of here before it's too late.
So then we bought property out here in West Virginia, got a little tiny house somewhere,
and that's it. And then we moved out here, set up the company in this, in what is now the
Castle, which is the company's, you know, I don't live here. And that's the point. I understand.
For me, it was, it was much easier.
And I moved much sooner than most people. But I do think sooner or later, if you do nothing,
there will come a time when BLM will come up to your house. They'll be armed for some reason or
another. Maybe you'll be at work. And they're going to be, or maybe they've got an American
flag in the front of your house. They've already done this. BLM has already threatened people
because they had American flags on their houses. or later in these cities it will it will
happen you want to buy my my point to people is if you could buy a lottery ticket and if you won
the lottery on it then they would lock you not put you in prison for life like that was the prize
the chances of it happening are very very low but would you buy the ticket anybody no so the chances of blm actually showing up to your house in the immediate future right now
and destroying it is a lottery tickets chance okay over time it's slowly becoming more and more
likely we are seeing more and more of this several years on now they're putting people in prison
after blm attacked them look at the cash app founder too in san francisco exactly do you think
there was something to that because that was 2 a. Do you think there was something to that?
Because that was 2 a.m.
You think he was doing a drug deal or something?
Nope.
Right outside.
That guy must have been worth a billion dollars.
Was he walking home drunk?
What was it?
2 a.m.
Why was he outside at 2 a.m. in San Francisco?
On a weekend?
Yeah.
Everybody's out at 2 a.m. on a weekend.
Drinking?
Maybe drinking.
San Francisco was a major urban area.
Where he used to live.
I mean, he could be coming home from a friend's house.
He was going to his apartment, wasn't he?
Yeah, I think so. He was at his apartment i don't want
it wasn't a bad area yeah and his family what you don't don't take that and i don't know what
it's it's simple bro 2 a.m in new york yes 2 a.m bars close at 4 don't walk around in cities at 2
a.m guys unless you absolutely have to stick to the bright lit streets walk fast like you're the
one that's dangerous and get to your destination and think about lit streets. Walk fast. Like you're the one that's dangerous. And get to your destination.
And think about what you're saying.
360 as much as you can.
Think about what you're saying.
That's how you got to live in a city, man.
It's dog eat dog.
Or you get out because.
Or get out if you can.
It's insane.
It's beautiful out in the open.
Yeah.
It is insane that we've gotten to the point where it's like, if you go out at 2 a.m. in
a city, you might die.
Yeah, that's not how it works.
And then here's the best part.
The person who did it is going to get let go.
Yeah, you can't trust that there'll be any justification.
I think the main thing you have to be conscious of
that the water is boiling, right?
Like true, you may not lose everything today,
but do you want to be in the place most likely
to be the next epicenter of one of these riots?
Of course.
Probably not.
And it is difficult to leave, but make it a priority.
Like this is something that you maybe need to it a priority. Like, this is something
that you maybe
need to make a goal.
Let's talk about this story
from TimCast.com.
Female swimmer,
Riley Gaines,
assaulted by trans activists
while speaking on women's rights.
This is proof that women
need sex-protected spaces.
The video's crazy.
The video's absolutely nuts.
Let me play this video for you.
Is there any...
I'll just full-size it.
Is there audio or what?
There was when I saw it.
Oh, you know what the issue is?
There's a...
Oh, wait. There it is. The issue is that I have it muted.
Nope. Still no audio.
Wait. It's still muted.
There we go. And now it's on the wrong channel.
We're bad at this audio thing, you guys. Trans rights are human rights!
Trans rights are human rights!
Trans rights are human rights!
Trans rights are human rights!
Trans rights are human rights!
Trans rights are human rights!
Trans rights are human rights!
Trans rights are human rights!
Trans rights are human rights!
Trans rights are human rights!
Trans rights are human rights!
Trans rights are human rights!
Trans rights are human rights! Trans rights are human rights! Trans rights are human rights! I don't think
having been on the ground
and actually seen this stuff
I don't think people realize what it's like
when a mob forms and comes after you
it's freaking crazy
but let me explain something
here's how it's going to go down
for you in your city and comes after you. It is freaking crazy. But let me explain something. Here's how it's going to go down.
For you in your city,
you are going to be at a grocery store or something or a restaurant.
And someone's going to overhear you talking to your friend
saying something like,
yo, these BLM people are nuts.
They're going crazy.
And there's going to be some waitress
or woke person who hears you.
They're going to find out who you are.
They're going to see your name
and they're going to find out where you work.
Things like that happened 10 years ago. Things like that have happened
five years ago. One day they're going to start posting online. They're going to attack you and
your company is going to be like, I don't know what it is you did or who you talked to, but we
cannot have this heat. So we're gonna have to let you go. I don't know who you pissed off for a
while. You're going to be like, I didn't do anything. I don't know what's going on. I'm like,
well, look, man, we don't want to be involved in whatever is you believe in your ideologies don't fit this company.
They're going to go to your house. They're going to protest your house because this is what
happened in Wisconsin. Does anybody know why they went to that guy's house and protested?
He was some random local guy. Made no sense. Here's what happens. The mob. There is no
individual who decides we are going to storm into this person's house and kill
them what happens is the mob is just moving amorphously one person steps out in front everyone
steps out in one direction they go to the house and one person goes up and starts knocking on the
door as soon as that person goes on the porch it's an invitation to the rest of the mob to go on the
porch the person knocking then someone sneaks by and tries to jiggle the handle. Someone sees the handle jiggle,
and then they pop the handle and push the door open. Another person sees the door go open,
and then they stick their head in and look around. Another person sees that person start sticking
their head in and say, I guess I'll go in too. All of a sudden now, these people are walking
into your house, all being egged on by each other.
The snowflake doesn't blame itself for the avalanche. This is how I've seen all riots form.
There will be a large group of people. One guy, one Antifa guy will take a water bottle and just throw it straight up in the air. The moment that bottle comes down, then a bunch of people see the
splatter and then they start throwing things too.'re like oh people are throwing things they throw things so one step at a time one person moves an inch another
person moves an inch further and then before you know it they've kicked your door in they're
rampaging through your house they're smashing stuff and then once they go into your room one
guy wearing a mask punches you in your bed and then someone else sees it and all of a sudden
they're jumping up and down in your room stomping on things and smashing things there's kids there's videos of this i know but there's
like 14 year olds listening they're gonna be having nightmares man we got to be careful
i know it's it is true that you got to be safe you got to take care of yourself but you can
yeah get out of cities because what i just described there's actually a video of right now
where people are sitting at a restaurant and a mob of people are standing on top of the of the restaurant tables kicking the patrons in the face and stomping on them
i'm not just describing something out of the blue right i'm explaining videos that have happened
and the guy in his house when the mob showed up that mob had set fire to a different house in
wisconsin twice and so this guy brandishes a shotgun through the window and then puts it down
the police come and arrest him.
Well, I think he's just describing the nature of kind of a mob dynamic, not necessarily trying to scare 14 year olds.
But I think that this also goes on the inverse for the people that are out there in the streets that are protesting, because the gentleman in the Boogaloo Boys, I forget his name right now, but the guy that had the AK or whatever it was, if you're going to put yourself in that situation, you're also putting yourself in tremendous danger. Because if you're
a member of the mob and people are all moving towards you in a wave, well, then if someone's
armed and they fear for their lives, you don't know what might happen. And maybe that guy had
no ill intentions. Maybe as he's approaching the car, maybe he's genuinely trying to subdue or calm the situation, but you just don't know. So I agree with Tim. I think a really good litmus test is
look at the outflow population of your state from 2020 to 2021. If you had harsh lockdowns,
you probably already had a net outflow and those people are going to be the people that vote in
alignment with your belief systems. So it means that your state is now so hard blue, you're probably never going to have political power
in that state again. And this is why I fled California. Well, and then one thing that
scares me with the Riley Gaines video and how she was going to schools and trying to speak,
and then they're like, the mob was after her is the fact that how many times did we grow up hearing,
you know, the idea that, well, you know, those are because college kids have been doing this
for many decades, of course.
However, it seems like it's the intensity and the frequency is only getting worse.
However, the idea was that these kids will graduate, they'll get out into the real world, and then the real world will somehow make them normal functioning adults.
But we haven't seen that because now we've seen these kids will graduate and they will bring that with them to their workplaces.
I think the New York Times ran a piece the other year. I think it was last year, right, that millennials are now afraid or older millennials are afraid
of Gen Zers who are coming along because you might be 38, 39, thinking that you're quite
liberal and stuff yourself.
You're more liberal than your parents.
But now you don't even know what's coming.
The 23-year-old woke kid comes in and he thinks that you are a microaggressor, that you are
X, Y, Z.
And this is what Vivek Ramaswamy said when I interviewed him today for the Culture War
podcast, that a lot of people thought the, I forgot how to explain it, but the AI monster
was going to be a cyborg with laser eyes, but it's Dylan Mulvaney.
It is these young people who have been manipulated by the AI, And it's not intentional, but it's turned them into something out of sync
with human civilization, with American civilization.
These people live in a world crafted
by social media algorithms.
They are driven to do things
that they think will be perceived as popular.
They are weak-willed individuals.
And this is leading to people believing insane things, adopting insane behaviors, and engaging in extremely violent tactics.
And sometimes they end up writing code to make the AI.
Let me add one thing that is supplemental to the AI ideological takeover. August of 2011, Barack Obama included in an executive order that you would have every single federal governmental department would implement a DEI department within their institution.
So that was the beginning of the end in terms of having any and keeping in mind the federal government is the number one, the largest employer in this country. So they were really like the first shot across the bow in terms of including diversity, equity, inclusion, hiring and firing practices, which is really the woke
takeover of the business world. Naturally, because so much of the government's contracts are with
actual private industry, but they also will now include demands that they also have a DEI
department. So in a matter of about 12 years, you went from this concept being almost unheard of
to being everywhere.
Is it that the government is not,
I assume they can't make private companies
start up a department,
but are they just saying we're not going to give you funding?
Not so actually,
because you can include as a requirement
in your government contracts
that you will only do business with,
just like the the uh
i think it was the osha vaccine mandate they were saying if you are doing business with a government
uh contractor well they're going to have to have the mandate as well because that's where the
money's coming from it's taxpayer money so they can still put the same sort of requirements it's
not forced but it's saying we won't do business with you if you don't have this they can't
literally storm your offices and demand this one be the di room but they can't say it's saying we won't do business with you if you don't have this. They can't literally storm your offices and demand this one be the DEI room, but they can't say we won't give you money and therefore you can't operate, you can't pay your employees, you'll close down.
If we are the main source of income, we are your biggest client, then you're stuck.
Very coercive.
That's a really great point that you bring up because on my show I had a firearms expert kind of guest.
And so he would be able to explain this better than I can. I'll try and like re-emphasize or kind of boil down what he was saying. He's from
Ammoland, John Crump. So, you know, shout out to John Crump. But he was saying with one of Biden's
recent executive orders mid-March, how the idea was because the DOD, I think it is because they
work so much with firearms manufacturers, that to put the squeeze on regular, you know, law-abiding
citizens who want to buy guns, they'll tell, you know, the squeeze on regular law-abiding citizens who
want to buy guns, they'll tell the gun manufacturer, well, if you want our contract and look how much
money we can give you, well, then you can't sell X, Y, Z firearms or accessories to civilians.
And that's how they get you. So I think it's kind of similar to what you were saying.
It's social emotional learning is taking over academia and the education system.
Diversity, equity, inclusion is taking over corporate America, as well as obviously governmental departments. And then you have ESG,
which is taking over the highest levels of finance. Those are the three evil acronyms
that are taking over everything you spoke to Vivek today. I'm sure he would agree.
Do you think that the market will correct itself?
It's very tough because what you're competing with is a printing press-backed mechanism.
You have access to not just the law setting,
but the setting of interest rates plus the setting of monetary supply.
I mean, that's a huge lever.
It sounds like a centrally planned economy.
It sounds like CCP.
No, no, no, no.
Let me explain it for you guys.
This is the dawning of the age of Aquarius.
This is the new religion that will seek to subvert Christianity.
It is the religion of the water bearer.
I remember reading about this and watching documentaries back in the day about how first it was the age of the ram.
If you guys have seen Zeitgeist, you'll know what I'm talking about.
And that's why the Jews would blow the ram horn, the ram's horn. And then Christianity was the age of Pisces,
which is why they use the symbol of the fish. I'm not saying that's true, but that's what was said.
And then the question was, what would be the new religion to supplant and subvert Christianity?
The religion of the age of Aquarius. Well, as we enter the age of Aquarius, we have a new religion.
In this tweet, David Rosado explains,
the great awokening is a global phenomenon. No evidence it started in the US media. Analysis of
98 million news articles across 36 countries quantifies, exception, state-controlled media
from China, Russia, Iran using wokeness terminology to criticize and mock the West.
And here we see, in this image, you can see the rise of terminologies
related to transphobia, homophobia,
transphobic, Islamophobia.
Every one of these countries,
even the Congo, experienced a major spike
in social justice rhetoric.
The one thing that correlates social media.
Simply put, when the AI is created and shared, it functions to serve human emotion
and anger gets the most shares. So treating people like victims to get them angry,
got content to be shared. The human experience, similar. All of these countries started to realize
this is what makes us money.
The human being who wrote the article about Trump being Hitler did not think they were doing anything wrong.
But what happens is 100 writers each write 100 stories, put them on the Internet, and then the algorithm says, yeah, the one where Trump is Hitler.
That guy gets a million hits, makes a bunch of money and then
everyone says that's what we should write here we are welcome to the new religion and it's true
because it gets picked up it's kind of like there's always a language of power throughout all
time there's the language that everyone kind of speaks back in the day it was actual is like the
lingua franca other you know the heads of state of england wanting to speak to the heads of state
of spain if they couldn't speak intellectually between English or Spanish, they would use French as the intermediary.
Latin was that at one point. Nowadays, it's speaking the language of power, speaking the,
however you want to phrase it, wokeism, social justice, whatever you want to call it.
And that is, for example, what was it, like Guatemala or something, a nation where to get
like $20,000 in a state grant from the US State Department, they had to accept, I think some of the money had to be used for
like drag queen shows.
And in a country that's more conservative, like Guatemala, it's like, well, why would
they need that?
It's because if they can speak the language, then the state is going to, and the state
meaning the US in this case, will reward them greatly in a similar way that there used to
be actual fashion crimes.
Remember, we kind of joke about that, but that was like a thing, you know, the nouveau
riche of the 1800s versus the, like the old money families, and how could they tell each
other part? Oh, you don't know how to dress, you didn't wear the new fashion for the spring. It
sounds kind of silly, right? But you see that in today, like the Zuckerberg types, they'll kind of
dress down, they don't want to be as flashy with their clothes and stuff. Because again, it's
signaling, I'm on a different level, I may be rich, you may be rich, but I'm a different level than
you. So the money of philanthropy, where you can kind of remake the world in your own image, and i'm on a different level i may be rich you may be rich but i'm a different level than you so the
money of philanthropy where you can kind of remake the world in your own image and you can you kind
of use your charity as like an investment basically it's not like they're giving away
their money now they're poor it kind of comes back to help them but again it's speaking the
language of power and as you were saying tim earlier like this is kind of like this has proven
to be successful so this is the language of power other countries countries around the world, if they want that US money,
they want that US backing,
they don't want a color revolution in their country.
They're going to speak that language.
Even if their populace is like,
we don't want this,
but they're going to speak that language
and they're going to push it saying,
you better speak it or Uncle Sam's coming.
That is such a profound point.
And if you have ever watched any of the pressers
that come out of the World Economic Forum
and you see all of the richest people on the planet.
And they get up there and they talk about how they're all concerned about the poor.
And I'm like, you're not, though.
You're not.
But they use that language.
That is such a great analysis.
I'd never even considered it.
That is really the language mechanism that traverses language barriers now.
Because if you're talking about equity and inclusion, well, then you're just just one of us other big groups that have a lot of money a lot back
and we'll go oh that guy need to get in contact with him he's in the same wavelength and the
world bank and the imf backs wef in this entire it's insane new religion yeah it's the new religion
yeah the age of aquarius when does it begin well it depends on who you ask. March 20th, 2021.
I thought it was 2250.
2160. Some people say it begins.
But it depends on you. Some people have speculated that
we're in it right now.
Or that we're in the cusp between.
So we're watching the emergence of...
Basically, the Catholic Church has done a lot
of good in history, but it's also done some bad.
I think the pedophilia that came out of that in the
90s and stuff annihilated people's love for christianity there's a new report uh i think
it was out of maryland about a scandal going back to the 60s so all that stuff is bad and it crushed
the old religion it soured it and now people do need something to believe in it's it's but but
this is not what's causing what we're seeing here it's created the void here's here's the scary
thing this is you said the dawn of the age of aquarius
is 2160 this when i pulled it up it says 2021 so already that we're in it i had heard in 2012 that
it was coming up in like 2150 or something it may be and what is it like every 2500 years is
every 20 2160 years on 2160 so about this. At the beginning of the age,
it wouldn't immediately be
that everyone is indoctrinated
into a new religion.
It would be that several hundred years
into that era,
the new religion dominates.
So this could be,
as we watch Christianity
start to diminish
and this new psychotic cult
take power,
100, 200 years,
this could be the dominating that is so dark
that's what happens and i think perhaps why so because i'm a devout catholic i'll just have to
stand up for my church and say that actually pedophilia obviously it happens anywhere and
everywhere unfortunately and so actually it was a lot less that happened in the church than happens
and say the teaching profession or others the church is actually has again so it happened on a smaller scale than people say it just you know well the mistake culturally people
go oh the church but on a on a greater thing um so talking about like the you know different ages
or whatever i think one thing is what's happened in this nation has happened uh in a way that has
happened in okay maybe let's rephrase this so what's happening in
our nation because of some of the market forces because of liberalism and other things have eroded
the networks that bind people and make people know who they are what do you hear today from
all the disaffected mobs the people who will come up and want to you know scream and yell and you
know threaten you and stuff these are people who don't know who they are and you hear that a lot
but you go back 200 years people knew who they were you know who they are. And you hear that a lot, but you go back 200 years, people knew who they were.
You know, who are you?
Son of John.
I'm a farmer.
I'm this, I'm that.
They knew exactly who they were.
I'm a Catholic.
I'm a Presbyterian.
I'm a this, this, or that.
Nowadays, people don't know who they are because people are atomized.
People are lonely.
And so people, again, liberalism market forces has snipped family ties, community ties, religious ties, all the ties that bind.
And so people
are lonely. They're atomized in cities. They're a lot more easily emotional. They're easier to
lead to riot, to do other things because they're more emotional. They don't have a family that they
need to keep their name good for, reputations for, because everyone's kind of on their own.
So if you ruin your own name, well, it doesn't matter for your brother or someone else. You're
kind of all your own individuals. That's something the USSR and other nations, totalitarian states, did
purposefully. We kind of got here accidentally. That's what I was trying to say earlier when I
forgot my words. They did that intentionally where they had the state come in and they snipped those
ties. They destroyed ethnic groups that were very strong on religion, very strong on family ties.
They would deport them, move them, do whatever. And then, again, go after
church, make it subservient to the state or just shut it down in general. And then on and on,
because they're getting people out of the peasant areas, because that's where tradition usually
survives longest. And they were pushing people into the cities. You saw China do this even through
like the 80s and 90s, when they were on the come up before they pushed Japan out to become the
world's second largest economy. Again, and again, you saw that again, those totalitarian regimes, they were doing that purposefully, because they don't want they want Japan out to become the world's second largest economy. Again and again, you saw that.
Again, those totalitarian regimes, they were doing that purposefully because they want
you listening to the state first and foremost and not to your family, to your pastor, whoever.
Forgive me, but-
We got here accidentally.
I don't agree it was accidental.
Okay.
Oh, well, yeah, okay.
I get that.
Give me your theory as to how it happened.
Well, I mean, it could be accidental in the sense that there was just a bunch of policies that were completely ill-conceived and moronic, maybe.
Or it could be that, you know, you had the war on drugs and you broke the black family and you create all sorts of discord that happens there.
Then you have obviously the militarism that has persisted throughout my entire adult life and far longer than that.
I think that ultimately those things alone will kind of unmoor a society.
It starts to degrade the culture, the underlying culture, the ties that bind.
Then you have obviously the, not the advent, but the popularity that came
in the atheist movement over the past 20 years, I think was really interesting.
And keeping in mind, I'm not a religious person, but I think that it's quite evident in hindsight that there is a major
price to be paid when you have people that give up on religion and they make the state their God.
And that is what I see being very pervasive amongst the young people.
I think saying, bringing up social media and how that's also atomizing things is very true. I got got up this morning pretty early and i logged on to steam to play some video games and when i
did my dad logged on to play some video games and i was like my dad's here and we didn't talk didn't
message nothing i just saw his name and i felt his presence but it wasn't like i was calling him on
the phone there was no communication superficial connection i think that's one of the strange part
of our modern world
instead of you're absolutely right uh going to church seeing your family living near them being
connected in a really authentic way where you can communicate with them you know intimately kind of
how they're living their lives what they're thinking about what their concerns are you get
updates on social media oh this person got engaged oh this person's moving houses and it
again we're tuned to have this dissatisfaction culture where
it's like why am i not getting those things why am i not in those relationships how can i solve
things who's at fault for that why don't i have what i want in life i think part of it is that
we don't have a unifying national culture and we struggle as a nation because the geographic size
and the complexity of our makeup to to have that and I think it became easier to pull people apart
than to bring them together.
I think that the unifying culture that we once had
was one of bootstrapping it, entrepreneurialism,
I will find a way through.
And now, unfortunately, because of public education,
in my humble opinion,
you now have the youngest generation
that believes that they are oppressed structurally,
not just because of race and sexism and all this other stuff but also because of capitalism they all
believe that capitalism is evil not all but a huge percentage do i think that once you have broken
that cultural tie one of like i'm going to find a way to make it that like that's what the land of
the free the opportunity all this stuff that's what we used to migrate here for that's what my great-grandfather came here for and now you don't
hear that talked about very much from the people that are born here this is why i think elon musk
buying twitter was so important because i believe that what we're seeing is just a a i i would say
it's probably more accidental that when twitter was created, it was the free speech wing of the free speech party.
But when they implement these algorithms to maximize profits, they turned a generation of people around the world into psychotic, deranged individuals.
So short, so short sighted, though, because, I mean, culturally and not just culturally, but economically, civilizationally. Like you're really playing with fire
by feeding into these algorithmic-
But no one feels an obligation to that.
No one feels like
if you're at the tech entrepreneur
and you could make a billion dollars
in a decade,
that's what your priority is.
That seems like forever.
You don't think about the global-
And where's Jack Dorsey?
I have no idea.
I've grown his beard.
We don't do it at Mines.
And what happened to his friend?
See, this is what really bothers me,
is that story in SF is sad
because here's a guy who was leaving San Francisco
saying the crime is getting out of control.
We got to go.
It's his buddies that did this.
It was Jack Dorsey, Mark Zuckerberg,
Susan Wojcicki, I don't know her name.
These people were just like, we must maximize profits.
So I got to be honest, the criticism of capitalism, I can get to a certain degree.
These big corporations were basically saying, create a social media algorithm, write me
code.
And I wanted to do one thing.
I wanted to reduce things that cost us money and increase things that make us money. And because big brand advertisers are terrified of leftist activists, you were more likely
to see if Coca-Cola was emailed by the far left, you're offensive.
Then they'd be like, okay, stop that campaign.
YouTube, Twitter, Facebook says we're losing money.
What's going on?
Well, the activists are mad, but conservatives wouldn't boycott.
Conservatives don't protest.
So these companies have nothing to worry about.
Even right now with the Anheuser-Busch boycott, you still have a lot of conservatives being like, oh, it's stupid.
I don't care.
Okay.
So Anheuser-Busch is looking at it.
What happened?
Nike doubled down in defense of Dylan Mulvaney because they do not feel the economic repercussions from conservatives.
I got to make the defense of capitalism argument as an ANCAP.
ESG, I'm wearing the shirt.
Environmental social governance.
This is exactly how the government is dictating diversity, equity, and inclusion practices
in these businesses, in their marketing schemes.
This is not an organic thing entirely.
Tim is absolutely right.
The algorithms, the social media world, the youth movement, all that's true.
But it wouldn't be this bad.
You wouldn't have so many companies that were insulting their customer base if it wasn't a financial imperative on the back end because BlackRock, State Street, Vanguard are functioning under ESGg protocols which dictate that they will only invest
in these companies no that's true i know but you got it backwards esg emerged from this not the
other way around social media companies like i said jack dorsey said we're the free speech
free speech party so where did esg come from esg 2005 united nations right so when these algorithms
get implemented this is the point i made to I can't remember who we were talking about when it came to academia.
I think I was telling Phil Labonte this as well.
ESG and other ideologies, how many, let me ask you basically, how many ideologies exist?
Right, exactly.
It's ridiculous.
There's so many.
Why is it that only these are prominent today? today a vehicle was built by which they could be pushed onto the masses globally and it just so
happened that what fit those holes was the likes of esg correct there's a bunch of other ideologies
that could have been hey how about white nationalism oh nope jack dorsey banned that stuff
in like 2015 and 16 they were like we're getting a lot of flack from activists. We are getting attacked by the corporate press.
Shut this part down.
Yeah.
And then you could not monetize that content.
It could not exist and it would not be influential.
So nobody went near it.
What happens is people like Jack Dorsey at one point says, I'm all about free speech.
Then he has a board and investors say, we're not making money here. And he goes, it was, it was, it was not an instant thing that what happened that slowly
changed at Twitter was they would get a bunch of far left activists who would attack them.
And they would say, Hey, look, we're getting attacked a lot for this stuff. People are
quitting. The far left is much more likely to boycott protest or quit than the right is.
So the economic pressure is just right there. boycott protest or quit than the right is so
the economic pressure is just right there there have been a bunch of economic ideologies climate
change for instance has not had as easy of a time as esg it's funny right climate change has been
around for a long time with with al gore and it's struggled to get a foothold why because social
media doesn't care there's no monetary incentive to ban someone who doesn't care about climate change.
But the ESG stuff overlaps with bigotry, homophobia, etc.
So when someone says something naughty or racist, everybody says, okay, whoa, whoa, whoa, hold on there, guys.
Everybody basically agreed we don't want to see that stuff.
It gets taken to an extreme degree.
The far left throws a firebomb and complains.
And all the corporations say, I don't want to
piss these lunatics off. Please don't associate me with those, with that kind of content.
Twitter then says, don't worry, we'll down rank. This is literally what happened. YouTube said,
we will down rank all of that content. So people don't see it and flag it for demonetization.
Please don't leave. There was no inverse pressure from the right to support and
push for things they did like and to oppose the far left. So what happens? Man, I remember back
when they were doing these weird videos showing kids sex toys, and this is like 2013, 2014. It's
like during Gamergate. That stuff was all happening. Conservatives did not have that as a
core platform. Conservatives have been behind on this the entire time.
Simple example, ActBlue and WinRed.
The Democrats have had an online digital fundraising platform, ActBlue,
and it took the Republicans like three or four years to figure it out and make their own.
That's how far behind they were.
Well, there's two reasons in my estimation.
One, the conservatives allow the progressives to raise their children.
So how do you happen?
How are you going to compete with activism when you don't have kids that actually share
your values?
I think you're automatically at a dead end in that regard.
Sorry, go ahead.
Oh, no.
Oh, no, sorry.
I was just thinking through a few things as you were talking about it.
It is interesting that a lot of people say, start out saying, I'm free speech or I'm this or that, and then they find themselves on the opposite end of it.
I wonder if there's something psychologically, because I've noticed with some people, I think maybe this is just something all humans deal with, like your own internal biases, is that you feel like at heart you're a good person, right?
Everyone kind of feels that about themselves.
Like my motivations are pure, I'm good.
So I could never be that which I abhor even when you become that monster you know so i wonder if there's kind of
that where some of these people go well i do still believe in free speech but you're banning
conservatives you're banning this or that well no exactly and it's like this weird switch that it's
like kind of like almost a wall that comes down that almost people don't realize it's like this
weird idea that i can never be that monster that i went out to slay. I think there's a hierarchy of what they believe is justified, right?
Like free speech can be sacrificed at the expense of this person's feelings or shielding someone from this.
Like there are times when you're allowed to compromise certain values.
And for other people, you know, free speech is at the top number one.
You wouldn't sacrifice it for anything.
I saw this tweet about the Great Awakening.
Matt Iglesias, one of the founders of vox.com said
unpleasant chart it contradicts my my theories and my presumptions matthew iglesias had previously
said that the rise of wokeness was due to the fact that gen z was paying attention and that as they
were reading the news and getting exposed to the stories they were then putting it at the forefront
of their minds and then he explained something like i I think it was quoting Ocasio-Cortez,
that Gen Z is depressed because they know reality.
And that's actually not true.
The reality is they're in a fake reality.
Yes, and this feeds into it.
Yep, they're being fed a feedback loop
of psychotic algorithmic content.
I agree.
It is making them insane and violent.
You have to, it can't be just
the algorithm though because this this concept wouldn't have been viable to me as a child neither
would have white supremacy or white nationalism correct but it was banned so that's not in your
you're not wearing a shirt saying white supremacy is evil no but that's kind of given if right but
here's the thing what if twitter was promoting outright white supremacists and neo-Nazis?
You would be wearing that shirt being like, what is going on in this country with the right?
Why does this happen?
Certain ideologies were outright eliminated from the conversation.
And it was because advertisers found one to be socially acceptable.
And it's a combination of reasons.
As I mentioned, before social media, most people in this country were like, dude, I don't like racism.
Like, we had gotten past that.
Yeah.
So any attack on something as racist would cause panic among someone who didn't want to be called a racist.
This meant the far left could accuse you of being a white supremacist for no reason.
It went to absurdity.
Larry Elder is the black face of white supremacy
because they use something like that to convince us to adhere to it so a an advertiser that sells
vitamins all of a sudden they're getting attacked saying you sponsored a white supremacist and they
go i had no idea in their mind they're thinking the clan but the left is lying and they're saying
conservative but these brands don't know anything about politics. And they say, I had no idea we did this. You guys, you got to apologize.
Vivek Ramaswamy mentioned that his moment when he came into the culture war was he's running
this pharmaceutical company, Black Lives Matter riots happen, and he gets asked to give a
statement. And so he was like, sure, I guess. And so he makes a statement like, you know,
this is, you know, it's horrible to see these kinds of things happen. Let's come together as
a country and trying to find a way through this. And then he was like, the next thing I know,
they're saying it wasn't strong enough. It didn't meet the moment. And then six advisors resigned
from his company. He's like, what is happening? Because he didn't get to his knees and screamed
the high heavens. That's what the left has been doing, selectively manipulating.
And then you get people who are scared of them to fall in line.
But simply put, there are a hundred different ideologies, like Ron Paul.
The Ron Paul libertarian ideology was massive.
And then what happened?
Well, the reason it was massive, it's genuinely a good idea.
The libertarians had a lot of great ideas.
You may disagree with me, so I'll leave you alone.
Hey, that really works for me.
That's what I liked about Ron Paul.
So in 2007, 2008, the internet was flush with this stuff.
The Ron Paul love revolution.
I like to mention mike.com.
Went woke.
Originally started as more libertarian, know ron paul like but the algorithms were that
were the things that were getting the most clicks were playing into social justice narratives so
these these media companies just outright said whatever makes us money baby i got i got to
connect these dots because the it's so you're absolutely right and the timing is so perfect
because you have the 0809 great recession you have the bailouts that come with that you have the 08-09 Great Recession. You have the bailouts that come with that. You
have the end the Fed chants that are happening with Ron Paul in 2008. And then all of a sudden,
out of nowhere, Klaus Schwab identifies this ESG concept, this anthropogenic global warming concept,
this wokeness concept, this inclusion concept. And it's just perfect timing. They flip all of
the animosity that's going towards the banks and they put it right back on to but that you're being oppressed by race yeah i know but still the time i mean
it's still it's still a redirect from the anger that came from the federal reserve's policies in
0809 i think that's exactly what happened i do i i only somewhat agree in that they used wokeness
to try and stop occupy wall street and subvert protests. But I think when you see a company like Mike.com make the conscious decision
to maximize on far left ideology instead of Ron Paul libertarian ideology, it was all economic.
I know I learned this from an employee. I was actually hanging out. It was World Trade Center.
It was One Freedom Plaza. And I'm hanging out with someone who worked there explaining to me
how they went through that process. And I'm like, damn. But don't you think that given the political
environment of where big tech lives, that they could, and not to mention the Twitter leaks and
what we now know about the intervention from the federal government in terms of censorship
protocols, in terms of service protocols, could it not have been dictated by the government to take it down this path i don't know so it's been 10 years we get the start of this shift through social media algorithms
around 2008 with with facebook what happened was you on average people a person would have 300
friends and page likes combined and that meant your news feed would move fairly quickly eventually
people couldn't see anything and facebook was like, if they're not seeing their core friends, they're not sticking around.
We need an algorithm that shows them things they're more likely to interact with.
So they made it.
This resulted in people being inundated with videos of police brutality, videos of black men being beaten by cops.
It created a massive wave of people who are anti-establishment, anti-police.
In the beginning, though, you got a lot of libertarians.
People were like, screw the police.
These people are bad.
Yeah, that's why I was there.
But also, you had distrust in government,
so you ended up with Ron Paul as sort of the avatar for this.
That was the first iteration.
But as the algorithms became more and more pronounced,
as more people got onto social media,
the things that would make the most money
were stories about first police brutality.
Tie in some racism to it.
The article gets 10 times as many views.
Interesting.
It's actually like, um, who was, who was Vivek was telling me this, this morning, he said
when he asked me if I ever went whitewater rafting and I was like, yes.
And he goes, okay, how do you get a class five rapid?
When two streams come together of equal force, you don't get a two times stream.
You get a 10 times an
exponential boost. So when someone wrote an article about police brutality, people would be like, oh,
but if they wrote about racist police brutality, it would be massively exponentially increased in
terms of viewership. And I'll tell you why the algorithm is programmed so that if there is an
article that within the first 10 minutes, it received 100 views, the algorithm
would say, show this to a thousand more people.
If it gets a hundred views in the next five minutes among those thousand, show it to 10,000.
Right.
If the next five minutes it gets a thousand, show it to 10,000 more.
That's the exponential growth train of how these algorithms were basically working.
Right.
Here's what happens.
A video, an article about police brutality is shown to 100 people
and 10 people do click it it goes viral an article about racism is shown to 100 people
it goes viral but an article about racism and police brutality hits 20 people in the first
minute two times so what happens then is the algorithm exponentially increases the blast off of this. It then says,
whoa, whoa, whoa, how many did we get in the first 10 minutes? A thousand? Whoa, this must be a good
article. Show it to 100,000 people right now. And if 10,000 people click on it, and then it would,
and then this one article would get sent to 10 million people in one hour. So that was an
exponential burst. This led to the rise of intersectionality.
Feminism.
First, it was feminism.
It was women's rights.
And then the question became, how is it that we talk about police brutality, racism, and feminism,
but now in 2012, 2013, we're talking about intersectional feminism.
Because an article that contained sexism, feminism, and police brutality
would get 100-fold as many views. So everyone's talking about wokeness. Everyone's talking about
ESG. But what I keep always remind people is this didn't start there. You can actually watch the
progression of the ideology and how it was formed. It wasn't like Klaus Schwab drafted this letter,
submitted it to these companies, and then all of a sudden, from 2008 to 2010, ESG existed.
And we were talking about wokeness and critical race theory.
No, no, no, no.
It started with police brutality.
Everyone was in favor of Ron Paul.
Then these companies started to shift and become woke.
We introduced racism into the mix.
Then we had Gamergate, video games, misogyny in games.
You get feminism, Anita Sarkeesian, etc.
Eventually, you get into the era of critical race theory.
Right.
Now, critical race theory has graduated to critical gender theory and in general, wokeness.
You can actually watch the track that social media has created this amorphous zombie horde.
It's very interesting.
But the timing, it just continues to give me pause because 0405 is literally when the United Nations writes up their first
conceptual idea of ESG.
And by 2010-11, the World Economic Forum has already made it like their focal point.
And then you're absolutely right, though.
It doesn't really take over corporate America or the global corporate environment until
2018.
I think that's a confirmation bias because what you're not talking about is any other
corporate plan or ideology introduced by global elites except for that one and it's because it's the one you know well it's also the
one that's the most evil but yeah they're all there was also talk about doing uh block currencies
i remember alex jones talked about this 20 years ago a north american currency this is before the
euro and then the euro happened the amero and there was big talk about an economic plan but
often what happens is they'll float an idea and if if it doesn't go anywhere, it just fizzles.
In fact, we have a chance.
That's how everything happens.
We have a chance to fizzle CBDC right now, Central Bank.
Yeah, that thing's crap.
So anyway.
They're going to backdoor that.
The Amero conversation is interesting, right?
We're not talking about the Amero anymore.
No.
It was the idea was that there would be Canada, the US, and Mexico sharing one currency.
I remember Alex Jones talked about it a whole lot.
Never happened. Never happened.
Never happened.
Why?
Just there's a lot of ideas they flooded that never took off.
Yeah.
A lot of conversations that happened that are going anywhere.
The advent of central bank digital currencies and Bitcoin and blockchain technology, I think,
kind of forces them to regroup and come up with a new scheme, which will probably be the CBDC.
But Bitcoin didn't matter until, what, 2014?
Yeah, but when were they
talking about the amero 2000 2002 2003 right so so why did my point is just this why didn't that
why why aren't we sitting here complaining about the attempt to implement a north american currency
but you are wearing a shirt about esg a bunch of ideas were presented some of them persisted
that's it i don't think it's that they were like, in 20 years, this will be the plan.
Although it might have only because the Twitter files are pretty eye opening.
And we see that the FBI has been in there telling them what to do.
Maybe a decade ago, they were also like, we don't.
That's my concern is, do we know that these like Tim saying that it just became more viral
and more profitable. I'm saying, couldn't you if you had control of the algorithm setting, couldn't you make anything go viral, essentially?
So the so the so the issue on your network, right?
You would have to believe that these people came up with a plan for ESG in 2005.
And then the other people came up with other ideas.
Just they were dummy ideas.
They were proxy ideas meant to confuse and distract us.
And then once the social media companies existed, they planted people within those companies not to implement their plans right away, but to only implement the first page of their 100-page plan through the idea of feminism.
Then they'd have to write an algorithm that would guarantee the promotion of racism and police brutality, but not at the same time. But my point is this, I watched all
this. We have the data showing the rise in this terminology over years and the hockey sticks and
the spikes. I'm going the opposite direction though. I'm saying, I'm saying what if they
already have this, this playbook and then they're looking at what is fertile ground here. We have a
whole bunch of kids that have been raised in the
public school system to be very anti-racist, very progressive in nature. We're going to formulate
our protocols for power accumulation using what we will think will already work on this population.
That makes sense to me. Sure. But what makes more sense in my opinion is there's let's let's let's say there's a guy named schwaus club
and he believes in hardcore laissez-faire capitalism he sounds awesome and right now
he's sitting in his in his lair in schwitzerland going it is a shame that our plan didn't work
no and the other elitist psychopaths we're not discussing because they didn't make it. Yeah. What I think is more likely is of the 10 psychopaths that were, you know, Plinko?
Yeah.
You drop the little thing and there's little pegs and it goes, and you're hoping it goes
in the middle where the $1 million is.
You put 10 psychotic global elite, you know, millionaires and billionaires, you drop them
and their pegs bounce around and then one of them lands right in the middle.
And that's Klaus Schwab.
And then we're going, here's his plan.
Here's how he did it.
And I'm like, no,
there were a bunch of other people
trying to do a bunch of things.
They just didn't fit the mold.
You know what's wild about this,
this thing you pulled up,
this diagram here,
is that look at Cuba.
Cuba's the communist place.
It's the one that in 2000
was extremely high up on the,
all the other ones started low
and became talking about racism and
sexism but it was already happening in cuba and then it dipped but look 2005 after the war in
iraq but look at iran iran had spikes and a stable medium rate of this of these conversations
look at malaysia there was actually a spike early in the 2000s it dipped a little bit spiked again
there are some countries south africa had a huge spike in south africa was started off very it
started off high similar to cuba not as high as cuba but cuba was all the way at the top and south
africa is going through apartheid here's what here's what i here's what i do think your observation
tells us we are all heading towards communism i completely agree it seems like a communist tactic for sure and my other social media has adopted it probably unwittingly through their
algorithmic manipulation i would believe what's more likely is that as these things started to
emerge communists noticed and then exploited it to an extreme degree yeah they gotta be
but but it's it's the people keep this falls in line with what I talk about with wokeness, when
people are like, wokeness is these leftist theories that emerge.
And it's like, no, no, no, no.
Go and talk to a woke person.
And I think the reason I differ from many of these, you know, conservative independent
thinkers about what wokeness is, is because I was at Occupy Wall Street, is because I
spent a decade on the ground with these people.
And I've found that they don't believe anything.
They like, yeah, Ukraine war. And I'm like like what does that have to do with the frankfurt school nothing right it's a cult that's it that's why i think i think what you're talking about with
like the kind of internal momentum of the algorithm and stuff but also it has there
has to be fertile ground there as well for why these you know racism and other buzzwords were
catching on the same way that they were and then kind of like creating almost a death spiral, because then like more and more,
it was kind of coalescing, as I think, in some ways, and also maybe why some of these other
nations sometimes kind of use the talking points, is because it speaks to a real pain that I think
people feel a lot of people are economically insecure, a lot of people do feel like the
state is rigged against them. And again, those are quite real concerns. And then as you said,
but the state doesn't want a solution to say like a Ron Paul or an adjacent type view,
because then that takes away from their power. So they're going to boost up these other, you know,
again, whatever you want to call them, the different, you know, like woke is and whatever
you want to call it, because it kind of funnels back to, well, the state is good, and the state
will protect you from XYZ, these threats that we've, you know, identified, and we will fix this
problem together. so i i
wonder if that may be why because again i think because what also gets boosted is the typical
republican right and you know i don't know where i am right now i feel like i'm in a weird place
ideologically um i'm very conservative in my beliefs come to the catholic side but i find
myself i love a lot of libertarians scott horton you know the rest are good friends i really love
them i like a lot of their critiques and stuff. And what it kind of opened my eyes to was, it was one thing when I was 16 years old in
my high school Republican class, right? You know, we had our little high school group and stuff,
and it's pick yourself up by the bootstraps. Come on, kid, get out there, work. My dad used to,
my grandpa used to, all that kind of thing. Well, then I get out into the real world and I'm like,
wow, this sucks. Everything is rigged against you tough you try and get a job when you're this happened to me when I was 18 19 20 could not get a job
at even McDonald's Panda Express nothing was taking me and I'm like I'm not dumb hopefully
I'm not you know a bad kid I don't have any grade issues there's nothing so why am I not being hired
and I'm not getting hired but 16 year olds could get hired at some of the jobs I was applying to
and sometimes they tell you well you know um we will actually something my friend told me because she was also having similar issues that at that time, California was raising minimum wage.
And so they were saying, well, they're going to pay you more.
They're going to want someone who maybe has spouse kids or has more work experience than you.
And I'm like, even in low-level jobs?
And she's like, well, yeah.
And so I kind of started to realize like, wow, I can't get my foot in the door anywhere.
Everyone's everywhere is telling me, well, you're going to be like a grocery bag or you
need five years experience.
Like I know hyperbole there, but that was kind of the idea.
I'm like, well, how can I get experience if no one's giving me that first job?
And so then I realized, well, then if that's how that is, how am I going to get an apartment?
And then how come apartments where I live are like two plus grand?
It's not what my mom and dad pay for mortgage.
Wait a second.
Then how am I going to save up money for a house?
They're five, six, seven, $800,000. And then I realized like, oh,
normal Republican, our talking points are not meeting people where they're at whatsoever.
People are dealing with real issues and they're not feeling heard. A lot of young kids grew up
hearing, and I felt this too, a lot of Republicans hear this too, saying, you got to go to college,
you got to go to the best university or your life is over. Teachers would pound that into you.
Your coaches would tell that to you. So you finally do it. You go to university to college you got to go to the best university your life is over teachers would pound that into you your your coaches would tell that to you so you finally do it you go to university
now you're in a lot of debt you can't get a job for the reasons i mentioned earlier you're making
30 grand a year you don't know where you're maybe rooming with three or four people because you
can't make rent and then you have people telling you oh you went to college and you took out that
loan you dummy yeah look at you and then you feel like you're just being yelled at by the same people
who told you to go down that life path so i'm a conservative but i kind of like the specific
strain i am i don't know because i want to meet people where they are because that's why so many
kids are going off on these left because at least they feel heard and like you're right tim a lot
of them they don't have like um a strong ideological position as to why they just
hurt a lot of what are what do we deal with with young people suicide is extremely high drug overdoses a lot of kids are doing escapism because they
don't know they just grew up hearing you know everything's evil you know if you get married
have kids get a job you're only working for the man and then kids who actually do want to do that
they find it's very hard to do this they kind of feel like wow i don't know i'm tugged in both
directions and then this is the only side that it seems like they're listening to my pain at least.
So I'll just mold myself to whatever they're saying.
But the problem is that they're prescribing more poison to alleviate what is already damaging
them.
So I agree with you, though.
It doesn't reach them because they have gone through 12 plus years of indoctrination into
this ideology.
So if you just go, well, in truth,
it's actually the minimum wage. It's the reason that you weren't able to get a job. And now
that's why you went to college. You took on all the student loan and it's actually all a product
of the government. But then you have a guy who's running for president who's like, I'm going to
get rid of that student loan and you're not the problem here. They're like, well, that sounds
awesome. I couldn't tell you how many people, because I did go to university, who were like,
Bernie Sanders sounds great. Free college. Like that would be a great idea. This is the worst. I'm going to graduate with debt. I think you're completely right that people, I love a lot of the ideology that comes with being conservative. I think working hard and being self-reliant are honorable skills. But what does that look like when you're 18 and you have no work experience or don't have a lot of work experience and no one will hire you? I think it's easy to become discouraged because that's the best
thing about being young. You are incredibly hopeful and optimistic and you just want to go
and do all the things. But if you can't move out of your parents' house and gain independence
because you are financially strapped from the beginning, it becomes sort of difficult to look
at that person saying like, well, just try harder,
keep working and be like, are you kidding? Yeah, you do have to work. This is a big part of it is
you need to work 12 hours a day to succeed in this life, especially now you need to be the one that's
there first, or at least that you're willing to spend 12 hours doing what you love five days a
week. And you know what, what he was just talking about with the algorithm?
It's like that eight hours,
that's the baseline that everyone else is putting in.
Well, you double it and then it actually creates
an exponential growth curve once again.
And if you can do that earlier,
then that curve has a chance to arc
even more exponential as you get older.
So like I did the same thing in my 20s
and because of that,
I was able to retire at 37 years old.
Like most of my friends were not willing to make those sacrifices. So if you can actually view it
that way, like where if you just make it a little bit better, if you do 10% more or 20% more when
you're younger, that exponential growth curve actually works in your bank. And then what you
do, it's really simple. You, in 2010, buy Bitcoin. Well, that helps too.
Buy a few thousand of them and then just forget.
And then 10 years later, you're a billionaire.
Investment is certainly part of it because it's the same way.
You work more, you make a little bit more than everyone else.
The investments start to compound on themselves.
I think you have to make choices that don't sound glamorous in today's day and age.
Like, it sounds more fun to live in the city and get to do whatever and spend all your money.
But like, is it more financially prudent
to live somewhere that's more expensive
or less expensive so you can save money
to eventually buy property?
I think it's difficult in indulgence culture,
which is what I completely believe we're in right now,
to say, look, you have to make a decision
for your long-term.
We live in a now culture.
I want satisfaction right now.
I don't want to have to say no to something
knowing eventually it will lead off. Like you're saying're saying like you had to put in extra work when
you're young but i don't want you because i want to go off and do this other thing and the reason
kids won't is because they have so much hopelessness that it's like i would rather
because i'm going to be battling this battle forever well then let me enjoy now you know but
i didn't feel that way when i was a kid yeah so
that's just heartbreaking the amount of people i say here who are like well i'll never be able to
buy a house i'll never be able to get married i'll never do whatever it's it's sort of like
yeah i would i would hate all this too and that's all fed policy and this is why the libertarians
and this is why i get so activated about federal reserve even though it's so wonky and so cold and
dry and such a boring concept to most people but this is the reason that the rom-com revolution existed this is the reason that people
like me became so activated because once you understand that manipulating the money supply
the price of money the most important market mechanism that exists well then the whole system
is broken so of course the young person who knows they're never going to be able to afford a house
becomes hopeless and lives in the present and spends and borrows unnecessarily because they don't think that they have a future.
And they're probably right.
But who is responsible for that?
Well, then let me ask you, because you would know obviously a lot more than me.
And I am genuinely curious because obviously there's a term that is getting a lot of buzz right now.
Anarcho tyranny, right?
About like anarchy in the streets uh tyranny at the top
in the sheets you know like you could be a you could be a murderer basically in like the streets
of a major city and you can get out you know with pretty much you know slap on the wrist but then
you don't do everything correct on your taxes the irs is gonna be knocking on your door saying those
threatening letters and stuff so anarcho tyranny is there something similar because you're right
we are living in like almost like a gluttony age and overindulgence age,
but yet we also don't have what we need. So there's a weird thing, young people today,
we have all the new phones, we have fast fashion, we have a lot of cheap stuff. And I know a lot of
that from some of the libertarians, I was, again, dipping my toes, and I don't know as much right
now. But they were saying with inflation over time, that a lot of goods are made more cheaply now because of that.
And so I wonder if there's, like, a similar term to describe, like, as anarcho-tyranny, but for, like, our goods, where you have a lot of young people who were satiated and overindulged in these kind of, like, trivial matters.
You know, buy the video games, buy the fast fashion.
We can go to the mall.
We have that kind of money. But we can go to the mall we have
that kind of money but we don't have the money for what actually matters in life like the home the
car the marriage the whatever so it's almost like a week because again when i was coming up as a
normie conservative this what would i always say to young people why are you so depressed we live
in the most wealthiest prosperous time ever and and that is true but then also you're looking at
well people are spiritually impoverished people don't have the same faith in god and family because back in the day you're ill your family's
there to take care of you now it's gets kind of outsourced in a sense you get sent to the
the old people's home and they're they're fueled by envy right yes they they think they should
have these things and they don't have them so you become immensely frustrated with society and again
we have taught people that well actually all your problems are someone else's fault right but keep in mind too that because you now have uh social security and medicare medicaid
like your your your assumption is that you don't need your children to take care of you in old age
so so what does that mean you don't necessarily care about taking care of your kids it doesn't
give as much of an incentive to do so if you're most if you're a good person you're going to do it anyways. But I'm just saying, all of this is incentive
manipulation that comes as a byproduct of state intervention into our culture, our economy,
most specifically. And then it trickles down into the economy and it degrades the foundation.
This is why I'm such a big proponent of Bitcoin, because I believe that it has the capacity to
remedy many of these cultural ills. So we'll see how it plays
out, but I think that ultimately
the reason I don't agree with Tim that this will be
the new religion
of the next millennia or whatever
is because it is
self-devouring.
We will end up in ruin if that is the
case, and I just refuse to believe it.
And then a real religion will appear because some prophet
will stand up. That's my belief if it if the track for the new religion is actually abrahamic
then it'll be some resurgence of christianity actually yeah i think so so i think you do see
i mean there are inverse possibility yeah i think there are there's some revivalism yeah especially
and like other i think it's kyrgyzstan right now there's some revivalism. Yeah, especially in like other. I think it's Kurdistan right now.
There's some crazy wave of young people.
Like there are countries where the biggest growth of church attendance is among young people, which, of course, it would have to be if you're going to develop a religious country.
Now, what if these are the end times revelation and what is going to happen?
What is actually going to happen is the new religion will actually be set after the second coming.
So all of these things that are happening, like the mark of the beast, you cannot buy or sell unless you bear the mark and things like that.
What if all these things really are coming true?
And then there is the second coming.
And then the new religion for the age of Aquarius actually is the newest expansion upon Christianity into the next.
The only downside of that, I love it,
but I don't like waiting for someone to come save us
because we have to save ourselves.
This is a reoccurring theme.
Absolutely agree.
The second coming is within all of us.
Like each of us, if each of us can step up
and become the Christ in our own life
and treat other people with that,
I think that's like the resurgence
or the new society that can overcome corporate greed
other than that corporate greed's too powerful i don't see anything other than other than
oh state power is way more powerful than corporate greed like just the barrel of a gun yes weaponry
yeah the only way to defeat weaponry is to change the minds of the people that hold the weapons
you or the hearts of the even state government can raid a fortune 500s office and arrest the top executives and destroy the company.
McDonald's can't go arrest the president.
But who runs the show?
Is it the state of the United States or is it Halliburton and Lockheed?
Not Halliburton.
Lockheed Martin.
I mean, it's a revolving door.
So like, who knows?
But regardless, the monopoly on violence exists within the state, not within the corporation.
So I think that they take the cake in terms of power wielding. Do you, Kara, do you get into like revelation? Have you studied that stuff much?
Am I going to be saved or not? So I'm a Catholic. So for me, I know, I think Christ even says in
the New Testament that even he doesn't know the hour nor the day. So that's not something I,
if Christ himself's not going to predict, he's the God man.
He's the God man.
I'm not going to predict or anything.
What I do know is obviously all of us are going to die.
Whether or not the second coming comes first before that doesn't matter.
We're all going to die.
And so to get ourselves right with God, one thing I know in my personal life is I see
God moving through my life, very obviously bringing me, first of all, here to this fun
podcast with all of you lovely people into my job and stuff.
So I'm a very, I have my scapular actually on right now.
I think I figured it out.
Finish.
I don't want to interrupt.
Oh, no worries.
What is that?
I think I figured it out.
Scapular.
So here's what I think happened. And Klaus Schwab, you know, when he was a teenager, he was depressed and angry and he tried to take his own life, but only briefly as he was resuscitated.
But in that tiny moment, he was sent to hell because it's a mortal sin to commit suicide.
And for him, it felt like an eternity, but he was resuscitated.
And now he knows that he's committed this mortal sin.
And no matter what he does, when he dies, he's committed this mortal sin and no matter what he does when he dies he's going to hell so he is trying to you know seek immortality and then create this new dominant religion and
take over maybe he can never hell on earth he'll live forever this is actually the theme of like
two different things like constantine the movie where he's like he knows he's going to hell
because when he was a kid he tried to kill himself and then i think this was um shadowlands and world of warcraft el uh sylvanas was like no matter what i do i'm going to
like this whatever region so she shatters the veil between the afterlife because she was like
if i'm going everyone's going with me i will say one interesting thing that i noticed and
one of my producers he's actually filling in for me today chris boyle uh one of our big
conversations is it's interesting that in your rights of the atheist age came in.
I think a lot of that is actually motivated by big data.
The idea that, see, man, you're nothing.
We can predict everything about you.
So there's actually nothing special and unique about you.
It's kind of like the idea you're just where Earth is nothing special.
It's just a floating rock.
And it's one of many planets, yada, yada.
However, that doesn't resonate with people.
Like maybe at first when you're kind of rebellious and a kid, whatever. But I think people kind of grow out that because
the need for belonging for higher purpose, it's everything. Because if you look from the beginning
of time, and even on like, you know, what you can't see in the invisible world of pathogens
and stuff, everything's eating each other, everything's killing each other. Sometimes
you feel like, you know, it's a struggle to stay alive every day. And yet we still find meaning and
purpose, even though we know that.
So I think one thing that we've noticed a lot right now with politics specifically is that even though officials like religion is kind of, you know,
so you talk about the pew numbers going down, people affiliating as nuns as like none as in religious affiliation.
But you see a resurgence almost in like witchcraft, a cult.
You see that a lot on TikTok for young people, people the crystal shops everywhere tarot card shops everywhere palm reading
i know in ukraine they were doing the viking like the you know pagan ritual for some of the deceased
fighters they were one of their state official accounts was doing hexes so it is kind of strange
it's similar to how like dawkins and stuff they would say we don't believe in god or a higher
power and yet they talk about evolution and natural selection in a way like it was an omnipotent force.
Yeah, it's like it's an omnipotent force. But this is just accidents. It's not like a guided
force, but they would talk about it like a guided force. People talk about the universe or karma,
like it's almost a God, but they say, I don't believe in a sky daddy. But the universe is
direct to me. I'm like, wait a second. So C.S. Lewis would say that in the same way we hunger
because we need food to live, we thirst because we need drink to live, we hunger for the divine, for worship, for adoration.
It's a universal that through anthropology that all human cultures that we found have
some supernatural belief attached to them.
It's something that mankind, it's like innate in us.
We're looking for that proper outlet for it.
But I think that's why we can never get away from the paradigm of man has to worship something. So politics otherwise.
Pete Murray Rothbard wrote in Anatomy of the State that in the absence of-
I'm reading all his books right now.
Pete Good. You're on your way. You're going to be one of us in no time. In the absence of the
state that there would either be statism or scientism and that the state would probably
use scientism. And then you look at Anthony Fauci. I was rereading Anatomy of the State during the lockdowns,
and I was like, I know exactly what you are, Tony.
I don't consider myself Christian.
I say this all the time.
I believe in God.
I don't really follow any, like, scripture of any religious institution.
But I got to say, over the past few years, the more I've seen,
the more it certainly felt like angels and demons.
The more it feels like a nefarious, malevolent presence
seeking to subvert something more divine in this world.
Well, then allow me, if you'll allow me to, to posit one theory.
So obviously, like, I think that your algorithm theory,
I think that that is very, very true to kind of how we got here
and everything's kind of exploded.
Because a lot of people say,
it seems like it just kind of came out of left field, a lot of this stuff. And I know the
ideologies go back many decades. But I think one thing is, at least for me as a Catholic, so again,
this is just my theory, people just can take it or leave it. I'm not trying to push anything on
anyone. It's just something to kind of mull over. One idea that I think is strange is how I can be
doing my show on a random Tuesday night, we're talking about, I don't know, a drag queen who's
naked dancing in front of kids. And you see the moms brought the kids there for the express purpose
of seeing a naked dance. They're not shocked. They're like, oh, I didn't know. I thought this
was family friendly. Like they're there for that reason, actually. You've seen in the Washington
Post, there was a woman who wrote saying, yes, I bring my toddler to gay pride parades for the
kink and I want them exposed to that. So I think, wow, this is very strange how and why. For me, at least as a Catholic, believing in the Trinity, God, the Father, God, the Son,
God, the Holy Spirit, they're a family at heart reflected in the Holy Family, which is a
representation of them on earth and then including the God-man himself. So he's in both. So St.
Joseph, then the Blessed Virgin Mary and Jesus. So the mother and father become one through
marriage and then through their love, they create a child. They're open to that new life. So sexual love, and you see a lot of saints
actually in the Catholic Church talking about ecstasy, climax, and stuff, and sexual relations,
that it's a shadow of things to come, a full union with God. Because for us as Catholics,
the idea of being in the church is you're a spouse of Christ. And so the idea for heaven
is that you are fully one with God in a spousal union. That's why throughout the Bible, wedding feasts are so prominent, the wedding
feast of Cana, the marriage feast of the Lamb, heaven being described as a wedding feast, as a
feast itself. So a lot of it is these kinds of things. So if God is the foundation of all reality
and all that exists, and love is the center of that and sexual relations on earth,
which is why the church, why we have morality so strongly. It's not because we have arbitrary rules.
It's because it's guiding your soul to grow and to be better and not to be deformed or malformed.
Well, then if all of this is true, no wonder that when you pull away God and try and remake
society in your own image, because that's what leftism is, right? That reality is not itself.
It can be manipulated, can be changed. We can remake reality. So if that's true, because that's what leftism is right that reality is not itself it can be manipulated can be changed we can remake reality so if that's true if that's what we're trying to
undo then no wonder the the scene that we see splitting is sex specifically whether it's the
drag queen story hours whether it's just any of these other debates that we're having i think
women vote democrat men vote conservative overwhelmingly yeah yeah all right shall we
go to super Chats?
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So that's our sponsor spot for Fridays.
So hopefully we'll get that going next week,
meaning if you're a member, you're basically
sponsoring the show already, we'll shout out
a company from each of you once per week i'm really excited for
it um let's uh let's read some more uh let's read some super chats all right shaky own says i got an
email about a timcast gift and was told it would be shipped by the end of the week but i haven't
heard anything not complaining just curious um i think i heard something about that do that do we
know what that's about no someone well someone was telling me something they were going to be
sending members some stuff so maybe i'm wrong i've seen some updates in the
discord i don't know if that has anything to do with it but i know there is like every day uh
brett and andrew are working on that discord and improving it yeah and there's like promos
and stuff yeah maybe maybe you got randomly selected for some promo or something so all right
raymond g stanley jr says tim my dude are the culture wars only getting better or is that just promo or something. So, all right. Raymond G. Stanley Jr. says,
Tim,
my dude,
are the culture wars
only getting better
or is that just me?
Not sure about Vivek,
but now I'm digging him.
You turn us on
to so many.
Yeah,
I guess
the latest episode
of the Culture War podcast,
it's episode number seven,
youtube.com
slash Timcast
or check it out
on Apple and Spotify.
I had a two-hour conversation
with Vivek Ramaswamy,
and man, that dude is very, very smart. I'm really excited to see him on the debate stage.
He's running for president, obviously, as a Republican. I think he's going to give,
I think he already just pushes DeSantis way, way down. He makes DeSantis look like,
when people are like, I think it's going to be Trump or DeSantis, I'm like, I'm not so sure.
Depending on how much attention Vivek can actually get, his knowledge of all of this stuff, be it ESG, the culture wars, corporations, pharmaceuticals, his tenacity, his calls to action, I think actually are substantially better than Ron DeSantis.
Oh, man.
But we'll see.
Can I ask one question?
Yeah.
I've read his book, and Vivek's awesome.
I think I could not appreciate The Vake like cake
I could not appreciate him more
For shedding light on ESG when he did
He was doing it very early along with James Lindsay and others
Only thing
That I really have a problem with
Tripling down on the war on drugs
Oh is that one of his positions?
He wants to
He basically said he's going to threaten the Mexican government
That if they don't shut the border down and keep the drugs from flowing across fentanyl
specifically that then he will go to war against the cartels and it's like well first off as an
anti-war guy but also someone who doesn't believe that prohibition of drugs works i can't believe
that this is an appealing stance to take i i disagree to a certain extent talking about
securing the border and stopping human trafficking and drug smuggling is like i think we need a border well i'm fine with that
but you honestly think you honestly think they're going to stop drugs tim come on i i think i think
vivek is an outsider candidate who who is actually serious about securing the border and and i think
he could i think he could secure the border i don't think he's going to stop the flow of drugs
but saying war on drugs is different But saying war on drugs is different.
Saying war on drugs is different.
Like, war on drugs typically refers to, like, nonviolent defenders being put in federal prison.
If we're talking about cartels, which are murdering people and, like, stringing them up and stuff like that,
well, I think that's a fairly popular position that we don't want that to happen.
I will go deep with him on this.
Thank you for bringing that up.
Yeah.
All right.
Tracer says, for my channel membership birthday i
wish for a tim emoji with red laser eyes and a ghost girl emoji but let mary decide what it
should be well all right um i don't know someone someone in discord is going to make it yeah someone
in discord could absolutely yeah if someone in discord makes that we could use you know oh did
you see the one of you but it looks it's like a religious figure with a chicken it's like they
didn't want to post it because it was like is this too racy to post publicly looks it's like a religious figure with a chicken it's like they didn't want to post
it because it was like is this too racy to post publicly because it's like he was like a saint
yeah i wouldn't skateboard and i was asked like oh you want to run that i was like i don't i
wouldn't whoever made that stellar job it was those that was hilarious it's it's like well
done you know those candles where it's like a saint and he's like it was me with a chicken
and a skateboard or something and i was like but i wouldn't want to actually sell that because
of the religious iconography i wouldn't want to actually sell that because of the religious iconography. I wouldn't want to. I wouldn't
assert that, you know. But it was an AI.
I wonder. Let me know.
Might have been. All right. What do we got here?
John Kirsten says, forget
Vosh and Kirk or Destiny and
Smith. The pairing we actually need is
Doerr and Bannon. I'll ask him.
But the pairing we actually need is
poker with the boys, Jimmy Doerr playing
poker with Steve Bannon. Hell yeah. And Ocasio-cortez oh my god so i actually think um there's a possibility for
some democrats to actually come and play if the goal of the show is simply it's a game of poker
we're not here to debate politics but we will have playful ribbing as long as it's not specific
so making a joke being like you know if, if AOC was playing with Matt Gaetz
and then Matt, you know, raised a bet,
she was like, you think I'm going to believe anything
this guy says?
Like jokes like that.
I think we actually would see some Democrats
be willing to come and play
if it was like, we're not here to go to war.
We're here to like, this is more like,
you know, wave the white flag.
We have fun.
We be human.
It's about building rapport
as opposed to actually debating ideas.
But I still got to be honest.
I really doubt most of them would just say, no, screw off. Yeah, most would say as opposed to actually debating ideas. But I still got to be honest. I really doubt.
Most of them would just say no, screw off.
Yeah, most would say no.
Wouldn't do it.
Because they would know their audience is going to be like, how dare you do that?
But some of them would do it.
It'll be after this show.
It'll be a Friday night show, right?
Yep.
Yep.
Friday night.
1030.
Right after we wrap.
10 o'clock probably.
Okay.
But then I wouldn't be there with the guests for like half an hour.
So the show would start probably with Clint.
Yeah.
And then you would be like, what up?
We're going to get the game going and then we would the idea would be to get one
guest per week for that show and then our friday night guest if they could as well so we would have
two people so like you know if we had vivek ramaswamy we'd be like the next part of the show
is you playing poker and who do we have who's our other guest it's like oh it's dave smith
so you know two presidential contenders potentially i don't know dave hasn't announced yeah it'd be fun and it's
just it's most it's just table talk it's not meant to be a serious game so if you don't understand
poker it shouldn't matter right it's more so about people being silly goofing off and having fun
so yeah what do we got here brin taranova says i'm a ride share driver in austin with over 14,000
rides given never Never again.
It's not worth the risk.
Well, I wouldn't say quit driving over this.
I would say don't drive anywhere near BLM when they're riding.
That's probably better advice.
But I guess the fair point is that guy didn't know.
That guy didn't know.
He was just wearing his shorts and a t-shirt.
And they were like, oh, you go to prison now.
Martin Edgar says, today was my last day of work.
Seven years U.S. army plus 28 years postal service
35 years of federal service and into retirement on to bigger and better things to piss off the
leftists so where should i start tim oh man the world is your oyster i don't know contact scott
pressler and ask him how you can out register voters and ballot chase and ballot harvest where
illegal yep that's an important thing nice work work, too, on that career, man.
Or woman, whoever you are.
Nice work.
All right.
Raymond G. Stanley Jr. says,
Ian, after the opening, I was like,
F, why is everything so bad in the dumps?
But leave it to Ian to remind us of the good out there.
Cheers, good sir.
Oh, my gosh.
Dude, first, rage, what's up?
Dude, check out that Culture War show from earlier
with him and Vivek.
I watched an hour of it before the show and i mean i just walked in like i i turned it off
at 7 15 and walked right up here and it is just it's it's really good to see someone that not
only is he a billionaire nearly he's like worth 700 million or something he's he's has solutions
and he wants to run not on say he's an idiot that's stupid he's like no i'm gonna fix this
by putting that there we can do this to make this better i have faith in this it really stunning
and a very very enlightening also did you know the guy gave six figures to the east palestine
this dump he really didn't even publicize it he didn't want to say it too and he found a church
there that was helping people and he gave them six figures. do it. And I was like, fine, Rhonda Santos hasn't announced, but Vivek and Marion could have gone. So I asked them outright. I was like, look, Marion Williamson, she's running too. She didn't visit
these people. And then I was like, also you're running. And I had to ask why you didn't. And he
said, the first thing is that he had just announced like, you know, a couple of weeks before, but he
was like, these people actually voted for Trump. Trump showed up for them. They were there for him.
He was there for them. He was like, for me, if if i showed up it felt like bring a camera i'm like that's a stunt but he was and it seemed
like he really didn't want to have to say it but he's like no i wrote a six-figure check to donate
to people who needed it down there and i didn't want to make a big deal or say anything to anybody
i thought they needed it and then i was like but you have to say it because if you don't say it
people assume you did nothing and you don't care. And then if you do say it, people are like, oh, he's doing a stunt.
But he seemed like he I think he genuinely was frustrated that he had to publicly admit to helping these people because he did not want to be a spectator.
He didn't want to make it a spectator.
Let me just say real quick.
Can you imagine how much better of a world we would be living in if you could have Jimmy Dore of the People's Party, Dave smith the libertarian party rfk junior as the democrat and
then vivek ramaswamy as the gop that's a much better field folks that's a much much better
let's have that debate yes let's do it all right damage controlling says tim i'm upset
you had the vivek on your show and you didn't ask him about the Sunder or Keening. How can you hope to destroy the heart of Lorcan and defeat Molag Joe now?
Is this how you honor the Sixth House?
Does anyone understand that reference?
I'm looking at you, Ian.
Sounds like some buzzwords up in that.
Was it?
I don't know, jargon.
It feels like a spell cast on Ian.
The Keening.
Lorcan.
Lorcan.
I think he's making it up.
Cool name, though.
I don't know.
I'm writing a fantasy novel by
the way it's just coming out so easily all right let's grab some more super chats eric miller says
tim regarding poker with the boys why don't you do a rake cover your cost and the rest goes to a
charity or cause that the discord votes on every week that way politicians can play and their
winnings would go to the rake so i'm the rake that probably
wouldn't work right so here's the thing we got to pay for the space we got to pay for the dealers
we got uh we've got to pay for the electricity we got to pay for general materials we got to
pay for security we have to have a manager on staff checking people in and out we've got to
pay for i think we're gonna need three people to run the show itself because you're going to need
someone to handle general cameras and stuff like that think we're going to need three people to run the show itself because you're going to need someone to handle general cameras and stuff like that.
Then you're going to need someone to actually, when the RFID readers read the cards, tracking
bets going in, things like that for people to be able to follow along.
Travel, production.
Oh yeah.
Paying for guests to fly out.
If we're like, hey, we want you on the show.
That's like, that's, that's going to be like two grand.
Hotel for two or three days.
Then we got to get the car to bring them out to where the shop is.
Plus, you want to have some money for the people to be playing against each other to try and win.
Well, they got to buy in.
Oh, it's going to be that way.
We're looking at a standard gaming license for a buy-in.
I'm thinking like a 1-2 game.
You know, they buy in for 300 bucks.
Dude, I'm going all in every time against AOC.
And then depending on who it is, we like,
but to a certain extent,
we may cover the buy-ins for certain people.
If someone's like,
dude,
I'm not really a poker player.
I don't want to,
we'll cover your buy and have fun.
Okay.
But for like,
we want it to be a legitimate game where there's actual table stakes.
That'd be amazing,
man.
There are other options for how we could run it.
I think having it be a legitimate,
just fun game where poker is ancillary and it's a table talk that makes it
work.
But we've been trying to figure out how to do it and we were like maybe the show will make money in
super chats and clips to the point where we actually can do that what your idea was right
um but then we want to make sure we can undercut the competition we've got three casinos on the
east coast you've got horseshoe maryland live and mgm then you have if you only
go about an hour north you've got hollywood york and harrisburg i think and then if you go an hour
west you've got hollywood charlestown so there's like five casinos within a couple hours of each
other that anyone could choose to go to i think there's only four poker rooms how do we convince
people to come to our very small limited seating club and then participate in shows like this right we got to be a really really awesome place sure figuring out how to do that
is going to be tough and getting dealers to come we got to make sure we pay the dealers more money
and guarantees but i think we can do it we're trying to figure it out and i'm i'm hoping the
show itself will generate revenue so that if we tell people come play here and there's no rake we don't need to
take a rake because we make money off the show that people are going to be like then why would
i go to any of these other casinos i'll go to the club where i don't got to beat the beat the house
to try and play this game i'm telling you if there's no rake you will get a lot of players
right so for people to understand a rake is when if two people bet the dealer will take a percentage
of it and put it in the house's stack that they just take.
They take it.
It's usually three or four bucks per hand.
Well, at MGM, it's five.
I think Maryland Live and Hollywood's six.
That means every time a pot, every hand, six bucks is taken away.
You sit there a long enough time, you notice everyone's stack is getting smaller and smaller and smaller.
Yeah.
Oh, this just in. Lorcan is from elder scrolls 3 morrowind you guys played phenomenal game what
is what is vivek in morrowind oh vivek is a god in in morrowind he's one of the new i do
i think the tribunal or something he knew the whole time along with uh over the other gods
there are a few of them yeah so uh all right all right. Way back says, Tim, the fact that it's confirmed that there were at least 40 feds in the crowd
on January 6th means the conspiracy theorists were right jars overflowing at this point.
Was it that there were 40 feds on the ground or was it there were 40 feds working with
Proud Boys?
Was it on the ground?
I haven't seen clear numbers on it, so I'm hesitant to say.
I saw the story about 40 informants or something or feds, but I just don't know where they were.
I don't know.
I also want to Google it.
I think there were feds on the ground for sure.
I know there was like six actual PD.
Yeah.
And we know they've been testifying in court with the case going on with the Proud Boys.
I mean, you're wrong.
Sideways says, amazing interview today, Tim.
Really opened my eyes to a new perspective.
I thought of a nice saying in hearing him speak, wokeness is weakness from uh yeah that's a good one well look if you i i thought
vivek was brilliant he's a he's a he's a really smart guy i want to see him pull really well in
the gop i want to see him standing on that stage having a conversation with trump because he's
going to bring these ideas up that trump will have to address and that's a good thing because
vivek knows all about it my favorite part was when he said he was like if i win i'll have donald trump be an advisor and i'm like that's a bold thing
like he'll be my advisor but um no you won't no thanks if you if you guys like the show share it
we've we've run episode seven of the culture war it's a conversational podcast not news oriented
and so you know very chill could use your. 40 undercover informants were on the ground. Wow.
Holy crap.
Jeez.
Clinton Rary says, Tim, I live in Austin.
The D.A. withheld evidence to the grand jury to get an indictment.
The lead detective accused the D.A. of witness tampering.
The whole case was stacked against Daniel Perry.
A.P.D. said stated it was an open and closed case of self-defense and then if that's the case
then everybody needs to be hitting up greg abbott being like pardon this man immediately get him
home to his family no questions well i'll be in austin tomorrow we'll see what happens don't drive
into what greg's up to maybe we can have him on the show that'd be cool greg abbott you out there
buddy you're there well i tweeted who do i got a call is there somebody i can call you know because because i'll
tell you this was what i was explaining to vivek at the end of the show i'm like we we have what
i think we're the consistently the biggest live show every night yeah but our audience size is
not relatively big compared to like crowder who gets like two million people or tucker
carlson gets 3 million.
But most people who watch the largest demographic are moderate, former liberals, moderates,
slightly conservative individuals. That's why we get so many conservatives who are like,
you got to go on Timcast, because they know half the time, or I should say a quarter,
a third of the audience are people they need to reach that they don't reach in the conservative shows. And the don't get it and so they're seeding that ground calling me far right or whatever when the fact
that the ian's on the show it's like what vosh said he liked you and he told us i love that guy
but like their whole thing is like no don't go on tim okay i know it could be such a fun that's
the illusion of like conflict is is really it's just like you shatter it immediately, get to the human.
And can I just say real fast, we're talking about like withholding evidence, and I feel like that's becoming more and more common.
You hear that a lot, especially in high profile cases such as this one, whether or not happened specifically in Austin or not is beside the point.
We just hear it often.
I've had officers on my show who've had to deal with it um and so we can even talk about you know to the highest levels
with you know with alvin bragg and the trump indictment the idea of everyone says all the
legal experts say this is a very weak case especially trying to for a guy who's well
known for you know reducing charges now he's trying to make a misdemeanor into felonies
it seems like he may try to be bank banking on a judge who's more in his favor and a jury who's
more in his favor because it's manhattan you this time and time again, and it's kind of the confluence of factors of for so
many years of since the left definitely does kind of run the institutions of making anyone that they
don't like anyone to their right, basically, as you know, anathema, don't go on their shows,
don't talk to them, don't associate with them. Well, then it comes down to even your rights in
the legal courtroom. It's like, if you want to, you want to put up a red flag, even if you think Perry is a murder or whatever,
even if you just want to say, well, what about his rights though in this case?
It's like, oh, so you're siding with an evil man?
And then now that's in the conversation switches to that.
And now you're not even talking about legal stuff anymore.
I just think that's a scary pattern.
We're seeing it really come to fruition.
There's two quick notes.
I'm really grateful in a sad way that
trump and also the j6ers have gotten such a raw deal in the legal system because the right has
been the defender of the legal system and the policing forever and ever i think it's forcing
them to reconsider the the blank check that they had written them for so long and it's not to say
that you shouldn't support any cops it's just that like maybe realize that once the state has a monopoly on violence and it
becomes very overtly political in nature, it may not be your friend.
And I think it quite clearly is not their friend.
It's the same thing with social media algorithms.
In my opinion, that stuff should be freed.
No humans can control that.
And if it goes into the wrong hands, it's disaster.
Anarchism, baby.
Let's go.
All right.
Funny Farm in Texas.
Y'all says, Tim, we're planning to come to Austin to see y''s disaster. Anarchism, baby. Let's go. All right. Funny Farm in Texas, y'all, says Tim.
We're planning to come to Austin to see y'all Saturday.
We live two hours away.
Will your meetup be in the evening?
Keep up the excellent job.
We are fellow chicken farmers.
Chickens are great, by the way.
So we've been ordering sushi and playing poker on Fridays these past few weeks.
And then we always take the extra sushi and the chickens go nuts.
You guys have to see it.
It is the greatest thing ever
giggles like a school child oh dude he's so happy watching these chickens chase after the fish it's
great imagine watching chickens play football that's what it is that's what it is and he's just
he's just rolling on the ground laughing it's awesome it's it's it's and like roberto jr the
rooster just watches he chills he doesn't fight for the fish he lets the girls eat it you throw
it in.
One runs full speed, grabs it, and then they're all running around in circles. They're jumping over stuff.
They're trying to peck it out of each other's mouths.
It is a sporting event.
That was a favorite part of my entire day.
Whenever you talk about, I'm going to go live down by the van and by the river or whatever,
I always wonder, like, but where are the chickens going to go?
Yeah, we're going with chickens.
There's no way you'd go anywhere without your chickens.
You're like the most devoted chicken owner I've ever met.
You're going to have like a little chicken thing.
So as for the meetup Saturday, so what we're doing is next Friday is the live event at the Vulcan Theater.
We're going to be doing our show in Austin the whole week.
We have a really amazing lineup of guests.
And then tomorrow, I'm not having a meetup.
I'm just going to be mentioning to the elite members in the
discord where i am and that's it because uh i don't like if i what happened with john rich is
that he was like we should play at my honky tonk downtown nashville i said let's do it and then
some crazy person came in and got the whole thing shut down and the police were got called and they
were like we think there's a credible threat against your life you can't come and then i said they can't stop me i'll come
anyway and then they were like there are children outside this building during the day we like we
we strongly recommend against and i was like okay you got me like i can't if a crazy person's
threatening to kill me and then i'm like i don't care that's fine but it's the downtown area with
children and families so it's like okay well i can't do it. So tomorrow what's just going to happen is I'll be in Austin.
And then I'll just mention at some point in the evening to the elite members on Discord.
Hey, guys, we're hanging out here.
If y'all happen to be nearby, come swing by and say what's up.
But I also, for like the restaurant we may be at, I don't want to be like, it's a meetup and then have like 50 people show up in the restaurants.
Like, dude, what is going on here?
Like, you can't do an event like this so but i'll but i'll be mentioning just the elite
members that if they're around in austin so if that's you then i'll just post it in the discord
where we're hanging out so people can come say what's up all right where we are where we are
where are we alabama elisa say to him my family and i watch your show nightly my eight-year-old Gabby was in a worldwide premiere of a music video on YouTube last night.
You'd mean the world to her if you would shout her out promoting it.
Artist.
NF song.
Happy.
Oh, NF is cool.
Oh, is it?
Yeah, he's a rapper.
I don't know if I've listened to this one yet, but NF is a rapper.
He doesn't curse at all.
He started like, I don't want to say it's like biblical rap, but his early stuff
did have a lot of religious content in it.
So he's cool.
Was it Lisa?
Lisa was in this video?
Gabby.
Gabby?
Where did Lisa come from?
I don't know.
I was like,
what's her name, Lisa?
Gabby, nice work.
What was the name of the video?
Happy by NF.
That's exciting.
I've been in music videos too.
That's cool.
You were just in one.
Yes, I was. I was in a Distur disturbed music video one time we've got a another another couple songs so there's a song that i wrote that i played on instagram a while ago and i told phil i was like
in terms of like strength and gruffness in the voice it needs to be here here's where i can go
here's where phil labonte can go and i was like i
think you might have to see if you can you know do this one me on pain i've been practicing no
phil singing it oh oh yeah phil's the right guy phil is the guy who's got the deep strong voice
i can pull like dark harmonies i think that'll make it hurt i was like let's go it's the kind
of song that needs to be sung by someone like phil labonte and not by someone like me
it's just like it's a it's a heavy it's a hard rock, heavier, you know.
All right, what do we got here?
Normies Get Out says, Starlink is down globally at the moment and has been for about 30 minutes.
That was about an hour ago.
I saw that story going around.
World War III has begun.
Bummer.
How does it go down?
I don't know.
Was it thousands upon thousands of satellites?
Yeah, that sounds systemic.
I think it could be, too, with the documents that got, not declassified, but that got leaked.
Yeah.
About how Russians aren't actually losing?
Is that what it was?
Sounds like it.
So is that what it was?
Like documents got leaked showing that Russia was actually winning in Ukraine?
The casualties aren't as enormous as Western media.
Like they were like one-tenth of the reported, which yeah by the way douglas mcgregor
and others have been reporting pretty much along those lines for quite some time so well yeah it's
crazy to me that people still believe anything coming out it's the ghost of kiev i know man it's
all it's all bs but it didn't just start after russia invaded the bs about ukraine has been
persistent for decades okay i i can i go on a rant briefly? All right. So first off, the World Bank
and the IMF absolutely destroyed Russia in the 1990s. And I didn't know anything about this until
I read Scott's book. But after the fall of the USSR, the West broadly, but obviously America
being the leader of the West, had such an incredible opportunity to look at their fallen
foe and say, we are going to welcome you into the capitalist West. Because most people don't know
this, but the Russian people after the fall of communism were extraordinarily open to the idea
of capitalism because they were like, well, that sucked. Let's give this a go. And instead of
welcoming them with open arms, they were just kicked in the teeth repeatedly by the West.
And George Bush's administration, Bill Clinton's administration, George Bush's
junior's administration, year after year, you had both Yeltsin as well as Putin that requested
if they could be added to NATO, they were laughed off, never even given a consideration.
And the only requirement that Putin put on it was that he wanted to not have to wait in the normal line which obviously
as a nation with over 6 000 nuclear weapons you might want to go like all right yeah we won't
make you wait is it and the reason thousand no six as far as i know it's six thousand but the
reason he didn't want to wait is because the hardliners in russia that were super anti-west
probably would have toppled him in that interim.
So he's just like, look, slap us into NATO.
He didn't have the time to wait.
Yeah, he's like, I can't wait.
If you want me in there, put me in there.
Let's just accept the fact that we are European.
And what do they do instead? They alienate and they drive them into back-to-back depressions
over a three-year period that greatly diminishes
the life expectancy of the Russian people.
I'm talking late 90s.
I was a kid at the time.
I had no idea any of this was transpiring.
And then, as a byproduct of this, you now have driven Russia not only into war that could have been avoided
if our lunatic State Department hadn't been involved,
but also into the arms of the CCP, the communists, who also have nuclear weapons,
and, oh, might I add add over a billion people and we
risk world war three now when we none of this had to happen no so you're correct they have 5 977
it was at their peak the soviet union had 45 000 yes and and that was the other thing that they
were doing they were cutting back on their nuclear arsenal they ended the warsaw pact they were doing
all of these like signs of good faith and instead of treating them with any sort of respect as a nuclear power they were just laughed
off and abused and like this is not to justify or write off putin's responsibility in the death of
countless ukrainians and it's absolutely tragic but to write off the west responsibility in this
and the u.s specifically the bill Clinton administration, which gets a total clean bill of health.
No one even pays attention to what the Clinton administration did to them during that period.
But they, along with the IMF and the World Bank, absolutely destroyed Russia.
And they laid the groundwork for a nationalistic rise of a strong man like Vladimir Putin.
He probably would have never even been the leader of Russia had it been not for Clinton.
It does seem like he's trying to hold on to save the country.
That's why he won't let go.
And it's like when he feels comfortable letting go, he'll just be like, is that Scott Horton's book?
Yes.
We'll just read one more.
Rife Technology says, I'm fully against CBDC, but I know there's no stopping it.
I already have a contract with the central banks.
Ian knows who I am.
I got your Rife machine, dude.
That's Royal rife's grandson
uh and if you don't know royal rife uh he was what was the experiment with like healing the
body with electromagnetic frequency so i just received this machine today and i'm excited to
use it so i'll use it over the weekend and i'll get back to you and let you know how it is all
right everybody if you haven't already would you kindly smash that like button or would you perhaps
angrily smash that like button?
And subscribe to the channel.
Share the show if you do like it.
Make sure you check out the Culture War podcast, Apple Spotify.
And it's on YouTube at youtube.com slash timcast.
We had Vivek Ramaswamy, a two-hour conversation.
We talk about a whole bunch of issues, AI, the GOP, Ron DeSantis, his views.
I think it's really interesting.
He made a lot of really interesting points about, you know, what AI is doing to us and things like that, as well as economic plans. And just,
you'll learn a lot about who he is. He's running for president, and he's getting a lot of traction.
I'm really excited to see him on the debate stage because he knows so much about what's
going on in the culture war better than most people. Check that out. You can follow the show
at TimCastIRL, basically anywhere, but mostly like Instagram that out. You can follow the show at TimCastIRL.
Basically anywhere,
but mostly like Instagram and Facebook.
You can follow me personally at TimCast.
Cara, do you want to shout anything out?
Oh, I guess you guys can follow me on Twitter at Nefertari underscore 25.
You can also watch us on OAN.
You can Google OAN where to watch.
It can help you.
You can also download our app.
You can watch us there.
Live shows.
You can watch old episodes.
Thank you so much for having me, Tim, and everyone else.
I'm just super, super grateful.
Grateful for everyone watching. Very happy
to be here. So yeah, very happy.
Thanks for coming. Thank you.
Clint Russell, Liberty Lockdown, as well
as Tower Gang. I am just getting
my second strike lifted off of YouTube,
so go subscribe to Liberty Lockdown
on YouTube right now. I will be, my very first episode back will be with the father of Julian Assange, Gabriel.
So do not miss that.
That's going to be on Monday.
I am extraordinarily excited.
The only other time I've cried on my show is when I interviewed Ross Ulbrich's mom.
And I feel like I'm going to fight and not cry during this one.
So make sure you check that out.
And then last but not least, go to the TakeHumanActionTour.com.
Pick up the tickets for
My Debate Against Destiny in Memphis
two weekends from now.
And what time is your show
going live on Monday
on Liberty Lockdown?
Don't know yet.
Probably afternoon Monday.
Cool.
That's awesome.
I'm Hannah-Claire Brimlow.
I'm a writer for TimCast.com.
You should go to
at TimCast
or you should follow
at TimCastNews on Twitter and Instagram. You can go to at TimCast, or you should follow at TimCast News
on Twitter and Instagram.
You can go to TimCast News,
click on the read tab,
see all of our work from me,
our other journalists.
Of course, Chris Burtman is there.
If you want to follow me personally,
you can follow me on Instagram
at hannaclaire.b
and you can follow me on Twitter
at hcbrimlow.
Thanks so much, guys.
Bye, everyone.
Ian Crossland.
And I just wanted Kara
to shout out your Twitter again.
It's nefertari underscore 25.
It's N-E-F-E-R-T-A-R-I underscore 25.
Perfect.
Good to see you.
And I also will be at the Minds Fest performing or at least having a conversation this Saturday, this coming Saturday.
So a week from tomorrow.
That's the day after our Friday IRL show at the Vulcan Theater.
You can get tickets.
Tickets.Vulcancanpresents.com. I think after the
TimCast IRL live show
on Friday at the Vulcan,
we're going to play music.
Oh, solid.
So we'll see what happens.
Cool.
But I think, you know,
Phil will be there,
you'll be there,
I'll be there.
Be there.
So maybe we'll just grab
someone from the audience
who has some songs to play
and we'll just go crazy.
Cool.
Yeah.
Follow me at KellenPDL.
Ian, when we finally get
these religious shows going,
Carrie, you should totally
come by again because I'd be so happy. You know, we finally get these religious shows going, Carrie, you should totally come by again.
I'd be so happy.
We usually have fun on Fridays, but this was a good one.
I was just listening.
It was great.
We should do 13 episodes of Ian's Quest,
and we get 13 different religious personalities of different persuasions
to sit down and explain their spirituality to Ian.
Can I tell you how much money I would pay to see Jordan Peterson and Ian Cross
and sit down for a couple hours?
Give me that.
He knows so much.
Put it right in my veins.
I'm just imagining Jordan being like,
No, Ian, listen.
Let me say it one more time.
Educate me.
All right, we're good, everybody.
Thanks for hanging out.
I got a plane to catch very early because we're flying to Austin,
so maybe I'll see you down there. Thanks for hanging out. I got a plane to catch very early because we're flying to Austin. So maybe I'll see you down there.
Thanks for hanging out.
We'll see you all next time. you