Timcast IRL - Trump WINS, Q1 Jobs Report SMASHES Expectations, MS-13 ATTACKS Prison Guards
Episode Date: May 3, 2025Phil, Ian, & Libby are joined by Cliff Maloney & Courtney Knill to discuss Trump job numbers smashing expectations, court audio leaking of Abrego Garcia's wife begging a judge for a protective order, ...3 Democrats requesting they be removed from Trump impeachment resolution, and DHS officially recommending therapy instead of surgery for kids with gender dysphoria. Hosts: Phil @PhilThatRemains (X) Serge @SergeDotCom (everywhere) Libby @LibbyEmmons (X) Guests: Cliff Maloney @Maloney (X) Courtney Knill @courtneyknill (X,Youtube)
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The United States economy added 177,000 jobs in April.
This is up from 145, I believe was the 135 projected.
That led to a significantly good day on Wall Street.
The traders seem to like that a lot, which is not really a surprise.
Considering how volatile the stock market has been in the past couple of weeks with all the trade trade war talk, this actually led to a positive economic outlook for the Trump administration.
So we're going to talk about that today. We have new court audio from 2020 regarding the white from the wife of Kilmar
Arbrego Garcia. He's said to have hit her repeatedly. This shouldn't really come as a
significant surprise considering the allegations that he's been violent in the past. There were multiple times that she was trying to get a court order,
restraining order from him.
So we'll discuss that.
There was an attack at the Virginia Department of Corrections.
I'm not sure which actual installation it was,
but three corrections officers were stabbed by ms-13 gang members
um so this actually seems to be this is a new breaking story too uh bill malugan was reporting
it so we'll get into that uh democrats are starting to pull out of the impeachment resolution
um showing that it's not actually popular among all Democrats to continuously try to
obstruct and create issues. So we'll get into that. The HHS recommends therapy, not sex change,
to treat gender dysphoria. So that's a that is a positive, I guess, if you have a realistic opinion about trans people.
So we'll talk about that.
Then there's some information about trans militants in Portland.
Be Trans, Throw Hands, they're an activist group,
and they're talking about teaching children how to fight in order to defend
themselves if they're trans and then we're so we'll talk about that we'll discuss antifa agitators
in our local area here in maryland there have been assaults for the mayday protest because
apparently it's something to that has something to do with being trans, I guess. And then we've got the ADF has been classified as a right-wing extremist group in the German intelligence agency, she says.
And that speaks to the way that the left is treating right-wing groups across Europe.
So we'll get into that. And then if we have time, a New Jersey judge has moved Mahmoud Khalil's deportation
out of immigration court and into federal court,
and we'll get into why that actually matters.
But first, go buy coffee.
Go to casprew.com.
You can buy some of our coffee.
You can get Ian's Graphene Dream.
It's still available.
It's the big seller.
Everybody knows that Ian's Graphene Dream is easy on your stomach.
And Ian is going to buy a Lamborghini with all the proceeds from that.
You can get the last iteration of Alex Stein's Primetime Grind.
I don't think they're making it anymore.
There will be another Alex Stein blend if you're an Alex Stein fan.
Or you can go get Two Weeks Till Christmas, which is a very nice gingerbread coffee.
It's very, very pleasant.
So head on over there to get some cast brew.
But smash the like button, share the show with your friends,
and we're going to get into it right now.
Joining us tonight to talk about this and a whole lot more is Cliff Maloney.
How you doing?
I'm great.
Good to be here, guys.
Cliff Maloney, CEO at Citizens Alliance, founder at the P.A. Chase.
Knock a lot of doors out there to crush the rhinos, beat the commies, and I'm looking to doze your state.
So get involved.
Follow me on X at Maloney.
Appreciate you all having me.
Awesome. And we've also got Courtney Nill here. So get involved. Follow me on X at Maloney. Appreciate you all having me. Awesome.
And we've also got Courtney Nill here.
Hi, this is Courtney Nill.
I am running for Charlestown City Council in Jefferson County, West Virginia.
I'm also a creator over on X with political and health content.
And that's at Courtney Nill on X.
Awesome.
Moon Lord.
Hey, buddy.
I'm here just to talk about magic.
So you want me to go deeper, Phil?
Not right now.
We'll get into that.
I'm Ian Crossland.
I'll give you an outro at the end of the show.
I'll tell you about what I've been up to.
But Libby, tell me.
Awesome.
I'm Libby Emmons.
I'm here from the Postmillennial and Humanevents.com.
Glad to be on the show tonight with y'all.
Awesome.
So let's get into it.
CNN reports the U.S. economy added a stronger than expected one hundred and seventy seven thousand jobs in April.
America's long resilient job market continues to defy expectations in even in the wake of swirling uncertainty.
The U.S. economy added a surprisingly strong one hundred and seventy seven thousand jobs in April. A slight slowdown from March's downwardly revised 185,000 gain,
according to the Bureau of Labor Statistics data released Friday.
April's gain was stronger than the average pace of monthly job growth in the three prior months.
Meanwhile, the unemployment rate was unchanged at 4.2, a historically low level.
Economists polled a data firm FactSet were expecting the economy to have added just 135,000 jobs last month.
And that unemployment rate held at 4.2%.
So it's my sense that the jobs report is something that is positive for the economy overall.
But the uncertainty is still there. Does anyone have any
opinion on the economy now? I mean, I'm not an economist, but I think that,
Serge is an economist, I think that the jobs report is a tangible, whereas the stock market
really doesn't affect, you know, people the same way that, you know, having, you know, low unemployment does.
What do you think, Cliff?
I'd say this.
I think that you've got different indicators that obviously the political arena is going to look to.
This is one that the Democrats will be mad about.
Republicans will praise it.
And I think any realist would look at it and say, OK, you know, I'm going to praise it because it's good.
We want more jobs.
But to me, it's going to come down to what's the impact of the tariffs?
What's the impact of the spending bills towards the end of this year?
Do we actually cut the spending that Doge has, you know, showed us all this waste, fraud
and abuse?
But I think this is the first step is to track some of these smaller things, because this
is going to dictate 2026, right?
When you're looking at this midterm election, I mean, these are the small numbers, but I think it's going to build towards this idea of, well, are we actually going
to cut spending? Are we actually going to do what the Republicans said they would do? And I think
the tariffs, to me, it's the big question. But I think seeing these numbers, you're going to see
the right screaming, this is great. You're going to see the left saying, hey, oops, you know,
here's actually what's wrong. But I think it's a very good thing to see. And, you know, obviously we'd love to see more jobs.
It's business as usual as far as you're concerned.
Correct.
Okay.
Well, the White House is super happy about it.
You know, they sent out this whole thing with the details.
So there were, as you said, 177,000 new jobs, which they said was smashing expectations.
This included private education and health services, 70,000 new jobs, transportation and warehousing, which I thought was interesting, 29,000.
Leisure and hospitality, plus 24,000.
Professional and business services, plus 17,000.
And financial activities, 14,000.
So all of those people that were saying that everything Trump was doing was going to tank the economy and get everyone fired right away. It looks like they were wrong. Also, all of the people who are
saying that, you know, removing illegal immigrants was going to be bad for the American people. Like
there's still jobs. That's not so bad. And the stock market has responded. I think it was up, what is the Wall Street Journal says, 1.3 percent on the Nasdaq and the S&P was 1.5.
So, you know, I think that things are looking OK.
Unemployment also had held steady at 4.2 percent.
It's really, though, I mean, as we know, right, like the economy, all of these numbers come out,
the White House says things, Democrats say things, everybody has their projections.
But it's really about how you feel when you're going around in the world. It's about like,
how does do you feel good when you have 100 bucks in your pocket? Or do you feel like you are
losing money? Do you mean like, do you feel like you can afford your life or not?
I don't I don't get the sense that the average person feels like the economy is doing really well.
And I think that the economy is one of those things.
If you get enough people that are kind of like apprehensive about where the country is heading, that's going to affect the economy.
Even if we've got really high or full employment or unemployment is really low or whatever. Do you guys get the sense that there is a positive notion towards the economy or the
economic situation in the U.S.?
Or do you think that the tariffs have scared people so much that they're expecting negative
things too much and that it's going to be a self-fulfilling prophecy?
Well, I think people can get a little bit spooked when they hear things like the tariffs
that we've just been discussing.
And once people get through that,
once they're like, okay, all right,
maybe it's not going to be the end of the world
that we have some tariffs going on.
I think people will look at their grocery prices
and they'll look at what's affecting their day-to-day life,
sometimes more than numbers coming in and things like that.
Just the average person.
So I don't know a whole lot about if tariffs are going to affect grocery prices.
It's my sense that they're not, but I don't know.
Does anyone have any information about that?
Libby, do you know any more about it?
Do you think they're going to actually affect the grocery?
Because I think you're right, Courtney.
I think if people feel like they're going to the grocery store because that's the most regular purchase that most people do that
and gas um and if they're going to the grocery store and they don't feel like they're getting
killed i think that things like team being more expensive on amazon or or i team was different
than amazon but you know things that you're you're buying from amazon being more expensive
will have less impact if you're going to the grocery store and you're buying from Amazon being more expensive will have less impact if
you're going to the grocery store and you're not getting crushed or you don't feel like you're
getting crushed. Does anyone else have a... I think the White House has done a really good
job of messaging in terms of letting people know that buying little cheap pieces of crap
off Timu or Amazon, where when you buy stuff on Amazon at this point, like I was looking for a
thing the other day for my cat, like just a dumb thing for my cat, you know, put the litter box in so I don't
have to look at it anyway. You know, people with cats, you know what I'm talking about. But I could,
it was very hard to find one that wasn't just made in China that I didn't know when it was ever going
to show up or if it was going to be like the picture said it was. And I'm constantly, and I'm sure I'm not
the only one, I'm constantly looking for like, was this made in the US? Is this going to be
decent quality? You know, like I have this situation with printers. How many printers
have I bought in the past like three or four years? I cannot get a printer to work.
I can't get a printer. Right, right. It's like it just one little aspect of it just stops working.
And what I wouldn't give for like the toaster my grandma had
in the 80s you know what i mean like stuff you don't want your toaster connected to wi-fi i don't
want that i don't want the talking fridge i don't want any of these things but i do want stuff that
works and stuff that lasts yeah you know and so like and and i keep hearing like i was listening
to this podcast the other day. It was on Honestly.
I don't know if you guys listen to Barry Weiss's podcast ever.
She's kind of interesting.
But you had two people with contrasting views, Batia Angar Sargon, who I think is really
an interesting.
She's very, very much a cheerleader for the administration.
She's very much a cheerleader for the administration, but she's also kind of a socialist.
And, you know, she lives, she lives in Brooklyn. She's a surprising cheerleader for the administration. And she's
really smart, right? But anyway, she was making the argument that it's important to bring home
manufacturing jobs, manufacturing jobs, even if factories are going to have AI components and all
of this stuff, and that Americans can do these jobs. And then you had Brianna Wu, who's like this trans leftist who's also on the show.
And Brianna was talking about how Americans are just not smart enough to do the kind of
jobs that they're doing in China.
Brianna has some bad takes.
Bad takes.
And she's had some bad takes.
All around.
Yeah.
But there they were on the episode.
And like I was catching up on a lot of podcasts at once.
Anyways, but I think that that's an interesting place to be for Americans. Do we want these jobs? Can we do these jobs? Can we produce quality merchandise? You know, like when Henry Ford, whatever you want to think about Henry Ford, when Henry Ford started his factory, like one thing he wanted was he wanted his workers to be able to buy a Ford, you know?
Yeah, that makes perfect sense.
I do think that it's an interesting question.
Would Americans pay more money for things that are not so disposable?
You hear people talk about, you know, consumerism and constantly upgrading.
And when something breaks, you just go buy another one
because things are so cheap now.
Do you guys get the sense that people would buy,
are comfortable with buying higher quality
and paying more money?
No.
Would you pay $75 for a toaster
if you knew that that was the last toaster
you'd ever have to buy?
Oh, yes, I would.
I said no because I saw a company did that experiment they were like it's going to cost us
uh i think two and a half times more if we do it out of china so they put it on their website
buy it from china for 350 bucks or from america or whatever it was for 790 what was it zero people
bought the american thing oh i'm trying to look it up right now. That's because the other thing was available at a cheaper price.
And the reason I ask.
And the idea is that the $75 toaster is available and it's a good quality toaster and it's made in America.
Or you could get a $90 toaster that's crap and made in China.
That's the idea of these tariffs is from what I understand. understand because like personally i will go with something that i know is going to last
if it like if i have the option if and i'll pay a little extra for something that i know that i'm
going to have in two three five years like i i've got a leather my leather bag here it wasn't cheap
but i know that thing's going to last just as long as i'm not you know don't abuse it it'll last me
probably last for the rest of my life well and part of it too is when you know that thing's going to last just as long as I'm not, you know, don't abuse it. It'll last me probably last for the rest of my life. Well, and part of it too, is when you know that things fall
apart, we have a situation now where it doesn't matter what you pay for something. It's crap,
right? Like, yes, there is no quality. There is no quality option. Like I could pay $500 for a
printer and it's going to die in a year and just stop working anyway. You know, I could pay
like a thousand dollars for a dress and the hems aren't finished and it has no lining. Like why?
Why? Like it used to be that if you were going to pay, you feel me on the dress, right? It used to
be if you were going to like buy a piece of designer clothing, this was a classic item. It
was going to last you 20, 30 years.
You were going to be able to sell it at the consignment shop for good money as well.
Like good quality pieces.
Now if you buy a designer item, it's just as crappy as whatever you bought at H&M.
It just has a different label.
Yeah, that's where I think we're seeing a big shift is in the fashion space.
And I think a lot of the younger generations are more focused
on sustainability and even more focused on cottons things like that better materials I don't I think
the I think you're right like but I'm I mean I'm I'm less versed in fashion but I know that like
if I am going to go buy a tool I'm not going to go to Harbor Freight right I'm going to go buy a tool. I'm not going to go to Harbor Freight, right? I'm going to go buy a DeWalt or I'm going to go buy, you know, a good quality, a craftsman,
a good quality tool that I know that I can, you know, bring back to the manufacturer and
be like, yo, this broke if something breaks on it.
But you go to Harbor Freight, you're getting what you pay for.
Now, I know there are people that love Harbor Freight stuff, love Harbor Freight because
they love that cheap stuff.
But you can't deny that the quality is not the same.
And so I think that it does go beyond just, you know, fashion and stuff.
Well, I think people are a lot simpler than politicians or these economists make them out to be.
It's like consumer choice, right?
If they have options, they're going to look, they're going to see.
Like you said, if it's provided, you know, maybe the study shows they don't go that way. But
I think right now what you're having, the argument from America First folks is, look,
if we can make this an equal playing field, if we can get China to have to not, you know,
be able to compete with a price that's a third the cost, then there will be this opportunity
for these products that come in. Here's the problem. Politically, you only have a year, right? So anyone that ever tries to do this,
you have one year that you have to have not just the changes made, but then the products have to
start coming in. But most importantly, the voters have to feel the change, right? When we talk about
these numbers that come out of the White House, when we talk about all these high level things,
I just think at the end of the day, when people walk into the voting booth.
And by the way, the reason I'm always bringing it back to the voting booth is, you know, that's why these politicians are making the decisions they're making.
Right. As they're trying to figure that out. But for them to get these changes in place in time.
I mean, we're talking about these changes have to be done by the end of this year.
And then you've got to have products start coming in and they've got to start feeling that by the summer of 2026.
I mean, it's going to be quick.
But to me, I just think people, I'm not calling them stupid.
I just think that most normal people, they're trying to pay their mortgage, put food on the table.
What are the options?
And I think a lot of them don't trust right now this idea that, well, there is a quality product.
Because I'm 33 years old.
There aren't a lot of quality products that I've seen in my lifetime.
It's all cheap garbage.
All crap.
All of it.
And it all breaks.
And then it all just falls apart.
And then you're just like, I worked really hard.
I got paid.
I spent my money on this.
And now it's in the gutter.
And I think Americans are genuinely pissed off about that situation.
It's so infuriating. Right? I mean, it's so the gutter. And I think Americans are genuinely pissed off about that situation. It's so infuriating.
Right?
I mean, it's so infuriating.
I think it's one of those things where, like, people don't realize they are until, like, something breaks.
And then they realize, oh, this is frustrating.
And then it goes away.
But then it's something that kind of stays in the back of their mind.
But they don't really think about it.
Well, they order it on Amazon.
It's there in two hours.
Yeah.
It's the same rinse, wash, repeat.
And now there's something where it's hard to return stuff, too.
They make it
increasingly harder to return things. I'm not sure what the deal
is with Amazon lately, but I've had
three orders that I've ordered in the past
three weeks and have issues getting
to my house. Last year, I bought a pair of shoes for my
son, and instead of the shoes I ordered, it was
a pair of used Reeboks
with gum on the bottom. It showed
up in the box, and I was so grossed out and horrified.
Yeah.
And I couldn't get any response.
And I think I had to like take to Twitter to be like,
Hey,
Hey,
you guys actually take the time to return things.
If we're talking like something that's under 50 bucks,
I usually do,
but they'll just give me the money.
They'll just be like,
fine,
just keep it and keep the thing.
If I'm like a broke or if it's any kind of food product,
they don't want it back.
So if they send you the wrong food product,
you just tell them and they'll refund you on the fly.
I don't abuse it, but sometimes they'll literally,
like you said, Phil, I'll get like three orders in a row
will be wrong every once in a while.
I got a wave of it like two months ago.
I don't know if you guys did.
Two months ago.
I just think we have it so good and don't realize it
because I think the
majority of people, and I get it, some people are having tough times, but the majority of people,
you order like a shirt for 30 bucks and it comes in, it's the wrong size. Are you really going
through the process of getting the return label, sending it back? I just think a lot of people,
they're not doing that. Well, that's why they make it harder to return it because they know
that if it's hard to return, most people are just going to eat that 30 bucks.
But the thing is, there's two sides of it, right?
So if you don't like shopping on Amazon and getting garbage delivered to your house that's
wrong and then just eating the 30 bucks and you want to go to the store and try and buy
something there, you can't find the thing at the store.
It's hard to just go buy something at the store that is the thing you need., it's hard to, like, just go buy something at the store
that is the thing you need.
So a lot of times
you end up having to buy it.
You know, you'll go to, like,
Walmart or whatever
and instead of, like,
five decent options,
there's one option that sucks.
Talk about having a good,
like, even just the idea
of the store.
Right.
Like, there's a store
called The Store
that we are just so used to.
I like The Store.
It's available.
I want to go to The Store. What is The Store. I want to go to The Store.
What is The Store?
I want to go to the mall.
I want to buy stuff at the mall.
It is.
I do like, I really do miss like having the ability to go and like pick something up if
I need it.
Like Amazon's cool and stuff.
But a lot of times I'm like, you know, like I've like one of the things that I've been
waiting on is just red Loctite. Why am I waiting on red Loctite? Why don't I go to Lowe's? Well, because it's on Amazon
and I just hit the button and say, okay, it should be here tomorrow. Well, guess what? Now I've been
waiting a week and a half for my damn red Loctite, you know? So I, I, I do, I do miss the whole, the,
the, the fact that you would just be like, oh, I want to go to the store to get this, or I need
this and I'll go to the mall and pick it up.
I had a fun experience on Monday.
I was at the White House for the Eagles celebration.
So I'm trying to buy a green suit and it plays to this.
You know, I wanted to get a green suit.
I was looking for a Kelly green suit, but any green suit would have done.
But I'm in Vegas.
I'm out there and I'm like in a massive metro area.
And every single, you know, men's dress store that
I would go to. Now this is a first world privilege problem. Okay. I'm not talking about a $30
expenditure, but I'm trying to get this, got this invite. And every single person would say the same
thing. They're like, Oh, well, you know, you can order online. You know, there's tons of options.
And then I go on Amazon, I order this Kelly green suit. It comes in. It looks like I'm a leprechaun.
It doesn't fit.
It's horrible.
The material's just garbage.
Yeah, you're right.
I miss that experience.
You used to be able to get that in Philadelphia at Craft Brothers.
There you go.
You know?
It's Austrian. It's the same with food.
I want to test out my food before I buy it, like my produce.
I want to feel the melon.
Same with the shirt.
I mean, it's the same with the shirt.
But because of this upward momentum of finances finances since especially since covid the acceleration the hyper conglomeration of of
corporations you're seeing like megacorps in control of a lot of i feel like the the issue is
i feel like the issue is that covid kind of gave us a taste of what it could be but as time's gone
on the the quality that was that it used quality that products used to have from Amazon,
like you used to be able to get decent stuff from Amazon,
it's really just gone down the tubes
as more and more and more people
got used to having things delivered to their house.
It's like once you get used to that,
you knee jerk to Amazon to get anything.
And then it's like companies realize
oh we can just sell garbage on Amazon
and people will buy it so it's like
you know it's an unhappy
byproduct of constantly
getting stuff from the
internet as opposed to going and
I'm sure they have this conversation
Amazon and they're like okay we're going to just
sell crap we're going to be willing to lower
our quality. Amazon doesn't sell stuff. Or they'll facilitate the sales of
whatever cheap quality. And then they're like, if they return it, they return it. It's a cost on us,
but odds are they're not going to return it because they just play on that. I think you're
probably right. That's why I almost never buy anything from Amazon unless there's something
that I just cannot get. I'm like, nope, I'm going to go to the store. I'm going to try it on
and make sure that it's something decent. And even still, that's the sad part is that so many
of the products that are in the stores, even that you go to look at, or it's terrible. I had a pair
of shorts that I just bought. Um, I don't normally go to the big department stores, but I went to JC
pennies and I got a pair of shorts. The first day that I wore the shorts, the button like failed
and like it broke out of the whole shorts. And I'm like, what in the world? I I wore the shorts, the button like failed and like it broke out of the whole
shorts. And I'm like, what in the world? I'm like, what, what is this garbage? And I'm like,
fine. I'm just buying stuff at Levi's. I'm like, I know that it'll last longer. I'm like,
this is so stupid. And it doesn't matter where you buy it. I mean, you could buy shorts for,
you know, $20. You could buy shorts for a hundred dollars. You could buy shorts for,
you know, $200. The button's going100 you could buy shorts for you know $200 the button's
gonna come off button's gonna come off did you guys see well before we move on away from amazon
that they were going to display the tariff costs on their website and then there's a bunch of
government hoping they would and i thought it was a good idea because i at the very least i want to
know if something's coming from china or something made in america i wish they would tell you it was
interesting because it wasn't going to be for the consumer side.
It was for something called Amazon haul,
which is like more wholesale or something.
The White House pushed back.
So as of three days ago on CNBC,
Amazon says display tariff costs not going to happen.
Yeah.
Government always hates transparency.
I mean, think about that.
Amazon is trying to put this forward.
If they wanted to go forward,
let's say they'd have it done in three days,
I still can't tell you what it costs to go to the doctor's office to get a routine physical.
No one can.
I mean, there's no transparency, and the government loves shutting that down.
Why do you guys think that—is it the cheap quality just because they can get away with it
because China has a monopoly on manufacturing right now?
Well, I think because people expect to replace things as opposed to have things that last.
Oh, land obsolescence.
Yeah, that's something that's been fairly well known.
And maybe it has something to do with the fact that there is such a turnover in technology now that kind of that mindset is filtered into other products as well.
But, I mean.
Well, and more people don't know how to do repairs on products
anymore, either. I mean, look at cars, they've made everything so sophisticated on some of these
newer vehicles, that if you were going to try to actually go work on that yourself, or you're well,
you'll need all these, you know, very specific tools, you have the whole, you know, digital
apparatus that's built into it. It's not the same as it was, you know, 30 years ago to try to change your oil or just do something routine on your car.
There's this movement called the right to repair movement.
I love that. I believe in that too.
And I would hear it and it'd be like boring. Every time I'd hear it, I'd be like, ah, yawn,
data, tech, but it's so important. According to the people that I think it's Luis Rossman,
who has been on this show before, he's big into it. And it's just like, hey, Apple,
if you're going to sell products you need to sell
the products that I am going to need to repair this
thing and it's like a
legal battle I don't know where it's at right
now but I think that would be something cool to push
forward I don't know
that's a big deal too yeah because people used
to be able to look at like my cousin Vinny like
she knew how to fix a car well I mean
fixing cars I just watched that again the other
day good movie I mean I don cars. I just watched that again the other day. It's a good movie.
Good movie.
I mean, I don't know that I want the government telling Apple what they have to do.
I don't know that I want the government telling Tesla what they have to do.
I do think that it's fine to be like, hey, you know, I want to know how to fix this or I want to be able to fix this.
I also like the way Apple products work. And part
of that is Apple's control over how they work. I like the way my Tesla works. And part of that is
Tesla's control over how they work. So I do understand people that are like, yo, I want to
be able to fix this. But at the same time, I also like, I don't want the quality of the product to change. I don't
want my computer to, to work badly. I don't want to have, you know, the, the garbage, you know,
spyware or whatever that it tends to be ubiquitous through, uh, PC stuff in my Apple products as
well. I like that control that the company has. And there are options. If you don't want to be,
have a company that has that
kind of control of it, you can buy other stuff. Yeah. And I think the market reacts. I know
everyone's jumping the AI, but we keep talking about cars. I was meeting with these guys.
There's this new company, Crash Champions, collision repair type company. And they were
telling me they're dying for technicians, people that have these skills, because most people don't
these days, right? And most people don't these days.
Right. And most people, you know, even just a simple ability to fix something in your car.
They went from like eight locations in 2018. They've got like over 650 now.
So, you know, not saying this plays into the AI thing and that, you know, we're trying to.
But the market will respond. And I think a lot of these things, it's interesting to see.
Yeah, we'd like to be able to fix it, but there is an argument here.
It's creating a lot of jobs, you know, making it so that things are popping up.
But, yeah, the crash champions, I was talking to them last week and kind of fascinated with, you know, how the market is moving to that because it's a real skill to be able to fix those things that most people, they just don't have that skill set.
They're repairing stuff with new technology?
So they're just, I mean, they're repairing, it's a crash, you know, collision type repairs,
but which obviously I'm not saying normal folks should be able to do that,
but I'm just saying it's interesting to see the job market kind of spring up
because there's just certain things that AI, it's going to take a while to get there,
but the market's going to provide and respond.
All right, we're going to jump to this story here.
Court Audio from 2020
reveals wife of Kilmar Abrego Garcia said he hit her repeatedly. Shocker. From the post-millennial,
Kilmar Abrego Garcia, an alleged MS-13 gang member deported to El Salvador,
faces additional allegations of abuse after a newly released audio recording featuring his wife, Jennifer Vasquez Ora,
pleading to a judge for a temporary protection order against him.
In the audio recorded during an August 2020 court hearing,
Sura had detailed the alleged physical abuse she suffered from Abrega Garcia,
which included allegations that he grabbed her by the hair, slapped her and hit her.
I mean, slapping is hitting, but...
On Wednesday, he hit me, like around like 3 in the morning.
He would just wake up and like hit me, she told the judge.
Sura said she attempted to escape after witnessing a neighbor walk by and scream for help.
However, the attempt was unsuccessful.
She said, Ebrego Garcia then grabbed me from my hair and then slapped me,
according to the audio obtained by USA Today. Does the is the audio here on this this video or is this? Yeah, there's an audio.
All right. Let's take a listen to this. I came to fill out a protective order. I think it was in
December. But I didn't show up to the court because his family, like, washed my brain telling me that his dad was sick and not to do it.
So I didn't do anything.
But after that, it was like I would call the police.
I have a lot of police reports.
And I kept trying to get to the door basement to try to open the door, and then, like, he pushed me.
So then when I was able to go outside to get a
phone I called 911 from a disconnected phone um now they took a long time to get to the house
it was probably like 20-30 minutes so I saw a neighbor um walking his dog and I opened the
door and I was like help and then when he heard me like he grabbed me from my hair and then he
slapped me and then the neighbor like he didn't know what to do.
He didn't know what to react.
I have pictures of the evidence, all the bruises.
Because even on Wednesday, he hit me around 3 in the morning.
He would just wake up and hit me.
And then last Saturday for my daughter's birthday party, before I went to my daughter's birthday party, he slapped me three times.
And then last week I did call the police.
My sister called the police because he hit me in front of my sister.
Is anyone surprised about this?
It's a bad dude.
Very bad dude.
Look, my opinion on this whole Abrego Garcia situation is deport him regardless of any criminal activity that he's had the fact that he's here illegally is all i
need to know go home send him out i don't care this stuff proves that he's bad but this is all
democrat republican arguing over you know is he a good guy is he a bad guy is he a innocent baba
angel or is he a you know, MS-13 gang evil man?
I don't care.
He's here illegally.
Send him home.
This is why Donald Trump was elected.
I don't see why this is so controversial.
What I think is crazy, too, is the Democrats have spent so much time trying to paint this guy as a saint.
And he had a deportation order already.
He wasn't deported at the time. It was, in fact,
I think in 2019, the DOJ just decided not to send him home. There was an order that he didn't have to go to some place, but he could be sent to other places. So he's had his due process.
You know, this order to deport him has been there this whole time. He already went through in front of a Home Depot in Maryland.
What was it?
After his first arrest, like 2019-ish.
And that was part of local cops doing an investigation into local gang activity.
Like, that's why he was picked up there.
He's beat up his wife, obviously, many times.
And even when she was interviewed about it and she said, are you afraid of your husband? She said, my husband's alive. That's all I can say.
After a really long pause, like this is this is not a guy who he's not American. He's already
has a deportation order. He's a citizen of El Salvador. And now he's under their jurisdiction.
Like, how is this an issue for everybody?
And I cannot understand how Democrats continue to pick these issues to go all in on that
10, 15 percent of their own party is excited about it or thinks that it's some big deal.
To me, this is going to become if they stick with this and they go all in the way they
are, if they double down, they triple down.
This will become the issue that the border has been for the past four years.
They're doubling down on the worst issue they have, which is the border.
They still think this virtue signaling is going to work.
I mean, I don't think it's as big as the transgender surgeries for these prison inmates.
I don't think the Republicans will spend that much money on it.
But if they continue this into 2026, talking about this guy,
and all this stuff keeps coming out,
I just think it's one of the stupidest political moves
you can possibly make.
That's why I love it.
It's sort of the phenomenon of like
smelling blood in the water, a shark,
just one drop of blood,
and that motherfucker's gonna go crazy.
Just like people looking for a problem,
looking for a Trump problem.
There's a drop of it.
Let's go crazy.
And it's almost like you can bait them. I'm sure the administration's looking for a problem, looking for a Trump problem. There's a drop of it. Let's go crazy. And it's almost like you can bait them.
I'm sure the administration is looking for ways to bait them, getting upset about things that aren't a big.
Well, I mean, look, but it's not even just the administration.
There was that.
What was it?
The reporter that was walking next to Ilhan Omar and asked her a question just completely and totally calmly normal wasn't you know wasn't
some kind of gotcha question f you her response was f you for asking her a question that's kind
of become the norm someone replied to that with the like that video with do you talk to your
brother with that mouth i love it um i i assume she doesn't because, well, I'm not going to go there.
Anyways, but yeah, this is kind of the norm for Democrats.
They think that, it seems like, they think that being edgy is going to win them votes
because it wins them a popularity contest on the internet.
Sure, it does energize their base and their base is like, yeah, sticking it to the man but that doesn't win elections they've learned nothing they're
they continue to pick these issues that are showing that they've i mean i thought 2024 what
got me nervous was okay they're going to move away from the crazy stuff they're going to come out
they're going to admit harris was a horrible choice they're going to move away from the woke
stuff they're going to get off the border they're going to say away from the woke stuff. They're going to get off the border. They're going to say, no, let's have a sensible border policy. Nope. Just complete double down.
They're in complete denial. And look, there's time to write the ship. There's time for them
to pick a nominee or, you know, have some sort of new leader come up. But it's just wild to me
on some of these issues. I mean, even if you look at polling, you know, and I think, look,
some of them are learning. I mean, Gretchen Whitmer just did her little thing at the Trump event.
She got it.
Sort of.
She hit her face, which was.
No, no, this was the new one.
So that was White House.
She hit her face and then she got the backlash and realized, hey, I can't just be edgy.
Right.
I can't just keep being anti-Trump.
And enough people that are working class were like, what are you doing?
You're at the White House.
So then they had this public event and Trump brought her up and kind of said, hey, do you want to say a few words? And I think that eventually we might have to spoon feed them,
but the Democrats are going to learn from their own voters that we have to have rational opinions
and to just keep being radical. They should have learned from 24. It's not going to sell. I hope
they don't. I hope they, you know, put AOC up there, put Bernie up there. But it's going to
it's going to backfire politically.
Well, that's the plan that they have. Did you hear Kamala Harris the other night giving her speech at the Emerge Gala?
No one heard Kamala Harris give that speech.
You and 17 other Americans.
I watched it because I cover the news.
But she announced exactly who she thinks are the leaders of the party.
And she praised them. Cory Booker, Chris Van Hollen, Chris Murphy, Jasmine Crockett, Maxwell Frost, AOC and Bernie Sanders. These are the people that
she mentioned who are like, you know, the pinnacles of the Democratic Party right now.
And all of these people, I mean, AOC definitely has some political talent,
but Jasmine Crockett has no ideas. Maxwell Frost is an idiot. Chris Van Hollen went to El Salvador and he, you know,
to talk to this MS 13 guy and he never talked to his own constituents,
whose family,
you know,
who with Rachel Moran,
I think murdered by illegal immigrants.
He didn't reach out to her mom.
Um,
Cory Booker,
the last thing I remember about him was he gave that speech.
And before that,
I remember he pulled somebody out of a fire in Newark and like, that's it. Like these are, these are your top talent. Do any of them. And Bernie Sanders
is what, 80 million years old right now? Yes. Do any of them have one single issue that is something
that they feel like here's a solution or here is a bold plan for the future? I just, I don't feel
like they have anything they bring to the table except orange man bed. Yeah, that's pretty much what they have.
And now they're saying, you know, that America, the America we're living in now is Trump's
horrible vision.
Well, we've got jobs up.
You know, we've got the border finally under control, which is, of course, why we had to
bring Trump back again in the first place.
He fixed the border.
They destroyed it again.
He had to come back to fix it.
Do you think that good?
Well, Cliff, back to something you said about rationality.
I think that a story like this changes the narrative quite a bit for a lot of people, at least people more in the middle.
Maybe not your radical leftists, but it is, it happens quite a bit where they cannot, they struggle because these victims want to come forward. They want to tell the courts what's going on. But then they're worried that the person that they care about will then be deported. And so they go back and forth. They retract. And it's this ongoing issue. But I think for a lot of Americans, when they see, OK, this really is a bad dude. I think that they're not going to be so much on the democrat side of things i like like i said i like the fact that they're taking these positions because they're extremely unpopular positions to take and so i do think that
if they do continue to stick to their guns and have these you know extort these positions then
you're going to see you know a lot of failure at the ballot box next year or in, in two years. And I,
that's great.
Like,
that's what I'm hoping for because I think the Democrat policies have been
terrible for the U S but I do get the sense.
I do have a feeling that they're going to figure it out.
I can't imagine that there aren't,
that there aren't people like Carville that are going to be like,
look,
you have to stop.
Even if he's come out and he said, oh, you know, David Hogg is a fighter. I know that he did. He kind of bent the knee there, which is, in my opinion, a terrible idea.
You know, behind the scenes, he's like, you can't expect to win with this.
These are all these are all 80, 20, 85, 15 kind of issues.
And the more Trump can keep them off talking economics, right, whether it's good or bad,
that's what the election is going to come down to.
If I'm the Democrats right now, the biggest missed opportunity is nobody is out there
with some sort of economic plan that they're saying, this is how we're going to bring costs
down.
This is how we're going to control the inflation.
And that's got to be their pivotal issue in 2026.
If they pick anything else,
you know, those issues, they're not with the American people on. But once again, I know
they'll say, oh, some random Democrat congressman has a plan out there to, you know, do X, Y, and Z
financially. But that's the missing piece. If I'm in the Democrat strategy room, it's like, look,
let's at least put something out. So if things do downturn, if things are not going great economically, or people are struggling with the cost of food,
we at least have an alternative. They're just playing Trump's game. They're focused on all
the wrong issues. I don't want to give them too much advice, but that's the missing piece. You
do that. Then you at least have that, that Trump card to play when it's time in 2026. But right now, you're screaming about every issue except the cost of goods.
I don't see how they are going to right this ship when they're continuing to bring to light
or focus on the most radical people in their base.
But we're going to go to this story here, which is a bit, it's kind of a similar issue because it's got the MS-13 bent.
Today, breaking from Bill Malugan, three Virginia Department of Corrections officers were stabbed in a state prison today in what the state says was a premeditated attack involving five MS-13 gang members,
all of whom are Salvadoran illegal aliens who've been convicted of violent crimes such as murder and rape. So the statement says,
Richmond, the Virginia Department of Corrections is currently investigating the apparently premeditated stabbing
of three corrections officers at the Wallens Ridge State Prison.
The attack occurred at approximately 9.45 a.m. on Friday, May 2nd.
Five of the six inmates involved in the attack are confirmed MS-13 gang members from El Salvador
who are in this country illegally.
Each have been convicted of violent crimes including aggravated murder, first and second
degree murder, and rape.
The other inmate involved in the attack is a confirmed member of the Serrano 13 gang
and from the United States, serving
a sentence for second-degree murder. Send them
all to Gitmo. Yes.
Well, or Seacoat in
El Salvador.
Yeah, I mean, they're illegal aliens, so you can
send them to Seacoat, too. Again,
it's bad that
there are all these criminals
that we have
that are illegal immigrants,
just send them out.
Hold on.
They should all get sent right out.
What about, I'm not advocating for capital punishment,
but if they were attacked and killed, did they kill guards?
Because I don't think we, if they did a horrible enough thing,
you don't send them anywhere.
Well, they committed the attack.
They stabbed them, so I don't know that they.
Yeah, but they're convicted of murder, second-degree murder, and rape.
Yeah.
I mean, so before this incident, you know, they've already got that.
They were already bad guys.
My first thought is, what the hell are illegal, violent, illegal immigrants doing in American prisons still?
Well, if they've committed a crime in the U.S., the U.S. will imprison them.
And hold them instead of send them overseas.
You keep them up until free.
We only just got that deal with El Salvador, and we're paying them, I think, six million dollars a year to take people from our prisons.
And a counter argument for years, I mean, honestly, from the right and the left was if somebody does something horrible here, let's imprison them here once they're convicted.
Because if we send them back, you know, how confident are we they're going to imprison them there?
And then they come back. And historically, that has been the case that they'll just get to whatever country they were from.
And that country will be like, well, you can't stay here. So you got to get out of here.
So what they do is they make their way back to the border and come back to the U.S. illegally.
I don't have a problem keeping them in in Gitmo. I don't have a problem sending them to to el salvador but again this just illustrates the point that we have a
problem with criminal gangs in the u.s that are that are illegally here that are illegal immigrants
and we need to do something about that and we can't allow one political party to put the brakes
on that when the the whole of the American people are against keeping these people
here. I think if that was Al Qaeda, if there were five members of Al Qaeda that we had had in prison
and they stabbed an American guard, I think there would be a lot more anger from people across the
spectrum because Al Qaeda has been accepted as a terrorist organization generally. And it's still
like, I think people are resistant because it's Trump that's the one that said ms-13 is a terrorist organization people are like anything you say trump is is
bullshit i don't agree with you but i think you're right you know knowing a known al-qaeda terrorists
in prison attack a guard oh i don't think they're seeing the light of day like that's you don't if
they're already al-qaeda terror and i'm not saying it was righteous to call these people
terrorists i'm not saying that maybe they were maybe these people terrorists. I'm not saying that. Maybe they were. Maybe they weren't.
George Bush was a funny guy.
Well, Al Qaeda?
Yeah.
No, it's right to call them terrorists.
Yeah, they're terrorists.
I'm completely...
Them, ISIS.
ISIS was the next one. I was like, I just heard ISIS on the news.
I'm like, oh, now the next terrorist organization is in the books.
Now it's called ISIS, this one. Anyway.
They're terrorists, too.
I think MS-13, this is definitely an example that these guys are,
and five guys don't speak for the entire MS-13,
but they're definitely not giving it a good name.
Well, it's a criminal gang.
It's like an international criminal gang.
They do drugs and smuggling and human trafficking. Human trafficking.
I mean, the drug stuff, you're going to have a lot of libertarians be like,
well, you know, if you're just like people do, the drugs they want to do, you wouldn't have this problem.
You know, the United States Institutes for Peace were arguing that the Taliban should not be cracking down on opium producers because it was bad for Afghans worldwide.
I can't believe that idiocy.
We were paying for that.
That's dumb but it's dumb the the point that i'm making is like even if the libertarians go and make the stupid
argument that oh well you know you can't do that because they're just selling drugs and it's fine
like they're still human traffickers and that's actually you know that's they're they that's
that's facilitating the rape of minors, like of little kids, little kids.
You're not talking about, you know, adult women that are like, well, maybe if I go into the sex working industry, things will be fine.
No, you're talking about the rape of children.
So libertarian in America, libertarians need to stop with their argument of, well, you know, they're just if we stop taking the drugs,
it's our fault. Blame America. It's not. It's it's them trafficking children. That's that's the big,
horrible thing that's happening. And the thing is, we wouldn't be having any of these problems if the border hadn't have been open for so long, where so many illegal immigrants were pouring
through and we had no checks to see who
who it was that was showing up where they uh wanted for you know rape and murder in the country
they're coming from um hey we really should probably not let them in the u.s that's the
whole reason why there's an immigration process you're supposed to go through or even to apply
for a visa is because we want to vet these people before they come into our country. And then they end up running amok and causing all these problems.
If we didn't have all the people, all these really bad people pouring in, it would be much less of a problem.
I was thinking about it because they call it an invasion.
And they literally, that Biden administration literally didn't defend our country.
They let people, foreign people.
He was complicit.
That's another level.
He invited them.
At the very least. Surge the border. Defend the country. Yeah was complicit. That's another level. But at the very least, surge the border.
Defend the country. Yeah, he did. He told him to surge in his campaign, in his 2020 campaign.
Defend the country. That's your job as the American government, as the military,
is defend the country. If people are coming in illegally, defend the country.
There was this crazy thing, too, where Texas tried to put up a border wall,
and the Biden administration took them to court. And the court said, thing, too, where Texas tried to put up a border wall and the Biden administration took them to court and the court said, hey, Texas, you're not allowed to put up a border wall.
And now you have all of these judges who are saying you're not allowed.
OK, so you're not allowed to defend the country.
We already have discovered that.
And you had multiple states taking the Biden administration to court saying, you know, you're destroying the border, you're creating this crisis.
And judges were like, meh, whatever. But now that the Trump administration is trying to
get rid of criminals who don't belong here, who have orders of deportation already,
who've committed crimes in America, the judges are saying, no, they have to stay here. Like,
what is up with this judiciary who for the past four years refused to enforce the law, refused to hold the administration accountable to the laws that Congress set out and now is preventing the now is preventing the government from deporting people?
Why is that happening?
What kind of judiciary is this?
Why are they doing this?
Andrew Jackson's got a quote about the who was at the courts.
He said they made their decision, now let them enforce it.
Well, that's the whole thing, right?
I mean, if people don't, and this is something that the Chief Justice said a couple of weeks ago,
if people don't have respect for the court's orders, then, you know, we don't really have a third branch of government.
The Supreme Court, it's fascinating.
They can make a decision, but they can't do anything about it. It's all entirely dependent
on if we respect their decisions. And the judiciary is getting to a point where a lot
of their decisions are hard to respect, like the one recently where you had the ACLU bring a case.
They said the Trump administration was going to deport, I think, 50 Venezuelans from
Anson, Texas, from a facility in Texas. And the ACLU brought the case and they brought the case
in the Northern District of Texas. And they said, hey, you know, you have to put a stop to this.
It's going to happen right now. Simultaneously, they brought the case to the Fifth Circuit
in Louisiana and they brought the case to the Supreme Court all at once. So the ACLU didn't give the lower courts time to make a decision, right?
The Northern District Court of Texas was like, hang on, we'll get to it.
You know, the Fifth Circuit said something as well.
And then the Supreme Court jumped in, completely bypassing the lower courts.
Now, the Supreme Court is an appellate court.
Like that's, you don't get to the Supreme Court without appealing and appealing and appealing. It's the, it's an appellate court like that's you don't get to the Supreme Court without appealing and appealing and appealing.
It's the it's an appellate court. The Supreme Court jumped in and said, hey, Trump administration, you can't deport any of these people without an order, a further order from this court, which makes no sense because that case was that case is a Texas case.
And with the ACLU did in that case was they said, you know, they wanted protection for this specific class of people.
They want to turn anybody who is potentially subject to deportation into one class nationwide so that they can bring one suit.
And because otherwise, per the Supreme Court rulings previously this year, you have to bring suit in the district
where the people are being held, which means the ACLU has to run around to like hundreds of
different districts to prevent this stuff. And they want to just do one thing nationally. But
it's it's so fascinating to me that these courts just let all this happen. All these judges were
like, no, you can't. The Biden administration doesn't have to do that. They don't have to
protect the border and neither can you states. You can't protect the border. And now they're
not letting now they're not letting the enforcement arm clean this all up. It makes no sense to me.
I think that the only sense I can make of it is that it's an emotional reaction or it's being
incited by an emotional reaction to Trump's willingness to use intimidation instead of
persuasion. And people are literally afraid of the part of it was a California.
I'm sorry.
Just one thing that there was a California judge, Edward Chen, who was objecting to the
deportation of Venezuelans, in part because he thought that DHS was using negative stereotypes
about the Venezuelans.
And you had a judge in I forget her last name, but a judge in Boston who was saying that you can't eliminate the temporary protected status for a whole bunch of people because a lot of these people, in part, because a lot of these people send remittances home and their families and their home countries depend on their income in the U.S.
So you can't, you know, so the U.S. can't restrict, can't change their status, their semi-legal status.
So that is, those are both emotional reactions.
I understand your your your perspective, but that doesn't that doesn't really address why they were behaving the way they did under the Biden administration.
That's a good point, man.
You know, like if they're like, well, you know, we don't want to send these people back because it's mean, you know, that doesn't address the fact that they weren't allowing people to prevent them from getting, they weren't allowing states from allowing them to get in.
And they had no, no, no inclination to force the Biden administration or even make rulings about the Biden administration actually not enforcing the law.
Because, I mean, that's the job of the executive.
Yeah. But the point you made earlier where you said, they're here illegally we don't have to debate all the
other things the crazy thing is that democrats are talking now about ms-13 ms-13 i mean the ads are
going to write themselves these guys they're los angeles chapter documented you do have to commit
a murder to get in that is documented it's public ms-13 everybody does they have to commit a murder to get in. That is documented. It's public. MS-13, they have to do a murder. The craziest thing I've saw about MS-13,
a majority of the hit jobs that they put out, the killings from them are done by minors.
A majority of them. Nobody talks about this, but when the Democrats are going to go in and defend
MS-13, I'm telling you, this is going to become a huge talking point. You heard it here first.
A majority of the killings
that they do as a gang are people
under the age of 18. If you don't think
those people are bad people
that no one is going to defend, they
are subhuman people,
I just think it's very clear
that we're not just talking about people that came here
illegally. These are bad dudes.
Yeah, that's terrible. Do they do
that because minors can't
be, minors have a different set of
rules? Yeah, because they're
protected from being treated as
an adult. And they try to
get them before they're, you know,
17, where they, it's kind of
a gray area. You know, they get them
if they can get them when they're like
14 or 15, when they're clearly
a child, and have them commit their first murder then, you know, that's.
Yeah. And I can't believe that this is happening in the United States.
And we're just allowing this in other countries.
If you're like a bad person and you go commit crimes in these countries, first off, they might not let you in to begin with.
But then if you do bad stuff,'re gonna go to jail forever and you don't have people you
know that are like oh the poor ms-13 gang members we need to we need to be there for them those
people it does it is you know and we've said this on the show a bunch of times but it is
really remarkable that they're going to use the the perspective of oh the poor ms-13 gang members
you can say oh this is not you know they didn't get due process or whatever,
but to really sit there and be like, oh, we're going to defend the gang members,
you know, it's something that the Democrats can't help but do,
is they're defending bad people.
Defending inmates for transgender surgery being paid by taxpayers.
I mean, I'm not saying that transgender folks that are convicted of much lesser crimes are
MS-13, but man, you pick some funny people to go to bat for.
Well, yeah, there was a, did you guys talk about it on the show?
I probably missed it and you probably did.
But the guy who is accused of firebombing a Tesla dealership in Kansas City, a judge
released him in part because he has ADHD, is depressed, and needed access to his gender-affirming treatment.
He allegedly committed the act in March.
He started the gender treatment in March.
Do you think he was on hormones and the gender-affirming care could have had to have done with what he decided to do?
Maybe.
I mean, estrogen does really weird things to the brain.
So I don't know.
You said it, not me.
I sure did.
I sure did say it.
It's the truth.
We're going to jump to this story now.
Three House Democrats asked to be removed from the Trump impeachment resolution.
We were talking about how crazy Democrats are, but this might actually be indicating that they're trying to get their ass together from the Hill.
A trio of House Democrats asked to be removed as co-sponsors of a resolution to impeach President Trump, a sign that many in the party do not want to go down down the path of trying to remove the president from office, at least at the current moment. Reps Kwesi Mfumi from Maryland, Robin Kelly, and Jerry Nadler had signed on as co-sponsors
of Rep. Cherie Thandier's impeachment resolution, which includes seven articles of impeachment.
But Tuesday afternoon, they went to the House floor and asked for their names to be taken
off the legislation.
The House clerk granted their requests.
Spokespeople from Kelly and Mifumi said the lawmakers initially signed on to the effort
because they assumed it had been reviewed by leadership.
When they learned it was not, they asked for their names to be removed.
Congressman Mifumi removed his name as a co-sponsor from House Resolution 353 because he was made aware it was not cleared by Democratic leadership and not fully vetted legally.
And he preferred to err on the side of caution, the spokesperson for Mifumi said.
The congresswoman was under the impression that the resolution was drafted and reviewed by both the House Judiciary Committee and leadership when she originally signed on during a vote series on the floor.
Kelly spokesman said Nadler's office did not respond to several requests for comment.
Do you guys buy that?
That those are the reasons that they want their names off?
Or do you think that this is just politically a bad move at this time?
Because I think we're all in agreement that should the democrats take the house in the
midterms there will be articles of impeachment filed again john ossoff and chuck schumer already
basically said that they would do that you know um yeah i think uh i think part of what happened
here is that the congressman who brought the impeachment um he turned out to look a little
bit crazy and i think maybe they didn't look a little bit crazy.
The guy's $730,000 in debt in his campaign.
And he left a bunch of beagles to die in a lab in New Jersey when his business went bankrupt.
Yeah, they're not sending their best.
I will tell you that.
I think it is authentic that they got on it and then got off.
I don't think they purposely said, hey, I'm going to get on this resolution and now I'm
going to get off it. I think the reason is, once again, I'm not saying
that the Democrats have had a full awakening, but I think they probably saw the backlash.
They saw the backlash to just being super anti-Trump and enough of their normal Democrats
in their district probably like, are you serious? Here we go again with this whole impeachment
thing? Let's just go after them on the issues. Let's just go after them
on this. Let's just beat them in the 2026
election. So I could be wrong.
They could have had this plan and now they're going to be seen
as moderates. But Jerry Nadler,
his district's a D plus
100. I mean, he doesn't need to get moderate
voters. So I think there's probably some...
Have you ever looked at his district,
the map? No.
Okay, so it goes down the Upper West Side of Manhattan and down for a bit,
and then it cuts across into Brooklyn.
It covers like two blocks wide to get to another Democrat stronghold.
It just skips through the top of Bay Ridge because Bay Ridge would not elect him.
Bay Ridge has Nicole Mallalley-Taukus.
And so it's just this teeny sliver just so he can get to the rest of the Democrats.
Democrats are so good at districting.
They're so good at districting.
And Republicans are like, well, we don't want to be seen as racist, so we have to make fair maps.
It's like, look at their maps.
I hate the Republicans for not having the balls to be as good as the Democrats are at
that.
And I hate the Democrats for even doing that. They should be simply like wards in a city or just all of Manhattan is one district.
There's going to become a battle.
Let me bring up New Hampshire and get you excited, Phil.
There's going to be a battle in New Hampshire where right now the legislature is working through new maps to present to Kelly Ayotte, the governor.
And I think it's going to become a very big national movement because they could realistically, legally, and I would argue correctly, adjust the maps to make one of those seats a competitive Republican seat.
And so I think, I mean, there's a whole, there's a district right there that could move,
but it's going to take a lot of pressure
from folks out there.
Call your people in New Hampshire,
but that's going to be one of the only seats
that because of maps could move.
That would be stellar.
But I mean, I think that the rest of the country
should follow suit.
But the idea that, you know,
a two block stretch connects to significantly.
It's crazy.
Yeah, significantly different pieces of New York.
That's, it's just, it's insane.
So, but I do want to point out,
a friend of mine sent me a text and asked,
when did Chris Kattan become a politician?
We're talking about this.
Oh, yeah.
He's the theory guy.
You know, it does kind of look like Chris Kattan.
I thought I wrote this guy off as a loony because he was smiling a lot when he was talking.
And then I gave him a chance on Piers Morgan.
I listened for a short period of time.
Okay.
He's just he's probably a normal guy.
I think Tim had a great combo with him on Piers Morgan. I didn't a short period of time. Okay, he's probably a normal guy. I think Tim had a great combo with him on
Piers Morgan. I haven't seen the whole article yet.
But what I really want to know is, is there anything
to these? Are these impeachments legit? Are these
seven counts? Any of them? Is there anything about any
of it that's legit?
If you listen to the
discussion that Tim had with him, it was
all just, well,
I don't like Donald Trump, and we don't like what he's
done, and this is unpopularpopular and that's unpopular.
And that's as partisan as it gets.
So to say that this is, you know, something that rises to the level of impeachment is absolutely ridiculous.
I think that this is just, like Tim says, I think it's just a stunt.
The Democrats don't have leadership.
And so this guy's trying to plant his flag.
Because it's almost like that's too stupid to be real.
But I think you might be right.
It's not too stupid.
They didn't run it by leadership.
I didn't know that until just now.
Well, and it's so stupid because I think at a certain point, look, you can always introduce articles of impeachment.
Again, you know, if you have the majority, which they don't even have, but if you have it and you want to go through the process.
But your voters have to want that.
Your voters, the American people, not just your actual voters,
but all these swing districts are going to be impacted by that.
And if it becomes this petty battle against Trump, and I just think with all of these, I mean, the guy was shot in the face.
The guy was impeached.
They tried to convict him of all these crazy things.
Once again, Democrats have not learned.
And I think that's why these three are pulling their names, because I think as much as Schumer
and them are kind of flirting with it, I think politically behind the scenes, they're strategists.
If they have just an ounce of any type of strategy left, I don't think there's an appetite
for this even amongst Democrats.
No, I don't think so either.
And when you look at it,
too, you keep seeing Democrat leadership like start saying about how they need to take, you know, Democrats need to take to the streets and start protesting and all of that stuff.
And we're not seeing as much of that as you might have thought that we would. You know,
there's a lot less energy for rioting and protests and screaming your bloody head off.
Retired boomers.
Among normal people.
And it's just the retired boomers who are out there doing their weird hippie dances
and complaining about how nobody else is joining them.
Meanwhile, they're like, oh, you know, like I'm having so much trouble affording my
summer house and my normal home.
What am I going to do?
You know, these are the same people that are not sharing. having so much trouble affording my summer house and my normal home. What am I going to do? You
know, these are the same people that are not sharing. This is the group that is most adverse
to like leaving their wealth behind. They're still traveling around the world trying to find
themselves. You know, the rest of us are like, really, we figured out in our 20s that we probably
just need to pay our bills. Well, with these particular articles of impeachment as well, like, for instance, the creation of an unlawful office in terms of Doge is kind of insanity because Doge was not going around and making these changes.
I think the media painted that very differently than what it actually was, because Doge was just looking in.
They just were going through the books of these different agencies and seeing, what's really here and then they were making recommendations and then the agencies
would do with that what they will not only that the doge is actually the continuation of
u.s digital services yeah it was usds and then it was uh obama started in 2014 and then Trump renamed it.
They got an office day after to U.S.
It's still U.S.
D.S.
U.S.
Doge offices now.
It's the same.
It's the same office. So it was created by executive order legally.
It's legal to change the name of it.
It was legally created.
Yeah.
So it's not even so that the articles of impeachment are actually wrong because it was created.
It wasn't created by donald trump it was created
by barack obama um but it has elon's name attached to it so we have to hate it well yeah i mean
that's really what it is it's all about the people that are involved not about whether or not there's
a necessity for it which clearly there is you know there very few people think, oh, no, every dollar that the government spends is is is used very wisely, right down to the penny there.
There's no waste. There's no fraud, blah, blah, blah. No one thinks that.
Like there's not an American out there that would say, no, I think that they really spend our money wisely.
Yeah. Even the people protesting. And I only use my parents as examples because they went out and protested.
They were reliving the late 60ss 1969 and just recently they did yeah like a month ago and i was
like what are you guys protesting and they were like well trump and i'm like well what are you
protesting for and they were like i don't know i gotta go ian my dad was like i gotta go we'll
talk about it later and i'm like because there's nothing it's it's they don't i think they're
afraid they're gonna lose their their retirement funds because of the kooky
la-do going on in the government right now.
And I mean, we're hitting an inevitable wall anyway at $36 trillion in debt.
So they're out there trying to stop that all from happening.
But unless you create, like you were saying earlier, Cliff, a better plan to make gas
cheaper, unless you present that, the protests don't have any emphasis.
I mean, the Vietnam protests were like end the Vietnam War.
So they were anti-LBJ, stop the war.
I don't know if they actually had something to create.
I'm going to jump in real quick.
They weren't so much anti-Vietnam War because they were anti-war.
They were anti-Vietnam War because they were on the side of the communists.
But also because that was the first war
where we actually saw war televised.
I mean, you had journalists...
Agreed. It was real.
Yeah, you had journalists like,
that was out in the jungle or whatever
actually filming what was going on.
This is what was being broadcast to people in the evening.
So I think part of it was
when you look at that kind of carnage,
that's really hard to
stomach. I mean, if the Dresden firebombing had been televised live to people's homes,
people would have had a much different idea of what was going on in Dresden as well. I mean,
seeing children like set on fire because the air was on fire, like that's going to be rough,
right? That's hard to stomach. But I don't think it was just because everyone was on the side of
the communists. I think people were losing their sons and brothers and i think the people
that were i think that i'm talking about the people that were like out in the streets protesting
like the dirty hippies yeah the the people that were that were on college campuses that were
protesting they were protesting not because not because they're against war in as a concept it's
because they were on the side of they were on the side of the common i mean
i wonder like i was i protested war myself like back in the old days of george w bush yeah but
that there was a totally different it was totally different kind of war but like it was because i
thought that the yellow cake thing was a lie and there was probably we should have no war like
there's no reason to go to war against iraq yeah it seemed dumb but like i said i think the contexts were very very different sure you know the they were actual communist the vietnamese
were actual communist vietnam was a communist country they were they were north vietnam was
actually communists and they were they were fighting actual communists in the u.s they were
like no are the people that were the earthy crunchies that were protesting they were like
no actually i think
there was that i think the the piece that turned it though was that there were so many people yes
i agree about that what was going on yeah i agree that the the the effect of the news bringing that
into people's homes was can't be denied you see a guy just watch the wonder years oh great show
like some of that vietnam footage is phenomenal and it's on youtube like they'll be he'll be
there with a platoon and then the guy gets shot.
And then he's like, they're banning jump his leg.
And he's like in almost in shock, just talking to the platoon.
And then they medevac him out and like, they're hanging out.
It's just a jungle.
Just like we go outside and sit down there and it could be like there, like it's that
realistic.
And, and they're like 18 years old and you're watching.
They're all kids.
Yeah.
Yeah.
And there, it wasn't a popular war overall
and the fact that the draft was part of it
was another big thing, you know.
The wars that we fought in the 21st century,
regardless of your feeling about them,
the people that went to war, they volunteered.
There was no draft.
Everybody that went there.
And people would show up,
people would like volunteer early.
Oh yeah, yeah.
Yeah. This stuff with Doge that people are protesting, if that's what they're protesting, draft everybody that went there would show up or people would like volunteer early oh yeah yeah
yeah this stuff with doge that people are protesting if that's what they're protesting
it's so vague a lot of it's been happening behind the scenes that it seems like people don't really
know what they're yeah but let me let me throw a warning out there i mean i thought the same thing
and then this wisconsin supreme court race happened and you know we lost by 10 there and if
you look at the entire messaging, so
Indivisible, the left-wing group, did a lot of work on the ground, and we got a hold of their
scripts. And their entire script was simply, Elon Musk is a monster. And the power of fear,
right, the power of just making Elon this horrible creature that, you know, whatever
they're protesting for, it doesn't
matter if they don't have a message, right? If you have a boogeyman, if you have, and Wisconsin
proves it. I wish it didn't, right? I wish at the Wisconsin race you could see, hey, they were
talking about, you know, certain issues that the left cared about. This isn't, no, it was Elon Musk
is the devil, and if you want to stop him, we have to elect this Democrat to the Supreme Court in
Wisconsin. And they won by 10 points. Now, people can say Republicans were complacent, that we
didn't have something that was motivating our side. But that worries me. The voters react that
way. And their entire message was Elon bad. You can stop him by voting for the Democrat.
Man, it's Canada. Sorry, Libby, but this Canadian election, it's the ultimate example of Trump scaring people and then them voting against him.
You know, it was mostly boomers.
It was mostly boomers that voted liberal.
We ran a story on that the other day.
Boomers were terrified of Trump and everybody else just wanted to be able to have decent housing.
But it was the boomers that gave this election in Canada to the liberals.
Why are the boomers so afraid of Donald Trump?
Because they're his same age group.
I feel like that has something to do with it.
Like, he's their peer.
And so they all watched him, like, be this, you know, dick playboy this whole time.
And they hate his tone of voice.
They, like, hate his tone.
They hate his oeuvre.
They hate his vibe.
That's what they hate about him.
And, like like this always
happens with my mom and i'll be like my mom's very lefty and everything and she'll be like um
you know i hate donald trump blah blah and i'll be like well what about this idea and she's like
that's not a bad idea and i'm like what about this and she's like no that's a that's a pretty
good idea and i'm like so what do you hate about trump and she's like well i i just hate everything
about him you know it's like they
hate the man there's no substance there's no substance yeah yeah all right so we're going to
uh jump to this story uh from the post-millennial hhs recommends therapy not sex change to treat
gender dysphoria thank god uh the department of health and human services has released its
treatment for pediatric gender dysphoria review,
in which it recommends a greater emphasis on behavioral therapy when addressing gender dysphoria in minors
over invasive and permanent medical procedures such as pharmaceuticals or surgery.
This is the most obvious thing that we have talked about, I think, ever on this show.
The idea of using surgery on children when they're saying
that they're experiencing gender dysphoria is insane uh they go on the 409 page review stated
that medical and surgical interventions for children and adolescents with gender dysphoria
are widely promoted as essential and even life-saving yet the evidence base does not
support strong conclusions about their effectiveness
in improving mental health or reducing gender dysphoria.
There is no such thing as trans children.
What do you guys think about this?
Well, I'm really glad to see them being willing to put this out here
because that's truly what's happening.
Children cannot consent to make those changes
about their bodies. They don't even know what they are yet or who they are. Adults are one thing.
Children should not be having this happen to them. And in many cases, if you even recommend
that they go to therapy and try to make sure that they're really sure that before they start getting
on hormone blockers or anything like that, that's not even allowed.
And then you're blocking them
from getting their gender affirming a care.
I used to play Wonder Woman out in my backyard
when I was like, it was like a couple of weeks ago.
No, I'm just kidding.
This is like when I was like six
and I'd be whipping around all the whips
and like, I just pretended to be Wonder Woman.
And then my parents were like,
hey, come in and eat your spinach.
I'm like, does Wonder Woman eat spinach?
And they said yes.
So I went in and ate the spinach, Phil.
And then if they were crazy, they would have probably thought I was a woman.
They could have easily been like, uh-oh, my kid is actually a woman on the inside.
I was just an actor.
They enhanced my creativity.
They were like, it's okay to pretend to be things.
Throw that lasso of truth around your waist.
Next thing you know, they're chopping your genitals.
You know, and she kind of looked
like my mom
so I was like identifying
with my mother.
Did you have the Wonder Woman
underoos?
Did you remember?
No,
I had Superman
and then my brother
had a bat,
I think he had a Batman one.
No,
they wouldn't buy,
they didn't encourage me
to be like a girl
just because I played a woman
on stage multiple times too.
What's that?
I was just joking around.
Were you though?
Yeah. Oh, okay. It's always a joke was just joking around. Were you, though? Yeah.
Oh, okay.
It's always a joke when you talk about underoos.
I was lucky to have sane parents.
And we talk about trans people.
Underoos.
Because I wasn't trans.
And if my parents had been scared or made a crazy decision guided by the media or by
their peers, and they actually took me and started to be like, well, do you feel like
a girl? Like, if they had really sat me down and had it as I, well, do you feel like a girl?
Like if they had really sat me down and had it
as I was six, I would have went along with it.
I don't know, I would have, they're my parents,
I would have trusted them.
That question alone is insane.
Do you feel like a girl?
Do you, yeah, do you feel?
I don't know.
Yeah, like.
I have no idea what that feels like.
Like how is a man, male, supposed to know
if they feel like a female?
Especially a child.
Yeah, a child.
Before puberty.
It's like you almost feel androgynous.
I mean, definitely there's the boy and the girl stuff going on.
That doesn't really kick in until later, though, that you have any sense of the kinds of differences there are i mean like so i like when i was a little kid i had
a crush on my babysitter but that wasn't like a developed understanding of a of what i wanted to
relate as a from a relationship or whatever it was like oh she's cute he he he you know i was a kid i
didn't know i would chase girls around on the playground and try and kiss them not really but
like playfully because i would see it on tv i I was mimicking. I'm like, boys are supposed to like girls. So I played that role. And if I'd
been around a bunch of people being like, you're supposed to be a girl deep down, I would have been
like, probably started playing that role. I don't know. Yeah. Well, and particularly kids go through
so many social pressures that they, they are looking for outlets. A lot of the girls that
actually used to become, um, get these eating disorders
and things like that. Instead they are choosing transgenderism. If people it's a, the book's been
out for a few years. There's a very good book, um, by Abigail Schreier. Um, it's irreversible
damage. The transgender craze, seducing our daughters, um, came out in 2020. Um, but it's a
very good book and it talks about how these young girls, they have it's popular among friend groups where friend groups will get this idea of like, hey, we want to reject this idea of femininity.
And instead, we're going to become either non-binary or trans and they're going to change their ideology.
But it's popular with these groups as a social thing,
which is just insanity.
And it's so influential.
It is.
The five people, even as an adult,
your six closest friends basically craft your identity.
You would do it along with them.
As a kid, man, to have your...
And if one of them is jockey and is more popular than you,
it's like, ah, you have the way you look up to them.
Yeah, I mean, it's definitely a status symbol as well.
You look at the people in Hollywood that are like,
oh, I have three trans children.
It's like, do you really, do you really believe
that you have three trans children?
Like, it's super rare, but all three of yours are.
Really?
Who's the one responsible for that really?
You know?
Gender dysphoria is a real thing, but there's no reason for now it to be exploding at these really crazy levels compared to what it's been in the past.
It's just it's a social thing that's happened.
I'm not even sure that gender dysphoria is real.
The other thing, too, that I think is interesting about what you're saying is that the rates of homosexuality has basically stayed steady and the rates of trans
has like skyrocketed it's sort of like why does homosexuality stay steady but like trans is off
the charts it's it's artificially you know it's artificially done but i think that with this hhs
report this is the difference between having a man leading the h HHS and a man who thinks he's a woman leading the HHS.
This was Rachel Levine, who was the assistant HHS secretary.
Pennsylvania's finest.
Pennsylvania's finest, who, you know, took his mom out of a nursing home ahead of sending all the COVID patients back to the nursing home.
Very consistent.
Yeah, I mean, real ethical fella here.
But this is a person who was consistently saying
that it's important to affirm your kids,
put your kids through sex changes,
had like a big impact on the Biden administration.
Joe Biden came out and told parents to affirm their kids,
absolutely nauseating.
And now we have a man who knows he's a man in charge
and we're not getting this kind of crap.
This was a promise that Trump made.
We're going to stop sex changing kids in the U.S.
And, you know, here we are delivering it.
I'm going to use my parents again.
Oh, you're going to say something?
Well, just adolescence as a whole is kids figuring out who they are and who they're going to be.
That's essentially what you go through as that coming of age.
And so you have all of this trans stuff that is going on.
Look, as a middle schooler, I would have considered myself to be more of a tomboy.
I'm like, oh, yeah, I like sports.
I like soccer.
I think guns are cool.
I had a habit of collecting knives.
I thought that those were fun.
And those were the more masculine hobbies.
But if now girls that might just be tomboys and have some maybe traditionally masculine interest,
we're telling them, oh, maybe you're not a girl, that maybe you're not who we thought you were based on what genitalia you were born with.
Here, would you like to explore something else instead? I think that we're missing a Mr. Rogers person in reality right now. And it's
tough to centralize power and give that guy a TV show because who watches television? It's on a lot
of it's on the internet. But like just someone telling you, you're okay who you are. You're,
you are you are you and that's okay. And feels weird sometimes that's okay too there was this wild thing so robert de niro's son just came out as trans um went from being aaron to
a-a-r-o-n to a-i-r-y-n so the name's the same it's just spelled different but one of the things that
um he was saying when he was talking to them magazine about coming out as trans was that as a child he
never heard that he was just right just the way he is and so now he's finding that by fully now
he's finding that like totally but there's this weird idea that you're just right just the way
you are by undergoing drastic medical intervention like that doesn't make any sense it's like you
were talking about with the what i was gonna say that's that's exactly the opposite what they say yeah when i
was a kid in the 90s they were always saying you can be anything you want you're okay for who you
are and then at a certain point that changed to you're not there would tell people you're not
being represented for who you really are trust me i know who you really are and like this people
that are unfortunately vulnerable to that will fall for that they'll immediately think oh well
i have these feelings that i feel like the the unsurety of puberty the the weird feelings you feel like the weird feelings
you haven't felt your whole life up until that point it gets manipulated and that's what they
love to do like phil we always talk about how they skin suit stuff you know they take the argument
and they make it this thing against like the oppressor which is like your feelings and your
emotions and like everything's stressful like if doordash is like the biggest stress you have in
your life every day like this can be like fundamentally it can be devastating for these people but we don't we
don't see it like that because we've all lived harder lives they do though that's like the
biggest thing for them it's it's it's scary it's gross the goal the goal does seem to make people
think that the the the reality that they live in is actually the oppressor yes exactly you know
and so that way and you can you can escape your body is your oppressor. Yes, exactly. You know, and so that way, and you can, you can escape.
Your body is your oppressor.
You can escape this oppression by taking control over your body and, you know, by, by coming
out as a trans person, which is your true self.
And that gives you some control over this oppression that you're experiencing by just
existing because, and you hear him say things like, I didn't ask to be born.
That's one of the things that kids say it,
but also that's something that the leftists have really globbed onto.
They're like, well, you didn't ask for this.
I didn't ask to be born, so I should be able to do this, this, and this
so I can break free of the oppression of this reality.
The number of the crazy liberals that have multiple kids that are non-binary or trans,
like there's just no way that there isn't some sort of input and influence in the household.
All over Hollywood.
Yeah, because they want to be a victim, right?
They don't want to be victors.
It gives, like you said, they want to stand up to the oppressor.
They want to be somebody that gets to say, I'm different.
You know, I'm standing up to the oppressor. They want to be somebody that gets to say, I'm different. You know, I'm standing up to the man. And I got to tell you this issue. Okay. When I, as a diehard
Ron Paul libertarian, this was one of those issues that really got me to realize, you know what?
I am going to go all in on Trump and team red, right? I get the debt. I get a lot of the things
that happened under Trump 16. Obviously,
I was not supportive of Biden. But when they are chopping off kids' private parts, when they are
trying to tell these people that they should identify as something completely different,
I mean, that's the time when you wake up and say, hey, listen, maybe it's time to fight against some
of this radical stuff. This issue, though, when I came out and supported Trump, yeah, did I lose a couple of friends and were people just rabid against Trump? Sure.
When I come out on certain issues and people on the other side, yeah, I lose a couple of friends.
I have lost lifelong relationships over this issue just because I come out and say that telling a
nine-year-old girl or a nine-year-old boy that they are not the gender that they were assigned
at birth that that's looney tunes that's crazy and there are it's not a lot but there are some
people that really i was baffled by that i've lost relationships because they are just so bought
into this idea that they get to choose and you're oppressing them. I reject the concept of gender at all nowadays.
I don't think that it's because what is it?
It's your gender.
It's your sex spirit.
Well, and even from a science perspective here, if you just cut all the social part of it out, people that go through these sex change surgeries, there's a lot of sexual dysfunction there. It causes sexual dysfunction
where they no longer have access to their reproductive system that they were born with.
That's a huge thing. We see a lot of the adults that have transitioned and gone through that
whole process that they're unhappy with the end result. And we're seeing more and more people push back against that.
Maybe they're deciding to detransition,
but they caused a problem to their body.
They're having issues with their body now, health problems.
And so just from that aspect alone,
I think we need to pump the brakes a little bit
and be like, whoa, these kids want to make these changes.
Well, do they know what they're signing up for
in terms of their health?
They can't. No, they can't. there was also this thing that i think people forget about
which is um uh marcia bowman who's trans who was the trans doctor heading w path which is the world
professional association for transgender health did a bunch has done like a bunch of trans like
sex change surgeries and has done sex change surgeries on minors,
including working on Jazz Jennings
and told Jazz Jennings, like,
you're going to be so pretty you could do porn, right?
So that's a great doctor to have.
That's a great aspiration, right?
Sure.
But Bowman said in a-
As if everybody that does porn is pretty.
Come on.
But Bowman said in a talk, I think at Duke, that none of the patients
he'd had who had, and I'm using wrong pronouns, I guess, but none of the patients that he'd had
who had gone on puberty, boys who had gone on puberty blockers and then got onto cross-sex hormones, none of them were ever
capable of having an orgasm once they were adults. So none of them were ever capable of having like
a fulfilling sexual relationship. And the idea, the reason that they put, and this is per WPATH
also, the reason to have minors go on these drugs is so that they are better able to pass once they're
adults. So the idea is once you're an adult, you will look more like that thing you wished you were
when you were a child. That's the whole point of doing it young. You completely destroy sexual
function, which means you're destroying adult relationships. Like how are you going to have
a fulfilling adult relationship or romantic relationship, if you can't ever, like, achieve orgasm?
Jazz Jennings doesn't know what an orgasm is.
I think that the two parts that the grand manipulation is calling it care, gender affirming care, those words affirming and care.
Because I've had this conversation with a couple of boomers, my parents and my mom's like straight up common sense.
And my father's like, they need care, Ian.
They need care.
And it's like, I agree.
Now you have to define what that means.
Cutting their testicles off,
cutting a nine-year-old's testicles off,
cutting a 15-year-old's testicles off,
cutting her boobs off.
Is that care?
If they were elbowing their kid in the face,
would that be care?
That could cause them a little bit of physical trauma
if the kid was asking for it.
Would that be care?
Don't deny them their identity, Ian. Would a little bit physical trauma if the kid was asking for it? Would that be care?
Don't deny them their identity.
Would we go in there and seize the kid from the psycho abusive father?
So that that knowing that that the affirming and care because he's like a paramedic by trade.
He's a fireman.
Just there's not much greater than the hero of saving the vulnerable.
And these people feel like that's what they're doing. But that now to tack it off is that people that have gone through this horror are now adults, and they're speaking
about it. And there's enough of them that they're a political force. So I have a lot of faith that
you can see the HHS has already made a move on it. Well, I mean, this this administration has
been good, but there's no guarantee that if the Democrats win again, they're, you know,
the next administration or the next Democrat administration won't undo all this stuff and then have another
insane man at HHS that dresses like a woman running HHS saying things like, oh, you need
to affirm your child's gender and have mutilating surgery performed on them.
Yeah.
And even with this,-affirming care,
because sometimes they'll go the route of puberty blockers.
You're like, well, you think you're confused.
Let's just hold off puberty.
Osteoporosis.
If you hold off puberty, there's huge health effects that come along with that.
You can't just block a child's puberty and be like, oh, well,
we'll just let it go a few years, and then at 16, 18, whatever,
then we'll let their body do what it's going to do then.
No, it leaves them with permanent changes.
So you deciding to put your kids on puberty blockers is going to affect them for the rest of their life.
And parents need to be aware of that and not just hear terms like gender affirming care.
Like we want our kids that are struggling to feel loved.
We want them to feel like they
have a place in this world, that they matter, that suicide isn't an option. These are all
things that we want for these kids, but making decisions very quickly about, oh, we're going to
do something that's going to affect your body for the rest of your life is so drastic.
There's no such thing as gender. It's your sex. Can't change it. Get over it. We're going to go to Super
Chats and Rumble Rants.
We're going to start off with
Alpha Turkey says,
100 fills could definitely take on a silverback.
Granted, we might lose 38 fills.
We still have 62 left in an
unsubscribed to life
gorilla. How would you attack the gorilla
if you were split into 100
pieces and you controlled them all? With machine guns.
Well, no, if you had no weapons but your hands,
would you split up into groups? Would you all go in
at once and try and dogpile the thing? You'd have to do
as much dogpiling as you can because
if you go in one at a time, the gorilla
is going to kill you. Now, there
might possibly be the
possibility that
I don't even think this is possible, but
some people might make the argument that you'll tire the gorilla out before you exhaust the 100 people.
I don't know that that's the case because gorillas, they're incredibly strong.
And the amount of effort they have to use to smash you into a puddle is probably minimal.
It depends on the size of the arena.
If you're in a tight space like this, it's all happening at once.
But if, and also, the gorilla might get afraid,
morale should be included,
because 100 fills would be pretty scary.
I can't tell you how much I talked to my son
about this very scenario this week.
I don't think that there is any,
like any world in which multiple humans
can take on a gorilla.
Yeah, he didn't think so either.
He painted the scenario of the gorilla
picking up one human like this
and just like helicoptering everybody else.
What if like a Phil jumped out of a bush
and he's like, blah!
And then another three more of them jumped out
and he's like, blah!
Like full, the gorilla might be traumatized.
I think the gorilla has a better handle on gorilla warfare
than a bunch of Phils do probably.
I think a silverback gorilla, just people, a chimpanzee
will tear you limb from limb. And a
chimpanzee is not nearly
as big as a...
They're vicious. That's awesome.
They go right for it. Just so you know
if you ever come into contact in the wild. That's great.
Protect yourself. Just great. Yeah, not you
personally. So Shane H. Wilder
says in the Rumble Rants,
tomorrow the people of Cameron County, Texas will vote to turn Starbase from an unincorporated work town into a Texas city.
Is Elon Musk going to be the mayor?
I don't think so.
But they're going to incorporate it and it'll be Starbase, Texas.
Okay.
Let's see.
I thought he maybe needs another hat, you know?
Well, he's a busy guy, but apparently he's going to be stepping back from Doge and doing less work on Doge.
He's not getting out of Doge.
Well, he only had like 130 days to do it.
Well, he's 100 days now.
He's going to be only working like one day irregularly so that way he can extend the work.
Because, you know, they've got kind of their marching orders and stuff Perpetual Jonathan says Phil the PA guy
at Ball Arena played two weeks last
night and then the Avalanche beat the
Stars to force game seven tomorrow
night coincidence no it's not
no it was it was the
it was playing that song
and I'll take credit for that
let's see
BMW C94 says and I'll take credit for that. Let's see.
BMWC94 says,
he had surgery on his ankle and lost his job just looking for help for my family
for the time it'll be off.
It's gofundme.com slash F-E-E-B-9-B-90.
Feeb 9B90.
Careful soon man
Ankles suck
It does
Let's see
Some more super chats
Arsonist YouTube says
I think we should keep an eye on China
Apparently students are protesting
Really?
I don't know
I don't know if that's serious or not.
Students in China?
Yeah.
They'll shut that down real quick.
I don't think that's even true, though.
Yeah, I don't see anything about that.
I've seen a lot from David Zhang.
He's been talking about the student protest.
And it's been on a couple people that are like the Chinese
and sensory people that are watching it.
But whenever the Chinese protest around this time of year, we should pay attention.
I'm taking the mindset of we got to be, I'm going to be really empathic and like
compassion, just like on the level with the Chinese citizens and the Canadian citizens,
like make them your friends, because it is possible that there will be Democratic Republic
uprisings in other countries.
I don't think it's possible in China.
It's the most challenging country that it could happen in, for sure.
But that doesn't mean it can't.
And if it happened, it wouldn't happen from the outside.
It would, you know.
It would be awesome to see.
The CCP sucks, so.
They're pretty horrible, to be sure.
K to the Swiss says, we love Courtney.
Thank you guys.
Thank you very much.
And then Colin Rouse one says, Cliff, go birds, Dallas sucks.
I thought you were going to say, Cliff, we hate Cliff.
Go birds.
That's right, baby.
I wouldn't read that.
I wouldn't do that.
Go Eagles. It's's right, baby. I wouldn't read that. I wouldn't do that. Go, Eagles.
It's been a good year.
We got the Super Bowl.
Got the White House back.
I'm not tired of winning yet.
Isaac Vanderbilt says, I've been living off of ramen and bologna for 30 years.
And then he goes on to say, you know who grocery prices don't affect?
Singles.
That's right.
Well, single men,
I think. Single guys. I think that women like to
have more fun and experiment
in the kitchen more than dudes do. Dudes are
just like, whatever, you know,
stuff some ramen in the food hole
and I'm good.
And more zucchini. Zucchini is
great. That's true. Raw or
cooked. I literally forgot about zucchini.
I'm going to have to get some zucchini.
Rage LB says,
from Rumble Rants,
need a shower after a fill tonight?
Come chill.
Rage LB on Rumble
and at Rage LB3 on YouTube.
I'm not sure exactly why you'd need a shower.
I showered before work
and I haven't been particularly dirty,
I don't think.
Jacob Jones says,
Accidentally got myself in hot water by commenting on a left-wing page on Facebook,
and everybody that was going on unhinged rants on me
had either animal cartoons or AI profile pictures.
Gulag immediately.
Yes, sir.
Yes, sir.
Gulags are necessary for those deviants.
I was very much a libertarian-minded person until all the trans and furry stuff.
And I'm just like, well, maybe I am an authoritarian.
We can just toss people in jail for no reason.
Well, I mean, for being a pedo-furry, like, that's, you know.
You guys all have that experience, though, where you do post something.
Every once in a while, it just strikes that chord.
And all of a sudden, I don't know what the algorithm's doing, but it's just feasting.
I try not to do it in text.
I try to do it with my voice so they can hear the tone.
Because otherwise, it's just a cavalcade of black letters on a white background.
It's like, ah.
One time I said uh themselves i said something
like you know it's 20 this was last year i said it's 2024 and we're still seeing people using the
argument that men are paid more than women for the same jobs and i mean you would have thought
it's just not true you would have thought i like no went off the deep end yeah it's funny the things
that bring out the liberals on social media and it it's it's just sometimes it can be just innocuous things and then the wrong person
either retweets it or put you know puts it in front of their audience and then next thing you
know your your timeline your mentions are just full of crazy leftists saying crazy leftist things
i call that the keith olbermann special He starts pushing stuff. It is like rabid, just
Looney Tunes coming after you. Yeah. I think there was so much, um, online from the 2024 primary
that like conservatives were like really going back and forth with one another that then finally
when like a Democrat showed up to tell me that they didn't like what I was saying, I'm like,
oh wow, I haven't seen one of these in a while. I'm like, how have you been? Oh, okay. That was the White House
incident with Zelensky, you know, when they, when J.D. Vance and Trump were after him. I mean,
same thing, like any comments on that, it was like these people just, that was the orange man
bad moment of this year. Just, they went wild. That was a, that was a wild, wild press conference.
He, Zelensky really stuck his neck out speaking and doing it in English
because that language barrier was sad.
He was confused.
You think that's what it was?
Yeah.
He said, you're going to know how this feels.
Yeah, he did another interview more recently
in Ukrainian or Russian.
He did it in his native tongue.
And I think he's just decided,
I'm not doing any more English. No, I don't think he decided that. I think the backlash
from that interview, you're probably right. He probably struggled a little bit, but
I just think the backlash from that, they probably sat down and said, well,
where do we go from here? I guess we're going to have to backtrack a little bit.
Just my thoughts. Let's see.
Mac12 says, hey, Phil, the icon tools at Harbor Freight have a lifetime warranty.
Well, it's good to know.
Got him.
Who wants to go return your stuff all the time, though? That's kind of annoying.
It's like, oh, man, my hammer broke again.
I'm going to stick with my DeWalt stuff.
I like the DeWalt electric stuff.
I got to get a good chainsaw.
Got any good ones?
Steel is a good chainsaw. That's good ones? Steel is a good chainsaw.
That company's called Steel?
Steel.
It's not, it's Still.
It's S-T-I-H-L.
It's a German company.
They make good knives too,
the Germans.
Yeah, they do.
Germans and Japanese
know what they're doing.
Yeah, that folded steel.
Nine.
Damascus steel.
Nine.
I don't know if that's German
or Japanese though.
Nine is German.
It's also a number.
Red Muskrat says, I'm a machinist by trade, but I love buying old comps and cutting into them.
Tinkering is my bag.
I'm not sure what a comp is.
Computer?
Computer?
Maybe.
Cutting into them and seeing what's, you know, I guess.
Cutting into them circuit boards?
Yeah, maybe.
Joel Jamal says, hi from Australia.
It's great to see Cliff Maloney on the show.
Much love from Turning Point, Australia.
Wish us luck in our elections today.
You're having elections?
I hope that the furthest right-wingers that are running win,
because then you might get some people that are kind of centrist.
Joel is doing the Lord's work.
God bless him.
Good luck to him. I always laugh, but, you know, when people are trying to kind of getrist. Joel is doing the Lord's work. God bless him. Good luck to him.
I always laugh, but, you know,
when people are trying to kind of get things moving in some of these areas
where they're really seen as not just the resistance, but, I mean, it's,
you know, to try to organize in a place like that.
But he's doubling down doing good things.
So thanks for the shout out, Joel.
Let's see.
Sergeant Buck says,
there are two ways to fix a printer,
a driver reinstall or driving a wedge.
Just throw that garbage out and buy a new one.
I'm with Libby on this.
I think I'm going to have to stop buying the $40 printers.
There's got to be like an $800 printer out there
that might work for a couple years.
Doesn't exist?
I don't think so.
Not like for home use.
Yeah. You'd have to buy an office printer.
They have some nice ones.
My last office printer was great
and I was the printer whisperer.
If it ever broke, they came
to me before we called IT.
That's a good spot to be in.
They need you. Did the hitting work, kicking it?
That was not what I normally went with first.
No?
Well, to each his own.
TC Blair says...
I still love that scene in Office Space
when they take the fax machine out.
Yeah.
I will say that does work for pickle jars, though.
If you're ever trying to open a pickle jar
and you can't get it,
if you hit it on the floor a few times
in a few different places,
it's actually way easier to open.
Yeah, that works.
TC Blair says,
I live in the county where the gang attack happened.
We have friends and family who work there.
Keep us in southwest Virginia in your prayers, folks.
Yeah, definitely.
Absolutely, we will. Prayers up.
Yeah, it's a terrible thing.
And like I said, we should send them all out.
Just get them out of here.
There's no reason for us to have to deal with them.
We just don't want them to come back.
We can't have them coming back.
Luckily, the border's closed.
Billdozer74 says,
Phil's libertarian voice is sexy.
It's not intended to be, but you know.
JimmyBGood said,
they had a reason to go to war with Iraq.
Saddam stopped using dollars to sell his oil to stick it to us, and the banksters don't allow that.
Mess with the banksters' money and they kill you.
I don't know if that's the case.
I don't know if that's the case because at least the first Iraq war, not the second Iraq war,
the first Iraq war, I really do think that the Saudis had a lot to do with it.
The fact that Iraq invaded Kuwait and said, OK, we're coming in here.
The Saudis were like, ah, this kind of makes us nervous.
So maybe we should have a U.S. base, which is a terrible idea to have a U.S. base in Saudi Arabia.
But they really I think they did were like did want the U.S. to kind of ensure that the Saudi royal family would not be hung up from bridges, which is what tends to happen to monarchs that lose power.
But yeah.
Duende says, big L on your opinion on Apple, Phil.
I don't think you're making the argument you think you're making. Well, I do think that I'm making the argument I think I'm making. I like Apple products to stay the way that I to the Apple store to get the warranty repair. And I don't like the idea of outside companies messing around with Apple because I like the
way Apple products work generally, except for the brightness on my phone. I just want it to
stay bright when I turn it. He might be leave it bright. Don't ever turn it down ever. Stop
adjusting it. I turn it up for a reason. I never, ever, ever want you to turn it down.
He might be talking about, um, the, this, this the idea that it's it's a more secure product because they have it all done in their
factory without like external but they might be it might be more vulnerable if it's if it's more
proprietary why because no one really knows what they're doing so if you have access to the parts
you think apple doesn't know what they're doing oh they know what they're doing. So if you have access to the parts... Are you saying Apple doesn't know what they're doing?
Oh, they know what they're doing.
Okay.
But they don't have to tell people necessarily.
Yeah.
I think there is one regard that Apple doesn't know what they're doing.
I really want my headphone jack back.
That's still a gripe for me.
I like wired headphones, and I just, I want it back.
You were a boomer.
You know.
I always thought Apple, it's weird how they'll take parts away because they're like, they just don't need that anymore.
I'm like, give me six USBs on my computer.
Like, don't take them away.
I do think, you know, they could probably use more USBs.
I think my laptop has three.
They assume you'll buy a peripheral that plugs in that gives you like eight USBs.
Yeah, I'm not totally against that.
I do like the idea of
everything being usbc now oh my god it's so great i do like that that's like the world coming
together that was the european union did that that's no no i didn't mean i didn't mean that
i wanted them to to make the connections i just like that uh i like the the fact that the usbcs
are smaller and they're more convenient than usbBs. You can flip them upside down and they still plug in.
That's so huge.
Well, it was Europe who said, like, you know,
you can't just have a million different kinds of chargers all the time.
You can't be changing this all the time.
And I was against that, too.
Yeah.
I hated the idea.
I was like, don't mess with my Apple products.
I don't want you, you know, European Union messing with my Apple products
because I like the way my
Apple products work and I don't want governments involved saying you have to make them work
this way because usually that means they make them work worse.
Yeah.
I've had worse luck with USB-C than lightning though, at least so far when it comes to audio
stuff because there has something to do with when with lightning it's easier for things to like go
out and come back in versus with usbc the way that apple has done it right now um like i said
for auditory things it's not working so great if you want to be wired in wow i didn't know that
so uh let's see um now we're moving around uh ron, Canada won't even let Americans with DUI convictions into the country,
yet we have Dems defending the worst of the worst here.
I agree.
It is crazy.
In Canada, they're actually very, very strict,
and it's been a pain in the butt when it comes to touring bands because it's frequent are
there a fair number of duis and touring bands not maybe not in the bands themselves but when it
comes to crew yeah yeah i mean sure you know and of course the crew should they should know they
should look at the routing and they should say okay you're going to canada i have a dui i can't
do this tour but they don't and then you have to figure it out at the border and it's a
pain in the butt and so um but yes canada is very very strict when it comes to who uh who's allowed
which americans are allowed in uh if you're not an american i hear it's fairly easy to get into Canada for numerous reasons.
But if you've got a DUI, look out.
Let's see here.
What have we got?
The Emperor's Champion said,
If attempting to impeach the president on behalf of MS-13 is not treason, then I don't know what is.
I think that doesn't count as treason because treason has a specific meaning. And I think it's in wartime is when it's actually treason.
It might be sedition.
That's sedition.
Yeah.
This might be sedition, might be a more accurate phrase.
But it is definitely counter to what is best for the American people.
Raymond G. Stanley Jr. says, Ian's lying. played dc adventures just last week i love that guy why does he say i'm lying because well did you listen
no i didn't play dc adventures with raymond is it fun raymond i never even heard of it i don't know
no i love raymond should i do this should i do this one uh that's a pretty good one uh it's your choice man pokey man said phil drives a trans
ma'am i don't no he doesn't are you do you do you leak what you drive for real what do you leak what
you actually drive what you uh you actually i've said that i drive a tesla yeah it's a sick tesla
i thank you very much i I realize, Raymond was talking about
when we were pretending to be Wonder Woman
and Spider-Man down in the basement last week.
What?
That was a sight.
Did I say that out loud?
Yeah.
Oh, man.
Sean Turner, scene in cheese, says,
Anyone bring up the cartels guys caught smuggling 180,000 rounds of CO.
CO equals Neo CA.
But they get minimum trucks to the CO Supermax to El Chapo or to give to TDA.
I think he's talking about 180,000 rounds of 308.
I'm not sure if they were 30 cal rounds. But, you know, that's a lot of suppressive fire if they're firing from a full-auto belt-fed machine gun,
which, you know, the cartels absolutely have.
And I haven't heard anything more about it, though.
Go back to that.
Was he saying Colorado and calling Colorado Neo-California?
Yeah.
Oh, I see. Colorado equals Neo-California? Yeah. Oh, I see.
Yeah, Colorado equals Neo-California.
Got it.
Bet they get minimum trucks to the Colorado Supermax to get El Chapo or give to TDA.
I think that they're probably going to go out of the country, and those rounds will be used to fight the governments in South America or maybe fight the Mexican government.
But, yeah, it's a lot of bullets, man.
You guys don't need, let's see, Tim Neal says, you guys don't need more USBs.
Each USB port will run 100 plus devices.
You have to have powered USB banks to run more than three.
Well, you know, that's an extra piece of equipment that a lot of people don't really want to buy.
Right, exactly.
I can't say that I blame them.
Thunderbolt?
Is that what it's called? The new technology? Thunderbolt
technology? It's a couple years old.
Thunderbolt 4, I think, or 5
they're up to now? I think so, something like that. Ridiculous.
It's almost as fast as HDMI, I think.
Yeah, yeah, yeah. Probably, I don't know.
And it's a USB-C plug.
Wow.
Let's see.
Red Muskrat says,
I'm a machinist by trade, but I... Oh, no, I already
read that one.
What do we got here?
Let's see this one.
Which one?
Oh, okay.
Jammie Broccodile says,
Boomers are afraid of Trump because they still get their news from TV.
They should get online to find out what's actually going on.
I mean, look, you can find information that's critical
or outlets that are just as critical of trump on the internet
as if you you know watch regular tv now granted people that expect the tv stations to tell them
the truth like if you're a boomer and you remember the days when it was just three news stations and
cronkite was like and that's the way it is um that may i mean it makes sense why you would
still kind of have that inclination.
But I don't think that just getting on the Internet is the solution because people will still be looking for.
Actually, it might even be worse because they're looking for confirmation of the things they kind of already believe.
And if they believe that Trump's a bad guy, you know.
Well, it was wild when you looked at the post-election polling of kind of, I mean, Trump moved to the right with every single demographic except the boomers.
And so I really did a deep dive trying to understand.
I think that's a good argument, which is they still get traditional media.
I think a better argument is they aren't as impacted by some of the Biden policies when it comes to the economy.
Right.
They're kind of hitting that retirement age.
Life is good.
Things are OK.
People vote to kind of keep things OK.
And I think of all the groups, it's a mix of them getting traditional media.
But I think it was they just weren't impacted as much as everybody else.
But it's the only which is, you know, kudos to Trump is the only group that didn't move
to the right.
Yeah. is the only group that didn't move to the right. Yeah, I mean, I...
Wait, you said kudos to Trump for...
That every other group moved to the right.
Yeah, I mean, I do think that that's because
they're more inclined to...
They're not set in their ways, honestly.
Like, if you're a boomer
and you kind of have an opinion of Donald Trump,
I don't know what it's going to take to move you,
and they're certainly not going to go out and look for information that's contrary to what their preconceived notions are.
You can get through if you talk about the liberal economic order and they're smart and they actually care.
They'll listen.
I mean, I've had some experience explaining like global technocratic banking and how they have been gutting our country for 100 years.
And they're like, okay, the Kennedy assassination.
Like, yeah, that was us.
If you go through to talk about the Kennedy assassination
with them, the boomers, they're like, oh, yeah, CIA got you.
Yes, yes, yes.
Well, and more of them already own their houses, though, too.
Sure.
That could be a really big factor.
Hmm.
Mr. That One Guy says,
hey, team, just wanted to share information. Previous guest,
angry cops, Richard high. Great dude. You should subscribe to him on YouTube. Uh, the SVU detective
has brought up Buffalo Buffalo school district is hindering investigation into child abuse,
abducted and abduction and worse. They could use the attention um yeah you can watch the unsubscribed podcast um
richard or angry cops went on there and outlined a lot of the really just disgusting behavior
from the buffalo school department and you know he's an svu cop special victims unit this is this is literally right up his alley and as soon as he basically put the
buffalo schools on blast they started trying to discredit him and tried to discredit the podcast
now again this is a special unit a special victims unit detective this is what he does and the school
is trying to save face and they're being selective with the wording.
They're trying to imply that he's lying.
They're not calling them lies.
There's all kinds of just sus behavior by the Buffalo schools.
I can't speak for anyone at the Post Millennial, but I know someone over there.
And it'd be cool if you guys covered it.
I actually was looking at YouTube about that the other day,
but yeah, we haven't covered it yet.
Rich is a great dude.
Yeah, I met him the other night on the show.
He's a great guy.
Him and actually all the guys on the Unsub podcast,
Eli, Donut, the Fat Electrician,
they're all great dudes. Donut is such
a good nickname. Donut Operator.
He's a great nickname. Joey Bag of Donuts.
So good.
Yeah, you should subscribe to
the unsubscribed podcast.
Let's see. Isaac Vanderbilt
says repeal the 19th. It just makes sense.
How do you feel about that, Libby?
What was that?
Isaac Vanderbilt says repeal the 19th it
just makes sense oh that's just so stupid oh boy just dumb uh adam brinman said i haven't looked
the actual actual adjusted numbers but other than the covid rebound all biden's jobs reports are
after reactions almost all negligible, minimal. That's my understanding
as well. Like the Biden administration made a big deal about the jobs that they had, you know,
during their administration, but the whole country was shut down largely when he took office.
And so the idea that he actually created these jobs,
it was just these places of business opening back up
because we realized that they could, you know,
that it was time for the restrictions to end.
Or sometimes someone would pick up two part-time jobs
because they couldn't find a full-time job,
and then they'd list it as two jobs.
Yeah.
And also, the jobs could be redundant.
Like they'll hire someone to dig a hole and then hire someone to fill the hole up just
so that people stay busy and the Federal Reserve can keep getting their money at interest.
Like with Works Progress, there was stuff like that.
Yeah.
Works Progress Administration under FDR.
There was stuff like that.
Just dig a hole and-
Yeah.
I mean, they're always going to spin it, right?
It's like, hey, what number can we take?
And I love though, when there are certain things under Biden that the Democrats really Just dig a hole. I mean, they're always going to spin it, right? It's like, hey, what number can we take?
And I love, though, when there are certain things under Biden that the Democrats really championed.
And now if it's better under Trump, it's like, what do we do now?
But that's why I say it's always about, OK, where are they when it comes time to vote?
And if they have the job and they're feeling good, great.
But they're always going to just take these numbers and run with them.
Yeah, I do think that there's going to be as much twisting of the information as possible.
Yaquindil—Yaquilin? I can't even pronounce that.
Yaquiindia.
Yaquiindia? There we go. It says, gender ideology is the most sexist thing ever.
I mean, maybe, but it's all bs anyways so um grits 15 years says i have yet to meet a trans
person that doesn't exhibit an incomprehensible level of self-loathing uh i mean i think that
i've met a couple that are fairly reasonable i mean blair white is fairly reasonable blair's
always recently was like i
don't even know if i'm trans i think i'm a cross dresser you know like there's i mean you know i
mean sorry to interrupt you no no it's fine yeah blair's awesome dude you know i love that guy
he's the fucking man uh lucy fear says my friend is making a daily podcast telling the story of 250 years of america across 250
episodes premieres july 4th 2025 ends july 24 july 4th 2026 go give him a follow at at 250 years of
usa on x go give him a follow guys me and ian were just talking to begin before the show about
uh what was that called the great war i think yeah yeah, I'm like 10 YouTube. Yes, correct
Like if it's if it's 250 episodes like that each year, that's so sick. I love stuff like that you have
Pick up the Great War if you want to understand why modern war is
Basically the devil incarnate you do not want modern war look at the Great War
We got to keep World War one in mind because they didn't understand. Just like we have drones right now,
these are the machine guns of the modern age.
You don't understand what you're about to go up against.
And they did a week by week,
everywhere from 2014 to 18,
every week they would say,
this is what happened in the week of 1914,
100 years ago.
It's fascinating.
And just the death,
millions and millions and millions and millions,
just from the machine guns.
But then you take trench foot
and all these other horrific,
just the chaos of the explosions,
that way that can traumatize and destroy a human body.
My name is Yeet, says Ian.
We miss you on the seven days server.
My name is Yeet.
There was too much lag.
If it's been resolved, that's a good thing.
All right, smash the like button,
share the show with your friends,
go to rumble.com, become a member,
and you can sign up for the after show.
You can catch the uncensored after show.
And then if you go to TimCast.com, you can join our Discord.
And then you can call in and talk to us.
But not tonight.
Because tonight's Friday.
So.
One more.
One more?
What do we got?
The one from Kyle?
No, the left.
Just right here. Yeah god blue debut says phil's alter
ego is the philbertarian no it's not um official no it's not i'm libertarian right i don't even
call myself a libertarian anymore because they're just they're unbelievable he's addressing guys
he's addressing now everybody he's dressed it all right We'll leave it alone. He's addressed it.
Smash the like button. Share the show with your friends.
Go to TimCast.com. Sign up. You can join
the Discord. Go to Rumble.com
and become a member so you can watch our
after show, which is not happening tonight because
it's Friday, but we will be back on
Monday. Cliff, you want to shout anything out?
If you want to doze your state, let's talk.
Hit me up on X at Maloney.
Love the TimCast family. You guys are all great. Appreciate you want to doze your state, let's talk. Hit me up on X at Maloney. Love the Tim Cass family.
You guys are all great. Appreciate you having me. Thanks so much for having me on, guys. If you want
to find me over on X, it is at Courtney Nill. That's K-N-I-L-L. And right now I'm running for
office. If you are someone who really cares about politics, think about running yourself.
It's a lot of hard work. Don't let anyone tell you that it's going to be easy, but it's something very worthwhile. If you want to
check out my campaign, it's nilforcitycouncil.com. You guys follow me up on YouTube. I just did an
interview with Richard Gage, who's the head of architect. Well, he was. He founded Architects
and Engineers for 9-11 Truth. And this guy's compiled thousands, got thousands of architects
and engineers across the world to diagnose the twin towers coming down in the physics involved with these buildings
falling in near free fall speed. And he just laid out evidence for like an hour and a half.
We went at it. It was great. So follow me on YouTube. Check out the video on YouTube
and X and Rumble. That's where you can find all my stuff at Ian Crossland.
I'm Libby Emmons.
You can find me on X at Libby Emmons.
And I would love if you would sign up for my newsletter, which comes out every day.
You can do so at thepostmillennial.com slash Libby.
And this month we are sponsored by Merriweather Farms, which has been great.
And I just, I met them last year.
I met the owner of Merriweather Farms on TimCast.
I've been a customer ever since
and so I'm really honored
that they're sponsoring the newsletter
and you should check it out.
I am philtheremains on Twix.
I'm philtheremainsofficial on Instagram.
You can check out my band, All That Remains,
all over the internet
and catch TimCast clips throughout the weekend
and we will see you right here Monday.
We should shout out the Culture War.
Are we still alive?
Yep.
I just hijacked the end of that phone call.
Oh, good.
The Culture War is tomorrow.
Culture War live.
Phone call.
Is it going to be broadcast?
These are questions I have.
No, it'll be broadcast a week from tomorrow.
So the live thing is tomorrow, and then they actually put it on the internet a week later.
So if you're coming, bless you.
If not, pray for these people.
They're going to have a wild, romantic evening.
Alex Stein is going to be there, and he's going to be yelling at people.
Rhyme time.
Pimp on a blimp.
Pimp on a blimp, man.
With the big booty Latinas.
Thank you, Phil.
I defer to you and your graciousness.
You're an excellent host.
So yeah, we'll catch you guys on Monday. you