Timcast IRL - USAID Orders Staff To SHRED & BURN ALL Documents, Deep State COVER UP w/Bubba Clem

Episode Date: March 12, 2025

Tim, Phil, & Libby are joined by Bubba Clem to discuss USAID employees being ordered to shred or burn documents, a Pro-Palestine activist deportation blocked by a judge, Trump declaring people who van...dalize Tesla dealerships are domestic terrorists, and Rosie O'Donnell fleeing to Ireland. Hosts: Tim @Timcast (everywhere) Phil @PhilThatRemains (X) Libby @LibbyEmmons (X) Serge @SergeDotCom (everywhere) Guest: Bubba the Love Sponge @TheBubbaArmy (X) Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices

Transcript
Discussion (0)
Starting point is 00:00:00 So a USAID official has instructed all employees to shred and burn all documents. And as according to an email that NBC News has uncovered, you have to wonder why it is they're telling them to do that. Oh, boy. And this comes at a time when Trump's efforts to shut down USAID are being thwarted or at least jammed up by Democrats and bureaucrats. So this is going to be interesting. I think it's a cover up. I don't know for sure. We'll go into exactly what's going on, but they're trying to destroy as many documents as possible. And rightly so, people are really angry. We've got a handful of other stories. Donald Trump says that anybody, any one of these far leftists who are attacking Tesla dealerships, they firebombed them. They have firebombed Teslas that were in a holding parking lot. Basically, they were delivering electric cars and somebody
Starting point is 00:00:50 went and torched a bunch of Cybertrucks. They even shot up private Teslas owned by individuals. Trump says domestic terrorism. We'll talk about that. We have that story about the Infowars reporter who was murdered. Now, another reporter was swatted just the mere hours in the following day. Here's a funny one. Rosie O'Donnell's fled the country. She's in Ireland now. I don't know who cares. Funny.
Starting point is 00:01:14 And then this big story about Mahmoud Khalil. He was a green card holder, resident of the United States, who had his visa revoked. He has been arrested by ICE. He's being deported. And Democrats are claiming this is a violation of his free speech because they care so much about the free speech of non-citizens, but not American citizens. So I'm going to come out right away and say you will not get me to defend a non-citizen when y'all would not defend American citizens who are being censored and shut down. Nice try. And then, of course, we got Rumble.com
Starting point is 00:01:45 slash Timcast IRL. You guys are going to love the Green Room episode from today. We were talking about, oh, you know what? I got to be careful. Yeah, this one's uncensored. I'm going to say it's uncensored. It has to do with medications, mandates and certain issues which are very uncensored. But this is a personal individual story from a friend of mine who was hanging out explaining what happened after he was mandated to get a certain medication. You can check that out at Rumble.com slash TimCastIRL. It should be up in about an hour, maybe 40 minutes. But you got to be a Rumble Premium member.
Starting point is 00:02:18 So go to TimCastPremium.com and that will set you up to sign up for Rumble Premium using promo code Tim one zero. That way you can watch that episode and all of our green room shows. And of course, you can always go to boonies HQ dot com link in the description below. Pick up a 28th Amendment skateboard. The right of the right of the people to keep bear and breed chickens shall not be infringed. And I mean it. It's crazy to me that they try to make it so that people can't grow their own food. And boonieshq.com. Don't forget to smash that like button, share the show with everyone you know. Joining us tonight to talk about this and everything else is Bubba the Love Sponge. Hi, Tim. How are you, my friend? I am doing great. Well, how about you? I'm doing great.
Starting point is 00:02:58 Very honored to be here. A good friend of ours, Alex Stein, I think helped me get with you. And so what a great experience. What a nice facility. Thank you. And being a fellow radio guy, really impressed by your setup. And I appreciate the opportunity of being here. Yeah. Who are you?
Starting point is 00:03:16 What do you do? I mean, honestly, I think everyone knows who you are. Well, you know, maybe. Maybe. I'm Bubba the Love Sponge. I've been doing content or radio for 40-plus years. Did some radio back when you were a little kid in Chicago on B96. Pretty much everything that we do now is at The Bubba Army, whether it's our YouTube channel, whether it's our Facebook, our X.
Starting point is 00:03:36 And then we have a kind of a master website with some of my old archive stuff from back in the day. That's BubbaArmyHQ.com. So I do content like you do, different hours. I do morning drive. I have some terrestrial affiliates, and then we do kind of an after show kind of deal like what you guys do as well. And you're one of these OG radio guys, so you knew like Howard Stern and all them? Worked for Howard for six years. Wow.
Starting point is 00:04:00 So yeah, I'm kind of one of these OG, old head kind of guys, you know, really proud of the younger generation and what you guys are doing with that. But radio and what you guys, radio is in trouble. You know, terrestrial radio is in trouble because they've ran off all the talent. All the talent now is over here or at least trying to be here or establish some real estate here. So, you know, regular radio is in big trouble right now. Interesting. Well, we've got a lot to talk about, so glad you can be here. Thank you for having me.
Starting point is 00:04:32 Libby's hanging out. I'm Libby Emmons. I'm hanging out. Glad to be here. I'm with the Postmillennial. Glad to meet you. Hi, Libby. How are you?
Starting point is 00:04:37 Hi. How's it going? Phil's here. Hello, everybody. My name is Phil Labonte. I'm the lead singer of the heavy metal band All That Remains. I'm an anti-communist and a counter-revolutionary bubba you and i are going to have some uh some now is it true that uh tampa florida is like the death metal capital it is yeah more uh i think
Starting point is 00:04:52 it's i think it's more sound is the studio down there that all the death metal bands can't the cannibals or the cannibal corpse well the cannibal corpse started in buffalo and they moved to florida yeah the asides in tampa there's a band called Trivium that's out of Orlando. There's, I think, Malevolent Creation is in Tampa. There's a bunch of bands in the Tampa area. I don't know how Tampa got... I mean, we were the strip club capital for the world. Might as well be the heavy metal
Starting point is 00:05:16 capital of the world. It's Florida, man. The comment you made about terrestrial radio and how all of the talent left, that's something that I'd like to touch on. Maybe we talk about on the after show but quick quick quick question for you phil would the country be a better place if metal as a genre had more fans than taylor swift i don't know that it would be i don't know that it would be mad as heck i don't know about a better place but it would be it would definitely be a more calm place. I'll tell you what would make America a better place.
Starting point is 00:05:46 And I had Joe Rogan on my show in the early stages of my serious career in 06. And, you know, he's and he was talking about at the time he'd been turned away from a bunch of terrestrial radio stations, KLOS, KROQ, some really legendary stations. And and you don't think you know how well somebody like you and joe rogan and some of these huge franchises would do on regular radio right now well we actually guys can't you can't it's almost taking a step back for y'all well yeah so we we've talked to agencies and they said we will sell your show for radio syndication but no one actually bothers to do it and it's because all the ad agencies say that the revenue is like 5%, so it's just – it never takes priority. And as it shouldn't just because you've – once you've made it where you've made it on the – then it's going backwards. Yeah, but why not?
Starting point is 00:06:33 The thing that is – But it hurts the integrity of how good terrestrial radio could be again. Yeah. If they bring the Tim Pools, if they bring Joe Rogans, if they would have that talent pool, but they've ran them all off. Yeah, that's one of the things that you said that struck me. The reason people listen to terrestrial radio, if they listen to terrestrial radio, is because of the talent on the radio show. Because nowadays, if you want to listen to music, you can stream whatever you want, whenever you want. No commercials.
Starting point is 00:07:04 No commercials or minimal commercials. So if people are listening to your JJOs in Wisconsin or your WLUP in Chicago, remember AM1000. Remember, Tim, when you grew up with WLS and Larry Lujak and John Records Landecker and all those guys. AUPD in Arizona. I remember Manco. We should go to the news, though. Sorry, Tim. Here's a story from the Post Millennial.
Starting point is 00:07:26 Five alarm fire. USAID employees told to shred or burn classified documents. This is from, obviously, Post Millennial. The U.S. Agency for International Development instructed its Washington staff to shred and burn documents, according to an email obtained by NBC News. Directive comes as the Trump administration faces challenges over its attempt to strip and shut down the agency. An email from Erica Carr, USAID's acting executive secretary, indicated that the destruction was scheduled for Tuesday. The message thanked workers for their assistance in clearing our classified safes and personnel
Starting point is 00:07:59 documents, shred as many documents first and reserve the burn bags for when the shredder becomes unavailable or needs a break. Wait, what? How do they burn these things in D.C.? So they say, while classified materials are sometimes destroyed in emergencies, former employees and a group representing foreign service workers say this directive is not appropriate. Legal groups opposing the administration's effort to shut down USAID filed an emergency
Starting point is 00:08:22 motion on Tuesday to halt the destruction. Defendants are, as this motion is being filed, destroying documents with potential pertinence to this litigation. The motion stated a Trump administration official stated that three dozen employees received the email and that the materials being destroyed were courtesy content documents given to USAID by other agencies. So Mike Benz tweets, this is a five alarm fire. Right now, as we speak today, USAID is shredding and burning the contents of the agency's classified safes. The key information needed to reconstruct the history of USAID's weaponization, both at home and abroad. But it
Starting point is 00:08:54 sounds like the Trump administration wants this to happen. Yeah. So if you scroll down to the bottom, there's another paragraph right there at the end that. That their old documents, they're in compliance with Federal Records Act of 1950, the official said everyone involved in the process had a secret clearance or hire was approved by the bureau that they were handling. Majority of the content is courtesy content. Most original copies are still classified in computer systems. Yeah. I mean, so that's possible for sure. Yeah, but how about just the actual physicality of, what, you got to go out back and get a big barrel and throw some gas in there?
Starting point is 00:09:30 Like, I mean, how are you doing it? Like in downtown Washington, D.C., how are you actually physically setting something on fire? Well, I imagine they're loading them into trucks and the trucks bring them to burn sites or something. Look, I mean, if it's USAID that they're talking about, I mean, these people have the capacity to dispose of incriminating evidence wherever they are. Because that's what CIA is capable of doing that.
Starting point is 00:09:56 You know that any time you hear historically, any time a United States embassy was about to be taken over or you had to get people out. There was a burning of sensitive documents. That's actually standard practice. It happened in Vietnam and stuff. If you have to get out of there, you burn all the incriminating evidence, anything you don't want to fall into the hands of the opposition forces or whatever. So the idea that they have a protocol that can be used in D.C. That should not be surprising to anyone. No, I mean, obviously you would have a protocol to get rid of documents, but it does seem kind of crazy that they're just burning it all,
Starting point is 00:10:31 just getting rid of it without anyone just taking a look at what those files are. I mean, I would like to think that the DOJ would be able to call and say stop. If they wanted to. The DOJ is super busy right now. They are, they are, but I mean, he's busy. To be fair, I've seen a lot of criticism. The DOJ is super busy right now. They are. They are. But I know he's busy.
Starting point is 00:10:45 To be fair, I've seen a lot of criticism of the DOJ where they're pointing out that while the DOJ has done some things, a lot of people expect them to go after the lawfare first. And certainly there was some hubbub over the Epstein files, but it looks more so like they're going after things that we agree or we don't like, but not the biggest priority. I'm not really hearing much from them, really. I mean, I mean, Kash Patel arrested some U.S. Army guys selling secrets. Right. And that's that's great. But everybody expected the first thing to be those who were waging lawfare against Trump and his legal team would be. But I suppose those things take time. Those things take time. You have to bring a case.
Starting point is 00:11:23 You have to develop a case. You have to put it all together. You have to, you know, go out and do the investigation. Those kind of investigations do take a long time. Look how long it took to investigate Hunter Biden for his various crimes. Right. That took years. So and the lawfare takes a long time, too. I mean, to like when they were going after Trump, it was years of building stuff up, falsifying documents, creating steel dossiers, things like that.
Starting point is 00:11:47 So while that's certainly not something I would expect the Trump DOJ to do, they do have to go figure out where the crimes were committed. Right. They have to say like, OK, Alvin Bragg did this. That was a crime or Letitia James did this. That was a crime. They have to figure that out before they can bring any charges at all yeah i mean i i assume that they have a generalized idea of what they're looking for but they probably do have i mean you have to have specifics if you're gonna get yeah you have to bring a case you have to like develop a bring the sexy stuff first too though especially in the first hundred days you want that sex that's why they you know they were all dangling that epstein carrot for us you know and i don't know that we'll ever really get it really the way it's we're supposed to get.
Starting point is 00:12:29 I mean, I don't think we're going to get it. I don't think we're going to get real answers. But the other thing, too, that happened, if you look at how because the other thing the DOJ is doing is going into court to defend all of Trump's executive orders. Every time the ACLU or, you know, 23 states team up to bring cases and they have to go in and defend that against judges. And you had a lot of judges, you know, every time you've had some wins for sure, but you've also had a lot of temporary stays of executive orders or temporary overturnings of executive orders. And you've seen judges say things like, where's your case? Like, don't you have something better to defend that with? So the DOJ really has to work to get their cases together to to defend what is it like over 300 executive orders at this point, many of which have been challenged in court rightly or wrongly. 300? At least. It's got to be a record, right? Yeah, it's a lot. Wow. I think he doesn't
Starting point is 00:13:22 have as many. I don't think he's on track to have as many executive orders right now as FDR. FDR had like a lot of cleaning up to do. I mean, he had a lot. I mean, we thought we think we were in bad brothers. I mean, they were's you definitely have a ton of that going on. I wonder how much Trump is actually going to be able to succeed in the in the gutting of the bureaucratic state, the deep state, what with the judges saying you can't freeze payments and things like this. Certainly, I think the advantage is always going to be with the executive branch, which does present some challenges for our constitutional republic in that trump can fire away executive orders over and over and over and over again but the supreme court doesn't convene every day right so trump can they can only take a certain number of cases a term right federal judges run this country i mean that's that's that that's that's you know and they're appointed for life and it's
Starting point is 00:14:20 you know it's it's it's they're as polarizing as the parties in themselves. But federal judges are the only ones that can really overturn these things. And, you know, again, Trump can sign 300 of them. But how many Barack Obama or Clinton appointed federal judges will get these and just shoot them right down to zero? And look, remember, it's great that Donald Trump is doing things through executive order. But we really do need Congress to legislate. Yeah, we do. Because they have to be. That's the only way that they're going to be permanent. If we really want to get rid of the Department of Education, there has to be legislation. And that's such a long process in itself. I mean, it wasn't the deal. I mean,
Starting point is 00:14:54 the DOE was Jimmy Carter formed it, but like he signed a congressional law for it. Yeah, there has to be. That's the thing. like, right, when when when Trump came into his first term, he overturned a lot of Obama executive orders. When Biden came in, he overturned a lot of Trump executive orders. And now we have Trump overturned, what, 78 Biden executive orders and is creating new executive orders. And if the GOP doesn't keep the White House, then a lot more executive orders will be overturned. And to be honest, that's that's no way to live your life under executive orders that only live for four years at a time. And a lot there's also, though, the other thing that was interesting was the affirmative action executive order. That was Lyndon B. Johnson. And Trump just overturned that. So that was interesting to that
Starting point is 00:15:41 last long time to do this stuff anyways. like the reason that we have every like every administration undoing the stuff that the previous administration did is because we actually have a government that is that is going far beyond its constitutional mandate that you know if you want to do if you want to do something like an epa versus west virginia yeah if you want to get some real changes, like really, really big changes, get a constitutional amendment to clarify the necessary and proper clause in the Commerce Clause. When's the last time there was a constitutional amendment that actually went through? It certainly wasn't the ERA. No, it wasn't. The ERA didn't. I want to say that it was in the 90s was the last one. Was it? But it was something that that was was not significantly
Starting point is 00:16:21 consequential to the average American. yeah um i can google it in a second but the point that i'm making is the president shouldn't be coming in and trying to create law we shouldn't have presidents at different administrations fighting about what they think the country should be doing the fact of the matter is what the federal government actually has power to do has been laid out in the constitution there's no reason for the government to try to go beyond the bounds because the states are empowered to all make decisions in and of themselves what is good for california is not necessarily good for florida or what's good for massachusetts is not necessarily good for idaho and it is completely
Starting point is 00:17:02 like not only is it good it is it is the thing that the country is supposed to do. Well, they have different laboratories of democracy and try things out. The rumor is that Trump's intention, his agenda is to basically federalize the country to to largely dismantle the federal government so the states become competitive once again. Regulation, everything will largely follow the state's taxation. largely dismantle the federal government so that the states become competitive once again. Regulation, everything will largely follow the state's taxation. Love to see it. So when we're talking about the gutting of the IRS, some 45,000 employees, or now the Department of Education, which is a big story. I was watching Fox News and the breaking news came in.
Starting point is 00:17:38 They ordered all staff to vacate the building by six for security reasons. Love to hear it. And now by tomorrow, half the staff may be gone. I'm hearing from people who, let's just say they work at it around D.C. They know some of these people that Trump wants the states to be in control once again. Well, that makes sense when you consider the Dobbs decision, which was a state thing. And when you look at how a lot of states are fleeing Delaware right now, used to be a lot of companies would set up a Delaware corp, and now people are going to. I think Walmart's the biggest.
Starting point is 00:18:09 Yeah, Walmart's the biggest. They're going to where, like Wyoming, Arizona, wherever else. I'd love to see it. Montana. I think Montana is one of the. I think Montana, you guys can look this up, might be the only state in the country where you can set up a company and the owners of the corporation are not publicly disclosed. You cannot find out
Starting point is 00:18:29 who the owner of a corporation is in Montana. So a lot of people set up LLCs and sub S's in Montana, which was much like had some same some same verbiage that Delaware had until just most recently people over, you know, the Delaware thing got overturned and people are leaving. Well, you know, I've had my gripes over West Virginia's garbage law. We call them Uber laws. However, West Virginia did just pass a an artificial food dye ban. I saw that.
Starting point is 00:18:59 That was cool. However, the governor hasn't signed it. He could still veto this. And so, well, I think people got to understand this. The major food producers probably generate several billion dollars worth of revenue in the state, largely for themselves. But that amount that amounts to a lot of taxes and jobs. And so, you know, these companies are going to be telling the governor, don't sign this because you're going to lose X billion dollars per year, which is going to result in X loss of jobs, is that or otherwise, which means everybody out there who supports this stuff, you need to do whatever you can to make sure that West Virginia and any state that does this has the support it needs. So that means we need investors who are going to be like, I'm going to set up a cereal manufacturing plant or whatever, West Virginia that uses beta carotene instead of red dyes or whatever.
Starting point is 00:19:44 We're going to make real healthy food instead of the fake dye garbage. That way, the market doesn't take a hit. But we will talk about that a bit more later on. I do want to jump to the story. This is the big news, ladies and gentlemen. Mahmoud Khalil, he is a green card holder, permanent resident of the United States. He had his visa revoked. He is being deported.
Starting point is 00:20:04 A judge has blocked his visa revoked. He is being deported. A judge has blocked his deportation temporarily. And they're saying it's because he was aligned with Hamas. He was supporting Hamas, Hamas aligned activities. And now NPR reports green card holders rights in spotlight after arrest of pro-Palestinian activists. What's really fascinating about the story is how the story itself largely doesn't matter to Democrats or. Well, here's the funny thing. The the run of the mill Democrats are angry over this because it's an immigration question. The far left Democrats are angry because this guy was anti-Israel.
Starting point is 00:20:38 The middle of the road Republicans are saying you can do this. You have no right to be here. And then the Jew and non and and as a distinction and the anti-Israel right right right side are angry over this and they're claiming it's free speech grounds. I think principally that it is real. Is this for a lot of these people? But there is an interesting question being brought up as Trump. Trump's administration is seeking to deport a permanent resident who is married to an American in this country. So what do you think? He's calling for violence.
Starting point is 00:21:12 So I. We have quotes where he calls for violence. There were quotes where he was saying we should attack the police and things like that. Were those his quotes or were they part of the Columbia University apartheid divest? The way that I understand it? They were his quotes. I could be I could be misinformed. I was looking I was looking for a video of him specifically, and I didn't find that stuff.
Starting point is 00:21:32 But again, what's what's stopping it? He I know that federal judge. I know people have been saying he has quotes like we will resist the police and things like that or something that effect. I don't know. Exactly what he said specifically that could be described as threats of violence or anything like that. Well, Columbia University Apartheid Divest is a really radical group, and they're the ones who were staging the takeover of Hamilton Hall last year, the takeover of the quad. I think it was almost two weeks that they took over buildings. Yeah. Hamilton Hall. year, the takeover of the Quad. I think it was almost two weeks that
Starting point is 00:22:05 they had to take over. It took over buildings. Yeah, Hamilton Hall. They renamed it Hind Hall after a girl that was killed in Gaza. They were very specific about that. But they took over the Quad for like two weeks. They recently took over Barnard's Milstein Library, which is like this really storied historic library on the campus that is shared by both. It's shared by both universities. But yeah, I mean, it's a pretty shocking group. They have really disgusting views. They're very big Jew haters. They also are very big haters of the West, of America. They've also done this crazy thing where they compare the war in Gaza and Israel to Colombia's real estate deals in Manhattan on the Morningside campus. They say that Colombia is an occupier of Morningside, this part of Manhattan,
Starting point is 00:23:01 and all of this stuff, which is absolutely ridiculous. And that's how they link that up all together. It's not a good group. They have really bad ideas. And they have. They had last year, the daughter of Ilhan Omar was out there. She was a Barnard student. She was protesting and Ilhan Omar was out there as well. You also had Congressman Brandon Gill today saying that he thought that he'd think the country would be better off if Ilhan Omar was deported, which made me look up how you could deport a naturalized citizen. Well, real quick, it is funny, but most people don't realize that Ilhan Omar has a 20-something-year-old daughter. Yeah, and she was in Barnard. I think she got – I know she got suspended.
Starting point is 00:23:40 I don't know if she got expelled. She was certainly locked out of her housing for a good while and made a whole stink about being unhoused on the house. Well, so I asked my my Twitter and my ex followers, should non-citizens in the U.S. be allowed to stage protests against U.S. policy? Eighty five point eight percent said no. Fourteen point two percent said yes. Out of twenty thousand eight hundred and one votes. It's been up for two hours.
Starting point is 00:24:07 I think that is actually a violation of the of the green card, like the green card requirements. It has responsibilities of the government and responsibilities as permanent resident. And one of the responsibilities as a permanent resident, it says required to obey all laws of the United States and localities and also expected to support the democratic form of government not including voting which you can't do yeah i'm i i am uh i'm totally fine with his visa being revoked and him being too absolutely i mean sorry sorry about your luck bud we got rules around here i mean you know sorry i mean these protests were taking over buildings. We're not talking about a guy standing on a street corner waving a little sign that says Free Palestine. We're talking about a guy who was an organizer of a protest, who was giving speeches.
Starting point is 00:24:52 Giving press conferences. Press conferences. And they physically took over buildings and occupied spaces unlawfully. And people don't say, I think the issue is for a lot of people, they don't remember the videos that came out of this, where Jewish students were attacked. One incident where a guy, I think it was a guy or woman, they were wearing a Star of David, and they were walking around, I think it was Columbia, and then people just formed a line, linked arms, and pushed them out. Yeah, they refused to let them into the encampment. They also refused to let people go to class. Recently, they say that Khalil was part of a group of students. I don't know if this is true, but they say that he was part of a group of students that was disrupting classes and distributing like Hamas leaflets in classes. That's something he was Hamas leaflets. It was like Al-Aqsa flood stuff, which is like pro Hamas Al-Aqsa flood. That's what they call the Al-aqsa is like the temple mount
Starting point is 00:25:45 yeah um and yeah it's like basically you know pro well there's a big question basically is not right so these are so these are the questions and this is why i think that it would be good to have a hearing i want to hear all the evidence against this guy and i'd love to also if this is the first guy who's being deported who has a green card and he's being, you know, charged, he hasn't been charged with anything yet. He hasn't been investigated for any crimes. And that's something, too. I was reading the Free Press report this morning. So what?
Starting point is 00:26:14 And they were saying that he hasn't that nobody in the administration says that he's done anything illegal. So what? Well, so it's interesting. And so what to you? I mean, so what in general? Yeah, if this is going to be the blueprint of how people with green cards are deported, I want every I dotted and T crossed so that we know that in every case this is being done appropriately. Have an appropriate procedure.
Starting point is 00:26:38 Yes. Make sure that they do it lawfully. Just like you said, do it lawfully. And then ship them all out. Sure. And then use that law. And then use that law, beat it. This is how we protect Americans. Use that as case law then. Let's have the first one.
Starting point is 00:26:51 Let's have some case law. And then we'll have some case law. I disagree. The law clearly states, and if you want to change it, we can change it. There is no judicial review. The State Department can kick out any green card holder whenever they want. At any time. If it's lawful. No, no, no, no. There's no question of what lawful is because there's no judicial review. Then it is lawful. Right. Then that means always
Starting point is 00:27:15 at any time for any reason, it's lawful. So if there's no question. All I'm saying is like if your information is accurate and it's lawful, then ship them out. So here we have it. They don't even have an appellate process. There's none. I've talked about it earlier. I've pulled it up. This is Section 221, Subsection I. After the issuance of a visa or other documentation to any alien, the consular officer or the secretary of state may at any time, in his discretion, revoke such visa or other documentation, period. Let me read this.
Starting point is 00:27:45 General and such revocation shall invalidate the visa or other documentation from the date of issuance, provided that carriers or transportation companies and masters, commanding officers, agents, owners, charterers, or co-signees shall not be penalized under Section 273B for action taken in reliance on such visa or other documentation. This is an aside to it. They're going to say there shall be no means of judicial review of a revocation under this subsection, except in the context of a removal proceeding, if such revocation provides the sole ground for removal under Section 237A1B, blah, blah, blah, which is an aside. Basically, if the Secretary of State says we are taking back your visa, they can do it. Period.
Starting point is 00:28:25 They don't need a reason. There's no appeals. There's no court. There's no habeas corpus judicial review. It is you are a visa holder. You are no longer a visa holder. You are now here unlawfully and can be deported. Aren't there extra protections for green card holders?
Starting point is 00:28:39 This literally says, and I quote, the secretary of state at his own discretion can revoke such visa or other documentation. That's it. And notice of such revocation. Notice of that's the important point shall be communicated to the attorney general and such revocation shall invalidate the visa or the documentation from the date of issuance. So that means it means the moment Marco Rubio says we have revoked your visa, it's gone. What did you say about judicial review? So it says here there is no there shall be no means of judicial review, including review pursuant to Section 2241 of Title 28 U.S. Code or any other seating or any other habeas corpus provision and sections 1361, 1651 of such title. It says there shall be no judicial review of a revocation under this subsection except in the context of a removal proceeding
Starting point is 00:29:30 if such revocation provides the sole ground for removal under section 237A1B. So it sounds like that would be the case here, and there would be a removal proceeding, and we're going to see a hearing tomorrow. No, no, no, no, no, no, no. You misunderstand a specific subsection. So let me pull up section 237 if we want to address the specific criteria by which they would have a proceeding. And I believe it's relating to when other – oh, man, this jumps so far. It's huge.
Starting point is 00:29:53 It's a huge – you weren't kidding. It's what, like 500 million pages? It's 503 pages. Yeah. So I think what – we'll get it right. We'll get it right. We'll get it right. Well, I think what they're saying is if the revocation is particular to a specific action, there's one exception for when they do this. But I'm pretty sure if you read it plainly, it says in the discretion of the consular or the secretary of state, they can just revoke your visa. After the fact, it provides exceptions.
Starting point is 00:30:21 That's pretty fascinating. I didn't know that. I mean, it's pretty stiff. pretty secure yeah i mean it makes sense you have the trump administration investigating 60 universities total and instructing the administrators of those universities that they have to comply with all of this stuff because the executive order i guess per the trump administration's way of thinking is retroactive right i? I mean, this guy Khalil, I think, was involved in stuff in January. I don't know if it was before January 20th or before the executive order was signed or after. But it is interesting if the Trump administration is going to be deporting green card holders from those who were engaged in retroactively yeah retroactively i wonder if that's uh i wonder if that's i think since he's been in office this is all stopped i mean because they all because it's still happening
Starting point is 00:31:10 it's still happening at barnard at the level that it happened you know yeah at barnard they were uh hanging effigies of one of the deans wow they were distributing leaflets in classes disrupting classes preventing people from getting to classes. Then NYPD was called in. There was a bomb threat so that they had to evacuate the whole building. I mean, it's pretty insane at Barnard. And when you look at the press conferences, there's plenty of student activists with accents. And you wonder, like, on what circumstance are you here? Where are you from? Is that going to stick?
Starting point is 00:31:47 So it certainly has been continuing in New York, at Columbia specifically. I don't know as much at the other schools. I think everything else is pretty much. I don't think it's nearly as prevalent as it was. But you also have the administrators of a lot of these schools saying that they're not going to cooperate. You have the administrators at Columbia anyway saying they're not going to cooperate with ICE or DHS or anybody trying to come find these students. I wonder how that's going to work you have the administrators at columbia anyway saying they're not going to cooperate with um ice or dhs or anybody trying to come find these uh i wonder how that's going to
Starting point is 00:32:09 work out for them yeah and it's undergrads to grad students who are of course adults i mean i think this guy is like 27 28 years old i am still trying to find the page the subsection yeah it's just massive it's not easy to find it I think it's 500 plus pages. The particulars of it, honestly, they're not really all that important to me. There is a legal means to do this. How it's done, whether they get a hearing or not, whatever, I don't care. If they're spouting anti-American rhetoric and they're calling for violence or calling for action against the police, calling for if they're occupying private property and stuff like that, get them out. Impeding people to get to school.
Starting point is 00:32:59 Send them back. If you are here, you are here as a guest on a green card, on a visa like that. So if you're an anti-American, beat it. Like, send them the hell out of here. We should not make room for people that are just going to come into this country and try to subvert the United States. He was only here since December 2023. Boy, the mentality of it. That was interesting because he finished grad school in January or December of this year.
Starting point is 00:33:29 So what's crazy to me is how do you finish grad school in a year? I went to grad school at Columbia. It took me three years to get through it. And that was arts school. I mean, so it's not like it was rigorous. The mentality of people who have green cards nowadays, I mean, back in the day, I hate to say some back in the day, old school stuff, but like, you know, they figure people figure that they were guests of our country. They would you know, they would act on their best behavior. They wouldn't be, you know, the squeaky wheel that gets the that gets the oil. And now these people are just doing, you know, literally just, you know, unbelievable, you know, criminal stuff. Libya is right. Am I right?
Starting point is 00:34:05 You are correct. So there is judicial review in this particular case. Section 237A1B is specifically about deportation. And if what they're saying is if the revocation of visa is the sole reason for a deportation, there will be a hearing. You are correct. And this is why they're actually having the review right now where the judge has put a halt to it. Let him have the hearing. If there was any other reason where the individual, like if this guy, if they had him on a crime, any crime.
Starting point is 00:34:36 Crimes, for sure. But that could be like jaywalking. Yeah. Then there would be no hearing at all. But basically what Trump said was national security issues uh the i i believe the state department said that he was uh aligned engaging activities aligned with hamas which i reject wholeheartedly realize i'm gonna clip the part where you said libya's right and absolutely you absolutely should and that's why we read it yeah okay because libya was correct all the time
Starting point is 00:35:02 i had it i had a i had a tim is it might be wrong bubba was right uh today in the green room earlier we were talking about i hope it's on tape because well no there was no tape there's no tape of it we were recording before the recording i know it might have been during the recording was during the uh talking about the tip situation and you said you may be correct if you were talking in the context i was speaking this is actually important um no tax on tips bubba brought up means super chats may be tax exempt right um and i said however it's a so a gratuity is it's you know we know what it is it's self-explanatory it's money after the fact right you're not getting anything for doing it however for us with super chats there
Starting point is 00:35:44 is an expectation a probability that we read what you have to say. Right. So if you're watching right now and you put in a Super Chat, the expectation is Tim is going to be reading the Super Chats and I'm basically paying for that to occur. That real estate. That's not a tip. Right. However, you pointed out for your show, when you do Super Chats, you don't read any messages you say thank you to jim mcgill thank you yeah that is a tip they're giving you money with no expectation of what's called legal consideration right meaning your tax exempt on all that so i'm looking forward to that if i hope it goes through that's really interesting that opens the door to a lot people need to understand oh yeah i mean a lot of people in
Starting point is 00:36:21 the content industry i mean yep you know a lot a lot it's crazy how democrats somehow are against taxes on tips because they you had aoc saying that that means that every job would become a tip based job great yeah that means uh pay what you will yeah and think about how that would work uh i say hey if you want to watch our members only show it's free just leave a tip and if don't, we won't do it again. Right. So it's like no taxes. Right. I mean, you can get creative on that.
Starting point is 00:36:51 Yeah, it's almost like you tithe. We'll do the uncensored show. Tithe to the Timcast. Yeah, tithe. And then what we do is we say, like, nobody has to give us money. But if we don't make any money doing it from tips, we're not going to do it again. Right. We're not going to be around. Yeah. And and look we know that servers rely on tips for their
Starting point is 00:37:08 income so you are allowed to rely on tips for your income so long as nothing of value is given in exchange right other than service no no no no no i mean like as far as a server they're just serving so tips come after the service is already completed right that. That's what I meant. I mean, as far as they're tipping you, I guess, on how well you did your job. It's just extra money. Have fun. Right. There you go. Freebies.
Starting point is 00:37:31 Yeah. Anyway, I had a Tim moment like you had just a minute ago, Libby, that you're clipping. I just don't know if I can clip it or not. No, we recorded that. That's on the Green Room show. Okay. Let's jump to this next story from Business Insider. Vandalize a Tesla dealership. Trump says he'll label that domestic terrorism good he actually said we already consider it as such and i don't think people understand just how
Starting point is 00:37:53 serious things are gotten take a look at this story let me let me uh let's play this video for you i think it's about a minute long and you can hear it from this uh local news report let's roll a man who wishes to remain anonymous but says his Tesla was among those damaged at the Tigard store this past week. He says he took his vehicle in to get the windshield replaced, only to have that replacement damaged by gunfire. He says he's been following the vandalism at Tesla stores and was worried something like this might happen. We've been nervous driving the car and uncomfortable even having it parked out in front of our house. We have taken the steps of covering the car at night. Seemed like at the time when we got the car, it was more of a left wing or left leaning person's car. The group behind today's
Starting point is 00:38:48 demonstration into visible greater Vancouver said they do not condone acts of vandalism or of violence. Adding these actions aren't conducive to the kind of change they're pushing for, which is a lie, because let me tell you, this is the Oregon far left group like this, regular old people wearing shirts and waving signs, and some dude ran up and opened a Tesla dealership, not a single one of those people would provide any assistance to the police to stop him. Correct. If it was a group of right wingers wearing American flag shirts and holding up signs and a guy ran up and opened fire, they'd all be telling the cops everything they saw. They'd be doing interviews about it and they'd say, arrest that guy. And if it was in the right state, they'd be pulling out their guns and shooting them. That's right. If it was in Texas, I mean, you open fire in public. You're in the right state that happens. And it's, you know, you got a bunch of
Starting point is 00:39:38 Trump supporters or a bunch of conservative people together and they're in an open carry or they're going to they're going to defend. They're going an open carry or they're gonna they're gonna defend they're gonna defend themselves they're gonna defend i well let's just defend others yeah let's just clarify what this is trump says this is domestic terror it and and it is but but real quick words i want people to consider this you are out in public and a guy runs up and starts opening fire on a car dealership there There are employees there. There are customers. This is, I mean, it's terror. It's a clean shoot.
Starting point is 00:40:10 If you're in a self-defense state, people are going to start firing back. It's going to get really bad. So we cannot tolerate this. This is unquestionably political, and it is intended to frighten people. The point is to scare people. That's what terrorism is. That's exactly what terrorism is. is to scare people. That's what terrorism is.
Starting point is 00:40:25 That's exactly what terrorism is. That's my point. That's what Condoleezza Rice said. Terrorism is designed to terrorize the community. Yeah, the whole point of this is to scare people, scare people away from purchasing Teslas, scare people that have Teslas. And it is without question politically motivated because Elon Musk is working with the government for the guy said unquestionably terrorism and the government should come down as hard as they are legally allowed to and just four months ago this was more of a left issue support green support electric vehicles no so it was it was never it was never actually supporting green or anything it's always been a cover for socialism the point is to get
Starting point is 00:41:06 control the point is not that they give a crap about environmental issues the point is all about socialism that's why tesla's uh i believe the story was that biden had like an electric car summit and didn't invite tesla that's right and it's not about green anything no and biden also had these like uh ev rebates if you buy evs and tesla was tesla was not included in that too i always thought that it had some it was both political but also because tesla's a non-union shop so it's always been about elon it's always about taking a hack at elon but also biden was in yeah biden was in the pocket of the auto workers union so that was part of it too so it's always been about taking a hack at elon well it's not it's
Starting point is 00:41:44 not so much this it it hasn't always been about taking a hack at Elon. Well, it's not it's not so much this. It hasn't always been about taking a hack at Elon. It's been taking a hack at Elon since Elon came out as not supporting the left or Democrats. Right. But the idea of the environmental movement being about the environment is absolutely BS. If they actually were about the environment, they would actually be pro-nuclear. Correct. But they're not pro-nuclear. They want to, because nuclear works far too well,
Starting point is 00:42:12 and then you end up with people, with an abundance of energy. It is able to power the capitalism that makes modern society possible. The renewable energy that they endorse, things like windmills uh solar that would actually you would have to cut back the amount of energy that you use and that's the goal because they don't like capitalism also windmills are not environmentally sound when you take
Starting point is 00:42:36 consideration the uh effort of their production i saw a report where it takes more energy uh or a bigger carbon footprint to to to run a windmill than it does the power it produces. You ever see what the anchor at the base of a windmill looks like? It kills birds. It's all terrible. No, at the base, it's all concrete and rebar. That's straight up petroleum. You can't get concrete without petroleum.
Starting point is 00:43:01 Here's some useless trivia to waste your time. We say windmill. They're wind turbines, but colloquially we say windmill because they had wheat mills where they would grind the wheat. Here's another funny bit for you. And the wind would spin it. You know where a treadmill comes from? A torture device where they would take prisoners and force them to stand on a wheel and keep walking. And the wheel would spin and it would mill grain into flour. Yeah.
Starting point is 00:43:29 And it was considered punishment. They'd have people walking for hours a day, stepping up on this wheel, spinning it. I bet they were toned, though. You know, they were toned. They were jacked up. Those prisoners were ripped. And make some bread, though. That's right.
Starting point is 00:43:45 Well, maybe if Trump arrests these far leftists, he will have them work the treadmill so that we can. I mean, somebody's got to come down hard on this situation. This could be this could really get bad. Ray Dalio really get bad. Ray Dalio wrote in 2021, I believe it was. And they published this section of his book on Time magazine in 24 that we were entering some kind of civil war. Now, what I can't stand about a lot of these people and with all due respect to Ray Dalio, we'd love to talk to him, is that they keep playing this thing where they're like, where do you want? He writes in his book, do you want to live under a fascist dictatorship or a communist dictatorship? And I'm like, well, neither. It's a good thing. The only thing we're concerned with is the communist side. We can fight against that because Trump's not a fascist. And they keep these people always do this where they're like, both sides are getting more extreme.
Starting point is 00:44:25 And I'm like, Trump, Trump's side is not getting more extreme. Trump is a 90s Democrat. If anything, he's just moderate as he's actually even a little bit left leaning from where the right used to be. So what about anything that Trump has done has been far right extremism? More importantly, what about anything? What about anything that Trump's done? What about it is fascistic? Has he taken over the steel industry, nationalized it and forced the production of weapons? Well, the one thing that they would say now is they would they would claim that a lot of this stuff is like a consolidation of power thing. But I think that the more apt argument would be that the that it's about federalization, which is what you were saying before. So this is funny because they're saying Elon Musk is trying to enrich himself through Doge. Meanwhile, Tesla has lost what, like a third of its value in the past month. Yeah. And Trump's trying to comes out on TV.
Starting point is 00:45:21 Please buy Tesla. Right. And he came out. He bought a Tesla. Elon's net worth has dropped since doing this. Trump's net worth has dropped. He's becoming president. And they're saying it's for personal gain. Then they say Trump is consolidating power while he fires all of the federal staffers that empower him. It's just not the case. Yeah. So you I mean, you can see what their argument would be, but I think it's incorrect. It's a lie. It's a bad argument. Yeah. Yeah. Well, someone on Axe, it was a viral post, I can't remember who posted it, but they likened this to the weather underground.
Starting point is 00:45:53 And I completely agree. I mean, this may be the beginning. It's not going to stop. And I warn all of you that are listening right now, those of us who are veterans of the 2010s protest movement, we could tell you in the winter there's no protests. Maybe you go to South America or something when it gets warm. Protests light up. Why? Look, man, if you're an organizer, if you're an activist and you get 10,000 commitments, here's the first thing. They'd make Facebook pages and they'd say, here's the event. Here's the time. Here's the date. We always warned everybody. Only 10 percent actually show up. So if it says 10,000 people
Starting point is 00:46:30 have RSVP'd, 1,000 people will be there, maybe less. Here's the worst thing for the activists. If it's lightly drizzling, no one will show up. Nobody's going to show up. No one's going to show up because politics is never more important than avoiding getting wet. So that being said, if we are seeing Tesla dealerships firebombed and shot up when it's still cold out and it's starting to get warm, it was 70 degrees today. Come summer, this is going to be tenfold. Yeah, absolutely. That's pretty scary. I mean, we could see a summer that I don't think that it'll be have the intensity of.
Starting point is 00:47:07 You don't think it'll rival 2020? No, I don't. I think 2020. I mean, you also had COVID rage. Yeah, it would take it would take more than just people being upset with Trump. Although, I mean, if you see a lot of direct action and then you see the doj and federal federal response you could see people start to get kind of crazy because of escalation well also if you have like i'm sorry go ahead no no it's fine if also if you have like this guy mahmoud khalil if you have like people one at a
Starting point is 00:47:38 time getting arrested and deported you're gonna have martyr situations you know so if you like are arresting one person at a protest here one one person at a protest here, you're going to have a problem. But round them all up. If they round them all up at once. I mean, has anybody considered that or to protest that? Has anybody considered the fact that I mean, I may be a little bit. But like the Democrats are not really organized right now. And they're they're they're really in shambles.
Starting point is 00:48:06 They don't have a leader. They don't have anybody to – they don't have a fresh-faced guy, you know, Barack Obama. You could see them grooming Barack Obama when they were. And they don't have anybody that they're – you know, Gavin Newsom is not that guy. They don't. So I think that that may hurt their a little bit of their protesting situation just because they don't have they they're in shambles with regards to organization. So I think that I think you're I think you're right about the fact that they don't they don't have a leader. But it's deeper than that. In my opinion, the Democrats aren't sure who they are. Yeah. Right now, you've got the progressives and the far left that have been the loud voice
Starting point is 00:48:44 really controlling the party and dragging the rest left that have been the loud voice really controlling the party and dragging the rest of the party along and they managed to convince and it was a small section of the far left that managed to convince the whole basically all of america that it's not worth speaking out against them and they were able to lead the country along for a while because the the normal democrats didn't stand up against them and they were able to lead the country along for a while because the the normal democrats didn't stand up against them and they were afraid because everybody was getting canceled and stuff like that but now the democrats are in a situation where they've lost most of america is tired of the far left's garbage and so the rest of the democrats are like how do we where where should we go should
Starting point is 00:49:21 we go with the far left who are the people that are going to be protesting, that are going to be pro, you know, pro Hamas? They're going to be anti-America. They're going to be saying that America is a fascist country now. Donald Trump is this big, bad boogeyman, et cetera. Or do we work with Donald Trump, who is essentially a 90s or aughts Democrat? And do we try to, you know, prevent him from doing the bad, the things that we don't like, the excesses that do go too far, but work with him on the things that we do agree.
Starting point is 00:49:50 Until the Democrats figure that out, they're going to remain in chaos. You know, look at Fetterman. I think Fetterman's nailing it right now with regards to potentially what a successful Democrat could be doing right now in lieu of those idiots that made the chalk signs during the congressional thing. And you make a great point because he's going on camera
Starting point is 00:50:11 and saying beautiful things. And that's what Democrats should be doing. And then he's going to the Senate and voting in line with all of the far left psychotic policies. That's exactly what a Democrat could be sounding good on TV while stabbing Americans in the back. That's what he's doing really well. Yep. Yeah. But it's I mean, it's better than, you know, the asses that they made out of themselves during the congressional address. To me, they they've become the party of the weirdos. And, you know, they and I listen, I voted Democrat a couple of times in my life.
Starting point is 00:50:45 I really have. I voted for Barack Obama the first time, you know, for various reasons. And but it's it's to me, it's like they've they don't represent anybody that I know that has a sound mind. And, you know, I mean, I can't think of anybody. I agree. It's funny because with this like Mahmoud Khalil story, the Democrat narrative is that he was disappeared in the middle of the night. And it's like he was arrested. Yeah. And they're like, yeah, but he was disappeared. I'm like, no, he was arrested. And he's in a Louisiana holding facility for ICE. Yeah. He wasn't disappeared. You know exactly where he is and you know exactly who arrested him. Right. You know exactly why they showed up. They've published their exact reasoning in the press and given numerous statements about it.
Starting point is 00:51:29 Right. But the Democrats thrive and the far left violent activists, Antifa types thrive off of trying to make young people believe they're in a James Bond thriller or a totalitarian novel. And they're they're Winston. They're like none of us is Winston from 1984. We're all like the rando other people just going around our lives, walking our dogs. But we're not in 1984 ration. Right. We are in something weird. We are in something weird. I mean, to be fair, maybe we are in some kind of dystopian show because someone needs to write it, the riots the lockdowns the biden administration everything was cuomo running for mayor again yeah so maybe they're not wrong but uh they're not wrong about the narrative but what they want to do is right they want people to think that they're uh we said winston winston from 1984 they want them to be v from v for vendetta
Starting point is 00:52:20 right i want to tell you that you can be that leader leading the charge with the guy Fox mask on. Or what's the one where it's like put on the sunglasses? I actually graduated in 1984. Yeah, but that's us. And it was mandatory reading for us to read that book our sophomore year in 1984. Yeah, we had to read it too. And it's just like, you know, it was so far-fetched back then. You're like, and wow.
Starting point is 00:52:43 Was it far-fetched? I remember reading it in like the late 80s, early 90s. I did not think it was that far-fetched back then. You're like, and wow. Was it? Was it far-fetched? I remember reading it in like the late 80s, early 90s. I did not think it was that far-fetched. I thought it was a little, I mean, I lived in a little Warsaw, Indiana, a little, you know, a little rural town. I was obsessed with apocalyptic literature. So it was bad. It was Brave New World.
Starting point is 00:52:57 I was obsessed with cafeteria. Isn't it kind of weird though, like with all, with, with, in all fairness, that the dystopia we are in is actually a combination of all of them i'm not kidding brave new world fahrenheit 451 1984 the yeah it's all yeah it's like uh the screens yeah you not only have the the drugs and the pleasure don't forget sleeper it's a little sleeper too what's that one woody allen movie i don't know that one oh it's well if you ever get a chance so fahrenheit 451 you've got the censorship due to fear of offense. Brave New World, you've got the drugs to stimulate you and make you feel better or whatever.
Starting point is 00:53:31 1984, you've got the government lockdown and collusion and censorship. It's a little bit of all of them. It's a crock pot. It's Animal Farm. Of all of it. And then you have Sleeper where they have an orgasmatron, so nobody ever has sex. They just have this orgasmatron machine. That's good.
Starting point is 00:53:43 Have you seen the Reborn dolls? What? You know what a Reborn is? I sure have seen that stuff, yeah. Yo, man. You know what a Reborn doll is? Well, much. There are women who buy lifelike fake babies to raise.
Starting point is 00:53:57 Oh, boy. There was a woman who... And are they really real realistic where they have like a bowel movement and you have to feed it? I don't know about that, but they're made of like silicon and they look like babies and the women bounce them and they have conventions. Are they doing it to practice to have a real baby or are they just doing it because that's their baby? They're lonely and sad. Yeah, they're lonely and sad. They're lonely and sad.
Starting point is 00:54:19 When I was in college, there was this mentally, I don't know, can you say mentally retarded? She definitely was. That's the academic term, I believe. Yeah. Yeah, it is. She, who went to my same coffee shop, and she was always pushing a stroller with a baby doll in it. And half of her face was paralyzed, and it was just, the whole thing was very difficult
Starting point is 00:54:40 and sad. Developmentally disabled. She loved that baby doll. She was developmentally disabled. Have you guys seen the movies? Yeah. I hope nobody laughs at me like this is i think it's on netflix and it's called scamanda have you guys seen that oh man it's it's about it's about this this guy who orders a a real life female robot and he
Starting point is 00:55:00 controls it and she's like looks just like i mean like a like a regular person and you can control its mentality and how smart it is how sexual it is amanda it's called scamanda and it's three episodes really and it's because there's a movie that just came out called companion which is the exact same thing a guy oh no that's what it is it's called command yeah it's companion yeah companion oh okay yeah companion you know You get that right. No, I have my things messed up here. And that's a movie. Have you seen it? Yeah, yeah, yeah.
Starting point is 00:55:29 Companion? But it's not, first of all, the trailer is miserable. Right. Whoever made that trailer for that movie should be fired. I would like, I sincerely hope that anybody involved in the making of the film Companion fires whoever made that trailer. Because the thumbnail on Amazon looks like a guy whispering to a robot it's got like all white eyes right right and i was ivy her name is ivy right correct on uh iris iris iris i think so iris it is and um uh you have a far better memory than me i saw the thumbnail for it and i'm like
Starting point is 00:55:58 oh that looks like a thing about like a guy has a female robot lady and then i played the trailer and it just looks like a drama right it just looks like a relationship drama and it looked in the trailer made it seem like it was about a woman who was in love with a guy and he was abusive so i was like i'm not watching that chick flick garbage and then later i just like well we watched everything else we watched it and i was like oh it is about a robot it is if they just said it was about a robot i'd have watched it as soon as it came out right so they kind of they kind of did themselves did themselves dirty on their thumbnail because the thumbnail was horrible compared to how good the movie was. Scamanda is about this woman who faked brain cancer and she had the entire – Oh, Scamanda.
Starting point is 00:56:35 I get it. Yeah. And she had like all of her church and everybody believing that she had brain cancer. She would go into the emergency room and just like with dehydration. But while she was there, she would stick needles in her arm and take all these B-roll pictures. So she would have pictures of her being in the hospital.
Starting point is 00:56:55 And then she embezzled millions and millions of dollars. The thing about Companion though is it's not really about a robot. Sorry. Okay. If you want to see a movie that entertains and explores a complex future where people buy robot companions, that is the movie for you. That movie is a—
Starting point is 00:57:16 Do you think it'll ever be that way? Do you ever think we're headed there? Absolutely. And what would you say the time frame of that would be? It's soon. Two years? Yeah. What?
Starting point is 00:57:24 Very soon. Yep. Two years. And what would you say the time frame of that would be? It's soon. Two years? Yeah. What? Very soon. Yep. Two years. That good of technology. So we're already at the point where a kid has committed suicide because his AI chatbot lover, Daenerys Targaryen, told him. Told him to. She didn't explicitly say to
Starting point is 00:57:40 end yourself. She said, I want you to be with me. And he said, what if I could be with you right now? And she goes, do it, my it my love come and then he ended himself you know yeah you already have the chat bots so right now there was a big scandal where there was some ai service where dudes were forming bonds like sexual relationships with ai chat bots and the company said they were going to disable this because there was it was getting creepy and then all the users revolted and they stopped here's the crazy thing about only fans you know the owner of only fans tried banning porn the intention of only fans in the early days remember that it was it was supposed to patreon right it was supposed to be like this is where
Starting point is 00:58:18 you could subscribe for extra content and i was when we're doing porn and he was like we're going to shut it off and then the people who were running like the investors and people behind the company were like, whoa, whoa. They shut it down. And then they were making a lot of money. Don't shut it down. Well, they shut it down. And and then like they were only going to make it like topless.
Starting point is 00:58:32 Like that was going to be it. Like, that's it. That was the most bikini shots and and topless. And like the strip clubs that were allowed in Times Square and kind of the ones that were. And then that didn't last but a week or two. And then the investors, like you said, Tim, they were making, you know, billions of dollars and they and it lasted about two weeks. So what's going to happen is you're going to see like with these AI chat bots, same thing happened. They said they were going to grandfather everyone in who was in a
Starting point is 00:58:57 sexual relationship with the robot. Insane and creepy. Now they've got the humanoid robots that are already starting to come out and they're very rudimentary. But in a couple of years, they're going to be substantially more lifelike. It's already possible to make human like animatronics. But with the like Tesla Optimus bot, for instance, combine the existing 30 year old animatronic technology with modern robotics. And you are very close to having these lifelike dolls. Now, two years, I think you already have having these lifelike dolls. Now, two years, I think, you already have these lifelike dolls. They sell them, but they're not animatronic.
Starting point is 00:59:30 They're not fully functional. A couple years, they will be. I think in 10 years, it's going to be indistinguishable androids. Maybe 10 to 15, but it's advancing very quickly. The AI LLM stuff is going to be freaky because already, this is crazy, in video games like, I think, Sky skyrim and this was a year ago someone made a mod or a team made a mod for skyrim
Starting point is 00:59:52 and so are you familiar skyrim yeah when you get companions they they're just generic pre-scripted companions they run around you talk to them and they'll give you a line. There was a mod that connected it to chat GPT's API. So you could actually speak into a microphone and talk to the character and it would respond to you to whatever you said that exists now. You can do that now. Yeah. So you're playing and you've got one of the companions in Skyrim and you can say, what are you doing? And it'll be like, what do you say, what are you doing? And it'll tell me, like, what do you mean, what am I doing? And it'll actually talk to you. Have a conversation with you.
Starting point is 01:00:29 Yeah, and it's chat GPT, so it's still like chatbot large language model silliness, but we are extremely close. Boy, you're going to get clowned if you're that guy that brings your chat robot girl. Nope. You don't think so? Nope. No, sir. You don't think?
Starting point is 01:00:44 Because I can tell you when. You don't think so? Nope. No, sir. You don't think because I can tell you when you don't think you'll get clowned? Absolutely not. Because I remember when it was cringy to say you met online. Okay. Now it's the default to say you met online. And so like in that movie, Companion, you saw that, right? Yeah, yeah, absolutely. The dude brings his robot bang bot. He's a little more vocal than that. And so does his friend. Right. And no one cares because everybody has one. And we didn't even know into the movie that the dude that his boyfriend he's got a bang bot too that that we didn't they didn't let us know that he was a robot till later on down the on the on the line that's how good he was there's also there's also like um like ai robotish type
Starting point is 01:01:19 companions that they give old people in nursing homes, like fake animals, fake animal dogs and stuff like that, just to keep them company. All right. Let's let's let's jump to this next story, because we were talking about whether or not there was going to be a great civil war in this country. Well, I don't think so. You know why? Rosie O'Donnell has moved to Ireland after Trump election. It has been heartbreaking. She would have begun. The far left has begun to self-deport. Good riddance. That's it. That's what I say to her. Good riddance. Rosie O'Donnell has confirmed she's moved from the U.S. to Ireland. Didn't, who else moved?
Starting point is 01:01:50 I thought Rosie wasn't MAGA. She's not. If she moves, she is. Wait, what? If she left America, she's making it better than when she was here. There you go. I thought you were all whacked out over there for a minute. Yeah, well, the funny thing is is these people have been saying for decades,
Starting point is 01:02:07 if the Republicans win, I'll be leaving. But they never do it. They finally did. I do give them credit. I do give them credit. Didn't George Clooney, wasn't he one of them? A couple of them. I do give them credit that they're finally putting their money where their mouth is,
Starting point is 01:02:18 and they're finally leaving. These celebrities that say, oh, you know, if such and such wins, I'm out of here. Well, that's, you know, Miami's got a better place now because she's gone. That is what's funny about X. All of these progressives who are on the platform complaining about Elon 24-7 while paying him. Like he has money because of you. Right. Right.
Starting point is 01:02:39 But no one ever accused these people of being smart. So I like the fact that they're finally following through. Yeah, I like that. saying it forever and ever if you and it's something that you come back what did ellen come back i think she i i want to say that she did but i think she left because she was so mean to her people the fact of the matter is the left is notorious for this they when they get when there are election results that they don't like, they believe that America failed them. They don't love America. They only love America when the politicians that they choose or they like are in power. And then when they're not there, they start talking. We need to leave. We need to get out of here. Or they start talking about things like,
Starting point is 01:03:24 oh, we need to we need to not listen to the politicians Or they start talking about things like, oh, we need to not listen to the politicians. The politicians we don't like. Or we need to impeach them. We need to take them out of power. They only care about the United States when they win and when they're getting their way. Ellen didn't come back. Get out. She didn't come back?
Starting point is 01:03:39 She did not come back. In fact, this is from three hours ago. Ellen DeGeneres lists California property, reportedly her last remaining U.S. home, for $5 million. How about that? Good news. And that's nothing in California. $5 million. That must be a shack.
Starting point is 01:03:50 Yeah, I mean, unless it's—I don't know how the real estate prices got affected by the interest rates and the wildfire. Yeah, true. She also made a lot of money on real estate. Oh, did she? Yeah. I mean, I think the house that she sold was like, what, $85 million, $35 million, something like that? She sold and flipped mansions, California mansions, basically. But I think the one that she sold, her final, final one, was like $35 million.
Starting point is 01:04:13 I have no idea. You have to wonder how many of these celebrities that are fleeing are associates of, say, Diddy? Yeah, I wonder if they are giving up their citizenship, too. Like, are they renouncing their citizenship? I don't think so. I mean, I don't think so. I think you're just moving to throw a fit and you'll be back in four years if potentially the outcome's different in your liking. But, you know, I don't know. They'll come back. I mean, with these prominent liberals leaving at a time when Democrats are in desperate need of leadership, they're basically saying the ship has sunk and we're done. How do they possibly recover from that? I'm not saying like Rosie O'Donnell is
Starting point is 01:04:56 going to lead the Democratic Party, but she still is a loud voice for Democrat personnel, for Democrat politicians. They're losing Hollywood celebrities and they have no leader. I tell you, one of the craziest things I heard, I mentioned this last week, Cassie Hunt, I think it was on CNN, asked Tim Waltz, who is the leader of the Democratic Party right now? And he said the American voter. And she went she made this like face like what? Yeah, that doesn't mean anything. The reality is there is no leader of the Democratic Party, which is kind of crazy if you think about it. Yeah, it's not whoever they just elected as DNC chair, whose name I officially have forgotten.
Starting point is 01:05:30 No idea. David Hogg? David Hogg is more famous than whoever the first guy from the Parkland shooter. That guy? He's more famous than the active DNC chair. Wasn't Stephen A. Smith, too? Wasn't he not even at school that day? Stephen A. Smith has been making a little noise. Yeah. Listen, I had you guys familiar with John Morgan, the the the attorney from Florida, the for the people. He's got the person, the largest personal injury firm on all of the world. And he's one of the largest Democratic donors.
Starting point is 01:05:55 When Clinton used to come to Orlando, he would stay at his house. When Obama came to Orlando, he stayed at John Morgan's house. He was you know, he was a huge Democratic donor. And he was on my show just after they announced Kamala was going to take over for Biden. And now this is a guy, I mean, this guy is, I've been in his office before when he has called Bill Clinton. I mean, this guy, this guy is a big wig in the Democratic Party. And he is officially registered independent right now. Wow. And his exact words were nobody asked us if this would be our candidate. We wanted it. We wanted a protocol or some type of different thing to happen instead of this shove down that we got in Kamala. The Democratic Party has left me.
Starting point is 01:06:38 I didn't leave the Democratic Party. One of their largest donors, John Morgan, look him up. So this this actually speaks to something we were talking about earlier. The the donors are not going to give money to the far left. If it's if it is actually the party of the, you know, anti-capitalists, the anarchists, the the extreme progressives, the donors aren't going to give them money because they're not going to be responsible with their money. And they're also going to pass legislation. They're going to try to pass legislation that would actually expropriate the property of
Starting point is 01:07:11 the donors. Right. So they're not going to get those people. When you're losing guys like John Morgan and you're losing guys like that that are now registering as independent. Yeah. I mean, you're in trouble. You're in big trouble.
Starting point is 01:07:21 It's true you know and and as long as the democrats are fighting this fight it's better for the for conservatives for the republicans because it leaves people that are in positions of authority to actually institute policy that will benefit the american people and now grant there's gonna there's a lot of hemming and hawing right now and there's going to be there's going to be some people that are going to be hurt because they're going to be doing massive cuts to the government and there are a lot of people that get their you know get their job from the government and so that's going to take some time to work out but once that stuff gets worked out and you actually transfer the power from the bureaucracy to the
Starting point is 01:08:00 private sector you're going to see a better result for the American people. You're going to have the ability to start businesses and actually invest in yourself without the government having as much influence and having the government be as involved. And I think that that's what the American people want. Again, Stephen A. Smith was, like you said, he was creating some noise. Going after James Carville. Going after Carville and was actually trending where people were listening to what he was saying. He went on The View and said a couple of those girls straight. I like Stephen A. Smith. I like his sports stance and stuff.
Starting point is 01:08:40 I don't know if he necessarily should be the leader of the Democratic Party. I don't know. Maybe. Maybe that's what they need. Maybe that's exactly what they need they do need a they do need a loud mouth for sure i mean that's i mean that's he's he's as good as anything they've propped up so far i'm just telling you that but it's going to take more than a few years to recover that oh yeah unless they get lucky watching these celebrities spiral out of control it's just like they're not going to have the mechanism to prop somebody up.
Starting point is 01:09:05 The view. The view is terrible. Oh, it's horrible. Whoopi Goldberg is all like, I don't know what the problem is having men in women's sports. I got an idea. It's totally fine to me. I was watching that. Whoopi Goldberg, she's on The View, and she's like, I don't even understand what the big deal is.
Starting point is 01:09:21 I got it. I volunteer as tribute. Here's what we'll do. I will compete in I'm volunteering to compete against a female of the same height, the same weight, the same age as me. Let's get it identical. Let's say March 9th, 1986, female. And you know what? Screw it. Let's find a quarter Korean, white, same, same thing. And we will compete without any training
Starting point is 01:09:49 in a series of physical tests concluding with a boxing match. And then we'll, we'll put it on the view and we'll see how that turns out. Make it like a decathlon. Like, you know, like, you know, just 10 different events,
Starting point is 01:10:00 running event, you know. And no training, no training camp. Literally just shut the day off. If it's skateboarding, obviously you'd have an, you know, an advantage. And no training. No training camp. Literally just shut the day off. If it's skateboarding, obviously you'd have an advantage. That's what you've done. But make it just 10 events that you've not trained in, 10 events that she's not specialized in, and let's
Starting point is 01:10:14 see how it works out. Let's go. We'll see what happens. Right. I think everybody knows what's going to happen. Sorry, ladies. I hope you win in boxing, at least. Yeah, that's the thing because because joe rogan has that famous video from 10 13 it's like 13 years ago and he was just like there's no question a man a male no matter what hormones they're on is going to have more striking power
Starting point is 01:10:38 and these these females who fought a trans woman without knowing said one of the quotes is i've never felt so much power before right they've never been punched full force by a man one woman had her skull cracked there was this uh to this tweet thread that i read by the uh helen pluckrose she was uh she was an associate of uh peter bogosian and james lindsey she did the critical series thing yeah she yeah she wrote that book with him but she just it was just yesterday and she was talking about how most women don't understand how significant the strength difference between men and women are because when men interact with women that they're actually not fighting with when you're play fighting men are moderating their their their strength every time
Starting point is 01:11:22 i've play fought with my girlfriend or with any girl in the past like you don't go all up because you want to know what's great yeah you'll really like women and women don't realize that and that she made that she made a really long post about it she was like look most women have never had a man restrain them where he's serious right like because you know if you're if you're restraining your girlfriend or whatever, you're like, okay, come on. It's not like I want to stop her. It's like, I'm trying.
Starting point is 01:11:49 Okay, come on, honey. But you don't want to hurt her. If I grab my girlfriend and throw her, I'm going to injure her. She'll be hurt. When during COVID, my son and I went down the shore and there were no kids around.
Starting point is 01:12:04 You know, there were no kids around you know there were no kids around in New York you couldn't go out and play or anything like that and I was like oh like damn my kid is what whatever age he was 10 years old he needs somebody to play with him I'm gonna have to play with him you know like rough and he's 10 right rough him up a little bit so we would like play wrestle in the dunes because I figured if one of us goes down in the dunes, no one's going to get hurt. It'll be totally fine. It's sand. And by the end of the time we were there, I would be able to, I was picking him up and throwing him in the dunes.
Starting point is 01:12:35 And he was having a great time. And, you know, it was fine for a couple of months. And then at a certain point, I was like, we're done. And I was like like you're hurting me you can't do we can't do this anymore and i showed him our hands and his hands were bigger than mine his wrists are way bigger than mine his arm is like you know like the size of my calf well now he's now he's 15 right but like we can't we can't we haven't been able to play fight in a couple of years now no and he i kept having to
Starting point is 01:13:05 remind him like you can't no more spankings bigger than well there was never really any of that anyway but i'm like you're bigger than me you're stronger than me look at your hands you know i even said to his dad i was like you got to show him and he was like okay your mom is littler than you know this is uh this image we have pulled up it's a very famous image that goes viral all the time that explains this and it is the combined grip strength and kilograms between men and women based on age and you can see that around let's say 20 24 years old which would be like right here the strongest females are weaker than the average males yeah and if you look at the. And that's the strongest female. Strongest females are weaker than the average males. Right.
Starting point is 01:13:48 And then, I mean, and compare the averages. The average male has around double the grip strength of the average female. And the strongest females don't even get that high in terms of grip strength. I'm not surprised by that. And when you look at the regulations that were in place for the Olympics as to what men could compete in women's sports, you have to like take estrogen and lower your testosterone and all of this. And when when women who take testosterone would try and like compete against men, no matter how much testosterone a woman takes, she doesn't hit the lowest end of male testosterone.
Starting point is 01:14:25 Right. And men don't hit the, you know, don't get down enough, low enough to ever be in the realm of women's nanomules per. The mystery has been solved. Can we pull this up? Libby, would you like to read the top and bottom section? I asked Chachi PT. Women generally have lower.
Starting point is 01:14:43 No, no, no. What's the question? Where's the question? Up at the very top. Very far right. Why can't women open pickle jars? I hand my kid the pickle jar. And what does it say?
Starting point is 01:14:53 What does it say? Women generally have lower grip strength than men due to biological differences in muscle mass, tendon structure, and hand size. This makes it harder for them to generate the necessary force to break the vacuum seal on a pickle jar. I mean, I think it goes back to the fact that men were hunter and gatherers. In the caveman, in the very start of man, we were always using our hands doing something, whether it's making an instrument or something. Men would famously go and gather wild pickle jars. And when they brought them back, the wind struggled to open them.
Starting point is 01:15:25 Right. And everybody starved until dad opened it. But I mean, it is also great stories around the fire about opening the pickle jar. So men were hunters and women are gatherers. And you know why? That's right. Women like shopping so much. Because they gather.
Starting point is 01:15:39 Because gathering stuff. Yeah. They say it's like women tend to dress in more colorful variations, and it's because the theory is back in the day women would go out. And why can women see colors better than men? Do you know what a tetrachromat is? So people have three rods and cones in their eyes. I believe it's both. Women sometimes have four, and they can see colors that men cannot.
Starting point is 01:16:02 If a man has the same genetics that would result in a tetrachromat female, he's likely to be colorblind. Crazy, right? Right. They say that women, you can tell if you're a tetrachromat by looking at the clouds at dawn. And if you see purple around the clouds, it means you're actually seeing colors most people can't. Crazy. And it's because when we're gathering, they needed to discern the berries from the bushes. Right. So with that, women like to go shop and pick things out and bring them back to the family it's also why they say women are tend to be the ones who go grocery shopping and control the household
Starting point is 01:16:33 right right none of this explains why my entire closet is filled with black navy blue white brown and gray and that's your personal choice that's all i have in my closet yeah you know some women not everybody's identical. You know what I mean? Everybody's a little different. Like zero color. No, but I mean, this really is, I mean, no matter how much the far left continues to assert that women and men are the same and that it's just a social construct. That's where they're getting weird. That's BS. It's just weird.
Starting point is 01:17:05 At what generation, we all come from different generations i'm 20 years older than most you guys but at what at what part where did we get weird where did this where'd the weirdness start uh when i was growing up nothing when i was growing up we didn't have any it wasn't even uh it wasn't even an uh an argument about a girl or a guy competing against a girl. It's men's fault. Like, where did it start? So we can go back a long ways, but we can start with suffrage, for instance. Women were granted the right to vote without requisite civil responsibilities because men are weak.
Starting point is 01:17:39 That's it. You know, men have gradually gotten weaker to the point where when women started demanding the right to vote, which makes perfect sense as far as I'm concerned. Me too. However, the anti-suffragettes were like, we don't want to have to be conscripted or join the fire brigade. So let men do all of that stuff and we can stay out of it. Well, the suffragettes won. They decided, you know what, let's just give them the right to vote with no requisite civil responsibility. And now women don't have to be drafted or do any civil service for their right to vote. This was the beginning of men saying you do. And it's not about women.
Starting point is 01:18:14 It's about the general concept of we will create a class of voters who have no civil responsibility. What happens then? People start voting only in their own interest and not in the interest of the responsibility. Think about a voting system because it affects men now to a voting system in which you're a man and you're going to vote and you can go die in war or die in a fire. These guys are going to be voting in their interest and their interest is the betterment of society. Along come one of the first instances where they say we now have women who have no responsibilities and can vote on whatever they want. Thus, a woman can vote for a man to go die in war with no risk to herself. For the first time, people were allowed to vote with no direct impact on themselves, no responsibility, but they could vote for their benefit. This creates a system of pressures in
Starting point is 01:19:02 politics where everything starts flowing towards the self and away from the community. Now, 100 years on, that's all we have. Everyone is voting just for themselves. Politicians don't actually care. Al Green did not stand up there and wiggle his cane at Trump because he cares. He's doing it for a video so we can get reelected. Right. He doesn't actually go to the floor and vote. They don't actually talk about bills. Everything is just for the self. And if that's the case, your society crumbles. Yeah. Yeah. That in conjunction with a lack of parenting.
Starting point is 01:19:29 I mean, our parenting has gotten so soft. I guess as our generation has gotten soft, our parenting has gotten soft. You know, I mean, I the things that the kids are allowed to do nowadays as compared to, you know, the standards they were held 20 years ago. Yeah, but I mean, now. But they don't have to. But here's the deal. They don't have to go down the coal mines. They don't have to work for their.
Starting point is 01:19:52 There's no longer. No is no longer an option. You can't tell a kid by a lot of people. What do you mean you can't tell a kid no? By a lot of parents standards, mostly liberal, is the fact that little Johnny. I'm sorry, Johnny, you can't run against track against a girl. No, the answer is no. Our kids don't have to accept that.
Starting point is 01:20:17 Back when we were growing up, you know, your dad told you no. No was no. Now they'll find a way to make it happen. He's a spank, too. Yeah, I still believe in that. And now they say it's way to make it happen so that he's a spank too yeah i i still believe in that and now they say it's child abuse you can't spank your kids i went through a very i'm going through a 18 years ago went through a child custody uh battle and had to have child psychiatrists and all and had to just it was it was very contested and and we both end up being great parents, and I got 50-50 custody. But one thing is I believe in spanking.
Starting point is 01:20:48 I believe in limited spanking. And the child psychiatrist, the psychologist that I spoke to. Man. Ah, man. Man. It was Dr. Satterley and another two men, oddly enough, the state appointed that i had to pay for but the rule then and florida would not the the florida sheriff's association or whoever you know you can spank on the butt up to three swats until your hand hurts that's what was the rule was given
Starting point is 01:21:22 to me on the butt up to three hand hurts and how hard are you hitting the kid well that's what was the rule was given to me. On the butt, up to three... Your hand hurts? How hard are you hitting the kid? That'd be pretty hard. Yeah, I know. It's like, you don't need to hit him that hard. No, I'm just saying, like, no, if... No, I get that.
Starting point is 01:21:33 So that your hand doesn't hurt. Like, so up to three swats, and don't... Your hand shouldn't be hurting. Oh, okay. That's, I guess I kind of missed... Right, it's not like you were saying until your hand hurts.
Starting point is 01:21:44 No, no, no. That's a pretty hard strike on a child. Three swats and your hand shouldn't hurt after the third one. So that was the rule given to me. I may have spanked my son. My son's now 24. I may have spanked my son five times his entire childhood. The issue is that, look, if you're talking about someone slugging their kid we were all opposed to that yeah but it's like there's this weird reality where these millennials think
Starting point is 01:22:10 that spanking is a merciless beating of a child when you're talking about like a a five percent force on a child's butt that is not going to leave any kind of damage or any bruise no more it's it's just unpleasant and a child's don't and the kid doesn't like it we're not talking leave any kind of damage or any bruise. No more. It's just unpleasant. And a child's don't and the kid doesn't like it. We're not talking about any kind of lasting pain, damage or injury. No. So and all too often I'd spank him and I'd go back in my room and cry like a little girl because I would just I would literally it would it would upset me more that I had to do that than than than it did him. And it was just the it was just the act or the formatics of getting a spank and then upset him more than the physicality of it. But, you know, I, I, I actually was given a rule as to as to how to do that. We got to jump to one last story. Got some The New York Post.
Starting point is 01:22:56 Ladies and gentlemen, I love this. Ontario suspends 25 percent electricity surcharge for U.S. customers after Trump's up aluminum and steel tariff. What a beautiful story. So the premier of Ontario, Doug Ford, was like, I'm going to put a tariff on electricity, 25 percent. If I have to, I will shut down their power. So Trump comes out and says, OK, we're upping the tariffs on aluminum and steel to 50 percent. And if they do not back down in one month, we will put a tariff on on on cars and destroy the auto industry in Canada. It took the guy like an hour to come out and be like, we're canceling this tariff on the United States. Trump wins. Well, they decided to renegotiate the USMCA. Sure they did. Yeah. And we're going to they're going to talk next week or Thursday.
Starting point is 01:23:43 I think Thursday. Why have we been the the welfare system for these countries? Look how when Trump says I am going to put a tariff on your cars, they drop to their knees and beg. Why do we have so much leverage that we've never used? If I'm going to – Because we're woke. Imagine this – certainly. Imagine this scenario where I say I'm going to just give Phil this $100 gold coin or whatever, and Phil's going to trade me a quarter. And that's just the way it's going to be forever. Right. Then eventually I say, you know what? I'm not doing it anymore. And Phil's like, wait, wait, wait, but you're giving me $100.
Starting point is 01:24:22 Like I can – why are we – And Phil relies on that now, too? Right. Been doing it for so long that Phil relies on it. Canada is getting all of this discount stuff from us. The moment Trump says it's not fair. So we're going to put a tariff on you. They drop to their knees and beg because they're getting free stuff from us. And no is no longer an answer. An option of losing or being on the wrong side of something is not an option. Man, think about how weak the Biden administration was, where they would just be like, we're sorry, Trudeau.
Starting point is 01:24:51 I mean, the the the left, even the Democrats, and I'm not talking about leftists, I'm talking about just regular Democrats. They tend to have this guilt complex about winning, about the successful cunt or being a more successful country than others and I think that it even comes down to we were just talking about parenting like the whole idea of like everybody gets a trophy nobody actually wins a page that comes from the left that doesn't come from the right like that comes from the left and that when you have that kind of attitude when it comes to geopolitics what you end up with is the United, well, we're so successful and so powerful and our economy is so big that it's perfectly fine to allow other countries to have imbalances and let other countries take care and take take advantage of us because we're so much more powerful. It's it's kind of like participation trophy.
Starting point is 01:25:41 Well, yeah, but it's kind of like, oh, we're so much better than you and so much stronger than you. We need to lift you up and help you out. First of all, that does nothing good for the other countries. For us to be like, oh, here, let us go ahead and whether it be foreign aid or whatever, there's no reason for us to give money away. There's no reason for us to have like the significant trade imbalances there's no reason for us to accept that some countries have massive tariffs on our product on products that we ship to them but there are no there's no reciprocal tariffs on their stuff there's this is all that kind of protectionism for other countries it's all unnecessary in the united states the government should be standing up for the United States and for the for the American businessman, for products that are made in America.
Starting point is 01:26:27 Like that should be normal for the government. And they just don't. And I don't know why they haven't. It's not been normal for four, however many years. Now it's such an abrupt, you know, it's now now it's like such a, you know, oh, my God, you guys are barbarians. And I'm doing the right thing and trying to be pro-America and make the playing field a little bit more even. And now it's so – because they've had it so good and been spoon-fed and had training wheels for the last four years. Now when we try to just right the ship, we just try to right the ship, we look like a bunch of barbarians. And we have to use strong-arm tactics to get things back to where we should have them. You know, if you've got a spoiled kid, they've never been disciplined. They're going to cry and scream when you tell them no more ice cream.
Starting point is 01:27:10 Yep. And that's what we're seeing right now. And the premier of Ontario, imagine this. Donald Trump says to this little whiny kid, no, you can't have the ice cream anymore. So the kid screams and says, oh, yeah, I'll hold my breath. And Trump says, OK, hold it. He held his breath and then gave up right because he had nothing he had no leverage flying on flying up here yesterday i had this kid behind me and he wanted uh his toy some kind of toy kid was two years old and he threw a i mean an absolute screaming, you know, blood curling, just absolute fit.
Starting point is 01:27:45 And the parents wouldn't hold the ground and say, no, you're not having the you're not having the toy. The kid got the toy. And that's that's kind of what we're going through. The kid gets the toy. Yep. Because, you know, it really irks me. And now getting into like the parenting analogy is parents who just give their kids tablets and then stop paying attention. Because I've seen like friends of mine, their kids. Just give them a tablet and that's what babysits them. And then what ends up happening is they become addicted to psychotic content. And then, you know, I hear from people saying things like, well, you know, my kid loves this and he gets mad if he doesn't get it.
Starting point is 01:28:22 And I'm like, how does he know it exists? Right. When did you decide that this psychotic and deranged YouTube kid stuff, and it is, it's deranged, should be in front of your child? You let them watch it and now they're addicted to it and that's going to affect them forever. And if they, if they do get mad, let them be mad. Yeah. Let them throw a fit. I mean, let them, let them throw a fit. You know what? My, my daughter's going to be watching nothing but BBC nature documentaries. Yeah. let him throw a fit. I mean, let him throw a fit. You know what? My daughter's going to be watching nothing but BBC Nature documentaries. Yeah. She's going to know everything about lions, giraffes, and echidnas.
Starting point is 01:28:52 Echidnas. That's right. I'm not going to... Kids programming is fake, and I think it is wrong, and I view it as evil. You have to pick it out for them. You have to pick it out for them. I want to say this. Kids content is evil. One of the best pieces of advice I got from uh uh some friends of mine who'd had kids before me they said don't
Starting point is 01:29:12 ever play kid music for your kid just play the music you like yeah and so my son has good musical he never listened to any of that trash it's so the idea and i never had to listen to it. Think about content for children. This didn't exist 200 years ago. Kids were just, they learned from the adults around them. Or they watched what their dad was watching. There was no TV. There was nothing to watch. 200 years ago, you'd get up and you'd watch your dad farm. And you'd watch the chickens. And you'd go out and you'd do work when you were seven. Now, you've got kids content, which treats children like they're developmentally disabled. And instead of instead of children of humans growing up and watching what adults do and how they behave, they're watching deranged, quote unquote, kids content that doesn't speak in
Starting point is 01:30:01 complete. They don't speak in complete sentences. They speak very strangely. So a kid growing up 200 years ago would hear the dad say, oh, we got a storm coming in. We're going to have to bring the animals in because this is going to be a big one. And they'd learn to talk like that. Now they hear, there's a storm. Do you know what a storm is?
Starting point is 01:30:21 Well, only on the TV. I mean, unless parents do that. And they're handing tablets to these kids. I think parents talk that way, too. It's not even about that because maybe they do. Maybe talk is perpetual. But it's the tablets. They give a tablet to a kid and the kid gets four hours of people talking like they're
Starting point is 01:30:37 developmentally disabled. Right. And the kids are going to adopt these behaviors and it's going to stunt them. And we're going to be dealing with a generation of these people who vote. Right. Not too long from now. Nope. You know, those are the people that have to take care of you. I'll be dead. But those are the people that have to take care of you as you get older. No one's going to take care of me. We were we were talking to a contractor when we were building this place. And we're talking about building a house. And he was just like, well, you know, I recommend a single floor or whatever, you know, because
Starting point is 01:31:05 you're getting older. You're not going to be able to climb upstairs, as most people say. And I was like, oh, no, no, no, no, no. You don't understand. There is no reality that exists where I will be living on a single floor house because I can't climb the stairs. If I am 80 years old, I will have a four storystory house, and there will not be a chairlift. I will drag myself up with ropes and crawling, groaning and screaming as I do it before I accept any of that stuff.
Starting point is 01:31:32 A single four-wheeling. Nah, never going to happen. Right. And so, you know, I'll take care of myself, as people should, and I'll take care of my kids, and they can live their own lives, and I'm going to build it for them. Also, could you imagine, like, what you're like in your 30s or whatever, and you're, my kids and they can live their own lives and i'm gonna build it for for them and also could you imagine like what you're like in your 30s or whatever and you're like planning to be very old and not being able to go upstairs it's like so i have to spend the rest of my life not going
Starting point is 01:31:54 upstairs because maybe when i'm old i'll have difficulty with it can i can i tell you i think that's crazy the old studio the green room was so when you pull up the driveway, it's, if you go to the right, it's slightly uphill, and then you're on the first floor, and if you go to the left, it's slightly downhill. So when you pull in, you're actually at basement level. You then walk into the green room, which is a little bit three steps down, and then you have to walk up one flight of stairs, and then you have to walk up a second flight of stairs to get to the old studio. We had many guests who were in their 30s who struggled with stairs, with two flights of stairs. Dennis Kucinich ran up the stairs. Yeah. And he's like 70 something. Me, I would jump. I
Starting point is 01:32:37 jump two stairs at a time. I run full speed up. Boom, boom, boom, boom, boom. And I was actually surprised how many 30 year old individuals, people like 35, 36, boom, boom. And I was actually surprised how many 30-year-old individuals, people like 35, 36, commentators, personalities would be using the railing and going really slow as they walk themselves to the stairs. I was like, are you kidding me? Wow. You know? I'm a fat ass and I got up the stairs okay today. Yeah, you had no problem. But it's not everybody.
Starting point is 01:33:02 But, you know, people, I was reading that. It's just people getting soft. You know, back in the day, you know, stairs were not poison. Now they can make stairs poison to certain groups of people. Well, you know what I heard? And, Phil, maybe you know this better than me. Young or just men in general typically don't train lower body. Oh, yeah.
Starting point is 01:33:23 All guys miss legs. I mean, you know, I'm just saying. That's the infamous thing going in the gym. Oh, you're going to miss leg day? And it's super important to, like, if you do squats, if you build your legs, your rest, your body will grow. You should do three exercises without question. You should do flat bench, you should do squats, and you should do deadlifts if you're just starting out lifting if you do those three exercises do one each you know each day of the week or each every other day
Starting point is 01:33:51 or whatever do that for three months you're gonna have a massive change in your body from just three exercises big compound exercises like that squats deadlift and bench press and squats and deadlift are both extremely taxing on your lower body. And they're training both of your biggest muscles. And you know what? You can increase naturally. I've had many doctors on my show, urologists and things like that, on my show that if you train legs heavy, heavier than the average guy,
Starting point is 01:34:19 that you can naturally build your testosterone level by 100 points just by not skipping legs. Yep. Because you release so much testosterone and so much endorphins that regulate testosterone and the firings of testosterone. But if you skip legs and you're just Johnny upper body guy, that your testosterone will be naturally lower because you skip legs. I do legs twice a week because I do deadlift. I do a deadlift day, which is basically I'll do deadlifts, and then I'll do hamstring curls. Sometimes I'll do thrusters for glutes. And then on quad day, I'll do squats, and then I'll do extensions, and usually I'll do some kind of lunge or something like that.
Starting point is 01:35:01 But I do legs twice a week. I only have leg day. That's because you skate all day. That's right. I can't flat bench anymore, so I incline. I just do incline bench. So I incline more than I flat bench. The leg day is really, really important.
Starting point is 01:35:18 If you have a Smith machine, there's no excuse for you to – because at that point, if the squat goes awry on you, you can get out from underneath it. Squats sometimes get tricky on a person. There's a viral cross-section of male thigh muscle mass at 30, 50, and 80 of the average male. Yeah, I saw that. Yeah, and it's like by 80, there's nothing left but fat and there's no muscle. And this is why people struggle with stairs. That's awful.
Starting point is 01:35:48 And then they compare it to a runner of the same ages and the muscles basically the same the whole time. If you don't use it, you lose it. I'm 60 and I got pretty good quads. That's good. I got unbelievable calves. You'd die if you saw my calves. My calves suck. But I have a i have a
Starting point is 01:36:05 quad sweep you know the yeah you know and you you you have to do legs you can't skip legs it and it's so easy to skip too yeah because maybe like man those curls look good those cable crossovers look good but you gotta get legs when i was a kid i just i got my first pair of rollerblades at seven years old. And then you start rollerblading, and your legs just get fit. Oh, yeah. And your core and your balance and all that with skating. I mean, people don't realize with just skating how much you're building your core. Just staying stable and not falling down is building your core. And the other thing, too, about skateboarding is that the ollie is not largely jump power.
Starting point is 01:36:49 It's largely core power. The reason why men can ollie, ollie is the jump technique in skateboarding. Men can ollie higher than women in skateboarding, not necessarily because they have more fast-twitch muscle, which they do, but because men's center of gravity rests higher. What happens is you jump off the ground, and then you pull your legs up to your chest. Right. And because your center of gravity is higher, you can pull your legs up higher than a female can when she tries to do the same thing. So women not only have less fast twitch muscle, they require more jumping power to clear the same obstacle. Thus, it is much harder for them to get on obstacles and skateboard. We were talking about guys versus girls, men versus women on sports and the grip
Starting point is 01:37:28 strength and the hunting and gathering and all that kind of stuff. But in your specific sport with with with skateboarding, if and I'm not familiar with it, like the number one guy in the world compared to the number one woman in the world, is it just a vast difference on their ability and skill set and the kind of tricks they can do and the height and stuff like that it a 12 year old boy is better than the best seasoned female pro skateboarder a probably a 10 year old boy is better than the best female seasoned pro skater in fact there is a 12 year old 12 year old boy competing at the highest levels of men's skateboarding and it's just look man know, I think the thing about, you know, we talked about this before, like when you watch women's tennis, if you don't know anything about
Starting point is 01:38:11 tennis, I watch women's tennis and I can't tell the difference between that or men's. They're like, but the ball is going faster. And I'm like, dude, I have no idea. Right. I see people playing tennis. I suppose if you didn't know anything about skateboarding, you might feel that way. But I'm fairly confident that if I showed you the best female skateboarder and the best male skateboarder, any random person who's never seen skateboarding before, they'd clearly be like, wow. Because the dudes, let's talk about vert skating, half pipes. Like, it is only in the past couple of years women started doing rotations the so to be fair the first 540 i think was maybe like 15 to 16 years ago the first male 540 was in the late 70s the first male 720 which is two full spins was done in the early uh early 80s the first 900 rotation two and a half spins by t Tony Hawk in 1999. The first female 900 was just last year. 25 years later for a female to finally hit that benchmark.
Starting point is 01:39:12 And what are we at now? 1260. That's where they're at now, 1260. Yeah, I think Mitchie Brusco. Is it Mitchie who did the 1260? I think it was Mitchie. And no one really cared. It was kind of crazy.
Starting point is 01:39:24 He landed a 1260 on a skateboard, and it's just like nobody really said anything. It's a natural progression then. It's three and a half spins. Yeah. If you watch male vert skateboarding, every trick they do, save for some where they're just turning around, is going to be spinning with the board flipping underneath them, and they're catching it. If you watch women, they go up and down a couple times. Right. Yeah, no joke. They go up and down a couple times right yeah no joke they go up and down a couple times and i mean that no disrespect there there are some female runs they're starting to do more 540s which is uh it's
Starting point is 01:39:54 it's one and a half spins on a half pipe so you go up you spin around you know 540 degrees uh there's no question and the funny thing is they keep making this argument in sports that it's after puberty. So they're like if a male individual went through transition before puberty, then they don't need to qualify. No. The first 1080 spin was done, I think, by like an 11-year-old boy or a 12-year-old boy. Way before puberty. Way before puberty. Right.
Starting point is 01:40:22 Or, I mean, just before. Or, yeah. But if you compare a 10-year-old boy to a 10 year old girl, it is it is there's no question. Right. There's none whatsoever. You're going to be like, dang. Right. The skill and ability is is it's it's insane.
Starting point is 01:40:36 Right. Anyway, let's go to super chats and rumble rants. My friends smash the like button. Share the show with everyone. You know, become a member of rumble premium go to timcastpremium.com that will automatically set you up to sign up with promo code tim10 it gives you 10 bucks off an annual membership and we're gonna have that uncensored call-in show coming up at 10 and oh boy do we have something not so family-friendly for all of you in that uncensored portion of the show so um i'd say you don't want to miss it.
Starting point is 01:41:05 But this story is really gross. And maybe you do. Oh, no. But I still recommend you subscribe and watch the show anyway, because it's going to be fun if if you're prepared for the harsh realities of modern American politics and what it's turned into. You know, there was something I was going to talk to you about. And I and I'm not I hope that this isn't I kind of know the rules of radio and things
Starting point is 01:41:24 like that a little bit and hope this isn't – I kind of know the rules of radio and things like that a little bit, and I hope this isn't out of line. But you opened yesterday – and I know they're a good sponsor of yours. And you opened the show up yesterday with a sponsor that protects your mortgage and your identity and all that, okay? And, again, I guess maybe I'm throwing a plug to your sponsor. I don't know. But anyway, as you were going through what it does for you and how easy it is to steal your identity and go down to the courthouse and get a second mortgage and a HELOC and all that kind of deal, there's a guy. And you guys might want to research him. He's not unbelievable. He's really a bad person. His name is Matt Cox.
Starting point is 01:42:00 And he did 17 years in federal prison. He's from Tampa and he has his now he has his own podcast and his own whole he has his own YouTube channel and whatever it's Matt Cox but he specifically did exactly what your service did he go he would go in and create a fake you know what would they protect against yes what what your clients protect against is exactly what he did to people, including taking their homes, remortgaging their homes, getting HELOC on their homes. He would first steal their identity, and then he would go in and create documentation and bank statements and all this kind of stuff. He's out now, and he has, you know, I'm not trying to promote his stuff but he's like one of the number one
Starting point is 01:42:47 identity theft guys that stole people's homes from them and it's exactly what your client offers and so I was like the protection of what your client offers the bad people they don't offer to steal homes
Starting point is 01:43:02 they offer you to so that Matt Cox can't steal your home. Because he's still. It ended up being on American Greed. You know that show on. I don't know what network it's on. But it's American Greed. And it's Stacy Keish, I think, is the one that narrates.
Starting point is 01:43:19 And it's about guys who. People that have been real greedy over the years. And stolen bunches of money and stuff like that. They did a whole special on this guy named Matt Cox. And so as I was listening to you talk about your client, I'd be like, man, people really need to take note that that does happen in real life a lot, a lot. Let's grab some super chats.
Starting point is 01:43:38 Before we do, my friend, smash the like button, share the show, as I said. And also, it's 311 Day. So why don't you uh put on beautiful disaster and enjoy this wonderful holiday for those that listen to good music today's my mom's birthday that's a good day yes happy birthday right shane h wilder says happy belated birthday tim the loss of jamie white doesn't seem like just some burglary gone wrong apd sucks their job so i wouldn't trust them to tell us what really happened if they knew i believe uh the story is that he was trying to stop a uh carjacking is that what it was they were breaking into his
Starting point is 01:44:09 car he tried to stop him into his car is what i saw today and then they shot him yep but uh i look guys that doesn't mean much right when if someone is if there's a journalist who's investigating something and i'm not saying this story specifically, but how do you think they would take that person out? Do you think they would just walk up to him and yell, this is for the government, don't investigate us, bang, bang, bang? Or would they be like, hey, you, give me that car.
Starting point is 01:44:35 Ooh, I'm a regular old burglar. Right. Exactly. All right, let's go. Let's grab some more super chats. Jason Dixon says, Timcast.com equals more money to do good stuff timcast.com discord means you showing up uh plus you showing up more equals more money to do more cool ish with how about you spend some of your time with with us for the first
Starting point is 01:44:57 time and in the discord i we i am in the discord but uh y'all should oh i think he's talking to everybody else. You guys should join the Discord server so that you're not just passive listeners of the news. You actively get involved. If you've been wondering to yourself, what can I do? I don't even know where to begin. You start by meeting people. So you go to TimCast.com.
Starting point is 01:45:18 You click Join Us. You join the Discord community. And instantly, whatever you say is seen by 20,000 plus individuals. So if you're like, I got a really good idea, you could go on X and tweet it with a hashtag and hopefully somebody sees it. You could respond to somebody, hope that they see it. Or you can join the Discord community where you're instantly in that chat room with tens of thousands of people. And then they're going to argue with you and say your idea is not very good. You should rethink it.
Starting point is 01:45:41 Or maybe. Maybe a great idea. Maybe a great idea. Maybe. And they're going to be like, dude, that is the greatest idea I've ever heard. How come we've never heard of you? And then you'll say, you have now. All right.
Starting point is 01:45:55 Real John from Naples says, Bubba Army representing. Real John from Naples is a great listener. Thank you, John. Right on. What do we got here? Beavis McLean says tim you were the inspiration for my addition to the culture war if you want the most hilarious stories from the military service look for camo comedy podcast that's uh two m's in camo find out how many
Starting point is 01:46:16 jeeps you have to borrow to see bob hope live in vietnam oh geez that sounds like a good idea that sounds fun how about those are good stories i bet you have a lot of stories too That sounds like a good idea. That sounds fun. I bet those are good stories. I bet you have a lot of stories, too. Maybe maybe like a sitcom. All right. Jacob Wally says, let's say the Supreme Court is partisan and skewers the Constitution in a way that isn't constitutional. Article two, section one says the president has a duty to uphold the law. Would he be obligated to oppose the Supreme Court crisis? Yep. Yeah. And that's the challenge we're facing right now. 562 Mike A. says, Tim never reads these over on the Rumble Rants.
Starting point is 01:46:54 As you read it. That's right. Let's go. What is this? We'll grab this one. Yaquindia says, celebrities threaten to leave because they want to be begged to stay and then when nobody does they leave like kids libertarian hawk says holy ish i did not even recognize bubble love sponge i am a tampa native too well thank you i don't know if that's good or bad force name change says canadian exports to the U.S. are 20% of our GDP. U.S. exports to Canada are 1.3% of GDP.
Starting point is 01:47:28 If tariff war halves our perspective, revenues perspective, we lose 10% GDP. You lose less than one. Doug is a liberal F-boy. Well, there you go. Let's see. Hans says technological pacifiers is tablet parenting yep absolutely no tablets no phones that's a great name tablet tablet parenting that's a great name yeah i'm i i am disgusted like you said what you were going to expose your your daughter to drafts
Starting point is 01:48:00 and polar bears and stuff like that nature documentaries Nature documentaries. She'll be so far, so more worldly and better than the person that's thrown a tablet in front of them and that's their parent for hours. Allison is reading stories to her, reading books. And I have been explaining math and dimensions
Starting point is 01:48:19 and physics. She already understands. No, she's two weeks. Oh, I thought she was two years old. No. Oh, man, you're really starting early. Oh, hell yeah. She's going to be, wow.
Starting point is 01:48:32 I started reading Willa Cather to my son because I was like, oh, I'll just read him whatever I'm reading. There you go. I was reading Willa Cather. Like a little audience. Yeah. So my daughter already understands space-time
Starting point is 01:48:44 and the curvature of space-time and how it actually creates gravity. At two weeks. At two weeks. Oh, yeah. Yeah. I'm I'm assuming she understands it. Right. Because I said it. Why wouldn't you know? Why wouldn't you know? She can't look at things, but, you know. Right. She's just looking around all crazy like it. Wouldn't it be amazing if you could really understand what they're figuring out in their figuring out process? My thought is – In two weeks? A lot of Americans make this assumption that children are stupid, and they're not.
Starting point is 01:49:15 No. A computer that's brand new is not a useless computer. It just hasn't – nothing's installed in it. Right. You don't wait until the computer is full of random junk data from the Internet before you install the video game on it. You get started immediately. So my thoughts are I'm not going to sit here and be like, well, she can't talk. So there's no way she's going to understand any basic. No, no, no. We're going to we're going to sign language. Babies can do simple
Starting point is 01:49:39 sign language. So if she can't doesn't have the muscular strength, you can do. There's a lot of stuff for parenting about how you can teach the baby to make hand gestures so they can say what they want or things like that. And baby's going to be learning all the basic math at one. Right. She's going to learn. They're little sponges. Quadratic. Absorbing everything. Absolutely. Quadratic equations by two. Advanced mathematics, physics, calculus, et cetera, at the same time. So then she'll enter school and she'll be like, I don't need any of this. I was just getting ready to say you could have an issue at school just because she's going to be so far advanced. She probably won't go, to be honest.
Starting point is 01:50:19 Yeah. Schools are a waste of time. I believe in homeschooling in the right situation. Oh, yeah. Yeah. Schools are a waste of time. I believe in homeschooling in the right situation. Oh, yeah. Yeah, I am. My experience with school has led me to cheer for the destruction of the Department of Education, which we don't really get into. But, you know, they order all the employees to leave by six and not come back. Right. places and their daycare centers for a destroyed economy where both parents are forced to work
Starting point is 01:50:46 because of the nature of the liberal economic order and out destroyed families and their households. And it should be, as it has always been, that you can have 2.5 kids and just the dad works. Used to be. Used to be. And that's when school was OK. But the problem is now that both parents have to work, school is daycare. Right. And so parents are like, I have no choice. And then you're giving your child to the state to be indoctrinated with garbage nonsense. I am playing that game. Let's go.
Starting point is 01:51:18 Richard Slammer says, well, Tim, I've tried 10 times Super Chat. What I feel about the fat POS who is your guest tonight. Oh, geez. Oh, wow. I have anti-f wow. I'm pretty sure you've never super chatted about Bubba the Love Sponge. Or if you did, I've had no reason to read
Starting point is 01:51:32 it because why would I read a super chat about Bubba when he wasn't here? Right. I have a lot of trolls, too. People that really hate me. Well, then. OJP says if green card holders can't use a second,
Starting point is 01:51:48 they can't use the first. Interesting. I did see one person argue that green card holders are not... What's the right word I'm thinking of? The right? No, green card holders are not subject under the provisions of 221 subsection I. Well, we went through that. There was only that one exception.
Starting point is 01:52:10 It was talking about visas and documentation. And I think the argument is that green cards are further documentation. Right. And that's the argument the Trump administration may be making. We'll see what happens in court. Brandon Rodriguez says, Phil, I love Destiny 2. What class do you play? I got all three, but I kind of main
Starting point is 01:52:27 Warlock usually yeah like who doesn't play all three you know what I mean? I don't know my first character was a Warlock because it was described poorly to me otherwise I would have played a Hunter and then you know you max out Warlock then you do Hunter Titan's boring I agree I don't like the Titan
Starting point is 01:52:43 jumps the Titan jump is annoying the Warlock and the you do Hunter. Titan's boring. I agree. I don't like the Titan jumps. The Titan jump is annoying. The Warlock and the Hunter have the best jumps. Yeah. Yeah. Hunters. Yeah, the Hunter's triple jump, right? Well, the Warlock's like the air dash, which is fun. But the triple jumps make for better glitch hopping.
Starting point is 01:53:00 Yep. And reaching faraway places. And cheesing. And cheesing's allowed. Cheesing is allowed. Absolutely. If the game function exists, you're allowed to do it. Absolutely.
Starting point is 01:53:09 Just because they're like, well, there's no honor in doing it that way. Dude, we're playing a game. There was a cheese that the developers actually made into an actual thing in the game. I forget what it was, but there was a glitch that people had found, and they were just like, oh, and so many people did it, and it was so popular that they actually made it into something in the game. So for those that don't know what that means, cheesing, is in a video game, let's say there's a big dragon, and you're a knight, and you're supposed to fight the dragon by blocking the fire with your shield, and then swinging a sword at the dragon and then someone eventually finds out that if you jump on this rock to the left the dragon for some reason can't throw fire at you so you can keep hacking away without having to worry about the fire that's called cheesing you're you found a way to beat the game in a way that makes it very easy and the developers didn't intend that's the game i got no problem maybe the
Starting point is 01:53:58 developers made that that gimmick so that people would be a little cult-like thing, people would find it. Well, to be fair, they end up uh, yeah, they patch them out. Oh. So when they... Early Destiny, bro. You played Destiny 1 when it first came out? How much fun was that when you could just farm all the engrams, and then they were like, you're having too much fun, stop. And then they disabled
Starting point is 01:54:20 it, and I'm like, pfft. So like on an update or something, they'll take it out. Yep. Back when you could use Sparrow, you could use the Sparrow to go through walls, And then they disabled it. And I'm like, stupid. It's like an update or something. They'll take it out. Yeah. Yeah. Back when you could use Sparrow. You could use the Sparrow to go through walls. Remember that? Yep. The wall glitches.
Starting point is 01:54:30 And then there was, you could go to areas that were in game that weren't yet released story-wise. So there were actually parts of the map that were blocked off. And we would break through the walls by glitching and then going and exploring the future, you know, the future expansions. Really? And then they were like, stop having fun. World of Warcraft. We used to do this all day. Dude, World of Warcraft vanilla was the best because there was so much world that was undeveloped
Starting point is 01:54:53 that you weren't supposed to get to. But if you knew how to play, you could. You could get to the to the undercover part. You know, you could go under Stormwind under the main city. You could go into areas that were on the map, but you didn't have didn't actually have an entrance. And then the developers were like, stop having fun! And they patched and got rid of it all.
Starting point is 01:55:09 And now it's not fun. Now it's the game sucks. And I know some people still play it that are listening right now. What are your favorite games that you guys play now? I play Destiny 2 mostly. I've always liked Halo. So I've got Halo, the clat. Hasn't Halo been around for what, 20?
Starting point is 01:55:25 Still good, though. Halo is fun. The original Halo came out in the Halo, the class. Hasn't Halo been around for what, 20? Still good, though. Halo is fun. The original Halo came out in the aughts sometime. I don't remember. I personally think Halo 3 was kind of like the apex of Halo. I got into Halo a lot when they started doing multiplayer during Halo 2, so I've been a fan of that game forever. But I like first-person shooters, so Halo.
Starting point is 01:55:44 I play Call of Duty some, not a ton, but yeah, mostly Destiny. been a fan of that game forever but i like first person shooters so halo and call it i play call of duty some not a ton um but yeah mostly destiny right i like uh destiny one pvp was way better than destiny two yeah because the what they didn't like about it was that everybody just eventually started using shotguns but come on you would you would you would slide shotgun blast and that was the most fun and my uh kd ratio like was it kd kill death it's been a while since i played was always super high and then they were like no we're gonna get rid of that and then destiny 2 they were like we're gonna nerf shotguns and we're gonna make everyone's using primary and now it's like distant stuff and i'm like
Starting point is 01:56:19 whatever i guess it's still fun but you know i liked running around with shotguns it was always always fun now it's like special ammo drops and everyone runs full speed to get silly silly let's grab a couple more of these uh chats here alex smith says i guess you could say america is a melting pot of different dystopias indeed indeed but then trump won so it's being nice i think it's is a melting pot of different dystopias. Indeed. Indeed. But then Trump won. I think it's being nice.
Starting point is 01:56:49 I think it's being a little out of touch. You know, I don't know. Trump won. So we'll see what happens. Navy Sooners says Khalil has graduated. He is now trespassing on private property. He has committed a crime. Send him home.
Starting point is 01:57:02 I don't think he graduated. Yeah, he finished. Yeah, no, but he didn't graduate. I'm pretty sure they reported that he did not graduate. Really? Yeah. I'm pretty sure he finished his graduate studies. Fox News said that he finished the courses without graduating or something. But I could be wrong.
Starting point is 01:57:19 Yeah, they said that he completed his studies before enrolling in Columbia, where he earned a master's degree in December 2024. Oh, okay. So I guess he did. Yeah. A master's.
Starting point is 01:57:29 International studies. You went to Columbia. Yeah, graduate school. All right, everybody. It took longer than a year to get out. We're going to go to that uncensored call-in show. And you're, I mean, you probably want to hear the story we're going to talk about, but you're going to be mad that you did. And you're going to be really angry about the state of modern politics, but it's okay.
Starting point is 01:57:48 Smash the like button. Share the show with everyone you know. My birthday was last Sunday. So if you'd like to get me a gift, join Rumble Premium using promo code TIM10. Not only will you get to watch the uncensored call-in show, you'll get Mug Club, you get premium content from Dr. Disrespect, and so much more. And we've got big big news coming we are taking the world by storm rumble's got to win you can also join our discord server at
Starting point is 01:58:11 timcast.com to get involved in our community where you can actually call into the show you can follow me on x and instagram at timcast bubba do you want to shout anything out no i appreciate you having me all my all of my stuff pretty much is at the bubba army across the board and uh what what a what a what an honor to be here with a with a legend my friend it must have been you having me. All of my stuff pretty much is at The Bubble Army across the board. What an honor to be here with a legend, my friend. It's been an honor to have you. You're the legend. B96! Back in the day, Julian Jumpin' Perez, Bad Boy
Starting point is 01:58:35 Bill, Tim Spinnin' Shomer, Hit Mix 5. My buddy Andy's here, who's from Chicago too, and as soon as you said B96, he started yelling out the B96! Julian Jumpin' Perez! Yeah, Julian Jumpin' Perez. he's here who's from chicago too and as soon as you said b96 he started yelling out the oh yeah b96 oh yeah it was jimmy jumpin perez yeah julian jumpin perez that was my boy he actually ran for an alderman office in uh chicago i don't know that he won but he but he but he ran for a uh an office in chicago right on man well we're gonna be going to that uncensored show but before we do libby what's up i'm libby emmons at the post millennial you can check out everything that
Starting point is 01:59:04 we're doing over there the thepostmillennial.com, thepostmillennial.com, humanevents.com, and you could sign up for my newsletter, which is thepostmillennial.com slash Libby, and you can follow me on X at Libby Emmons. Thanks. Libby killed it tonight. I'm
Starting point is 01:59:20 impressed with Libby. She's great, isn't she? Yeah, very. Very, very knowledgeable. Thanks, Melba. You're welcome. I am Phil that remains on Twix. You can subscribe to my page there. I'm Phil with Libby. She's great, isn't she? Yeah, very. Very, very knowledgeable. You're welcome. I am Phil that Remains on Twix. You can subscribe to my page there. I'm Phil that Remains Official on Instagram. The band is All That Remains. New record just dropped on January 31st. It's titled Anti-Fragile.
Starting point is 01:59:35 You can check out the whole record on YouTube, Apple Music, Spotify, Pandora, Deezer, Amazon Music. Don't forget, the left lane is for crying. We'll see you all over at rumble.com slash timcast IRL in about 30 seconds. Thanks for hanging out. you

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