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In order yours today. amid. The
0:45
wave of campus protests in
0:48
support of the Palestine Liberation
0:50
Movement. One intrepid reporter. Decided.
0:52
To ask N N Y u
0:54
student protester. Just. What
0:56
exactly she was protesting? Here.
0:59
Is her response. Where
1:03
can I. Sign
1:05
on What? The man.
1:10
Of our. His son
1:12
is doing. I really don't. Care.
1:37
What? Are we protesting?
1:39
I'm glad that this girl clarified that she is
1:42
not an N Y U student. At.
1:44
She's only visiting. and why you to
1:47
protest after traveling downtown from Columbia? Because
1:49
it takes an Ivy League education to
1:51
be that ignorant. As.
1:53
Is usually the case. Most of these
1:56
people are not protesting anything in particular.
1:58
They're. Just sort of pro. Casting. as
2:01
they do more and more these
2:03
days. But the protests to demonstrate
2:05
more than merely the ignorance of
2:07
the protesters. We're. Seeing
2:10
ever more of these demonstrations
2:12
over ever more confusing grievances
2:14
because the political order here
2:16
is fraying. People. Feel
2:18
rightly or wrongly that the governing
2:20
powers or unaccountable. It
2:22
feel that the political order is unintelligible,
2:25
They can't make sense of it, and
2:27
they can't do anything about it. So
2:29
they yell and scream until they are
2:31
dragged away or more likely just get
2:33
tired and go home. Move on.
2:35
the next thing. I'm Michael Noses Mcconnell show.
2:57
Welcome back to the show. There is
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The. Bullring on that girl. Never a good sign
4:25
for those of you who are only listening
4:27
that student protest or from Columbia. She had
4:29
a nose ring, but it wasn't. even the
4:31
little nose ring on the side of your
4:33
nose which if it's a little died or
4:35
even a ring itself it's guy can sometimes
4:38
be kind of cute. It's not, you know,
4:40
not it's it's okay. Sometimes it's okay. it's
4:42
But the one that is truly never a
4:44
good sign is no ring right in the
4:46
middle of the nose. Like
4:48
a bull like bulls have, you
4:50
know? And I noticed the real
4:52
leftists, the real angry. Loss.
4:55
To way word. Down
4:57
the path to misery kind of leftists girls.
4:59
They have the middle nose ring and not
5:02
good. Like gotta be something about it that's
5:04
kind of. Demonic
5:06
seeming to me. I'm not saying they're are
5:08
I just if. They.
5:10
Look like bowls like bulls being
5:12
dragged around by their slave masters.
5:14
Not. Not. A
5:16
good sign. And then she opened her
5:19
mouth and proved that prejudice correct. Now.
5:22
Speaking. Of America. And.
5:24
The world. There's a pull out
5:26
a cheesy as read the end of the show. That.
5:29
Asks voters what percentage of them think.
5:31
That. The Us has control over
5:34
its borders. It
5:36
just think. What number that might
5:38
be if the number were fifty percent? That
5:41
is even. that is not great news
5:43
for Joe Biden. Fifty percent say that
5:45
he as President. Won't
5:47
even and force the most basic laws
5:49
of a country. Oh, that's not good.
5:52
but it's not twenty percent. And it's
5:54
not forty. And snap thirty. Just twenty
5:56
percent of eligible voters think that the
5:58
United States has control over it's borders.
6:00
Disappeared to a survey taken by Redfield
6:02
in Wilton Strategies on behalf of Newsweek.
6:06
Bad news. There
6:08
is no way for democrats to make up that
6:10
gap. The. Border is a
6:12
big issue and it's a it's a top
6:15
toward the top of the priority list for
6:17
lot of people and there's no way between
6:19
now and November to go from twenty percent
6:21
think we have control over the borders to
6:24
sixty percent. It's just can't happen to the
6:26
only strategy for Democrats. Is
6:28
to focus on other issues. This is
6:31
something that I have encouraged my Republican
6:33
friends. And. Fellow Conservatives to
6:35
take note of. Democrats are
6:37
very good at politics. They're very crafty
6:40
and they don't fight hopeless battles. and
6:42
they don't tilt at windmills. Generally they
6:44
recognize their it if they're weak on
6:46
something they have a major vulnerability like
6:49
on the Border. You're. Not
6:51
gonna have. You're not going to win by
6:53
doubling down in why. Actually, it's really good
6:55
to have a totally open border or actually
6:57
steam millions of foreigners pouring into our country
6:59
each year or don't really exist. That's not
7:01
really happening. These are Not the droids you're
7:03
looking for are actually actually actually don't do
7:06
that. They just focus on other things. That.
7:08
Point over there the say look at, look at that butterfly.
7:11
Look. At bird look at abortion they
7:13
they were very good version. hey everybody
7:15
go look for hims going to prison
7:17
stay everybody looks there was an insurrection
7:19
when they just. They.
7:22
Know and hold on. Know and holding. Know and walk. Wait,
7:24
know when to run. At said, this is
7:26
an issue that the Republicans should be pummeling. We
7:29
have any. Since we know this issue matters to
7:31
be both. We know the Democrats are basically could
7:33
not be in a worse position on the issue.
7:35
The only way they can get out of it
7:37
is by turning people's attention away from. It's unfortunate
7:40
a lot of republicans and conservatives are gonna let
7:42
them do it. Don't
7:44
let them do it. Keeps.
7:46
At attention on the borders of speaking of the
7:48
Border. New. Report from The
7:50
Boston Globe: Several illegal aliens who were
7:53
flown by Florida governor under Santas have
7:55
to Martha's Vineyard. You remember that last
7:57
year. All. The illegal aliens pouring
7:59
into the Kind creed Santas and Gov
8:01
Abbott and Texas decide. Okay, well we're
8:04
gonna. We're gonna make the Democrats feel
8:06
the pain of illegal immigration. We're going
8:08
to send them to not just New
8:10
York. ensure our recent Martha's Vineyard. Actually
8:12
Before Gov to Santas or Gov. Abbott
8:15
did this years ago, Sen. Ted Cruz
8:17
was calling for this. He said, you
8:19
are I want to fly these illegal
8:21
aliens to Martha's Vineyard, to Cape Cod,
8:23
to Rehoboth Beach, Delaware which is where
8:25
Joe Biden lives and even date. The
8:28
Democrats don't need to feel the negative.
8:30
Social consequences of of illegal immigration. Most of the
8:32
time he got to make them feel it's so.
8:35
The an avid do it. As
8:37
Governors and now we find out
8:39
the several of these illegal aliens have
8:42
been granted. Crimes The
8:44
says. Sleeping. Granted
8:46
visas, they're allowed to stay here. And
8:48
specifically the been granted crime visas which
8:50
I guess makes sense because they committed
8:53
crimes. Another good pieces as a crime
8:55
visas work in America I guess student
8:57
a way that the liberal establishment tells
8:59
us crime pieces work as if you
9:01
are here. And. A crime
9:03
is committed against you. You. Can
9:05
get a special Vesa because of that.
9:08
It's technically called a you Be Some.
9:11
Typically quote set aside for victims
9:13
of certain crimes have suffered mental
9:15
or physical abuse and are helpful
9:17
to law enforcement or government officials
9:19
in the investigation or prosecution of
9:21
criminal activity. Totally.
9:24
Totally ridiculous there that the suggestion
9:26
here is that they've suffered abuse.
9:29
They've suffered some crime because what's
9:31
because. Rhonda Santas chartered
9:33
an airplane and sent them to one of
9:35
the nicest places in America with some of
9:38
the highest property values. No. No,
9:40
they're getting these special visas. Just
9:43
after they leave the really nice areas rights,
9:45
those democrats were welcoming the illegal aliens across
9:48
the border. They got them at a Martha's
9:50
Vineyard within forty eight hours. or we love
9:52
you would please com give us your poor
9:54
your huddled masses not hear of another know
9:57
natty over there. Palm.
9:59
please We want you, you're welcome.
10:02
No human being is illegal over there, over
10:05
there, about maybe like 10 miles down the road
10:07
from my beach house, but not here, not
10:09
on the beach. I'm going to call the cops. I'm going to
10:12
throw you into the ocean actually, if you come anywhere near my
10:14
beach house. But now that you're over
10:16
there, now that you're
10:18
far away and others, especially red state and
10:20
purple state governors have to deal with you,
10:22
yeah, now you get your visa. That's
10:25
what they do. And they're going to
10:27
keep doing it and they're going to use every little trick
10:29
in the book, including now the U visas, the crime visas.
10:34
They suffered the crime of law enforcement trying
10:36
to enforce the law. Speaking
10:39
of not having control over our
10:41
political order, another
10:43
study out from the Media Research Center
10:46
showing with
10:48
detail all of the
10:50
times that just Facebook alone has interfered
10:52
in US elections. So I've mentioned this
10:55
before. I mean, all
10:57
the liberal clap trap about how the
10:59
Russians are meddling in the election to help Donald
11:02
Trump with all the meddling in the election rigging
11:04
and blah, blah, blah. It's the libs who do
11:06
it and far more than the Russians have ever
11:08
meddled in the election. What did they do? They
11:11
spent 100 or $200,000 in Facebook ads
11:13
in the 2016 election. Facebook
11:17
itself spent $400 million in the
11:19
2020 election and
11:21
invested that in left wing groups that then took
11:23
really tangible steps to rig the
11:25
election, including moving ballot drop boxes,
11:29
in some cases illegally far away from county
11:31
clerk offices. And just I
11:33
mean, it in Mark Zuckerberg's own words, really
11:36
putting the thumb on the scales of the
11:38
election to make sure Trump did not get
11:40
reelected. So we know that this happens.
11:42
We have some examples come to mind, like in
11:45
2020 when Facebook dumped hundreds of millions of dollars
11:47
into it. But now the
11:49
media research center is giving us the
11:51
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So a really good report, I encourage you to go
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check it out on MRC. In 2012,
13:14
Facebook suspended a veteran political action
13:17
committee because they posted a
13:19
meme drawing attention to
13:21
the attack on Benghazi that
13:23
the Obama administration mishandled, totally
13:26
flubbed, allowed to happen, I
13:29
guess, and then lied about. And
13:31
so a veteran pack posted
13:33
a meme, just a little meme about it.
13:37
They suspended that pack. 2016,
13:40
Facebook censored Bernie Sanders, then a, you
13:42
know, something of a real challenge to
13:44
Hillary Clinton for the Democrat nomination for
13:46
president, just censored him, outright
13:48
censored conservative topics and news. I
13:50
was here at the time, that was right around the time Daily Wire started up. We
13:53
experienced this. I mean, I saw
13:55
this part really firsthand and
13:58
it hurt not only conservatives, any
14:00
opponent to the liberal establishment, including Bernie Sanders.
14:03
2018, Facebook censored multiple candidates for
14:06
Congress and state legislatures, removing
14:08
ads for my own senator here,
14:11
Marsha Blackburn, for Matt Rosendale in
14:13
Montana, for Michigan State Senate Republican
14:15
candidate, for President
14:18
Trump, and on and on. 2020,
14:22
we know what happened in 2020. Obviously,
14:25
the censorship went through the roof, and then
14:27
separately, Mark Zuckerberg was spending a ton of
14:29
money to rig the election. In 2022, Facebook
14:32
censored lots of gubernatorial candidates and candidates for
14:34
US Congress. Were they 50-50 Republicans
14:37
and Democrats? No, they were focusing on
14:39
Republicans, and on and on. Go check
14:41
it out, there are 39 really good
14:44
examples here. The
14:47
takeaway for conservatives and Republicans
14:49
is that power does not go away. You
14:52
can't make power go away. There are some people,
14:54
especially, who are a little more libertarian-minded,
14:58
who just, they say, we gotta take
15:00
this power away from the government. We
15:02
gotta stop these powerful actors from
15:05
putting their thumbs on the scales.
15:07
Power doesn't go away. Power
15:10
is conserved. You know, like in
15:12
physics, you learn that energy is
15:14
always conserved. Power is always conserved.
15:16
The question is just, where
15:18
is it going to go? So when we
15:20
limit what government and
15:23
what candidates can
15:25
do, the power doesn't
15:27
just disappear. You hear the libertarian harangues
15:29
against big government. When we talk
15:31
about government, by the way, we should talk about governments. There's
15:33
the federal government, or the state
15:35
governments, county governments overlapping sorts of
15:38
layers of government, different branches
15:40
of government. When we limit
15:42
what those governments can do, and what the candidates can
15:44
do, and how much money the candidate political action committees
15:46
can raise, and how they can spend that money, the
15:49
power just goes somewhere else. In this case,
15:52
the power, when you take the power away from
15:54
the candidate political action committees, just goes to super
15:56
PACs. And the super PACs are
15:59
technically not allowed to do that. to coordinate with the candidates. They
16:01
kind of do. I mean, they try not to. They
16:03
try to stand the good side of the law, but
16:05
it's very, very blurry and ambiguous rules. It
16:08
goes there, and then the power goes to private
16:10
corporations. So we
16:12
say, okay, good, the government can't be
16:15
too involved in these elections. Oh, good. And
16:17
those politicians, they can't be taking too many
16:19
donations. Okay, well, now Mark Zuckerberg is going
16:21
to control our elections. Is that better? I
16:24
don't think that's better. Mark Zuckerberg is just
16:27
about as liberal as our liberal
16:29
established government order, and
16:31
he's much less accountable. And
16:34
he's one guy, there's that's a lot of
16:36
concentrated power. If we're
16:38
going to have a monarch, at least give us a
16:40
monarch, at least at least give us a guy with
16:42
some dignity, who's trained for this, who has a sense
16:44
of, you know, I don't know, God and the moral
16:46
order and the political tradition and history, don't give us
16:49
some nerd from Silicon Valley,
16:51
who's made himself Emperor of the
16:54
country, there's going to be power, there's going
16:56
to be power. Stop.
16:59
This is kind of kind of like the argument we
17:01
were all having over free speech a few years ago.
17:04
You got to just recognize that the fight
17:06
is it's not even on the same axis
17:08
that you're looking at. People
17:11
always thought the fight between over
17:13
free speech was between free speech and censorship. It's not
17:15
the point of my book, speechless was to say, actually,
17:17
just look at a different axis. It's
17:19
a thank you. It's a fight between one
17:22
set of standards and norms and another set of standards and
17:24
norms. The same is true here. The battle for our political
17:26
order is not between a really
17:28
powerful political order and a weaker
17:31
political order more conducive to liberty.
17:35
The amount of power that there is, is static at
17:37
any discrete moment. The question is, where's the power going
17:40
to go? You got to look at a different axis
17:42
here. Is it going to be in the hands of
17:44
the government? Is it going to be in the hands
17:46
of private corporations? It's going to be in the hands
17:49
of political candidates? Is it going to be in the
17:51
hands of outside political consultants? Where's it going to be?
17:53
You've got to strike whatever the right
17:56
balance is. Right now, it's
17:58
totally off balance. favors the libs.
18:02
Speaking of this kind of anti-Trump activism, Fox
18:04
News. Fox News ostensibly conservative right-wing
18:07
cable news channel, at least it was
18:09
considered that way for many years, probably
18:11
not considered so much that anymore. Fox
18:13
just aired an ad attacking
18:15
Donald Trump. I
18:23
was wondering if you guys are hiring right now. I was thinking about applying
18:25
for a job. I was thinking
18:27
about applying for a job here.
18:29
I'm currently facing 88 felonies. I'm
18:31
currently facing 88 felonies for
18:33
detention of classified information. If you all
18:35
take people that have been found liable
18:38
for sexual assault trying to overturn the
18:40
2020 election, falsifying business records, I was
18:42
wondering if that was gonna be a
18:44
problem. They're
18:50
gonna do a background check. Yeah. That's the
18:52
only... Probably not. So
18:54
did you guys hire people that have been found liable for
18:57
sexual assault? We
18:59
want to phone back now. Okay. No,
19:01
we don't. I don't think
19:03
so. Okay. Donald Trump
19:05
has been charged with 88 felonies
19:07
and found liable for sexual assault.
19:10
If Trump is too big of a
19:12
liability to get a job at your local
19:14
mall, he is too big of a liability
19:16
to be President of the United States. Republican
19:19
Accountability Pack is responsible for the content of
19:21
this advertising. Really
19:23
insidious ad and ironic for
19:25
a few reasons. First of all, at
19:27
the same time that the Libs are running this
19:29
ad, they are simultaneously
19:32
saying that we need to prevent employers
19:34
from discriminating against criminals, convicted criminals in
19:36
their hiring process. At the very same
19:38
time, we covered a story on this,
19:40
I think two days ago on the
19:42
show. The Libs are
19:45
saying it's discriminatory. There's a
19:47
disparate negative impact on minorities,
19:50
people of color. If you
19:52
take into account the criminal record
19:54
of job applicants, it's wrong. It's
19:56
discriminatory. It's evil. We can't do
19:58
that. Even though they've been... convicted
20:00
of all sorts of crimes. Oh, but Donald
20:02
Trump's been charged with 80 bazillion crimes by
20:04
every Democrat politician in America. Cast
20:07
him to St. Helena. To
20:09
Elba goes he. It's
20:13
not a question of how we treat
20:16
criminals in our society. It's
20:18
that when the criminals are
20:20
not Donald Trump, when the criminals
20:22
are liberal rather than conservative, we
20:24
let them off the hook. When the criminals are
20:28
black, brown, and all sorts of colors and
20:30
not white or orange, I suppose in this
20:32
case, we just let them off the hook.
20:34
When the criminals are women or sexually confused
20:36
rather than straight men, we let them off
20:39
the hook. It has nothing
20:41
to do with the crime itself, but furthermore
20:43
they say Trump has been charged
20:45
with these crimes. He hasn't been convicted of anything.
20:49
He hasn't been convicted of a single crime. Well,
20:52
yeah, but we wouldn't hire him to work at
20:54
a at the diamond store. We wouldn't hire him
20:57
to work at the restaurant. Okay, well,
20:59
explain something to me. Why is
21:01
Donald Trump still polling roughly on par with, according
21:03
to some polls, even a little higher than the
21:06
current president of the United States? Why?
21:08
If this is so bad, if Donald
21:11
Trump is really this awful criminal and we
21:13
would never hire him to mop the floor
21:15
at a restaurant, why
21:18
is he still a major challenge to Joe Biden?
21:20
Why does it look like he could be reelected?
21:23
Because that
21:26
huge number of charges
21:28
of felonies that he's accused of helps
21:30
him, as I've said
21:32
from the beginning. It's bad, it's sad, it's awful
21:35
that our political order has been has been made
21:37
to look like this and the Democrats are responsible
21:39
for it. The number
21:41
helps him. If he were only charged
21:43
with one crime, maybe
21:45
it would stick. Two crimes, maybe maybe they would stick.
21:47
88 felonies.
21:51
It just looks like a witch hunt, which
21:53
it is for prosecutions across
21:56
all these different layers of government
21:58
all around the country for For.
22:01
What for Crimes know any? We can
22:03
really understand the things we knew about
22:05
he's he made a big time contribution
22:07
to his own campaign and paid off
22:09
a porn star allegedly even though she
22:11
said that they he didn't. Live.
22:15
Ah, That. Yeah.
22:18
So we can't we wouldn't hire him for and it's just
22:20
so. Obviously disingenuous and when pulling
22:22
on this question has been done. A
22:25
clear majority of Americans. The vast majority
22:27
of Americans recognize this is a political
22:30
persecution, so I hope they keep running
22:32
these ads. Call. Attention
22:34
to it. Quality. We were
22:36
talking earlier about house. That. When
22:38
you're in a political fight is not
22:40
only about that you're substantive views on
22:42
the issues, but it's even about which
22:45
issues you're talking about. Focusing on the
22:47
the trials and tribulations of Donald Trump,
22:49
the the criminal prosecutions which a really
22:51
a political persecution. That. Helps.
22:54
Trump. There's so much
22:56
more to say first though. Go
22:58
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Speaking of large numbers, Andrew
24:51
Tate. Andrew Tate,
24:53
you know Andrew Tate. He's this guy
24:56
who he became wealthy running a webcam
24:59
porn business and he's charged
25:01
with sex crimes in Romania
25:03
because according to
25:05
prosecutors he kept these girls under
25:07
his eye
25:09
and in his house and forced
25:11
them to do all these
25:13
weird sex things on camera and then kept
25:16
a lot of the money. And he kind of bragged about some
25:18
of this stuff but he denies some of the charges and he's
25:21
just one of these guys, one of
25:23
these self-help gurus who says, you
25:25
know, I drive really nice cars and I
25:27
got a ton of money and I sleep
25:29
with a lot of chicks and I and
25:31
so he's a very, very polarizing figure. He
25:33
converted to Islam. So people
25:36
have all sorts of views on Andrew Tate. My
25:38
main takeaway from Andrew Tate is he's a
25:40
very impressive internet
25:44
influencer. Forget about
25:46
all of the other, the awful sex
25:49
stuff and the charges and the materialism
25:51
and Islam and all that. He
25:53
just is really good at keeping people's attention. He's
25:56
really good at getting people to, even if they
25:58
hate 99. Percent of
26:00
the things that he says and does the 1% they'll
26:03
agree with and then it'll another group He'll irritate and
26:05
he just keeps people's attention. Well, they got people's attention
26:07
yesterday When he made a
26:09
tweet that aroused a lot of ire He
26:12
said sex is for making children Any
26:16
man who has sex with women because it quote
26:18
feels good is gay. Oh My
26:21
I'll clean up some of the language make it
26:23
a little more elevated for this family show. Oh
26:25
my phallus feels good This is great. In
26:28
fact, if you are 40 with less than five
26:30
children, you're probably gay all that
26:32
feel-good phallus sex and hardly any
26:35
genetic legacy And
26:39
Then actually readers added a comment they said having sex
26:41
with women is straight I actually I
26:43
hate to disagree with community notes. I hate
26:45
hate to have to agree with Andrew Tate
26:47
over the you know cumulative wisdom
26:50
of Twitter here Tate
26:53
is pretty much right. I think This
26:55
is a view That has
26:58
been articulated in the past by great
27:00
philosophers And ethicists
27:03
including the late great philosopher
27:05
Norm Macdonald In
27:08
regular life, that's why sex is so
27:10
tough to get going because it's so
27:12
shameful and filthy and Obviously
27:16
meant only for procreation. So when you
27:18
get You
27:21
know and kind of ideas. It's a little it's 20%
27:24
exaggerated 20% hyperbolic bring me back to
27:26
the Andrew Tate tweet. I want
27:28
to see the exact wording here It's
27:31
it's very precise Sexes
27:34
for making children fact-check true. That's what it's
27:36
for. That's what that's what marriage is for
27:39
It's for the begetting and the education of children
27:41
So it's not enough just to make them you
27:44
also have to raise them Which is why children
27:46
have a right to be the product of the
27:48
specific conjugal act of of his parents of their
27:50
parents Who are joined together
27:52
in holy matrimony? Which is a union
27:55
for life the union oriented toward the
27:57
education and beginning of children and also
27:59
as? as a secondary aspect, the
28:01
mutual support of the spouses. Now,
28:04
Andrew Tate might not have fit all of that into the 280 character
28:06
limit, but he says, sexist for making children?
28:08
That's true. That's what it's for.
28:10
It's a very Aristotelian view. That's
28:13
the T-loss of the sexual act. There
28:15
are incidental aspects to it. Oh, it
28:18
feels good. Oh, it's a way to
28:20
pass the time when the cable goes out. Oh, it's this,
28:22
it's that, it's the other thing. But that's what it's for.
28:24
You know a thing by what it's for. The leftist
28:27
years tumbler is for bringing delicious leftist years into my
28:29
body. The microphone
28:31
is for transmitting my mellifluous dulcetones to your
28:33
ears and sexist for making children. Totally true.
28:35
Any man who has sex with women because
28:38
it quote feels good is gay. He's
28:40
obviously making a joke here and it's
28:43
kind of hyperbolic, but the
28:45
point he's making here is a point I
28:47
actually made quite earnestly on the Iced
28:50
Coffee Hour podcast some
28:52
months ago. And the hosts
28:54
are lovely guys, but they were kind of
28:56
shocked by what I said. They took issue
28:59
with my use of the term gay and
29:01
the point that I was making, but I
29:03
said no, I'm making, I'm using the term
29:05
specifically because I'm using it in the sense
29:07
that sterile sexual
29:10
relations are
29:13
gay and gay
29:15
relations are sterile. I don't
29:18
mean it in any judgy way or
29:20
even to be needlessly provocative. I'm just
29:23
saying that's what distinguishes normal
29:27
healthy sexual relations
29:29
that are ordered toward their natural
29:31
ends from all the other kinds, whether you're talking
29:34
about a couple of dudes, a couple of chicks,
29:36
three dudes in a billy goat, a whole village,
29:38
some bacchanal in ancient Rome or whatever. That's
29:41
the difference. One is fruitful
29:44
or at least, it's a fallen
29:46
world so people suffer infertility, but it's
29:48
either inclined toward fruitfulness or
29:51
it's just sterile and for pleasure and
29:53
the former is good and natural and
29:57
oriented toward family and marriage and
29:59
the other. is gay. Yeah, that's true. Then
30:02
he kind of mocks this idea, oh, you know,
30:04
my genitals feel good.
30:06
This is great. Yeah, that's true. If you just
30:08
live for your own personal
30:11
pleasure, your base appetites,
30:14
that's going to be shameful. That's
30:18
not going to satisfy you in the long run. It's
30:20
not going to be very productive and edifying. He
30:23
goes, if you're 40 with less than five
30:25
children, you're probably gay. Funny line in
30:28
that. I don't think statistically that's
30:30
literally true, but we
30:33
used to have a lot of kids and now we don't. And
30:36
that shift is
30:39
a shift away from giving of oneself totally
30:41
to one spouse and totally to one's commonwealth
30:43
and totally to the common good and totally
30:45
to one society because we're the social animal
30:47
and turning away from that toward just making
30:50
everything about your own personal pleasure, which
30:53
is decadent. That's a decadent thing to do. No
30:56
genetic legacy. Well, it's even more than
30:58
a genetic legacy. The genetics is the
31:00
physical representation of the legacy, but there's
31:02
more. There's a cultural legacy. There are
31:05
the memories passed across the generations of
31:07
a family. There are the family heirlooms.
31:09
There's a tradition. There's all of that.
31:11
Absolutely. Between community notes and
31:13
Andrew Tate, Tate is not 100% correct,
31:15
but he's about 97% correct here.
31:18
Now, speaking of controversial views on sex,
31:23
Kanye West, according to reports, might start a
31:25
porn company. That
31:27
is very unfortunate. There's
31:30
a report out now. Here's a report from
31:32
Marka. We'll
31:34
see if it happens. This studio
31:37
will be titled Yeezy Porn,
31:39
according to reports. Why
31:41
does this matter? Well, it's in
31:43
the news in part because he has his
31:45
sights set on this guy, Mike Mose, who's
31:47
the ex-husband of Stormy Daniels, who is the
31:49
porn performer who's at the heart of one
31:52
of the Trump criminal prosecutions. He
31:55
wants that guy to help run the porn studio,
31:58
but it makes news not because and hip-hop
32:01
mogul is involved in weird depraved
32:03
sex stuff. It's because Kanye
32:05
seemed like he wasn't gonna do that. Remember
32:07
some years ago, he came
32:10
out with this album, Jesus Is King. I'm
32:12
not a huge fan of this kind of music generally,
32:14
but of all the Kanye music, Jesus Is King had
32:18
some good bops on it, man, you know? And
32:21
then he was hosting these Sunday services, which were eccentric
32:23
and a little bit weird, but they were at least
32:25
about God. They
32:28
were at least religious in their tenor, and
32:31
they brought a lot of people together. And
32:33
it just seemed much better
32:36
and more edifying, if
32:38
not even sanctifying, than so
32:40
much of what's out there in the pop culture. And
32:43
then it looked like he was fighting
32:45
to save his marriage, and he was, according
32:48
to one report while he was making an album, he said no
32:50
one can fornicate on the set, and
32:52
he was reading the Bible
32:55
a lot. And I don't even think it was just a performance.
32:57
I have a number of neutral friends with Kanye West,
33:00
across actually all sorts of different areas of my
33:02
life. For
33:06
some reason, I keep overlapping with Kanye West, and I heard that the guy was sincere about
33:08
it, and
33:10
now this, and now this. Which
33:14
reminds me of a very important fact that
33:18
you should keep in mind, is the sower who went forth to sow.
33:21
And while he soweth, some fell back,
33:24
some fell by the wayside, and the birds
33:27
of the air came and ate them up. And
33:29
other, some fell upon stony ground, where
33:32
they had not much earth, and they sprung up
33:34
immediately, because they had no deepness of earth. And
33:36
when the sun was up, they were scorched, and
33:38
because they had not root, they withered away. And
33:40
others fell among thorns, and the thorns
33:42
grew up and choked them, and others fell upon good ground, and
33:45
they brought forth fruit, some 100-fold, some
33:47
60-fold, and some 30-fold. The
33:49
parable of the sower, really, really important here. Jay
33:53
is a troubled guy. He's been pretty open
33:55
about some of his troubles. So it's
33:57
unfortunate to see this. The
34:00
guy who 15, more than 15 years
34:02
ago now probably, had Jesus walks. Jesus
34:06
walks. Big
34:08
song. And then he kind of went
34:10
away into more degenerate art for a while. And
34:12
then he comes back with Jesus as king and
34:15
he's reading the Bible and that's great. And now
34:17
the prospect of a porn studio speaking
34:20
openly on podcasts about how God didn't answer
34:22
his prayers in exactly the way that he
34:25
demanded that God answer them. And so he's kind
34:27
of turning away from religion. It's
34:30
unfortunate. It's unfortunate because it's
34:33
a reminder. A lot of people think you
34:36
live in the wrong way and then you
34:38
repent and you see the right and you
34:40
respond to God's grace and great. Now everything's
34:42
totally rosy. Everything can be totally
34:44
rosy, but when that happens, the
34:47
devil is going to come after you with
34:50
10 times the strength that he had, a hundred times the
34:52
strength that he had previously. And
34:54
if you stumble and you
34:56
fall unrepentantly and you continue to
34:58
stumble, you're going to
35:00
be worse off than when you started. You're going to be
35:02
worse off than before you turned
35:06
your mind and responded to God's grace and started going down
35:08
the right way. And
35:10
what you can do right now is subscribe
35:12
to the Michael Knowles Show YouTube channel, smash
35:14
the like button and ring that bell baby.
35:18
Running away from the depraved life
35:20
to the trad life, the libs
35:22
are still furious over
35:25
the phenomenon of the trad wife. You've
35:28
heard this term. I think a lot of these terms are just kind
35:31
of silly. You hear this term
35:33
now, trad wife. What is trad wife? It means
35:35
a normal woman from 30 years ago. Now
35:38
that's a bizarre kind of, or even I've heard
35:40
this phrase pop up, trad cons. All
35:43
the time people ask Michael, what's
35:45
your political ideology? Are
35:48
you a paleo,
35:50
neo, populist, libertarian,
35:52
anarcho, trad, classical?
35:55
What are, and I think I'm
35:58
a conservative man, grow up. You
36:00
grow up that's what I am either. I'm
36:02
a conservative. I want to conserve things I
36:05
like I want good stuff. I want more
36:07
good stuff. I want less bad stuff. That's
36:09
my political ideology I guess it's kind of
36:11
an anti ideology grow up, but
36:14
they do this now they the libs try
36:17
to take these terms
36:19
and And they use
36:21
them to well again to quote
36:23
Norm McDonald to marginalize normal people
36:26
One time when Norm was asked the meaning
36:28
of the term cisgender He said a cisgender
36:31
is a term used now to marginalize normal
36:33
people. That's true here
36:35
The tradwife the rise of the
36:37
tradwife why some women say
36:39
they are opting out of work key points
36:43
Tiktok's latest tradwife and stay-at-home
36:45
girlfriend trend shows an idealized
36:47
view of adhering to very
36:49
traditional gender roles Staying
36:52
at home necessitates a degree of privilege that
36:54
fewer young adults have these days if anything
36:56
women are working more not less and foregoing
36:58
Paid labor comes at a steep economic cost
37:01
some men are scaling back at work or recent study shows, okay Sure
37:05
stay-at-home girlfriend is not a great idea. You should just
37:07
get married stay-at-home girlfriend is called a concubine Tiktok's
37:10
latest tradwife trends show an idealized
37:12
view of adhering to traditional gender
37:15
roles Sure
37:17
that I guess that's true Wouldn't
37:20
you say though that the
37:22
last century and a half of feminism
37:24
shows an idealized view of rejecting gender
37:26
roles? Because we've been told women reject
37:28
gender roles Women needs a man
37:30
like a fish needs a bicycle don't get married don't
37:32
have kids Don't just go work in the widget factory get
37:34
used by a hundred guys Sexually and then be cast
37:36
to the side and that'll make you really happy and empowered
37:40
It doesn't does it so isn't which
37:42
is the more idealized view the
37:45
tradwife phenomenon? Meaning people just going back and
37:47
doing the things that everyone did forever or
37:50
the feminist view which keeps promising utopia
37:52
never quite pays off
37:55
or to say on this first though the 2024
37:58
NFL Draft is here I'm
38:01
learning right now and crane company
38:03
will be live streaming the entire first round
38:05
starting at 8 p.m. Eastern tonight Not only will
38:07
watching this live stream give you a reprieve
38:10
from Roger Goodell any woke
38:12
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38:14
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38:16
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38:18
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38:20
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38:29
and leave your thoughts in the live chat
38:32
my favorite comment yesterday is from a Return
38:35
after a while to the favorite comment slap my bass 3
38:37
8 2 5 who says You
38:40
don't need AI to tell someone's political affiliation You
38:42
can do that just as easily by their clothes
38:44
hairstyles and especially the bumper stickers on their cars.
38:46
Yes, that's true I was just talking with a
38:48
friend of mine about this last night I
38:53
covered the story yesterday. Wow AI can predict your
38:55
political views just by looking at you Yeah, I
38:57
can do that too because I have eyes and
38:59
I'm willing to acknowledge patterns
39:03
but but it's even funnier than that AI
39:06
is Pattern recognition
39:08
that that's pretty much all AI
39:10
is AI
39:12
is trained to recognize Patterns and based on
39:14
those patterns to recognize other patterns and that's
39:16
all it is. It doesn't have a soul
39:18
doesn't have free will It's pattern recognition But
39:21
political correctness and wokeness we call it
39:23
now says you're not allowed to recognize
39:25
patterns that if you recognize patterns And
39:27
acknowledge them that that's prejudice. So
39:30
at the same time that the libs are pushing AI.
39:32
This is so great. It's progress It's the future that
39:34
they build all the AI and then they get really
39:36
angry that the AI does what it is built to
39:38
do So then they have to go in
39:40
and install their own political views to say stop recognizing
39:43
patterns Don't that's very prejudiced
39:45
and awful if you recognize patterns. Well
39:48
in defense of the AI what else is it supposed to do? That's
39:50
all it does It's like it's
39:52
like saying hey Um here
39:56
is a cup of coffee. I've
39:58
just made this cup of coffee And here it
40:00
is. I'm gonna make ever more the perfect cup
40:02
of coffee and then one tries the cup of
40:05
coffee says oh no This
40:07
is hot and full of caffeine. Oh,
40:09
this is terrible. You can't we can't have a
40:12
cup of coffee That's hot and full of caffeine
40:14
you can they say okay Well, we'll make the perfect cup
40:16
of coffee But we're it's not gonna be hot and it's
40:18
not gonna have caffeine and it's not gonna be liquid and
40:20
well a certain point You're not You're
40:23
fighting against yourself. You can't you gotta
40:26
you want to do the thing or do you not want to do the thing? the
40:30
tradwife Phenomenon the
40:32
libs are so furious about it. They've been pushing
40:34
these articles every few weeks now for
40:36
months and months Here's
40:39
another warning staying at home necessitates a
40:41
degree of privilege that fewer young adults
40:43
have these days It
40:45
is tough in a tough economy to stay
40:47
at home. That's true You
40:50
know our grandparents They were able
40:52
to buy a house when they were young and
40:54
our grandparents They were able to have a stay-at-home
40:56
mother and it's true There have been changes to
40:58
the political economy that make it harder now that
41:01
women are expected to work that Changes
41:03
the way that wages work in this country
41:05
now that we have mass migration For instance
41:08
wages are lowered by mass migration. And so
41:10
it makes it harder and and but also
41:13
We have a much higher standard of living than our grandparents
41:15
had at our age Our houses are
41:17
bigger when we have houses our apartments, you know
41:20
or houses even that you could rent
41:22
our Food our luxuries our
41:24
travel our technology. It's we have a much
41:27
higher standard of living a Lot
41:29
of people could do it You
41:31
could live the tradlife. You can't you
41:33
can't really live the tradlife in Midtown, Manhattan
41:37
You might have to move a little further away from the
41:39
city You might not be
41:41
able to have two cars You might not
41:43
be able to go to brunch all the time You might
41:45
not be able to have the fanciest clothes or all the
41:48
latest gizmos and gadgets and you you might have to live
41:50
it Everything in life has a
41:52
cost. Well, it just requires a
41:54
degree of privilege Yeah,
41:57
it's your what do you mean a degree
41:59
of privilege? There's a cost There's a cost when
42:01
your wife doesn't work that
42:03
you you obviously get much less income and that's
42:05
gonna affect maybe your standard of living That's true,
42:07
but everything in life has a cost That's nothing
42:10
new about that if anything women
42:12
are working more not less and forgoing paid labor
42:14
comes at a steep economic cost Yeah forgo what
42:17
does that even that's just a truism? So
42:19
if if a woman doesn't get paid by
42:21
an employer in the formal economy in the
42:24
commercial economy Then she's not going
42:26
to get a paycheck in the commercial economy. Yeah,
42:28
you're right exactly She's making a choice to do
42:30
something else some men are scaling back
42:32
at work Yes true if the if the wife stays
42:34
home, but guess what the guy's gonna have to work
42:36
more probably because it's expensive. That's
42:38
true Why are they so afraid
42:41
that why are the libs so? Afraid
42:44
of people desiring to return to the trad life
42:46
and what's the trad life? It's just how people
42:48
live for most of history Well
42:51
because it threatens their power In
42:55
industrialization really helped the libs Klaus
42:58
Schwab at the head of the world economic forum he talks
43:00
about multiple Industrial revolutions he
43:03
talks about now we are in
43:05
the fourth industrial revolution the first
43:07
industrial revolution is mechanization The second
43:09
industrial revolution is the assembly line
43:12
and electrification The third
43:14
industrial revolution is the rise of
43:16
computing and now the fourth industrial
43:18
revolution is Supposedly
43:21
the the melding of computers and
43:23
biology, you know We're going to we're
43:25
going to become cyborgs and we're gonna
43:27
we're gonna make everything electronic
43:30
and not just electronic but connected to the
43:32
internet and smart and You
43:34
know constantly processing data and that's that's the fourth
43:37
industrial revolution and we probably are in the midst
43:39
of that Sure, and
43:42
there are downsides to that The
43:44
the liberals on the left and on the right
43:46
the classical liberals the libertarians. They'll tell you industrial
43:48
revolution has been totally great It's been wonderful. There's
43:50
but you're beginning to see creep up on the
43:53
right Once
43:55
again a criticism of that Tucker
43:58
notably has been on that train didn't
44:00
start that. I mean, that has been a
44:02
theme of American conservatism for many, many decades.
44:04
Now, in fact, it goes back much further
44:06
than that. I think of the poem Jerusalem
44:10
by William Blake, who, not
44:13
saying William Blake was some doctrinaire conservative, but
44:15
he expressed the kind of uneasiness
44:18
that many conservatives have, even with the
44:20
first industrial revolution. And did
44:22
his feet in ancient time walk upon England's
44:24
mountains green and did the Holy Lamb
44:27
of God in England's verdant pastures scene. I'm probably
44:29
getting some of the words wrong, but there's a
44:32
line in there where he refers to these dark
44:34
satanic mills. We
44:37
will have Jerusalem builded here
44:40
among these dark satanic mills. The dark satanic mills
44:42
were the mills of industrialization,
44:45
which was viewed as a kind of symbol
44:48
of hell, a coming of hell on earth.
44:50
A dehumanization, no longer were humans fully
44:52
people who were doing all sorts of different
44:55
tasks throughout the day. But no, they were
44:57
being reduced to nothing more than cogs in
44:59
a machine to punch in and punch out
45:01
on the clock. And
45:04
there's been a lot of material prosperity
45:06
that's come out of that, but there's been a
45:09
dehumanization too. And immediately afterward, you
45:11
saw effects on family size. All of
45:13
a sudden, family size gets cut down.
45:16
As that process continues,
45:19
you see the political strength even of
45:21
the family, the building block of society begin
45:23
to diminish. And people are
45:25
looking at that and they say, oh, I don't like that. I actually
45:27
want the families to be strong again. I want to have a lot
45:29
of kids. There's more to life than money. I
45:31
don't think we're all just interchangeable cogs
45:33
in a machine. I think we're different.
45:35
We're vibrant. We're different. Different peoples are
45:38
different. They have their own distinctions that
45:40
add spice to life and variety. And
45:42
men and women especially are different and
45:45
we're complementary and we should celebrate that
45:47
and recognize that. I want a wife
45:49
and I want a trad life and I want more
45:52
kids. And that is
45:54
a threat not just to Joe Biden or the Democrats
45:56
or the progressives or something. That is a threat to
45:58
the The whole liberal
46:00
project of the last I don't know 150 years Rant
46:06
completed Speaking
46:08
of joe biden though. We'll get back to joe biden now Really
46:11
disgusting stuff from joe biden In
46:14
the last few days joe biden was just at a campaign
46:16
event uh where uh
46:19
in florida The
46:21
libs are making a big deal about ron
46:23
desantis's defense of unborn life And
46:26
joe biden was standing there listening to them
46:28
harang Ron desantis for
46:30
protecting babies in the womb And
46:33
then he did something shocking And
46:37
then we come back here to state of florida Where
46:40
ron desantis felt like he needed to run for president.
46:42
And so 15 weeks wasn't good enough.
46:45
We had to go to six weeks 15
46:49
weeks wasn't good enough We had to go
46:51
to six weeks and joe biden for those of you who are only
46:53
listening He made the sign of the cross I
46:57
can't i'm trying to see exactly when he starts it the
46:59
most charitable read on this I can say is he made the sign of
47:01
the cross When
47:04
she mentioned that that desantis ran
47:06
for president as if to say
47:08
rip his presidential campaign Which
47:10
is flippant and glib and kind of taking you
47:12
know the the Central
47:15
fact and the central mystery of the christian
47:17
faith in a in a vain and flippant
47:19
way Because the sign of
47:21
the cross is an articulation of the
47:23
trinity. That's the central mystery of
47:26
the christian faith, but also the It's
47:28
a representation of the crucifixion, which is you
47:30
know, when our lord is sacrificed to redeem
47:32
mankind. This is the the pivot
47:34
of history The cross being
47:36
the axis on which the whole cosmos turns And
47:40
so that's the most charitable view of it What
47:43
most people are taking from this is that he's making the
47:45
sign of the cross about How
47:48
awful ron desantis's pro-life law
47:51
is 15 weeks wasn't good enough. They have to reduce the six
47:53
weeks He makes the sign of the cross that
47:56
if that's what he's doing that is as blasphemous
47:58
as he gets He's
48:01
invoking religion,
48:04
this central expression
48:06
of the religion, to
48:09
what? To advocate for the murder of babies?
48:11
Which is, we don't even need to form
48:15
our own conclusions here, which his
48:17
church says, with authority, dogmatic
48:19
authority or magisterial authority for
48:22
2000 years, says is evil.
48:29
I can't make sense of it. Now
48:32
I'd be inclined to take the charitable view, except Biden
48:35
has a pattern of this at another recent
48:37
campaign event, also in Tampa, Florida. He
48:40
starts mocking the Bible. Brag
48:45
how proud he was to get
48:48
rid of Roe v. Wade over. He
48:50
took credit for it. He said there
48:52
has to be punishment for women exercising
48:54
the reproductive freedom. His
48:57
words, not mine. He
48:59
described the job decision as a miracle. Maybe
49:02
it's coming from that Bible he's trying to sell. Whoa.
49:08
I almost
49:10
wanted to buy one just to see what the hell's in it.
49:15
Folks, it was no
49:17
miracle. It was a political deal to
49:20
get rid of Roe v. Wade. A political
49:22
deal he made with the evangelical base of
49:24
the Republican Party, to look past
49:28
his moral, if they look past his
49:30
moral and character flaws in exchange for
49:32
his commitment to appoint Justice
49:34
Supreme Court would overturn Roe. So
49:37
there it is. Don't tell me that I'm being unfair
49:39
and I'm misreading what Joe Biden is doing there when
49:41
he makes the sign of the cross during
49:44
an invective against
49:46
the cause of life and in defense of
49:48
abortion. Here he is. He
49:52
says he's advocating for abortion. He's advocating for killing babies
49:54
in the womb. Then he makes fun for him. He
49:56
says, you know, he's selling that Bible. He
49:59
probably figured out. that
50:01
he's going to support unborn babies, he doesn't want to
50:03
murder him, because he's reading that Bible of his. Ha
50:06
ha ha ha ha, they're all laughing. Ha ha ha, he goes,
50:08
I almost bought one of them Bibles, I just wanted to see
50:10
what's in it. You
50:12
guys hear about this? You hear about this? What's the deal with
50:14
these Bibles, huh? You guys hear about this? You're
50:16
doing a comedy routine up there about the Bible. But
50:20
what's he mocking? His defenders will say, well,
50:22
he's just mocking Trump. He's mocking
50:24
Trump's Bible. Trump's
50:27
just selling the Bible, man. It's just the Bible. He
50:29
didn't write a new one. He didn't
50:31
do it. It's not the new Trump translation. He's
50:34
just selling the Bible. A
50:36
lot of people sell Bibles. That's
50:38
good to have. You should buy multiple copies of the Bible
50:40
if you can. So
50:42
that's what he's mocking. He's mocking the Bible, and
50:45
he's mocking religion. He's mocking
50:48
the Trinity. He's mocking God. That's
50:51
his shtick. And he's specifically doing
50:54
it when it comes to
50:57
protecting babies in the womb, which
50:59
is a non-negotiable issue for his
51:01
putative faith, which he mocks.
51:03
And he mocks it because it's not really his faith. When
51:06
his putative faith comes into conflict
51:10
with liberalism, he picks liberalism, simple
51:12
as. Now, today
51:14
is Theology Thursday, coincidentally.
51:18
And we have an
51:20
interview with King and
51:23
Country. How do you like that? It's very exciting. There's
51:26
a new movie out. The rest of the
51:28
show continues now. You do not want to miss it.
51:30
Become a member. Use code NOLS,
51:32
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