Podchaser Logo
Home
Joe Rogan Goes Quiet as Elon Musk Exposes This Elite's Real Motive

Joe Rogan Goes Quiet as Elon Musk Exposes This Elite's Real Motive

Released Friday, 3rd November 2023
Good episode? Give it some love!
Joe Rogan Goes Quiet as Elon Musk Exposes This Elite's Real Motive

Joe Rogan Goes Quiet as Elon Musk Exposes This Elite's Real Motive

Joe Rogan Goes Quiet as Elon Musk Exposes This Elite's Real Motive

Joe Rogan Goes Quiet as Elon Musk Exposes This Elite's Real Motive

Friday, 3rd November 2023
Good episode? Give it some love!
Rate Episode

Episode Transcript

Transcripts are displayed as originally observed. Some content, including advertisements may have changed.

Use Ctrl + F to search

0:00

You might ask why I would be concerned

0:03

with bringing the history of the Bible

0:05

to a more popular audience.

0:07

We inevitably

0:10

and

0:10

must see the world through

0:14

the lens of a story. A

0:18

story is a description

0:20

of the implicit structure

0:23

through which we view the world

0:25

and prioritize our perceptions and determine

0:28

how to act. Because you can act

0:30

in a very large variety of ways,

0:33

that plethora of possibility

0:35

has to be limited and focused. It

0:37

has to come to a point, it has to have a destination,

0:40

it has to have a moral, it has to have an ethic.

0:43

And what a story is, is a description

0:46

of an ethic of potential

0:49

and action prioritization.

0:53

Peace is dependent

0:53

upon us being brought together under

0:56

the rubric of a single centralizing

0:58

narrative, much of which is reflected

1:01

in the meta-narrative that the biblical

1:04

library constitutes. So

1:07

I hope you enjoy this tour through

1:09

the history of the world's most

1:11

significant book.

1:25

All

1:25

right, internet, I have returned.

1:28

I'm still Dave Rubin. This still is the Rubin Report. It's

1:30

November 3rd, 2023. Where has this year gone? We

1:34

are live streaming on the Rumble,

1:37

on the YouTube, on the Locals. If you want to join us for

1:39

a post-game show

1:41

today after the show, rubinreport.locals.com.

1:44

And by the way, we are doing our first ever test

1:46

show. We are launching a new show at

1:49

1pm Eastern, Monday through Thursday

1:51

next week. A call-in show so you guys

1:53

can get involved in what we're doing

1:55

here.

1:55

It is one of the pieces that I have wanted

1:58

to integrate into everything else we're doing. doing

2:00

for a couple years now. We finally figured out a

2:02

way we can make it work. We're gonna be launching that next week.

2:05

It's gonna be Monday through Thursdays 1 p.m. Eastern.

2:07

We're doing our first test show with our locals Community

2:09

A just to make sure we got the tech right and

2:12

everything else. So I've posted about that

2:14

in locals. If you want to check it out, the cold open today

2:17

obviously was Jordan Peterson talking about the importance

2:19

of stories, in that case biblical

2:22

stories specifically. And the reason that I wanted to use

2:24

that as the cold open is

2:26

because I am just back from five

2:29

days in London at Jordan Peterson's

2:31

ARC conference, the Alliance for

2:33

Responsible Citizenship. And

2:36

you know in light of the last three

2:38

and a half weeks worth of news, or almost a month

2:40

now worth of news, we

2:43

have needed some positive

2:45

stories to be told. We have needed some

2:47

resurgence of the good ideas to put

2:50

away the bad ideas. And we are seeing

2:52

bad ideas just burst forth and

2:54

proliferate everywhere. Some of us have been warning

2:57

about it and even those who have been warning about

2:59

it I think are somewhat surprised at the level of depravity,

3:03

not just in the barbaric acts themselves, but the

3:05

response on so many college campuses and from

3:07

so many of our political leaders and people in the West

3:10

and all of that stuff. But the ARC conference,

3:12

ARC, which stands for the Alliance for Responsible

3:15

Citizenship, was so absolutely wonderful.

3:17

I just want to run through a couple pictures here. That

3:19

was me and Ben Shapiro. He was the surprise

3:22

guest at Jordan's last show.

3:24

There was a huge show about 20,000 people at the

3:26

O2. It was just Jordan at his

3:29

absolute best. There's Jordan at the O2

3:31

you can see and Jordan and his wife Tammy.

3:33

And there's a rare picture of my producer

3:36

Phoenix. Go back to that one. There you go.

3:38

There's Phoenix and you can see me in the background. And

3:40

we did, we shot about 20 interviews.

3:43

You'll recognize a whole bunch of those people from Eric Weinstein

3:46

and former speaker Kevin McCarthy,

3:48

although as he calls himself, once and always

3:50

speaker Kevin McCarthy, Brett

3:52

Weinstein, Andy Ngo, and many

3:54

more. So we're gonna be releasing a lot of those throughout

3:57

the week. Oh there's one more. So that's from the ARC conference

3:59

itself. I just really like that cool

4:01

shot. That's Jordan on stage with I on

4:03

her see Ali former former deputy prime

4:05

minister of Australia John Anderson

4:08

and some other folks and it was just

4:10

absolutely Inspiring, you know

4:12

the last couple weeks have definitely I think they've

4:14

taken a toll on Everybody

4:16

and we're all kind of looking to that shining

4:19

city like where is it? Which way are we supposed

4:21

to be going? What is the the vision

4:23

for the future that will be positive and it was just

4:25

so great to be around so many

4:27

people It was an invite only event for the

4:30

three days and then the the o2 event was public

4:32

but to be around You know about 1500 people

4:34

that we had all sorts of political differences. There were

4:36

people really much more on the right There were some

4:39

people it was harder to find, you know, sort of people

4:41

really on the left But like everybody from

4:43

all these different countries, I think they said there were 73

4:46

countries represented there And it

4:48

was really just wonderful and inspiring and

4:50

just one other thing before we get to the show today Which is sort of

4:52

framed around that idea How

4:54

do we have a vision for the future

4:57

and perhaps it's by looking back into our past? Maybe

4:59

we did do some good stuff. Maybe

5:01

our ancestors weren't all backwards racist

5:03

bigoted homophobe, but one other comment

5:06

real quick I seriously missed you guys,

5:09

you know, I was in LA for a couple days before we

5:11

went to London We did that show with with RFK

5:13

that live event there So I really haven't been

5:15

in show in studio for about a week and a half and you

5:17

know The show has grown in such

5:20

a way over the last couple weeks Especially

5:22

and I know you guys are looking You

5:24

know every every weekday at that 11 o'clock

5:26

Eastern to get a little bit of insight

5:28

or whatever it is that I offer Here and

5:30

I missed you and I thought about you every day and we

5:32

tried a couple times We were trying to figure out if there

5:35

was a way we could live stream from there But there were just so many

5:37

things going on. Anyway for the rest of the year.

5:39

I'm Basically, is it fair to

5:41

say that I'm basically here? I'm basically

5:43

in Miami and yeah We will

5:45

not be taking any days off And as I said, we're at

5:47

in the second show also later in this week

5:49

is the next Republican debate from

5:52

Miami so I think we'll have a couple surprises around

5:54

that and There we go. So

5:56

the theme a vision for the future

5:58

by looking back into our past

6:01

and I thought we could lay it out with a couple bullet

6:03

points. Who is the enemy right

6:05

now? We seem very confused about that.

6:08

What is the action of the enemy? What

6:10

are they doing right now that seems to be unfurling

6:12

so many things? What is the consequence

6:15

of those actions in America and

6:17

the West? What are our solutions

6:19

to what they are doing? And

6:22

finally, I think that there is

6:24

a solution and it's that bottom-up approach

6:26

that Jordan Peterson often talks about. So I thought

6:28

a nice way to start this would

6:30

be a clip that maybe some of you have seen because it was a couple

6:32

days ago while I was gone. But Elon

6:35

Musk was on Joe Rogan's show

6:37

and they were talking about George Soros. And George

6:39

Soros, as you guys know, he is the globalist

6:42

billionaire who has funded so

6:44

many of the politicians and

6:47

the DAs who have

6:49

ruined so many of our cities.

6:51

And Elon, well, Joe asked

6:54

Elon what he thought about George Soros

6:57

and I thought this was quite interesting.

7:00

The one often he has of the sort of George

7:02

Soros bogeyman. But I mean Soros actually,

7:05

you know, he is I believe the top

7:08

contributor to the Democratic Party.

7:10

The second one was Sam

7:12

Backward-Pre. So

7:15

and Soros, I don't know, I mean, he

7:18

had a very difficult upbringing. And

7:23

I, in my opinion, he

7:25

fundamentally hates humanity. That's my

7:27

opinion.

7:28

Really? Yeah. I mean, well, he's doing

7:31

things that erode the fabric of civilization, you

7:33

know, getting DAs elected who

7:35

refuse to prosecute crime. That's

7:38

part of the problem in San Francisco and

7:40

LA and much other cities.

7:42

So why would you do that? Was

7:46

it humanity or is it just the United States

7:48

as a whole?

7:50

I mean, he's pushing things in other countries, too.

7:52

He's doing the same thing.

7:54

I

8:00

haven't been on Twitter much the last couple of times. I

8:02

guess anything's possible. Anything for clicks,

8:04

right? Anyway, this idea

8:06

that George Soros, the things

8:09

that he puts money towards, these

8:11

DAs all over the place, right? And we know where

8:14

they are, right? They're in San Francisco, they're in Los Angeles.

8:16

As a matter of fact, when I went up to San Francisco

8:18

to meet with Elon Musk a couple months ago,

8:20

we stood in his office, which is

8:22

a corner office in Twitter, and he was

8:25

just pointing around, oh, that's where they get the

8:27

drugs, that's where they do the drugs. The

8:29

police are standing right there, they don't do anything.

8:31

So he has seen the way it has, systemically,

8:34

you can say the word systemically, in this case, it's an overused

8:36

word, destroyed San Francisco, you know

8:38

about Los Angeles. We did have a Soros

8:41

back to EA here in Florida, Ron DeSantis

8:43

got rid of him. But here's an interesting

8:45

moment. So you can

8:48

agree or disagree with Musk's

8:50

notion that Soros hates humanity. But

8:53

he then lays out what he

8:55

is actually doing, what Soros actually

8:58

figured out. It's not that you have to break

9:00

laws to destroy a society, you

9:02

just have to not enforce laws,

9:05

and that's an important distinction, take a look.

9:07

George at this point is pretty

9:10

old, I mean he's not, you

9:13

know, he's basically a casino

9:16

at this point. But I mean he, and he's very

9:18

smart, and

9:21

he's very good at arbitrage. You know, famously

9:24

he shorted the British pound, that's

9:27

sort of how I think he made his first

9:30

money for shorting the pound. So

9:32

he's good at spotting, basically

9:35

arbitrage like spotting value for money that other

9:37

people don't see. So one

9:40

of the things he noticed was that in, that

9:43

the value for money in local races is

9:47

much higher than it is in national races. The

9:49

lowest value for money is a presidential race.

9:52

Then next lowest value for money is a

9:54

senate race, then a congress, then,

9:57

but once you get to sort of city

9:59

and state. district attorneys, they

10:02

value money is extremely good.

10:04

And

10:05

Soros realized that you don't actually need to change

10:07

the laws, you just need to change how they're enforced.

10:11

If nobody chooses to enforce the law or the laws

10:13

are differentially enforced, it's like changing the laws.

10:18

That's what he figured out.

10:19

This is a really, really important point

10:22

and I think you'll see how I'm connecting it to everything

10:24

else going on in the world right now. It's

10:26

complex from an American perspective to change

10:28

laws, whether it's a city law or a state law

10:31

or a federal law, you have to go through either

10:33

the state senate or the senate nationally,

10:35

congress, etc. Or you

10:38

can push people into office, you can

10:40

back people who will simply

10:43

not do their job. And the system doesn't

10:45

know how to really react to those people. So

10:47

that, for example, might be a district attorney,

10:49

say George Gascon, who is now

10:52

the DA of Los Angeles, who

10:54

does not enforce laws. He doesn't enforce trespassing

10:57

laws, you can do drugs on the street, you can get

10:59

away with petty theft, you're literally allowed

11:02

to steal under, I think it's $899 worth of stuff. So

11:06

you can walk into a Best Buy, take

11:08

a Playstation 5, how much is that running these days?

11:10

PS5? About $400, you could

11:12

take about, what, you could get about four games,

11:14

another like $50 a game, or they're

11:16

usually about $70 a game now, right? So you get maybe

11:19

three games, but if you go over that $899, then

11:21

maybe they'll arrest you, but we know they're not gonna do that.

11:24

You've all seen the videos of CVS and

11:26

Dwayne Reed, all these drug

11:28

stores and department stores that are just barren

11:30

because they have to put stuff, either the shelves

11:32

are completely barren or they have to put stuff behind

11:35

glass so you can't get like a Gillette razor

11:38

unless you actually ask someone. You've

11:40

all seen all of this, but it's an important distinction,

11:42

what he's saying. Soros decided,

11:45

oh, we don't have to do the work. The work

11:48

would be getting people elected who will

11:50

change the laws. We can actually just get a

11:52

bunch of people who will not enforce them, right?

11:54

This is a fundamental difference and it's a much

11:57

easier way to destroy society.

11:59

By the way, that... one of the reasons, there were many reasons,

12:01

mostly related to COVID, but it was one of the reasons

12:04

that I left Los Angeles. I felt

12:07

that if something, if someone had

12:09

shown up to the door of my house and we had our mail broke

12:11

into and a bunch more, but if someone had hopped the fence,

12:13

for example, you were allowed to trespass.

12:16

If someone had tried to barge

12:18

into my house, that simply they would not have

12:20

done anything. If I had taken action to protect

12:23

myself and my property and my family, I would

12:25

be the enemy. This is what Soros

12:27

has basically ceded across

12:29

the nation. Then what he does is

12:32

also his DA's,

12:34

they bounce around. George Gascogne, who as

12:36

I said is now the DA of Los Angeles,

12:39

he is the former DA of San Francisco.

12:42

He actually destroyed San

12:44

Francisco and then they move him. That's

12:46

Democrat privilege. You never pay the price for

12:49

what you do. You just get moved elsewhere. Now

12:51

I want to connect this to something else because it's not just

12:54

the DA's. You could also get people

12:56

in charge of say, I don't know, the Department of

12:58

Homeland Security who simply

13:00

will not do their job. You could get people

13:02

at the federal level who are supposed to protect

13:05

our borders and they simply will not

13:07

do that. Check this out.

13:09

This video is going viral over the last couple

13:11

of days. This is our southern border

13:13

and you tell me, are the people

13:16

in charge of the border doing their

13:18

job or not?

13:27

I

13:36

think

13:38

you know the answer to the question that I posed.

13:41

But isn't that interesting? These people

13:43

who are seemingly all young, right?

13:45

They're all young. It's largely male. It

13:47

seems about 80 percent male, but all young. They all look like

13:49

they're in their 20s, 30s, maybe 40s, right? This

13:53

is very different than say, I don't

13:55

know, 1920s, 30s America when we had

13:57

a great boom of immigration.

14:00

from Eastern Europe and you would see the poor

14:02

and the tired and the huddle masses and old

14:05

women with one jacket and people

14:07

coming across with nothing. These people are wearing

14:09

pretty decent clothes. They don't seem like

14:11

they're really fleeing much of anything, but

14:14

that's a side bar to the larger issue. The

14:16

larger issue is we have not gotten

14:18

rid of any of our laws. We

14:21

as a society have decided to stop enforcing

14:23

them, and unfortunately I have to say we, because

14:26

even you watching this, if you did not vote for

14:28

any of these people, it is the

14:30

society that we're part of, and we have

14:32

to fix that thing, because what's

14:34

happening now is that then often

14:37

these people come here and

14:39

they create all sorts of crime, all sorts

14:41

of stress on our system, and if you say anything

14:43

about it you are then called a Nazi,

14:47

even though it's the people that

14:50

are defending Hamas and the rest of it that

14:52

are acting like the real Nazis. But then what happens

14:54

also is that the media starts

14:56

getting everything backwards, right, and they

14:58

start defending the bad guys and the criminals

15:01

and the illegals and taking out the

15:03

good people. So here's a story. This is from

15:05

Texas over the last couple days, and

15:08

there is a young teenage kid, I

15:11

will make no note of his race, you can decide

15:13

if you think there's a racial element to this yourself,

15:17

who went up to a complete stranger

15:19

at a park and slugged him.

15:21

You're gonna see the video, this is from Cypress,

15:23

Texas, and watch how the media frames the

15:25

story. This kid who attacked

15:28

this man for no

15:30

particular reason, watch the

15:32

suck job that the media did. 19

15:35

year old Alfred Lewis spoke with me about

15:38

how he feels about it now. You know, I

15:40

just made a mistake and everybody

15:43

makes mistakes. This is the video in question

15:46

first shared with KHOU11 via the

15:48

Nextdoor app. In it, you can clearly

15:50

see Lewis striking a man in the head

15:52

from behind before he turns around

15:55

in shock. I know like from the video

15:57

all you see is like the bad part about

15:59

it.

15:59

but

16:01

what people didn't

16:03

see was that I shook his hand after and

16:06

how I gave the man a hug. That

16:08

is something we cannot verify, nor can

16:11

we confirm that another man seen

16:13

in the video getting punched and grabbed

16:16

later left on good terms, according

16:18

to Lewis. I really didn't expect

16:20

for it to just go so left,

16:22

you know?

16:25

I have a lot of questions about that. So

16:27

he beats the crap. Basically could

16:29

have killed that guy. Like a slug like that from

16:32

the back of your head when you're not expecting him, absolutely

16:34

could kill you, absolutely could put you in a coma,

16:36

right? But now the media does this

16:38

job on him. Well, what did he think about it? He didn't

16:40

realize it was gonna go so crazy. The video

16:42

has only shown you a portion. He hugged the guy. So

16:45

he claims there's no video evidence of

16:47

the hug. But the

16:49

reason I am showing you this, that is a micro

16:51

version of something that has burst forth throughout

16:54

society. If you have the race situation

16:56

backwards on that, right? So let's just say,

16:59

I don't know, that kid looked like he was what, 15, 16 years old? 15, 16 year

17:02

old white kid, ran up behind

17:05

a random black dude, slugged

17:07

him like that. We would have riots in the

17:09

street. Barack Obama would be saying,

17:11

that guy looked like my son or my

17:14

cousin. But when it doesn't

17:16

fit the narrative, we suddenly humanize

17:19

the people and we

17:21

neutralize the vice and crime that

17:23

they are causing all over our

17:26

cities and towns. So now I wanna show

17:28

you one other thing. I unfortunately missed

17:30

Halloween here. The boys did dress

17:32

up. We got a lion and a tiger here. But

17:34

I unfortunately missed Halloween. But I wanna show you this video

17:37

that was also going viral over the last couple of days. This

17:39

is what appears, it's a little unclear if

17:41

these are illegal immigrants or not. So I'm gonna

17:43

put that aside for a moment. But this

17:45

is a video from Halloween that was going viral.

17:49

Well, take a look at the video. And again, this is somewhat

17:51

irrelevant whether they are illegal or not. I wanna talk

17:53

about behavior specifically and

17:56

how when we reward all of the wrong things,

17:58

that society starts collapsing.

17:59

Take a look.

18:29

Okay, so it's unclear to the Internet

18:31

whether those people are illegal or not. They obviously

18:34

weren't speaking English. It's actually a

18:36

moot...well, it's not a completely moot point whether they were

18:38

illegal or not, but I'm talking now more

18:40

about behavior, right? Because that video

18:42

is going viral. It's like, what are those people teaching

18:45

those children? Like, and I think

18:48

you can see how it starts with that,

18:50

right? If you have parents who

18:53

tell your kids, go ahead and steal, take

18:55

everyone else's candy. Not only

18:57

take everyone else's candy, we'll do it with you. By

19:00

the way, you shouldn't be eating all that candy. That's, I guess,

19:02

a sidebar call. But if you start

19:04

with that sort of thing, you can see how

19:06

those kids might grow up and

19:08

then walk into a Best Buy and

19:11

say, I'd like Call of Duty. I don't

19:13

have any cash. I'm going to take it and I'm going

19:15

to punch this security guard on the way out.

19:17

So these things actually are deeply

19:20

connected. And then what happens

19:22

is mainstream media punishes

19:25

all the wrong people. They constantly

19:27

go after all of the wrong people. So

19:30

now I want to show you a video, I believe this is from yesterday,

19:32

of quote unquote of late

19:34

night quote unquote comedian, Stephen

19:37

Colbert. And think of all of the things

19:39

that are happening in the world right now, all of the bad

19:42

people who should be exposed right now, all

19:44

of the wrongs that this guy could hit

19:46

if he was an actual comedian speaking

19:48

truth to power. But no, no, no, he's

19:51

going after the orange man.

19:53

Wow. Then Trump

19:56

weighed in on the attorneys that flipped on him

19:58

down in the Georgia election. fraud case. If

20:01

you want to challenge the results of

20:03

an election, they hound you. Look

20:06

what happened this weekend with two good people. They

20:08

hound them and they scare them and

20:11

they, but we don't get scared. We

20:13

don't get scared. I'll tell you what,

20:16

I don't mind being Nelson Mandela. No,

20:18

no, no, no, no, no, no, no,

20:21

no, no, no, no, no, no, I also

20:23

don't mind him being Nelson Mandela, specifically

20:26

the part where he goes to jail for 27 years.

20:32

Oh, ha ha, the applause

20:35

sign

20:36

went off, so they all applauded. Of course,

20:38

Nelson Mandela unjustly went

20:40

to jail for 27 years. Stephen

20:42

Colbert, you hack, which is exactly

20:45

what could potentially happen to Donald

20:47

Trump, whether or not he's done some things that

20:49

he shouldn't have. The selective prosecution

20:52

here, of course, is absolutely ridiculous,

20:55

but it's not just crime. And this is what

20:57

I want to link to everything else. It's culture. It's

21:00

erasing of everything that

21:02

is our history and what we know to be

21:04

good and bad, and then ushering

21:07

in this amoral drivel

21:09

where we don't know where we came from. So

21:11

now allow me to link it to something else. You may

21:14

have seen this. The Black History

21:17

Museum

21:18

has melted down a statue

21:20

of General Robert E. Lee. Now,

21:22

we know that General Robert E. Lee

21:24

was on the wrong side of the Civil War. I

21:27

am not defending Robert E. Lee

21:29

or slavery.

21:31

If we melt down,

21:33

burn down, tear

21:34

down every statue of our history,

21:37

how

21:37

will we ever know who the good guys and

21:39

bad guys were?

21:41

Do you think they will stop with just the

21:43

people who are the bad guys? Probably

21:46

not. Here's some video of the Black

21:48

Museum taken out, Robert

21:50

E. Lee.

22:05

People were very excited

22:07

about that. Again, it's not a defense

22:09

of Robert E. Lee to not

22:11

want the statue there. I have said

22:13

this many times, the better way to deal

22:16

with complex people of history and figures

22:18

who are controversial and using all

22:21

of our morals and ideals of today

22:23

is that if there's a statue of somebody,

22:25

you don't rip it down. Perhaps some of

22:27

them you could move to a museum so you don't

22:29

lose the historical context, but what

22:31

you could do in some of these cases is

22:34

put a plaque that explains

22:36

a bit more. So, okay, this statue

22:39

was put up in deference in honor

22:41

of this person, but as time has gone by and

22:43

we have learned more, here is

22:45

what we think of the history now. So,

22:48

if you don't want him in public, you

22:50

put him in a museum, not in a furnace,

22:53

because when we lose our history, we

22:55

will lose our future, right? We will literally,

22:58

if we lose the history, that will lose the future,

23:01

we won't know how to get to a decent

23:03

future. That really is the problem

23:05

and that now is what is happening

23:08

all over our college campuses and in

23:10

a very twisted way all over many of

23:12

our biggest cities. So, here is a pro-Hamas

23:14

rally in Brooklyn, New York. Brooklyn,

23:16

New York, which of course is home to one of the largest

23:19

populations of Jews in the United

23:21

States and they're calling for River to the Sea,

23:23

which is a genocide chant and

23:25

a bunch more and the New York

23:27

City Police Department, which is certainly

23:29

not the NYPD of the old

23:32

days, right? This is not Rudy Giuliani's NYPD.

23:34

These are largely good people who are trying. Many

23:37

of them have retired early. Many

23:39

of them have now been brought down to Florida because

23:41

DeSantis has said to these guys, hey, if you don't want

23:43

to work there and you're good and you're decent,

23:45

we'll take you down here. One of the

23:47

other things happening right now is that the blue states

23:50

are losing their good police officers because

23:52

the administrations don't back them. This is a problem. It

23:55

got a little violent in Brooklyn with the

23:57

pro-Hamas. And by the way, I have no problem calling

23:59

these people.

23:59

pro-Hamas protesters. People

24:02

keep saying, well, they're not all for Hamas. I have yet

24:04

to see anyone,

24:06

literally one person at any of these

24:08

rallies that is out there with the sign, I'm for

24:11

the Gazans, but I am against Hamas,

24:13

right? All of these things, all of these

24:15

protests broke out after Hamas killed

24:18

about 1,400 Israelis and

24:20

still have 200 hostages,

24:22

including about a dozen Americans, which nobody seems

24:24

to care about. Anyway, here's Brooklyn just in

24:27

the last day or two. I gotta

24:29

say, the police are trying.

24:52

They are trying

24:54

to let people peacefully protest. One

24:57

of the things that we are gonna be challenged on going

24:59

forward constantly is what are the limits

25:01

of free speech? If you are chanting for

25:04

genocide, how close does that get to

25:06

a direct threat of violence? If you are targeting,

25:09

as they've done in London repeatedly now, if

25:11

you target just a random store

25:14

owned by a Jew for your anti-Israel

25:17

supposed protest, are you infringing

25:19

on the rights of that person to

25:22

own their store, right? To basically run

25:24

a business. And we know this thing

25:26

is far more than anger over

25:29

Israel's response to what happened in Southern

25:31

Israel. This was all coordinated, it was all

25:33

ready. Just think back to BLM. They

25:35

turn this thing on when they want

25:38

and they turn it off when they don't want.

25:40

And by the way, that is deeply connected to

25:42

George Soros and the people who fund

25:44

all of these organizations, right? BLM

25:47

was funded to the tunes of hundreds,

25:49

hundreds

25:50

of millions of dollars, if not billions

25:53

of dollars. Did they send one black kid? We

25:56

could do a little research on that. Did they open one

25:58

black shop? Did they do anything? about urban

26:01

renewal in black communities or did they just get

26:03

a bunch of people, a bunch of grifters real

26:05

rich? Well when you watch

26:08

those people, and by the way, it's a strange

26:10

confluence. I'd say you have some genuine

26:12

kind of like Islamists out there who wanna

26:15

take down the United States and we have to figure out if they're

26:17

here legally or not and that distinction

26:20

is important when figuring out what to do with them, that's

26:22

one thing. Then you have the set of confused

26:25

moron, college kids

26:27

and whatever. Then you have just like a bunch of losers

26:31

with nothing to do and it's like okay, that's

26:34

kind of what's all going on there. But

26:36

the point is they make up some intersectional,

26:40

disgusting coalition

26:43

of lunatics. Unfortunately,

26:45

we as a society right now, we don't know what to do

26:48

about that. We don't and I have to

26:50

tell you, having been in London, like the people

26:52

of London, they don't know what to do with it. It's

26:55

not that most people in London are

26:57

these radical

27:00

people cheering on the death of Jews. Of course

27:02

not, I would venture to say it's far more, it's probably 90%

27:05

of the people that are against it. I don't have the exact numbers.

27:07

We're gonna work on getting some numbers on that and

27:09

I think especially in America, we certainly, most

27:12

people are not for this, but the good people,

27:14

the huge silent majority,

27:17

we simply do not know what to do about

27:19

them because we've in some essence lost the

27:21

culture war. So we don't have enough good

27:23

people out there fighting this stuff. One

27:26

good person who's out there fighting this stuff is Hia

27:28

Rechik. You know her better, she's better known

27:31

as Libs of TikTok on Twitter

27:33

and she just does an absolute great

27:35

job. She has confronted some of the people from

27:37

our Hamas caucus on the floors of

27:40

the house many times. Here she is in the last day

27:42

or two, going after AOC

27:45

and trying to get her to condemn Hamas

27:47

or anything. And just like we've shown you these videos

27:50

from Ilhan Omar, we've shown you these videos from

27:52

Rashida Tlaib. They seem incapable of

27:55

condemning people who literally put children

27:57

into ovens. That seems a bridge too far for these

27:59

people.

27:59

can take a look.

28:23

Do

28:31

you care? Do you

28:34

care that Hamas is holding American hostage? What

28:37

do you say to the families of Americans who

28:40

are currently being held hostage by Hamas?

28:44

Does the Hamas caucus have a statement about

28:46

it? That

28:51

was really great. That's not easy to do

28:53

to get in somebody's face. It looks like it can be fun

28:56

or silly, but it's not the easiest thing to do. I've

28:58

been around these people and security, and you don't know what

29:00

they're going to do to you. So that's just a beautiful

29:02

moment. But notice, AOC again, she

29:05

just simply cannot condemn these people. And

29:07

she was so excited to take the picture at first, and then

29:10

she realized, oh, oh, oh, oh, it's her. And

29:12

then what is her answer? Why doesn't she like her?

29:14

Because she's transphobic, which means

29:16

that Qaya has an irrational fear of trans people. No,

29:20

that is not true in the word, much like Islamophobic.

29:23

It's completely ridiculous. It's not

29:25

about an irrational fear. It in this case is more

29:27

about she doesn't want little boys' wangs

29:29

cut off so that they can pretend that they're

29:31

girls in the name of tolerance and diversity.

29:34

All right. So AOC, and by

29:36

the way, as you know, AOC has no knowledge of

29:39

the history or anything else. And the revolution

29:41

will eat her. The way the revolution is eating Bernie Sanders,

29:43

who's largely irrelevant, hallelujah.

29:46

The revolution will eventually eat AOC. So there

29:48

is a silver lining to all of this, guys. But

29:50

the point is that

29:52

people like AOC and the political

29:54

class who either is ushering this in intentionally

29:57

or just sort of burying their heads in the sand, they

29:59

have been fine. by guys like George Soros

30:02

and that milieu of people are

30:04

basically looking to

30:07

take out all of Western heritage and it's

30:09

not just here in the United States. I want to

30:11

show you a video of the Scottish Labour

30:13

Party leader. His name is Anas Starwar

30:17

and he is very upset that there's so

30:19

many people that are white in Scotland.

30:23

Every chief executive of every council and

30:25

every government department white. Every

30:28

director of a department in Scotland

30:30

white. Every principal of a college

30:32

or university in Scotland white. Every

30:35

head teacher in Scotland white. Every

30:38

chair of a public sector body in Scotland

30:40

white. Every High Court judge in Scotland

30:43

white. Every prison governor in Scotland

30:45

white. Every editor of

30:47

a news organization in Scotland

30:50

white. Why? You know

30:52

every time I've watched Braveheart I've always thought that

30:54

Mel Gibson should have been cast as a black

30:56

guy. I found it personally offensive.

30:59

That guy is there only

31:01

to destroy Scotland. Let's be

31:03

very very clear about it. Actually in the interview if

31:05

you want to know a little bit more about him and by the way you're

31:07

not gonna believe this his wife is Alistinian.

31:10

If you want to know a bit more about him in my interview that

31:12

we're gonna put up next week as I said I did about 20 interviews

31:15

throughout the week with Douglas Murray. He really

31:18

Douglas is in such sharp

31:20

based Douglas Murray mode. He

31:22

has been warning about all of this for years

31:25

right. His book The Strange Death of Europe from what seven

31:27

years ago. He is just so

31:29

sharp and focused and clear on all

31:31

of this. I have two Scottish employees in the

31:33

studio right now. Do you have Scottish blood? Do

31:36

you? I feel like you must have Scottish blood. Who's my other?

31:38

You have Scottish blood? My and look at you. Connor's

31:41

literally the whitest person I've ever seen. He's

31:43

going after you. He's going after

31:45

you. You at least have a little more color from Italy or

31:49

Anyway the point the point is Scotland

31:51

okay they have white people. These people

31:54

are here to destroy the West

31:57

and if you don't see that already you

31:59

can be

31:59

bury your head in the sand, but that just

32:02

means that they will behead you a little

32:04

bit lower on the neck. That's how it works.

32:07

Now I wanna show you something,

32:09

because the few days before

32:11

I went to London, I actually was debating

32:14

whether I was gonna go at all because of these crazy protests

32:16

there, these Hamas

32:19

rallies, again, they are Hamas rallies.

32:21

I will say that until proven wrong. Until

32:23

you get me a rally of a couple thousand people

32:26

chanting no Hamas, then I'm

32:28

gonna call them Hamas rallies. This

32:30

was the massive one. This was just

32:32

hours before I landed in London. Take a look.

32:35

They say that was over 100,000 people.

33:01

I don't know about the exact numbers, but

33:03

you saw a big bend in that picture, beautiful

33:06

building. We were right there. We were right there.

33:08

We walked by that. Actually, one night I was going to dinner. We

33:10

were in a car and we drove right by

33:13

one of the Hamas rallies. The

33:15

question is,

33:17

really, do

33:18

you think these people are proud

33:20

British citizens? Who

33:22

is more indigenous to the land? Do you think it's

33:24

the ancient, it's the Jews in the ancient

33:27

land of Israel, the Bible, all

33:29

of that stuff, the story where Jesus

33:31

was from and where Hanukkah took place and all that.

33:33

Do you think the Jews have a little more connection with that land? Or

33:36

those 100,000 people who are somehow in Britain

33:39

there to undermine the very

33:41

Western values that allowed them to be there

33:43

in the first place? That is the question. And as

33:46

I have said repeatedly and will continue to say, if

33:49

you don't care about Jews and you don't care about Israel,

33:51

it's fine. It actually is fine, right? Like

33:53

everyone can care about whatever is important in your

33:55

hierarchy of things you care about, that's just fine.

33:58

But if you think that if they,

33:59

take out

34:01

that tiny little country the size of New Jersey,

34:04

wipe out all the Jews there. If you think that those people

34:06

in London and in Paris and in Brussels

34:09

and in Amsterdam are gonna wash their hands

34:11

and be like, okay, we're good, let's go home and let's be

34:13

great citizens and build a great free country,

34:15

no. They've been

34:18

empowered and emboldened and they will come

34:20

for everybody else. Of course, the next part

34:22

of this, I believe this is also from London, check out this

34:24

flag. This is very exciting. From

34:26

one of these protests, they have combined

34:29

the psychotic and racist France

34:31

flag. So you have people who want to chop the

34:34

genitals off children. They have combined that

34:37

with the Palestinian slash

34:39

Hamas flag, which is better noted

34:41

for wanting to chop the heads off

34:43

babies. So whether it is your genitals

34:45

or your head, you will

34:48

be severely wounded by the time

34:51

they are done with you. Okay,

34:54

so now that we've shown you what's going on in

34:56

London today, and

34:58

by the way, all things being equal, I

35:00

had a nice time in London. As I said, the event

35:03

itself, I was largely just going from the hotel

35:05

to the event. I did go to a couple dinners

35:07

and things. I had a nice time in London. There were a lot of

35:09

good people in London. The British

35:11

people are waking up to this. So I am not the smurching

35:14

all the people of Great

35:16

Britain. I am not going after all the Londoners. Again,

35:18

good people don't know exactly what

35:21

to do, but when you see those 100,000 people

35:23

marching out there and you know, you just

35:27

know it in your bones. They don't care about

35:29

Britain. They are there to invade.

35:31

They are calling for their Islamist armies.

35:33

They are calling for the rise from

35:36

the river to the sea and all of those things. What

35:38

do you think the future of London will look like?

35:41

Oh, I would recommend you read any of Douglas Murray's

35:43

books or watch the interview we're gonna have in a couple days. We

35:45

thought we should, we've shown you this once before, but I thought it was worth

35:47

noting again because it was in my head the entire time

35:50

I was London. Here's London in 1960. you

36:30

you A

36:49

beautiful architecture people

36:51

going about their business well-dressed

36:53

the society on its way up with

36:56

a great history Right, right like

36:58

Britain London England. There's a great history

37:00

there of Western values and then since 1960

37:04

What has happened massive migration

37:06

of? Massive open borders

37:08

that have allowed all sorts of people to come in and have

37:11

their own little pockets We actually drove through

37:13

one of the little pockets that let's just say if Dave

37:15

Rubin had got out of his car It

37:18

probably wouldn't have gone that well they

37:21

had now have Infected their

37:23

society with something that

37:25

the good people of their side society don't know

37:27

what to do it They had a beautiful flower

37:30

an absolutely beautiful flower But

37:33

today that flower has been cut from its roots

37:36

what happens when a flower is cut from its

37:38

roots Well, here's ion her see Ali on

37:40

stage with Jordan Peterson and a couple other people at

37:43

the Alliance for Responsible Citizenship Conference

37:46

that I was at

37:47

What I the quotes that you just had

37:49

about you know Western civilization

37:51

is a cut flower and cut flowers die That

37:55

is true

37:56

cut flowers die. That is true. So

37:59

what do we do? do, because we are seeing now

38:01

that whether it's in America, to

38:04

a lesser extent I would say largely in Western Europe,

38:06

some of the places I mentioned,

38:07

France, Britain, Belgium,

38:11

Holland, they have a much bigger problem

38:13

with all of this. But the purpose of the art

38:15

conference was to try to figure

38:18

out what is the

38:20

story, what is the story that we knew,

38:22

that we forgot, that we must remember

38:25

so we can get out of this mess. Ayaan

38:27

continued.

38:28

Cut flowers do die, but what we

38:31

have in terms of Western

38:33

civilization is a lot of seed packets.

38:36

And I want to send you off with these seed

38:38

packets which you find in libraries, which

38:41

you find in, you know, wise

38:43

people like you, like Roger Scruton, like

38:45

all these other people that I mentioned. In

38:48

statues we have the

38:51

remnants, the symbols of

38:53

Western heritage and

38:56

their seeds, and all we have to do,

38:58

those of us who inherited it and enjoyed,

39:00

is to go and seed them, grow them,

39:03

nurture them, water them, and when

39:05

they attack, fall for them.

39:11

I just adore that woman. I did have

39:13

a sit down with Ayaan Hirsi Ali that you'll see

39:15

as well. I've had Ayaan a few times on the show. Her story

39:18

is, she is the living, breathing embodiment

39:21

of how good the West is. A woman who was

39:23

born in Sudan, who underwent female

39:26

genital mutilation, who was forced to be married,

39:28

who was raped, eventually

39:30

made it to Holland, became a member

39:33

of parliament in Holland, along with Theo

39:35

van Gogh, Vincent van Gogh's, was it his

39:37

son or grandson, I'm blanking, who was assassinated

39:40

on the streets of Amsterdam by

39:42

an Islamist, and then they pinned a note

39:45

on Theo van Gogh basically saying, Ayaan,

39:47

we're coming for you next. Thus she moved

39:49

to the United States of America. That's

39:52

not what she's talking about there. We have the seeds.

39:54

And you know what those seeds are? Those seeds

39:57

are things like individual rights. Those

39:59

seeds are... things like free speech, knowing

40:01

where we came from and how we got there. Now

40:04

I wanna show you this video that, I'm

40:06

guessing you've probably seen it because it went super, super

40:09

viral, but this is just so great. This made me proud.

40:12

So much of what I see out in New York City these days, I'm

40:14

like, oh man, that's just so not the New York

40:16

City that I once knew and

40:17

lived in for 20 years, my

40:20

most formative years in my early 20s and to mid 30s.

40:26

Here is a video from New York City, I think it's in Queens actually,

40:29

and watch as one of these

40:31

people, one of these awful human beings,

40:33

I don't know if he's there legally or not, he's

40:35

ripping down signs of kidnapped and murdered

40:38

children in Israel. We don't know why he's doing

40:40

that. I mean, you could be for

40:42

whatever you believe to be the plight of the Palestinians,

40:44

still understand that kidnapping and murdering

40:46

children is not a good idea, but watch

40:48

the way some of these true New Yorkers, this

40:51

guy is such a true New Yorker, watch

40:54

how they respond, this is so absolutely beautiful.

40:57

Now what are you doing? You

40:59

know where they are right now? Do you have any idea where they

41:01

are right

41:04

now? All right, I'm a veteran. I'm

41:07

not Jewish, he's not Jewish, I don't

41:10

know if he is or not, it doesn't matter. This

41:12

is in the US, it's New York City, you

41:14

don't have a right to touch that. It's

41:17

a free country, you go away, you pass that flag

41:19

and say, that's the use of America, whatever you are,

41:22

but we can put the stuff on, okay? Then

41:25

don't rip that down, you are doing something, you're offending

41:27

us. Yeah,

41:30

you are, when you throw that on the floor, you're leaving the city.

41:32

In a minute, I'm gonna let it on the floor with you. You

41:35

don't move the fuck on. You have proof that

41:37

not a kid knows. No, so shut the fuck

41:39

up. I know

41:42

that's what you want. I'm late, dying, I'm late.

41:44

I'm not doing the hospital,

41:46

come on. I mean, it's so good, the

41:48

emotion and the spirit that New York used

41:50

to have, right? Like, and yes, he got

41:52

as close as you can get without

41:54

punching somebody and all of that stuff. I have

41:56

been trying to find this guy online. Apparently we were

41:58

able to find one of the other. other guys, but I got

42:01

a thousand bucks. I will treat that guy at

42:03

a Peter Luger steakhouse or whatever he wants

42:05

to do in New York with all his friends

42:07

or whatever. If I can get up there, I'd be happy to go

42:09

up and break bread with him and

42:11

those guys. And how beautiful, like it doesn't matter. As he said,

42:14

I'm not Jewish, he's not Jewish. It doesn't matter. We

42:16

believe in America, right? And it's like,

42:18

and that, the other guy, I'm a veteran like, and this

42:21

disgusting pig. And that's what that

42:23

man is. He has nothing, he has nothing

42:25

to say. Absolutely nothing to

42:27

say. So that guy right there

42:29

with the glasses on his head, showing

42:32

the passion and showing the belief and showing the spirit

42:34

of America, he's the one that's actually

42:36

replanting the seeds. Because if we don't

42:39

start getting some of that attitude, all of

42:41

us, all of us, dare I say it, don't

42:43

get a backbone like a ramrod. We

42:46

are going to continue the

42:48

descent to hell.

42:50

So now I wanna show you, and I think we're gonna try to

42:52

play this full video. We're gonna see if we can get it from the ARC

42:54

folks. At the end of the ARC conference, which again, was

42:56

three days of academics

42:59

and political leaders and thinkers and influencers

43:02

and all these people giving incredible speeches. I

43:04

kid you not when I say this, I am not being hyperbolic

43:06

or sarcastic or exaggerating.

43:10

Jordan Peterson gave the best

43:12

speech I have ever heard in my

43:15

life. Not just the best Jordan Peterson

43:17

speech, the best speech I have ever heard in

43:19

my life. It was a distillation of everything

43:22

I have ever seen this man do. And let's not forget, I

43:24

toured with the guy for a year and a half, 120 shows, about 20 countries. I

43:28

saw him take all of the work he has

43:30

ever done and combine it. I wanna

43:32

show you, it's about a minute and a half clip, just

43:35

a portion of it. We'll try to repost the

43:37

full thing, but perhaps, guys,

43:39

there are some answers and sort of where we started

43:41

at the beginning of the show. Perhaps we just have to look

43:44

backwards to figure out that

43:46

we are actually a piece of the thing

43:48

that might fix it.

43:50

Perhaps, Jordan. And that's

43:52

what's happening to the young people that we see who

43:54

are adrift. They're taught to be nothing

43:56

but self-conscious, to do nothing

43:58

but think about their immediate. immediate needs,

44:00

to refer to themselves as the

44:02

locus of all things, and there's nothing

44:05

you could do that would make them

44:07

more miserable. It's identical

44:09

with the instruction in

44:11

misery. And you want to be outside yourself

44:14

serving a higher purpose, and maybe

44:16

you're cynical about that, but you

44:19

can think about it technically. Well, why

44:21

do you bring a fort to the table? Well, so

44:23

that you can put a plate beside

44:24

it. And why do you put a plate on

44:27

the table? And so that you can set

44:29

the table to serve your family, to

44:31

share food, to bring together the

44:32

people you love in something approximating

44:35

harmony as a microcosm

44:37

of the entire cosmic

44:40

theater.

44:40

And you can replicate that at every

44:42

level of complexity all the way up to

44:44

what's at the pinnacle. And that's

44:47

all real. And so is what's

44:49

at the pinnacle. And we've

44:51

forgotten all of that. And as a

44:54

consequence of forgetting that, we've forgotten

44:56

the responsibility that we need to

44:58

bear in our life to make our

45:00

lives bearable. And we've forgotten

45:02

the meaning and the adventure and the purpose

45:05

and the significance

45:05

of the

45:07

earned self-regard that goes

45:10

along with that sacrificial attitude. And

45:12

we've forgotten to tell our children the

45:14

same thing. And we could remember,

45:17

we could remember who we

45:19

are. We could remember who

45:22

we are. And that's what this conference

45:24

was for, to remind people,

45:27

everyone who attends, who you are

45:30

right here the...

45:35

I'm telling you guys, I sat in that room with over a thousand

45:38

people. You could not only hear a pin drop, which

45:40

I've been through that with Jordan many times before, but

45:42

I don't know that there was a dry eye in there. When

45:45

you hear truth, what I always tell you, we play all these

45:47

clips of these politicians lying and you can feel it

45:49

in your body. It's not right. It's

45:51

not good. It's why they're always screaming and emoting.

45:54

And something like truth comes and you hear

45:57

it and it gets in you. And that

45:59

is what Jordan is saying. asking us to remember. I'm also reminded,

46:01

it's funny I didn't even think of this when I was hearing it the first time.

46:04

One of the things that I really like to do, and I actually wrote

46:06

about it in Dumper in this country, like

46:08

we love having big dinner parties here. I love

46:10

setting the table. And I finally connected in my

46:12

mind. Literally, I was just watching that. I was there live

46:15

for it. I've watched it twice since. But it just hit

46:17

me. Like there was a, it's not just to have a nice table.

46:19

It's like there is a reason that

46:21

if you set the table properly and

46:23

then you invite people over, they dress

46:25

a certain way. And you all sort of believe

46:28

in whatever your shared values

46:31

are. Let's say the values of goodness

46:33

and community and decency. And you share a

46:35

meal and you talk about things. But

46:37

you start feeding

46:39

the ground, as I am asked us

46:41

to do. You start feeding the ground for a

46:43

better society. So we're almost at

46:46

the end of the show today. So I now want to go back

46:48

to just an image. Remember that family that we showed

46:50

you? It doesn't matter, as I said earlier, within

46:52

the context of how I'm describing it, it does not matter whether they're

46:55

here illegally or not. It matters in a meta

46:57

sense. But for the purposes of stealing

46:59

the candy, it doesn't remember it. So let's show you a picture of that family

47:01

again. We don't have to show you the full thing. So here they

47:03

are. And there was also a young guy there that you can't

47:05

quite see in the yellow. And they're just grabbing

47:08

all the candy taken from everybody. They are

47:10

stealing. They are showing their kids it's okay to

47:12

steal. They're going to get fat and their teeth

47:14

are going to rot. And they're going to get everything they deserve.

47:17

And that's what they're doing to society.

47:19

But there's a better way.

47:52

How about we all fill up that bowl? What do

47:54

you think? I'll do it if you will. Guys,

47:56

parts one and two of my interview with RFK

47:59

on location. in Los Angeles are

48:01

up right now. The full things on Locals, of course. If

48:03

you have not joined us on Rumble,

48:05

rumble.com slash RubinReport. Post

48:07

game show, as I said, coming up right now at rubinreport.locals.com.

48:10

And later today we're running our first test

48:13

of the new call-in show, which will debut next

48:16

week. That's you guys being part of the show

48:18

uncensored. I wanna hear what you think about things.

48:20

I have often said in the midst

48:22

of anything, if I've learned anything over the last couple years,

48:25

and I like to think I've learned a couple things, it's

48:27

that often you guys have as much, if

48:29

not more, insight

48:29

than a lot of the people that I'm sitting down

48:32

with. So I've wanted to do this show for a long time. I'm psyched

48:34

that we're gonna finally launch it. So we're doing our first test

48:36

version. And if you want to be part

48:38

of that, and then be part of the queue of

48:40

people that we'll be selecting to be on the show, you can join

48:42

us at rubinreport.locals.com. Ah,

48:46

I was about to say the show is a 10, the rare 10. And

48:48

then I got rubinreport.locals.com wrong.

48:51

All right, we're gonna nine-nine this thing. We

48:53

leave you with another guy who knew a little something

48:55

about what your responsibility in society

48:58

is. And we'll see everybody on the other side.

49:00

And so my fellow Americans,

49:04

ask not what

49:06

your country can do for you, ask

49:09

what you can do for your country. Thank

49:12

you.

49:38

Thanks for tuning into The

49:40

Rubin Report. You can watch the show live

49:42

every weekday at 11 a.m. Eastern

49:44

and 8 a.m. Pacific on Rumble, Locals,

49:47

and YouTube.

49:48

Don't forget to rate, review, share, and

49:50

subscribe to this podcast. And

49:52

you can join me for the post-game wrap-up

49:55

every day after the show at rubinreport.locals.com.

Unlock more with Podchaser Pro

  • Audience Insights
  • Contact Information
  • Demographics
  • Charts
  • Sponsor History
  • and More!
Pro Features