Episode Transcript
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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.
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