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Timcast IRL #1023 BIDEN IMPEACHMENT FILED, GOP Files Saying Its THE SAME As Trump Ukraine w/Josh Smith

Timcast IRL #1023 BIDEN IMPEACHMENT FILED, GOP Files Saying Its THE SAME As Trump Ukraine w/Josh Smith

Released Saturday, 11th May 2024
 1 person rated this episode
Timcast IRL #1023 BIDEN IMPEACHMENT FILED, GOP Files Saying Its THE SAME As Trump Ukraine w/Josh Smith

Timcast IRL #1023 BIDEN IMPEACHMENT FILED, GOP Files Saying Its THE SAME As Trump Ukraine w/Josh Smith

Timcast IRL #1023 BIDEN IMPEACHMENT FILED, GOP Files Saying Its THE SAME As Trump Ukraine w/Josh Smith

Timcast IRL #1023 BIDEN IMPEACHMENT FILED, GOP Files Saying Its THE SAME As Trump Ukraine w/Josh Smith

Saturday, 11th May 2024
 1 person rated this episode
Rate Episode

Episode Transcript

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0:00

Basically, Joe Biden said to Israel,

0:02

do not engage in military actions.

0:05

The ones that we don't want you to do

0:07

otherwise, we will not give you congressionally approved military

0:09

aid, which he does not have the authority to

0:11

do according to Democrats. And

0:14

then he did withhold it

0:16

when Israel, or actually,

0:20

before they even went into Rafa. So that's your quid pro

0:22

quo. Why'd he do it?

0:24

Well, he's getting attacked mercilessly by

0:26

many young Democrats for his

0:28

support of Israel and he's trying to

0:31

signal that he's on the right

0:33

side of history or whatever it is. So he's desperate for those

0:35

political points. And now they filed for

0:37

impeachment. I don't know that actually goes anywhere, but

0:39

last night we were talking about how

0:41

they were preparing to impeach him. Now they've

0:43

actually, it's been formally filed by Corey Mills.

0:46

We'll see if that actually goes anywhere. We'll

0:48

talk about that. But the big news, of

0:50

course, outside of that is, Michael Rapaport has

0:52

withdrawn his endorsement. And as you know, that's

0:55

a very big deal. It's

0:57

big enough in that, I mean,

0:59

Rapaport, such a strong

1:01

anti-Trump personality coming out in the

1:03

way he is, it's indicative of what we're seeing for a lot of

1:05

different people. So we'll talk about that. But then I suppose the actual

1:08

real big story, which, you know, we probably could

1:10

have let off with,

1:12

is the ex-class solar flare

1:15

that is barreling towards earth has already made

1:17

contact in some places. Europe is

1:20

already seeing the Northern Lights, but they're

1:22

red instead of green. So whip out

1:24

your biblical prophecies, prepare for a lesson

1:26

in eschatology, because we're going to talk

1:28

about whatever that means, but I actually

1:30

don't know enough anyway, so we'll do

1:32

that. Before we get started, my friends,

1:34

head over to casprew.com, buy coffee. We

1:36

got great coffee. Some say it's the best, at least

1:38

that's what I've been told. Appalachian Nights sells like hotcakes.

1:41

Rise with Alberto Jr.'s a close second, but

1:43

really, Appalachian Nights is big. Everybody really loves

1:45

it. And then we got our Alex Steins

1:47

Primetime Grind, two times caffeine, drink responsibly. You

1:50

know, caffeine, you know, you got to drink responsibly. And

1:52

head over to timcast.com, click join us to

1:54

become a member, and hang out in the Discord

1:57

server with like-minded individuals, but also. Here

2:00

in the Discord server, you are networking, you're

2:02

connecting with people, and you'll get access to

2:04

our Monday through Thursday Members Only call-in show

2:06

with a huge library of all of our

2:08

uncensored shows going way back. And

2:11

more importantly, it's about the networking and

2:13

being a member supports the show. It's how we make

2:15

the show happen. So smash that like button, subscribe to

2:17

this channel, share the show with all your friends. Joining

2:19

us tonight to talk about this and so much more

2:21

is Joshua Smith. Hey, how's it going Tim? Thanks so

2:23

much for having me on again. For

2:26

those who don't know, I'm a candidate for president for the Libertarian

2:28

Party. Our nomination is coming up in two weeks, so maybe we

2:30

get the nomination or maybe we don't. I

2:32

don't know. Also the host of Break the

2:34

Cycle with Joshua Smith Live on Tuesdays and Thursdays. Thanks

2:36

for having me. Easy enough. Shane's hanging out. Yo, harp

2:38

is trending. The sun is exploding. I'm

2:41

Shane Cashman and Inverted World

2:43

Live is going to debut on

2:45

Sunday, 6pm on

2:47

YouTube at Tales from the Inverted World. My

2:49

first guest will be Tim Pool. We will

2:52

talk about reality. We will talk about the

2:54

sun exploding. Talk about ghosts. Yeah. Tales

2:56

from the Inverted World, I'm 100%

2:58

serious. Tales from the Inverted World

3:00

is filmed on location in a haunted house. I've

3:02

been living in a haunted house for three years.

3:04

I want to stress this again. I

3:07

am not joking or exaggerating. We

3:10

actually got a barn house that was built

3:12

in the 1850s and fixed it up and

3:15

that's where the show is

3:17

actually shot and filmed. The staff

3:19

at Timcast have been complaining about weird goings on

3:21

there. I'm not joking. They're hearing strange sounds. Doors

3:24

are flaming. It is bizarre and we are filming

3:26

the show on there. Shane saw the meme online

3:28

that's like stay here for $1 million and he

3:30

just stayed. He never left. I didn't

3:32

even need a million dollars. I got to be honest. If

3:34

you're a ghost, you're pissed because every space of that

3:36

building is occupied by workers. Yes. But

3:39

the first week of being here, people are like, hey,

3:41

there's some weird stuff going on here. I'm

3:44

like, well, you're in a haunted house. I don't know what that

3:46

means. I don't know if they're ghosts. I'm just telling you, it's

3:48

a house that is 170 years old. The

3:51

ceilings are like 6'5 because people

3:53

were short back then. We're

3:55

getting call-ins on Sundays. We

3:57

have people lined up to call in. We'll

4:00

be hearing their crazy stories about ghosts and

4:02

centaurs and near-death experience. Oh, yeah, it's wild

4:04

Yeah, you do know that six five ceilings

4:06

weren't big enough for Nephilim Giants. So at

4:08

least you go get there Yeah, they might

4:10

be underground To come back. We

4:12

got still hanging out. Hello everybody. My name is Philip

4:14

Monty. I'm the lead singer the heavy metal band all

4:17

that remains I'm a counter. Oh geez messed it up.

4:19

They I'm an anti-communist in the counter revolutionary. I do

4:21

an end Claire I can't believe you messed that up.

4:23

Why? Just your it's your

4:25

I am not perfect who you are. It's the only thing I

4:27

thought that was your whole name at one point I'm

4:29

here for a room. I'm a writer for

4:31

SCNR calm. I'm tonight tonight's diversity higher Hello,

4:38

yeah, let's get started Tim here's the here's

4:40

the big news I guess you know well,

4:42

definitely I think the solar flare might be

4:44

bigger news, but When they

4:47

filed to impeach the president, yeah,

4:49

I feel like you can't ignore it and I gotta

4:51

be honest I feel kind of bored

4:53

with it. Okay, so we all know Biden. He's being accused

4:56

of a quid pro quo He he

4:58

tells Israel if you invade Rafa I'm

5:00

not gonna give you the military aid

5:02

which is beyond his capabilities as president

5:05

because Congress has already approved the aid

5:07

to be Delivered to Israel. I'm not

5:09

saying we like that but Joe Biden

5:11

doesn't have the authority to Unilaterally

5:13

deny Congress having voted to pass this

5:15

aid. That is one branch acting like

5:17

they can do so much more now

5:19

Don't get me wrong The president

5:22

sets foreign policy and the president and in my

5:24

opinion actually could do this But the standard has

5:26

been set by Democrats when they impeached Donald Trump

5:28

for doing the exact same thing Because Trump said

5:30

to Ukraine we're not gonna give you the aid

5:33

We want to know what's going on and then

5:35

Ukraine said okay, and then what up that said he's impeached So

5:38

now Joe Biden's got to go and then we can

5:40

have I don't know Kamala Harris, I guess Why

5:46

they're gonna jump into the oh well It was different

5:48

because Donald Trump did this or it was different because

5:50

blah blah blah There's already people

5:52

beginning to make that argument on Twitter

5:55

and the why does not matter the fact of

5:57

the matter is that

5:59

Congress approved the

6:01

shipments, whether you like them or not,

6:03

Congress did, and then the President threatened

6:06

to intercede

6:08

in those shipments because of

6:10

politics. The President does not have

6:12

the authority to do that. If you're going

6:14

to impeach Donald Trump for

6:16

it, you've got to impeach Joe Biden for it,

6:19

or at least there is justification to impeach Joe

6:21

Biden for it. Listen, I'm not going to- I

6:23

think good for the Republicans for doing it because

6:25

after Democrats. I'm not going to do what past

6:27

libertarian candidates have done and say, they're great public

6:29

servants, but I'm riding with Biden on this one.

6:31

All right? Look, I

6:33

believe the President should have the power, even if they don't,

6:36

I believe they probably do have the power to veto spending

6:38

bills. And this is, to me, it's a spending bill. And

6:41

the AEMF has given the President the

6:43

power to direct our military all over

6:45

the world for decades now anyways. So

6:47

it's good for Biden. Good

6:49

for Biden. I'm glad that Biden is deciding not

6:51

to send any more of my taxpayer money to wars that I don't-

6:54

Can he do it to all wars? I'm sure we should

6:56

just- Can we just eliminate all the wars? That would be

6:58

perfect. But he won't do that. I would like to see

7:00

it stopped. Well, I suppose that I

7:02

should say, I got to agree. I

7:05

am also riding with Biden on this

7:07

one. You're all right. You're live. Well,

7:09

because let's talk principally. When

7:12

Donald Trump said that he's going to withhold military, I

7:14

think that's one. I think the

7:16

President negotiating with foreign countries needs to have

7:18

the executive authority over our military and how

7:20

we align an ally with other countries. Congress

7:22

saying, we approve this being sent, I believe

7:24

ultimately goes to the President to make the

7:27

determination in these negotiations with foreign leaders. That

7:30

means that the same would apply for Biden. But

7:32

if we're going to be- if we're saying this is

7:34

the standard that has been set, you want to play

7:36

ball, we'll play ball, that I get. But

7:39

I also disagree with impeaching Joe Biden in any

7:41

capacity. Because we are six months

7:43

away from an election, he is poised to lose

7:45

on the merits, and we don't

7:47

need to give them any more advantages. So right

7:50

now, the real issue for the election is the

7:52

shadow campaign, whatever it may be. I don't know,

7:54

but there certainly is one. And

7:57

Biden is a Bucket of concrete.

8:00

It'll like the Democratic Party's I'm I don't

8:02

think it's wise the G O P decide

8:04

to help take that bucket of concrete off

8:06

their legs just as they're trying to swim.

8:08

The visiting some funny that we live in

8:10

a world where impeachments are now a Pr

8:12

positives? yeah feather. Us

8:14

but I don't know what can I help. In that

8:16

happened to trump like when John he to support when

8:19

our court system is also clear he there's no way

8:21

that happens with bite and right in he gets a

8:23

be like everyone who are running away from his ship

8:25

is already gonna be like yeah see I told the.

8:28

Bad guy like this. The thing about the think

8:30

about Robin and god bless him for doing this

8:32

is one the great things that Trump did was

8:34

he made people hate the corporate news media like

8:36

absolutely That was one of the greatest things a

8:38

bit a Trump presidency and so like of course

8:40

on the news media started going in on him

8:42

on this appeasement. every suggest reserve you know there

8:44

our but this is this is just a ploy

8:46

by the by the democrats could slide somebody else

8:48

in the right before the election their lives out

8:50

about? Sure sure. But let's talk about my favorite

8:53

thing ever and I can't believe it's been ten.

8:55

It's been almost ten years. The. Well done

8:57

steak with catch us he was Trump

8:59

you know Trump knows what he's doing

9:02

art So a thirty day dry a

9:04

steak and they said Mr Trump how

9:06

would you like any says well done

9:09

with a side of ketchup and. Trump.

9:12

I've been them are lago. the man knows how to

9:14

eat a steak. Like the. Beaten you'd

9:16

you don't have a club like that. Understanding?

9:19

Commentary Standards: The way people dress, the

9:21

dress codes The know he did this.

9:24

Because he knew the media would make fun of them. And.

9:26

Then Middle America would be like. That's how

9:29

I have my senate leaders need to max

9:31

neither making fun of Trump's they're not making

9:33

fun of Trump, They're making fun of the

9:35

people when they did them right? Yeah, no

9:37

problem as they got. That was the point

9:39

in which I really understood the amount of

9:41

told. Them. that trump was was that was

9:43

that seven the costs se meme is what has happened i

9:45

met your map as you said everybody's he woke up it

9:47

that was in the morning to the i woke up in

9:49

your like what the hell be like oh you know he

9:52

i know what's going on you know he learned a lot

9:54

by being in front of a camera on realities home for

9:56

doing like if i just do this one thing i can

9:58

tell ya dig into higher mean sphere of course so

10:00

that's what all this I mean most of it he

10:03

always since the day he started flirting with the

10:05

idea of announcing announcing his round okay

10:09

round two name something that's

10:11

not boring sorry we

10:14

were looking for Chumba casino

10:30

he has controlled the media

10:33

cycle right I mean it lives

10:35

and thrives off of what Trump

10:43

does in part because they hate him so

10:45

much they can't look away which is sort

10:47

of hysterical but also because he knows that

10:49

he is a bigger personality than anybody else

10:51

on both sides of the aisle including Joe

10:53

Biden who's like barely with us as

10:56

far as I can tell it's really interesting to me

10:58

and maybe that's because of his rally TV background but

11:00

I also think you are just born that way there

11:02

are some people with this kind of charisma this

11:04

version of Joe Biden is not

11:07

with us who knows if it's the same thing was

11:09

great because what

11:14

did he say despite the negative despite

11:17

the negative it was like despite

11:21

the negative the media cafe fee yeah

11:23

or something and then there were people

11:25

actually I think Cassandra actually wrote this

11:27

and it was like coffee is Arabic

11:30

for I will stand and I'm like

11:32

come on someone potato fingers

11:35

to the phone and then accidentally hit send

11:37

that's all that happened and then Trump responded

11:39

with like what could it mean yeah and

11:41

he's just he's just loving it he's like

11:43

I'm in charge I'm living in all of

11:45

your heads rent free something he would

11:48

have taken it down I mean I don't know

11:50

I think I think you like it if the Clown

11:53

I think 40 chests I Put it off the job

11:55

they did on purpose you think I like that's the

11:57

yeah I don't know I don't think we have a.

12:00

That you're getting a giving any just like me.

12:02

It makes people timing money may as well having

12:04

when you realize how everybody was trending and he

12:06

was like and he was like what can it

12:08

mean. I also think this is

12:10

a difference between have a president young people

12:13

point out that job demands your President Trump

12:15

is older, right? He's like seventy eight now.

12:17

Ah, but he actually a month social media.

12:19

He loves it. He loves Twitter. He thinks

12:21

it's a you started he notes or to

12:24

set a social whereas Joe Biden I don't

12:26

think I ever was really in charge of

12:28

his own social media accounts. Your life he

12:30

doesn't have any way to message himself, is

12:32

completely dependent on whatever. Again, Z staffer. They're

12:35

like you must know about the internet. You.

12:37

Lied for he says hands don't work for

12:39

nothing worked for his legs worry separate of

12:41

the roses Broadway other is like a lobster.

12:43

fill their through I have to look for

12:45

my own candidacy for president On people like

12:47

all your to raf your this you to

12:50

which would roll or mine and what to

12:52

do that and see Donald Trump or the

12:54

White House for four years we're like would

12:56

that's what people want Now they want they

12:58

want to be precise Dumb shit like that

13:00

on time you know? So I missile I

13:02

think. It's personality. I think people want to

13:05

feel like there's someone with decisiveness and who

13:07

has a personality whereas I think everyone sort

13:09

of field even if you know rest are

13:11

democrats are like yeah Joe Biden cerebral. He's.

13:14

More of the amalgamation of whatever his

13:16

staffers are doing is not enough and

13:18

personality feel like a leader and he's

13:20

not present enough in anyone's mind to

13:22

really feel like an inspirational. Big anybody in

13:24

the United States believe the Joe Biden is running the

13:26

country are? no. I. Don't think I am said yes

13:29

I bought duck die as he is in the

13:31

white house I think they'll I fly as have

13:33

to go for him. I think it's magic.

13:35

You. Know I think it's it's trump. When

13:37

he walks in a room, he has an

13:39

aura of the images coming out of him.

13:43

And. You can see it when he somewhere

13:45

the way people act around him. It's the

13:47

weirdest thing. Some people just have

13:49

at the X Factor. I don't mean literal magic. There's

13:51

like something about him you can put your finger on.

13:53

called the X Factor Caught. whatever it is some people

13:55

have, some people don't. Know. Single democrats

13:57

guy. Has got to.

14:01

And there's a bunch of Republicans out a little bit, but

14:03

it's just like Trump's that guy

14:05

that Everybody wants to tell a story to

14:07

that everybody wants to talk to that everybody

14:09

wants They want Trump to hear what they

14:11

have to say for some reason Don't

14:14

know why our guitar players like that Mike he

14:16

everybody likes him everybody wants to hang out with

14:18

him And I can't figure out why he's been

14:20

a man He's still here, holy crap. Phil votes

14:22

him out every time he's still there. Get out

14:24

of here I

14:29

call him stupid Mike Martin all the time He

14:31

just shows back up and then yeah, and then we all

14:33

just let him stay and he's bigger than me He's big

14:35

and strong too so I can't say no Alright,

14:39

are you being bullied in your own band? Maybe a little bit

14:41

yeah That's why Phil

14:43

works out so much One of these days Mike,

14:45

one of these days He never did Before

14:49

he had a kid he used to work out, and I think

14:51

his max bench was like four Stupid

14:54

so do people like him or they're just scared

14:56

of him? No they really like it is weird

14:58

like I've said it before He's got this he's

15:00

got this weird charisma He's not super outgoing and

15:02

he's not the kind of person that's really boisterous

15:04

And he's not the kind of person that goes

15:06

out and socializes a lot But there's something about

15:08

him when like people meet him They're just like

15:10

I like that guy and and they he's just

15:12

got this charisma where people are like I want

15:14

to go and hang out with that guy. I think

15:17

Is he from New York? No he's from Ludlow. Oh,

15:20

okay. I think I think Someone

15:22

in the chat they kind of explained it. It's this

15:24

there's a new way to describe the energy that Trump

15:26

has Riz Do

15:33

you think we have fewer charismatic people because we

15:35

had a generation of kids like well

15:37

every generation is increasingly more online Well,

15:40

no, I think I think the the charisma died out when

15:42

when comedy died out I mean really at the end of

15:44

the day is like everything's any joke

15:46

now is like off-limits and offensive and like you

15:48

can't Go out and have that or anymore. You're

15:50

misogynist. So I agree, but I agree with you

15:53

about comedy But I don't think the charisma has

15:55

died off. I still think that there is there

15:57

is an innate amount of charisma

16:00

not just pretty privileged because again like I said

16:02

Mike he's not what you would consider like a

16:04

good looking dude like he's not. So you don't

16:06

like him and he's ugly. Oh

16:08

geez dude. No but here's the thing. Come on. It's

16:11

like we used to have a whole generation

16:13

of men that wanted to have the Riz.

16:15

I mean that was like people aspired, men

16:17

aspired to have the Riz. I agree. To

16:20

have swag and now they aspire to. You're talking about

16:22

something different than what I'm talking about. So

16:26

like Riz and because what it

16:28

sounds like is you're talking about things like

16:31

being able to interact and

16:33

kind of like how

16:35

to win friends and influence people. Sure. Yeah

16:38

but the thing is there is a certain amount

16:41

of just natural charisma that people have where

16:43

you don't know why someone walks into a

16:45

room and you're like I like that guy

16:47

and I don't know why. Oftentimes

16:50

it's associated with things like

16:52

height, facial symmetry and stuff

16:54

like that. Not always.

16:57

Sometimes it's not and like I said Mike isn't

16:59

like a, he's not a weird looking guy

17:01

but he's not a particularly handsome guy where you're

17:03

like oh that is a pretty dude. I

17:06

think everybody knows that the

17:09

moment Trump steps out on that stage or appears

17:11

on the TV all the ladies are fainting and

17:13

fainting themselves. He's the new beetle. He's the beetle.

17:15

I had that. When he was

17:17

younger he had that. Well he also

17:20

had a lot of money. Well I mean.

17:22

But there are a lot of people with lots of money who

17:25

are very awkward and weird. Sure. And

17:27

many people have been fawning over them every day. Money

17:29

has never made anyone ugly. Money

17:31

has never made someone ugly. Have you ever seen Bill Gates?

17:33

He was a cudgery. Have you ever seen him?

17:35

Have you ever seen an interview with Bill Gates before? Bill Gates is

17:37

a melting marshmallow. Yeah he's a gooey person. Yeah and a sweater vest.

17:41

Let's jump to this next story from SCNR. Perhaps

17:43

one of the most important and shocking

17:45

things we've seen so far. political Rappaport

17:48

has withdrawn his endorsement for

17:51

Joe Biden. I can't believe it.

17:53

The esteemed comedian is now

17:55

saying that he will not be supporting Biden.

17:58

He says I'm officially unendorsing Joe Biden. I

18:00

did so much work on behalf of this soft serve

18:02

ice cream eating I'm

18:06

done Like I want to

18:08

get my shot up The

18:10

reason why his journey has been so incredible is

18:12

because he's he's so vocal He's so animated in

18:14

his mockery of Trump and now of Biden and

18:16

he is a funny guy I

18:19

think there's a pee missing from his to pee.

18:21

I guess I guess Israel's more important to wrap

18:23

a port than our democracy Oh, yeah. Well, that's

18:25

unfortunately Funny

18:27

and Even

18:30

when he says voting for pig dick Donald

18:32

Trump did not a table It's

18:34

funny and I can respect it but I think

18:36

ultimately what we see here is the tides they

18:39

are a turn in and there are

18:41

a lot of people who are This

18:43

is not just about my grandpa for we were

18:45

talking about the other day Jewish voters who up

18:47

until a week ago we're anti Trump and

18:50

for Joe Biden and endorsing him and Bang

18:53

there now pro Trump instantly anti-bide

18:56

just on one issue Overnight

18:58

well, I think the funny thing is is that

19:01

Biden has supported Israel way more than Trump ever

19:03

has ever and they're I mean at the end

19:05

of the day, they're both pro Zionist and yeah,

19:07

you know Trump put the Embassy

19:10

in Jerusalem. Yeah, right. We did make

19:12

big moves and Trump is the one

19:14

who executive ordered the anti-Semitism definition Yeah,

19:16

and he did the Abraham Accords. Well,

19:18

they were good. No, I mean like

19:20

he was trying to do things that

19:22

were seen pro Israel It's right. Joe

19:24

Biden been voting to send money to

19:26

Israel for 40 years His

19:30

career, I mean he's supported Israel way more

19:32

than Donald Trump ever had I should not

19:34

even go it's not even close It's anything

19:36

that pisses off the communists the Nazis At

19:40

the same time I'm kind of for it,

19:42

man So if

19:44

it hurts the Democrats and it hurts the

19:46

communists and it pisses off the Nazis I'm

19:48

like, all right I kind of you know,

19:50

I kind of like it because that all

19:52

of that stuff is anti-american BS So I

19:55

just think this is you know, an example

19:57

of how many Americans feel betrayed by Biden,

19:59

right? Like it's why when people say like,

20:01

I, I, we have empathy for loss

20:03

of life in other places, but we want you to focus

20:06

on what's going on at home. Like we are suffering here.

20:08

The border is way too open. I cannot pay my bills.

20:10

It's interesting because he's like, I was on your side and I feel

20:12

as though you've betrayed

20:16

me, whatever his reasoning is. Like, I think that's

20:18

a sentiment that a ton of voters share right

20:20

now. It's not that they're in love with Donald

20:22

Trump. Maybe there are people who are won over,

20:24

but a lot of people are just like, Biden

20:26

is the worst and he let me down. Yeah.

20:29

Yeah. Do you think this will be the

20:31

thing that changes Rappaport to see other issues

20:33

like that? Like if this is, if, you

20:35

know, his, his, his rail is a way

20:37

drug into seeing other problems in the country.

20:39

This is, this is a one and done

20:41

kind of thing. Like Israel, when it comes

20:43

to like Jewish people that are, that are

20:45

generally liberal or leftist and they're like, they

20:48

were like, Oh, this one issue, this will be the one

20:50

and done, they're not going to be him into like a

20:52

brick suit at the border wall. No, I don't, I don't

20:54

see him. I definitely don't see him, you

20:56

know, being like, build the wall, build the wall. The

20:59

pro-Zionist people, the majority of the pro-Zionist people

21:01

in the United States are liberal. They just,

21:03

they just support pro-Zionist Republicans

21:06

because they're pro-Zionist. Well,

21:08

I mean, what do you mean by liberal? Like culturally

21:11

and, and they won't, I mean, they want liberal in

21:13

an American sense or liberalism. Not

21:15

liberalism, the classical liberalism. You mean like

21:17

neo liberal open the entire border. You

21:19

just said neo-liberal. Sex changes for children.

21:22

Hold on. You just said neo-liberal, right?

21:24

Okay. Do you think of,

21:26

of libertarians as neo-liberals? Absolutely

21:29

not. Sitching at

21:31

them, you see. Anyways, we

21:33

lost, we lost that term. We lost

21:35

that term to the left. So there's,

21:37

so there's neo-liberal, neoliberal, neoliberal is a

21:39

reference to like Democrat establishment, corporatism. That's

21:41

what I think too. And there's, but

21:44

the classical term liberal was, was libertarianism. I mean,

21:47

the founders were classical liberals. They, that's how they

21:49

work. But the left stole that term from us.

21:51

That's the problem with the right and the, in libertarians

21:54

is we've been losing the war on language for decades

21:57

and decades and decades. Yeah. But that's why

21:59

neo-liberal exists. Right because liberal

22:01

is a reference to there's there's

22:03

different facets of liberalism in classical

22:05

liberalism traditional Social liberalism and then

22:07

you have neoliberalism like you have

22:10

neo conservatism. It's the establishment uni

22:12

party garbage But what are they arguing neoliberal

22:14

means libertarians? So that's what they yeah They're

22:16

they're like no libertarian because they're saying that

22:18

it's a new liberalism that's open markets and

22:20

blah blah I'm like I never thought of

22:22

them. You know, you guys are trying to

22:24

take it back. I always thought of work

22:27

I always thought of neoliberals as Democrats, right?

22:29

Yeah, you know Exactly

22:31

Hillary Clinton. So they were just as much

22:34

the war machine as anything else Listen, I

22:36

just watched the guy my perspective I started

22:38

the liberal caucus and the libertarian party who's

22:40

trying to bring the names Josh He's

22:43

trying to bring the term liberal back

22:46

as neoliberal as libertarian and then he's

22:48

praising bill well Okay,

22:51

that guy said on the board of CFR like come

22:53

on so like that's the thing it's like that like

22:55

that guy Josh like I I

22:57

think he means well I had to block him cuz he's

22:59

annoying but I think he means well, but he's Drop

23:06

I'm on the I'm on the Michael Malice train

23:09

Michael Malice is right when it comes to I

23:11

only block the porn box that you want

23:14

at any reason for any reason at

23:16

the drop of a hat because your

23:19

Twitter experience is your experience and if

23:21

you are not Filling why

23:23

not obligated to listen to anyone feel

23:26

Monetize the hate man. Why why

23:28

even look at your mentions? Oh,

23:31

I still talk to people outside Yeah,

23:34

I can't yeah, I don't have to

23:36

yeah mines. Yeah mines random mines. No

23:38

manager. Just nonsense I open it up

23:40

and it's a mix of like crypto salesman

23:42

marijuana porn box Or my bottom for mine's

23:45

different now that it was like a year

23:47

like a year change ago when I started

23:49

Coming down here regularly and stuff, but like

23:52

it's it's still manageable I probably have yours

23:54

thousand Twitter porn box blocked, but no what's

23:56

what I do is if

23:58

there's someone that is

24:00

you know if I see if I

24:03

do periodically look at mentions and stuff like that if

24:05

I see someone the first thing I do is I don't

24:07

block them I mute them no I

24:09

do block them oh you do and then I unblock

24:11

them instantly it's a it's a force

24:13

on follow so what was that

24:15

okay they'll I'll stop appearing in their feed

24:18

without them being blocked and then out of sight out

24:20

of mind that's pretty cool I don't know that way

24:22

so yeah we're having away Twitter secrets

24:25

right now I know what I'm showing up

24:27

in my Twitter feed you know has been

24:29

around forever

24:32

you block it unblock right away and that

24:35

because some people are trying to get blocked oh

24:37

yeah so then they can then screenshot it and

24:39

then start the currency right it is so so

24:41

you don't give it to him you just it's

24:43

step one is block unblock and not not they'll

24:45

they don't follow you anymore I just like following

24:47

the people that are worse to me I

24:49

just follow them back I don't I do look I take

24:51

it back I do block there are some people you know

24:53

for a long time they went after my family they were

24:56

talking about my family I do want people to talk about

24:58

my children that's the one the one caveat that I carry

25:00

is if you talk about my kids you're done there was

25:02

a time there was a time where people were going after

25:04

we're trying to wear like Antifa people were trying to go

25:06

after the band I'm

25:09

pretty good at keeping myself

25:11

separate from the band like

25:13

I don't do political stutter

25:16

under the guise of all that remains so I can keep them

25:18

separate and the guys in the band they're very different

25:20

opinions in the band right like we're not a monolith

25:22

at all so well we were trying to adopt the

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Revoid. We're prohibited by law. See terms and

26:00

conditions. Eighty One up and again Eventually haven't really

26:02

given us the an adopted as they

26:04

just they just made it too hard.

26:07

Or. Easy. That means like people kept it

26:09

a child from having a home with their

26:11

biological siblings because of what they did on

26:13

Twitter. Guess that's the other thing. Oh dear

26:15

it. I'd be really interested to see a

26:17

look like an individualist of who has blocked

26:20

all of us because I think there is

26:22

an aspect of the internet where people. Create.

26:24

A version of you like you are feeding it when

26:27

you post. Also people have a version of you that

26:29

they have come. Pre. Determined to the

26:31

platform to i don't know me see. You on that one

26:33

thing in there like I duck eyes The worst hit

26:35

me. Don't actually spent any time lucky adult. They'll block

26:37

you right? Off. The bachelor not like little. how

26:39

many my haters the works like adopted kids

26:42

from foster care. I'd like to know who's

26:44

this Goes back to regular things like sourcing

26:46

about charisma there is the same I'm seem

26:48

kind of distaste. immediate need, your reaction that

26:50

people have to and like some people you'll

26:52

just meet someone in their like i don't

26:54

like something about that person and you keep

26:57

and is really really hard to do anything

26:59

about it if you'd like. Get that, you

27:01

know. And I think

27:03

it's weird as also another one person as

27:05

he locks on twitter and I know why

27:07

certain never interacted Me ask you know to

27:09

me like a it's interesting to think. I.

27:12

Don't care about you at all, but you care enough

27:14

about me. Even though we've never interacted, you have to

27:17

go out of your way to block Miata ammonia. I

27:19

was barely alive. I. Prefer not as people call

27:21

my jobs and knock on stuff. I mean it's

27:23

pretty, it's meant as people are nasty man. they're

27:25

everywhere To me when when mean a bomb threats

27:27

and we are at the underlying federalist. Sure to.

27:30

Yeah, yeah. so I've had lots of death threats.

27:32

Lot about said. If I showed up to my

27:34

own anti war rally for my own party in

27:36

Bc, they said they would kill me flowers hundred.

27:38

That's weird because I feel like the So that

27:41

with us was very specific. And centered

27:43

around one particular thing that I can't discuss

27:45

surfaces but I I I. I see people

27:47

posted messages, words like someone some it as

27:49

much as look and it's like this really

27:51

awful nasty thing you're scumbag visit every swear

27:53

in the world. we really don't get any

27:55

that stuff. Miss. yeah ah aside

27:58

a lot about the swatting such as That

28:00

was hyper specific to, you

28:02

know, there's still an ongoing investigation related

28:05

to it, but they think they caught the guy

28:07

I don't know that they did but that was

28:09

really really specific in terms of the general death

28:11

threats and stuff like this for Don't

28:14

see it Like we did the

28:17

skate thing in DC. We announced we're gonna be there

28:19

not a peep We showed up and everyone

28:21

clapped and cheered and we got high fives. Yeah I

28:25

get weird emotional messages

28:27

like I've had people message me stuff You

28:29

know just kind of dark They're telling me stuff that

28:32

like I cannot help them with from the internet we

28:34

again You don't really like we don't actually know each

28:36

other and that's where it starts to be like, you

28:38

know The internet's such an interesting tool and people can

28:40

feel really bonded with someone on the other hand like

28:42

it It makes it so

28:44

there's this weird barrier where you're allowed to interact with

28:46

someone in a way that like isn't real but on

28:48

the other end like They

28:51

have no ability to help me if you're like threatening to hurt

28:53

yourself or something like that And

28:55

I again with the rise of like

28:57

Twitter Endorsements and like how many people

28:59

because if you were getting an endorsement

29:01

for a presidential election in the past,

29:03

right? You would like maybe get a

29:05

congressman maybe a newspaper would endorse either

29:08

editorial board or else, but now Michael

29:10

Rambaugh different Pillars

29:12

of culture especially that are big online

29:15

What they say really matters and it can reach

29:17

people in a way that I don't think campaigns

29:19

have the ability to keep up with Influencer

29:21

effect on the election we live in an influencer

29:23

economy. We do that's what culture war is very

29:26

important right now Very so let's talk about what's

29:28

going on. We got the big news that in

29:30

two weeks We got RFK jr.

29:32

And Donald Trump at the LP libertarian party

29:34

National Convention and for vague and the vague

29:36

Yeah, I'll the vakes campaigning for for Trump

29:38

though. So I assume that's it's all just

29:40

about for the fourth. Well the vake has

29:43

Actually said that he's gonna

29:45

debate our vice presidential candidate really which

29:47

could end up being a Exactly

29:55

What? Michael Reckon Wall did on the show when he

29:57

when he couldn't remember Clint's name. I know. The

30:00

front of my eyes of the other day

30:02

that trying to democratic in hiring Michael Bolton.

30:04

So yeah yeah like of a lot of

30:06

that we know and a lot So yeah

30:08

it could end up being quit quit. Russell

30:10

from Livery Lockdown is our is our vice presidential

30:12

candidates. I viewed as no real know challenger other

30:14

ever challengers. but I'm it's Clint Like a he's

30:17

already He's kind of predetermine unless anybody else steps

30:19

up. I think of a signaling the his E

30:21

P I don't know if that's what I sent

30:23

like it's not like that he was stats. His

30:26

signifies you standing behind Trump at the has shrunk

30:28

from under us. A Vps know what is that?

30:30

Mara Lago with Trump at a fundraiser standing right

30:32

next to India? I don't I don't see him.

30:35

I see I'm going with the intent of helping

30:37

Donald Trump. He was out. but but to have

30:39

a major political candidate. Going. To

30:41

the else Libertarian party convention a past president I'm a

30:43

writer A massive This is a sister to biggest thing

30:45

ever happen a Libertarian party and you know that the

30:48

normal social club people that have been and Libertarian party

30:50

for a long time a really upset about the some

30:52

in the really say know there's a there's a part

30:54

of me it's like a this has taken. A

30:56

first like the schematic of her candid within. A

30:58

really got to the point where like the we're

31:00

going to war eyes on our candidates than we've

31:03

ever had at the National Convention It's in fifty

31:05

years right selects. And there's also like Rc two

31:07

years pushing for debate with Donald Trump right? which

31:09

if that was to happen and give the Lpg

31:12

it's not going to Hannah Weeks probably not. But

31:14

if if we're able to get the the Libertarian

31:16

presidential candidate in there as well as if we

31:18

could pick the Nami early enough than we have

31:21

you know, three different parties basically on are actually

31:23

doing something that the Libertarian party's never been able

31:25

to win. Every history. Are keen on the first

31:27

a business owner it's subsets must be on the third

31:29

day but there there is a way to amend the

31:31

agenda to move it off In there's lot of people

31:34

that are taught of delegates because you nor delegates there's

31:36

only thousand people are nominee. Yeah this delegates from all

31:38

of the country show up at Because or nominee two

31:40

weeks from today actually and so there's a chance that

31:42

we move it up. We have our nominee picked and

31:44

ask the person the questions on Trump at the at

31:46

the pet shop. So. Can you when you when

31:49

Angel may be innocent She said that people run.

31:51

I'd like to send in questions or something before

31:53

Henderson to be sort of a list for. There's

31:55

already a list of things where. is

31:57

he getting like a somebody moderating asking questions

31:59

or Is he going to deliver speech? I've heard so many different

32:01

things. But there's one that says if

32:03

we have the nominee by then, the nominee is the one

32:06

that gets to ask the questions from the panel. If we

32:08

don't have the nominee, this is the list of questions. He's

32:10

going to talk maybe about Ross Ulbrich. Maybe he's going to

32:12

talk. There's certain things. There's all kinds of things flying around

32:14

out there. Who knows what's real? Angela probably knows much better

32:16

than I do. What is real and what isn't. There's so

32:18

much in the Twitter space. But look, the fact of the

32:21

matter is that this is the biggest thing that happened to

32:23

the Libertarian Party. And people are like, oh,

32:25

you're asking your opponents to come over there. I'm like, that's good.

32:27

That's good for me. If I get the

32:29

nomination in two weeks, because I consider one of

32:31

the front runners, maybe top three, OK? If

32:33

I get the nomination and we're on C-SPAN and

32:36

we're on all these news outlets and Donald Trump's

32:38

there and I'm the guy that gets the nomination

32:40

after a debate, because we have a debate too,

32:42

like our candidates debate on the news, that's

32:45

going to be more eyes on the Libertarian Party than ever

32:47

before, ever in history, in 50 years. Why

32:50

would you be mad about that? Don't

32:52

be mad about that. That's a good

32:54

thing. Well, I mean, legitimately, as far

32:56

as libertarians go, like Donald Trump is

32:58

a really bad libertarian. So I get

33:00

why there are like the pure because,

33:02

look, I'm a better libertarian than Donald

33:04

Trump. And there are libertarians out

33:06

there that would swear to God I'm not a libertarian.

33:08

Right. So, you know, that's just the

33:10

way that it goes. So

33:13

Donald Trump get drawing attention. You

33:15

know, I mean, God, but

33:17

there's just they're both so far away from the

33:19

area. I think Trump's going to get booed

33:22

and cheered. Yeah, he's going to get a lot of chasing

33:24

a lot of booze. Well, you have to register for the

33:26

Trump event, too, because there's like limited space. So there's like

33:28

going to be outside people. It's not just going to be

33:30

libertarian. There's going to be a lot of people there. It's

33:33

essentially like Trump's own rally at the Libertarian Party.

33:35

I was going to say, I would assume libertarians

33:37

are maybe like, don't siphon off our voters. Well,

33:40

we need them to vote for our candidate who

33:42

we just selected. This is the truth that

33:44

libertarians need to be confronted with that we have

33:46

less than seven hundred thousand registered libertarian voters in

33:48

the entire United States. Trump can reach those people

33:51

on the media today, right now. It does not

33:53

need to go to the Libertarian Party convention. But

33:56

There's a lot of other voters there that know nothing

33:58

about the Libertarian Party that will see the. Libertarian

34:00

party because of retainer I like to post know

34:02

my heart and like we actually I sit here

34:04

I love you know my often at my my

34:06

start to go out home and I had the

34:08

same items I have to hold or month I

34:10

bought as I think Trump's gonna earned votes he

34:12

so is this week. The ideas actually really simple.

34:15

Trump This I have a Libertarian party bots. It

34:17

either. He doesn't have Libertarians they want about Libertarian

34:19

Trump showing up. It's only a net positive and

34:22

if he can get even a tiny bit, it's

34:24

just good news for that's why do it. I

34:26

disagree you think is going there to be like

34:28

a better lose votes? He can reach all those

34:30

As.all those registered voters just on the news today.

34:32

right now he doesn't have to go to Matters

34:34

Ladders and our outreach matters. L says matter never

34:36

ordered area. Might have you ever met a Libertarian?

34:39

Authorities I remember hearing about what is the reason

34:42

Trump would actually go to. I don't. I don't

34:44

know he's hoping to answering all suffer he hopes

34:46

but I don't I don't think. That that's going to hell.

34:48

I think going to help the libertarian. Even if you only have seven

34:50

hundred thousand and read said, Libertarians are a lot people who. Lean

34:52

Libert and Lima Veterinarian. Who still identify Libertarians? Me

34:54

I think of the of that you know that show

34:57

parks and Rec sad when they had this one Nick

34:59

Offerman character who was a Libertarians and I think that

35:01

brought that concept to a lot of people are of

35:03

young people who would be more open to the the

35:06

as they do want to say they're concerned on sale

35:08

rather than football but like the Libertarian so by Trump's

35:10

showing up at the event it's him saying like i

35:12

recognize that this is up philosophy that there and I

35:14

think this is he got me to stay there Why

35:17

like. There was a nice moments when he sixteen

35:19

called Libertarians for Trump. I mean the felt like

35:21

the Libertarian Donald Trump or never seen him. They

35:23

do not live in a country that he have

35:25

a president for doctors. One. For.

35:27

That sympathetic like the libertarian independent voter like

35:30

and still be like when I talk to

35:32

them. i think that the more people to

35:34

me see our nominee i think the issue the

35:36

libertarian party is that it's functionally just third party

35:38

right you've got woke libertarians as i would libertarians

35:41

pro bowlers libertarians anti war as libertarians it's just

35:43

basically a group of by to different people decided

35:45

that they don't like the establishment and then operate

35:47

under one banner give us a problem with freedom

35:50

riders and was gonna venice of that before the

35:52

show and we've got a different version of what

35:54

freedom is to them enough but it's a big

35:56

mess he beautiful saying really truly and that's that's

35:58

how freedom would be in any country that

36:01

chose to adopt it. But here's the thing, I posted

36:03

on Twitter about this earlier, and Dave Smith, God

36:06

bless him said this on Twitter once too,

36:08

but the simple thing about the white pill

36:12

is if you have children or you plan on having

36:14

children, you can't afford the black pill, right? And that's

36:16

the truth, it's like, I want my

36:18

children to live in a society that has

36:20

fewer laws than I lived in, right? More

36:22

freedoms than I lived in, and so it's

36:24

gonna be a messy thing. Freedom's

36:27

gonna be a messy thing no matter what, because everyone's got a different

36:29

version of that, but we've gotta continue to push

36:31

towards there, I can't afford the black pill, because I have

36:33

children. So many children. Do

36:35

you have an answer

36:37

for the arguments that people

36:39

that are post liberals make?

36:42

That liberalism, because I

36:45

am still working through the liberalism

36:48

has the flaw of liberalism

36:50

takes arguments at face value,

36:52

and philosophies

36:54

that are not liberal are

36:57

not obliged to be honest

37:00

or engage in debate in

37:03

any kind of way that a liberal

37:05

would understand it, which is I think the reason

37:07

why liberalism is, the

37:09

people that say liberalism has failed, whether they be on

37:11

the left or the right, the reason is because they

37:13

have not allowed, they have

37:15

allowed illiberal philosophies

37:17

to beat them by using illiberal

37:20

arguments, but they're trying to still

37:22

be liberal. Do you

37:24

have a concept of what should be done

37:27

when you're dealing with people that are going to openly

37:29

lie, that don't care about the truth, that essentially the

37:31

sinful impulses of the enemy. Well

37:36

yeah, I feel that's what I've been doing, and the

37:38

thing about it is like, I feel like- Well what

37:40

I'm seeing is articulated here. Yeah, well we have. The

37:42

problem is, like I said once earlier, is we're losing

37:44

the war on language, and we've been losing the war

37:46

on language for a long time, and a lot of

37:49

that is deceitful, purposely deceitful. And so the best thing

37:51

that we can do, and I don't consider myself a

37:54

liberal, or I guess you can call libertarianism

37:56

liberalism, whatever, I don't really, what do you

37:58

consider it? Subscribe to that. I think that

38:00

technically to me it's a right wing movement and

38:02

further right than the conservatives in the United States.

38:04

That's how I feel about it and you know

38:07

that we probably disagree on something. Philosophically

38:09

where would you say it comes from? Philosophically

38:12

it probably was born out of classical liberalism.

38:15

Okay. Yes. And that's

38:17

fine. But we've seeded that word a long time ago. Fair enough.

38:19

I just want to know where you're... Trying to bring

38:21

that word back now as a libertarian is just failing

38:23

us. No, no. Because the

38:26

thing I understand what you're saying

38:28

about the language. So then

38:30

what I'm trying to get to is where your

38:32

ideas are going to stem from. Is it a

38:34

liberal philosophy? What kind of philosophy do you have

38:36

to inform your epistemology? I

38:40

think the most important thing we can do is not mince

38:42

our words anymore. We don't want to play the

38:44

language game anymore. We want to use the language that's

38:46

now in the now and not try to

38:48

use the historical language because we've lost that

38:50

war a long time ago. So

38:52

no more mincing our words. We've got to stand

38:54

strong in every principle that we have. And these

38:56

are important things because it's becoming mainstream right now.

38:59

You've got MMA fighters going out there talking about

39:01

Reed Mises and Brothbard in their

39:03

post-flight interviews. And Argentina has been seen

39:05

like they're having... I

39:08

don't know. I haven't looked in deep,

39:10

but I hear that the numbers are good now. I

39:12

go back and forth on Malay and I think the

39:14

Bitcoin movement in Salvador. You know why I

39:16

go back and forth on Malay. I think

39:18

he's done some really good things. I'm not going to fault him

39:20

entirely, but we'll see how Zionist he

39:22

gets. I

39:25

still like him. He can fix Argentine

39:27

of a man. He won

39:29

me over at a Fuetta. Yeah. That's

39:31

it. No, I don't hate the guy.

39:33

I think he's doing a good job. I think he's done

39:35

some really good things. And so I support that. I do.

39:38

And I'm very clear about supporting him. I do. Now,

39:41

if he starts to send a taxpayer money across the

39:43

world, he's not really a libertarian. I don't think they're

39:45

going to be sending a taxpayer money. I hope not. They

39:47

don't have that much. What does a Josh Smith's presidency

39:49

do for this country? Well, first of all, I think

39:51

something... And I talked about the first time I was

39:53

on the show. The most important thing to me is

39:55

the family in the United States. I think the United

39:57

States has had an open war against the family. And

40:01

whether it's economic policy, social

40:04

policy, whether it's the

40:06

actual family law in the United States right now, with Tada

40:08

4D, the Social Security Act, which was signed into law by

40:10

Gerald Ford in 1971, that took

40:12

us from a society that had one in 60 children

40:14

living in a fatherless home to one in four, just

40:17

since the 70s. With

40:19

that's been undeniable stats for increases

40:21

in violent youth offenders, increases in

40:23

homeless and runaway youth, increases in

40:26

school dropouts and mass shootings, all

40:28

this stuff is undeniably attached to

40:30

the destruction of the family in the United States. So that's

40:32

at the forefront of, is trying to put

40:34

the focus back on bringing families back together and

40:36

making families have to learn how to work it

40:38

out. That's the truth, because we've

40:40

just given people an easy out. Now, a

40:43

family. So as president, you will executive order

40:45

mandate people have families? No, no,

40:47

no, no. I would remove, I would remove the,

40:53

you know, I would work to remove Tada

40:55

4D, the Social Security Act, which has paid

40:58

states to separate families, where essentially the federal

41:00

government pays a dollar to every state that

41:02

spends 88 cents on these

41:04

family programs, okay. But there's a

41:06

lot of other things too. I mean, economically, we're destroying

41:08

the middle class. You can't keep families together if you're

41:10

destroying the middle class. The Federal Reserve,

41:12

I was obviously a giant counterfeiting

41:14

machine that's, you know, stealing our wealth through a

41:16

tax called inflation. I know that's a bumper sticker,

41:18

but that's the truth. It's really the prop up

41:21

for the warfare state and all the worst policy

41:23

in the United States. So like, we've got to

41:25

start working to dismantle the Fed. Now the president

41:27

doesn't have the power to end the Federal Reserve,

41:29

but he does have the power to nominate the

41:31

Fed Chair. He does direct the treasury. Maybe we

41:33

don't take any more fiat currency from the Fed.

41:35

There's a lot of different policies that could be

41:38

worked on to start breaking down this Federal

41:40

Reserve machine. You could make Luke Rydkowski the

41:42

Fed Chair. Well, I've said that it would

41:44

be along, someone along the lines of Ron

41:46

Paul, Bob Murphy, somebody like that, somebody who's

41:48

really good at economic. Bob Murphy is one

41:50

of the best followers on Twitter. He's so

41:52

much fun. Holy cow. He's

41:54

probably the most fun economist that you can find

41:56

on Twitter. And we've got to stop the warfare

41:58

state. It's disgusting. It's

42:00

such a huge part of our budget. We got

42:02

12% of the population of the United States today

42:04

can hardly put food on the table. Like I

42:06

said, the middle class, I'm just a blue collar

42:08

working class guy, right? I'm just a normal guy

42:10

like everybody else running for president who might end

42:12

up on all 50 ballots. So I understand how

42:14

these policies affect families because I am a big

42:16

family raising kids, doing everything that everybody else. I

42:19

put work boots on every morning. And

42:21

so the warfare state's got to go. We can't

42:24

continue to spend all of our

42:26

citizens' tax money on wars that most of them

42:28

don't support. What changes first? You

42:31

change culturally first or policy? So

42:33

I think people also have learned to hate or

42:35

not want to have them. The libertarians aren't going

42:37

to win until we change the culture. That's

42:39

just how it's going to be. We have

42:42

got to culturally move society in a direction

42:44

where they understand how bad the Federal Reserve

42:46

is, how bad the warfare state is, how

42:48

bad gun legislation is, how bad the drug

42:50

war is, how bad all these things that

42:52

have been the war against

42:54

the family. We have to get society to understand

42:56

that stuff before they'll support a libertarian. Here's one

42:58

idea. You held an event called

43:01

Free Cheeseburgers and Why the Fed is

43:03

Bad Day. Well, I've been doing that on

43:05

Break the Cycle twice a week for three

43:08

years. There's

43:10

a lot of stuff. And there's a lot

43:12

more libertarianism in culture now too, like people

43:14

like Phil over here, who's a musician, well-known,

43:17

goes out and talks about libertarian philosophy and

43:19

stuff. And Air July and

43:21

people making comic books. That's

43:24

the kind of cultural stuff that we have to do

43:26

if we're ever going to get to a point where

43:28

we do get a libertarian election in office. Family stuff,

43:30

where does your libertarian presidency go with abortion? So

43:33

I actually have it. I am the only

43:36

abolitionist candidate running in America today. I'm the

43:38

only one who thinks that

43:40

it is absolutely illibertarian to kill

43:42

your child. And Tim, we're not

43:44

going to argue about this. Let's

43:47

jump to this story from SCNR. We talk about it

43:49

on the board. RFK Jr.

43:52

suggests abortion should not be

43:54

regulated by federal or state

43:56

laws. And probably one

43:58

of the most shocking. and

44:00

probably the most extreme position held

44:03

by any federal politician, RFK

44:05

Jr's position saying, I mean

44:08

this is a quote, even at full term,

44:11

she said, Kennedy

44:14

says, I don't think it's ever okay, we should do

44:16

everything in our power to make sure that never happens

44:18

but I ultimately think nobody says that to do that

44:21

and there are always some kind of extenuating circumstances that

44:23

would make a mother make that kind of choice, a terrible

44:25

terrible choice, you can't overstate how bad it is, I

44:28

think ultimately we have to trust women. The

44:30

interviewer says even full term to which

44:33

Kennedy responds even full term. Now

44:36

let's analyze what he said, nobody

44:38

sets out to do that, my

44:41

guy, murder happens all the

44:43

time and people do set

44:45

out to do it intentionally because they want to

44:47

end a life for whatever reason. What

44:50

he says in this interview is basically

44:53

there should be zero regulation in

44:56

any way up to

44:58

full term. If a woman decides, just

45:00

trust her because no one would

45:02

really do a bad thing like that. I

45:05

don't think there's any other federal

45:07

level politician who's taken that extreme

45:09

position. I think mine's the opposite

45:11

extreme. That is the most naive

45:13

position any president has ever, I've

45:15

heard any president in this, it's

45:17

like oh no one

45:19

would do that. That happens all the time?

45:22

That is the most, that is childish. Tim

45:24

are you having more pro-life in real time

45:26

right now? What does that mean? I've positioned

45:28

the same as it's always been. But

45:32

like your pro-life. I've never been of the position,

45:34

it should be un-reactive. I've never held the position

45:38

that at any

45:40

point for any reason a woman can just

45:42

kill a baby and I've said every single

45:44

time we've talked about it that elective abortion

45:46

is wrong. This is Ralph Northam level. Like

45:49

we'll keep them comfortable. This is beyond. It's

45:51

worth crazy. Ralph Northam. He was saying yeah.

45:53

It's but no you wouldn't really use some

45:55

regulation in this. What it is is cowardice.

45:57

It's because he's afraid to say anything that

45:59

would to defend the Democrats or

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Revoid. We're prohibited by law. See terms and

46:38

conditions. No,

46:52

like that is unacceptable. In 2021, he

46:54

was still stomping for lockdowns for- Brain

46:56

worms, get out of here. Yeah. He's

47:00

Hollywood Catholic. Yeah. Just like

47:02

Biden. He seems like he's crawling out of the womb

47:04

of liberalism, like in the bad sense of liberalism, not

47:06

good liberalism. Are we just finding out who the Kennedys

47:08

are today? No, but there's been, I was anti-Kennedy from

47:11

the first moment that he came on. I

47:16

was like, okay, interesting. I like JFK saying no to

47:18

Northwood. Yeah, that was good. There's things that they've done

47:20

that are nice, but he's also- He didn't make it

47:22

long after saying no to Northwood. I wonder why. I

47:25

don't know. I wonder why. I

47:27

don't know. I don't really like also, and

47:30

how they operate when it comes to his dad and all that

47:32

stuff. But he's, I just see a

47:34

pattern. I want to find that point.

47:36

I think it's near the end. He's a serial cheater. So

47:40

I wonder if that's why he's pro-abortion. I

47:42

mean, he's had a pretty rough life. It's

47:45

up to the woman. You know my belief is that

47:47

we should leave the woman. We shouldn't have government involved.

47:50

Even if it's full term. Even

47:53

if it's full term. Fuck. And

47:56

I think that's what I wanted to clarify because there has been- I'm

47:58

gonna play that again for you. Right. So

48:01

to leave. So in other words, keeping it

48:03

as is with Roe versus Wade having been

48:05

overturned and leaving it up to the states

48:07

to determine if and when

48:09

a woman can have an abortion. No, I wouldn't

48:11

leave it to the states. Right. Oh,

48:13

I would. He would say completely. It's

48:15

up to the woman. You know, my

48:17

belief is that we should leave it to the woman.

48:20

We shouldn't have government involved. Even if

48:22

it's full term. Even

48:24

if it's full term. Okay.

48:26

And I think that's where that's what I wanted

48:28

to clarify because they're especially people

48:31

in the middle trying to. Yo, we're we're.

48:35

Wow. Male feminine are the word.

48:39

Nothing he says in that preamble leading up

48:41

to it where he's dancing around the idea.

48:43

It's all negated by the even full term.

48:45

Yes, even full term. It is absolutely insane.

48:48

He's like, and we'll just trust women. Dude, some

48:50

women deliver their babies and throw

48:53

it a dumpster. A million, a million babies are

48:55

aborted every year in the United States. A million.

48:57

But how many, how many instances, when he looks

48:59

up per year, how many instances have occurred where

49:01

women will have a baby and throw it a

49:03

dumpster? It happens a lot. It happens enough to

49:06

wear toilets and toilets and garbage bags. There was

49:08

the the woman who had the baby and then

49:10

the mom and her, they killed it or whatever.

49:12

What was that story? And then he's like, or

49:14

New Mexico. And he's like, just trust them. Just

49:16

trust the woman. Like, dude, look, I don't think

49:19

the majority of women are set out to

49:21

murder their babies in, you

49:23

know, in these kinds of ways. I actually think

49:25

a lot of women would rather not get an

49:27

abortion and society is pressuring them in this direction.

49:29

That's beside the point. Yes, sorry. Any presidential candidate

49:32

that says trust women is automatically disqualified. Yeah. Well,

49:34

I think the point is, he's like, well, you

49:36

know, no one really wants to do this. I'm

49:38

like, yo, some guy in New York threw a

49:40

belt around his neck, dragged her behind a car

49:42

and then raped her. Is that what happened? Oh,

49:44

that was crazy. On video. It's on video. There

49:46

are people who do want to do these awful

49:49

things. That's what government does. But hey,

49:51

I'll give it to this. It's very libertarian,

49:53

right? And I mean this

49:55

in the most dry sense, in the dry

49:57

sense of the anti-government word, the government. being

50:00

like, we literally just won't even enforce laws. I

50:02

think one of the important things to note with

50:04

the stories you get about girls who toss their

50:06

babies in dumpsters or whatever else is they're

50:09

also part of a culture that says having

50:11

a kid ruins your life. It's over after

50:13

this. And so I think it's crazy that

50:15

we have this narrative of

50:18

like, yeah, they're under terrible circumstances,

50:21

quote from RFK, when actually the terrible circumstances are

50:23

like, you might not get to go to college.

50:25

You might have to take on more responsibility along

50:27

a young age. It's very,

50:29

it's not common. It's not the majority

50:31

of people who have abortions who are

50:34

really in dire straits. They have all

50:36

kinds of issues. It's a thing that culture

50:38

has told us you should do because otherwise you have

50:40

to become responsible. Like, oh, what a concept. I

50:42

wanna say there's another part in this interview as well

50:44

that's not being talked about here. And this is the

50:47

funny part is he says he's for full term

50:49

abortions, he's for full term abortions, but we need to

50:51

make it so that women do feel like they don't

50:53

have to make abortions. So he's also talking about using

50:55

more taxpayer money for more services to take care of

50:58

women. Also saying that women should be able to commit

51:01

baby murder up through full term is how I,

51:03

that's how I look at it. I don't mince

51:05

words on this anymore. I'm done with it. I don't do it

51:08

anymore. That's why I started calling human sacrifice. Yeah, I don't call,

51:10

yeah, that's even better maybe. I'm the only abolition candidate running in

51:12

the United States today. So you're too close to the back and

51:14

you're too far away. Oh, sorry.

51:16

I'm gonna start screaming human sacrifice.

51:20

I'm, cause it's loud in mind and so I'm

51:22

trying to keep up. That's why. They

51:24

don't even know what they're doing right now. It'll be better

51:26

that way. No, I mean, I

51:29

think there is this policy

51:31

issue of like on what level of government

51:33

do you regulate this? But I also think

51:35

the cultural issue of like we have raised

51:37

generations, especially of women to look at children

51:39

and families as this negative burden that is

51:41

going to make them have to do all

51:44

these things they don't wanna do or whatever

51:46

else. And for the most part, it's inaccurate.

51:48

It doesn't really represent how people wanna live

51:50

but it also creates this negative hostility that

51:53

makes, I just hate that abortion is

51:55

the woman's issue. I think women have a lot of interest. I think

51:57

we have a lot of things that could change their life and they

51:59

have boiled it down. to like but if you aren't allowed

52:01

to get rid of your baby your life is over. Real

52:03

quick I just got to get a shout out to old sticky old

52:06

sticky Keetane super chat he said

52:08

his brain worm died poor guy

52:10

starved to death. So,

52:14

I'm gonna say you said

52:16

you said abortion is women's

52:18

a women's issue? They have they made it. I have very good

52:20

news for you the issue is never the issue

52:25

the issue is always the revolution. That's

52:27

true but this is how they're selling it

52:29

to women to join the revolution. For the

52:31

moment because remember as soon as they threw women under the

52:33

bus as soon as the women with the penis has showed

52:35

up. And the women welcome

52:38

these women like it's crazy to me. I

52:40

love this narrative where it's like don't be

52:42

Republican what if you need to kill your

52:44

baby? Yeah. That's a good point. I can't

52:46

be Republican I have to be able to

52:48

kill my progeny. I

52:51

just I think it's disgusting. It's the same group

52:53

of culture that is like you should 100% freeze

52:55

your eggs because what if you wanted to work until

52:57

you're 45? Also what if you actually get pregnant and

52:59

then you should have to be able to get rid

53:01

of that baby? I got it. What is it here to you? I

53:04

I solved it. Okay if a woman

53:06

wants to get an abortion you just take the

53:08

baby out and freeze it. There you

53:10

go. Yeah. You can freeze it for a later date. People

53:13

do that. They'll like conceive children and they put

53:15

them on a enough part of idea. You can

53:17

take a baby out of a woman. Not a full

53:19

born baby but like. Baby's

53:22

being born and she's like can I freeze it?

53:24

And usually that's used for people that are the

53:26

DIVF is typically used for people that have problems

53:29

giving birth. I'm saying like a woman walks in the clinic she's

53:31

like I'm four weeks pregnant the black we will take that that

53:33

thing out we'll put in the freezer. In 1956 they were freezing

53:37

hamsters for like I think an hour

53:39

and then microwaving them. Yeah. Bringing

53:42

them back to life resuscitating them. With a microwave? Yeah.

53:44

It's like a radio. Look it up. It's a microwave.

53:46

It might be a special microwave but I'm calling it

53:48

my blood. So the frogs out here the little

53:50

little little frogs are called spring peepers.

53:53

And no they're based. We got good water here. Like you

53:55

got the base frogs. Spring

53:58

peepers dude. These are little. One-inch

54:00

frogs and they scream really loud. Oh, they're basically

54:02

yelling to the ladies But they have super high

54:04

glucose in their blood so they don't freeze They

54:07

just slow down and then don't move and then

54:09

when it gets warm, they just come right back

54:11

Wow, that's free wild That's base. How do you

54:13

change the so I I don't we

54:15

got to put the sugar in the baby when it's born

54:17

and then put In the freezer put in the freezer and

54:20

a microwave I think it's gonna be impossible to change abortion

54:22

from the top down although I think we need to get

54:24

rid of Yeah, I'm a sacrifice. I think we need to

54:26

do it, but I don't know if it's gonna fix everything

54:28

overnight Like how do you do the cultural from the bottom?

54:30

I look at the government look so as

54:32

a libertarian I think the only libertarian position

54:34

is that if a government must exist it

54:36

has to exist to protect the life and

54:38

rights of its citizens That's it I mean

54:40

That's what the government should have to do

54:42

and and the right to life extends to

54:44

all people including the unborn child Okay, so

54:46

like a government should say that it should

54:48

be illegal to murder. I agree with you

54:50

I feel like how long in which I

54:52

agree with will cause deranged people to do

54:54

it more in other ways should be dangerous

54:57

Let me ask a couple questions Let's say there's

55:00

a person and they they're riding their

55:02

bike and then another person riding his bike

55:05

jumps off the back of a Toe

55:08

truck does a sick flip and tail

55:10

whip and then as he's landing

55:12

the tail of the bike hits the other guy in the

55:14

head Knocking him down

55:16

to the ground. He's his head again, and then they

55:18

bring him to the hospital and this guy is His

55:22

brain is gone. He's brain dead. Just just lying there

55:24

Do you think the law should mandate that person be

55:26

kept alive? I

55:30

Think that man, that's a tough one. No,

55:32

I don't think the law should mandate that person

55:35

be kept alive because they have no They

55:38

have zero life left. I mean, it's their life

55:40

is gone Once you're once your brain is once

55:43

your brain dead I mean technically you're almost legally

55:45

dead at that point Anyway, like it's like the

55:47

Terry shot a bow thing like right persons in

55:49

a coma with a feeding tube and they're like

55:52

We don't think this person is here anymore. We don't

55:54

think they can come back at that point your family

55:56

should decide how much suffering They're willing to

55:58

let you do but when it's

56:00

a baby that's not suffering, that's a new life being

56:02

born. There's a complete, this is Apple, an

56:04

orange argument. I disagree. The issue with

56:07

people who are comatose is the doctors don't

56:09

really know for certain. I mean, there's certainly

56:11

circumstances where like, yo, this guy, his brain

56:13

is jello. But there are a lot

56:15

of circumstances where people have been said. There's not a lot, it's very

56:17

rare. When people are brain dead

56:19

in comas like that, it's very rare they come back.

56:21

But it's also not uncommon for doctors to be wrong.

56:24

And so the issue is. Well, yeah, that's one of the

56:26

biggest causes of death in the United States. It

56:29

absolutely is malpractice. So the issue then

56:31

becomes, do you trust the doctor

56:33

when he's giving medical advice saying this

56:36

person is no longer with us.

56:38

And then you run into a similar problem with abortion,

56:41

where there are many women who say the doctor told

56:43

them, your kid is not viable, it will die into

56:45

an abortion. And then they said, you're wrong. And they

56:47

had the kid and the kid's healthy and 20 years

56:49

old. So the challenge I see there

56:51

is giving discretion to end

56:53

life. Now with someone who's an adult or

56:55

older or any capacity like a teenager or

56:57

whatever, they end up

57:00

dependent upon a machine to live.

57:02

Someone's got to pay for that resource to have to come

57:04

from somewhere. That's a challenge. With

57:06

a woman who's pregnant, her body is already sustaining

57:08

the baby. So as long as she's eating and

57:11

living, the baby is gonna grow and be nurtured.

57:13

I just think there is a similarity there. And

57:15

at what point do we allow a medical practitioner

57:17

or a state to determine that a life can

57:20

be ended? Okay, first of all,

57:22

I wanna start this off saying that like 1% of

57:25

abortions in the United States are medically necessary,

57:27

okay? So we're talking like 99% of abortions

57:30

in the United States today are not medically necessary.

57:32

That baby would thrive and grow and be human.

57:36

They're elective, okay? It's contraception. There's a huge,

57:38

and I'm gonna keep saying this, Apple's in

57:40

Oranges, because it's a completely different argument. We're

57:42

talking about somebody who is brain dead, in

57:44

a coma, cannot support their life anymore. You're

57:46

exaggerating the position. A person

57:48

who is in a coma and presumed

57:51

brain dead could recover. Should

57:53

a doctor, a man, a fallible man say, you

57:56

can pull the plug. I hereby determine in my

57:58

expertise as a doctor, I think he- He can't recover

58:00

and then we're supposed to take his word for it.

58:02

That's the issue. How is

58:04

that the same as knowing that a baby

58:06

is growing and going to grow up to

58:08

be a human being and a doctor saying

58:10

this person is brain dead? You're making a

58:12

probabilistic argument. The baby likely will not suffer

58:14

a traumatic brain injury during birth. The baby

58:16

will likely have a fully functioning brain and

58:18

no disabilities. The baby will likely not. There

58:20

are babies that are born brain dead. There

58:22

are babies, there was actually a baby that

58:24

was born without a brain. There

58:27

are babies born with all kinds of different birth defects

58:29

for sure. That's

58:31

also not the norm. The norm for people that are brain dead are

58:33

dead. So

58:37

again you're exaggerating position. I'm saying there's a

58:40

person who is by all appearances comatose

58:43

and the doctor says this person will not recover.

58:47

I'm saying there's a chance, we don't know, the person could recover. It

58:49

happened. Sure. So the

58:51

question then becomes and by

58:54

all means hold the position that's probabilistic. If

58:57

there is a 10% chance the person recovers, do

58:59

we say you can't kill them? If it's a 0.001%

59:01

chance? Well I certainly wouldn't

59:03

say that we should kill somebody with a 99% chance of survival like

59:06

we would with 99% of the babies that are

59:09

aborted. But if it's a 99% chance of death,

59:11

you're okay with it? I mean if there's a

59:13

99% chance and a

59:15

medical professional is telling you this person is never going

59:17

to come back and there's 1%, at

59:19

that point it's got to be up to the family to decide. How

59:22

would you deal with when it comes to abortion

59:24

law, a doctor just going, you

59:27

want to get an abortion? I hereby sign

59:29

this baby as a 99% chance of death. So

59:32

we're good, doctor says so. Kill

59:34

the baby. Doesn't that sound like

59:36

a medical malpractice suit waiting to happen

59:38

plus a murder charge in my opinion?

59:41

Oh sure. There'll be no fine

59:43

ways to prove it. I mean

59:45

if you make it a mandate

59:47

to where these doctors have to

59:50

go to jail for performing abortions there's going to

59:52

be ways to prove it. I mean there's got

59:54

to be a criminal justice thing. We

59:58

prosecute murders, right? Look, we prosecute. Anybody

1:00:00

can murder today right now, right? And you

1:00:02

prosecute murderers, right? The idea that a doctor

1:00:04

could make a mistake and then

1:00:06

you're gonna find intent on that, the

1:00:08

issue becomes, like many people have said, the issue

1:00:11

with no-fault divorce, I've said no-fault divorce is bad.

1:00:13

The response is, without no-fault divorce, women will falsely

1:00:15

accuse their husbands of rape, and how do you

1:00:17

deal with that? Women already do that. That's

1:00:20

right. Even with no-fault divorce. And it'll get

1:00:23

substantially worse. I don't think that's an

1:00:25

argument. I think we should still get rid of no-fault

1:00:27

divorce. If you don't wanna get married, don't get married.

1:00:29

But the issue then is, not that it's the majority

1:00:31

position, not that you shouldn't ban abortion. I'm saying, simple

1:00:34

question. How do you deal with doctors who lie?

1:00:36

Is it we try to investigate them? I think

1:00:38

the reality is, if you

1:00:40

say a doctor can give, medically

1:00:43

necessary abortions will always be permitted.

1:00:45

Like, look, the baby's

1:00:47

gonna die and you're gonna die. Doctor says so. No, I think

1:00:49

only if the woman's gonna die. I think that's the cutoff point.

1:00:52

To me, that's the abolitionist. And that's, you know, it

1:00:54

has to be proven. Not if the baby's gonna die?

1:00:58

The doctors say that the babies aren't gonna survive

1:01:01

all the time and they do. So why would

1:01:03

we risk it, risk murdering somebody just because

1:01:05

there's a chance they might not make it?

1:01:07

I mean, that's just, that's insane. That's an

1:01:09

insane, if we really get to the crux

1:01:11

of this argument in the United States today

1:01:14

about this thing, it's really disgusting. It's really

1:01:16

disgusting to think about the fact that we

1:01:18

treat unborn children as completely expendable. It's

1:01:21

completely expendable in the United States today.

1:01:23

So if a woman is pregnant and

1:01:25

the baby has no brain. If

1:01:27

the baby has no brain, I mean, if the baby's

1:01:31

developing with no brain, then the baby's not alive.

1:01:33

I mean, that's just the truth of the matter.

1:01:35

No lungs. That baby's not alive. Baby's got

1:01:37

no lungs. That baby's not alive. You don't survive that one. Okay,

1:01:39

so now we're getting to it. So you are saying there are

1:01:41

many circumstances in which a doctor's orders could result in abortion of

1:01:43

the baby. I don't, I

1:01:45

mean, yeah, the baby's, if the

1:01:48

baby's an ectopic pregnancy, I mean,

1:01:50

you're gonna know that within, what,

1:01:52

six weeks? This is literally not asking.

1:01:55

So like, but here's the thing is

1:01:57

we're throwing up all these different hypotheticals. matter

1:02:00

is that 99% of abortions are elected.

1:02:02

They're elected. So we're talking a

1:02:04

million babies a year. Okay, 99% of

1:02:06

those are elective

1:02:08

abortions, where there was nothing wrong with the

1:02:11

baby there wasn't the motor wasn't gonna die.

1:02:13

Okay, there wasn't even rape or incest or

1:02:15

whatever it is that the left throws at

1:02:17

you when you say that a birder should

1:02:20

be illegal. Okay, so you talked about hypotheticals.

1:02:22

I'm sorry. I'm getting you bad.

1:02:24

I would ban it. Yes, absolutely. I would. I'm

1:02:26

the only abolition candidate running today in the United

1:02:29

States because I think that murder is wrong and

1:02:31

it should say wrong and we need a society

1:02:33

and no, no exemptions or some exemptions. What's the

1:02:35

exemptions for the for the life of the

1:02:37

baby if if it's gonna kill the mother, then

1:02:39

it should be medical medically necessary. That's nothing on

1:02:41

the baby. Nothing else. Nothing else. Okay, so there

1:02:44

are scenarios where like a baby will have no

1:02:46

heart or something like this, it'll be developing improperly.

1:02:48

You're gonna know that I mean, there

1:02:51

might be some medical there might be some

1:02:53

medical necessity where you know, because first of

1:02:55

all, if a baby is forming with, you

1:02:57

know, you're basically taking Louisiana's position because

1:02:59

that's what Louisiana has a ban

1:03:02

on abortion except for medically,

1:03:04

I forgot what the term is, but it's got

1:03:06

to be full. It's got to be it's got

1:03:08

to be provably medically necessary. Otherwise, we're murdering people.

1:03:10

I mean, that's really the truth of the situation

1:03:12

in the United States today is we're murdering unborn

1:03:15

babies every day a million, a million a year,

1:03:17

that's got to stop. And if we don't have

1:03:19

somebody who's going to stand up and de normalize

1:03:21

this practice. And so so we can get into

1:03:23

all the hypotheticals you want. That's fine. But the

1:03:26

truth of the matter is that 99% of

1:03:29

the babies murdered in the United States are perfectly

1:03:31

fine, healthy babies. This is what I find frustrating

1:03:33

is I get it, you can say it a

1:03:35

million times. I'm trying to understand what is the

1:03:37

practical application of a law you would make? What

1:03:40

does it do? How does it affect society? Just

1:03:42

saying abortion is bad, we want to get rid

1:03:44

of it totally agree totally get it. Now

1:03:46

we agree, you agree that we should get a lot

1:03:49

of abortions are bad. I said them all the time.

1:03:51

Yeah, I think I think I thought you see I

1:03:53

thought you were more pro choice than that before when

1:03:55

we had already before. Yeah, the issue being that in

1:03:57

the case of rape and incest having I think I

1:03:59

think where we would be regardless of my opinion

1:04:01

on what you should or shouldn't allow someone to do is

1:04:03

that the Fourteenth Amendment would require a Judge

1:04:05

to sign off on every abortion that

1:04:07

that's that is not what I think the society should

1:04:10

be doing But that is what the Constitution we don't

1:04:12

typically we don't typically you know punish

1:04:15

The the children of criminals by death either so

1:04:17

that's something that we need to think about in

1:04:19

society as well when we're talking about Exceptions we

1:04:21

don't typically punish the children of criminals the

1:04:24

Fourteenth Amendment Needs to

1:04:26

be the Supreme Court needs to answer this are

1:04:28

the unborn persons right because it does a distinction

1:04:30

between what a citizen And what a person is

1:04:32

under the Constitution and that persons cannot

1:04:34

have their life liberty or Property

1:04:38

taken or hindered without due process you get a double

1:04:40

homicide if you kill a pregnant woman Sometimes

1:04:42

yeah, sometimes it depends on the state. I mean

1:04:44

there's definitely places where they've already said that's if

1:04:47

that person if that's the case Then the

1:04:49

unborn have personhood and a judge wants to

1:04:51

sign off on the approval of an abortion

1:04:54

And that's the Fourteenth Amendment. I

1:04:56

believe the Fourteenth Amendment interpreted properly

1:04:58

would ban abortion in almost

1:05:01

all circumstances Here's

1:05:04

what I don't what I don't like about Conservatives

1:05:06

is that they say rape and incest

1:05:09

and I say why is incest banned a Rape

1:05:11

I get you're making an argument about a woman who

1:05:13

did not consent to give her body in the government Being

1:05:16

restricted on whether it can force that woman to give

1:05:18

her body to someone else But incest

1:05:21

like if a brother and a sister have a kid

1:05:23

I mean it's gross and it's bad for a lot

1:05:25

of reasons the generous of hell If

1:05:29

baby born of incest would have all kind of all kinds

1:05:31

of health issues like it would not an argument I'm

1:05:34

not saying I'm right that I presented when the conservatives

1:05:36

say rape and incest I'm saying the incest thing has

1:05:38

no moral argument other than icky Yeah,

1:05:40

like there's there's negative consequences dramatic

1:05:42

negative consequences to incest But

1:05:45

we're talking if we're talking about two consenting

1:05:47

siblings Which I

1:05:49

think is a bad thing And

1:05:51

They have a baby. Why make an exception

1:05:53

to kill that baby in this in the

1:05:55

circumstances Irrespective of its medical conditions If the

1:05:57

argument is if the baby is suffering from

1:05:59

severe. The deformity. It opens the door to what's

1:06:01

more than we have a medical arguments but if the

1:06:03

issue was the baby appears to be healthy in every

1:06:05

way but it's an incest may be so kill it

1:06:07

that doesn't make sense That here's that. Here's the my

1:06:09

my last point on this because I know we we

1:06:11

view and I like to argue this every time I

1:06:13

come here as usually on the members only show But

1:06:15

here's my My My last point on this is is

1:06:18

that you know. We. Weep

1:06:20

it would let the left throw these hundred the

1:06:22

since the same hypotheticals that other people bring up

1:06:24

to the rape, incest, the medical necessity were talking

1:06:26

about less than one percent of those abortions we

1:06:28

left the last beat us on these issues with

1:06:31

one percent hypothetical. Okay, we let the left beat

1:06:33

us on these issues. We gotta stand strong. These

1:06:35

we gossip mincing words. We have a lose not

1:06:37

lose the war on language and in the only

1:06:39

way to do that is that school what it

1:06:41

is it baby murder and have become normalized the

1:06:44

United States. And we've got to say that I'm

1:06:46

actually really surprise a lot people in the chatter

1:06:48

pro Choice now I'm sure. I'm sure that there's

1:06:50

probably Libertarians were saying I'm wrong and if a

1:06:52

baby is conceived of incest, it should be aborted.

1:06:54

As be exception to tude to kill it and

1:06:56

will though used, you are doing wrong. but. The

1:06:59

of if a baby is conceived of incest, It

1:07:01

should. Be shouldn't kill it, right? Out. Of

1:07:03

a she killed. Someone. Should kill

1:07:05

babies off a killer hundred years. And

1:07:08

I don't think I got very clear. I can be going

1:07:10

to be clear, I don't think baby should be murdered. I

1:07:13

don't ever think the incestuous and become more prevalent

1:07:15

over the next couple decades because they are so

1:07:17

many cases of sperm donors who are like you

1:07:19

know so eager to cases of like I retelling

1:07:21

doctor see if there's from and suddenly they're like

1:07:23

I have five hundred siblings and we actually all

1:07:26

grew up in the same states like I wonder

1:07:28

if this will be something. I should reconsider

1:07:30

what I was. You know you can just

1:07:32

do okay. I know about. I

1:07:35

think the says that. The thing that

1:07:37

I find frustrating with the abortion issue

1:07:39

is that I typically find a lot

1:07:41

of people are unwilling to state their

1:07:43

actual opinions on how to do it,

1:07:45

because there's no. it. It is is

1:07:47

the the moral equivalent of like a

1:07:49

gigantic spear. There isn't. There's there's no

1:07:51

fence, there's no dead man's land. There's

1:07:53

no middle ground is no compromise. There

1:07:56

is either the abortion side or the

1:07:58

know. Abortion aside, and so there's a lot of people

1:08:00

in politics, we had one guy on the show

1:08:02

who refused to say abortion was murder. And

1:08:05

pro-life guy. Because he's

1:08:07

worried about the

1:08:09

optics of what it's going

1:08:12

to be when people see him say that. How it

1:08:14

affected political. Yeah, that's the same thing that, listen, this

1:08:16

is when Donald Trump came out with this kind of

1:08:18

wishy-washy... I know. Kerry like did it too. Yeah,

1:08:20

they all came out with these wishy-washy things and then all of

1:08:22

a sudden the Republicans were like, well, it's an issue we can't

1:08:24

win on. I said very clearly too.

1:08:27

Hey, guys, I'm sorry, like the

1:08:29

chat is very adamant that... It

1:08:31

says a lot about the culture. It says a

1:08:33

lot about the culture. Pro-life people are saying if

1:08:35

babies are conceived of incest, they should be aborted.

1:08:38

Listen, listen to me. If you think it's murder...

1:08:40

If you're going to be wishy-washy on this issue because

1:08:42

you think you can't win on this issue, then you

1:08:44

don't deserve to win. I'm sorry. I completely

1:08:46

agree. If you're running for a government

1:08:48

position and you can't win

1:08:50

on protecting unborn lives, then

1:08:53

you shouldn't win. I'm sorry, you should lose. I mean, it's ridiculous

1:08:55

to me that Trump and Kerry Lake are now just... You're saying

1:08:57

safe, legal, and rare in a new 2024 way. They're

1:09:00

parroting the left. We're losing that war

1:09:02

because we keep compromising on these issues.

1:09:04

This is why I think they're like...

1:09:07

No offense to all the politicians, but nothing's

1:09:10

going to fix it because it has to be a cultural

1:09:12

thing because we're dealing with a cult of nihilism. You can't

1:09:14

win the culture war if you mince your words and start

1:09:16

saying the same narrative as

1:09:18

your opponents. Yeah. It's not going to

1:09:20

work. It's going to have to come from the bottom up. The chat's getting

1:09:22

really manic because I'm reading and I said, why

1:09:25

is there an exception? Why do conservatives have

1:09:27

an exception for incest? They're all saying, Tim,

1:09:29

you're wrong about this position. I'm like, okay,

1:09:31

so you're saying that babies of

1:09:33

incest should be aborted or could be aborted? I'm like, no,

1:09:36

no, we're not saying that at all. I

1:09:38

know not each individual is saying things, but

1:09:40

overwhelmingly people are saying, I am wrong to

1:09:42

suggest that when... I've

1:09:45

heard Ben Shapiro talk about it. Abortion exceptions

1:09:47

for rape and incest. I'm like, why incest?

1:09:50

I get it. Incest is very bad. I'm

1:09:53

not going to make a Ben Shapiro joke. That's all right. I

1:09:55

Got to make a Ben Shapiro and his sister joke. I'm not

1:09:57

going to do it. I Do think so outside of this. Mike

1:10:00

moving to general politics with what for like Libertarianism

1:10:02

an otherwise I'm. Is are

1:10:04

are a lot of people just want

1:10:06

to assert a moral position they haven't

1:10:09

thought about. Or they hold moral positions

1:10:11

with that logic and so. If

1:10:13

you know I'm trying to look at a

1:10:15

law and understand the logic behind it and

1:10:17

why make sense. Big. Biggest

1:10:19

to peace have to fit together. That's

1:10:21

important for how the Supreme Court answers.

1:10:23

Things are for example in the in

1:10:25

the oral arguments on presidential immunity. One

1:10:28

of the things that Trump's art galleries were arguing

1:10:30

is that. You. Must interpret

1:10:32

it this way because if you

1:10:35

don't, Here's. A list of

1:10:37

laws that will break. If

1:10:39

you change the interpretation of immunity

1:10:41

and. The The General

1:10:44

Cause of Ideas. Were

1:10:46

arguing one facet of of of law

1:10:48

of of the arm is or or

1:10:50

code or anything that could have negative

1:10:53

impacts across the board and all of

1:10:55

the other are written law. So.

1:10:58

That's. What The logic of the law makes sense

1:11:00

and the application of it and it's nuances make

1:11:02

a are truly important to break down, but a

1:11:05

lot of people will be like. You.

1:11:07

Should be allowed to do this thing I say.

1:11:09

okay if you ban this than over here. This

1:11:11

law breaks Hutton so what would you do in

1:11:13

this instance and there a lot of people who

1:11:15

don't actually have a logic that plan for this.

1:11:17

What is with Hamas sources though? there's no solutions

1:11:19

on trade or what what exemptions do we make

1:11:21

for murder? Substance correct

1:11:23

were right defensive your self defense

1:11:25

of others for so engineer so

1:11:28

so we should make those same

1:11:30

exceptions for for baby murder. If

1:11:32

you're if you're gonna die or

1:11:34

your and grave bodily danger than

1:11:36

there should be different if not.

1:11:39

Your bit murky? Well, that's that's that's interesting

1:11:41

too, because I'd. Here's.

1:11:43

An air for your guy, his arm, How

1:11:48

have we base? our guys driving a self driving

1:11:50

car? And. On.

1:11:52

The. Car. Goes out of control.

1:11:54

no actually get a better a real world example

1:11:57

guy was driving a car. This actually happened and

1:11:59

the car randomly. The animated. There

1:12:01

was a defect with certain vehicles were the

1:12:04

accelerator would just punch him and he rear

1:12:06

ended a family and killed three family members

1:12:08

that they put him in prison. Someone's

1:12:11

driving a car. And. The car

1:12:13

goes out of control. You.

1:12:15

As a bystander are seeing the car

1:12:18

move towards an old lady. Do

1:12:20

you think it is legally permissible to kill

1:12:23

the man. In. The car

1:12:25

the only way to stop him His third. You

1:12:27

know it doesn't mean that would cause them hundred

1:12:29

an old argument brought up by Walter Block long

1:12:31

time ago. By the way. So that there was

1:12:33

I'm imagining is that you said the self defense

1:12:35

for the life out to defend the life of

1:12:37

a person or and right to set yourself or

1:12:39

life of another. Part of you have the right

1:12:41

to kill an innocent person to protect other people.

1:12:43

It's that means the Trolley car. Problem.

1:12:45

Right for soil? I don't know. I don't

1:12:48

think innocent person is the right. Where I'm

1:12:50

saying is that a car that malfunctioned. It's

1:12:52

an accident. And it's He's an innocent person.

1:12:54

So someone accidentally. You. Know ah a

1:12:57

drops something and it's about to kill somebody and

1:12:59

York the only way you could stop the you'd

1:13:01

save that a person has to to kill the

1:13:03

president. Do it was it was involved in the

1:13:05

accident. Regret: the car is out of control. He

1:13:07

doesn't know what he's doing. He's not intentionally trying

1:13:09

to kill someone. Is it still self defense to

1:13:12

kill that person. Even though there's no

1:13:14

murder and province no not as are still

1:13:16

killing innocent personality with that with the people

1:13:18

in your car where my family I'm probably

1:13:20

gonna do it right just like you would

1:13:22

murder somebody to protect your family. But but

1:13:24

this is this is good and totally to

1:13:26

the trolley car conundrum right? Like where do

1:13:28

I have the right to kill the one

1:13:30

person for saved the five people Were I

1:13:32

power? Yeah exactly I'm a bit and know

1:13:34

you don't worry, you don't round the right

1:13:36

to kill an innocent person. Even if

1:13:39

you think it's gonna save otherwise and this

1:13:41

is now we're getting into World War Two

1:13:43

territory in this the atomic bomb of in

1:13:45

which has also have an argument thing I

1:13:47

agree with year so let's know you don't

1:13:49

you know have the right to kill innocent

1:13:51

people know so that one with the exception

1:13:53

for abortion their does not apply by. So

1:13:55

if that the baby is not intending is is

1:13:58

an innocent person not intending to kill them. Other:

1:14:00

why kill the baby at that point you have

1:14:02

that is so so. There. There's

1:14:04

first all, there's a solution. Okay, I'm

1:14:07

end up the mother ah as to

1:14:09

take precedence at that point. I mean

1:14:11

that the fully formed a doll at

1:14:13

him when you're like. We're. Talking were

1:14:15

talking about two different things. He right like was

1:14:17

an accident and one is unavoidable. Someone's going to

1:14:19

die no matter what rights and you have and

1:14:21

have an egg or up a fetus right? A

1:14:23

depending on what stages and and you have a

1:14:25

fully formed mother with a family and all the

1:14:27

stuff. I mean you have to see, you have

1:14:29

to make a sad decision. At that point this

1:14:32

is not elect and again we're talking about less

1:14:34

than one percent of abortion. I've been right, right?

1:14:36

So right. But what we're trying that we're trying

1:14:38

to address right to hash out the moral Canada

1:14:40

More I got Jack and by we what how

1:14:42

we advise at that point you have to. you

1:14:44

have to. Choose. I mean you have to write

1:14:46

one of i'm going to Die or they're both

1:14:48

going to die so so are equal Scenario I'd.

1:14:51

The. Same Sarah mentioned a guys kind of as

1:14:53

out of control. If he crashes he and the

1:14:55

woman will die for. You can divert the car,

1:14:57

the car will explode and only them and will

1:14:59

die. You say you different? The car. I

1:15:02

mean you might you might have to. yeah I'm

1:15:04

live immediately become more on conclusion that the by

1:15:07

either way but but there's also there's also a

1:15:09

chance that you go to jail for murdering of

1:15:11

innocent person. I mean that you know that's the

1:15:13

truth. They bunnies you're trying to your try to

1:15:15

interact with a situation to save lives. I get

1:15:17

that. and they're so many different hypotheticals that we're

1:15:20

talking about. We know what are the into the

1:15:22

day good? I want to. I want to reiterate

1:15:24

it, ninety nine percent of the a baby murders

1:15:26

are like this. You know it's fascinating. About the

1:15:28

trolley problem is that. I.

1:15:31

Just totally lost much as I had a really

1:15:33

great point about it. Oh yea I'm science are

1:15:35

here. We are going okay with fascinating but the

1:15:38

trolley problem is. Most people what

1:15:40

was it? Most will say they would not.

1:15:42

Pull. The lever right now. I.

1:15:46

I don't think we actually get to the heart

1:15:48

of the trolley problem without telling people they have

1:15:50

legal liability spread. I think you tell someone saw

1:15:52

a trolley is having an eye on a track

1:15:54

it will run over five people will. if you

1:15:56

pull the lever you'll save the five people and

1:15:58

it'll run over that one person right? Have.

1:16:00

You want to go to prison for murder right now? Good

1:16:02

what state ever will Raleigh, Nc when I. Was

1:16:06

crossing a line and Selenium. Er

1:16:10

like as soon as the their ago and from

1:16:12

a free of more i censor spotless is what

1:16:15

size of as affect our eyes as of right

1:16:17

now saw odd. I. Prefer posted

1:16:19

a poll that he the pole and

1:16:21

the chat is should people be allowed

1:16:23

to abort incest babies Thirty nine percent

1:16:25

yes sixty one percent know where witted

1:16:27

boys were within a like look. incest

1:16:29

is disgusting but I i think every

1:16:31

life your plotted a bit. If your

1:16:33

kid admitting that kind of degeneracy you

1:16:35

really need to reevaluate your life anyways.

1:16:37

months here. But

1:16:40

I think this this kind of break it down

1:16:42

when you've got people in the chat that are

1:16:44

saying you should be audit aborted babies. That's what

1:16:46

I was pointing to. I am. I think everybody

1:16:48

in the chair business forty thirty forty percent now

1:16:50

believe it's as babies should be aborted for to

1:16:52

be allowed to be a forty people that support

1:16:54

maybe murder of free ruff forty percent or been

1:16:56

with a young person So it's actually for hundreds

1:16:58

of as one thousand twenty four votes. You know

1:17:00

that's unfortunate. I. Think it's just

1:17:02

a cultural thing. Silva have a model

1:17:04

somebody. a hard one to forty missing

1:17:06

idea of abortion. And that's why

1:17:08

I've been training myself. Just caught him. As I'm

1:17:11

going to start, I'm gonna.that because I feel like

1:17:13

when I say that because it's happened. You know,

1:17:15

such a high level of the tires, people celebrating

1:17:17

that.the nose or winning. So I'm going a word.

1:17:20

How many like a new poll that words that?

1:17:22

No way that I can just decide what mean

1:17:24

like how pulsar zoo at the ah ah ah

1:17:26

so we're at that What? Here we go you

1:17:28

see the on the nose or to habits. So

1:17:30

now up to fourteen hundred votes and rising and

1:17:32

now I know that sixty four percent their ago

1:17:34

one of the people who do not line of

1:17:36

abortion are now deciding to step up and hit

1:17:39

there we go apple been seat Now we can

1:17:41

win on this issue. I'd have to have conversations

1:17:43

as the crazies the my be and hard to

1:17:45

have reviewed often. To have these cameras you'll have

1:17:47

to have the computer is a lot of people

1:17:49

other that that. Believe the same thing that

1:17:51

I believe anymore. He not gonna win on

1:17:53

this. We're going to win on the situation.

1:17:55

mental map of this that air death Penalty.

1:17:58

What Your position? Ah, I'm I'm I'm. Not

1:18:00

for the states handing down capital punishment like that

1:18:02

here here here without a certain have I don't

1:18:04

I think that he they get wrong too many

1:18:06

times in the there's an issue theirself one time

1:18:09

is didn't want one or don't run down on

1:18:11

your own deaths and and we brought up Kamala

1:18:13

Harris and the Beginning and I really wanted to

1:18:15

say you know steps, I'm on death row even

1:18:17

though she had the evidence that could have exonerated

1:18:19

him a natural by Southern. Where is this what

1:18:22

always tell people who are pro death penalty? I'm

1:18:24

like it's because Lucky. That. You know

1:18:26

a lot of conservatives are are unfair the

1:18:28

death penalty and they'll say there are child

1:18:30

rapists out there and we know they did

1:18:33

it. I'm like I'll totally get that. I

1:18:35

totally get the problem is it's com Ela

1:18:37

Harris was trying to convince me of that.

1:18:39

It's it's it's like it's not that's not

1:18:41

my brother company be be like do trust

1:18:43

me man this guy's bad news we had

1:18:46

to something about some of our have only

1:18:48

and every single prosecution has a political element

1:18:50

because d A's don't wanna lose their dad.

1:18:52

Is it that there a motivation who wins

1:18:54

that goes beyond just. Finding out of

1:18:56

the purses actually guilty or innocent? Rate

1:18:58

of you haven't yet. You're making your

1:19:01

career mother and up on some have

1:19:03

rob you have a motivations than that

1:19:05

means that ensure that we kind of

1:19:07

makes the state not. Are.

1:19:10

Not on bias for here and I'll tell

1:19:13

you this. I'm all for families getting retribution

1:19:15

of people that have harmed their children or

1:19:17

whatever self harm it as you know and

1:19:19

then if and then if afterwards they find

1:19:22

that that person was not the right person

1:19:24

than that family member need to take accountability

1:19:26

further. Right? Murder of a new subversive you

1:19:28

know to me but I I'm not. I'm

1:19:31

not. I think that families that's ah exact

1:19:33

their own punishment. The revenge against people that

1:19:35

have harm them should not be held liable

1:19:37

if that makes. I. Think the death penalty

1:19:39

the really complicated issue to cause. If you

1:19:42

have some line, you know let's say the

1:19:44

perfect case. Confess, you can confirm Dna. it's

1:19:46

all there. and then we just pay for

1:19:48

them to be alive for decades like the

1:19:50

taxpayers are that it paints. As for side.

1:19:52

That's why said make Australia a

1:19:54

penal colony once again Roka. and

1:19:57

new zealanders got can be unhappy with a manager

1:19:59

yes It's time to it's time. We

1:20:01

need to go back in and take a takeover

1:20:03

Australia and turn it into a fair You know

1:20:06

colony to be fair You

1:20:08

look at what they did during kova and you're like, maybe they

1:20:10

are already are They

1:20:13

went that direction it's in their history It's in

1:20:15

their genes, but I really actually believe this and maybe

1:20:17

not in Australia But I believe we this is what

1:20:19

instead of the death penalty and instead of using taxpayer

1:20:21

funds to keep people in jail for 50

1:20:24

years We should have a penal colony and be

1:20:26

like you're a pedophile or a murderer or a

1:20:28

rapist or whatever You go live there. Goodbye and

1:20:30

leave and so that's what we should be doing.

1:20:32

We need a lot of Siberia. Yes, sir. Correct

1:20:35

Yes We

1:20:38

that I've been to Alaska and

1:20:40

it is very empty Yeah, and there's a

1:20:42

big opportunity for sending all of the federal

1:20:45

employees there because it'll start terraforming the region

1:20:47

We talked about this. Yeah. Yeah, then the

1:20:49

Alaskans were like We

1:20:55

already have heart we don't need any other problems Already

1:20:58

just let us keep our little oil Leave

1:21:00

us alone. I have successfully created a poll that

1:21:02

allows me to give any answer. I want to

1:21:04

question What's your question? How you should

1:21:07

incest babies be exempted from abortion law? Oh jeez. Nobody's

1:21:09

gonna know how to answer that 50-50 Yeah,

1:21:11

everybody's like, oh what? Well,

1:21:14

the point is what the abortion laws of vague

1:21:16

net it's a nebulous statement It's meaningless the abortion

1:21:18

law could be for or against abortion. Right? So

1:21:21

we've got an hour on No,

1:21:24

they should not be exempted from I'm happy that we've

1:21:26

done an hour on abortion, you know I because we

1:21:28

get to talk about it. It's actually been 16 minutes.

1:21:30

Is it only been 16? I

1:21:39

have a timer for one segment start and end.

1:21:41

No, we track them write them down. That's how

1:21:43

we make the segments on Oh, yeah And

1:21:47

we're actually we actually actually shifted into a

1:21:49

death penalty. Yeah, we did shift into the

1:21:51

death penalty. That's true. Yeah You

1:21:56

gotta be pro-life right across the board and that's

1:21:58

whenever somebody's like, oh, I'm pro-life I'm like Are

1:22:00

you anti-war? Yeah. And they're

1:22:02

like, no. I'm like, I love bombs in war. Yeah,

1:22:06

I love the innocent dead children across

1:22:08

the world. Children everywhere

1:22:10

else. Whatever. Yeah. No,

1:22:13

not for me. Yeah. Anti-war. Anti-death

1:22:16

penalty. But I'm all for a penal colony for sure.

1:22:18

Do you think- We guys, we got to talk

1:22:20

about the solar flare. I mean, we got 10

1:22:22

minutes for super chats and we haven't even got

1:22:25

into the fact that the world's going to end

1:22:27

tonight. And the world is laughing like morons. There

1:22:29

are already significantly impressive

1:22:32

pictures of auroras hitting up

1:22:34

Twitter. They're all over the place. Apparently,

1:22:36

we can see the clouds right now. Oh,

1:22:38

really? They might be so strong that

1:22:40

you can see them through the clouds. Space places. Really?

1:22:44

So what are these, Shane? Tell me. Well,

1:22:46

Harp is attacking me directly, I think. A

1:22:48

little narcissistic. It's about you? Yeah, that's posted every day.

1:22:50

Yeah. Yeah. Now

1:22:53

stop. That guy makes great pizzas.

1:22:56

Cannibal is the word of the year. Has anyone noticed

1:22:58

this? Like, it's funny to me that the solar problem

1:23:01

is now the cannibal thing. We

1:23:03

had the cannibal barbecue

1:23:05

in Haiti. We had that one

1:23:07

actor like a year or two ago who

1:23:09

was a cannibal supposedly. When

1:23:12

I was in Vegas, a man ate someone's

1:23:14

face at the 7-Eleven down the road. Oh,

1:23:16

basalt. I don't even know. I think he

1:23:18

was just hungry. I don't know if it was basalt. Well,

1:23:20

it was about hungry people. And now the sun's a cannibal.

1:23:22

Let me tell you. I know. The

1:23:24

whole bill went from $800 a month to about $1,200 a month. But

1:23:26

that's because you have a baseball situation. Yeah, but can you

1:23:28

imagine inflation on a family like mine right now that's killing

1:23:31

us? I don't know what's going on with this.

1:23:34

It's crazy because it

1:23:36

could do some damage, but it might just be

1:23:38

another eclipse where we freak out about

1:23:41

it and nothing happens. We're just a couple of months out

1:23:43

from an election. They need some kind of wild thing to

1:23:45

point to. We're

1:23:47

laughing at the COVID regime now. We're all laughing at it.

1:23:49

We're like, we're definitely not followed for this again. So

1:23:52

the next big thing is turn off all

1:23:54

the internet. Well, they've been talking about the

1:23:56

internet apocalypse for a year and they've been

1:23:58

connecting it to solar flares. I don't think I

1:24:00

from what I've heard from other people who hit me up about this

1:24:03

That's not really the case with solar flares. It might actually

1:24:05

take out ham radios first Yeah, but that's according to people

1:24:07

who say they know stuff take your antennas up Hey,

1:24:12

if you've got it if you got like

1:24:15

ham radios and stuff this can disconnect your

1:24:17

antennas so that way they're not you know

1:24:19

Here's the crane tennis are antennas and wires

1:24:21

and cables and stuff are what actually can

1:24:23

conduct the electricity and stuff So you have

1:24:25

a radio runs on the same technology as

1:24:27

5g Interesting it's like

1:24:30

this. It was like the original. Yeah Are

1:24:34

you sure though? Yeah, pretty sure cuz I'm pretty sure 5g

1:24:37

Look it up. They're all radio. It's a super high frequency.

1:24:39

Well ham is a low frequency I thought ham was low

1:24:41

and 5g is high ham

1:24:44

is is VHF

1:24:46

is UHF and VHF with

1:24:49

your varying ultra high frequencies.

1:24:51

Yeah, 5g frequencies are super

1:24:53

compact to Contain a

1:24:55

lot of data for me, but I'm pretty sure that they have a very

1:24:58

similar technology. Welcome to Science Friday

1:25:00

on IRL Mystery

1:25:02

science here. They're all just they're all they're all

1:25:05

actually the same technology except for the Radio,

1:25:07

it's just really branded Waves,

1:25:11

you know and then Harry Potter just So

1:25:19

ham radio is 1.6 megahertz to

1:25:22

1240 megahertz 5g is 450

1:25:25

megahertz to 6 gigahertz That's

1:25:28

very which is higher. We can go back to

1:25:30

harp frying the eye. There's an overlap. Yeah With

1:25:34

its hurts with its frequencies and I think

1:25:36

I just think harp is a problem I

1:25:38

think when you play God with machines, what

1:25:40

is it? What is harp? It's a high

1:25:42

thing radio waves off the ionosphere or honest

1:25:45

fear Yeah, which does I think

1:25:47

I've talked to people who believe this as well who

1:25:49

know things Hannah Claire about

1:25:54

Cryptochromes cryptochromes and birds eyes migratory birds

1:25:56

eyes. They've been affected by problems

1:25:58

with their honest fear I think

1:26:00

personally that harp is messing with that like

1:26:02

look at messing with the clouds in Dubai

1:26:05

what happened I think when you play God,

1:26:07

oh, that's a while. It doesn't go well.

1:26:09

Yeah, so so this is like There's

1:26:12

a bunch of news stories saying it's debunked but

1:26:14

Dubai did a cloud seeding operation which they

1:26:16

do normally It's was a potassium chloride. I

1:26:18

don't like they drop in the sky Which

1:26:21

which basically adds weight to the water pot

1:26:23

molecules and they fall and then

1:26:26

they had mass flooding Yeah, and I think

1:26:28

it was Bloomberg that reported Cloud

1:26:30

seeding causes mass or you know contributes to

1:26:32

the mass flooding causing a disaster and then

1:26:34

a day later all these corporate press outlets

1:26:37

Are like no no Debunked

1:26:40

didn't happen shows for big cloud

1:26:42

if you know anything about big cloud There's no but

1:26:45

I won't get started on that But I'm just saying

1:26:47

when you mess around stuff like the finishes interesting to

1:26:49

me that they called it harp Which angels in the

1:26:51

Bible don't play the harp right? But people do associate

1:26:53

angels with harps probably because Greek mythology and a lot

1:26:55

of those types of angelic figures were playing harps They

1:26:58

shouldn't mess around with ionosphere. I don't know if that's crazier

1:27:00

the particle I

1:27:02

do don't get me started on sir. If you want to hear more about

1:27:04

this Inverte world live

1:27:06

will be this Sunday Concern

1:27:10

me I would love to come talk about yeah that

1:27:13

stuff cuz it's all messing I think there were

1:27:15

there were actual lawsuits about certain there was a

1:27:17

whole there was a whole Conspiracy theory that the

1:27:19

world ended in like 2012. Well, we're all living

1:27:21

in purgatory right now And that's why the whole

1:27:23

thing is possible. That's why the whole thing is

1:27:25

different Like that's why they're having the uh Mandela

1:27:28

effect last time certain was Supposedly

1:27:30

blasted blasting particles. Uh, shinsou Abe was

1:27:32

assassinated in that same week. The guide

1:27:35

stones were blown up That

1:27:37

is also wild too The guide

1:27:39

stones blew up. Did they rebuild those? Well,

1:27:41

I did talk to the guy who collected the debris

1:27:43

from the guide stones and he was weird Like

1:27:45

why would you why he was putting in his museum?

1:27:48

He wants to rebuild them, but everyone in that area

1:27:50

doesn't want to rebuild them because everyone in that area

1:27:52

Most the locals believe that they're bad because

1:27:55

their eugenicist propaganda and nobody really knows

1:27:57

who made them who paid for me

1:27:59

Well, they Depends on who you talk to. Yeah.

1:28:02

No, I mean, there's an official like...

1:28:04

There's the RCE Christian guy, which is

1:28:06

a pseudonym supposedly. The argument

1:28:08

is at the height of the Cold War, there was

1:28:10

a fear that we wipe ourselves out nuclear annihilation. So

1:28:12

they created the guide stones in the event humanity get blown up.

1:28:15

However, that doesn't happen. People look back on

1:28:18

them and they look at it now

1:28:20

as a plan to enact as opposed... So

1:28:22

it's either... Sorry, that does just sound cool, Tim. We're

1:28:25

gonna have to go with the original conspiracy theory that

1:28:27

it was a plan. No,

1:28:29

that's actually the later conspiracy. Originally

1:28:31

it was, hey, we might all

1:28:33

die in a nuclear annihilation. Here's how you restart the

1:28:35

earth. And the crazy thing is it's got like...

1:28:38

Didn't it have... I say it's gone.

1:28:40

Didn't it have like a thing to track the

1:28:42

sun's position? Yeah. It had like math

1:28:44

and stuff on it. All the different languages. And then

1:28:46

there was a time capsule supposedly, but all the police

1:28:48

told me there wasn't a time capsule and they dug

1:28:51

it up. Really? The

1:28:53

languages thing is really important because of the Rosetta

1:28:55

Stone, for instance. We

1:28:57

don't know what the Egyptians were saying as a picture of a snake seven times.

1:29:00

And then we find the Rosetta Stone and we're like,

1:29:02

we can translate Greek to Egyptian now. Supposedly there's a

1:29:04

replica in Japan still. I don't know. Of

1:29:07

the guide stones? That's what I've been hearing. I haven't seen

1:29:09

the images, but it's interesting to me that Shinzo Abe was

1:29:11

taken out around the same time. But that's

1:29:13

just me. I'm the Charlie Day meme with the guy and

1:29:15

all the things connecting. That's my brain, but

1:29:17

I don't think we should be missing the thing. The photos

1:29:19

of the storm, it's already crazy. And it's wild

1:29:21

because it's red. I

1:29:24

went to Alaska in December and right when we landed in

1:29:26

Fairbanks, right when we got out of the airport, we looked

1:29:28

up and I was like, oh, hey, look at that. And

1:29:30

it was minus 30. So

1:29:33

I've got icicles forming all over my face

1:29:35

and the rental car key

1:29:38

didn't work because it was frozen. And

1:29:40

so Allison is like, get a picture, get a picture.

1:29:42

And I'm like, I'm going to turn the car on

1:29:44

and then as soon as the car turned on, it

1:29:46

just, it was gone. And

1:29:48

then we didn't see it again. Yeah.

1:29:51

We had a negative 30 day in Iowa this last year.

1:29:53

So it's fun. We deal with

1:29:55

a pretty cold winter weather. Negative 30. It's

1:29:58

great. I like

1:30:00

that your mustache freezes the second you walk outside. Yeah,

1:30:02

I'm gonna tell fun Yeah,

1:30:05

so I don't know if they're saying this is gonna

1:30:07

be as big as the Carrington event Which

1:30:09

means we might see substations blow up. Yeah,

1:30:12

that was I mean, that's what we were talking about today

1:30:14

on The culture

1:30:16

war there were two dudes that

1:30:18

have survival Yeah, we

1:30:21

and I mean look I don't know

1:30:23

for sure But it is something that

1:30:25

people are talking about like normies quote-unquote

1:30:27

are talking about it. So They've

1:30:30

been peppering it into the corporate press for a

1:30:32

year now, which I think while I were talking

1:30:34

about it But then we had suspicious observers space

1:30:36

weatherman Ben on culture war Yeah, talk about the

1:30:38

earth turning upside down. Yeah, he's been following if

1:30:40

he accordingly he follows this stuff very closely

1:30:42

He thinks there's a 10% chance of like that

1:30:44

kind of thing happening. I really bad stuff. What

1:30:47

if the shadow campaign is this? Dude,

1:30:50

the reason why they don't care about Joe Biden The reason

1:30:52

why they don't care about Trump The reason why they don't

1:30:54

care about the polls is that what really happens is the

1:30:56

grid gets knocked out for a month And then we it's

1:30:59

like October 27th And

1:31:01

then there's a massive geostorm hits

1:31:04

and this is the primer so it's

1:31:06

like this happens Then you know

1:31:08

like in September they say we're

1:31:10

forecasting another major solar storm to hit the

1:31:12

earth It's gonna it could be as bad

1:31:14

as the Carrington event. We all saw this

1:31:16

happen everyone get ready October 27th. Boom Communications

1:31:20

go down and we're all sitting around going

1:31:22

what's going on and then the

1:31:24

powers out until like November 20th And

1:31:27

then we wake up and they're like Kamala Harris the president.

1:31:29

What did what did the evil

1:31:31

people learn about the last few years?

1:31:35

Some people just know there's a better way to do things

1:31:38

Like bundling your home and auto insurance with

1:31:40

all states or going to the grocery store

1:31:43

for milk instead of buying your own cow

1:31:47

You know, there's an easier and better

1:31:49

way save up to 25% when you

1:31:51

bundle home and auto with all See

1:31:55

Bundle savings vary by state and are not available in

1:31:57

every state saving up to 25% is the country-wide average

1:31:59

of the maximum available savings off the home policy.

1:32:01

All state vehicle and property insurance company and affiliates

1:32:03

north book Illinois. Use the internet to subvert their

1:32:05

narrative. Yeah. And now they want to take that

1:32:07

from us. That's true. We did use, I mean,

1:32:09

the way that we've been trying to get our

1:32:12

language back has been through the internet. And people

1:32:14

found that language and there's a lot of people

1:32:16

who don't agree with the power class who

1:32:18

have a language now that could subvert them and they

1:32:20

don't want us to do that. And whether you love

1:32:23

them or hate them, Elon helped give us some of

1:32:25

that back too on Twitter. Yeah. Yeah. Communications

1:32:27

got knocked out. That's

1:32:29

how it used to be. It used to

1:32:32

be that you'd go to vote and then

1:32:34

like two months after the election or maybe like

1:32:36

a month a pony rider, you know, brought up

1:32:38

the paper and they were like, oh, that's who

1:32:40

won. Last month they swarm in, huh?

1:32:42

Dude, I just been up here farming. If the power

1:32:44

goes out again, Hillary Clinton could go to Harlem and pull

1:32:46

out hot sauce from her purse and not get in trouble

1:32:49

and ragged about it on unless she did. That's right. Because

1:32:51

she can just go and be whatever that area needs her

1:32:53

to be. But let's be serious. Think about this. If

1:32:55

the if the if the communications did go down and

1:32:59

you try like Google nothing

1:33:01

worked, the internet was knocked out, it would jam up

1:33:03

the economy real bad, something fierce. It

1:33:05

would really shuffle up the economy.

1:33:08

But let's be real. When the grid

1:33:11

comes back on and they come out and say Kamala

1:33:13

Harris as president or Joe Biden, there's

1:33:15

gonna be no there's there's gonna be no argument

1:33:17

right now. You've got out. Well,

1:33:20

it's because people can go back and be like,

1:33:22

how come on this day during the election CNN

1:33:24

ran these numbers, but then these numbers, how come

1:33:26

this these people were seen on video in a

1:33:28

viral video of being blocked from viewing the the

1:33:31

counting process. They get rid of

1:33:33

all of the surveillance footage. They get rid of

1:33:35

all of the questionable footage

1:33:37

of people who can't see in the windows are being boarded

1:33:39

up. And then all they can say

1:33:41

is most secure election we've ever had. And

1:33:45

you're good. And like if the grid went down,

1:33:48

they could literally just go, all right, everybody elections

1:33:50

off. We're gonna say Biden won. Done.

1:33:52

And no one can prove otherwise because

1:33:54

all evidence has been destroyed by the

1:33:56

what if that backfires and then it

1:33:59

actually causes widespread maximum

1:34:01

distrust. And people on

1:34:04

a massive scale reject anything they're told. It'd

1:34:06

be worse than massive distrust. Then how about

1:34:08

this? What if the grid goes down for

1:34:10

four months? I

1:34:12

think it's disorienting. What is it, 21 days for a routine or

1:34:14

something? Most people realign themselves to

1:34:17

the new economic order when the communication

1:34:19

grid goes down and then when it

1:34:21

finally comes back up no one's

1:34:23

asking who the president is, they're asking what do I got

1:34:25

to do today to get my loaf of bread. The

1:34:28

president might be useless at that point. You're

1:34:31

just making an argument to get on

1:34:33

propane, first of all. Second of

1:34:36

all, start stocking food, start storing food. If

1:34:39

you're not prepping by now, I'm sorry.

1:34:42

It's been time to start prepping. If

1:34:46

you go to FEMA's website, a lot

1:34:48

of people don't like to think about

1:34:50

doing prepping stuff because they're like, oh

1:34:52

it makes me weird and show on

1:34:55

History Channel and blah blah blah and they

1:34:57

feel like they're weirdos or whatever. If you

1:34:59

go to FEMA's website, that is the Federal

1:35:01

Emergency Management Agency or whatever, they

1:35:04

have a list of stuff and that's

1:35:06

what the government recommends. That's not like

1:35:08

weirdo outside of crazy person

1:35:11

stuff. It's just the

1:35:13

stuff the government recommends and if you do that

1:35:15

you're ahead of the game, you're significantly ahead of

1:35:17

the game. This is a really easy campaign promise

1:35:19

for me. If you vote for me I won't

1:35:21

cyber attack you. Say

1:35:23

that now, but what if you really don't

1:35:25

like us? Joshua, as candidate for president, have

1:35:28

you been checked for brain worms? I have

1:35:30

not, but my wife is very big into

1:35:32

the anti-parasite stuff. I'm

1:35:34

sure if I had them I would know by now.

1:35:36

She would let me know. We're going to go to

1:35:38

Super Chats, so if you haven't already, would you kindly

1:35:40

smash that like button, subscribe to this channel, share this

1:35:42

show with your friends and become a

1:35:44

member at timcast.com. We don't do the members only shows

1:35:47

on Fridays, but we will read your Super Chats now. TokenBlackGuy

1:35:50

with the first one saying, howdy people. No

1:35:53

Clint today, just TokenBlackGuy. He takes the first

1:35:55

Super Chat. Let's

1:35:58

see, what does it say? We

1:36:00

started off with an M R Or and and. Is.

1:36:02

In our and and next others or thing it's a Loomis.

1:36:05

Hate him and watching for years. Messages: My

1:36:07

sister just had twins and I'm wanting to

1:36:09

fly to meet them but can't afford it.

1:36:11

My venmo is summed up: good Luxor: Maybe

1:36:13

your someone super chatted money to be sent

1:36:15

to a random person so I guess it's

1:36:17

a sense helping them. Off. Or

1:36:21

I always frechette says could give a an

1:36:23

easement mean say, could you to be shut

1:36:25

up To my brilliant and beautiful wife Molly

1:36:27

Mcguire. It's. Your first Mother's Day and I

1:36:29

just want want her to know how much I

1:36:32

love and appreciate everything she does for our daughter!

1:36:34

A shout out to Ali about our Mama Thursday.

1:36:36

Sunday. If you have a man or a

1:36:38

wife, maybe you should do something about. Only

1:36:40

day I'll be home in the next

1:36:42

two and a half weeks while good

1:36:44

while now and get a doctor or

1:36:46

about not a Navy base with all

1:36:48

these other David Doors as Tim, you're

1:36:50

absolutely right about prisons on the culture

1:36:52

Where this morning as a former guest

1:36:54

of the States I can corroborate. Most

1:36:57

would leave, but prisons are extremely secure

1:36:59

in their vehicles, weapons, fuel, and food.

1:37:02

So what are we? were just weird. I'm prepping and

1:37:04

I said in the event of a collapse. Prisons.

1:37:07

Become Fort Marauder. Kosher

1:37:09

that they're going to open up everything and then

1:37:11

they're going to use that as a fortification because

1:37:13

as hard as it is to get out, it's

1:37:15

hard to get energy and so they're going have

1:37:18

weapons, arena, vehicles are going of resources and they're

1:37:20

going to go marauding and and are going to

1:37:22

come back and store everything in his fortress. I

1:37:25

believe. oh yeah definitely definitely of what I've also

1:37:27

watch The Walking Dead have your say that was

1:37:29

in of thinking was on the movies do that

1:37:31

in yeah Walking Dead their ideas and I have

1:37:33

than a million to six. Something

1:37:36

somehow do. I'm on Vog, announce athletes

1:37:38

refresher, getting some solid. You might lose

1:37:40

my sight. know a lot of water

1:37:42

got river Zhao wells. As mountainous said,

1:37:44

I'm offended that it's It's like our

1:37:46

own little Afghanistan. Sit around all. Of

1:37:50

us are I brine he gone says

1:37:52

sorry people Tim I award this one

1:37:54

hundred dollars. To the super cheddar of your choice

1:37:56

a sort of pay it forward if you like,

1:37:58

have fun, Man to do cool

1:38:01

things in your chats. Their new. Yeah,

1:38:03

I paid a couple people's rent this we

1:38:05

all. That room is better than I said

1:38:07

awesome And so I. So.

1:38:10

We do have one person who wants to

1:38:12

fly to see his sister who just had

1:38:14

twins twins. As they are

1:38:16

many nieces and or nephew. So maybe that

1:38:18

will be the easy One hundred dollars at someone

1:38:20

has gotten. Ever Gamers

1:38:23

is not a coffee drinker, but Cast Brew

1:38:25

coffee is good. Can't wait for Cast Brew.

1:38:27

If you ever make it, make sure you

1:38:29

do. Loose leaf Nctc not to see bags

1:38:31

as her flavors consider sale on and Earl

1:38:33

Grey go back to broadened. Say.

1:38:37

I like to oppose right and I saw

1:38:39

of rob a coffee man have club guy

1:38:41

during a lot of coffee stricken okay right

1:38:43

now got some gloves or with book was

1:38:45

about he says hi Tim Today my h

1:38:47

back failed my workshop. I'm a small ring

1:38:50

maker can't run machinery till I can afford

1:38:52

to fix it. Gets. Over one hundred

1:38:54

degrees without anything helps. Love the show! And

1:38:56

then Ulysses, Venmo, Russell Warner Ah, I

1:38:58

don't know what's what's what's more important

1:39:01

visiting your newborn twin nieces, niece and

1:39:03

nephew were having a workshop be able

1:39:05

to be worked as Will sizes A

1:39:07

says, where does he love my my

1:39:09

I do a triggering of Islam has.

1:39:12

Evolved from one. Why would sacrifice. Hypotheticals

1:39:14

about abortion or should we just decide people

1:39:17

states and see retired. Professor at this

1:39:19

rate maker. Is cool though they need I

1:39:21

would see reset into a pop culture crisil time.

1:39:23

He was like a goldsmith. And owner East

1:39:25

Texas. I. Feel like

1:39:27

I'm aware is rarely make actual things are

1:39:29

very cool. Yeah, and they're in. There's fewer

1:39:32

fewer people without up to. I knew

1:39:34

of items cigarette been doing another you new

1:39:36

nice to this that new had like stack

1:39:38

the stones to make those like I conrad

1:39:40

stone walls and Kiss sign. A

1:39:43

very serious addiction problem is raising his grandson and

1:39:45

he die before His grandson was very old selling

1:39:47

that trade that he had learned from his grandfather

1:39:49

would learn from his contacts just completely went away

1:39:51

with. Were similar to live in Oakland. I

1:39:53

started my own like or handyman business. I

1:39:55

did lot of plaster yeah and a come

1:39:57

to find out that like everybody who was.

1:40:00

The Latin class or was dead mugger I know

1:40:02

saw get call what everyday covers, total lack of

1:40:04

laughter in the city down and say as insane

1:40:06

as allow No clue I nodded yeah and so

1:40:08

they were call me and to do latter placer

1:40:10

all thousand make one of them are they were

1:40:13

fit in at now as get a ride Beavis

1:40:15

Mclean says fill The new single Divine is awesome.

1:40:17

The vocals and drums are just next level keeping

1:40:19

the great work out. How to get tired of

1:40:21

this I have to catch all that remains and

1:40:23

Megadeth on the road. The summer hell did you

1:40:26

so much? An absolutely not. Why on earth are

1:40:28

you cheated on the ground to Minneapolis? see video.

1:40:30

And yeah we want to hear such a

1:40:32

massive amount of when a common I was

1:40:34

so guys so three silly and I feel

1:40:36

his eyes. Ah listen I'm gonna do the

1:40:38

booking mile wide I love would not want

1:40:40

to put on the record yeah everybody not

1:40:42

everybody in Des Moines has a story twice

1:40:44

removed from Corey Taylor for every single person

1:40:46

to be elicits a few that i those

1:40:48

I was on him running down the street.

1:40:51

Make enough report in the morning that's as

1:40:53

is Fresno that a father. And

1:40:55

I. Feel bad for releases and. That

1:40:57

are as hims the great says How did Semin

1:40:59

crew as through my shoulder out a couple weeks

1:41:01

ago telling my garden doc said I need to

1:41:04

avoid doing it again. At. The have a

1:41:06

gifts and go for a small tractor. Look

1:41:08

up Pym the tractor I don't I think

1:41:10

the guy's workshop is the is that current

1:41:12

leader? Yeah. That's when I got is

1:41:14

because he's gotta take care of himself is a toss

1:41:16

up for him and of and the twins. I get

1:41:18

seen it in twins but it's. Unfortunate.

1:41:20

Your kids and this guy's gotta gotta work. I'd

1:41:22

love a detractor. Two bodies mother. We all went

1:41:24

for sure. It's tough we're looking into

1:41:27

getting some guy hit his trial he races

1:41:29

as one more hour weren't am a rap

1:41:31

as we gotta a coyote Denison's ah Ark

1:41:33

a racer Nascar are wrapped him cast card

1:41:35

of and so the someone switch added like

1:41:38

I raced lawnmowers you on a rabbit or

1:41:40

like yes we do nice added on American

1:41:42

culture and over there and not as you

1:41:44

guys the that on the Nascar rather I

1:41:46

was really cool those prequels a my mom

1:41:48

watches nascar i don't woman on those for

1:41:50

her. or

1:41:53

i mirghani says my brother almost died from quitting

1:41:55

alcohol he has home now but they drained thirteen

1:41:57

to fifteen gallons of fluid from his body His

1:41:59

girlfriend set up a go fund me to help

1:42:01

with the bills and calling all neighbors in the

1:42:03

friendly neighborhood I'm thinking of them right now.

1:42:06

Oh, wow Does that beat

1:42:08

the guy who needs his air conditioning fix?

1:42:11

It might dude. It's pretty tough. It's a close.

1:42:13

I mean team to a pole make them this

1:42:15

side I want I don't know this you

1:42:18

should make the chat Just always a question of like do

1:42:20

you support a lot to one person or like you give

1:42:22

small amounts to several people? Wait, wait, this guy

1:42:24

did this guy went through all this after being

1:42:27

a heavy drinker. Yeah, so I said

1:42:29

hmm hmm That's

1:42:32

a tough one Said

1:42:34

it says a but it was ago. It's a

1:42:36

go fund me though That

1:42:40

makes it tough. Oh, yeah. Yeah,

1:42:42

we like gifts and go here Go

1:42:44

fund me is super well can they ban good people who

1:42:46

need real help? And so, you know, I don't hold that

1:42:48

against you though, but maybe

1:42:51

maybe All

1:42:53

right, we'll grab some more super chats right now it's basically

1:42:55

like a shark tank of me. Yeah. Yeah. Wow Token

1:42:59

black I said hey Tim here's ten bucks to pass

1:43:02

forward to a lucky super chatter for pizza. Also Phil

1:43:04

kind of get a yeah Yeah, yeah So

1:43:07

it's up to 110 now to give to a person

1:43:09

in need look at that. That's super cool Operation

1:43:14

outstanding infield says Shane drew here for your

1:43:16

show Would you like to have me on

1:43:18

and talk about my coma fever dream hours

1:43:20

after getting diagnosed with GBS? It's

1:43:23

the stuff of nightmares and life survival. Exactly. It's

1:43:25

exactly what I want to hear about My dreams

1:43:27

are crazy. Oh, oh if it's the drew I

1:43:29

think it is. Yeah. Yeah, definitely definitely hit me

1:43:31

up dude You were in a coma. No, I

1:43:33

wasn't I one of my step-premiers was and he came out

1:43:35

of it talking about his oh, yeah For

1:43:39

like for like a long period right? Holy

1:43:41

shit. I'm glad you made it.

1:43:43

Yeah. Yeah, his story is actually pretty wild he

1:43:45

got knocked into a coma and then he Was

1:43:49

like on a roller coaster into this weird city

1:43:51

Where a small monkey creature rode the thing

1:43:53

back up into his body and then

1:43:56

was running around Doing flips and stuff and

1:43:58

jumping over cars. This was in your coma Yeah,

1:44:00

no no no the the monkey entity took over

1:44:02

his body and woke up And then he was

1:44:04

in this weird coma world where he had to

1:44:06

take over Chris Catan's dead body. I love that

1:44:08

movie Oh,

1:44:13

I knew you were going there. I just

1:44:15

haven't heard I couldn't think Chris came by

1:44:17

name, dude It's such a I love that.

1:44:19

I love that I knew it wasn't real,

1:44:22

but I never get better friend and friend

1:44:24

and Chris Chris Catan He takes over the

1:44:26

dead Olympic goodness body movies. Oh good That

1:44:28

was a cheesy good movie. Right cheesy, but

1:44:30

we enjoy it for a second Have you seen them have

1:44:32

you seen the movie John Travolta that came out not too

1:44:35

long ago That's directed by Fred Dirts from

1:44:37

from this. I heard about it. It's like the action movie

1:44:39

or whatever. No, he's a he's like a Stalker

1:44:41

he's like an autistic stalker and he's stalking

1:44:44

like a famous Actor and

1:44:46

the famous actor is a what's the guy

1:44:48

from idle hands and little Giants and Devan

1:44:50

Zawa. Okay It

1:44:52

actually it's like so cheesy, but it was really really good money

1:44:55

you should check it I can't remember the name of it. So

1:44:57

I'm gonna have to write it. Wow. He's back That's

1:45:00

why I said I'm running as president and I promised

1:45:02

to make registered member of the

1:45:04

Libertarian Party Did you really I want him to be

1:45:06

the poet laureate of the country so if you become

1:45:08

president, oh, yeah Could you hit him up? Yeah, the

1:45:10

newest limp biscuit record is great. Yeah, dad. It's all

1:45:13

I like that great record I thought dad vibes had

1:45:15

pretty sure I know there's a song called dad vibes.

1:45:17

I'm not sure I'm a last song on that record

1:45:19

family are saying it's pronatal Yeah, the

1:45:21

last song on that record is actually better than most

1:45:23

like 90s pop music as well I

1:45:26

read in 1983. I I proudly went to limp

1:45:28

biscuit concerts and they were insane. Absolutely Yeah, I

1:45:31

mean and also sorry I know I don't want

1:45:33

to talk about lint biscuit forever, but they also

1:45:35

are part of family values Yes, so there is

1:45:37

a there's a family theme here. Yeah. Yeah, I

1:45:39

like it So we just got

1:45:42

a super chat from the bearded fat man says

1:45:44

watch the show every night diagnosed with leukemia last

1:45:46

month South employment struggling with business and medical bills.

1:45:48

Everything helps give send go Kyle's fight against leukemia

1:45:50

guy That's the one we got to help their

1:45:53

leukemia is rough. That's not one good luck. God

1:45:55

bless you, man. Oh, whoa, really? That's

1:45:59

terrible Oh, there's all

1:46:01

there's actually a whole bunch call of go

1:46:04

fund me's titled that oh

1:46:06

well no Yeah, this is

1:46:08

this is tough are it up to you

1:46:11

You and everybody I? Think

1:46:14

the chat should decide is I think that yeah, I

1:46:16

don't like We're

1:46:21

gonna talk about any questions still I don't know

1:46:23

that I can actually find this man my friend

1:46:27

Don't put me in charge of that stuff Yeah,

1:46:30

I searched for that title and it didn't come up hmm

1:46:33

Kyle's fight against leukemia give send to go

1:46:38

So not finding it let

1:46:40

me try let me try a broader broader

1:46:42

search drag Yeah,

1:46:45

but in the meantime Yeah,

1:46:49

a little kid oh man now.

1:46:52

I gotta give this kid money. Yeah. Well. He's over his

1:46:54

goal actually Okay, so he oh wait. No. He's about that

1:46:56

his goal. Okay. I gotta give this kid money This

1:46:59

is just some little kid helping people peripherally now.

1:47:01

Yeah, I know I just searched this is a

1:47:03

little case got leukemia. Yeah What

1:47:05

is this? Oh man four years old

1:47:07

oh jeez terrible alright. He needs he

1:47:09

needs a couple grand Maybe

1:47:12

we should just like scroll through Lucky

1:47:14

or give some go all the time feel

1:47:16

like yeah support you this one. Yeah You

1:47:19

can pull it up and put it like in the super chat

1:47:21

Do you think people prioritize charitable giving

1:47:24

enough or do you think especially an

1:47:26

economically hard time no both sort of? I

1:47:28

think the Trent I think charitable giving is has

1:47:30

been off Outsource to

1:47:33

the government people think that taxes are there's

1:47:35

a social safety net there's taxes so charitable

1:47:37

giving does not exist for people that are

1:47:39

not religious and I

1:47:41

think that I think that that's I

1:47:44

think they've seen that in studies I'm not sure

1:47:46

I've heard that as our community sort of fell

1:47:48

apart one of the first things to go was

1:47:50

charitable giving and it's actually something that people talk

1:47:52

about in relation to women staying at home because

1:47:55

typically in Indiana

1:47:57

University had the school philanthropy to study

1:47:59

on this women tend to be the people

1:48:01

who decide the charitable giving. Like if you have

1:48:03

a family budget, you're like, well, this is where

1:48:05

these things are going. Uh, and

1:48:07

so as we focus more on work all the

1:48:09

time and individualize ourselves, these structures that we have

1:48:11

that would have normally been the ones to be

1:48:14

like, okay, now we've got to make a decision

1:48:16

about who we're helping. They fell apart. It's also

1:48:18

aid isn't there charity. They asked you for

1:48:20

charity everywhere. Now, like you check out at

1:48:22

PECO or supermarket, they want an extra 10

1:48:24

cents. Oh, dude. No, my, my, my favorite

1:48:26

thing was, uh, someone filmed a video where

1:48:28

they went to a grocery store and it

1:48:30

was self checkout only. And the self checkout

1:48:32

asked for a tip after that. No,

1:48:35

for real. Yeah. It was five, it was like

1:48:37

five, 10, 20%. And they

1:48:39

were like, who am I tipping? America's the only culture

1:48:41

that does it. I would have stole a bag of

1:48:43

chips just on time. Man.

1:48:47

We're the only culture. I'm taking some real penis and

1:48:49

I'm getting out of here. I'm not

1:48:51

anti-tipping, but like there's, it's gotten to a

1:48:53

point in the anti-tipping robot female comedian who said

1:48:56

that like she doesn't like tipping, especially when you're

1:48:58

like at a coffee shop and like you're doing

1:49:00

most of herself, like you're paying, she's like, I

1:49:02

work here now. You, you pay me. Like that's

1:49:04

how I feel about the self checkout at the grocery

1:49:06

store. You should get a discount because you're now an

1:49:08

employee. I was like, when they asked you if the

1:49:10

amount is okay. I'm like, can I negotiate? Yeah.

1:49:14

Mount's okay. I don't like it. All right. Brad

1:49:17

Markland says, Tim, please state what cutoff

1:49:20

you'd be okay banning. There

1:49:22

is some who have even considered partial and

1:49:24

post birth abortion. No time for

1:49:26

a full cutoff. I don't know what you mean. Like,

1:49:28

uh, he's asking where you think the cutoff should be

1:49:30

for abortion. Yeah. Well, I said this last night and

1:49:32

the members only show the simple, the solution is actually

1:49:34

very simple. Sorry. When the woman goes into an abortion

1:49:37

clinic, you, uh, she

1:49:39

signs the paperwork and you're like, are you sure this is what you want to

1:49:41

do? He says, yes. So you're right this way. You

1:49:43

sit, you lay her down. Then you admit her

1:49:45

administer anesthetic, which will keep her in a medically

1:49:48

induced coma for nine months. And

1:49:50

then when she wakes up, you

1:49:52

just say procedures done. I'm kidding. Holy crap.

1:49:54

Her family doesn't wonder where she went. That's

1:49:56

pretty base. Tim. I'm not going to lie, dude. That's

1:49:59

what was going on. That brainwashing camp and Canada and

1:50:01

metics I guess is what she would a coma

1:50:03

for? Yeah, alright. Wash their their their there is

1:50:06

no. There's no easy answer for our divorce and

1:50:08

questions. Like I was saying before, It's.

1:50:10

Or it a spear. There's no

1:50:12

battleground. There's no sense it's you

1:50:14

can't stand in the middle. It

1:50:17

doesn't exist. So I. I.

1:50:19

Think Ultimately, what it comes down to is the

1:50:21

Fourteen. The Mammoth says that a person can be

1:50:23

deprived of life without due process, and I believe

1:50:25

that human beings are person's There's no legal distinction

1:50:27

in, and there's no logical or scientific distinction between

1:50:29

a baby just they did at eight and a

1:50:32

half months and a baby just they did it

1:50:34

or a nap months that was born. There

1:50:36

the exact same level of development and so

1:50:39

I've asked us if every pro choice person

1:50:41

they can't give me an answer. What

1:50:43

is the legal distinction between. Two.

1:50:45

Babies that were conceived the exact same moment. They're.

1:50:48

Both just added to a half months and

1:50:50

then one woman goes into an early labor.

1:50:52

They deliver the baby the moment that maybe

1:50:54

touches air. It's now due process rights, but

1:50:56

because it hasn't touched, Era has no due

1:50:58

process rights as a make sense. So what's

1:51:00

the logic in the law for that? I

1:51:02

think whether anyone wants to accept it or

1:51:04

not, And. Whether whether my

1:51:07

opinion. Matters? It doesn't. The

1:51:09

a supreme court ruling on the Fourteenth

1:51:11

Amendment. Would. Be abortions require

1:51:13

a judge's sign off. Now.

1:51:15

Whether or not you want to save

1:51:17

with medical exemptions and for contraception, whatever

1:51:20

it doesn't matter, a judge saw a

1:51:22

sign off. Or because a person

1:51:24

as due process rights and that being said.

1:51:27

Ultimate. I think that turns into his

1:51:29

I'd. Abortions, Over. Put.

1:51:31

It was judges won't sign off on it but this

1:51:34

means off. In. Like almost every circumstance

1:51:36

the judge would sign off on issues where

1:51:38

the my that the mother's life is in

1:51:40

jeopardy and things like that there would be

1:51:42

our emergency hearings that does already exist lot

1:51:44

a lot of proportion people are like within

1:51:47

would have a woman's in a series medical

1:51:49

emergency exact amount they can't it's like yet

1:51:51

they are very have courts for this where.

1:51:54

You. Are judged to be contacted in in

1:51:56

moments like we're talking with like minutes to

1:51:58

an hour or whatever. So. I

1:52:01

don't think that's the issue. Seamus Coughlin writes up a

1:52:03

good point. When the left says

1:52:05

there will be back alley abortions, he goes, yeah, of

1:52:07

course, yeah, right. And there

1:52:09

will be very few of them and there

1:52:12

will be overwhelmingly no abortions. And that's, well,

1:52:14

that's the thing is like murder and robbery

1:52:16

and theft, these things are dangerous and they're

1:52:18

supposed to be dangerous, right? So like, yeah,

1:52:20

there's gonna be back alley abortions and people

1:52:22

can die from back alley abortions and good.

1:52:25

I mean, at the end of the day, they should

1:52:27

be, it should be dangerous to commit murder. I

1:52:29

don't want them to die. I don't want them to die,

1:52:31

but it should be dangerous. But it should be your messaging

1:52:34

because someone will take that right away and be like, well,

1:52:36

people will die, good. Well, there you go. It should be

1:52:38

dangerous to commit murder. It should be. Just so. They

1:52:40

would work on the messaging. Hal Gailey says a baby conceived in

1:52:43

rape is not a second assault on the woman. It's a second

1:52:45

victim of the rape. Make that POV,

1:52:47

the prevailing one, fix the premise. And

1:52:49

I understand this too. The argument from

1:52:51

the right on this one is that

1:52:54

the attack on the woman is

1:52:56

not the rape. It's the rape and the entire duration

1:52:58

of the pregnancy to which the baby has to be

1:53:00

born. So in

1:53:03

that argument, it's, I'm sorry, this

1:53:05

happened to you, ma'am, but the pregnancy already

1:53:07

happened to you. That's the point. That's

1:53:10

where you have the conservative argument on saying no

1:53:13

exceptions for rape. And

1:53:15

we don't, and we're not in the business of punishing the

1:53:18

innocent children of criminals with death. All

1:53:22

right, Brad Marklin says, no, you're right,

1:53:24

Tim. Incest shouldn't count, but birth defects

1:53:26

from it or if it's rape should

1:53:28

count, incest babies are still alive. So

1:53:31

this person, I believe, says there should be an exception for rape.

1:53:36

Cain Abel says pro-life conservative, Tim, no babies

1:53:39

should be murdered. It is not the baby's

1:53:41

fault for the sins of the father or

1:53:43

both mother and the father. Those

1:53:46

are my people there. What we do is we take the baby out, we

1:53:48

put it in a bag in

1:53:50

one of those where they grow the goats and they grow a

1:53:52

person. And then the baby is. They

1:53:55

are working on an artificial womb. How do you think they make the

1:53:57

moment? The moment you get an artificial womb, abortion's illegal. It's

1:54:00

just gonna like that's the problem right

1:54:02

now the logic of Democrats is when

1:54:06

when RFK

1:54:08

jr. Says even if it's full-term, it's like I'll

1:54:11

tell it right if a woman wants to

1:54:13

end the pregnancy or needs to end the pregnancy. Why killed the baby? Yeah

1:54:17

Yeah, I've never gotten a real answer. That's why I

1:54:19

keep saying human sacrifice. It's like they fetishize the violence

1:54:22

of it Like when there's ways

1:54:24

to protect a motor cult. Yeah, they is a miracle Thems

1:54:26

out of this nihilism they when they're coming

1:54:29

out of the abortion Clinics handing the pictures

1:54:31

of their unborn baby to pro-life people and

1:54:33

that's the baby I'm gonna murder right tomorrow

1:54:35

Wow, it's a miracle. Yeah home Brian says

1:54:37

I thought incest was illegal for medical reasons

1:54:39

No, not in fact and and some states

1:54:41

it is legal New York. I believe you're

1:54:43

legally allowed to gay marry your cousin Yeah

1:54:47

in New York. Yeah, New York State allows Yes

1:54:52

You're such a weird state. So New York is a

1:54:55

state where you can marry your cousin And

1:54:58

get gay married which means you can gay

1:55:00

marry your cousin. There's already a

1:55:02

meme of me calling Clint Russell Kurt Russell today Thanks

1:55:06

a lot to dance mom, I don't think you're

1:55:09

getting his No Listen

1:55:12

we were calling him Kurt Russell in Georgia. So that's

1:55:14

why I said They

1:55:17

were calling him Kurt Russell McCarthy because

1:55:19

he was doing the Inquisition about code

1:55:21

stuff So Jacob Hornberger Richard

1:55:24

slammer says Tim by definition incest

1:55:26

is non-consensual It's a

1:55:28

form of rape a parent forces on a child

1:55:30

that some people argue to normalize it by

1:55:33

so-called brosis Consent almost

1:55:35

never happens a straw man. That's not the

1:55:37

point The point is the leak that the

1:55:39

term legally incest refers to familial Be

1:55:43

brothers and sisters, okay, so but what if what if it's

1:55:45

a 40 year old parent with a

1:55:47

20 Your

1:55:50

your old that's degenerate disgusting

1:55:52

people. I know me. Yeah, so

1:55:54

a rat No, I

1:55:56

don't know. I don't know. I think well, there's an argument

1:55:58

for Generacy they definitely

1:56:01

need to leave yeah like the society but

1:56:03

other blasphemy laws in your

1:56:05

libertarian Not that

1:56:07

not to go too crazy, but it's something I think

1:56:09

about a lot I mean in my in my perfect

1:56:11

world sure yeah, but not can I

1:56:13

exist in this country? I don't think yeah, I

1:56:16

don't think they could we were built on it We're built I

1:56:19

believe that we were built as a Christian

1:56:21

nation with the right to freedom of religion

1:56:23

right and free will and free

1:56:25

will Yeah, so like so like 70% of the

1:56:27

population of the United States today Calls

1:56:30

themselves some type of denomination of Christian right

1:56:32

now. Yeah, right percent Yes, but and I'm

1:56:34

sure that the founding was meant to be

1:56:37

more Christian than not But there is it's

1:56:39

written into our founding documents. I would question

1:56:42

They'll 70% of people will say

1:56:44

they're Christian. I don't think that 70% of

1:56:48

Only 40% of us have ever read the

1:56:50

Bible there as Christian as by the yeah,

1:56:52

yeah, I think that it's and I think

1:56:54

that they're Actually not even they don't even

1:56:57

behave like Christians anymore though No, but what

1:56:59

they mean is my parents don't be up ties who

1:57:01

went to church a couple times when I was a kid It's

1:57:06

very different and I think this is interesting because I think you'll

1:57:08

see people who turn

1:57:10

to religion as one of these segments

1:57:13

in cultural you'll have a lot of people Atheism

1:57:16

was one of the if you're the Magnusson

1:57:18

were the two one of the two fastest

1:57:20

growing religions I think the Pew Research Center

1:57:22

has a poll on this and

1:57:24

people are always like oh, it's crazy But is it

1:57:26

actually crazy because they think this is the culture we're

1:57:28

in like they don't want you to be any religion

1:57:30

at all They don't want you to be Christian in

1:57:33

America because that's too close to what the founding fathers

1:57:35

wanted But on top of that they want you to

1:57:37

believe in nothing and not have families and to be

1:57:39

alone So

1:57:41

like I am an Agnostic

1:57:43

and I don't have this isn't a

1:57:46

spiritual thing that I'm talking about but

1:57:48

the left wants you to be anti-christian

1:57:50

Well, they don't want to have any

1:57:52

community. No, they want you have a

1:57:54

no, they know they want you to

1:57:56

be anti-christian the the project that the

1:57:58

left does is all anti-family and anti-christian.

1:58:02

There were times when Marx would call himself the

1:58:04

anti-christ. The whole

1:58:06

left is about tearing down

1:58:08

the things that people consider

1:58:11

quote-unquote good and we get

1:58:14

our conception of good from

1:58:16

the Judeo-Christian whatever.

1:58:21

You know what I'm talking about? I don't want to fight

1:58:23

about this. I know. I don't. I don't want to. Jesus

1:58:26

Christ you people are autistic. The point is they want

1:58:28

to tear down all of the things that Western society

1:58:30

is built on. If

1:58:40

you need any proof of that, just look at the

1:58:42

Communist revolution in Russia where they actually had to

1:58:45

excommunicate and kill the Orthodox Christians. It's

1:58:47

part of the playbook. We're up

1:58:49

to 235 and people

1:58:52

have superchatted saying give to someone else. There is this

1:58:54

dude, Alto Native, said he lives in his car and

1:58:56

he needs new tires he needs the help but he

1:58:58

did not link a Venmo or GoFundMe or anything like

1:59:01

that. Did you see that story

1:59:03

about the homeless woman who's been living on

1:59:05

the roof of a building behind their sign for over

1:59:07

a year? No. She had a computer

1:59:10

up there. She had some appliances. Is

1:59:12

there a term now for that kind of thing?

1:59:14

They call it frogging? I've

1:59:17

heard that too

1:59:19

but sometimes I think frogging is specific

1:59:22

to residential. I don't

1:59:24

know if maybe it can be applied commercially.

1:59:26

Did you ever see the home video of

1:59:28

that family that lived in an apartment and

1:59:30

there was this space above their front door

1:59:32

randomly. It had a door on it. They

1:59:36

put in a camera because they kept hearing noises and

1:59:38

there was someone living up there. There's a whole video

1:59:40

about frog-ing. Oh really? It's very easy

1:59:43

to me. It's creepy. I can't watch it. I

1:59:45

saw a video where someone was complaining about noises

1:59:47

at night and

1:59:49

it got bad where they called

1:59:51

the police a couple times. The police came in,

1:59:53

looked around and couldn't find anything so they installed

1:59:55

the camera and then they actually saw someone crawl

1:59:57

out of the ceiling. I'm like, they're... Into

2:00:00

the kitchen and started taking food and then crawled back

2:00:02

up the show that I was watching again It's called

2:00:04

froggy and you know every episode there's like a couple stories

2:00:06

and this one mom was like yeah Like I noticed all

2:00:08

the sodas are going missing but I had a bunch of

2:00:11

teenagers and she was saying one night She had a young

2:00:13

daughter who was like spending night in her bed, you know

2:00:15

had bedroom or whatever at one point She woke up and

2:00:17

she's like mom There's a man standing in the closet Oh

2:00:19

and it turned out the closet had one of those things

2:00:21

we like push up and get the addict He'd been living

2:00:23

there for like a long long time I'm

2:00:26

not even gonna say I have a So I

2:00:28

have a 1600 square foot basement Okay It's the

2:00:30

same it's the same size as our house at

2:00:32

the ranch level and then the basement the same

2:00:34

exact size And there's like all

2:00:36

kinds of nooks and crannies and there's like four

2:00:38

different rooms down there And then there's a part

2:00:40

that's unfinished and that's why my podcast studio and

2:00:43

there's several doors that enter into there, too And

2:00:45

every night you check them every night I go

2:00:47

down there Through everything you

2:00:49

got to check every nook and cranny every day.

2:00:51

You never know There's

2:00:58

a reasonable bear do that Yeah

2:01:04

There was a there are a couple crazy serious I mean I

2:01:06

highly recommend this TV show but again I can only watch like two

2:01:08

episodes at a time it made me like You

2:01:10

know and moved into a new apartment in like every once in a while

2:01:13

here something I'll be like Yeah, I'm already paranoid.

2:01:15

I don't need it I regret and I

2:01:17

regret to inform women that after two weeks

2:01:19

of living with them the bear has returned

2:01:21

to men So I

2:01:25

couldn't find I searched give send ago for

2:01:27

leukemia Kyle leukemia. I couldn't find it. It's

2:01:29

not there I did give some

2:01:31

other kid who was four years old. I look at me

2:01:34

a couple grand so Yeah,

2:01:36

that was brutal and that was from a few months ago

2:01:38

So their family's gonna see it and hopefully you know help

2:01:40

them out cuz they said yeah nuts the surgeries and everything

2:01:42

But I think the guy who needs to fix his AC

2:01:44

is currently winning I'd like to help the guys

2:01:47

living in his car, but he didn't give us a Venmo or anything

2:01:49

So the guy who's trying to work hard because he wants

2:01:52

to Get his workshop up and

2:01:54

running seems to make this really cool, man. What did

2:01:56

you start doing this thing? Well, I just abruptly paid

2:01:58

someone's rent And then people

2:02:00

started asking more and more and so I just started paying

2:02:02

really cool man. That's a really cool thing. It's awesome But

2:02:06

then some people are like Tim stop now everyone's just

2:02:08

posting and begging and I'm like, I

2:02:10

mean I People are just doing

2:02:12

it. I never said I was gonna give him money But I guess you

2:02:14

do and then people are like if he is you know what I mean?

2:02:16

Yeah No, I get it things are

2:02:18

really bad. Like I've tried this country so much and here

2:02:20

we go Fix your air conditioning

2:02:22

guy. Here's 235 bucks sick. They have nice Yeah,

2:02:26

I've been talking like taxi drivers and people

2:02:28

in the hotel these people teachers small business

2:02:30

owner. Well, it's yeah, everyone's crush I'm telling

2:02:32

you right now. It's gonna be worse than

2:02:35

2008. It's coming bad crash bad So it

2:02:37

feels like something it's gonna be brewing really

2:02:39

bad. Yeah, you take a look at the feds

2:02:42

losses the the unrealized losses

2:02:44

their balance sheet, it's just like

2:02:47

Negative in the insane to insane. It's not. Yeah, we're

2:02:50

we're house of cards is an understatement All right, everybody

2:02:52

if you haven't already which kindly smash that like button

2:02:54

subscribe to this channel share the show with your friends

2:02:56

Head over to Tim cast comm click join us become

2:02:58

a member because that's how we fund the show and

2:03:01

you get access to the discord Server where you can

2:03:03

hang out. There's gonna be an after show but only

2:03:05

in the discord server and that's the members that put

2:03:07

it on So definitely check that out. You can follow

2:03:09

me at Tim cast on accident Instagram follow

2:03:12

the show at Tim cast IRL everywhere As

2:03:14

well as rumble Josh, I

2:03:16

think yeah, follow me on Twitter. I'm at war

2:03:18

with all the other blue checks there It's at

2:03:20

Joshua at large and of course go check out

2:03:22

the campaign website at Joshua Smith 2024 calm We

2:03:25

got two weeks till the nomination two weeks and we're

2:03:27

we set a goal to raise ten grand So if

2:03:30

you can throw a couple bucks, we'd appreciate it. What's

2:03:32

the YouTube channel for Sunday tails from the inverted world?

2:03:35

What it will be at 6 o'clock eastern time

2:03:37

and you will be there and we're gonna have

2:03:39

a call-ins We have a bunch of people lined

2:03:41

up to tell us stories We'll go through some

2:03:44

news items about some weird stuff that's going on in the

2:03:46

world and it's gonna be a lot of

2:03:48

fun I can't wait to subscribe everybody go to tails

2:03:50

from the inverted world on YouTube subscribe now anything else

2:03:52

you want to shout out before we come on the

2:03:54

show Yeah, you should definitely come on everybody has been

2:03:56

I've been asking to come on. Yeah, like who work

2:03:58

here work here Because literally everybody

2:04:01

yeah, they're like this is

2:04:03

this is so much fun stuff to talk about

2:04:05

aliens ghosts Yeah, I thank you. They're everyone who

2:04:07

sent me messages I've had so much fun reading

2:04:09

all these messages if you have one hit

2:04:11

me up at Shane catchment at scanner

2:04:13

calm SC nr.com I'll take it submissions there also

2:04:15

on X wherever I'm going through them all I'll

2:04:17

hit you up I'll send you a link you

2:04:19

can be a caller on the show We were

2:04:21

still like tweaking out Aiden from the lore lodge

2:04:24

on your show. I was just thinking about that.

2:04:26

Yeah I'm guys a little large is what's up?

2:04:28

So I got a lot of people lined up and it's gonna be a lot of fun

2:04:30

I'm stoked. I am Phil that remains

2:04:32

on Twix. I'm Phil that remains official

2:04:35

on Instagram The band is all that

2:04:37

remains you can catch us this summer

2:04:39

on the destroy all enemies tour with

2:04:41

Megadeth and mud veins starting August

2:04:44

2nd going through September 28th

2:04:47

or something like that The

2:04:50

new single from all that remains is

2:04:52

out now. It's called divine. It's available

2:04:54

on Spotify Apple music Pandora These

2:04:56

are Amazon music YouTube, you know the

2:04:59

internet. Yeah, real quick. I just want

2:05:01

to stress I think it's like it's been up

2:05:03

for about a week now. Yeah, we got a 600 K on YouTube.

2:05:05

Yeah and Anybody

2:05:08

who like follows their favorite bands. That's massive.

2:05:10

It's crazy. It's amazing. It's I'm it's super.

2:05:12

It's a super big deal I really really

2:05:14

appreciate all the people that have has funny

2:05:16

just because like we've been gone for six

2:05:18

years We haven't put out new music because

2:05:20

we had a bunch of stuff So when

2:05:22

one of our guys passed away COVID when

2:05:24

another guy had a kid and a bunch

2:05:27

of other business stuff So like the fact that so

2:05:29

many people have been spending our stuff and showing so

2:05:31

much support. I really appreciate the heck out of it

2:05:33

Thank you so much. It's been wonderful

2:05:35

and I can't wait to see you guys on the road Hannah Claire I

2:05:37

think it's gonna be a cool summer for you Phil. I'm excited for your

2:05:40

it's been fun to be here with everybody I'm

2:05:42

Hannah Claire Brimla. I'm a writer for SCNR calm

2:05:44

that scanner news You can follow all of scanners

2:05:46

work at Tim cast news on Instagram and Twitter

2:05:48

if you want to follow me personally I'm on

2:05:50

Twitter at hankler B and I'm on Instagram at

2:05:53

hankler. B Bye search.

2:05:55

Bye guys. Have a good weekend. Cheers. Thanks for hanging out.

2:05:57

We got clips throughout the weekend and Sunday,

2:06:00

Tales from the Inverted World 6 p.m. is going to be a

2:06:02

hoot and we'll see you all there.

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