Episode Transcript
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0:00
Time is precious and so are our
0:02
pets. So time with our pets is
0:05
extra precious. That's why we started Dutch.
0:07
Dutch provides 24-7 access to licensed vets
0:09
with unlimited virtual visits and follow-ups for
0:11
up to five pets. You can message
0:14
a vet at any time and schedule
0:16
a video visit the same day. Our
0:18
vets can even prescribe medication for many
0:20
ailments and shipping is always free. With
0:23
Dutch you'll get more time with your
0:25
pets and year-round piece of mind when
0:27
it comes to their vet care. News
0:38
broke this morning that a judge
0:40
was arrested in Wisconsin. This judge
0:42
was aiding and abetting a criminal
0:44
illegal alien who had been accused
0:46
of mercilessly beating his wife. This
0:48
is not Kilmara Brago Garcia. This is
0:50
a different story of Wisconsin. And
0:53
just the other day we learned
0:55
about a Democrat judge. So there's
0:57
a liberal judge. They're nonpartisan they
0:59
call it in Wisconsin. In New
1:01
Mexico you had a Democrat judge. also
1:03
arrested, not being accused of tampering with
1:05
evidence. The other day, when we covered
1:07
this on Tim Kestirel, the news wasn't
1:10
clear. They said he was arrested, then
1:12
he wasn't arrested. Now we're learning,
1:14
he was arrested. And this Wisconsin
1:17
story is lighting up the internet
1:19
with Democrats furious, furious, because
1:21
to Democrats, they're above the
1:23
law. You're not, J6ers aren't, Trump
1:25
as it, but they are. Yeah, we've got the, the
1:27
complaint, the arrest, a statement from
1:29
a witness. as to what went down
1:32
with this Wisconsin judge and it
1:34
is insane. She actively obstructed according
1:36
to this document. Law enforcement
1:39
trying to deport an illegal immigrant
1:41
shuffled him out of back door
1:43
adjourned his proceedings even though he
1:45
was accused of beating his wife
1:47
or domestic violence. I don't know
1:49
if he's married. She let him go. They
1:51
ended up catching him, came back and
1:53
arrested her and now Democrats are acting
1:56
like this is the beginning of dictatorship.
1:58
Oh boy, you know I'm gonna... have
2:00
a field day with this one. We
2:02
do have a bunch of other stories,
2:04
but this of course is the big
2:06
one, so we'll see that. Before we
2:08
get started, my friends, we get a
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there's also focus with Mr. Bocus. I know Ian
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sitting here so he's gonna demand that you
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buy his coffee graphing dream. do Time
12:27
is precious and so are our pets.
12:29
So time with our pets is extra
12:31
precious. That's why we started Dutch. Dutch
12:34
provides 24-7 access to licensed vets with
12:36
unlimited virtual visits and follow-ups for up
12:38
to five pets. You can message a
12:40
vet at any time and schedule a
12:43
video visit the same day. Our vets
12:45
can even prescribe medication for many ailments
12:47
and shipping is always free. With Dutch
12:49
you'll get more time with your pets
12:51
and year-round piece of mind when it
12:53
comes to their vet care. Undermine
12:56
is the judicial branch to Congress.
12:58
This is undermining their laws, undermining
13:00
the naturalization process, undermining the supremacy
13:02
clause. You know, there's another song
13:04
that comes to mine. It's the
13:06
one where it's like, I don't
13:08
care, I love it. You know
13:10
that song? I don't care, I
13:12
love it. You know that song?
13:14
I don't care. I don't care.
13:16
Yeah. I don't care. Yeah. I
13:18
don't care. Yeah. This judge was
13:20
violating due process. And so that's
13:22
what they do. And as soon
13:24
as they do that, it all
13:26
makes sense of what's actually happening.
13:28
So judges supreme and inferior, according
13:30
to Article 3, they have the
13:32
right to serve in times of
13:34
good behavior. aiding and abetting and
13:36
harboring fugitives is not good behavior.
13:38
That's bad behavior. That's bad behavior.
13:40
Pack them up! Are they considered
13:43
fugitives? Yes. This person was a
13:45
fugitive. They were wanted for arrest.
13:47
The court proceeding was adjourned and
13:49
they escaped out the back of
13:51
the building. Are illegal people here
13:53
illegally technically fugitives or is it
13:55
only if you try and get
13:57
them and they run away? Yes.
13:59
And this guy had an. an
14:01
order for expedited removal. They do
14:03
not have trials for this. The
14:05
media has gas light in the
14:07
public into thinking there's a
14:09
criminal trial for every illegal
14:12
immigrant. Did you know that
14:14
Barack Obama 75% of his deportations didn't
14:16
have any due process? Is
14:18
that because none was needed?
14:20
See, I got to stop you there.
14:22
That's wrong. That was from the ACLU.
14:25
Well that's what I mean do they
14:27
just they didn't deserve a criminal trial
14:29
so they didn't get one therefore due
14:31
process was yes followed even though there
14:33
was no process well the process was
14:35
just get out see this is the gas lighting
14:38
and I got to stop you this is
14:40
the gas lighting they say they were
14:42
deported with you know like under Obama
14:44
none of these guys got due process
14:46
that's incorrect what process are you do
14:48
okay as an illegal immigrants you get a
14:50
you get reviewed by law enforcement
14:52
they check your IDs and detain
14:54
any American citizen at any point. If
14:56
there's reasonable suspicion, which is incredibly easy to get,
14:59
an officer can stop you and ask you questions.
15:01
They can ask for your ID, you don't have
15:03
to give it to them, you can say am
15:05
I being detained, and you can go. But if
15:07
they have reasonable suspicion that you're an
15:10
illegal immigrant, they can escalate a little
15:12
bit. Often what happens is they find out
15:14
the individual is not a citizen, or suspicion
15:16
grows to probable cause, and then they say,
15:19
okay, expedited removal. That is the process, that
15:21
you are due, as an illegal immigrant. So what's
15:23
happening now is Democrats are trying
15:25
to create the idea in the
15:28
minds of Americans that due process
15:30
means flatly 100% criminal jury trial
15:33
with the defense counsel. That's
15:35
for American citizens. Due process
15:37
is different in many different
15:39
cases. Okay, so due process can
15:41
be if a judge denies your evidence,
15:44
you as an American, if you're a
15:46
J6er and you get a criminal trial
15:48
and a jury. and legal counsel on both
15:50
sides and then you say your honor
15:53
this video is exculpatory evidence proving i'm
15:55
innocent and the judge goes you can't
15:57
show it that's a violation of due process
28:27
Time is precious and so are our
28:29
pets. So time with our pets is
28:31
extra precious. That's why we started Dutch.
28:34
Dutch provides 24-7 access to licensed vets
28:36
with unlimited virtual visits and follow-ups for
28:38
up to five pets. You can message
28:40
a vet at any time and schedule
28:43
a video visit the same day. Our
28:45
vets can even prescribe medication for many
28:47
ailments and shipping is always free. With
28:49
Dutch you'll get more time with your
28:51
pets and year-round piece of mind when
28:53
it comes to their vet care. to
28:56
a citizen who's a woman, a
28:59
citizen who's a freed slave, a
29:01
citizen citizen. Yeah, I mean, and
29:03
that, because of pro, that, you
29:05
know, points to the fact that
29:07
Democrats have been trying to get
29:09
citizens, so citizens can vote, so
29:11
these are just undocumented citizens, so
29:13
you can still vote. Which is
29:15
still just, I mean, it's just
29:17
word games to them, but if
29:19
they can get the American people
29:22
to kind of just accept that.
29:24
It becomes truth. Yeah, except that
29:26
as truth. That would help them
29:28
to allow. the actual non-citizen to
29:30
vote, which is something that we,
29:32
you know, we discussed around the
29:34
stable year multiple times. Yeah, without
29:36
cultural cohesion or belief in it,
29:38
they won't support the law. You
29:40
know, if people really believe their
29:43
citizens, they won't step up to
29:45
have them. Let me, let me,
29:47
let me help you out, Ian.
29:49
First generational warfare, mass artillery and
29:51
trenches, industrialization. Third Generation Warfare is
29:53
maneuver, Blitz Creek, strategic attack point.
29:55
So this is more like World
29:57
War II, fourth generation war, generational
29:59
warfare, decentralized non-state actors, psychological and
30:01
information warfare, blurring the lines between
30:04
civilians and combatants, and finally now,
30:06
today, fifth generational warfare, information, cyber,
30:08
psychological, and perception manipulation. There are
30:10
no clear battlefields, and wars are
30:12
fought in minds and online more
30:14
than on land. Yeah, you get
30:16
someone to destroy themselves. It's the
30:18
best way. Influence operations, AI war,
30:20
warfare attacks, and cyber attacks. Man,
30:22
they always say the modern war,
30:24
you don't want it because you
30:27
never know how it's going to
30:29
be. Like World War I, they
30:31
didn't realize there were going to
30:33
be machine gun nests, and that's
30:35
where we're at, staring down this
30:37
AI manipulation right now. Isn't it
30:39
fascinating how wrong? I think it
30:41
was Einstein, right? who said I
30:43
know not I know for not
30:45
which weapons world war three will
30:48
be fought but world war four
30:50
will be fought with sticks and
30:52
stones yeah boy was he wrong
30:54
yeah because likely world war three
30:56
is going to be subterfuge cyber
30:58
attacks and and and and perception
31:00
manipulation no it's not it's not
31:02
going to be kinetic great yeah
31:04
that's the point that the The
31:06
consequences and the cost of a
31:09
global war of all out global
31:11
war like a world war one
31:13
or two was You know, it's
31:15
too high and that's why information
31:17
warfare is is what you know
31:19
Nation states have defaulted to espionage
31:21
and and I don't think it's
31:23
a it's a cost issue I
31:25
think it's a it's an effectiveness
31:27
issue cost is a component of
31:30
that, but it's basically If you
31:32
could go to Gangaskan and say,
31:34
I will conquer all of this
31:36
land towards Eastern Europe and to
31:38
Asia and you will never lift
31:40
a sword or a bow or
31:42
a spear, would you want that?
31:44
They would say yes. Yeah, he
31:46
preferred that. If people would surrender,
31:48
he'd let them live. But would
31:50
you integrate them into their nation?
31:53
But with nuclear war, you're ruining
31:55
the land. The point is that's
31:57
not going to happen. That's why,
31:59
well, they don't, no, no, no,
32:01
no. It doesn't happen because, and
32:03
so they default to something else.
32:05
No, it's not gonna happen because
32:07
it's not as effective as manipulating
32:09
the entire population into bowing before
32:11
you. Nuking a country builds, makes
32:14
that country hate you forever. Well,
32:16
it also, I mean. Well, maybe
32:18
not forever. I mean, look Japan.
32:20
But we did kind of invade
32:22
and take over Japan. So instead
32:24
of nuking a country, destroying land,
32:26
it is cheaper, faster, and easier
32:28
to take over their minds through
32:30
manipulation. Oh, especially decentralized tech. Because
32:32
it happened overnight. The internet video
32:35
can manipulate a hundred media. I
32:37
still think that the fact that
32:39
you spoil the land is a
32:41
big part of the reason why
32:43
none of the global... superpowers ever
32:45
actually got into direct conflict. There
32:47
was proxy wars and stuff like
32:49
that because those were a better
32:51
option. And now that proxy wars
32:53
aren't really, well there are some
32:55
proxy wars, but now that information
32:58
flows so freely, because before the
33:00
internet, information flow wasn't so that
33:02
you could use. you know, information
33:04
warfare the way that we did.
33:06
So you went, you had, after
33:08
the end of World War II,
33:10
until basically until 2000, you know,
33:12
say 2000 just for, you know,
33:14
when most people, like most people
33:16
in the developed world had computers
33:19
in their houses. You know, you
33:21
didn't have the ability to really
33:23
influence minds over propaganda. The United
33:25
States was fairly isolated. It used
33:27
to be militaries that wanted to
33:29
influence... people or populations, they had
33:31
to either fly over and drop
33:33
leaflets or they had to have
33:35
people on the ground printing newspapers
33:37
and producing television shows or whatever,
33:40
having some way to spread that
33:42
propaganda. Now that the internet isn't
33:44
everyone's home and people can go
33:46
wherever they want, that makes it
33:48
possible to actually transmit information. So
33:50
the question is, what is the
33:52
most effective means of warfare and
33:54
nukes ain't it? issue of we're
33:56
going to ruin land. No, if
33:58
we were, if we truly wanted
34:00
to wipe out an enemy, we
34:03
would, we'd march to the sea.
34:05
We would scorch, we'd go scorched
34:07
earth. The issue is it's substantially
34:09
cheaper to hire a bunch of
34:11
Turkish dudes with 50 phones each
34:13
to spam blast a nation to
34:15
spam blast a nation, to spam
34:17
blast a nation, and have them
34:19
turn their country over to you
34:21
in a couple of the industry
34:24
in China, the shipping the American
34:26
industry to China last 20 or
34:28
the last 20 or 20 or
34:30
20 years, because, Production capacity, like
34:32
there's a game, Access and Allies,
34:34
wonderful World War II, board game,
34:36
better than risk. It's not about
34:38
money. None of the countries ever
34:40
buy stuff with money. You buy
34:42
it with production power. If you
34:45
have factories, you can build troops,
34:47
you can build armor, tanks, planes.
34:49
If you don't have factories, you
34:51
can't. And that's it. It's called
34:53
GDP. So without your productive capacity,
34:55
you're impotent on the global military
34:57
stage. We need to get those
34:59
factories back here or build new
35:01
ones. Let's jump to this next
35:03
story. We have this clip from
35:06
Fox News of Pam Bondi. It
35:08
turns out that the New Mexico
35:10
Democrat judge did not just harbor
35:12
this guy, but apparently is being
35:14
accused of giving him a rifle.
35:16
And let's just say, doing more
35:18
than harboring, trying to cover up
35:20
and protect him. Listen to this.
35:22
Trinidad and this person that they
35:24
harbored in their home, he was
35:26
showing signs through clothing, we're told,
35:29
tattoos. There was evidence through voice
35:31
messages and text messages of his
35:33
association to TDA. So what charges
35:35
will Kano and his wife face,
35:37
if any? So Judge Kano, soon
35:39
to be former Judge Kano, he
35:41
got his charges were just unsealed.
35:43
He's charged with obstruction. He is
35:45
charged. He admitted post-Miranda. He took
35:47
one of the TDA members' cell
35:50
phones himself, beat it with a
35:52
hammer, destroyed it, and then walked
35:54
the pieces to a city. dumpster
35:56
to dispose of it to protect
35:58
the wife also is charged with
36:00
destroying evidence. Sandra not only that
36:02
this TDA member and and he
36:04
had on a necklace that said
36:06
kill something about death he had
36:08
tattoos all over him he also
36:11
had on his cell phone pictures
36:13
of two decapitated victims wow decapitated
36:15
gruesome photos and he was sending
36:17
them out and and whoever he
36:19
was sending him to was sending
36:21
back say hey you need to
36:23
be careful you shouldn't be sending
36:25
these you shouldn't be texting these
36:27
photos out not not only that
36:29
these two the judge and his
36:31
wife gave him assault rifles that
36:34
belong to their daughter that's what
36:36
they're charged with in the I'm
36:38
gonna stop there and say I'm
36:40
pretty sure they didn't give him
36:42
an assault rifle It was probably
36:44
that it can air 15. Come
36:46
on Pam. In the criminal report
36:48
affidavit, he goes to a shooting
36:50
range with these assault rifles with
36:52
a suppressor with other known TDA.
36:55
Okay, actually maybe then. This is
36:57
the last person that we want
36:59
in our country, nor will we
37:01
ever tolerate a judge or anyone
37:03
else harboring them. Well, if it
37:05
was a suppressor as well, maybe
37:07
it actually was a legit assault
37:09
rifle like a vague term assault,
37:11
you know, it could be fully
37:13
automatic. It specifically refers to select
37:16
to select fire. Time
44:39
is precious and so are our pets.
44:42
So time with our pets is extra
44:44
precious. That's why we started Dutch. Dutch
44:46
provides 24-7 access to licensed vets with
44:48
unlimited virtual visits and follow-ups for up
44:51
to five pets. You can message a
44:53
vet at any time and schedule a
44:55
video visit the same day. Our vets
44:57
can even prescribe medication for many ailments
45:00
and shipping is always free. With Dutch
45:02
you'll get more time with your pets
45:04
and year-round piece of mind when it
45:06
comes to their vet care. no
58:13
repercussions you're never going to impeach these.
58:15
Pack the courts. I pack the court
58:17
right now because if Trump doesn't
58:19
Democrats will the Supreme Court it's the
58:22
last place that's not completely captured. We
58:24
still have, I mean, it's not looking
58:26
good with how Amy Coney Barrett's been
58:28
and how Justice Robert has been it.
58:31
You could look at it and say,
58:33
okay, well, it does look like it's
58:35
for, it's for, it's for, uh, for
58:37
five right now, but packing it is,
58:40
is, we're gonna pack it, say they
58:42
put 14 in, the Democrats are gonna
58:44
get in power, and they'll put 19
58:46
in. And that's gonna, that's gonna slow
58:49
down rulings, that's gonna make things.
58:51
chaotic and in that time when
58:53
there are 19 democratic judges sitting
58:55
on there, second amendment is gone.
58:57
So here's the issue. The way it
58:59
was supposed to work in this country
59:01
is that there was a federal
59:03
circuit for each Supreme Court justice.
59:05
We had nine circuits so we
59:07
have nine justices. However, we added
59:10
more states and expanded the territories
59:12
and now we have 13 circuits
59:14
and still nine justices, which means.
59:16
John Roberts oversees the fourth, Clarence
59:18
Thomas the 11th, Alito the third.
59:20
Sotomayor oversees the first and the
59:22
second. You've got Kagan for the
59:25
fifth, Gorsik for the tenth, Kavanaugh for
59:27
the DC circuit, Amy Koni Barrett
59:29
for the seventh circuit, and Katanji
59:31
Brown Jackson for the sixth. The
59:33
ninth circuit is usually assigned to
59:36
Kagan as well, but sometimes gets
59:38
reassigned. So the argument from Democrats
59:41
during Biden and during Obama was, we
59:43
better pack the courts. We need four
59:45
more justices right now so that there's
59:47
a justice for each federal circuit.
59:50
Trump must do this in my
59:52
opinion. Well, some of those circuits
59:54
aren't probably, there are different sizes
59:56
of people, so smashing two smaller
59:58
circuits together might make sense. that's
1:00:00
how they're doing it. And so to
1:00:02
add another judge that has a small
1:00:04
circuit wouldn't make any sense. Don't care.
1:00:07
I think that the Supreme Court, Trump,
1:00:09
in general, does not do it. Democrats
1:00:11
will. I believe it is a 100%
1:00:13
chance if Democrats at any point regain
1:00:16
power, the first thing they'll do is
1:00:18
pack the court. They will pack the
1:00:20
court. Because they will say never again
1:00:22
to Donald Trump, and we can ensure
1:00:25
this if we give ourselves a... bulletproof
1:00:27
majority in the Supreme Court, and then
1:00:29
they're going to just ram through law
1:00:31
by scotis ruling, which is unconstitutional and
1:00:34
shouldn't be done. I mean, it's clear
1:00:36
that the Democrats do want, like, single-party
1:00:38
rule. They don't see the value of
1:00:40
having opposing viewpoints at all. And you
1:00:43
see it in the way the party
1:00:45
acts. Like the people on the ground
1:00:47
act, they excommunicate people for having the
1:00:49
wrong opinion. If you have a dissenting
1:00:51
opinion, they're like, oh, well, you're a
1:00:54
person in Angrado, we can't sell you.
1:00:56
And so it stands to reason that
1:00:58
they would see the same, they would
1:01:00
see government like that as a good
1:01:03
thing, even though you look at, you
1:01:05
can look at a state like California,
1:01:07
which has that single party rule and
1:01:09
see all the massive problems. you know
1:01:12
the governor is trying to walk away
1:01:14
from those kind of that kind of
1:01:16
constantly only listening to people in his
1:01:18
own party I mean maybe it's for
1:01:21
cynical reasons because he's looking to be
1:01:23
the president but it still doesn't change
1:01:25
the fact that he people are leaving
1:01:27
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1:01:30
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because it's failing the people. You're making
1:02:01
me think of David Hogg as you
1:02:03
were talking about that because he's what
1:02:05
DNC had it not headed DNC like
1:02:08
number two. They shared the DNC and
1:02:10
they're trying to another looking to push
1:02:12
the guy out because he challenged the
1:02:14
unit party basically like welcome to the
1:02:17
Democratic Party bro super delegates you have
1:02:19
no power in that party they don't
1:02:21
money I love it and I'm glad
1:02:23
that it's Hogg because he's got a
1:02:25
lot of influence he's he has a
1:02:28
very liberal upbringing and has been through
1:02:30
a shocking experience at Parkland. He was
1:02:32
there when it happened. Oh, he wasn't
1:02:34
there. Oh, I thought he was in
1:02:37
the school. Okay, so he wrote his
1:02:39
bike to the school. One of the
1:02:41
more vocal people involved with that coming
1:02:43
out of it. Let's clarify. I believe
1:02:46
he was somewhere at the school, nowhere
1:02:48
near the shooting. and went home and
1:02:50
then when they when he found out
1:02:52
that they were doing interviews he jumped
1:02:55
on his bike and went as fast
1:02:57
as he could to the school to
1:02:59
get interviews. I think he's going to
1:03:01
be somebody I have a lot of
1:03:03
compassion for him in general just because
1:03:06
I think he's going to be someone
1:03:08
that is going to have an arc
1:03:10
where he leaves the Democratic Party and
1:03:12
realizes how violent was and then just
1:03:15
start speaking out about what he believes
1:03:17
and that's a good opportunity to love.
1:03:19
That's a very charitable positional positional position.
1:03:21
from what I can tell. Well, like
1:03:24
the DNC, there's a reason though, but
1:03:26
the DNC is supposed to worry about
1:03:28
getting Democrats elected over Republicans, not which
1:03:30
Democrats are, you know, in the, in
1:03:33
the, or in positions of, of power.
1:03:35
Like once you've got a Democrat in
1:03:37
a seat, to challenge that seat and
1:03:39
possibly lose that seat because of the
1:03:42
challenge is a bad thing for the
1:03:44
advice chair of the Democrat. So, DNC
1:03:46
to do. Just for the sake of
1:03:48
clarity. He was, uh, David Hawk was
1:03:50
at the school during the shooting. Uh,
1:03:53
they heard gunshots and were redirected by
1:03:55
a janitor, uh, and then hidden, uh,
1:03:57
wait, I'm sorry, a culinary arts teacher,
1:03:59
shelter them in a closet. He filmed
1:04:02
a bunch of videos. Got out safely
1:04:04
and went home and then rode his
1:04:06
bike back to the school after dark
1:04:08
and gave interviews Okay, it's you know
1:04:11
when I was younger, too It's easy
1:04:13
to be like use socialism to try
1:04:15
and solve problems But you know you
1:04:17
learn as you get older a lot
1:04:20
of times that you got to take
1:04:22
personal responsibility and protect your your local
1:04:24
environment and if everyone's doing that you
1:04:26
don't really need socialism because you're all
1:04:29
working together through this decentralized unity to
1:04:31
protect the environment I say we just
1:04:33
rapidly introduce neural link AI technology as
1:04:35
fast as we can and and and
1:04:37
be stowed upon Democrats. They'll be they'll
1:04:40
be happy and Then they'll live in
1:04:42
the pod and eat the bugs. Or
1:04:44
we could not. What do you mean?
1:04:46
That sounds like a terrible idea. To
1:04:49
have all the Democrats choose to go
1:04:51
into the pods and eat the bugs
1:04:53
and leave us alone? I don't know
1:04:55
though. That resolves all problems for everybody.
1:04:58
Trans people can live in a reality
1:05:00
where they're women and then they're not.
1:05:02
That resolves all problems for everybody's happy.
1:05:04
I feel like you're just trying to
1:05:07
make the board. Like, bro, if you
1:05:09
ever, like, when you, you know what
1:05:11
happens when you're playing in a world
1:05:13
of Warcraft and you try using mods
1:05:16
to cheat, the admins come and boot
1:05:18
you out of the game. So they'll
1:05:20
have no authority over it, it'll be
1:05:22
run by us. And we'll say, don't
1:05:24
worry, we will do everything in our
1:05:27
power to make sure you're happy and
1:05:29
comfortable as you own nothing, live in
1:05:31
the pot and eat the bugs. But
1:05:33
don't worry, don't feel shame from living
1:05:36
in the pot and eating the pot
1:05:38
and eating the bugs, because in your
1:05:40
private, because in your private little universe,
1:05:42
You're the Dragon Slayer Van Mark who
1:05:45
rides at night and shines the Golden
1:05:47
Sword. It all be just perverse, hurt.
1:05:49
Sure. They'd all be just disgusting. Well,
1:05:51
but true, but sometimes it would be
1:05:54
perverted discussing garbage as they pretend to
1:05:56
be Van Mark the paladin of the
1:05:58
Dragon. So hypothetical, if there was like
1:06:00
a political movement that took on neural
1:06:03
link and then they had a hive
1:06:05
mind, would you then take on a
1:06:07
hive mind with another movement to try
1:06:09
and challenge it? No. Because I feel
1:06:11
like it's an unstoppable force, a hive
1:06:14
mind, like the Borg is unstoppable almost.
1:06:16
No, the vulnerability of hive minds is
1:06:18
this, is the susceptibility of viruses. The
1:06:20
strength of a decentralized system is, if
1:06:23
a, if a portion of that decentralized
1:06:25
system is corrupt, it doesn't spread as
1:06:27
rapidly and can be prevented. I feel
1:06:29
like David Hogg's loyalties. He wouldn't become
1:06:32
a libertarian, he wouldn't become a conservative.
1:06:34
He'd get more radical to the left.
1:06:36
I feel like he would have a
1:06:38
better chance of becoming Hitler than Donald
1:06:41
Trump. I agree, completely. I mean that
1:06:43
legitimately. When I see someone who I
1:06:45
view as has the potential to be
1:06:47
really Hitler-esque, it's David Hog. Yes. He
1:06:50
is a narcissistic sociopath who is driven
1:06:52
by attention and power. He doesn't care
1:06:54
what's true. Or he knows it's true
1:06:56
and he's lying intentionally for power. So
1:06:58
he comes off as really sociopathic on
1:07:01
a quest for power. AOC as well.
1:07:03
He's kind of young, hog is what
1:07:05
he's like, 24 at this point, 24,
1:07:07
it's, you still got time. Give it
1:07:10
like, give it like three or four
1:07:12
years. I was definitely like a. not
1:07:14
a communist but I was like we
1:07:16
can all do this together we are
1:07:19
all one follow me I will save
1:07:21
us revolution that kind of mindset up
1:07:23
until like age 29 when I realize
1:07:25
like oh we can 3d print guns
1:07:28
you can't control people anymore I think
1:07:30
hog hopefully I mean it's kind of
1:07:32
like not it's not predestined you know
1:07:34
we can have him here on a
1:07:37
show you can have conversations with them
1:07:39
you can we change together but he
1:07:41
is like the kind of guy that's
1:07:43
super influential and if you just Send
1:07:45
him off into the nether to go
1:07:48
build a movement alone with his cohorts.
1:07:50
It could be very dangerous. I wonder
1:07:52
how just David it's people in that
1:07:54
position I wonder how actually influential he
1:07:57
or how influential he actually is I
1:07:59
mean obviously he's got a lot of
1:08:01
I don't think he is but I
1:08:03
don't know that he's yeah, I don't
1:08:06
know that he's actually, he's not an
1:08:08
opinion maker. He, he's, I actually don't
1:08:10
find him to be particularly influential. He's
1:08:12
been sitting around a million followers forever
1:08:15
on access. It's a big amount, don't
1:08:17
get me wrong, but it's not growing.
1:08:19
He's not building a base. This is
1:08:21
like, what is this, six, seven years.
1:08:24
He's had that amount to followers. He's
1:08:26
not advanced in any meaningful way. Name,
1:08:28
the other vice shares, the DNC, you
1:08:30
can't. He's as prominent as they are.
1:08:32
And I do mean that he's like,
1:08:35
he's a, he's probably a hundred pounds
1:08:37
soaking wet. So when he goes on
1:08:39
TV and doesn't know what he's talking
1:08:41
about and looks stupid, it's an easy
1:08:44
target for conservatives. I drag him mercilessly
1:08:46
at least once a month. You know,
1:08:48
Dean Withers apparently has given up and
1:08:50
he's just now taken to doing podcast
1:08:53
with random people who have no idea
1:08:55
what they're talking about. I saw him
1:08:57
with a Charlie Kirk event. That might
1:08:59
have been an old video. I just
1:09:02
saw it today. Yeah, that was Jubilee,
1:09:04
wasn't it? So, I don't know. He's
1:09:06
trying to get interview with Charlie, wouldn't
1:09:08
talk to him. Oh, I don't know
1:09:11
when it was from though. So what,
1:09:13
he's trying to debate people or talk
1:09:15
to people or interview anybody? The clips
1:09:17
that I'm seeing people share? Uh-huh. It's,
1:09:19
it's no longer, like, he got a
1:09:22
big boost when he was, he was
1:09:24
like yelling at Charlie, like, like random
1:09:26
people on the street on the street
1:09:28
stuff. Yeah, but he's also got podcast
1:09:31
clips where he's like in a room
1:09:33
doing a podcast talking to someone who's
1:09:35
like a random nobody Who's just like
1:09:37
I don't know I voted for Trump.
1:09:40
It's like why it's like oh, I
1:09:42
don't know and it's like oh you
1:09:44
know, so I don't think you know
1:09:46
people really thought that he had something
1:09:49
this dean with his guy and then
1:09:51
he kind of just fell off and
1:09:53
I think he's too scared to actually
1:09:55
engage in the actual political space like
1:09:58
he feels like his positions like his
1:10:00
positions. These guys are largely afraid of
1:10:02
going into actual political spaces. I think
1:10:04
Dean's different though. This is why I
1:10:06
think Politicon failed. You guys remember Politicon?
1:10:09
For those I don't know, it was
1:10:11
a political debate convention for the most
1:10:13
part. It was panels. were had between
1:10:15
various individuals or different backgrounds, but it's
1:10:18
just going to be conservatives because these
1:10:20
younger liberals are terrified to actually engage
1:10:22
in these conversations because they end up
1:10:24
looking like Luke Beasley did on this
1:10:27
show. And now he doesn't want to
1:10:29
come back. He doesn't want to do
1:10:31
any debates. He won't do it. We've
1:10:33
said anybody you want. They don't want
1:10:36
to do it. We do have success
1:10:38
with smaller, less well-known liberals because they
1:10:40
don't have anything to lose. because they
1:10:42
can't really think for themselves. They have
1:10:45
to follow a very specific script. If
1:10:47
they go out of line, then you
1:10:49
know, the cult comes for them and
1:10:51
they're like, nope, you can't say that,
1:10:53
you can't do that. You can't do
1:10:56
that. You know, I think on a
1:10:58
previous show, Tim, you talked about like
1:11:00
abortion, for instance, you could be the
1:11:02
biggest communist in the world, but then
1:11:05
you're like, maybe there should be a
1:11:07
limit on abortion. It's like, nope, nope,
1:11:09
you're out. And he's called right wing.
1:11:11
Like the left calls him a right
1:11:14
winger. It makes no sense. As soon
1:11:16
as you start to explore reality, I
1:11:18
mean, almost any of these conspiracy theories,
1:11:20
not any by any means, but like
1:11:23
9-11 for me, the war in Iraq,
1:11:25
weapons of mass destruction, you start to
1:11:27
go on that. It's just this whole
1:11:29
liberal economic sham becomes apparent. You start
1:11:32
to see the lines and the outlines
1:11:34
of it all. Like how can I
1:11:36
live a lie? I cannot live a
1:11:38
lie. So this is the issue with
1:11:40
these liberal personalities and why they don't
1:11:43
do shows Because if you are to
1:11:45
sit down in a chair where everybody
1:11:47
has a computer pulled up and a
1:11:49
monitor where we display I mean I
1:11:52
got a monitor in front of me
1:11:54
There's a monitor behind Ian and a
1:11:56
gigantic TV on the wall showing this
1:11:58
store that you are seeing on the
1:12:01
screen now So when I think one
1:12:03
of the big moments on this show
1:12:05
was when hunter Avalon came on and
1:12:07
and and I said well look you
1:12:10
know Joe Biden said, if you don't
1:12:12
fire the prosecutor, you're not getting the
1:12:14
billion dollars. And he smugly went, that
1:12:16
never happened. And here's, this kid actually
1:12:19
thought that was, so he was lied
1:12:21
to. The liberals were saying that never
1:12:23
happened. So he genuinely believed it and
1:12:25
then I went okay, and I pulled
1:12:27
the video up and literally 30 seconds
1:12:30
and pressed play and said Yeah, you
1:12:32
were wrong about that now what and
1:12:34
it's it's humiliating He doesn't have any
1:12:36
talking points handed to be wrong about
1:12:39
that because it just simply didn't happen.
1:12:41
So there's no there's no script So
1:12:43
what happens when you're like 20 years
1:12:45
old you build up a big following
1:12:48
based on liberal talking points and then?
1:12:50
You realize I can't actually go on
1:12:52
any of those conservative shows because how
1:12:54
do you lie about something that is
1:12:57
basically true? Like a brago Garcia? Maryland
1:12:59
man. So what happens when you go
1:13:01
on that show and say, okay, you're
1:13:03
calling a Maryland resident, a Maryland man,
1:13:06
he's from El Salvador, he's accused of
1:13:08
beating his wife. And then they're like,
1:13:10
now they're all backing away. You see
1:13:12
the Democrats being like, oh, it's not
1:13:14
about him. When the Democrats first got
1:13:17
on board that, it, it very much
1:13:19
was about the Maryland father, who was
1:13:21
wrongly deported. Hassan piker, did you know
1:13:23
this? He did not know the guy
1:13:26
was from El Salvador. He thought he
1:13:28
was from Maryland. If they were just
1:13:30
honest and said, look, the guy may
1:13:32
not be a great guy, but we're
1:13:35
worried about due process. If they had
1:13:37
just gone with that line, right, it
1:13:39
would have been at least tolerable and
1:13:41
the right wouldn't have been able to
1:13:44
mock the Democrats so mercilessly. Here's wouldn't
1:13:46
have had so much egg on their
1:13:48
face. and then he canceled and said
1:13:50
he would reschedule and never did. Because
1:13:53
what he's doing now is he walks
1:13:55
with a random person and says, what
1:13:57
was a, Donald Trump was was convicted
1:13:59
on 34 felonies, why? And then the
1:14:01
regular person's like, I don't know, I
1:14:04
heard that, I think it's probably not
1:14:06
true. It's like, what's not true about
1:14:08
it? And they're like, I don't know,
1:14:10
it just seems like they're weaponizing against
1:14:13
him and he goes, how? That's why
1:14:15
liberals avoid shows like this. And that's
1:14:17
why even though my politics may be
1:14:19
like moderate, liberal leaning in some areas.
1:14:22
They call me right wing. It's why
1:14:24
Jimmy Dore, a socialist, is called right
1:14:26
wing. And that's why when Hasan, humiliated
1:14:28
himself, when he played the clip of
1:14:31
my White House press briefing question, and
1:14:33
he was like, what do you mean,
1:14:35
bro? Like, you actually saying he's not
1:14:37
from Maryland? Like, he's from DC. And
1:14:40
then he's like, centrist liberal Tim Poole.
1:14:42
Yeah. It's like, my dude. Hasan genuinely
1:14:44
believed the guy was from Maryland. He
1:14:46
didn't know the guy was from El
1:14:48
Salvador. And then he was because of
1:14:51
that. He trusted the media when I
1:14:53
was calling out the lies from the
1:14:55
media. I had my my red-pilling reality
1:14:57
shattering happened in 2007 before I had
1:15:00
any kind of following I had like
1:15:02
4,000 followers on YouTube it was big
1:15:04
at the time but it was humiliating
1:15:06
and I had to learn in real
1:15:09
time in public and because of that
1:15:11
humility I feel much stronger in my
1:15:13
beliefs now but for someone to have
1:15:15
66 million ten six hundred thousand followers
1:15:18
that amount of humiliation to realize that
1:15:20
everything not everything but things you've been
1:15:22
saying for a decade five years is
1:15:24
wrong is like how you can eat
1:15:27
that one bro and Tim I want
1:15:29
to ask you what was your red-pilling
1:15:31
like like how did you start to
1:15:33
see past the narrative I never had
1:15:35
a red-pilling you just did you always
1:15:38
since 9-11 like how far back well
1:15:40
I mean actually I'll put it this
1:15:42
way I'll put it this way I
1:15:44
had I did not have a moment
1:15:47
most would describe as like a red-pilling
1:15:49
moment where they were like I'm a
1:15:51
Democrat then like Brad instruct describes how
1:15:53
he felt physical pain realized he realized
1:15:56
he was You know, I grew up
1:15:58
Catholic, family basically walked away from the
1:16:00
church, I became an angsty teenage atheist,
1:16:02
punk rock, all that stuff, and then
1:16:05
when I was 18, I was hanging
1:16:07
out with this guy, went to his
1:16:09
house to... like chill and jam and
1:16:11
he was like a prominent skateboarder so
1:16:13
this was like this is super cool
1:16:16
like I was gonna hang out the
1:16:18
cool kids and he had a picture
1:16:20
of Jesus on his wall and then
1:16:22
I was like what are you like
1:16:25
a Christian or something he's like no
1:16:27
and I was like then why do
1:16:29
you have Jesus on your wall and
1:16:31
he said I just thought a story
1:16:34
about a guy go around helping people
1:16:36
was kind of cool and then I
1:16:38
was like that was a formative moment
1:16:40
for me that maybe you could describe
1:16:43
as a atheist, liberal, urban narratives didn't
1:16:45
actually encompass what someone who actually liked
1:16:47
Jesus thought. So here's a guy who
1:16:49
wasn't a Christian, didn't go to church,
1:16:52
didn't think anything other than, I don't
1:16:54
know, I was a story about a
1:16:56
guy like helped people, and then I
1:16:58
started to think about it for a
1:17:00
second and I was like, yeah, that's
1:17:03
actually kind of okay, there's nothing wrong
1:17:05
with that. That was probably the moment
1:17:07
for I was 18. That was probably
1:17:09
the moment where I was like, yeah,
1:17:12
all that stuff, they're pushing forward about
1:17:14
what it means to be Christian, because
1:17:16
I was very much like on the
1:17:18
watching Real Time with Bill Maher and
1:17:21
all that stuff. And then you just-
1:17:23
And then you just- I've been liberal.
1:17:25
That then kind of like shattered your,
1:17:27
or that then allowed you to start
1:17:30
to see that borgish mentality elsewhere? So,
1:17:32
like, I had friends that were- talking
1:17:34
about info or prison planet I think
1:17:36
was the website and then of course
1:17:39
there was loose change and news loose
1:17:41
change 9-11 I think I was like
1:17:43
when when the I don't know how
1:17:45
well I was 16 or 17 when
1:17:47
the when the when the 9-11 truth
1:17:50
stuff was getting popular online so I
1:17:52
had seen Alex Jones stuff all the
1:17:54
time so I had a general understanding
1:17:56
that the media was full of it
1:17:59
and lying all the time and but
1:18:01
I realized that This urban liberal angsty
1:18:03
atheist narrative was not really conveying what
1:18:05
Christians actually believed. There's another moment where
1:18:08
I was hanging out with this chicken
1:18:10
the suburbs. I was like 17, so
1:18:12
this is even before that. And they
1:18:14
were a Christian Catholic pro-life, and we
1:18:17
were having dinner. Like, they invited me
1:18:19
to the house to hang out, and
1:18:21
they cooked dinner, and then they explained
1:18:23
that they were pro-life, and I asked
1:18:26
them what that meant, and they told
1:18:28
me, and I was like, oh. And
1:18:30
then I was like, that kind of
1:18:32
exposure, I think, probably insulated me from
1:18:34
the more Trump derangement syndrome mentality. Ron
1:18:37
Paul. So I never, I grew up
1:18:39
in Massachusetts and I never really fit
1:18:41
in in Massachusetts. I tried to fit
1:18:43
in in different ways. In high school
1:18:46
I joined the gay straight alliance, you
1:18:48
know, just so I could kind of
1:18:50
feel out different different people in different
1:18:52
groups and nothing really, nothing really worked.
1:18:55
I'm not gay by the way I'm
1:18:57
straight, but still. So then 9-11 happens,
1:18:59
and I'm in high school, and a
1:19:01
lot of people around me were all
1:19:04
of a sudden really like, we're going
1:19:06
to go to war, we're going to
1:19:08
get this, this is, we're going to
1:19:10
go to war, and this is good.
1:19:13
And I remember thinking in my heart,
1:19:15
this isn't good. This isn't good. Something
1:19:17
doesn't work right. I don't know. This
1:19:19
doesn't feel right to me. It didn't
1:19:21
feel right to be pro-war. It didn't
1:19:24
feel right to be an activist. Nothing
1:19:26
felt right. And then it was 2012
1:19:28
when I found Ron Paul and I
1:19:30
was like, this feels right. So I
1:19:33
don't know if it was really a
1:19:35
red pill moment. It was just a
1:19:37
moment where every view. Time is precious.
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that I had, the way that I
1:20:04
am, who I was, my whole life,
1:20:06
just made sense because I found my
1:20:08
people, I found my tribe. Were you
1:20:11
political from 2001 to 2010? No, no,
1:20:13
I wasn't. I sort of started dipping
1:20:15
my feet into it in 2012, but
1:20:17
I didn't start the red-headed libertarian until
1:20:20
December... 2017. So there was a period
1:20:22
of time where I was still politically
1:20:24
homeless because there wasn't a Ron Paul
1:20:26
that I could really attach to. So
1:20:29
I found Ray and Paul and I'm
1:20:31
like, okay, I like him, you know,
1:20:33
like is filibuster the Patriot Act? I
1:20:35
think that was 2014. And so I
1:20:38
was like, I like this guy and
1:20:40
I was following this guy now, you
1:20:42
know, so, so it really came to
1:20:44
the point where Trump got elected and
1:20:47
I'm living in Massachusetts still and everybody
1:20:49
is insane everybody lost their minds and
1:20:51
I'm like why like why is everybody
1:20:53
crazy about this this is like I
1:20:55
just couldn't understand it and so I
1:20:58
had a friend who was like well
1:21:00
you should maybe go on Twitter at
1:21:02
the time he's like you know you'll
1:21:04
find people to talk to you find
1:21:07
people like-minded people and so I'm like
1:21:09
okay so I just wanted to get
1:21:11
on Twitter and make like a couple
1:21:13
of friends that I could talk to
1:21:16
and I accidentally made a lot of
1:21:18
friends. So I doused your mind with
1:21:20
a new form of consciousness. Accidentally made
1:21:22
a lot of friends. Yeah, I had
1:21:25
no intention of this ever happening. I
1:21:27
don't know, the Libertarians kind of went
1:21:29
nuts though. Yeah. It's a good domestic
1:21:31
policy, but it doesn't work geopolitically. This
1:21:34
is why I really aligning myself with
1:21:36
the founders. And because it's something I
1:21:38
was always interested and always loved with
1:21:40
the constitution. I understood it was the
1:21:42
constitution. I understood it. So it's something
1:21:45
I'm like, all right, well, our founders
1:21:47
were kind of the original, especially the
1:21:49
anti-federal. They were like the original states'
1:21:51
rights, libertarians, you know, so I really
1:21:54
lean into that and the federalists were
1:21:56
more like Reagan. Republicans, I guess, if
1:21:58
I had to compare them to somebody.
1:22:00
Not really that far, but there's really
1:22:03
no good way to put it. Like,
1:22:05
Sam Adams was definitely a states rights
1:22:07
guy. But James Madison was more a
1:22:09
little bit more federal. So there's a
1:22:12
little bit, there's a little differential. But
1:22:14
that's why I lean into that, as
1:22:16
opposed to the crazy libertarian idea. Like,
1:22:18
oh, should there be an age of
1:22:21
consent? Like the kind of libertarians that
1:22:23
I want nothing to do with, I
1:22:25
stay away from. And judge me by
1:22:27
my enemies. Yeah, well, I we got
1:22:29
a long show but Phil if you
1:22:32
want to answer that same question I've
1:22:34
never really asked you about your road
1:22:36
to perdition like how did you snap
1:22:38
out of it? Did you we were
1:22:41
you even ever in it? Because I
1:22:43
remember you tell me you were like
1:22:45
a Republican early, but what happened? I
1:22:47
mean, I'm coming from the music industry
1:22:50
I was kind of always a contrarian
1:22:52
and being like I would argue on
1:22:54
like lamgo.com. When I fully decided that
1:22:56
the whole narrative that was coming out
1:22:59
of the government was something not to
1:23:01
be trusted was because of Ron Paul
1:23:03
and the Iraq War in 2008, I
1:23:05
was a Ron Paul guy and you
1:23:08
know, same thing in 2012, I was
1:23:10
a Ron Paul guy, I was a
1:23:12
Ron Paul guy too, so it was
1:23:14
definitely the Ron Paul, the whole Ron
1:23:16
Paul revolution, stuff that kind of brought
1:23:19
me out of it, because... You know
1:23:21
what I think was a big deal
1:23:23
for a lot of people that led
1:23:25
to the Ron Paul stuff was... Loose
1:23:28
Change 9-11, second edition. What was the
1:23:30
difference in the edition? The first edition
1:23:32
didn't really catch on and go viral.
1:23:34
The second edition with minor updates was
1:23:37
like, not that I agree or believe
1:23:39
it's all true, but it was like,
1:23:41
it was entertainment and everybody I knew
1:23:43
was burning into DVDs and sharing with
1:23:46
each other. Zikeise was another, Zike, Zike
1:23:48
Geist. It still is amazing. Watch that
1:23:50
movie if you haven't seen it. Yes.
1:23:52
And so those two films went viral
1:23:55
on burned cities like people were so
1:23:57
compelled by these. that they would burn
1:23:59
CDs with them and share the more
1:24:01
DVDs. And I remember when I worked
1:24:03
at O'Hare, someone brought it in and
1:24:06
they're like, have you guys seen this
1:24:08
loose change thing? We're gonna play it.
1:24:10
And then they played it in the
1:24:12
break room. And like I'd seen it
1:24:15
online. But that spreading around, I think,
1:24:17
helped create the Ron Paul Revolution. Yeah,
1:24:19
he started talking about blowback. When I
1:24:21
heard him say the word blowback on
1:24:24
the presidential state where he was running
1:24:26
for president and he started talking about
1:24:28
it in front of Obama and Hillary,
1:24:30
or no, whoever he was running against
1:24:33
at the time. The Republicans. Yeah, that
1:24:35
was the primary. It was like I
1:24:37
knew it. I knew what he was
1:24:39
saying was true and I knew what
1:24:42
he was saying was true and I'd
1:24:44
already kind of believe that that was
1:24:46
the case and I'd already kind of
1:24:48
believe that that was the case. But
1:24:50
it was like terrified of what that.
1:24:53
Maori or Sisson knows what it means
1:24:55
to burn a CD. Probably not. Maybe
1:24:57
get a match. Pretty sure, no, because...
1:24:59
By the time they were even old
1:25:02
enough to comprehend the function of burning,
1:25:04
DVDs had already taken over. Yeah. I
1:25:06
imagine the response would be something along
1:25:08
the lines of Hillary's, what do you
1:25:11
mean, like with a cloth? What do
1:25:13
you mean, like what matches? You know
1:25:15
it was fun. Turning on the radio?
1:25:17
And then they announced that like up
1:25:20
next we're gonna play like plush and
1:25:22
then you'd be like oh you'd have
1:25:24
to put the cassette tape in and
1:25:26
record. I would sit by it waiting
1:25:29
and you get if you could yeah
1:25:31
if you missed you get the end
1:25:33
of the song before so a lot
1:25:35
of songs I still think of the
1:25:37
song before. Mm-hmm. And then you'd have
1:25:40
like your mixtape you made from all
1:25:42
the different radio stations record on the
1:25:44
cassette. Yeah. Jack Basobic. He calls us
1:25:46
centen. That's what he calls kind of
1:25:49
the centenials. The older millennials, he calls
1:25:51
us centenials. So it's people who understand
1:25:53
because we're just, this is a micro
1:25:55
generation that many of us are in.
1:25:58
And it essentially is, we had to
1:26:00
go from analog to digital. And we
1:26:02
had to learn both in middle school
1:26:04
and high school. So this. This puts
1:26:07
us kind of in, we have advantages
1:26:09
in some ways, like look at me,
1:26:11
I still take paper notes, you know,
1:26:13
instead of doing whatever on my computer.
1:26:16
So it just puts us in, it
1:26:18
gives us an advantage, but it also
1:26:20
puts us in just a weird little
1:26:22
group. It's like a seven-year group of
1:26:24
sentenials. That's really interesting to think of
1:26:27
generations, because time is motion, and the
1:26:29
speeding up of information. transfer is like
1:26:31
speeding up time. Yeah. And AI? Like
1:26:33
the kids that are born with this
1:26:36
tech are almost a different generation. Whatever
1:26:38
that word even generates generation. Well, so
1:26:40
the technological advancements shape generations massively. And,
1:26:42
but you make a good point about
1:26:45
the speeding up the transfer of information
1:26:47
is condensing time. You know, think about
1:26:49
what it was like in, you know,
1:26:51
1776. Think about, think about when they
1:26:54
declared independence. Took six weeks to get
1:26:56
to England. And then it. Even when
1:26:58
it got to England, it didn't necessarily
1:27:00
mean that Parliament and the Crown had
1:27:03
a chance to thoroughly review it. And
1:27:05
then the king reads it and he's
1:27:07
like, he left at it. Yeah, and
1:27:09
then it's got to go, there's probably,
1:27:11
how many weeks of review from the
1:27:14
British government, and then how long until
1:27:16
the response came back? Another, I mean,
1:27:18
six weeks actually pretty quick to be
1:27:20
honest. Yeah. It got there pretty fast
1:27:23
and it came back and the first
1:27:25
thing, they were already Redcoast station. So
1:27:27
the reason why we had the Boston
1:27:29
Tea Party and why we had the
1:27:32
Boston Massacre was because Massachusetts was militarized.
1:27:34
What had happened is they had passed
1:27:36
the Taller Blacks. Well first they'd passed
1:27:38
the Stamp Act, the Sugar Act, and
1:27:41
the Townenacks. And before they passed the
1:27:43
Tangen Acts, they're like, all right, people
1:27:45
were rioting. We don't want that to
1:27:47
happen again. So we're going to send
1:27:50
a military over there to keep things
1:27:52
in order. And so by the time
1:27:54
that the Townchen Acts were passed, and
1:27:56
this was 67, 1767, the Townen Acts
1:27:58
were passed, and there was 67, 1767,
1:28:01
the Townen Acts were passed, and there
1:28:03
was two of their normal riots on.
1:28:05
in front of a store of a
1:28:07
loyalist. And the guy that was guarding
1:28:10
the store, the informant, he got all
1:28:12
rattled and he ended up shooting into
1:28:14
the crowd and he shot a little
1:28:16
boy. This was February 22nd of 1770.
1:28:19
Shot a little boy, the little boy,
1:28:21
little boy dies. His name was Christopher
1:28:23
Snyder. So after that, there are riots,
1:28:25
every day, riots, riots, riots, building, and
1:28:28
building. And then March 5th was the
1:28:30
Boston Massacre, and that was just another
1:28:32
riot. that they were out there and
1:28:34
it just the redcoats got nervous and
1:28:37
they shot into the crowd again and
1:28:39
that's what happened. What I learned about
1:28:41
the whole lead up to the Revolutionary
1:28:43
War is that in it was like
1:28:45
1750 and the British were basically like
1:28:48
not governing the colonies at all the
1:28:50
colonies were on their own for the
1:28:52
100 years that they'd been around whatever
1:28:54
and then the British like okay if
1:28:57
we don't take these guys seriously we're
1:28:59
gonna lose that territory to the French
1:29:01
remilitarized up north Spanish remilitarized down south
1:29:03
British like we need to go put
1:29:06
troops in the Americas. So they sent
1:29:08
all these British troops and the colonists
1:29:10
like, what the fuck, get out of
1:29:12
my country. You don't, we've been doing
1:29:15
this for 100 years, bro, get out.
1:29:17
But the British are like, no, we
1:29:19
need to protect our land. And then
1:29:21
they decided in order to pay the
1:29:23
troops, they started taxing the colonists, they
1:29:26
started taxing the colonists, because they couldn't
1:29:28
pay for their own subjection. And it
1:29:30
was just too much culture shock in
1:29:32
20 years. The first major tax was
1:29:35
1734, I believe, and it was the
1:29:37
molasses tax. And so when they brought
1:29:39
down the sugar tax, this next one,
1:29:41
they're like, OK, well, we're going to
1:29:44
cut the molasses tax. But then they
1:29:46
started taxing everything. And they were taxing
1:29:48
right down to a piece of paper
1:29:50
was taxed. If you were using a
1:29:53
piece of paper, we're taxing you buy
1:29:55
the piece of paper. So this was
1:29:57
very tyrannical. What they were doing there.
1:29:59
could have kept the colonies just building
1:30:02
this patriotism. Now isn't that crazy though?
1:30:04
Years. The revolutionary period was what, about
1:30:06
20 some odd years? The revolutionary period,
1:30:08
yeah, I mean, if you want to
1:30:10
start at the Sugar, that was 1663,
1:30:13
and it didn't end until the Bill
1:30:15
of Rights in 1791. And, revolutions are
1:30:17
long. The Declaration of Independence wasn't written,
1:30:19
signed, signed, and declared until 13 months
1:30:22
after the war already started. Yeah. Yep.
1:30:24
Because that was 1775. People think that
1:30:26
the finding fathers got together and were
1:30:28
like, and were like... let's declare independence.
1:30:31
And then they did, and then the
1:30:33
crown was like, I declare war on
1:30:35
you for doing this. No, actually war
1:30:37
was declared on the colonists first, and
1:30:40
they largely did not organize much for
1:30:42
about a year. So it was, I
1:30:44
should clarify because that's a subjective view
1:30:46
of it, but they did not declare
1:30:49
a formalized country until a year later,
1:30:51
13 months. And what was it, it
1:30:53
was July 2nd? Yeah, July 2nd and
1:30:55
then they reviewed everything on July 3rd
1:30:57
and then July 4th. And they didn't
1:31:00
even sign the declaration until I think
1:31:02
August 8th, like they actually sign it,
1:31:04
but we still celebrate on the 4th.
1:31:06
But the tolerable acts were laid down
1:31:09
after the Boston Tea Party and these,
1:31:11
what King George did and Many of
1:31:13
the grievances in the Declaration of Independence
1:31:15
are about the intolerable acts and what
1:31:18
King George did He's like he wiped
1:31:20
out their government essentially and he put
1:31:22
his own people in as the governor
1:31:24
He put his own people in at
1:31:27
judge Jurists like it was not fair
1:31:29
anymore He closed down Boston Harbor and
1:31:31
said you can't open this until you
1:31:33
repay the East India company every penny
1:31:36
and I mean the Boston tea party
1:31:38
was because of the fascism between the
1:31:40
East India Company in King George. They
1:31:42
were in bed together. They weren't paying
1:31:44
any taxes. They were getting fully reimbursed
1:31:47
on all their product. And they were
1:31:49
really undermining the entrepreneurs, John Hancock and
1:31:51
Sam Adams. So that was a big.
1:31:53
So here's a funny little bit of
1:31:56
trivia. John Adams wrote, the second day
1:31:58
of July 1776 will be the most
1:32:00
memorable epica. In the history of America,
1:32:02
I am apt to believe that it
1:32:05
will be celebrated by succeeding generations as
1:32:07
the great anniversary festival. It ought to
1:32:09
be commemorated as the Day of Deliverance
1:32:11
by solemn acts of devotion to God
1:32:14
Almighty. It ought to be solemnized with
1:32:16
pomp and parade and shoes, games, sports,
1:32:18
guns, bells, bonfires, and illuminations from one
1:32:20
end of this continent to the other
1:32:23
from this time forward forevermore. July 2nd.
1:32:25
July 2nd. But then why do they
1:32:27
say July 4th as Independence Day? That's
1:32:29
when people knew it happened. Oh, yeah.
1:32:31
That it was officially in record. Like,
1:32:34
we do a lot of things and
1:32:36
then it gets submitted to courts and
1:32:38
then it gets like officially. So there
1:32:40
are, I'll say this, without getting his
1:32:43
specifics on lawsuits, I haven't involved in
1:32:45
lawsuits and my lawyer will be like,
1:32:47
the lawsuit is filed, they have notice,
1:32:49
don't say anything until the court publishes
1:32:52
it. and then like three days later
1:32:54
the court publishes it and then the
1:32:56
press gets it. So should we celebrate
1:32:58
July 2nd, 3rd and 4th? I think
1:33:01
we should celebrate July 1st, 2nd, 3rd,
1:33:03
4th, 5th, 6th, 7th, 8th, 9th, 10th,
1:33:05
10th, 11th, 12th, 13th, 14th, yeah Magamont.
1:33:07
Magamont! Magamont! It is the whole month
1:33:10
that we celebrate. Well, I don't know
1:33:12
if there's any way to... to tie
1:33:14
it back into what we're talking about
1:33:16
that it takes two days for people
1:33:18
to know that something got signed. Right
1:33:21
now it takes two seconds. It's a
1:33:23
very different world. A revolution can happen
1:33:25
very quickly relative to what it used
1:33:27
to do. Technically. Like I just described,
1:33:30
you can submit official documents to a
1:33:32
court. and they don't publish it in
1:33:34
the public record for three days or
1:33:36
longer. And just because the information is
1:33:39
available doesn't mean the information is spread
1:33:41
particularly fast. Did you know that retirements
1:33:43
in the government are handled by going
1:33:45
down into a limestone cavern? Yeah. The
1:33:48
speed of technology and the speed of
1:33:50
government are two very different things. Yeah,
1:33:52
they were telling me that there's no
1:33:54
parking down there. Certain, you know, Homeland
1:33:57
Security. It's like there's... no parking. I'm
1:33:59
like, this is the American government and
1:34:01
there's no parking spaces. But we have
1:34:03
super secret underground science bases. Mount, Mount
1:34:05
Weather and Raven Rock? Like they know
1:34:08
where to put money, but it's definitely
1:34:10
not at like parking spaces, I guess.
1:34:12
They're down the street from us. Raven
1:34:14
Rock and Mount Weather. What is it?
1:34:17
Bro, are you kidding? I don't know,
1:34:19
Raven Rock. You've never played Fallout Three?
1:34:21
I have played Fallout Three, yeah. Did
1:34:23
you beat Fallout Three? No. No. I
1:34:26
do all the side quests. So I
1:34:28
guess that's where the enclave is in
1:34:30
Ravenrock. Okay. It's the emergency bunker for
1:34:32
government officials. Oh. Yeah. Where is it
1:34:35
relative to DC? West. Northwest. So like
1:34:37
it's close to where we are. Yeah,
1:34:39
I do. You can look it up
1:34:41
on the map. You got a computer
1:34:44
on you? Yeah. You can look up
1:34:46
where it's at. They started doing renovations
1:34:48
and expansion. I have breaking news. What
1:34:50
happened? Top Epstein accuser Virginia Guffrey dies
1:34:52
by suicide per NBC News. This was
1:34:55
Nick Sorter just reported this. Whoa. She's
1:34:57
been suffering some sort of health conditions
1:34:59
I've heard. Oh, something was very alarming
1:35:01
that was going on with her that
1:35:04
nothing added. Oh, this broke a half
1:35:06
an hour ago. Yo, check this out.
1:35:08
Virginia Jufray, one of Jeffrey Epstein's most
1:35:10
prominent abuse survivors dies by suicide. Uh,
1:35:13
I hate to ask this question, but
1:35:15
I kind of have to. Does anyone
1:35:17
believe it was suicide? No. I do.
1:35:19
She'd been suffering the last six months
1:35:22
from what I was reading. How did
1:35:24
she get hit by that car? Yeah,
1:35:26
she got hit by the car and
1:35:28
then she lived and then she made
1:35:31
the whole statement saying, well, I'm... I'm
1:35:33
ready to go, but I need to
1:35:35
see my kids first. And that was
1:35:37
really, you know what, you're a mother,
1:35:39
you're never ready to go. Does that
1:35:42
sound like she was telling the people
1:35:44
who were threatening her life? Please let
1:35:46
me see my kids one last time.
1:35:48
Yes, that's exactly what was. What happened
1:35:51
with the car? I dude. She just
1:35:53
got hit by a car. I dude.
1:35:55
She got hit by a car. She
1:35:57
got hit by a car. What happened
1:36:00
with the car? I dude. She got
1:36:02
hit. She got hit. She got what
1:36:04
happened with the car. She got hit
1:36:06
by. I. I. She got. I. She
1:36:09
got. I. I. I. I. I. She
1:36:11
got what happened with the car. Time
1:36:13
is precious and so are our pets.
1:36:15
So time with our pets is extra
1:36:18
precious. That's why we started Dutch. Dutch
1:36:20
provides 24-7 access to licensed vets with
1:36:22
unlimited virtual visits and follow-ups for up
1:36:24
to five pets. You can message a
1:36:26
vet at any time and schedule a
1:36:29
video visit the same day. Our vets
1:36:31
can even prescribe medication for many ailments
1:36:33
and shipping is always free. With Dutch
1:36:35
you'll get more time with your pets
1:36:38
and year-round piece of mind when it
1:36:40
comes to their vet care. And now
1:36:42
she dies by suicide. You know, they
1:36:44
could have said, okay, well, we're going
1:36:47
to do it or you can do
1:36:49
it yourself. I don't know. I don't
1:36:51
believe that. Could it be that with
1:36:53
Trump, you know, with Pam Bondi and
1:36:56
the Trump administration and, you know, cash
1:36:58
and then they were saying, I believe,
1:37:00
I don't want to speak for anybody,
1:37:02
but I'm pretty sure, and then they
1:37:05
were saying, I believe, I don't want
1:37:07
to speak for you, I don't know
1:37:09
this. I'm just going to say this,
1:37:11
no one will believe it. It might
1:37:13
be that... Considering the story right now
1:37:16
with the Epstein Documents and the Trump
1:37:18
administration and how a lot of people
1:37:20
are skeptical, but at the very least,
1:37:22
if there ever was a being close
1:37:25
to this, we are closer than ever
1:37:27
before to these documents, and then Virginia
1:37:29
Jufrei gets hit by a car? That's
1:37:31
the part I wondered about. I was
1:37:34
watching a clip from that show Goliath,
1:37:36
Goliath. You ever see that? It's a
1:37:38
show, I think it's a viral clip
1:37:40
where Billy Bob is in court. He's
1:37:43
suing and the judge dismisses the case
1:37:45
unjustly so Billy Bob calls the judge
1:37:47
corrupt when they're leaving This woman who's
1:37:49
in the case. She's like so did
1:37:52
we win or lose? It's like well
1:37:54
a little bit of both and wham
1:37:56
a van van slams into her just
1:37:58
kills her Like dude, that's one one
1:38:00
about Virginia. So my take you know
1:38:03
which is ignorant is that she was
1:38:05
in such pain from the car accident
1:38:07
she decided to take her own life
1:38:09
but the car accident did they catch
1:38:12
the guy to hit her by a
1:38:14
school bus and it was like out
1:38:16
of no that's right it yeah it
1:38:18
was and it was going faster than
1:38:21
a school bus is legally allowed to
1:38:23
go and did they did they get
1:38:25
the driver? I don't know. It doesn't
1:38:27
sound that way. I mean, I feel
1:38:30
like we would have heard it if
1:38:32
they got the driver, but nope, it
1:38:34
just happened. Were the kids on the
1:38:36
school bus? I don't know. I don't
1:38:39
know. Look, I mean, getting hit by
1:38:41
a school bus and like I said,
1:38:43
it came out of nowhere, or it
1:38:45
was like in the middle of nowhere.
1:38:47
kind of nowhere. Yeah, if I understand
1:38:50
correctly, yeah, it wasn't like it was
1:38:52
congested. It wasn't like congested. Nothing about
1:38:54
that story makes sense. This is like
1:38:56
his biggest accuser. This is the girl.
1:38:59
I've been following her work for four
1:39:01
years. It is. It is. Okay, so
1:39:03
let's go back in time a little
1:39:05
bit. Mike Sternovich saw that there was
1:39:08
a defamation case. And I believe it
1:39:10
was the Miami Herald who then joined
1:39:12
in and helped that effort, which exposed
1:39:14
a lot of it. I'm not entirely
1:39:17
sure. So forgive me if I'm roping
1:39:19
you and it wasn't you, but it
1:39:21
might have been. And they filed the
1:39:23
suit, I think it was a FOIA
1:39:26
request or something like that to get
1:39:28
the documents from this defamation case. And
1:39:30
then when those documents, I believe it
1:39:32
was the Miami Herald, who then joined
1:39:34
in and helped that effort, which exposed
1:39:37
a lot of statements about Epstein and
1:39:39
what he had been doing. from Virginia
1:39:41
Jufray, this blew the lid off of
1:39:43
Epstein. He was a free man at
1:39:46
the time. Shortly after this is when
1:39:48
he gets arrested, they start going after
1:39:50
him. And I think at that point,
1:39:52
when the stories started breaking, here's my
1:39:55
assumption, I don't know for sure, the
1:39:57
people that Epstein had been blackmailing were
1:39:59
largely staying away out of fear. When
1:40:01
the news came down that because of
1:40:04
what Cernovich and the Herald had been
1:40:06
doing, the story was out to break,
1:40:08
powerful individuals being blackmailed were like... Oh
1:40:10
God no, get this contained. Arrest Epstein
1:40:13
in a panic. He goes to this
1:40:15
jail where he gets a cellmate who
1:40:17
somehow obscene gets mercilessly beaten but survives
1:40:19
and he has bruise on his neck.
1:40:21
So then the guy's... I wasn't me,
1:40:24
don't look at me. Then they move
1:40:26
Epstein to another cell. I'm pretty sure
1:40:28
that cellmate died too. I'm not sure.
1:40:30
Someone fact-checked me on the one. Then
1:40:33
Epstein goes in the cell and ends
1:40:35
his life with the cameras broken and
1:40:37
the guards asleep. You also said that
1:40:39
he thought someone poisoned him, I think.
1:40:42
Ten weeks before he died. He was
1:40:44
like, they tried to poison me. Cash
1:40:46
Dan and the FBI. So this is
1:40:48
crazy. We had that story where Pam
1:40:51
Bondi wrote a public letter saying that
1:40:53
the FBI was withholding Epstein documents and
1:40:55
hiding it from her, the attorney general.
1:40:57
And she ordered cash to get those
1:41:00
documents. They report the documents were transferred
1:41:02
and they were going through them and
1:41:04
they'll be released soon. Everyone's like what's
1:41:06
going on. I wonder if people being
1:41:08
blackmailed are like, if these documents come
1:41:11
to light, they are going to subpoena
1:41:13
Virginia Jufray and ask her to speak
1:41:15
more on the issue. And this is
1:41:17
why you get a story like this.
1:41:20
How many other witnesses are going to
1:41:22
come forward now? How many other victims
1:41:24
are going to come forward now that
1:41:26
the main victim has suicided herself? Yep.
1:41:29
Yeah. I don't know if you need
1:41:31
some evidence to get that. Epstein had
1:41:33
two different cellmates Nicholas Tartagolian who was
1:41:35
alive. He was a former police officer
1:41:38
accused of quadruple murder. He was... Epstein's
1:41:40
cellmate in 2019 when Epstein was found
1:41:42
semi-conscious with him. Okay, so that guy
1:41:44
did not die. That guy's alive and
1:41:47
then Efrain Reyes was his... summit in
1:41:49
the special housing unit in August 8th
1:41:51
2019 the day before Epstein's death Reyes
1:41:53
was transferred to private prison where he
1:41:55
reportedly contracted COVID-19 okay from 2020 Reyes
1:41:58
was found dead on November 27th 2020
1:42:00
at his mother's apartment in New York
1:42:02
City with the death attributed to coronavirus
1:42:04
yeah okay so I was everything was
1:42:07
coronavirus yeah I'm telling you, like, he's
1:42:09
freaky out there. I don't want to
1:42:11
speculate, but if you understand the way
1:42:13
of the world, yes, I believe you're
1:42:16
right. I genuinely think this is likely
1:42:18
happening. Like, Epstein was blackmailing people. He
1:42:20
was probably working with some intelligence. Some
1:42:22
people think he was working with Israeli
1:42:25
intelligence. I don't know if the evidence
1:42:27
corroborates that. But I think Elaine's father
1:42:29
was Israeli intelligence, was he not? I
1:42:31
don't know, but I know that, you
1:42:33
know, Dan Bonjino on this show said
1:42:36
some Middle Eastern intelligence or something that
1:42:38
affect, and we don't know for sure.
1:42:40
Oh no, maybe it was British intelligence,
1:42:42
her dad. Maybe? No, I think it
1:42:45
was Israeli. Yeah, I think it was
1:42:47
Assad. Maybe. Either way, I think Jews
1:42:49
is crazy. My take, and I don't
1:42:51
even go too deep on this, because
1:42:54
I want to live a healthy, happy,
1:42:56
effective reality here, but I think Elaine
1:42:58
is the most dangerous. Elaine is the
1:43:00
mastermind. When the dark forces come, they're
1:43:03
like, Ian's the one we got. I'm
1:43:05
the tornado, man. He's the powerhouse of
1:43:07
Tim Kast-IRL. He doesn't matter. Ian. I'm
1:43:09
the fluctuation. My new transference deep within.
1:43:12
What? Well, here's, here's the question. Here's
1:43:14
the barrel. Staring at the sun. If
1:43:16
you're staring down the barrel and you
1:43:18
are told if you if you continue
1:43:20
this pursuit you may you may expose
1:43:23
the darkness or you may die a
1:43:25
horrible merciless death. I turn around right
1:43:27
now and luxury and comfort awaits which
1:43:29
do you choose? Oh brutal. Well, you
1:43:32
know. I
1:43:35
guess it depends on what time of
1:43:37
day you ask me that question. Have
1:43:40
I had breakfast? I think the I
1:43:42
think the thing is, you know, my
1:43:44
general thoughts are that it's not, it
1:43:46
of course it's important, but it's not
1:43:49
that important relative to what we really
1:43:51
got going on with deep state economic
1:43:53
disaster looming. So other people have said
1:43:55
this too. They're like the Epstein things
1:43:58
just forget about it. Don't worry about
1:44:00
it. Don't, don't hate about it. Like
1:44:02
focus on, you know, you know, tangible.
1:44:05
solutions that's kind of I mean that's
1:44:07
generally actually how I deeply feel which
1:44:09
is why I don't talk about this
1:44:11
stuff very much the Epstein stuff this
1:44:14
is crazy man what's the best that
1:44:16
could happen if we found out you
1:44:18
know jolains jolain's father was suicided she
1:44:21
well he commits suicide but she's these
1:44:23
people have us have in their families
1:44:25
like all the people in this fear
1:44:27
they're they're very unwell you know I
1:44:30
think depression runs in the family yeah
1:44:32
yeah and their friends families and their
1:44:34
victims families. A lot of people see...
1:44:37
And the investigative journalists, do they know
1:44:39
families? A lot of people who seek
1:44:41
power? They have like a narcissistic personality
1:44:43
if they seek some kind of power
1:44:46
and you know that can transfer into
1:44:48
cluster B and that can transfer into
1:44:50
all these other mental health issues bipolar
1:44:53
for instance. So yeah I guess it's
1:44:55
not surprising that there's a high rate
1:44:57
of suicide but she still says that
1:44:59
her dad was murdered. Since 1997 in
1:45:02
an interview. I mean, and it's Israeli,
1:45:04
so it's believed that it's that he
1:45:06
was Israeli, that intelligence, but he also
1:45:08
is alleged to have connections to British
1:45:11
and Soviet. Here's a picture of Virginia
1:45:13
Jufray with Prince Philip. Yeah, is it?
1:45:15
I was like, I'm pretty sure it
1:45:18
was the other guy. There's old Gee
1:45:20
Lane hanging out on the... You know,
1:45:22
I wonder if this prince whose life
1:45:24
was ruined could somehow be involved in
1:45:27
any... I don't know. I mean, his
1:45:29
mom stripped him of all of his
1:45:31
titles and stuff, but I don't know
1:45:34
what's going on out of his brother
1:45:36
is running. Well, his brother's got cancer.
1:45:38
I don't know what's going on. The
1:45:40
king? The king? Yeah. His brother is
1:45:43
the king? Yep. So I don't know
1:45:45
if anything's been lifted or replaced or
1:45:47
something to kill the family? I don't
1:45:50
know. The king of England's brother was
1:45:52
in a picture with Virginia Jupre. That's...
1:45:54
Yeah. And also it was stripped of
1:45:56
his titles and stuff by his mother
1:45:59
because of this stuff. So like he
1:46:01
was accused and the royal family is
1:46:03
like, all right, we're not, like he
1:46:06
didn't get like excommunated from the thing.
1:46:08
They stripped him of all kinds of
1:46:10
titles and they didn't have him doing
1:46:12
anything officially because of the Epstein connections.
1:46:15
They strip him of his... Time is
1:46:17
precious and so are our pets. So
1:46:19
time with our pets is extra precious.
1:46:22
That's why we started Dutch. Dutch provides
1:46:24
24-7 access to licensed vets with unlimited
1:46:26
virtual visits and follow-ups for up to
1:46:28
five pets. You can message a vet
1:46:31
at any time and schedule a video
1:46:33
visit the same day. Our vets can
1:46:35
even prescribe medication for many ailments, and
1:46:37
shipping is always free. With Dutch, you'll
1:46:40
get more time with your pets and
1:46:42
year-round piece of mind when it comes
1:46:44
to their vet care. Not just titles,
1:46:47
but his, what do they call it,
1:46:49
what you get when people die? He
1:46:51
was not in line to the throne.
1:46:53
Like his duchies or anything? His duchies
1:46:56
or counts. Counts. A duchy is a
1:46:58
bunch of counts, counties? Counties? Counties? Counties?
1:47:00
You'll be able to count that serves
1:47:03
a, that rules over county, then you'll
1:47:05
have a duke that rules over like
1:47:07
a multitude of counties called a duchy.
1:47:09
Okay. Give those to their kids, like
1:47:12
Prince Harry is the duke of this
1:47:14
and that. Yeah, I mean, those are
1:47:16
largely just titles now, because they have
1:47:19
elected officials, because they have a parliamentary
1:47:21
system over there. The monarchy is mostly
1:47:23
for show. Things like, yeah, yeah, yeah,
1:47:25
yeah, order. order. Someone told me to
1:47:28
do that. They said, Tim, bang the
1:47:30
hammer and tell him we're going to
1:47:32
uh, uh, chats, rumble rants or chats.
1:47:35
Smash the like button, my friends, share
1:47:37
the show with everyone, you know, let's
1:47:39
see what you guys have to say,
1:47:41
because your, your insight is invaluable. And
1:47:44
that's true. We actually, we often reference
1:47:46
super chats and member Collins on the
1:47:48
show later on because, uh, people notice
1:47:50
things we don't. They're not here. And
1:47:53
that's why we're doing the culture we're
1:47:55
doing the culture war live. We're live.
1:47:57
We're live. We're live. We're live. you
1:48:00
guys as members of the timcas discord
1:48:02
get to come on stage and i
1:48:04
think we have eight slots allotted but
1:48:06
it's no guarantee we actually get eight
1:48:09
people up on stage to debate let
1:48:11
me say this if you are planning
1:48:13
on debating and submitting your view on
1:48:16
things. Here's an important piece of advice.
1:48:18
The debate is going to be Kilmar
1:48:20
Abrego Garcia. Was he legally allowed to
1:48:22
be deported? Was the deportation correct? How
1:48:25
should Trump handle deportations? And then we're
1:48:27
going to bring you guys up to
1:48:29
add to the mix. If you are
1:48:32
going to submit a debate talking point,
1:48:34
you will likely be selected if you
1:48:36
are referencing something specific that we have
1:48:38
not considered. So if you submit something
1:48:41
where you're just like, I think he
1:48:43
should have been deported regardless of the
1:48:45
withholding of deportation because we have too
1:48:48
many illegal immigrants, we may bring you
1:48:50
up just depending, but just understand, that's
1:48:52
probably the first thing that will be
1:48:54
said by someone else already on this,
1:48:57
like that's, we're gonna be doing a
1:48:59
half an hour of open discussion to
1:49:01
kick off the show. And if your
1:49:03
opinion is largely what has been discussed
1:49:06
already. You're not going to want to
1:49:08
come up and just say the same
1:49:10
thing someone's already said. So consider that.
1:49:13
What we're looking for is people who
1:49:15
have insights or ideas that are either
1:49:17
counter. Maybe it's a third position. Maybe
1:49:19
you're like, we should be sending them
1:49:22
to Alaska to work the lithium mines
1:49:24
or something. I don't know. But you
1:49:26
know, that's how you do it. Let's
1:49:29
go. Shady Wilder says, Joe's is on
1:49:31
a vacation far away. Judge Hannah-Dogan's career
1:49:33
is over. See, I don't know what
1:49:35
the song is. Josie's on a vacation
1:49:38
far away. Oh. Oh, okay, I get
1:49:40
it. Well, all right then. Jacob Holly
1:49:42
says, protesting bad here in Milwaukee, the
1:49:45
insane partisanship here in Wisconsin is horrendous.
1:49:47
It's reached our small towns and now
1:49:49
neighbors are spraying swastikas on each other's
1:49:51
cars. I didn't help needed cheese. If
1:49:54
we were to track all of the
1:49:56
insane things that have happened over the
1:49:58
past eight years... Where
1:50:01
does this go? I mean, like, we're at the point
1:50:03
now where the Democrats have already arrested
1:50:05
lawyers and politicians and how the Trump
1:50:07
admin is arresting judges, as I think
1:50:10
they should, but I don't think Democrats
1:50:12
are gonna sit back and just accept
1:50:14
it. They're gonna say, he's a fascist, he's
1:50:16
Nazis, we gotta do something, and they're
1:50:19
gonna escalate. I still am of the
1:50:21
opinion that without the normies in
1:50:23
the street protesting to give the...
1:50:25
crazies and the people that want
1:50:28
to throw fire bombs and stuff
1:50:30
without the normies to give them
1:50:32
cover. It stays far less intense
1:50:34
than the summer of love was.
1:50:36
I don't see mass protests
1:50:39
by normal people because they can
1:50:41
go to work and they have
1:50:43
to go to work and they're
1:50:45
not as fired up. I mean,
1:50:48
Trump won popular vote. So they're
1:50:50
not as fired up. There's not
1:50:52
the same... you know, phony narrative
1:50:54
flowing out there about, you know,
1:50:56
about the Trump administration,
1:50:59
that there was about how police
1:51:01
treated black men in America in
1:51:03
2020. Remember, you asked the average
1:51:05
person, they were thinking that like
1:51:07
thousands of black men per year
1:51:09
were being killed, thousands of unarmed
1:51:11
black men per year were killed
1:51:14
by police. Thousands, you know? And
1:51:16
yeah, it was like 15 or
1:51:18
20. But the point is, without
1:51:20
that... Without that sense of
1:51:22
actual injustice, right, that even
1:51:24
though it wasn't actually happening,
1:51:26
without the belief of that
1:51:28
injustice, I don't think you
1:51:30
get Normies out of work to go
1:51:32
onto the streets to protest, and
1:51:35
without Normies, you don't get the
1:51:37
protests to cover for the riots.
1:51:39
Yeah, and it was like the
1:51:41
summer of COVID, basically. And you
1:51:43
see him like, Tantal, like kind
1:51:45
of... fishing these like a new virus
1:51:47
and you'll see like a news article
1:51:49
and it's just like no one cares
1:51:51
too. Well yeah now it's like if
1:51:54
there's anything that happens this summer or
1:51:56
whatever will happen this summer will be
1:51:58
lower intensity and it'll be stuff like
1:52:00
the firebombing of Tesla, you know, Tesla
1:52:02
dealerships and stuff, but it won't
1:52:04
be that every city has a
1:52:06
big riot. And look, man, I
1:52:08
really, really, really hope I'm right,
1:52:10
because if I'm wrong, you know,
1:52:13
then I could see significant bad
1:52:15
results from that, you know. All
1:52:17
right, Phelink says the charges on
1:52:19
the New Mexico judge are pure
1:52:21
cowardice. Those two were providing aid
1:52:23
and comfort to enemies of the
1:52:25
USA. Charge them with treason and
1:52:27
let them try to defend it.
1:52:29
That's interesting. I don't know if we
1:52:31
determine, correct me, I don't know if you
1:52:34
know this, but can a gang or
1:52:36
an organization be considered a
1:52:38
wartime enemy of the United States? Yes.
1:52:40
But I know I know we have
1:52:42
letters of Mark to target rogue groups
1:52:44
like this, but we don't declare
1:52:47
war on them. It's a incursion, it's
1:52:49
a predatory incursion or an
1:52:51
invasion. It's very specific, the
1:52:53
language that has to be
1:52:55
used for the president to
1:52:57
declare something like that this
1:52:59
was... This responsibility, this power
1:53:01
was handed over in 1798
1:53:03
to the executive from Congress.
1:53:05
And so that's why the
1:53:07
president on day one declared
1:53:09
an invasion and he didn't
1:53:11
declare a war, he doesn't
1:53:13
really have to declare a
1:53:15
war to do that. Spartan theory
1:53:18
says, Tim, I just want to thank
1:53:20
you for using Max's stupid science bitch
1:53:22
argument on Ian the other night. You
1:53:24
know, comedy writing is dead on when
1:53:26
it's being used in real life on
1:53:28
a political podcast. It's always sunny.
1:53:30
Indeed, but the stupid science bitch
1:53:32
argument is actually a literal philosophical
1:53:35
argument that they comitically applied to
1:53:37
Mac. Do you know what this
1:53:39
is? Yep. You're familiar? It's always
1:53:42
sunny, yes, okay. He's Christian, so he's
1:53:44
trying to argue that the atheists are
1:53:46
wrong because they have faith in their
1:53:48
systems, not seeing evidence all the same.
1:53:50
This is like standard basic knowledge philosophy.
1:53:52
You simply choose to believe what you
1:53:54
want to believe, because most people don't
1:53:56
actually do any of the research or
1:53:58
the science or track the evidence. They
1:54:00
just think that someone telling it to
1:54:02
him is truth, is evidence. So
1:54:04
that's everybody. I really don't
1:54:06
think in that. Like, do I believe
1:54:08
that Genghis Khan invaded Europe? I have
1:54:11
faith in it because of evidential proof.
1:54:13
I guess you call it proof, but
1:54:15
I don't even know. So belief is
1:54:17
like a form of proof, or of
1:54:19
faith, kind of. There's no proof for
1:54:22
many things. Even in court, we
1:54:24
often don't have proof. We have
1:54:26
evidence beyond a reasonable doubt.
1:54:28
That's true. Yeah, I don't even know
1:54:30
how you get proof to be completely
1:54:33
honest. It's a loaded term I mean
1:54:35
even now with AI it's going to
1:54:37
be even harder It's one thing if
1:54:39
you're caught on camera doing something,
1:54:41
but it's like yeah now we can
1:54:43
fake that Yeah, so even memory can
1:54:45
be faked like memories aren't your memories
1:54:48
right? This is what Branca was
1:54:50
telling us Andrew Branca that if
1:54:52
and I think angry cops was
1:54:54
talking about to witness contamination
1:54:57
terrible if there they will create
1:54:59
a new memory together of what
1:55:01
really happened. Yeah, it changes their memory
1:55:03
of things. First thing you do is
1:55:06
isolate all the witnesses so that way
1:55:08
they don't contaminate each other. This is
1:55:10
why I said the AI stuff
1:55:12
that's really scary is when they take
1:55:15
a really scary is when they take
1:55:17
a video like Trump saying, and I'm
1:55:19
not talking about the neo-Nazis, the
1:55:21
white supremacist, because they should
1:55:23
be condemned totally. Democrats share
1:55:26
that version. Republicans share the
1:55:28
other. And then people who
1:55:30
are there and watch Trump
1:55:32
speak are asked, which did
1:55:34
he say? And they'll go, I'm pretty
1:55:36
sure he said some. Because they don't
1:55:38
like Trump or they're biased. And
1:55:41
some news outlets said it. And
1:55:43
it fits their bias. Indeed. Scary
1:55:45
times, man. Alpha Turkey says only
1:55:47
two judges. This better be the beginning.
1:55:49
Oh, yeah. Hey, look, Bannon said expect
1:55:52
arrest in the summer. We're getting arrest
1:55:54
in spring. Hey, there you go. And
1:55:56
some people are like, they're not high
1:55:58
enough. Oh, it's two judges. You know, like
1:56:01
we're getting the ball rolling.
1:56:03
What do you think? They're
1:56:05
going to come out and
1:56:07
arrest Biden on day one.
1:56:09
And they got to arrest,
1:56:11
like, hardcore crime. Like, this
1:56:13
is crime. You know, and
1:56:16
anybody reasonable can look at
1:56:18
this and say, this is
1:56:20
crime. Yeah. Raymond, G. Stanley
1:56:22
Jr. says, Tim, you are so
1:56:24
happy. I left that mallet
1:56:26
there. This is Raymond. Let's
1:56:29
see. Jack Rivers poker says these
1:56:31
judges should get the maximum money
1:56:34
charged. As a CDL driver, if
1:56:36
I get pulled over, I automatically
1:56:38
get a ticket for any infraction.
1:56:41
Reasoning is that you should have
1:56:43
known better. They should know better,
1:56:45
indeed, their judges. Yeah. Trump
1:56:47
right now has the supremacy clause
1:56:50
on his side, and this is
1:56:52
Article 4, Clause 2, and this
1:56:54
says... It establishes the Constitution, the
1:56:56
federal laws, treaties, our supreme law
1:56:59
of the land, and they override
1:57:01
any conflicting state laws. So, for
1:57:03
instance, Wyoming can't declare war on
1:57:05
Ireland. They can't do that because
1:57:07
that would violate the supremacy
1:57:09
clause. It also goes for
1:57:11
sanctuary cities. Those are repugnant
1:57:13
of the Constitution as well,
1:57:15
because we have laws for
1:57:17
naturalization and they're federal. My question
1:57:20
to you Jack Rivers poker
1:57:22
is that you are sitting
1:57:24
at the button with Ace
1:57:26
Queen off-suit under the gun
1:57:28
raises 2.5 big blinds and
1:57:30
it folds to you. What's your
1:57:33
play? I'll wait. Anyway back
1:57:35
to the Superchats. I check.
1:57:37
Just then I check. Ian you can't
1:57:39
check when they've raised you. I
1:57:42
thought they folded. The guy
1:57:44
before me folded. It folds
1:57:46
to you. There isn't... Time is precious
1:57:48
and so are our pets. So time
1:57:50
with our pets is extra precious. That's
1:57:53
why we started Dutch. Dutch provides 24-7
1:57:55
access to licensed vets with unlimited virtual
1:57:57
visits and follow-ups for up to 5.
1:58:00
pets. You can message a vet at
1:58:02
any time and schedule a video
1:58:04
visit the same day. Our vets
1:58:06
can even prescribe medication for many
1:58:08
ailments and shipping is always free. With
1:58:10
Dutch you'll get more time with your
1:58:12
pets and year-round piece of mine when
1:58:15
it comes to their vet care. There
1:58:17
is a raise from under the gun at 2.5
1:58:19
big lines. You can't. You can fold, call,
1:58:21
or raise. I got to look at my
1:58:23
chip count before I make a decision. Ace
1:58:26
Queen off suit. It's a good Anne, but
1:58:28
how many players are there. Just well, so
1:58:30
the small and the big blinds are after you
1:58:32
and the under the gun has raised 2.5
1:58:34
Again, I've got to defer to my chip count
1:58:36
and do a little math in my head here So
1:58:38
I mean I'm me because I'm I like to play a
1:58:41
little loose and silly and have fun.
1:58:43
I just call You know because under under
1:58:45
the gun strong position for a for a
1:58:47
for a general raise, they're likely it's gonna
1:58:49
be it's gonna they're gonna be tight
1:58:51
in the range, but you also got
1:58:54
to check the player but I'm generally
1:58:56
when you're talking about like your pre-flop
1:58:58
range charts. They're gonna be they're gonna
1:59:00
be rocking something pretty strong to go
1:59:02
into the gun and raise right away.
1:59:05
I want to shout out Balotro game
1:59:07
of the year last year I think
1:59:09
you would love it. It's a poker game.
1:59:11
It's like a poker match like strategy.
1:59:13
Yeah with jokers that are all do
1:59:16
all these crazy abilities and stuff. It's
1:59:18
cool. What was it? What was that
1:59:20
wrong button? The show's notover yet. You
1:59:22
save 10 bucks on an annual membership,
1:59:24
which basically means that's spending 10 bucks
1:59:27
a month, you're going to be spending
1:59:29
like, I think it's $89 for the whole
1:59:31
year. Here's the thing, guys. Rumble Premium
1:59:33
and the Tim Kest Discord are separate
1:59:35
because, you know, like when we were
1:59:37
talking with Rumble and how do we
1:59:39
partner, that was a roadblock we did not
1:59:41
solve because running the discord
1:59:43
requires staff that is not related
1:59:45
to to Rumble. And then, Rumble membership
1:59:48
gives you everyone, including Stephen Crowder and,
1:59:50
So we were like, okay, anybody who
1:59:52
was a member up to that point
1:59:55
gets both for just, if you're
1:59:57
a team guest member, you got a
1:59:59
free membership. that point it became two
2:00:01
different things. Because if you're spending 10
2:00:03
bucks a month or if you use
2:00:05
promo code Tim One's Year on
2:00:08
Rumble, you get everybody's premium content
2:00:10
and there's a lot of premium content.
2:00:12
And there's a lot of premium. Plus
2:00:14
we have the Green Room podcast is
2:00:17
an entirely different show behind the scenes
2:00:19
for about a half an hour or
2:00:21
45 minutes Monday through Friday on rumble.com/Tim
2:00:23
Cast IRL. So there's like another show
2:00:25
you can watch and it's pretty uncensored.
2:00:28
You guys know her, you love her
2:00:30
when she was on and we were
2:00:32
arguing and everybody, all the conservatives didn't
2:00:34
like her, they called her a lib
2:00:37
journalist. The Green Room was even
2:00:39
better like feminist, anti-feminist argument, I
2:00:41
think you'll love. Apparently the people
2:00:43
who watched it loved it,
2:00:45
so that's at rumble.com/Timcast-IRL for
2:00:47
premium users. Definitely check that one out.
2:00:49
We had a lot of fun. All right, on screen
2:00:52
with Levine says, hey Tim and crew, I'm
2:00:54
doing my best to fight for Canada. I've
2:00:56
knocked on over 5,000 doors and I'm
2:00:58
trying to put out some shorts on
2:01:00
screen with Levine. Good luck saving your
2:01:02
country, sir, I mean that. But at any
2:01:04
rate, if you fail, we look forward to
2:01:06
taking your land from you. I never
2:01:08
got more death threats than when I
2:01:10
jokingly said we will take Canada and
2:01:12
strip them of their political representation. I
2:01:15
feel for those Canadians, because
2:01:17
they're probably like, what's that
2:01:19
going to happen to us
2:01:21
kind of... Like, we're Mark
2:01:23
Kearney now? Well, considering the
2:01:25
people think Trump is Hitler,
2:01:27
they're probably genuinely fearful that Trump
2:01:29
will invade and seize Canada. Well,
2:01:31
you know what? Canada had their
2:01:33
opportunity under the articles of the
2:01:36
Confederation, the 11th article, it said,
2:01:38
Canada's welcome to join us, and Canada's
2:01:40
like, no, we'd rather be Redcoats. We
2:01:42
asked Quebec. Yeah. People think there were
2:01:44
only 13 colonies. This is crazy. There
2:01:46
were a lot more than that. I mean,
2:01:48
were there were a lot more than that. The founding
2:01:51
fathers went to all of the colonies that were
2:01:53
under British control and Quebec was like, nah, we
2:01:55
got interested. Yeah, it was Benedict Arnold went up
2:01:57
there and tried to take it. Yeah, he tried to take
2:01:59
it and he failed. Yep. And then basically,
2:02:01
I think Georgia and South Carolina
2:02:03
were like, what's all this talk
2:02:05
about you not wanting slaves? And
2:02:07
Thomas Jefferson was like, well,
2:02:10
yeah, we think slavery is bad. And
2:02:12
they're like, then we're out. Okay,
2:02:14
fine, fine, fine. We won't complain
2:02:16
about the slave thing and stay. And
2:02:18
so they originally. Thomas Jefferson was going
2:02:20
to include in the declaration a complaint that
2:02:22
the crown had I forgot the wording he
2:02:25
used but brought slaves to wage war against
2:02:27
the colonists against their against their will and
2:02:29
South Carolina and Georgia were like nah we
2:02:31
like slaves. Yep. So he decided not to
2:02:33
include it because if he did they would
2:02:35
not have joined the effort and there would
2:02:37
have been no independence. Exactly and we needed
2:02:40
France to win the war but they did
2:02:42
include he had brought the Hessians over and
2:02:44
he armed the Canadians and he armed the
2:02:46
natives. armed the natives against us.
2:02:48
Even armed colonists against their own families and
2:02:50
their friends, they take them out the
2:02:52
sea and say, okay, you're either gonna, we're
2:02:55
gonna either throw you off this ship or
2:02:57
you're gonna go back in on alive your
2:02:59
entire family. So that's 26th grievance. To
2:03:01
all of the, it's always sunny in
2:03:04
Philadelphia fans out there, and I know, Tate is
2:03:06
not, because he's not old enough, and he
2:03:08
doesn't know what that is. They had an episode
2:03:10
where they went back in time, and the joke,
2:03:12
and the joke was, in the colonial era
2:03:14
and they said we don't want
2:03:17
a dependents we're gonna get killed
2:03:19
let's draft a declaration of dependents
2:03:21
that was a real thing it existed
2:03:23
there were loyalists to the crown who
2:03:25
wrote a declaration of dependents and they
2:03:27
got people to sign it and and
2:03:30
tried going to crime like no no we
2:03:32
want to stay with you and just nobody
2:03:34
cares it's not American history look
2:03:36
it is just a blit let's see we'll
2:03:38
grab we'll grab one more Michael Isakson
2:03:40
says I can't wait for the Swedish
2:03:43
version of this purge of corruption, we are
2:03:45
unbelievably corrupt, so much more than what
2:03:47
people think. It's more entrenched and hidden here.
2:03:49
That's why, when I went to South Korea, I
2:03:51
was, I'm South Korea, when I went to Sweden,
2:03:54
it was called the North, people called it
2:03:56
the North Korea of the North. That's why I said
2:03:58
South Korea, because I was thinking. when I
2:04:00
was in South Korea. I went there too,
2:04:02
but they just called North Korea, North
2:04:04
Korea. Sweden, there were people who
2:04:06
referred to it as the North Korea of
2:04:08
the North. Why? Because it is, like, okay,
2:04:11
if a country could be the Stepford wives,
2:04:13
it's Sweden. I don't know the, I don't
2:04:15
know Stepford wives. Does any, can you
2:04:17
explain it? It just, it looks pretty
2:04:19
and it feels pretty, but it's actually
2:04:21
really controlled. The women were all robots.
2:04:24
And so they're like everything is.
2:04:26
Like this way, and everything's uniform
2:04:28
machine state. Like if you
2:04:30
think the deep state here
2:04:32
is bad, don't go to Sweden.
2:04:35
Sweden is creepy. It's creepy.
2:04:37
It's like everybody blinks in
2:04:39
unison while wearing the same
2:04:42
clothes creepy. Yeah. A while. Yeah. Very.
2:04:44
All right my friend, smash that
2:04:46
like button, share the show with
2:04:48
everyone you know. I will be
2:04:50
back tomorrow morning, because I
2:04:52
am working Saturdays now, because I don't
2:04:54
know, I guess, you know. Well, to
2:04:56
be honest, Allison and I would go
2:04:58
and play pool or we'd go to the casino
2:05:00
or something. Now, you know, I got the boys,
2:05:02
Andy and Brandon are like, we got
2:05:04
to drag Tim out, you know, but with
2:05:07
the baby, he's not going anywhere. And they
2:05:09
were saying, like, how do we drag him out,
2:05:11
you know, but with the baby, he's not going
2:05:13
anywhere. And they were saying, like, how do
2:05:15
we drag you out to go to the casino
2:05:18
with us? And I would go with my wife
2:05:20
and my wife and my kid? And they're like,
2:05:22
and my kid. And they're like, oh. So...
2:05:24
You know, instead of doing that, I just
2:05:26
stay home because it's more fun. And so
2:05:28
then I'm like, okay, if I'm gonna go
2:05:30
to bed like normal and watch movies with
2:05:33
the family, I'll just come in and work
2:05:35
Saturday morning and then hang out with the
2:05:37
family. We don't have anywhere to go
2:05:39
or do anything that's more interesting than
2:05:41
what we're doing. So we're enjoying
2:05:43
ourselves. So follow me on X and
2:05:46
Instagram at Timcast. I'll be here tomorrow
2:05:48
morning. Jos you want to shout anything
2:05:50
out. That's all I do. Joe see the
2:05:52
red-headed libertarian. Joe see the
2:05:54
red-headed libertarian. I made a video on
2:05:56
YouTube today about Jesus turning water into wine.
2:05:58
I read the passage in... John too and
2:06:00
was just trying to make sense of
2:06:02
it. It's a really great story. It's
2:06:04
kind of like a sitcom if you
2:06:06
read the passage and just imagine them
2:06:09
buzzing around trying to, Mary's like, Jesus,
2:06:11
we're out of wine and Jesus, why
2:06:13
are you bothering me? I'm here with
2:06:15
my friends. And he's like, all right,
2:06:17
fine. And he's like, why are you
2:06:19
bothering me? I'm here with my friends.
2:06:21
And he's like, all right, fine. And he's
2:06:23
got at Ian Crossland. Let me know. I
2:06:25
am Phil the Remains on Twix, I'm Phil
2:06:27
that remains official on Instagram, the band is
2:06:29
all that remains, you can check out our
2:06:31
newest record called Anti-Fragual on the internet, you
2:06:33
know, YouTube, Apple, music, Spotify, Pandora, all that
2:06:35
stuff. Don't forget the left lane is for
2:06:37
crime. We will see you all tomorrow morning,
2:06:39
I'll have some segments up, and then we're
2:06:41
back with Tim Kastirel on Monday, thanks for
2:06:43
hanging out, we'll see y'all then. Time
2:06:56
is precious and so are our
2:06:58
pets. So time with our pets
2:07:00
is extra precious. That's why we
2:07:02
started Dutch. Dutch provides 24-7 access
2:07:04
to licensed vets with unlimited virtual
2:07:06
visits and follow-ups for up to five
2:07:08
pets. You can message a vet at any
2:07:11
time and schedule a video visit the
2:07:13
same day. Our vets can even prescribe
2:07:15
medication for many ailments and shipping is
2:07:17
always free. With Dutch you'll get more
2:07:19
time with your pets and year-round piece
2:07:21
of mind when it comes to their
2:07:23
vet care.
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