Video URL: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=YBJImac3uec


[Music] how's it going man i'm so excited it's been like a year and a half nice to see you last night was [ __ ] chaos that you you can't have like 10 people with microphones in a room in a trailer it was good though because alex would just start screaming ah if too many people talked at once so he was acting like you know that buffer oh thanks for coming man it was fun it ended up being huge we had like over a million people watch and really it was a cacophony of crazy voices and i don't know if anyone learned anything but you know it was fun it was just seeing alex sitting next to blair white and then you and me and luke and it's just this is wild yeah man very fun yes but seriously thanks for coming when uh it came together accidentally because one by one everyone wanted to come on the show on the same day i felt bad for blair white because we had originally booked her and then at the last minute i remember who was probably luke he was like have you have you asked joe and i was like he's got a comedy show he's too busy but you know if you don't ask the answer there's always no and then joe's like yeah i'll come by it'll be great and yeah i worked it in we got in we i had to podcast before then so we're with my friend ben and we were hammered so we had been drinking and smoking weed and we went straight over to there so it was uh it was silly right that's silly so what's uh what's going on well we're we're sitting here waiting for this uh written house um verdict right which is uh apparently gonna happen today maybe and uh what's what's interesting to me is that people are framing this as a race thing from the beginning well and then many people are realizing now because they're paying attention to the trial that he actually shot white people yeah like there's many people that thought that this kyle rittenhouse kid had shot black protesters when in fact it was white antifa rioters and then if you look at their record they were all criminals like the people he shot they were

that's a tough point you know joseph rosenbaum and i don't know how graphic you want to get because do you know this guy's history the first guy who attacked a cow who died you know his history yes i do but go ahead good graphic graphic he anally raped children i believe he anally raped one little boy and he performed oral on several little boys apparently he would try and date single mothers to to sexually abuse their children he that was when he was a teenager and then he went to prison i believe it was for 15 years now the details here get married i don't know exactly they say he got out of a mental hospital that morning this guy was not anti-fog he was not black lives matter at least in my opinion i think this is a guy who was suicidal he was screaming shoot me n-word shoot me n-word over and over again he attacked a kid with a gun who was screaming friendly friendly friendly and running away and then tried grabbing it and then within three .739 of a second written house let off four shots as as um as rosenbaum was reaching for his gun as testified by richie mcginnis and he crumpled to the ground and that's when these other guys the whole mob you know kyle runs for the police and then the rest of the mob starts running after him like get him cranium that boy get him get him get him anthony hoover is is an interesting one cause he's the dude who didn't with the skateboard twice people don't know this because you'll hear from the conservatives like oh he was hitting him with the skateboard and you see that photo of written house on the ground apparently he hit rittenhouse from behind with the skateboard before rittenhouse fell he grabbed the gun rittenhouse fired one shot right into his heart killed him instantly gage grosskroyd's the next guy charged at rittenhouse with a gun in his hand and you want to know where it gets really crazy gross kreutz testified on the stand that he told police and he believed kyle rittenhouse said i'm working with the police as he was running down the street because gage gross kreutz was running alongside him gross kroitz runs runs back turns around

and runs towards him pulling his glock 27 out from his waistband that means gage gross kreutz if he's telling the truth and he's probably not believed kyle rittenhouse was a police informant or in some way working with cops so he should draw his glock 27 on this kid and run up to him gun drawn i mean that's a crazy prospect that's not someone who's a good shot in the bicep shot in the bicep yeah this is not a guy who was uh trying to stop a mass shooter it's a guy who testified i was trying to what attack a police informant or a cop or something like that that's in the trial why do you think this has become a race thing is it because it was a black lives matter protest man this is crazy let's call it what it is is it a protest or is it a riot it's a riot it's a riot right i mean it seemed like i mean what was the scene were they lighting things on fire like what was what was the scene well so i watched a lot of videos about it you know same as many people but i also interviewed seven different witnesses we've had them on our show throughout right afterwards and throughout the year and we have a collection of all this footage from all these guys i mean this was a pretty serious riot what you know when people say like why did kyle written house come out why did he have to have that gun well buildings hadn't been burned down but there was a viral video of a guy who looks i think he's in his 70s i think he i could be getting the details wrong so you guys can fact check me on this one but he had like a mattress store that was on fire and so he rushes to it as people are just running through the store and causing havoc and he tries to stop them and grab them and someone goes up behind him with a rock and bashes him over the back of the head leaving him laying on the ground bleeding out i remember seeing that video and just being like holy [ __ ] dude so you have to imagine i mean you're a kid this cal written house he wants to be a cop he wants to be an emt and you hear the police aren't doing anything about it literally the police were just staying far away as things burned then you hear that

his friend nick smith was offered money to protect the businesses so they said we need to get a crew together to defend these businesses and kyle 17 he had a legal gun the gun was legal the judge ruled this and everybody so explain that because i thought he wasn't old enough to carry he so in wisconsin there's an exemption for rifles and shotguns if you're 16 or 17. it is believed the exemption is so that you can hunt right but it's not specifically about hunting so open carry um is in wisconsin if you're above 18 is that what it is i don't know about open carry or concealed care but but the ability to carry a weapon publicly because this is publicly right right and so even though he's 17 there's an exemption that he's allowed to carry that weapon because of the fact that it's a rifle it's a rifle greater than i think 26 inches so if he was carrying a pistol what he was doing was illegal but since he's carrying a rifle it's legal so because yes because people kept saying that he was carrying it illegally because he was 17. so that's not in fact true not true and all the legal experts who were being honest about this from from from the firs the first day this happened immediately came out and said he was legally carrying that rifle but i guess for the same reason people claimed kyle rittenhouse shot black people they claimed the gun was illegal you know i never heard anybody say that he shot black people but i think people just assumed that he shot black people they were what i'm saying i mean i don't think it was i don't think most people are even aware of the details of this case especially the people that which is really disturbing the people that are commenting on it in the media like joe scarborough got a bunch of [ __ ] wrong fired off 60 rounds i mean he just got a bunch of [ __ ] wrong like so many of the details wrong like he's a professional news guy that's what he does he's on what is he msnbc msnbc morning joe i mean how the [ __ ] does his i mean he must have fact checkers and you wanna you want to hear some [ __ ]

i've i've been watching the trial live stream non-stop from start to finish i've been reporting mostly on covering mostly this and reading legal analysis from a variety of lawyers there was a moment where it was really really bad for the prosecution one of their star witnesses one of the uh the men who gage grosskroitz he's the guy who ran up with the glock on on right now testified that it wasn't until he advanced on kyle with his gun pointed at him that kyle shot him right what did msnbc report what did npr report that he testified he raised his hands and with his hands up kyle shot him yeah what the [ __ ] are they doing are they just lying or are they doing it because are they doing it for ratings are they doing it because they're misinformed like what are they doing i'll play uh i'll try and be as fair as possible some have suggested that maybe gage grosskroytz said my hands were up he did say this my hands were up and then they write gage grosskroyd says his hands were up as he was being shot they sort of just did a bad job but i don't give these people the benefit of the doubt when you know i'm watching this trial same as everybody else and in the span of five ten minutes he says it was you know the defense asked him you pointed your gun and then he shot you and gage goes correct if if it was a mistake they could have issued a correction and said oh he actually testified he advanced on him with a gun pointed towards him right so i have to wonder if it's uh it's a cult it's ideological it's the refusal to accept you were wrong and to perpetuate the the narrative of your group think i don't even know if it's that or if they're just doing that because that's the way they they get people to watch and pay attention to uh reinforce this narrative that would be the most inflammatory and the most uh outrageous narrative which is that this guy is just on a rampage and we're going to let him off because he's white you know what i think i think over the past several years these media organizations they found they made a lot of money hating on you know quote unquote the far

right and donald trump and so they embraced that narrative yeah what ends up happening is your core audience who actually wants news eventually grows wise to the fact that you're just spewing out a narrative and they leave if you have if you have a viewership that's 80 percent you know moderate news interested people and the only thing you say is trump is bad and the far right is bad eventually you'll lose most of those moderates and retain a very left ideological group now npr cnn msnbc that's their core audience if they come out now and say something honest like you know it looks like kyle right now is acting in self-defense they're gonna start losing even them and they're not gonna get back the people they lied to that's interesting so it's almost like they dug themselves into a hole they can't get out of but to be fair chris hayes did say it's starting to look like an acquittal in all honesty hmm but is he saying that because the judge is biased and it's wrong or is he saying it because we're looking at the actual evidence because the actual evidence itself look you know i'm not exactly sure that this is a good thing that you know the news lies about all this [ __ ] i mean i i think it's terrible right i think it's it's terrible that we can't trust them but i want to know like where is it coming from are they doing it are they being deceptive on purpose or are they misinformed are they like where is it coming is it the the producers not understand what the [ __ ] is going on do they want to flavor the narrative that they think that their core audience what you were talking about the hardcore lefties are going to want to hear and that's how they need to capture them i mean what are they doing exactly i think that's it when i worked for that uh and i probably told you this the last time i was here when i worked for that uh for fusion the abc news univision company the president of the company said in multiple meetings we're here to side with the audience and i had a private meeting with him where he told me that he said you know we're gonna side with the audience and

our our audience are like young progressive so we're here to like basically side with them that's how we framed it and i was i asked him you know does that mean if there is a factual news story that would be offensive or upsetting to our audience we won't report it and he said yes i think that's fair wow i take it to a darker place where it's basically like lion omit and i think it's because the guys who run the business they don't know anything about news and i'm not trying to i think it's actually to their defense to say this a business guy says we need to bring in enough money to pay everyone's salary so they can do this work people want to hear the news and the news that's important to them so we make sure we're siding with them and getting the audience what they need and want but that goes to a dark place when you're when your motive is clicks and in in revenue instead of passion and principle i think most of these companies are realizing that with the internet with new media there's millions of different news outlets people can choose from they don't need to choose you so what cnn msnbc and these other outlets do is they choose their their niche market they decide this is the audience we're going to side with because we can't side with everybody you know if we come out we say trump's not that bad we lose the left when we come out you know let's just pick one of them right that's what they've done i feel like the news like cnn in particular is just geared for people at the airport you know what i mean they canceled that contract it's over really yeah the air cnn airport stuff ended recently good yeah [ __ ] propaganda you know i never had that opinion of cnn until this whole horse dewarmer thing with me that crazy like you guys are out of your [ __ ] mind yeah not only that it's it's it was so obviously a lie and repeated over and over and over and over again and they kept using the horse term where it's like you know i might i have a heartwarm medication for my dog that i got that's uh you know just a standard heartwarm medication i don't even know

why we got it he didn't have heartworms i think it was like something we have the preventative that we have just laying around and i looked at it after all this [ __ ] was over and i was like what's in here it was livermixthen yeah yeah ivermectin's in there i'm like this is crazy like i had no idea that this was laying around like i never even purchased it someone else in my family purchased did you know that this is this is true um there's uh actually witnesses who have said brian stelter was drinking um a a corrosive battery chemical a chemical used for cleaning corrosion off batteries he was actually seen later cleaning a and a drinking engine coolant so i'm talking about water in the water that's actually exactly yeah that's the game they play well it's not even the game it's just lying but the thing about it was weird is how coordinated it was and how dumb it was that they were doing it to me like it's like do you not know that i can say that that's a lie do you not know that i have more people listening to me than you do like what are you doing they're just scared of getting sued but it's not even just they're not scared of getting sued they're not scared of being publicly shamed for being full of [ __ ] like it doesn't have any effect on them but don lemon is the only dummy that actually commented on it you know when sanjay gupta actually we should be clear that it is not a lie that it's a horse dewormer and sanjay gupta said that's true no that's not what he said he said after that and it's also not cleared for use by the fda and he said that's true that's what he said right so he tried to talk about it again and talk about the horse dewormer part of it about ivermectin being used for humans and then don lemon steamrolled him so that's it's not true you did see that sanjay wrote in an op-ed he was scared you were going to jump he was trying to be funny he's not a [ __ ] socially uh you know fluid guy or you know he's not he's a [ __ ] neurosurgeon right he's a guy that works 100 hours a week and he takes he's actually deals with real patience he's a

really nice guy like sanji is a very nice guy but he's a little socially naive i would say it's just hard to give give them the benefit the doubt you know i don't think of him as them i think of him as a medical correspondent he's a legitimate doctor i think he can absolutely be led in astray and in a bad way especially when you're doing those short clips like when you call in to cnn like he's somewhere remotely looking into a camera they're in his ear and then don lemon or whoever the [ __ ] else it is is on the other on the line well it's not the same i had the privilege of being uh going through that a mini saga of what you went through because you helped out when when me and my my crew got sick and it was actually really interesting for me to experience this because i knew they would lie about me i even in my my like my first video back after i got sick i was like you know i knew the media was going to say it was horse dewormer or whatever but i actually wasn't like i was actually fairly critical and i have been always if i vermectin of the um i forgot what it's called there's like a contrarian uh it's it's a reference to being contrarian where you just believe something is right because the establishment thinks it's it's it's wrong or whatever and the media now still tries to claim that i've been gung-ho and ivermectin when i've actually been either neutral to slightly critical well the the evidence is not negative towards ivermerton but it is muddy and the reason why it's muddy is there's just like there's not like real solid funded studies that make much sense but they do know that it stops viral replication in vitro we do know that they've treated at least a hundred if not 200 congress people um who uh were sick pre-medicaid or pre-vaccine they treated them with ivermectin we do know that um in what is it called uh udar pradesh in india they treated everyone with ivermectin they handed out ivermectin to all these households as a preventative measure and they essentially cured kovid in this one country or it's one state rather in india now there's an interesting point that just came up

today i can't remember the guy's name it might be scott alexander i'm not sure and they found a correlation between worms and parasites and curing covid so one of the hypotheses for it's ud pradesh right yeah people there have a high uh propensity for for you know parasite infestation and so if you've got worms and your your immune system is being bogged down or strained you get sick you're more likely to die and have a serious reaction you take ivermectin you cure those worms you have your your immune system is more robust i'm not saying it discredits everything no no no no no it's not it stops viral replication right it's not as simple as like you don't have worms anymore so immune system is stronger because there's plenty of people that don't have worms that have an immune system that gets wrecked by covet what they're showing is that there's a direct correlation between taking ivermectin and having positive results the problem is so many like my friend um who was it that went over the it was a peter tia but he was saying that essentially the problem is that the studies were so different like some of them were taking it in prophylaxis so the tank is a preventative measure some of it we're taking it in the early days of the covid uh infection some of them were taking in the late days the code infection but here's the thing what you took that's undeniable when i took this undeniable is monoclonal antibodies yeah and this was meant when i talked about the stuff that i took i read off a laundry list of things and all they concentrated on is iron machine and they said i was promoting ivermectin this is clearly some sort of a campaign to discredit ivermectin and if you if you read the critical care the frontline critical covet care website or their um you could follow their twitter feed as well they talk about and dr pierre corey has an article about how the fda they targeted ivermectin they actually targeted it as a drug to single out as being ineffective while they don't say a goddamn thing about rem desmere remdezvir is something that they prescribe for covid early on that causes kidney failure whoa yeah you know i i i don't like to believe in coordinated campaigns grand you know schemes or

anything like that but i this is why i was like basically bringing it up as because i like even right here i'm like well there's a possibility you know worms i'm even somewhat i'm kind of you know a middle-of-the-road guy i tweeted monoclonal antibodies saved me in my opinion this is the and the and the nad plus that popped me back up and what are they writing about there's a new article where they're like far right tim poole is the poster boy of ivermectin but this is what that's they only do that to get people to click on things and by the way you're not how the [ __ ] are you far right you're you're make sure that what i'm saying about rev deserver is true because i'm i'm 90 sure that they stopped prescribing remdezvir for covid and i believe the problem was people were having kidney problems i feel like when i when i see articles making those claims it's about discrediting ivermectin yeah because even even me to say i think it was the monoclonal antibodies not ivermectin and then they write tim right i'm sure it's i'm sure everything i took helped i'm sure the nad helped i'm sure the iv vitamins helped i'm sure the monoclonal antibodies helped i'm sure i'm sure all of it helped but all they concentrated on was ivermectin did you find anything about rem deserver oh and kidney damage caused by covidine 19 not anti-viral drug lungs filling up with fluid and kidney failure are actually side effects of rem despair that's the claim that's the claim okay claim who's it where is this from the ap ap yeah uh ap's assessment false critical covet 19 not the drug rev deserver is known to cause fluid in the lungs and okay but i don't know i read something about rem dezvir specifically causing kidney problems the problem with all these [ __ ] things is you never know who's full of [ __ ] and who's not but wait wait wait wait i i've never seen i've never heard that uh okay go to that that's a pubmed there it is remdezvir an acute renal failure a potential study uh

safety signal from disproportionately analysis of the who safety database okay so now now we're talking you want to scroll down to conclusions so this is this is a pubmed study so this is this is what what i'm going to buy into no conclusion just the abstraction well so it i don't know i don't we don't know what it says see if you can find something else jamie but i will say i've never heard of renal failure from covid that's insane i mean if we if we were talking about kova 19 could kill your kidneys i think people would be freaking out a little bit more maybe it kills kidneys in some people i mean it's it's has different reactions in different people some people lose their sense of smell some people don't feel anything from that it's it's it's a [ __ ] weird disease man it's weird oh uh i'll just i won't get too personal on the details but it with the symptoms that i had like my veins felt like they were being stabbed like every vein in my body was it like i just it's hard to explain your veins felt like they're oh yeah this is the worst so look i've had when i had the flu i used to describe it the flu is the worst thing i've ever experienced in terms of an illness i was uh you know 18 i'm sitting on my couch shaking shivering pale i lost 10 pounds like in three days just like i was it was bad the flu so when i got covered it was a wednesday i felt fine and i didn't know i had it because you know we had a scare but we had four negative tests so we were like it's probably a cold going around it's not covered and the negative test you get with is the over the counter over the counter yeah and so those are wrong a lot yup so the next day i that night i wake up in the middle of the night drenched in sweat feeling like i'm getting sick and i'm like okay i'm not gonna be able to work tomorrow but it was from 0 to 11 from like that wednesday night i couldn't eat i couldn't sleep so you know friday i decided i was going to call a doctor and see if maybe there's something i need to be doing maybe i need sunlight vitamin d whatever they might recommend for this and i'm like look i'm i'm healthy 35 there's no way

this is going to get me down and the doctor said this is this work it's crazy the doctor said to me i'll give you the short version we were talking they said look we don't prescribe anything for this you can come in for some tests and i said is that necessary if you're not going to prescribe me anything and they're like it's a virus go home and go to sleep i said i know it's controversial but um you know has ivermectin you know been something you guys have looked into and they said ivermectin is what they said to me ivermectin has been shown to help many people who have covid and then they stopped and then i said okay is is that something you guys are prescribing and they go well the fda is has not approved it and then they stop and then i say oh so is that something that i have to ask for or like is that something you recommend and they said we will not prescribe it to you and i went okay but i'll be honest i wasn't uh i like i said you know i was like i don't know if i ever met in the thing or not and maybe i should just go home go to bed that was friday by friday night it had escalated so dramatically the pain the shortness of breath the and i was like if it's getting worse if it gets worse tonight and the nights are when it's is the worst i'm gonna be in the hospital and so that's why i was like i need to ask somebody like who's experienced this i i hit you up and i was like i don't know how sick you were i don't know what ideas you had long story short cause i don't get in too much of the private details for me and my girlfriend and the people got sick but the next day i went and got the the uh the monoclonal antibodies nad and the vitamin drip painkillers and ibuprofen like i was on drugs man my fever went down my temperature went to normal i felt fine but that night was the worst i have ever experienced any kind of illness i was hallucinating i am not exaggerating i was delirious i was wandering around in absolute agony nine out of ten in terms of pain i've had kidney stones before this is before or after the monocle antibodies but it was

only before it kicked in right this is only a few hours after the entire treatment so it's in my body but i haven't yet begun to you know it's probably beginning the process so essentially you got it at the right time because if you didn't get it then you were probably going downhill fast i couldn't eat i couldn't sleep yeah and um i don't know exactly why i know they say asians have more ace2 receptors and i'm part asians so that might play a factor other people got the sniffles but it i'm i'm when i say i was delirious i kid you not like waking dreams walking around just out of my mind but at 4am it was like all of a sudden i wasn't sick anymore and i said i'm in my living room and i just i'm looking around and the nad kicks in and everything is crystal clear all of a sudden i'm like i'm kind of almost freaked out how my vision just was hd vision was crazy and then i sit down on my couch and i'm just thinking to myself i'm like no no no i'm still sick i'm still sick i feel fine and so then i lay back i put on house md and i start it's 4am at 4am and i'm just awake fall asleep like a baby well not like a baby because baby's crown night but like a rock boom wake up in the morning get up and i'm just like so it's over yeah i look out the window and i think this is the nad i see all the leaves i see all the trees and i'm like what the [ __ ] dude it's just amazing it's incredible well um i'm glad you called me you know i'm glad we talked about it i'm glad i gave you the protocol that i follow and i'm glad it worked for you and it's the same thing that i told the aaron rodgers and it's it's the only time you know we talked about this yesterday but it's true it's the only time i can ever recall ever where a friend can say hey you got this disease that i have it now what did you do to get better i could say oh i did this that and this and then that's controversial but you know it was the best part another me telling you what to take and it working is controversial which is [ __ ] crazy my girlfriend loves this uh you posted

that video from the australian sketcher whatever of the guy yeah you know dying and she's like it's an epipen he's like what's in it and then he goes call joe and my girlfriend watches that and she's like you called joe and i was like that's it but but you're right it's like that's a pro it was a propaganda video on some goofy sketch show where they were saying what does joe rogan think you know like while this guy's dying and not willing to take an epi pen right right right right yeah so but it was i was like i kind of ironic that you know but but like you said you know look we're friends and so when i knew you had you were sick i knew you had a treat you had this this regimen done or whatever i was like i was sick for a day literally i was sick for one day one day and then i got the monoclonal antibodies and all the iv drips and everything like that and the next day i felt pretty good and then two days later uh on wednesday so i'm sick on monday on wednesday i made that video that went viral and then by the time friday rolled thursday i was getting negative tests on over-the-counter tests and then friday it was negative on you know standard tests i got the treatment on saturday but then i didn't take the test until friday and i was negative so i maybe it was earlier i don't know yeah maybe but the boy the point is the next day i was working out again i mean i felt fine two days after that i did ten rounds in the back like i've literally felt fine i caught it early and also i [ __ ] i exercise all the time i work out all the time i take vitamins every day i eat well i watch my health and that's that's the difference and this is something that people for whatever reason they want a one-size-fits-all approach to covet and yeah well there's there's actually i guess big news on that the the vaccine mandate was just suspended right by osha well it's not legal right it's unconstitutional so to to be able to say no here's the problem joe biden in his [ __ ] infinite dementia has decided to tell people to ignore that and you should still enforce the mandate now the problem with that is if these companies do that and people get vaccine injured and they will

some people will you know it's not a large percentage but some people are going to suffer some sort of a vaccine injury those people now will have the door open to sue the company will they though yes they will they won't listen they won't have the door open to sue the vaccine manufacturers but they will have the door open to sue the company do you know who pete perrotta is no drummer of the offspring i believe he's their second drummer he was kicked out of the band he was fired because he had guillain-barre syndrome and could not get the vaccine right so they i when i was a kid the offspring was my favorite band i can play a bunch of their songs all their big hits and ron welty was their first drummer so i'm a fan of this band and then pete pirata came in i think this is in the early 2000s and he plays with them for over a decade almost two decades or however long it's been i'm not entirely sure when he joined the band they they fired him because he's medically unable to get a vaccine and it's like remorseless and i don't know if you're right um i think part of the problem is the do the deal that he has with the promoters and the venues like you have to be vaccinated for a lot of these venues that's what it is so if he was not non-vaccinated and again it's not logical right if he's non-vaccinated and he uh went to these places they might kick him out and not allow him to perform well new york places i can't perform you know new york has an exemption for performers yeah i went there they tried to make an exemption against my exemption because i went there and i did madison square garden and then afterwards the senator introduced a bill specifically with my name attached to it saying people like joe rogan should not be able to come into our state and into our city and be unvaccinated and perform in new york city wow man [ __ ] well so but uh going back to what biden was saying with the with the white house where he you know it was the deputy press secretary who said yes the the courts have suspended this but proceed anyway now osha i believe was yesterday issued an official statement on their website due to the fifth circuit court ruling

putting a stay we have suspended all implementation enforcement of the vaccine mandate well they have to i mean it's it's clearly unconstitutional and then when you take into account the fact that so many people do have natural immunity and that natural immunity is more effective it's better for you the cdc was actually forced to admit recently that they do not have recorded cases of some no i'll give you the exact specifics of this i'll send it to you jamie because it's uh it's an interesting statement like what they said you know something like people who've recovered from covid have never transmitted or something yes they said but i don't know if that's true though see there's the thing it's like there's a big difference between something being true and something not being on record right so it says the cdc does not recognize natural immunity so a lawyer asked them under freedom of information act to provide cases where someone recovered from kovid got infected again and then transmitted it the cdc's response was we did not find any such case but that doesn't mean that that hasn't happened it just means it hasn't been recorded because a lot of these cases are not being recorded right and a lot i mean how many people are getting coveted and giving it to people they're not recording that it's a lot a lot of them are not recording it well let's talk about some of these facts that come up with the vaccine mandates we hear a lot that we've always had mandates which is actually not true it's a technicality we have um we have mandates at schools for kids but public school is optional you can take your kid to a private school or homeschool and there's medical and religious exemptions and they like to cite this ruling from 1905 in the supreme court where the supreme court ruled that you could mandate someone get a vaccine but if the penalty was a five dollar fine a guy said i won't pay it and they said haromf and then they sued him saying he owes us the money for not getting this vaccine under the pretext of this ruling i forget the name of it they actually said if the government has the right to mandate medical procedures we can sterilize invalids we can sterilize uh

dullards and they actually i believe tens of thousands of women got sterilized under that pretext so since then we've been like hey maybe that's not a good idea the government can mandate a permanent irreversible medical procedure what does a vaccine have to do with uh sterilizing people why why are they connected the the argument i guess was there was a smallpox outbreak in the early 1900s and it was in massachusetts i think it was in boston they said everyone has to get the get the vaccine for smallpox and this swedish guy says you can't make me do this they said well then we're gonna find you five bucks which is the equivalent to 150 bucks today he says i'm not going to pay it you can't make me pay it they sue them they go to court the supreme court says you've got to pay the fine but he was never barred from public accommodation he was never kicked out of the you just told if you're not going to do you got to pay a few bucks but under their ruling it essentially argued the uh medical procedures can be mandated when necessary i i don't i'm not you know the problem is this vaccine is not really a vaccine it's only a vaccine by definition but they're calling it a vaccine it is a gene treatment and that's why it doesn't last it i mean it literally only lasts a few months that's why you have to get boosters i mean this is right this is the whole premise behind all the boosters and all this stuff you know literally the best thing that someone could do is get vaccinated and then get coveted because the vaccine protects you from serious injury serious uh you know damage from covet and then you get the sickness and then you have the real robust immunity that comes naturally the fact that natural immunity is superior but yet it's not recognized in california where you have to vaccine to do everything except go to a grocery store now it's in l.a l.a is a [ __ ] hot mess right now have you seen australia really bad yeah austria's crazy you can't leave your house well if you are unvaccinated right if you're vaccinated you have full range it's just coercion in slovenia they're forcing people to get a vaccine if you want to get gas you have to show a vaccine card to pump gas

it's all a hustle but what but it's all the vaccine companies and the the manufacturers influencing these politicians the politicians then making these decisions based on the influence that these pharmaceutical drug companies have over them and that's the only reason why they would do this otherwise you could test people for antibodies we tested you for antibodies today it takes 30 seconds yeah it literally takes 30 seconds i have a video of me doing it i guess the question is which nightmare dystopia is this is it 1984 or is it brave new world it's a new one it's a new one that's based entirely on the influence that enormous enormously profitable pharmaceutical companies have over politicians you saw that video where it's like the meat the news brought to you by pfizer yeah instagram he's on my instagram did you find anything about remdezvir just the same stuff i mean but so that one pubmed article about renal failure but i i guarantee you i read something that was talking about high instances of kidney failure due to rem des vir and they were actually talking about the mechanism involved in in kidney failure and that was one of the reasons why they stopped prescribing it it was one of the earliest prescribed drugs i found stuff about that i found stuff about kidney failure but when it comes to the coven 19 and mixing those things like adding that to it nothing was right to be like proven but you found things on kidney failure and rem deserves right there's even yeah outcomes of coven 19 among patients with end-stage renal studies on rem deservier and at the end of this it says like there's no big difference between the people that were on the people that were not on it it's so hard it is it is weird that that ram deserver kind of fell out of focus because it was a big deal that just fell out of focus like literally it's been silenced like you don't hear a peep about it but that was one of the things that fauci was touting very early on so isn't uh what do they say they say ivermectin is a protease inhibitor and now merck who manufactures large quantities of vibromecton has announced they have their own protease inhibitor

to go to market well merck is was the original inventor of ivermectin merck it was the original distributor and the manufacturer of it but it became a generic drug that's the problem with divermectin the problem with divermectin is literally anybody can make it and you make it for like 30 cents a dose it there's it's not profitable so the problem is if you don't have a patent on it and it's not profitable then there's no incentive whatsoever for these companies to say like hey forget about all those billions and billions of dollars that we're making off of this stuff we got this [ __ ] for you that's generic and you can just take it that just shows you that this is a for-profit endeavor and the amount of profit that's been generated by these pharmaceutical drug companies during this crisis from selling vaccines is [ __ ] crazy which is why it's terrifying that they're now trying to give it to children yeah and they're trying to say the children need it when they don't they don't need it the children they keep saying 700 children have died from kovid the children that have died from covid without exception any that i've read almost all of them let's say let's say that to be safe almost all of them had severe co-morbidities they were either they had leukemia they had cancer they were there was something seriously wrong with them and they died of covet they were amazingly obese whatever it was it's not like a drug it's not a disease that is very dangerous for most healthy young kids it's not did you see that there's a big scandal where uh i think it was walgreens and a few other pharmacies were giving hundreds of children adult-sized doses yes well these kids are [ __ ] you know because these kids have like serious heart palpitations now and what's that it's really hard to know what's true when and it's man it's it's it's we're [ __ ] the media lies we know they lie they lie way too much if they don't lie they get things wrong for sure exactly now i i look at um when you don't when i do my show i use mainstream media sources all the time but i have to dig up to like 10

and find the source material where did it come from and do i trust it it's not easy and the average person can't do it but you know i'm hearing rumors about like all these football players who have had like heart incidents or you know events they call it where they're soccer players soccer players there's a lot of soccer players did i say football you did say football okay sorry i meant european yeah yeah european cause because it's like an international thing right and i i someone sent me this viral video of it's like a collage of all these news reports i've seen videos like this before and so i'm like i don't know if people made these fake stories up but i googled them and i end up finding the exact articles and there's a large amount of these you know soccer players who have just like fallen down in the field and like being carried out and stuff like that i don't know what that's from though well for some people it causes myocarditis and pericarditis that's that's a fact you remember when it started back in january there was a bunch of the videos of people just falling over in the street in china yeah that's like how this started whatever [ __ ] happened to people falling over in the street yeah well never maybe but i mean the thing about athletes is more interesting because these athletes obviously are in tip-top magoo shape and then they're running around well if you're doing a field player doing what that's what i'm saying no i know but soccer players are known for faking injuries and getting carried off no no no you could smash cut you could edit videos to look weird no but did jimmy they're falling down as they're running like they're like collapsing there's a video where heart attacks they're taking him to the hospital this is like yeah this is not it's not speculation and there's a better example there's a professional mountain biker i think have you heard of this story he made an instagram video saying that he got pericarditis from the vaccine and it ended his career and then he got attacked so relentlessly for that he made a video crying i don't want to i think he was saying like he was he became suicidal because everyone hates him

his career is over there's no recovery from this that's the weird thing is like there's so many nutty people that are just so pro-vaccine that i mean they went after eric clapton for talking about his vaccine injury and calling him a vile anti-vaxxer in the la times i mean he is vaccinated yeah he got vaccinated and he took both doses he had a bad reaction to the first dose and he had a horrible reaction to the second dose and just him talking about it made the la times write a horrible article about him what's up with the media like that's that's how they make money they know that people are scared especially in la there's so many people that are terrified that if you say something that is anti-the narrative when the narrative is vaccines are safe and effective safe and effective safe and effective for the most part yeah for the most part yeah but a certain percentage of the people that take them get like a serious heart problem that's a that's a real here's my idea is what i tell people if you work for a company that mandates the vaccine get a simple legal letter drafted that says you know i undersigned assume all liability for this permanent and irreversible medical medical procedure as a requirement of the job of you know employee see if they'll sign it because i assure you those employers aren't going to happen it's going to fire you they'll fire you but but then you have to go through court and right now i mean if especially if you go to a liberal court there's so many people that they're they're so connected to that narrative the narrative is the vaccines are safe and effective and if you don't agree with the vaccine you're an anti-vaxxer they've even changed the definition in the of what an anti-vaxxer is to someone who's against mandates that's right and they also well the cdc changed the definition of vaccine too right that means you and i are vaccinated really yup when did they change that so no yeah the cdc has an article that says a vaccination is it used to say something like it was very specific to the um adenovirus vaccines where it a small weakened or you know dead viruses introduced now it says it's a chemical

that triggers an immune response or something to this effect fact-check me for sure for sure but my understanding they don't say that we're vaccinated dude well well i know for sure i i know literally but the monoclonal antibodies according to a study i think the cdc confirmed this is eight months of protection at 82 percent efficacy and that's actually better than pfizer and modern so if they effectively do the same thing because that's how they describe a vaccine then why can't you know they're doing that to people but what you're saying they're doing that to people who did not test positive for covet so imagine you're in a high risk job but they can give you the monoclonal antibodies with no covet in your system at all and then you have this immense protest you are correct that's right so if you had it and then got it you've got super immunity i guess right exactly that's the idea why can't i say you know one of the biggest because because it's not a real narrative right it's a [ __ ] narrative it's not based on objective analysis of the information that's at hand it's based on you gotta take the vaccine because they're influencing politicians they're influencing all these people they're influencing the media when brought to you by pfizer the idea that that doesn't have any impact whatsoever and the way they talk about the news is [ __ ] absurd and that's why they don't care if you have better protection naturally it's a binary approach you must take the vaccine one of my biggest pet peeves i guess is because you know on my show for instance we have this argument all the time about efficacy and vaccines and stuff and it got to a point where i was like yo are we going to actually debate the policy the politics because i can tell you this i'm not a doctor i'm not a scientist i can't tell you the nitty-gritty details of enzyme and protease and these these are words i read in an article but i am uh i think fair to say an expert on being free you know i mean that somewhat facetiously but if we're going to talk about how we handle this i think it's simple the government can't mandate medical procedures have a nice day we get to these arguments often and i think it's good to discuss efficacy it's

good to discuss the vaccine injury and all this stuff absolutely but i also think it's important to bring back hey how about i don't care if it's a flu shot a append epidectomy or a coveted vaccine the government should not mandate as a requirement for public public accommodation you undergo an irreversible medical procedure especially when it's someone like fouchy who's somehow or another tied into these companies like it's not as simple as this guy has no no one influencing him that's not it's not the case and you know also with gates you know like the the fact that bill gates is prominently featured in the news talking constantly about vaccines you wanna you wanna flip your [ __ ] in june of 2021 the fda approved a drug to help treat weaponized smallpox on november 9th of 2021 bill gates warned of smallpox terror attacks and just the other day the fbi found vials labeled smallpox at a lab in philadelphia with another group of vials that said vaccinia the only smallpox that exists at the cdc in deep freeze and in russia so this triggered a lockdown at the laboratory no one knows so far they don't know what's in the vials is it actually smallpox but why is it smallpox yeah so i don't i i i you know when the fda approves a drug to treat weaponized smallpox you have to ask yourself why they fear smallpox if it's been eradicated and only exists in in government facilities in the russia and u.s and why is bill gates warning about smallpox terrorism right then it's been only a few days after bill gates said this they find vials labeled smallpox look yeah it's real sketchy could be nothing but yeah it's sketchy bill gates also invested i believe it was 50 million dollars and bought me look this up bio end tech september 2019 so he invested a large sum of money in the company that manufactures these vaccines literally

when the pandemic broke out in wuhan like when the first cases were seen in wuhan they believed they'd narrowed that down to september of 2019 that is specifically when bill gates dumped a bunch of money in there bioentech announces new collaborations develop hiv and tuberculosis programs so a hundred million dollars in total funding the bill and melinda gates foundation invests 55 million in infectious disease collaboration that could reach up to a hundred million dollars in total funding and they did that in september right before the the [ __ ] hit the fan now does that mean that he was he had information that there was a breakout no but it does look they they did discuss this and you know fauci was seen discussing these uh these things like i'll send you a video jamie so i don't uh because i'm talking on my ass right now but that they were talking about like trying to find new ways to encourage people to take flu vaccines the universe needed some sort of a novel uh approach to do that university of denver has mandated the flu vaccine university of denver house yeah i believe i believe we yeah we had an article published on my site about it i think that's the obvious next step it's you know that university is mandated but i think they're not doing that no i just mean that if you can mandate covet vaccines you can mandate all of them yes yeah i mean i think that's that's that's where the profit lies right in mandating vaccines because if you have a hundred million people and you have 100 million doses of vaccine and you force these people to take that that's just sheer profit it's [ __ ] crazy it's it's a lot it's pretty wild man i mean it really is it's it's weird to watch it all happen you hear about that the the research the ni uh niaid was funding on the beagles yes i did what do you what so uh actually you know self-promotion we just published an exclusive on teamcast.com fauci had been funding i should say the niaid has been funding maximum pain

research on primates in i believe it's an island off south carolina where they basically induce as much pain as possible to see how these animals react and we we're getting these stories you know we published this you have the beagle story but there is a very serious question about the limitations of science that the ethics of it the the thing is we we have we have greatly benefited from animal experimentation to a horrifying degree and like as what we do to these animals and a lot of people are happy to just live their lives and not knowing anything about it yeah i wonder what what impact it will have now that we're discovering you know pain research and bot fly research on beagles or whatever is that gonna result in people actually saying you know we would rather have less scientific progress on these things if it means we're not torturing animals to this degree well the thing is there's not a lot of oversight so people don't hear about it you know that's that's the the pro here i'm gonna i found it i'm gonna send this to you jamie that the problem is it's like who is who's informing people of all these uh experiments while they're happening very you know very few people are actually getting informed of them while you find out later you know someone has to be a whistleblower and then they but meanwhile the the studies are ongoing so it's not like there's clear oversight it's not like the public the public gets to vote on what they think is ethical or what they don't think is ethical when they think that studies need to be done in order to prevent some sort of an outbreak or save people from something and then they do these studies whether it's on primates or beagles or whatever you really don't hear about it until after it's happened right or i mean to be honest you never hear about it you just benefit from the research watch this video because this is kind of crazy why don't we blow this system up i mean obviously we can't just turn off the spigot on the system we have and then say hey everyone in the world should get this new vaccine we've been given to

anyone this is universal flu vaccine they're talking about some way that we grow vaccines mostly in eggs the way we did in 1947. in order to make the transition from getting out of the tried and true egg growing which we know gives us results that can be you know beneficial i mean we've done well with that to something that has to be much better you have to prove that this works and then you've got to go through all of the clinical trials phase ones phase twos phase three and then show that this particular product is going to be good over a period of years that alone if it works perfectly is going to take a decade there might be a need or even an urgent call for an entity of excitement out there that's completely disruptive that's not beholden to bureaucratic strings in in in processes so we really do have a problem of how the world perceives influenza and it's going to be very difficult to change that unless you do it from within and say i don't care what your perception is we're going to address the problem in a disruptive way and in an iterative way because you do need both but it is not too crazy to think that an outbreak of a novel avian virus could occur in china somewhere we could get the rna sequence from that beam it to a number of regional centers if not local if not even in your home at some point and print those vaccines on the patch and self-admit you want to hear some [ __ ] the second guy speaking rick bright he was the i think it's a director of barta barda is who made the weaponized smallpox drug jesus christ so that's the way that guy's talking the way these guys talk about trying to trick people into or convince people into taking these things and to be disruptive and to say you know we're gonna i mean it's it's just the admission that to do it correctly takes ten years that's why the emergency use authorization was required to get this

vaccine promoted so quickly in any other circumstance something that's this controversial and then also something that has caused this many deaths would have been pulled off the market if there's any other pharmaceutical drug that killed i mean what are the what does the vares report say currently like what's the number of deaths that are attributed to the vaccine today currently i've heard 17 000 i don't know if that's true well let's find out yeah what's the the number of injured the number of deaths the number of uh people with myocarditis all that stuff is recorded now it's under reported how what is the number that it's underreported we don't know and then there's also like people can report things that aren't totally accurate so we need to find out like what is the what's the accuracy of the even though it's reported like is it true like i don't know the one thing to consider is what i call the scaling problem if we give out 330 million vaccines and 17 000 people die it sounds like a decently high percentage to be like holy [ __ ] like maybe we shouldn't do that but if we give out you know 200 million vaccines well like if but less potentially a thousand people die right right so the way the way i usually explain it is if if if you give out 100 smartphones to a bunch of celebrities and one percent fail one celebrity says my phone broke nobody bats an eye you give out 100 million smartphones and one percent fail the same margin of error you now have a million people online posting other phones are broken and people will perceive that as a very serious threat or the product is not good right so it's it's hard when 330 million doses and now that the boosters it's going to be 400 million right and then they also feel like with some people the boosters will compound the potential negative side effects have you heard i mean everybody all these lefties are posting that the booster shot was the worst they've experienced yet yeah i like to say lefties because you're a far right guy because i'm far right um well i mean right winners say

that well but but look like i'll say you know the right says this the left says this but you know how are you what do you consider yourself you know you want to know my real politics i want to know your fake politics my fake politics are um i'm an astronaut i mean no uh like my actual core ideals when i say real politics like when it comes to policy which we don't discuss that often i'm decently far left and yeah that's what's ridiculous about them calling you far right but far right left like what do they even mean i guess it's just talking points so that people can get people to click on things because it makes you look like an [ __ ] so if they say far right podcaster tim poole is the new poster boy for ivermecton that's like oh what an [ __ ] let me click on this guy [ __ ] i can actually break down my politics uh i believe in the truth i think the establishment is trash i think the republican party is trash as much as democrats but populists got their foot in the door more so than the left populists got in the democratic party but um i can give you a really good example of how like my sort of like more lefty view of things in terms of economics uh dave rubin he had locals and they sold to rumble recently did you hear about this no so locals was started by dave rubin and i'll probably get some of the details wrong so um but you know because i'm not trying to get it wrong to disparage dave or anything but patreon bans a bunch of people and abruptly and it scares people because patreon is where um podcasters and personalities get subscription revenue to live their lives so dave announces he's starting his own version which will you know you'll control your data and you'll control your rules yeah bridgette fantasies on it right michael malus and tulsi gabbard a lot of people sign up for this and use this service same as they would patreon dave rubin sold the company to rumble which is the video platform i like rumble i like uh uh locals however that made me angry and i had a cup we did a segment on this on my show where we discussed the politics of what dave rubin did and why

did it make you angry i fully respect enterprise free market capitalism and that dave's perspective was if people need a service i will provide it and make myself some money and sell it so what's the problem i'm a lefty i believe that the the immediate approach should have been when this problem occurred and people were getting censored a decentralized technology that is uncensorable that we give to the people for free i understand it's not easy just to make free things but my immediate reaction was to start a non-profit which we have called the on foundation where we have been building out a a decentralized open source networking technology we will give you the program to install on your own server or a hosted server whatever you want to do you press enter and boom you have your own subscription website instantly we are streamlining it for free because i look at it like if the powers that be in the elites can control our thoughts and control what we have to say up creating a new patreon won't solve that problem right but isn't rumble committed to free speech like that is like basically the premise of their platform and then they sell to whatever company or the leadership changes if they do that i like rumble i use rumble but the issue i see here is there is a weakness that can strip away the rights of the people through private centralization of these platforms and so my view as someone who leans more towards decentralized authority and it's more of a lefty position is i'm not going to profit off of the fact that people are having their ideas and their and they're you know censored is decentralization a lefty opinion because it seems like an opinion of people that just don't want to be controlled by any kind of corporations there's a decentralization absolutely exists on the right if you're like an arc capitalist or libertarian you believe in free market solutions so it's it's not fair to say you like universally just like oh the left is more for decentralization but it's more so like a i believe all of the people should hold in their hands the keys to the software to never be censored versus a private enterprise can make it and then sell it

so that's more of like yeah i had a we had a big conversa look all due respect to locals and to rumble because i think it's absolutely phenomenal they exist the competition is very important but for me i'm like in 10 years and 15 years and 20 years the same problems will exist and i'll be completely honest with you know i'm not trying to be disrespectful but i firmly believe dave rubin on locals would absolutely ban there's probably a hundred names i could say if i'm not going to say he would ban them in two seconds why white nationalists i don't believe dave rubin would allow white nationalists to profit off of locals he would get annihilated in the press and then he'd have to intervene in some way investors he's got i'm assuming he's investors i believe he got a big round of funding you think these these investors wherever they're from are going to be like we appreciate that the white nationalists have found a new home base is that the slippery slope because when the aclu was established one of the things that they did initially was to defend nazis and the ability that nazis have for free speech and that was a big controversial point because a lot of people were like why would you ever defend nazis and their position is that we are not defending nazis position we are defending their ability to speak because if you do not defend their ability to have free speech then you will not it will not be available to everybody else as well you'll find a way you can find exceptions and exemptions you'll find a way to limit free speech across the board and we're seeing that i agree 100 and that was back when we had the american civil liberties union which unfortunately today is the anti-civil liberties union they're weird now right like some of the things that they support you like like i read about it on twitter like what are you saying they did just defend james o'keefe though and that is great and i respect that yeah the james o'keefe thing is fascinating right so there's a diary apparently that's missing and it's joe biden's daughter's diary and in that diary she has some

depictions of abuse and she has some weird thing about her dad right and this diary went missing so they've decided somehow or another that the project veritas people own it they have the possession of it i got i got a dark conspiracy theory on this one hold on they so they break into james o'keefe's house early in the morning and you know like full-on fbi raid and they they go through all of his information and take his phones and they don't find it they don't find the diary but since when has that been something that the fbi does james o'keefe says that he gave the diary to law enforcement that they couldn't vet it it was provided to them by someone who claims they had it they sold it or you know they were looking to sell it james got it went through it and said we're going to give to the police the fbi raids the homes of several veritas journalists including james o'keefe himself and then almost immediately after the raids the new york times called the journalists for comment on getting raided meaning someone who knew the raid happened slipped it to the new york times yeah then privileged communications between veritas and their lawyers were somehow leaked to the new york times most people believe and it is alleged that the fbi has been leaking legal communications like the uh like this is beyond serious to the new york times veritas is in a lawsuit with the new york times and they've been winning and doing very well against your times for defamation now all of a sudden the new york times has access to veritas's lawyers emails emails between them and their lawyers how do you handle a lawsuit like that now i mean this when you say they've been winning like what how they've been winning it's very difficult to get beyond a motion to dismiss in a defamation case especially when you're a high profile public figure the the the uh judge sided with veritas and they moved past they denied a motion to dismiss so it's actually moving forward meaning they move to discovery next where they

get to take new york times journalists sit them down under oath and have them answer questions on camera and in front of lawyers the new york times filed a stay to temporarily halt that process and a judge agreed said okay we're going to stay the discovery and we're going to postpone this then the fbi raids veritas and gives veritas's legal communications to the new york times so it is alleged most people think that's the case but you know for fairness so it is alleged this is uh one of the most this is one of the most terrifying things i've ever heard happen in this country for law enforcement to do but i think it's worse than this in october at the end of october an fbi whistleblower sent evidence that merit garland and the doj were targeting parents concerned about critical race theory using counter-terror tactics so this is a whistleblower at the fbi we also know from the leaked communications that james o'keefe was uh was currently investigating he just glossed over that say go back go back at the end of october a whistleblower within the fbi leaked communications to republican members of congress that merrick garland the ag the department of justice was using counter-terror tactics to target parents who are concerned about critical race theory why would they do that like what is what's the motivation behind that well they say it's because school board members and teachers have been intimidated and threatened because parents don't like the woke you know critical race theory stuff in schools and i think those threats and any threats are bad using counter-terror tactics this is this is confirmed and kevin mccarthy by the way not a fan issued a letter saying like we we want merrick garland under oath back in front of congress because he lied because he said they weren't using counter-terror tactics on parents what are these tactics specifically labeling people under specific terror terms in their databases to start there was a letter issued that basically

referred first it was a letter issue that said the parents who are going to these meetings and who are you know protesting the stuff are committing like low-grade terrorism or something that affect america right but do we know that there's a if there's something some specific allegations or accusations outside of them just going to these board meetings is it possible that these parents are threatening these teachers in some sort of uh yes yeah yeah there have been videos of parents walking up to cars and screaming you mfr you know all that stuff so like i said look threats are bad don't intimidate don't threaten people but the use of counter terror tactics on american citizens is alarming now i'm not trying to hash that whole debate this is about james o'keefe yeah the new york times made reference to the fact that james o'keefe was conducting investigations into the fbi and the legal communications in question they got access to was james o'keefe's his team asking the lawyers to what extent are we allowed to secretly record federal law enforcement and they said woof dangerous territory so i'm just speculating but if you have an fbi whistleblower leaking to the republicans is it possible that when james o'keefe and veritas said we we want federal law enforcement whistleblowers and are investigating that the fbi's true reason for raiding veritas was because they knew a whistleblower was leaking key details at the pres they didn't want the public to have but they didn't know what veritas had on them so they used the ashley biden diaries a pretext because it makes no sense okay the fact that the aclu these other free trevor tim of free press that they're going to come out and say what is the fbi doing to rate a journalist over a journalistic activity i'm not saying i know for sure not a big fan of yeah strong conclusions does make more sense right that that would be a way they could find out what they had on them when saw a false premise for investigation and and if it's just speculation man but it's the timing is rather perfect i would imagine that o'keefe thinks in 4d

chess you know that he's like probably prepared for something like this to happen i can't imagine that they just like lay around right thinking the fbi is never going to raid them or someone that some intelligence agency is never going to raid them i mean it's they're a strange organization right it's what do you think what do you think about them well i mean they're a strange organization in that so many people hate them and so many people are willing to throw out the idea of protections against journalists because they say these are not journalists you know glenn greenwald had a very interesting piece on that recently where he was talking about how the same arguments that they use with james o'keefe regardless whether or not you like james o'keefe or appreciate project veritas or whatever the same arguments that we're using with julian assange the same art arguments they're using with edward snowden and with glenn greenwald as well and many other journalists that they decide they don't like their conclusions or they don't like their perspective and with james o'keefe james o'keefe is clearly a right-wing guy and he's coming at this from a right-wing perspective and i feel like if someone had been doing the same thing from a left-wing perspective and exposing like real problems like some of the problems that he's he's exposed are absolutely real problems like a shadow banning on twitter censoring of conservative thought like all the stuff that they do the epstein case explain what he what he found out about epstein he veritas published a video of i think her name is amy rohrbach of abc news caught on a hot camera saying we had the epstein's story three years ago and they shut us down they were we had like yes yeah and think about all these people that are like the the guy from reuters known what's what's a guy from somebody just had a step down um oh my god i'm gonna say it's like a casino guy or something there's but there's more than a hundred

emails private emails back and forth i don't know to epstein god damn it mike cernovich big one and uh the miami herald did a lot of work exposing and and basically kicking off that whole epstein thing but veritas exposing how abc news you know shut down this park that's right what is barclays what is it it's a bank okay i'm pretty sure it's a bank think it's a casino it sounds like a casino so this guy put it up again jamie it actually said you could just close that little thing that was blocking it i think it said continue without erica barclay ceo steps down after epstein probe laid his financier to lose job over ties so this guy there's private emails that back and forth with him and they were but but but i want you to google the private emails because some of them were [ __ ] creepy they had uh references to snow white see does it say see if they uh they they like talked about some of the details that were in the private emails like what a crazy situation this is what's really crazy about it and this goes back to my love of alex jones where people get angry like why do you associate with that guy alex jones told me about this over a decade ago he goes this is the way they compromise them they take them they take these guys are basically nerds and they bring them to an island they go hey we got all these hot girls and you know they they photograph them with them and they they have sex with them and they find out later they're underage they have video tape what happened um and they say that you know we have uh evidence and there's the animals like really there's a [ __ ] island oh my god it sounds so cliche it sounds like james bond you know they take them to [ __ ] island and they get videotape of them banging girls but if you think about it if you're a wealthy guy like bill gates okay who's now divorced because of all this [ __ ] right divorced because of his ties to eb's teen and he's apparently got enough influence they're kind of letting him slide off of this investigation you're not hearing a

lot of talk about it but when you're a guy like that and you're married in particular like how do you if you know if you're a freak and you want to you want to bang girls like how do you do it you can't you literally can't so if you were a guy also that is a really wealthy guy and you enjoy all this power and you enjoy all this influence and you're so much different than regular people you're on yachts and you're hanging around with the global elite and they just have girls come up to you and start talking to you you're probably like well this is like part of the privilege of my job yeah part of the privilege of who i am as this guy worth a hundred billion dollars that you know uh people will come up to me and we're all drinking champagne together and this guy epstein assures me everything's fine we've got this all worked out and he's not a paranoid guy he probably has a couple of cocktails in them and next thing you know they got a videotape on them yeah and that's what they did they did it to clinton they did it to everybody he flew 26 [ __ ] times with bill clinton 26 [ __ ] times i had a tweet imagine i had a tweet when epstein's stuff was coming out the documents out of the miami herald and mike cernovich's case and i said you know bill clinton flew on this plane someone screenshot it put it on facebook and one of these fact checkers claimed it was fake news so it de-ranks you can't see it yep and the funny thing is there was there's a link when they do these facebook fact checks when you click it basically the fact check confirmed everything i said about bill clinton on the plane was true they just added at the end but we think you know they're like but we think his framing is not contextually you know correct so we're gonna call it false how is the framing not contextually correct either you get on the [ __ ] plane or you don't did you get on the plane with the pedophile you did was it the pedophiles plane it was did you know he was a convicted pedophile

you did interesting and mr gates would you like to explain like imagine but we see this with these the fact checkers on facebook they they're basically the sensors not the fact checkers right well it's also like who's doing it you know um i i we're talking about this yesterday i believe that guys from uh gun manufacturers were talking to me about how during the election um people started going through their pages and pulling things from eight nine years ago and banning them just banning right now because they were worried that a lot of these men these whether it's gun manufacturers or very influential right-wing groups could have an effect on voting so even if they have an effect like say if there's a gun manufacturer or some sort of a big right wing site that has a million followers or a half a million followers and then they put out something that impacts someone who's on the fence like maybe there's a guy who's kind of centrist but you know he believes in some right-wing thing so he follows a few right-wing people maybe he's right curious right and so then you'll find out something about the hillary clinton death count or something like this like that's it i'm [ __ ] about so if you can just cut those people out of the mix you've got a few thousand votes here a few thousand votes there and overall it stacks up it stacks up and it means something it and this is what they did they that they needed to ban alex jones he was way too influential yeah trump was not an establishment player for what for all the good and bad and alex was white massively supporting the guy they didn't trump was certainly an establishment player i mean he was an establishment player in terms of like the left and the right dynamic that were accustomed to but in terms of like being a big name that the public was aware of no yeah yeah you're right i just mean the the establishment political structure yeah he was he was a billionaire he was a tv mogu he's a celebrity he was he is still one of the massive powerful elites but he came from outside the political infrastructure where they kind

of control things where you play ball where they have the super pacs and yeah he steam rolls through it yeah and he might do it again i hope he doesn't well it's either him or it's going to be someone who is a more moderate republican like ron desantis i think the desantis like when you look at what happened in virginia how they won virginia with a republican that's like a reasonable person and then that woman the crazy thing was like calling that woman who's the lieutenant governor the the black woman calling her the they were calling her they were saying that when white supremacy voices come out of black mouths i was like what the [ __ ] remember larry elder oh my god black face of white supremacy it's clayton bigsby they keep saying this it is such a crazy thing to say and they're what they're doing inadvertently is they're diminishing the distinction of someone being a white supremacist by saying that like there's real white supremacists out there there's real racist people that think we should have an all-white country they're out of their [ __ ] mind and they're real those are real people that's a real white supremacist there's real people that think that someone is better or worse based on the amount of melanin in their skin and based on the the geography where their ancestors came from it's [ __ ] crazy but it's not that lady that's a lieutenant governor it's not her [ __ ] mind she's black and she's but because she's sponsored by the nra and because she's a pro second amendment woman i mean i don't know what other reasons they have to say that this lady supports white supremacist ideas but it's so crazy it's very clear that what the official narrative on white supremacy is the phrases they're trying to interchange liberty or classical liberalism with white supremacy right right so keeping and bearing arms right you know that uh i mean our gun rights have expanded dramatically over the past several decades if you look at a map from 1986 almost no states issued concealed carry

like a good portion of the states where like maybe we will a lot of them said no we won't today a good majority of the states are constitutional carry this is an issue of freedom a good majority yeah what percentage of those states are constitutional carry constitutional carry means that you could have a concealed carry weapon and you don't have to go through courses you don't have to do anything i know i will say that i will clarify maybe a good majority was a bit hyperbolic but if you can pull up the 13 buddy okay so i'm definitely wrong about a good majority but but i guess it's because when you look at the map it's the big empty states that take up a lot of space that are constitutional carry but uh it's it's it's growing it's getting more and more it's getting larger but let me i'll create this they're actually giving out concealed carry permits in los angeles now whoa they never were doing before and the sheriff has said very specifically the reason why they're doing is a large uptick in crime and the defunding of the police department and the fact that it's not just the defunding of it but they've declawed the police department they've taken away their ability to enforce these laws and regulations i'll i'll i'll i'll tone down what i said and correct i think we're looking at uh shall issue states so you have i think the majority of states and again may be wrong but our shall issue or constitutional carry shall issue states mean if you apply they have to give it to you you look at a place like hawaii new jersey and parts of new york and they claim their may issue where they'll decide but they're actually called in practice no issue well i know people who've gotten concealed carry permits in new york city yeah yeah yeah um it's not no issue no no not new york parts of new york i think like long island and parts of new york but i think new york city is the hardest place to get it i think new jersey is harder than new york yes really yeah um it's because new york as a state actually has a lot of open rural space and new york city is very very very difficult that's where the supreme court lawsuit is coming into play now because

uh this the lawsuit is i have a right to bear arms you can't deny me new jersey as a whole well hold on the right this i think the supreme court case has to do with people from new york state who have a concealed carry permit and the fact that it's denied in new york city and that it's instead of a state issue it's a yes let's find find out if that's the case i'm pretty sure that what's going on in new york state is there's some sort of a lawsuit about people that have a concealed carry permit in this state so people from like say rochester or some or maybe even more rural area that they can't carry in the city i know i know there's not i know there was a lawsuit where uh they basically said the the idea of may issue is where you apply and they say give me a good reason why you need a gun and if you don't have a good reason as we decide we will not give it to you i know there was a lawsuit about that saying i have a right to keep and bear arms so if i apply you have to give it to me maybe we're talking about two different cases i think we are yeah i think i think we're talking about um what i had heard was that there was a case from upstate new york where people were trying to figure out why their concealed carry in upstate new york does not work in the city that's actually a really good point yeah because it's a state issue yeah like how can it be a city issue but i don't how how will that impact the rest of the country supreme court the [ __ ] city of new york is gone i mean it's gone until this gentleman who won the mayor eric abrams right adams adams excuse me uh adams who is a democrat but yet very pro-police and uh very um very tough on crime which is what would that city needs because that city is probably they had things that have to go really sideways before they elected a republican digging through this uh this is for the state and then when i look at sullivan's law it doesn't say that it applies to the city the city go back to that please okay um so it says u.s supreme court maul's overturning new york's concealed new york's concealed carry gun law yeah this

is it can you scroll down a little bit and see i this one might be uh again yeah yeah this is this is the may issue case you need proper cause to get a permit which means they can just tell you no you can't bear arms but that's just for the state right so according to what sullivan's law is it says in the city that's the licensing authority is the police department not which rarely issues concealed carry licenses to anyone except retired police officers or those who can describe by the nature of their employment for example a diamond merchant who regularly carries gemstearns or a district attorney who regularly prosecutes dangerous criminals requires carry of concealed handgun my friend who got a concealed carry in new york is a celebrity that makes sense and he got one that's what was not easy it took years for him to get it when i was in new jersey uh i went to the police station like we had a guy who a pedophile tried to break into the house and you know in the middle of the night i wake up i hear rustling and i got no guns and i the police come cop tells me if it were me i'd answer the door with a shotgun and i'm like well i don't got one go to the police department they gave me [ __ ] information on how to get a gun so a few months go by of me confused like what the [ __ ] is going on until finally i figured it out and it was not easy to get my firearm license which allows you to only get certain weapons that you keep in your home and never leave you never take out it's it's i was even told that you got to be careful driving from the gun store after you buy it because they can arrest you and they probably will that's how bad it is in jersey and you you have a duty to retreat from your own home in new jersey technically they say they say it's a partial castle doctrine state but when i talked to a lawyer about it but hold up you're glossing over there you have a duty to retreat meaning if someone breaks in your house it's your job to leave your house yes right okay but to be specific what i was told by the lawyers i said look if this guy tries to break in again and i caught my shotgun and i you know

like dave chappelle said bird shot buckshot what's my liability and i was told you have to exhaust all means to avoid that lethal conflict if you cannot because it's partial castle doctrine escape your home to a safe place you're allowed to use whatever means to prevent great bodily harm or death to yourself however you will be arrested you will be charged with murder and then you can apply that affirmative defense after you've paid for your lawyers and gone to court and made your arguments maybe the jury will agree with you [ __ ] that yeah see that's why people move that's why i moved yeah when people get their homes broken into an estate like that or city like that that like clearly is not protecting people's ability to defend themselves which is crazy if someone's breaking into your home and threatening to cause bodily injury to you it should be really clear like you should be able to defend yourself especially if you have a family it's tough because you know so i'm in west virginia now west virginia is known for being like if you step on someone's property they can perceive it as a threat but it's not like you just kill anybody but um you know you still might get arrested even in west virginia or texas or florida because you know they there could be political pressure or there could be an argument that we don't actually believe it was self-defense and that's why i think castle doctrine hard castle doctrine and stand your ground is so important don't come into my home yeah do you know the story about the guy who shot the uh rioter in uh in austin i know well he wasn't technically a rioter he was a protester but he was walking around with i believe he had an ak-47 open carrying oh yes of course so this guy who was a veteran who's an uber driver or lyft driver or what have you and he's driving going by the directions and he goes into where these people are protesting and he's being forced to turn around right so as he drives towards it not knowing that they've got the streets blocked off so that they can protest

this guy points a gun in his face and you know he's larping essentially you know he's he's playing like he's a badass and uh the guy who was in the uber was uh apparently a veteran and pulled a gun out immediately and shot the guy because the guy's pointing a gun at him they acquitted him they let him out they're like they did no charges and then i believe it was like 10 months later the district attorney decided to charge him with murder i'm pretty sure that after he shot and killed that guy they shot at his car so the guy approaches with the ak the driver shoots him and then they fired back at his vehicle perhaps i'm not sure but the guy pointed a gun at him and then he shot him an ak yeah which is and also like we could remember and we were talking about this last night with blair there was so much [ __ ] chaos in the air back then if you go back to those riots if you go back to the george floyd protests and the riots there was so much chaos in the air there was cars being lit on fire houses are being broken into i'll never forget there was this video of uh these people walking down the street protesting and they just threw a rock at the window of this house where people were looking out they were just looking out at them and the guy was like hey man we're with you and they [ __ ] threw rocks at their windshield or their windows rather for no reason like it was that kind of chaos there's a video of some college kids in a dorm i think it was and they're like on the second floor yeah and they is what you're talking about that's exactly what i'm okay maybe i'm wrong maybe i got the answering but that's that's that's that's that's the wrong way yeah and they go what the [ __ ] we're with you we're giving you thumbs up they were giving them thumbs up see it was anarchy and chaos and when when that kind of [ __ ] happens people get terrified and they don't know if they're going to get shot they don't know what the [ __ ] is going to happen because all rules are out the window you're in a

period of lawlessness and you put people in a constant state of stress and anxiety over their safety yeah and that's that foments like revolution 100 then they make poor choices you know whether they shoot at people or you know they they get shot buildings get lit on fire i mean that is that's what happens during these wild chaotic moments of of rioting one thing that's really common among these left-wing activist groups something that i covered when i was down the ground occupying all these other events there's a thing called the diversity of tactics and the activists organizers often say respect the diversity of tactics what that really means is don't stop the violence so nobody's gonna care if a bunch of you know bleeding heart hippies are waving signs and marching through the street for the most part people might honk at them the reason why they have to issue the warning telling people to respect the diversity of tactics is that when black bloc anti-foot type individuals or writers burn and smash things they immediately turn to the peaceful people and say you have to respect their diversity of tactics basically allow them to do this right that's what we end up seeing in a lot of places but when you look at rittenhouse i think it's a case it's a really good example what that really means is the criminal elements who are here for no other reason than to destroy because they're upset they're unwell or violent are going to be allowed to do so so there's two there's two important things notably in ferguson when i was on the ground covering those riots it was local young black ferguson residents linking arms to guard the liquor store where michael brown had stolen the cigarillos it was out of towners who were ransacking and looting everything al jazeera was there i'm standing right next to this reporter sebastian i think walker is his name he was with vice verwell asking these young black men why are you linking arms to guard this and this kid said he's not a kid he's a guy he was like you know young man this is our

neighborhood these people don't live here they're destroying our home they're burning down our stores we don't want this right and this is uh points back to the written house case too right because these three guys that he wounds up shooting these three guys that do have criminal records they were there to take part in the chaos pretty clear it's possible that gage gross kreutz was a revolutionary i mean he raised his fist and said long live the revolution at a rally after the fact but look what the [ __ ] does that mean no no it means he believes the cause but he also has a criminal record right i think a large portion of his criminal record was expunged or something but he he that would be his grandmother six days before the trial but but here's right but hold on isn't that like really controversial the fact that his his record was expunged six days before the trial yes i mean that's kind of [ __ ] crazy when you've got a guy who is a witness for the prosecution and it turns out he was one of the star people and the only guy that survived that this kid shot and he's a piece of [ __ ] and the prosecutor instructed the detectives not to execute a signed search warrant against his phone that's right and that's and and that was very very confusing and controversial when did the police not get a signed search warrant and then the prosecutor says don't execute it so they say okay yeah but here's what i mean gage gross croix is a true believer he showed up to that protest as a revolutionary who believes in whatever he believes and he was there with the medical kit he may have bad ideology he may be a misguided person some people say similar things to kyle rittenhouse but rosenbaum was a child rapist i don't believe based on the evidence that he actually cared about black lives matter he was i think you know they say he just got out of a mental hospital some say over a suicide attempt i don't know but the dude was yelling shoot me n-word at a kid with a gun i think it's possible that this dude suicide by cop almost or suicide by yeah exactly forcing people this guy i don't believe actually cared about any causes so when you have the the facilitators the organizers say respect the diversity of tactics they're making

space for criminal elements who just want destruction damage or to profit well they're also they just that's the armed wing of the far left party like that's what antifa is they like the thugs that enforce the ideas that's why i wanted to ask you about this when chris cuomo was on cnn and he said who said that all protests have to be peaceful that's great but here's the question does he get fed that does he is he allowed to say whatever he thinks or do they have a script for him because cnn's not live right they're recording these segments a lot of it's live come on a lot of it is live but really oh yeah yeah yeah those guys talking they allow those guys to talk live it's a it's a mix though right it is um you'll get some like when they do interviews with people it's sometimes it's live sometimes it's not so i've never gone i've been on msnbc before and it was a pre-record but why would they make it live it doesn't seem like especially because what cnn has really become is more editorial and opinion pieces than anything right it's people expanding on a narrative that's that's basically what they are the opinion stuff is probably pre-recorded right so you get a guide like chris cuomo saying something like that is he reading a teleprompter i don't know but i do know and this is a a it's it's i've been saying the word evil a lot it's harsh but i think it's true when it refer when you refer to chris cuomo he's an evil person why say that he faked having he faked being in covet quarantine and everybody knows he did well here's what he did he came out of the basement and they said this is my first time coming out of the basement i'm finally released from covet quarantine but i attribute that to producers because i worked on television shows and i know what the [ __ ] they want to do they always want a moment like a big thing however he had been seen and got into a fight with a guy yeah 30 minutes away from his home right look if you're outside where he was looking at property that he was building something on someone yelled at him and then he went on his own radio

show i believe it's on sirius and said this guy comes up to me and he's going to have how you have words with me he has a serious show too i think it was on serious yeah he called them like a fat tired douchebag or something like right yeah because the guy is riding a mountain bike it's the banality of evil i guess you know i think that's evil i think it's deceptive but i think it's theatrically deceptive it's like here's chris cuomo's big moment coming out we got to catch the moment chris well i've already been out well done don't matter don't no one knows we're going to catch the moment i don't find that to be evil well it's a deceptive but it's standard operational procedure for anyone that produces a television show particularly reality shows that's why i say it's more akin to the banality of evil i don't think it's evil at all well that was corny you know when coming out of the [ __ ] basement to correct uh this real quick the apparently his full record wasn't expunged he six days before he had a case for drunk driving that was uh dismissed on a technicality expunged felony conviction yeah but he still can no longer be counted against him so he still had a record so that apparently interesting okay so uh his arrest in case history from the state department of justice is much larger than you would currently find through the online court records it shows a string of dismissed cases and an expunged felony conviction about what though look at that next sentence read that okay um this means that it can no longer be counted against him sorry the next one january 2021 he was accused of second offense drunk driving but the case was dismissed on a prosecutor's motion so they did that specifically because they wanted to make sure that he wasn't like that they didn't bring that up during the case or maybe they said to him look you testify for us you say what you know what you saw and maybe this drunk driving charge goes away he does however have a prior misdemeanor conviction for intoxicated use of a firearm in wisconsin but that could be you know he had a couple of

beers and went deer hunting his uh concealed carry license has expired had expired and he was seen on video with that so he had illegally possessing a gun which i think is a felony and and i mean i don't depends on where you're at but i well that's actually not true because i think in california cons like carrying a gun concealed is actually a misdemeanor i think ethan dupley was telling us about that you know what's interesting about gage grosskreitz he was from far away you know he he traveled you know 40 plus minutes or whatever but let's say gates gross croissants was not from kenosha right he traveled very far to go to a a riot where he knew there was violence because kyle rittenhouse traveled 30 minutes right well so this is what's interesting uh gage gross courage travels from far away to where he know there's violence he brings an illegal gun and he says it's because he was an emt who wants to help people kyle rittenhouse travels across state lines from far away to where the he's been accused of bringing an illegal gun where he knew there was violence because he wanted to be an emt they're not the same stories but it's remarkable to me that the narrative on rittenhouse was always p like he's evil he's a bad guy when gage gross croix's story was actually the correct like actually the the right narrative he's a guy who's not from kenosha who brought a gun illegally into a riot and then pointed it at someone and he got shot whereas kyle rittenhouse his dad lives there his grandma lives there his cousins live there he works there his best friend lives there he's he lives just on the other side of the border in what is effectively a suburb of kenosha he went there not with a gun but was given one by dominic black which he was legally allowed to possess so someone gave him a gun once he got there dominic black so is that confirmed yes dominic black has been criminally charged for providing the weapon which will be interesting i believe it's the it's a straw purchase charge which means uh correctness testified that he gave the money to dominic black to buy the rifle so that once kyle turned 18 he could possess it because

he can't buy a gun under 18 but he can possess a rifle specifically he said he testified the reason he didn't get a handgun is because he knows under 18 you can't have one but you can have a standard rifle so all this talk about so you can break it down here all this talk about him traveling across state lines with a firearm that's not true all this talk about him being in illegal possession of that gun that's not true right uh he lives in antioch illinois and i believe the reason was he's originally from kenosha but his mom and his dad split and so he was he stays with his mom about 20 miles away from kenosha 21 miles from the scene yeah which is pretty close he wasn't he wasn't an emt but neither was gage grosskroyd's my understanding and i could be wrong uh gross croix's emt certificate or whatever expired in 2017 and he did not re-up they both were wanted to go there claiming to provide medical attention they both had weapons but gross croix was the guy who was carrying the written house was going there saying he was providing medical attention and he did he provided medical attention to the writers themselves i believe on more than one occasion not only that but testimony from drew hernandez was that when there was a conflict arising from the militia guys on the roof and the writers rittenhouse actually came down and and walked up to them with his hands fanning down trying to de-escalate the tensions and then the writers de-escalated and left which shows uh and this is on video my understanding is provided to the state the cow right now not only did he have no intention to hurt anybody he was actively trying to stop violence hmm it's crazy right the whole thing is crazy because they did chase him down and that's when he shot them and most people didn't even know that and then there was uh some talk today about video evidence that had been withheld oh [ __ ] dude this is dark stuff yeah so this this this was actually included in the motion by the defense that was put out on uh given to the judge on the 15th this is we are [ __ ] on this story check this out the state had what they call unicorn

evidence it emerged you know two weeks ago like in the middle of trial they get this drone footage it's it's a high definition but it's so far away from where kyle is you can't actually see anything the defense makes the argument that the video shows kyle rittenhouse pointed his gun at the zaminski's this is the guy who had the gun and fired in the air and then rosenbaum chased rittenhouse in defense of others such that rittenhouse provoked him to attack him and then written out led him to the to the parking lot where he could shoot and kill him because of this footage the prosecution was able to get a jury instruction on provocation which means the judge said to the jury if you believe that rittenhouse provoked him he cannot be found to have been acting in self-defense the prosecution didn't withhold evidence this is what the big story was prosecution withholds evidence no no no they manipulated the evidence and it's darker than that the video received by the defense was a low resolution video it would plan a screen like normal but it was fuzzier the defense did not know they were not given the true and correct video which means if the state withheld the evidence and then played it in court this is our key evidence proving written has committed a crime the defense would say your honor we were never provided this evidence and the judge would say stop give them the evidence come back give them a chance to form a rebuttal because the defense thought they did receive the evidence they weren't able to actively scrutinize it because it was low resolution when the video was played in court by the defense the prosecution goes our version is much clearer that's when the defense said what the [ __ ] you provided us evidence that we could not discern then told we then then what the prosecution did was they got an expert to use uh our algorithmic software to enhance it basically which generates false images it's not real images and i can break that down present that to the judge and the defense did not know

that they were using different evidence to try and get to get this in introduced so is that video available the enhanced video they were given it on the 13th after evidence had closed and the trial concluded to us oh yeah yeah uh my understanding is that uh it it i don't know how but rocato law they've been doing this big live stream played both videos and you can see it now when i first heard this i said how would you not realize that the video they're playing in court was a higher resolution than what you had so i actually on my my tv played comparable resolutions and when you're looking for it you can see it but when you don't realize it you don't realize it you know the tv screens are big they're already kind of blurry and so what happens is this disadvantage to the defense in their ability to watch the video and actually say look here kyle right now's his arm is pointed in this direction by getting the low-res video they i don't know what i see the prosecution's gonna argue something and we can't so what they did was the defense argued you can't use cgi imagery in a court case but they were unable to accurately explain to the judge why it was cgi so the judge said i don't i don't know what you're talking about we'll allow it i'll tell you this the image introduced by the prosecution is obviously not a picture of anything the there's a big one what are you talking about there's a big white sign can we see it yeah you can pull it up if you go to legal insurrection and then um it's it's an old look for the um articles written by andrew branca he shows a side by side he's andrew branca is a foremost expert on self-defense law he's brilliant he shows a side by side from evidence of the enhanced version and the regular version and you can clearly see it looks like it looks like one of those google deep fakes of weird nothing there's a white sign when you look at the real image it's low resolution and blurry when you look at the prosecution's evidence there's two signs a faded large and small sign over each other because the computer program can't actually enlarge or enhance it just adds more pixels so what did it do

like google deep fake ai technology or whatever it just duplicated the signs over each other and they and people have referred to it as the signs being raptured because it's ghost is being pulled from its body they use that to argue and get this they argued kyle rittenhouse puts down a fire extinguisher within a split second takes his gun off flips the strap points with his with his left hand at the zaminski's flip then runs and whiles running takes the strap off flips it back to his right hand turns and shoots rosenbaum when this when the defense objected saying he's facing the wrong direction the prosecutor immediately goes that's an argument and the judge says that's an argument meaning in closing it was a closing argument so you can just rebut that if you want when it comes up it's remarkable that the state was allowed to introduce this and it's unfortunate because the defense look they're boomers they didn't understand the technology the richards in the defense said they use a 3-d ai logarithm to predict imagery and the judge goes what i would have said it very simply your honor the image they're presenting is not from august 25th 2020. end of story where when's the image from it's from two weeks ago at a crime lab in in kenosha from you know the police crime lab not from the night in question if that still got to the point where they brought in the expert and they did this guy james armstrong i would have asked the expert this image you're presenting to the jury when was that image created and he would say november you know october 30 30th 2021 said it that way i wouldn't say it that way this is not a very good way to look at it but this is what is on that website so it's already blurry it's already blurry but take a look at the sign you can see that left side that the sign is like two signs yeah it's not it's not a real image crazy is it still super blurry exactly we got we made a joke we called it the rorschach test that you know if you want to figure out someone's politics show them an ink blotch an ink blotch and then this image and if they say it shows car and i was pointing a gun at someone then you know you know their politics i'm exhausted about this subject i think we've covered

it enough oh for sure but uh there's no i i thought the verdict would have no there's still a lot they're actually i was looking this up right now they're talking about it in court i think they're actually watching the video in hd they were going back and forth about like was there a compression error with the email being sent did it change the file name and they're trying to prove that this can or can't i'm just trying to like figure it out but again but it's just weird that it's become a race issue for sure man a white guy shooting white guys and then these so many there's so many black lives matter people that are have a vested interest in this guy being found guilty you know what's fascinating is right now i i like using civics for polling because they have a long track where they show you real-time polling throughout every time they implement the poll over years black lives matter today is tied 44 opposition 44 support what's what's interesting here is that when the george floyd incident happened support for black lives matter skyrocketed then the riots happened and it plummeted and now opposition is rivaling so i tell people man the violence really makes you lose politically yeah and if they kept it peaceful they would own politics right now in this country i know but that's what the crazy the crazy narrative is that the peacefulness doesn't work and that you have to you know crack some eggs to make an omelette it's just not true it's it the thing is like it it doesn't work when it comes to polling but it does work in terms of like people placating people giving in to it people that are scared especially liberals like liberals in the sense of uh or in the face of that kind of violence immediately show that they're in support of those people so they'll show they're in support of the violence right they'll show they're in support of black lives matter and they'll do it because they're cowards and they'll put it on their instagram and they'll put it on their twitter and they'll do it publicly to virtue signal and let everybody know

that they're on the right side and a lot of it is because of fear yeah yeah uh virtue signaling but i take a look at what happened in new jersey with that uh republican state senator you saw that story right edward durr i think his name is spent 153 dollars to run as a republican yes he's a trucker and he did not campaign beyond that and he beat the incumbent democrat yeah i think we're at a point where when you get democrats placating defending or supporting the violence regular people would vote for a ham sandwich over the establishment well then there was also the weirdness of that election the the rep the the governor's election the election for governor jerseys [ __ ] it's all these mail-in ballots like that's just the easiest way to rig an election like they've shown like when you talk to experts in election results and the ability to manipulate they say that the most vulnerable aspect is male in balance i'll say this first i do not believe there was sufficient uh voter fraud to uh give donald trump uh uh to have stolen the election from trump i believe biden won because rules were changed because of universal mail and voting advantage to democrats however in north jersey there was a huge story where the courts basically ended an election after the fact nullified it and ordered a re-election because they discovered bundles of mail-in votes from different areas like in one mailbox and then they found some it's it i have to pull the story but there was like 30 percent of the ballots were like from like signatures didn't match and stuff like that now in the governor race in new jersey and i'm not saying that um was named ciderelli that he lost because of voter fraud but there was a report from northern jersey 100 reporting republican victory and then overnight 100 reporting democrat victory so a lot of people saw that and said how did they report one hundred percent right and then the votes changed yeah i

don't know i don't know either but i know that no nobody's got some problems north jersey's corrupt it's always been corrupt and there's room for [ __ ] there's a lot of room for [ __ ] when it comes to mail and ballots there just is and that's one of the reasons why people are so skeptical of people that are enforcing the idea of using mail-in ballots like the the mail-in ballot concept came up during this election because of the pandemic people like it's the only way to be safe mail and ballots are safer you don't want people to go to a official polling place and run the risk of catching covet that's true but before it was in october of 2020 pennsylvania republicans passed universal mail-in voting unconstitutionally before there was an outbreak of anything and this is an interesting story they initially tried to create universal absentee but found the constitution of pennsylvania bars universal mail in voting well let's see the thing about mail and voting like i don't think it's specific to one one party or the other like if they if they want [ __ ] if the right wants [ __ ] or the left wants [ __ ] it seems to be the best path within reason but the democrats are heavily advantaged by mail-in voting so you get you're in new york city you've got a building complex with a hundred apartments or a hundred condos you get two democrat activists to walk in the building and knock on the door family answers you say i see you got a mailing mailing ballot right there on your table did you fill it out yet he goes no i didn't why don't you fill it out put in the mailbox the mailman i'll get it for you that's not illegal they can cover all 100 of those families in one day now you do republicans who tend to live in rural and suburban areas what are you gonna do when you drive a hundred miles in one day to get the same amount of family is that effective that door-to-door [ __ ] especially so i used to do a lot of fundraising vote registration activism stuff and funny enough it was for like democratic causes and registering to vote democrats and things like that i

didn't do i i didn't uh we would do postcarding we i did non-profit fundraising on the streets we'd get people to fill out cards it works i mean when when uh when you get 10 000 postcards dumped on a congress person's desk it it plays a role so when when we would do fundraising the crazy thing was i would get people to give over their credit card information sign up on the street for greenpeace for all i could convince i was one of the i was for the short stint i was there was one of the top in the nation walking up to a stranger and within a minute getting their credit card and writing it all down and walking away when you see when you knock on a door and some and someone says you know hey you know what's going on you say we want to make sure everybody's voting it's so important and we know you got your mail and vote why don't you fill it out right here while we wait put it in your mailbox and the mailman will take it for you maybe it's one in ten say yes but if it's one in ten it's one in ten for republican libertarian you know democrat whatever if the democrats have the ability to use population density in that regard to their advantage universal mainland voting as a function is just advantaging democrats over republicans i'm so burnt out i really am i'm burnt out on all this [ __ ] bro i i and i'm doing a show tonight i just talk too much i just find it it's exhausting it's exhausting and it's just if the the thing about even the concept of voter fraud it just removes so much enthusiasm people have for the process if they really think that there's [ __ ] going on it makes some people angry but for a lot of people it almost makes them apathetic because it makes them just feel like there's no hope well that's why i my personal belief is that the trump narrative around fraud about how he really won is actually meant to just destabilize the the populist movement i don't know about that he thought that he won he wanted people he thought there was going to be some chance that someone

was going to change the vote he fell for it yeah well whether he fell for it or not whether he really believed that he had the kind of influence i mean when you're the president of the united states and for four years and you're actually getting a lot of good things done right he's getting a lot of good things done in regards to trade in regards to you know some some of the impacts it's having on businesses and then the covet hits the [ __ ] hits the fan everything's falling apart and then he loses the election and he's still of the mind that he has all this influence and he probably thought he could get people to overturn the election or change the election i think trump really believes it i think he genuinely believes it um you you look at this there was a lot of questionable [ __ ] well the thing is it's not zero percent voter fraud right like what's the percent well like in every every vote by the way every vote there's some percentage of voter fraud this is what's weird about this introduction of illegal aliens into this country at the same time they're promoting this idea that you shouldn't have to have an id to vote like both those things are so crazy while it's happening because at the same time you have to have a proof of vaccination in order to do a lot of things so you have to have id so id is racist if you want people to use id to vote but id is mandatory if you want to go to restaurants if you go to all these other places because you have to be vaccinated because it's like it's like it's so inconsistent what if i told you that illegal immigrants in this country each and every one does vote in the presidential election each and every one each and every one every illegal every single vote uh the electoral college is based upon congressional seats congressional seats are based upon total population citizen or otherwise right so if an illegal immigrant moves into a state they are counted in the census and a congressional seat is a portion to that state which then gets an electoral vote based on the amount of people so we don't do a popular vote for the

president that means if you have i think um california in the in 2016 got one additional vote based on their total illegal immigrant population one one extra um electoral college vote really so while they don't actually vote by going out and voting that's not how the presidential election works their presence in the state gives congressional federal power to that state to make those votes interesting so they make states where there's like borderline states or were there states where they're you know could swing one way or the other and they make those more accessible to illegal aliens thus they get additional seats i it takes ten years it takes the census which i believe is every 10 years right um i don't know which states they're doing i'm not saying anyone's conspir there's a conspiracy to do it but it is true that if you look at the illegal immigrant population per state you can you can calculate how many electoral votes they'll get well they're piling into texas oh yeah they're piling into details but where are they piling if they pile into urban centers then what will happen is say austin will have to expand and produce a couple more districts a couple more congressional seats then texas will get more electoral votes it won't give them the power to turn texas necessarily into a blue state for texas itself but it will give them extra electoral votes which could make texas a blue presidential state so here's the thing most people have no idea about this stuff most people are just it's not willful ignorance it's almost they're overwhelmed by just the sheer amount of data the sheer amount of information that you must have to have in order to make an informed decision i mean when you're going into the voting booth how many people really know who the [ __ ] these congress people are how many people really know who's running for senate how many people really are aware it's so few in i think new hampshire a trans-satanist anarchist won the republican primary for sheriff to prove

a point that people voted based on d or r and not on the candidate um find that we need to find that trans satanist anarchist sheriff where i think new hampshire but you know you can there's 18 people in new hampshire they don't know what the [ __ ] they're doing they went in and they saw a republican and they checked up the box and just voted for it i also think that the anarchists may have been running unopposed so people were just like you get my vote but when they found out who they voted for they got really really mad not everybody but some people were like here we go so what's next for the trans satanic anarchist who lost her bid for cheshire county sheriff it was the primary that uh she wrote she won wow wow i believe i believe oh yeah yeah okay there you go anti-scrutiny look at that more than four thousand police satanist runs for sheriff as republican in new hampshire [Laughter] four thousand two hundred republicans probably yeah looks like it yeah definitely a magazine yeah no it's concealed carrying i dig it i love it new hampshire jesus christ hold on stop uh aria dimezio a transgender woman in her early thirties has become a minor minor celebrity and the target of online attacks vandalism including homophobic slur spray painted on her car and a right in campaign to weaken her chances wow the lone republican candidate for cheshire county sheriff in september's primary most voters blindly checked the box she believes most voters blindly check the box next to her name she only registered as a republican at the last second after concluding her bid to get on the ballot as a libertarian her preferred party would have required gathering signatures amid the coronavirus pandemic wow i love it now that is culture jamming that is a statement right there it's pretty wild though new hampshire is a crazy fun place i gotta say man live free or die and the free state project yeah ah they're winning there's just not a lot of people up there that's also

where gaslane uh was hiding in the woods okay that kind of that's kind of [ __ ] up when they found her well i mean is it it's just woods it's a lot of woods her child just started this week what's going on with that they're picking up how have you not killed her it sounds like they should have killed her i don't think they should but seems like they should right i mean like the people that killed epstein which they did i i read they're going to name high profile people supposedly oh [ __ ] oh [ __ ] yeah i wonder if gates goes down you know if they if this like vaccine injury thing gets really out of hand and if uh this smallpox thing leads to something or if there's any inkling whatsoever that some people who have financial motives want more people to get vaccinated or want people to get vaccinated that don't need it or if there's any kind of discussion about this it'd be interesting to see if they decide to throw someone high profile under the bus to cover up their tracks you see fouchu shaking when he was being questioned by rand paul yeah i mean this is remarkable to me that rand paul holds up the study yeah that says chimeric hybrid viruses manufactured and funded by the nih and iad and fauci is like we did not do that and it's like well the nih has admitted they funded gain of function research and then fauci tries to change the definition of a gain of function means and that's what he's doing while rand paul is questioning but rand paul who is actually a doctor and that's the problem he does he understands these things yes you know it's like but fauci that was the first time where he didn't seem arrogant when he was being questioned he really it seemed like he was in trouble he's the first time when he's old he's 80. his shoulder might shake all the time i mean and and that's true because the way he's talking though is very different when rand paul said he said are you finally willing to admit you know that you were not telling the truth and that you did fun game of function research

and he was trying to say the definitions as defined like he's he just tries to skirt around what it is it's almost like the term gain of function is a real problem what he maybe should have said is did you fund the enhancement of virus research did you fund research that made viruses more contagious more virulent and more susceptible to the human population they would have had to say yes to that you can one-up it and say did you fund research on coronaviruses that originated in bats in china to make them infect lung cells yeah and the answer is yes yes yes and then covet 19 comes from where and does what right it does that the problem is the term gain of function which a lot of people don't know and then you know francis collins who's the head of the nih was on the lex friedman podcast and just said a bunch of [ __ ] that's not true yeah it was really [ __ ] to watch one of the things that he said was not true was he said that that pro wrestler that uh what the [ __ ] is the guy's name i forget his name a big [ __ ] stud of a man and he was talking about the guy like he almost died did not almost die said he had mild symptoms wow specifically from him so this guy is just a propagandist how does lex allow that ah man lex is too nice yeah you know in those kind of situations like lex is fantastic when he's interviewing people about their field of study and asking them questions about you know their research or whatever but when it comes to catching someone in a lie you got to be someone who can go stop stop and you know that's what i had to do with sanjay gupta right that kind of these kind of conversations these uncomfortable conversations that's not lex's strong point lex is a sweetheart of a guy and his he's allowing people to just express themselves but then in the comments people were furious and then the analysis by experts people were much more furious because they're like there's so many things that this man said that are provably untrue it sounds like his defense of fouchy like the way he was defending fauci saying you know that fauci's done nothing wrong that it's all political attacks on him no

this is not rand paul is not making a political attack on him he's saying very specifically you have led people you have led them to believe that there was no gain of function research going on while the nih has said yes we did gain a functional research they finally the nih has finally admitted it vouching still won't but his tone and demeanor are very different now than they were they did try walking it back though they issued this letter where it was like we did these things we're accused of and then once the news broke like wow they actually admit it they're like actually we're gonna say without you said definition's different oh they did something like that something like that they tried walking it back or something yeah the definitions are so [ __ ] squirrely it's like you're just just doing word jiu jitsu what is it with white supremacists that's the same thing you know that's way worse because that's just clearly deceptive i loved when when fauci was answering the question about gain of function it was like the best way i could explain it is rand paul goes dr fauci did you put a door on the building and fouchy goes we did not put a door on the building it's simply a large piece of wood with a knob that when you turn the door the object will open up allowing you to definition is not a door it's more like a wall that moves when you turn a knob but there's a video of him talking about people catching aids just being in the house with people that have aids from the 1980s like he's always been a fear monger he's always been i mean if you're a guy who is the head expert in infectious diseases i guess you have to think of what's the worst case scenario the worst case scenario would be that aids would spread through the house just by people breathing on each other so that's what he was saying but it was not true but then the you know the argument for him is like hey this happens all the time in science and they have to make corrections and this is called following the data and that's actually showing that science is correct that science is working because the the

conclusions change based upon the data and that's and that's what he said he said if you're attacking me they're really attacking the science well you use the third person that's a problem when they're taking fauci when you're attacking anthony fauci you're really attacking science now he's got in his office a big portrait of himself that's not good either it's not good it's not good you know it's like it's one thing if you know there's a big joe rogan experience time right in front of me but we're doing a show people are going to see the branding it's another thing to work in your own office with a big portrait of yourself right in front of you maybe someone gave it to him as a gift maybe his wife gave it to him he wants to have it in his office that's a good point it's a good point somebody somebody sent a drawing of us on our show and i thought about that like well what am i supposed to do like destroy it smash it on the garbage online live video here's my favorite my favorite fouchy arc he goes on tv i think it was cnn and he's talking about stuff like normal and they ask him now dr fauci you you say people should wear masks but wouldn't it make sense if people wore two masks because that would be more effective and he goes yeah it's common sense that two masks would would be more effective and then he goes on tv a few days later and they were like so you advise people to wear two masks and he goes i i did not there is nothing saying to wear two masks and then a few days later the cdc comes out and says people should wear two masks i feel like a lot of this advice came from just like the best thing though notice that they silently abandon the two things it's not yet right it's gone it's gone but there were so many dorks that were wearing two masks they want to show they were compliant so they'd have the surgical mask underneath the cloth mask and yeah showing everyone that they're on board with the science to be fair they also abandoned the two vacs thing you know it used to be like get two shots and you are good and now it's getting three shots well that's what europe is saying you know in uh in israel was the first place to not count you as fully vaccinated unless you have your booster

and now they're doing that in um other states and they're they're talking about doing that in the uk um they did they did they're saying in england in the uk in order to be to get your coveted passport like formalized it's three shots now oh my god new york city just announced they opened up boosters to everyone uh 18 plus 18 plus right but are they enforcing it in terms of like you know new york city has a vaccination mandate where you have to have a vaccine in order to go into restaurants and bars and what have you in gyms i believe which is just it's just an attack on business and it's also attacking my res because one of the things about vaccines is the highest percentage of people that are non-vaccinated are african-americans that's actually like a critical race uh argument yeah and it's funny that the critical race you know groups aren't actually bringing that up yeah well some of them are black lives matter are that's right and they marched with trump supporters yeah there were a few instances of that and it's it's funny how the media doesn't know how to address this happening i mean the african-american community has a long history of distrust in the medical institution going back to the tuskegee experiment and a bunch of other [ __ ] dark [ __ ] yeah dark [ __ ] like they they're in every they're right and it's funny like when african-american celebrities talk about vaccines except athletes like charlemagne the god you know and he had uh like a conversation about it he's like you know like i don't trust it like show me show me that you care about uh black community show me you care about uh african-american communities and and then i'll entertain this until then why would i do that kyrie irving people just let him go yeah but they attacked him right they attacked kyrie irving like even chris rock was calling him a dumb [ __ ] which is hilarious because chris rock got vaccinated and then got coveted was hospitalized meanwhile um you know there's a lot of people that weren't it's like how much of a protection did it provide you at a certain point in time because i think he got the j j and you know after six seven months or whatever it's been

that's not doing much for you it feels like they're trying to stuff us into the matrix because it's really hard to talk about the stuff even in you know well thank god we have podcasts this is the thing that this is happening at the same time that podcasts happen and not all podcasts because brett weinstein and heather hein their podcast has been demonetized for that very reason and those folks are actual evolutionary biologists and biologists that are talking to science experts and they're very careful with their words yeah they're very careful with they're not like us we're just talking [ __ ] off the top of our head and wrong about a lot of things these are actual experts actual scholars and when they discuss these things they get demonetized and some some episodes actually get removed you know depending upon who you are and what you talk about if you if you have certain uh subjects get discussed that they decide are you know encouraging vaccine hesitancy or whatever they just remove them this is the crazy thing too i i consider myself to be a rule lawyer for these social media platforms trying to make sure we figure out how you navigate a minefield and so one of the things that's important too is the rules for like why brett weinstein gets a strike you can't advocate for ivermectin and they also say you uh you must inform if you're talking about iraq then it's not fda approved and uh certain things like that it's it's but it's hard to know because they enforce it arbitrarily so you know i often just tell people and i think it's true i don't know i don't know about this stuff i'm not a scientist i'm not a doctor i certainly understand that if there are a lot of studies and there are talking about the efficacy of ivermectin we should be able to have a conversation about it and give our opinions i think it's also fair to say i'm not gonna recommend anything to you i had peter t on my podcast who's a doctor and uh one of the things that he said he said uh i don't like when information is being withheld i don't like when they're trying to establish a narrative he goes all the information

should be on the table the the information that shows what the vaccine does it's good the information that shows where it wanes the information that shows vaccine injuries all those things should be on the table and we should analyze all those things but that's not what the case is you know it's very difficult when someone has a vaccine injury to even find a story on them and google right you have to go to duckduckgo i found that over and over and over again that i that i that scares me it's weird it's curating information it's like they're deciding what the narrative is based on what they think you should be allowed to have access to so it's not the actual when you're researching that information and you're saying i want to find out what's going on you're not getting the full story you're only getting the story that they want to provide you it's like msnbc you know they they they select bits and you know pieces to only show one narrative i suppose you could say the same thing for a lot of what fox news does when you get these i think matt tybee has a great book i think it's called hate inc where it discusses fantastic yeah it's got rachel maddow and bill o'reilly on the cover right and she and he's basically made i think bill o'reilly is on the cover but he made the argument argument in another article that rachel maddow is bill o'reilly she's another one she's like you know she doubled down on that fake rolling stone article about people having horse dewormer overdoses and they were overwhelming the hospital in oklahoma to the point where gunshot victims were not allowed to get into the emergency room a [ __ ] complete fabrication no research on it whatsoever just total horseshit she not only did she tweet about it but then she doubled down and defended her tweet based on i think calls to the poison control center which doesn't mean jack [ __ ] here's the call for the poison control [ __ ] hey i just took uh ivermectin i thought it was a six milligram tablet it turns out i was 12 and i took two of them am i okay that's a call to the point it's fine yeah but what peter attila said on my podcast um the other day that the one that came out today said the

sheer number of people have taken ivermectin is so overwhelming there's been more than four billion doses handed out and the amount of people that have actually had adverse injuries or things it's like 20. now out of 4 billion people i forget what the actual number is it might be 28 or whatever the [ __ ] it might be eight whatever it is it's a very very small number in comparison to the four billion people i don't understand how you know rachel maddow she did the russiagate stuff for years yeah it's all it's been fake for a long time but how do you how do you as a viewer of msnbc watching her show be lied to so often but not eventually realize you're being lied to what happens to those people do you think they know they're lying do you think they just they say something because they know they can say it and if they do say it then it helps their party because it makes the other party look like they're corrupt in their criminals and their inclusion with the russians i wish i could read minds man i wish i could too i wish i would i wish i knew like what the like here's one thing about your show and one thing about my show there's no one [ __ ] telling us what to say and that i think that drives people crazy i really do but in that whether you think i'm a [ __ ] or you're a [ __ ] or we're right or wrong at least you know that if i'm saying something it's because i've read some things i've talked to some people this is what i've seen this is what i've read here's my opinion that's it there's no [ __ ] voice on high that's uh that's showing up with a clipboard and has a bunch of notes of things that i'm gonna discuss talking points on the show there are some issues who they but do they do they have those that's the question i want to know i think like the chris cuomo thing about rioting who says they have to be peaceful protesters yeah did somebody say that to him like how does that work someone told me that fox does have some certain subject is like don't bring it up it's off limits really yeah and i think it's ivermectin yeah yeah but but i i if i could you

know it's something someone told me in passing when talking about the network because they do i believe fox does have a vaccine mandate but it's not like the same kind of vaccine mandate it's something like get tested rarely or something like that well that was the that was the other thing about biden's mandate was that if you weren't vaccinated you had to be subject to i think it was weekly tests yeah which i think people should be subject to anyway if you're working in an environment where you could possibly spread a disease that really can [ __ ] people up two things should be taken into consideration one you should have a treatment plan available to the people work for you that's what i do when when something happens with someone that i know or you know someone is working here now we have options like when it first started happening like when jamie got sick over a year ago we no you know we didn't know [ __ ] like what do you do jamie just kind of laid low and got lucky that he had a mild case but now we have pieces in motion we have information to work with and we have experience we've had a bunch of people had coveted and we have some positive results based on the medications that i that i recommended to you i also recommend it to aaron rodgers i mean we have a medical team that we talk to that gives us and it works it [ __ ] works but now hold on if you are a person that has an office and you employ a hundred people or whatever it makes sense to just test people we test everyone here every day and everyone here's had covid everyone how much does it cost not much it's like 20 bucks a test it's not expensive man i guess you know i'm not a fan of of medical mandates tests are certainly a lower it's not a mandate to test people no you said everyone should be getting tested anyway it's nice i'm not just smart it's like it's a great service to provide to your employees if they show up for work and like here was a there's a case at uh vulcan the other day uh the uh comedy club that we perform at one guy showed up and he had a headache and they said hey what do you mean you got a headache like what's what's going on he's like oh i

just feel real tired i got a headache and he goes listen we're gonna test you they test him right away he's got covered they send him home amazing they prevented this guy from getting in there and spreading it to the audience spreading it to the other employees they caught it in its tracks it was a wise intelligent move if you have a business agreed right that's part of the mandate that was part of biden's mandate that made sense but here's a problem the problem is when you say you either have to be vaccinated or test the dumb thing about that is if you're vaccinated you can [ __ ] spread it like we know that now i know i right now know six people that have been hospitalized that were vaccinated six we had two breakthrough cases in our outbreak i know more than 15 people that have had breakthrough cases yeah i'm trying to keep track of it it might be even closer to 20. i like the idea of a business being like we're going to provide tests for everybody if you're feeling sick just let us know but i don't like the idea of the president going around the legislative branch to issue a rule to force all these people to do it no that's not cool but if you're a conscientious business owner and you have a bunch of people working in the office you don't want someone to spread it to other people it is not hard to just provide tests for people yo we had a covered outbreak and i'm not going to say the names of anybody or anything like that but some people just didn't really care if they were sick and going to spread it to others yeah and that's the big challenge i feel like the thing is people don't want to miss work and they don't want to miss money that's what it is then this was the thing about this kid that showed up at vulcan yo i'm uh they don't want to admit it but i'm a lefty man i told everybody unlimited sick time on limited vacation i believe in people who work here being passionate so if you get sick yo do what you got to do but the thing is some people don't want to admit that they have covet that's right you know they just they want to be in denial and they want to keep showing up at work and i just you know that's why i wonder about the whole asymptomatic transmission

asymptomatic according to who yeah you tested that and they find out someone's got it right you sure they were asymptomatic maybe they felt like [ __ ] and they're just in denial about it you know that's right they're not saying anything i mean there have been people that are asymptomatic like uh my real estate lady she she had no [ __ ] symptoms at all she got tested three times she couldn't believe she had it she goes i never felt anything nothing happened i've heard that too you know and interestingly also uh one of the things that threw us for a loop was like i said we had four negative tests when the coveted outbreak started yeah so we peop when i hear from everybody like four people got tested and said we're negative but they had they were sick you know what's interesting the real estate agent too she i think she shows no um antibodies which is really crazy yeah a year later a year after having covid i don't think her antibodies show up which is wild because like she didn't have any symptoms i wonder if when you don't have any symptoms and you test positive and for whatever reason the the virus is just a low viral load on you or whatever it is your body goes through it it's enough to test positive but not enough to generate sufficient antibodies and then i guess not get sick again i don't know i mean maybe can get sick again but she was around a bunch of other people that also got sick like in a meeting a large meeting someone showed up sick again same sort of deal i just think regular testing is not a problem it's not hard to do i don't think it's infringing upon your rights and i i don't think it's like forcing you to you know take some sort of a medical or and be involved in some sort of a medical procedure or take medication that can be dangerous for you it's just testing this this is why you know i i go on rants periodically on my show where i'm like why are we still having an argument about the science instead of the policy because if if for me if a business says we're going to give all of our employees vaccination whenever they want ibuprofen tylenol vitamins we're going to test you if you want it a free service provided to your

employees yeah [ __ ] awesome by the way ibuprofen is [ __ ] terrible for you yeah this stuff is so bad for your gut it's right it's really bad for you it causes so much inflammation my friend cam haynes who is a um he runs ultra marathons he was taking ibuprofen every day and he was telling me how much he was taking i'm like dude that's a lot and then i brought it up to dr rhonda patrick and she sent me some studies that shows how much inflammation that stuff actually causes because it [ __ ] with your gut bacteria doesn't it so he stops taking it he stops taking ibuprofen completely and all the pain that he was taking ibuprofen four went away wow when he stopped taking it taking that [ __ ] was causing inflammation so taking these non-steroidal anti-inflammation inflammators was actually [ __ ] up his gut bacteria [ __ ] up his body so bad that it was causing pain wow doesn't it it prevents your body from producing the mucous lining in your stomach something like that something like that i don't know but he was taking 800 milligrams a day and i heard about that i'm like dude that is so much and then i started looking into and then i reached out to rhonda and rhonda you sent me all the um the studies and the details i'm like bro you got to get off that [ __ ] right away i started doing keto several months ago yeah and uh are you on keto right now yeah really yeah you get tested no well i'll i'll say that um i've been following i'm not a strict guy i didn't do this because i was like i didn't have one day's like i'm gonna do keto i'm gonna chug cream and all that stuff i just decided sugar's gone like sugar is bad i've known it's a band gluten processed breads all this stuff i don't want to just have any more and so i've been trying to eat more meat more fats and more vegetables and so for the most part i say keto colloquially my carb count is near zero like it's it's it's very very very low i try to do just like a very little bit because i'm not trying to do zero carb or anything like that i'll just say since cutting out the grains and the sugars i felt infinitely better yeah

it's terrible for you yeah grains and sugars particularly gluten gluten pastas bread stuff like that it's just terrible for inflammation sugar's terrible for you all that stuff is just it's just not good it's a staple of the american diet and it's and it's remarkable when you start trying to avoid it when you realize everything yeah but but i started eating a lot more beef too which is something i've never really done i used to eat a lot of chicken and fish mostly the lion diet not really i mean i just felt like peterson no no no none of that the carnivore the only beef or whatever yeah i did that for a month and you liked it right yeah it was interesting gave me ferocious diarrhea for the first two weeks like ferocious do not trust your butthole diarrhea whoa uh yeah like yikes um but but that went away and uh when that went away i lost a lot of weight i lost a lot of body fat but uh it definitely affected my workouts i didn't have the same pep but i did have a lot of mental clarity throughout the day so for normal tasks my energy levels were very consistent but and when it in terms of um like workout stuff like if i was going to do rounds in the bag or like heavy lifting or running anything that requires a lot of explosive activity man i just got tired quicker i was sure i was doing um accidentally intermittent fasting not something i intended to do i just i wasn't eating breakfast so i'd wake up i would work and then once i finish with my morning show i'm like oh it's you know three o'clock i'll eat yeah the one time for the day but i would get like we love getting hibachi big old rice and chicken and i'd pass out right afterwards wow just be groggy and fall asleep and then wake up like i gotta get ready for the show cause we do the nightly show and i'm like chugging water trying to get back and and then i would do the show and then when i started cutting that stuff out i'm just energized all the time yeah it's the the this sugar crash you know it's the carbohydrate crash the insulin crash and that's just a thing that happens when you eat a lot of carbs but if i eat a lot of carbs now and i essentially eat

the same way i mostly eat just vegetables and meat that's most of my diet i mean occasionally i'll have sushi or i have something that has rice in it and occasionally i'll have pasta if like we get together like a bunch of comics get together we have like a comedian's meal we go to red ash this is a fantastic restaurant in town and uh we'll all just pig out and you know bring plates of pasta and meatballs and lots of stuff with bread and gluten and garlic bread with um um bone marrow oh bone marrow oh my god amazing red ash place is so good and they're bone marrow's off the charts but anyway um i feel like dog [ __ ] afterwards but while i'm doing it i know what i'm doing i'm doing it for fun and we're just like we're all just having a bunch of laughs and getting a bunch of people together we're driving home i'm with my buddy luke rokowski and he's like let's stop at krispy kreme and i said i will not touch a single krispy kreme but boy do i want to and so we pull up yeah and luke's like i'm going to get a doughnut and i was like five dozen no for real so uh luke's like okay we'll get a dozen assorted and then i'm like two two full glaze two two more full random and he's like okay five dozen and i bring him back to the house and i look at him it's incredible i was like i will not fall to temptation the birthday cake krispy kreme i was staring at it like i wanted to eat it i didn't do it i didn't do it i i don't eat them very often but i will eat them you know my favorite one is the one that's uh it's got chalk on the outside and cream on the inside you know what that one i mean it's a lot of them chocolate glazed cream filled i think it's called oh my goodness that's a good donut but i said i won't eat this but all of the staff and all of our you know our crew they thoroughly enjoyed eating those donuts when i work out afterwards though my god i feel so weak like when i have a donut like that and then uh or a couple donuts like that and then i go okay i gotta burn this off and then i'll go work out like everything is just like groggy and shitty it's like i poured sand into the gears of my machine it's like crap that's it man avocados

heavy cream and i have this like mct powder and i just my mind is blown by i should have done this sooner you know higher fat and then when i'm exercising it's just like i feel 10 years younger you're only 35 you know but like it's like man the coordination the energy the clarity feel great yeah most of what people are eating especially in terms of bread and pasta and eating so much of it is just not good for you and it's not bad for you all the time see the thing about bread and pasta and even some simple sugars it's actually not bad to have them right after exercise because it restores the glucose and the muscles and it's not not the worst thing right afterwards but you just got to be cognizant of the impact of food house that the food has on your body and i think as you get older you start thinking about that stuff more you want to talk a little bit about nad sure so so i take this nad right and i told you just a moment ago how i'm like looking at my floor and i can see all the fibers of the carpet and it was like hd vision that morning when i woke up when i was like no longer sick i l you know i put on my my my eyes weren't like cured of being nearsightedness but i put in my contacts and then i walk into my kitchen and i can look out the way instantly just see outside and i felt like it was i was like i could see every leaf i could see every shade every detail i could see like more colors it was the craziest experience so my girlfriend also got the nad stuff and she's like i don't i don't notice anything i think you know it's not true tim's exaggerating and then when we come in and we were talking someone here said people often say it's like hd vision right when you arrive after you get it i was like aha like that proves i'm right that's the control it was incredible i felt i think it has a different effect on different people because it doesn't do that to me either i've the other people who got it didn't say they felt exactly what i felt but here's what i think everybody feels better everybody feels better to varying degrees like my girlfriend was saying she was like um i don't really notice much i've been staring at a computer screen

for five years morning through night i do the morning show the night show and i think what happened is my eyes are strained really bad yeah and they weren't recovering because if i if i if you know if every night i do you know x damage and it can only recover why it's slowly degrading so tell me what what your schedule is you do a morning show and then you do a night show yeah so i wake up at around 7 20. i set my alarm for 7 20 but i always wake up at 7 19 and then turn it off it's a weird it's a habit i guess and then um at eight o'clock well i already have a bunch of stories from the previous night that i you know have in my phone or in my my slack group so when i wake up in the morning i immediately get on my phone and go through my news feed i look at messages and notifications from i'm just asking about like your show schedule oh yeah yeah i record a segment at nine nine up i publish at ten ten am one pm four pm and then we do a two and a half hour recording wait a minute you publish three times a day you do three podcasts a day so yes let me break down um last year i was doing six a day six segments uploaded independently followed by a two and a half hour show so i do 22 minutes to publish at 10 22 minutes to publish at 1 pm 32 minutes to publish at 4 pm and then we're live for 2 hours and then we do a half an hour private members only segment for the website so when you're doing this um these different segments is it essentially just you going over the news yeah the the uh first two are more like a couple stories and then i just monologue the third is more like a bunch of stories that i break down and analyze and then the irl show from 8 to 10 p.m is a live conversation you get overwhelmed by all that [ __ ] information do you get overwhelmed by all those conversations like all that [ __ ] news and i recorded my morning show uh before coming here now we're talking for x amount of hours

and i've got to do my two and a half hours tonight as well i've i've got a mental issue defect where i talk too much whatever yeah last year though i was doing six segments and the live show the reason i'm six a day six individual segments followed by how long so there is uh 22 22 32 and then about 13 13 13 and then your live show and then my live show in the live show is it a recap of all these things with conversations somewhat um there are a lot of so if if i'm doing six segments i have six base stories to go through but there's like 50 stories a day right and so with tim cast irl which is our live show we kind of just we flow not too dissimilar to this but more regimented where we note the big story the days we want to lead with so tonight it'll be you know right now stuff obviously but then depending on who our guest is what do you think is going to happen if written house gets acquitted you think they're going to riot yes but why who's going to riot this is the question it's like are they riding because they have a nice excuse to riot is that what it is or are they rioting they're angry but what well is it a refusal to admit the facts of the case is it a is it a narrative that's already been projected then by the mainstream news and here's a question if the mainstream news has been painting this very distorted perception of this case and this is what has affected and influences these people to riot how much of you know how much responsibility do they have a lot right i think there will be a riot but i don't think it'll be comparable to the george floyd riots it's it's cold out you know it's november and whether it's cold but it does it if it rains people don't come out so having you know um you know i used to go on the ground all the time for this stuff and we knew if there's rain drop your expectation by 80

about who will be there if there's cold the summers are when everyone's like isn't that funny it's people are con it's convenient fair weather ideology but but i'll tell you in my experience what i would see for the most part with the riots are people who are angry at life and they found a symbol to represent injustice right and that's i think that guy who is suicidal and those other guys these antifa guys you're seeing in a lot of those folks they're very they're without for lack of a better term they're [ __ ] losers right they're losers at life and then they pile on to these causes and they jump in and they dye their hair pink and they light school houses on fire whatever the [ __ ] they do they're doing this impartial because it gives them an opportunity to rage to rage against the machine to rage against the system to rage against what they feel like they could they could describe as injustices whether or not it's actually an injustice or not but much like the band they've now begun to rage on behalf of the machine yeah [ __ ] you do it i tell you that's right i think i was i found a band that's crazy right like right yeah i went to a skate park when i was a kid i go to the skate park and people are spray painting like the system anarchy whatever i go to the skate park and would i see black lives matter and you know i'm i i was looking at some kids and then i was like isn't it weird that you've got basically like a pro corporate friendly family-friendly corporate slogan not really it didn't originate as that corporations adopted it because it's profitable for them but it's like it's it's woke capitalist right right right and they they do work capitalism just to signal to the people that are buying their stuff look we added a rainbow to our poison you know that's all it is but back in the day i wouldn't i when they say [ __ ] the police spray painted in the skate park walmart's not selling [ __ ] the police stuff i mean they might now with see i mean they made that music and stuff that said that i guess the um

what is rage against the machine doing now are they i don't even think they're still are they still together why don't they get back to their performance shows well they will be soon does everybody have to be vaccinated at their show i was i thought i had read that you do but they haven't performed yet so i don't know you know that's true to be fair though it's the it's the mandates it's the law it's still older you know you get older you get scared you know you want everybody to be vaccinated the offspring really surprised me i tell you that is i guarantee you that that has something to do with the venues i have friends that are that are musicians i'm not talking about the paradise sorry that are not vaccinated and they can't perform they're getting kicked off tours they can't go to places i just mean uh the guitarists like the singer and the guitars how they tweet and their behavior and their pro-establishment they're pro-democrat like like uh maybe maybe it's unfair to say that way but they're very alike anti-trump in the same vein damn it's [ __ ] most people in show business or anti-trump for sure for sure other than like what what's that guy's name from stained oh uh aaron list yeah yeah tattooed on his neck yeah johnny rotten was pro-trump was hilarious he was well he recently said it's surprising to see that the you know uh the uptight moral [ __ ] were the left or something like that yeah well i mean that just shows you that really what you're dealing with is ideologies more than you're dealing with like a real firm commitment to morals and ethics and an established sort of framework of behavior instead of that it's like these ideologies come along and they're basically like cults and like if you're on the left you support this and then when someone comes into power that you decides a fascist then they can justify all sorts of really nasty ways of communicating about that person body shaming that person attacking that person physically if you

find them they support violence if it suits their needs it just shows you what what's really going on more than it being their thing you all right i got a meme i got a meme i'm just getting a meme oh okay i wanted to read you a meme okay go ahead so uh uh there's a guy you know the meme where the guy's slowly putting on clown makeup yes it says i am an anti-fascist that supports big pharma corporations teaming up with the federal government to finance and distribute a product that is made mandatory by law yeah is that one of them double phone fold phones yeah it's amazing i'd love to see that open it up look at that you got a little tablet now yeah i know when uh when i first one of those anti-apple people huh no um i'm not a big fan of apple but i prefer android for its you know customization and flexibility literally flexibility huh uh when that phone first came out the z-fold i thought it was the stupidest thing i'd ever seen however i'm a tech guy and i usually try out new tech to see what's up and for somebody who does a lot of business and content has to deal with work issues amazing because you can kind of use it as a tablet answering texts phones making phone calls with it when it's folded can i see it like that very easy and then the text is easy on the phone with it folded because your hand can hold it in one hand and easily text like a normal phone yeah but then what if someone says hey you forgot to order the thing for the show and then i i don't want to be dealing with typing and stuff and you know so i open it up i go to the site and i got desktop it's really watching movies the size of it is amazing it's cool and it's cool that and you don't have a case because you're a rebel and then i was uh swatting a bug and i fell in my pocket and then it dropped you crack it you can feel on the bottom edge the aluminum is all screwed up oh hey it's aluminum though so it's fine yeah it's great i'm a fan i'm a fan i thought it was fantastic it's a great phone it's expensive though it's two grand i wonder what the [ __ ] gonna happen with phones

in the future where they're gonna be like these scrollable things where like you know you have like a tube and you just pull it apart and it makes it larger or smaller depending upon what your needs are there seems like this fold thing the problem is that middle crease you don't have that weird bump in the middle when you're playing videos and stuff you don't really it does fade but it does fade out but it is there there's a there's a funny image from like the early 1900s of what the future is going to be like and one of them one of the comics pictures is firefighters with mechanical wings flying and spraying a hose on a burning building the interesting thing about how we perceive the future is that we can only perceive it based on what we already know right so no one actually some people did predict cell phones but for the most part people if you look at like demolition man the movie in the future pay phones had video screens whereas in reality in the future we just have the summation of human knowledge in a camera in our pocket yeah we can't really predict the breakthroughs that will happen and how we develop so i mean even star trek didn't predict the internet they did predict tablets though yeah they did that was amazing that was the second version of star trek though right yeah the next generation they were walking around with tablets yeah yeah but that kind of makes sense like a digital clipboard tablets kind of make sense but and the voice activation computer yeah computer yeah you know so i when i had my alexa i thought it would be funny because you can set it to activate when you say computer they allow you to do that and it was the biggest mistake i ever made because people sometimes say the word computer and then the thing shut the [ __ ] up oh no i'm like i'm watching a movie and then someone's like computer and then it's like so it doesn't just have to say alexa you can say anything you want it to i think there's a few key phrases you can probably call it [ __ ] face hey [ __ ] face i don't know about that just ask it what's the weather what's the weather you know my problem with it is

it talks to me too much i'll say you know alexa what time you know what's the weather and it'll go it is 67 degrees and sunny by the way did you know and then i start yelling shut the [ __ ] up [ __ ] up [ __ ] yeah like i ask you a question and you speak with spoken to do you feel that this intrusion that technology has in your life do you feel like there's there's obviously a great benefit that we all enjoy from the technological innovations but do you feel like it intrudes in your life do you feel like it's gotten enough to the point where you you want to take active measures to try to just disconnect yourself in some way no no but i did just watch almost famous you seen that movie yeah 1973 i never wanted to live in 1973 oh oh it was about 1973. yeah yeah no phones well that was social media interesting movie right because it's it was about a journalist that was following a guy who was a a rock band yeah he's 15. the journalist is 50 yeah it's i guess it's basically about cameron crowe writing for rolling stone he's 15. he stumbles into this this tour with this band what was the band supposed to be based on i i don't think any real band um it was a it was like an amalgam of like led zeppelin and stuff like that it was called still water i just watched it um on the plane flying out here and i see this kid who's a journalist who's writing taking notes down and i was like that world is gone the mystery the mystery is gone yeah you know i remember when i was a kid i'd be like you know i'd call my friend's house he wouldn't answer so i'd cross the alley down the street go to his house knock on the door no answer and i'd be like he's gone right i'd not see him yeah now we just know everything all the time and it sucks well it's different right that's a better way to put it it's definitely different because there's a lot of limitations to living that way too you know like you have more information you understand how the world works more and i think back then propaganda was so easy to pull off it's so much more difficult to pull off now it's so much more difficult to trick cynical people that have been burned before and we just know too much

about how the world works now it's true but you know what i miss you know i was thinking back to like it's probably you know it's the 1200s and there's some some dude leaving his wood log cabin in the winter with a sword and a satchel and he comes across a small but angry bear and he scares it off and the whole thing takes place in 20 seconds he goes back to the local eatery with other people and he goes a great beast attacked me and he describes this giant monster and they draw a picture of a dragon and there's intrigue and there's mystery and there's fear but like you know reading reading these stories about the unknown mothman and and bigfoot i wanna i want the mystery i want the experience oh you liked [ __ ] absolutely dude i live in a world of facts and news stories and verifying but i love the ufos i love the unknown i want to discover but it feels like and this is partially a misplaced feeling it feels like we live in a world where discovery is is is so much harder because information is so rapid through social media yeah we learn it instantly the truth is there's still a lot of things that are secret there's still a lot of mystery that goes on and a lot to discover but it's not the same as when i'm watching this movie in 1973 and you get this guy in the band he stands on a garage tripping on acid and he goes i am a golden god and they all scream and then he jumps in the pool yeah those things would just be on tick tock it's just we know it happens and the worst part is it encourages kids to do stupider and crazier [ __ ] right instead of being this one magical moment that only that that people have seen but you can then write down and then you can show people and say here's the story that seems so cool to me well there's something cool about mystery there's something cool about the idea this nostalgic time of like living in a time where there was no cell phones and you you you know you could barely fax things that's like i lived it yeah you know we i year older than i am but i remember uh being a teenager and getting my first cell phone candy bar nokia and being able to text people changed everything yeah but if you were back in that time in 1973 and someone showed you what it's like to live in 2021 you'd be like [ __ ]

yeah sign me up because this way is [ __ ] this way with no internet and no hd video and no video on demand and no ability to talk to your car and say navigate to terry black's barbecue like all that [ __ ] is amazing i just had some of that it's pretty good it's amazing or being able to summon your car yeah things are incredible well just a tesla itself i mean i have the new one i have the plaid you got the plaid oh my god it's a is it [ __ ] spaceship isn't it like the other one was a spaceship the i had the model s before that which was an amazing car and this is the model s plaid my lease is up and so i got another one you leased it yeah that's probably a better idea i guess i bought um i think i have a model three i'm not sure i don't even know if at least i'm being honest with you i think i did but my point is that this new car is [ __ ] insane it's [ __ ] insane it goes zero to 60 in 1.9 seconds it's so fast it lit it doesn't make sense the other one didn't make sense the last one was 2.5 seconds this is a full six like almost yeah six tenths of a second somewhere in that range faster zero to sixty which is so fast and when i merge into traffic it's like it's effortless it's like it time travels it does and does it so silently that's what's so crazy i got the stupidest motorcycle you could get would you have you heard of the zero no i got the and i'm not i think it's a wonderful wonderful amazing thing i'm saying it's stupid it's the zero srs it goes like zero to 60 in a couple seconds but it is quiet as quiet can be so it's electric it's an electric motorcycle so we call it the tesla of motorcycles but it's slower than my car probably i mean it might be faster i'm not sure but you the plaid is like the cream of the crop the top of the top we're talking about 130k for that vehicle this thing costs 20k now here's the problem it's soap three miles oh no no it goes a hundred and something really and for a motorcycle that's that's pretty good and then you can hook it up to a supercharger i think it's like a type 2 charger or something like that but it's a commuter vehicle you're not going to go on road trips like you know a chopper or something but it's quiet so when i'm driving no

one can hear me or something no you're coming so they could change lanes and run into you exactly those are people that are texting that's the thing they say about motorcycles loud pipes save lives you know yes harley's and stuff like that they're much people are much more aware that's right um i talked to a bunch of motorcycle people and they said the reason we do it loud is because people are going to hit you and it's like a really high rate of people getting hit it's [ __ ] yeah so when i pull up in front of my house on the zero and everyone just goes whoa i didn't even hear you coming holy [ __ ] it's like imagine what the cars are thinking you're driving around in west virginia where everybody's on pills you know and there's yeah opioids man do you ever see the wild and wonderful white whites of west virginia no no oh my god you are a retreat it's one of the great documentaries of all time oh i think it was um what's his face johnny and dickhouse productions what's his name johnny knoxville knoxville from jackass he produced it and uh it's got a hank williams iii is in it and uh it is a documentary about an outlaw family the whites of west virginia oh cool oh their name is white oh my god it's so crazy it is such a crazy place i love west virginia man do you it's beautiful you've got constitutional carry i mean they say there's a lot of drugs but i've seen none of it why do you gotta go to the trailers i mean i'll ask around i suppose yeah yeah i i mean i've driven around uh and been deep into west virginia i've seen recreation i've seen mountain climbing kayaking beautiful landscapes forests bicycle riding in these you know and i just think it's beautiful it's beautiful it's inexpensive good people um they believe in liberty and personal responsibility it's a great it's a great place good restaurant uh let me think yeah um that's a no well i'm from chicago right and this is the thing for me i'm spoiled i lived in new york i lived in chicago and i can tell you about some some great

restaurants in the big cities the thing about west virginia is we've got trailers on the side of the road and some of the best brisket i've ever had is on the side of the road in virginia so i'm in the tri-state but in virginia there's this um this uh this place it's called pages like rest stop or something like that and it's like a little farm stand and they have a trailer with barbecue it is massively thick cut moist delicious brisket some of the best i've ever had so when we're getting food you know there's some local places i'm not going to pretend it's the best in the world you know but it's good enough that's what you're saying but it's pretty damn good but do you like the fact that it's a lower population density people are nicer that's that's awesome that's one of the things that i really love about texas and particularly austin it's just not that big a city island i think there's something that happens to people when you have cities that are overflowing with population or people get annoyed at each other i agree you know i would say i live i live in an area full of right-wing nut jobs you know and i mean at some point but you're a far-right podcaster i heard so they say i've read that online i think i think the definition of far right and far left has obviously changed to mean something doesn't mean anything anymore right they just say that if they want to discredit you they don't say it because it means something i say right-wing job more as a joke because they're all trump supporters right this one guy's got a big banner and it says drain the swamp uh bring your boots and it points to dc yeah there's a guy near my house that had a honk if you love trump and i would honk when i drove by just to make my my kids angry my daughter gets so mad stop doing it don't i go come on it's the country we're just supporting the country does she think someone's going to see that you support trump she doesn't think i support trump it's a joke she thinks it's funny she just thinks it's funny that i am honking while i'm passing by this car like he thinks

trump and she but she [ __ ] you know look when she first came here and she went to school schools are very left-wing leading school and never we hate trump and but it was interesting to me because i go what do you hate about she goes i think he's ugly and stupid like okay this is how a 12 year old thinks you know yeah it's the kind of conversation i have with her it's not like she understands his policies are detrimental to the country and well what you should respond with um do you know to really help your daughter out is yeah well i think biden is ugly and stupid well i'm kidding he's old and [ __ ] up um what's he taking all that hunter biden stuff man that was one of the weirdest things about censorship during the the uh the election is the laptop thing i did that laptop thing is that is an engraved example of censorship by the tech companies this is why they'll call me far right because i've said if the republicans win in 2022 they should immediately impeach joe button he should be impeached convicted removed and i can tell you exactly why what crimes well abusive power violating the constitution as it pertains the eviction moratorium and the vaccine mandates but that's we'll put that aside because it's very very charged how about we talk about the barisma scandal where there are a dozen active investigations by victor shoken i'm maybe a little bit too in the weeds on this one the ukrainian prosecutor is investigating an energy company in ukraine called barisma joe biden's son is placed on the board questionably like what does he have to do with energy companies there's also a former cia guy who's on the board by the way uh joe biden goes to ukraine and personally meets with the president and says if you want a billion dollars in aid fire the prosecutor now he claims and the mainstream you know story is that it's because the prosecutor wasn't investigating the corruption of a man named michola zlatchevsky who founded barisma however zlatchevsky when trump gets into power flees and when biden comes back in returns or it was it was something that effect it's been a long time since i've gone through

the story we have a quid pro quo definitively as they stated it so on that alone i'd say impeach the guy but with the hunter biden laptop we're now getting images of joe biden meeting with hunter and associates we're now getting direct confirmation or should take the very least communications claiming that hunter and joe share bank accounts yeah that's weird but that's sharing a bank account with your dad and then there's also the transcripts that say that he had to kick up money to the big guy that's exactly it i think regular people don't understand uh high-level finance like this and i mean the solid respect i'm not trying to disparage you know working-class people but there's one reason why a politician would share a bank out with his son and that politician joe biden flew his son to china on air force two for a private equity deal with china and upon arriving and having this meeting they received a five million dollar forgivable loan fact check me on all this stuff guys it's been a long time forgivable loan meaning you could just default on it yeah there's a certain criteria met you don't own the money anymore now if that money goes into hunter biden's bank account but joe has access to it you've got a tax problem right there don't you look i've i've tried to help out my family and i've talked to my accountant and said you know let me know to what extent i can provide for my family my extend my my my brother sister family whatever and my accountant's like you got to pay taxes on all of it there's no just buying stuff for somebody right i'm like then how does hunter biden share a bank account with his dad taking millions of dollars hmm i wonder well that powerful you know kind of worried about the darkness of that is one thing but the fact that the media covered it because they knew that it would be damaging to biden's campaign that's where things get scary because if the and when i say the media it's not really the media definitely didn't cover it cnn definitely didn't cover it but they censored people discussing it on the on and they they censored the new york post one of the oldest newspapers

in the country they censored them because they had a legitimate news story from a legitimate newspaper about that laptop that's right and twitter said the reason was we won't allow hacked materials to be distributed sorry but when it comes to james o'keefe's private legal communications however the new york times actually got it twitter's fine with that that's different it's a [ __ ] weird time man you know i think it's just these partisan people and these ideologically influenced people and i j they're just so rigid in their ideologies left or right but i don't think it has to do with politics in the in the in the true sense i think it has to do with tribe yeah it's cult it's cult-like thinking you know that that's why they're willing to pretend that biden is a good president the fact that he has a 38 percent approval rate is not shocking to me the fact that 38 of them think he's doing a great job is terrifying let's break that down let me start by asking a question how would you rate the state of the economy it's not good but there's a lot of factors you know there's there's certainly the shipping crisis there's sure certainly there's a shortage on a lot of things like the the um manufacturing uh sector that has been shipped overseas is shown to be a huge problem when it comes to things like chips for cars and there's a lot of things you can't buy right now that you used to be able to buy very easily and quickly would you say fairly bad or very bad fairly bad i would not say it's very bad very bad is like a great depression so democrats in the majority believe the economy is actually good fairly good why i don't know uh metric for what is good what are they basing it on so you can actually see this is interesting in during trump's uh presidency the democrats believe democratic voters are polled this is from civics they believed that the economy was fairly good into the pandemic as the economy got worse democrats started to feel the

economy wasn't doing too well so under trump it was you know kind of fair it was like well you know we don't like trump the economy is doing all right but then it tanks off through the pandemic but when binding gets elected it spikes back up again from now it appears it's mostly tribal independent voters say the economy is fairly bad or very bad republicans say the economy is very bad or fairly bad and so when you take a look at polling when you take a look uh whether it's economic whether it's black lives matter whether it's support for the president or the vice president moderates and republicans are very very similar but democrats are mirror images of both like i mean i mean an inverted image it's different the other side that says to me you know you take a look at virginia you take the election the young king you take a look at new jersey i think independent voters actually i'm gonna pause real quick pew research put out a political tribes study and they found that there is the the ambivalent right which where they categorize you or i then there's like the democratic how am i ambivalent right i'm left-wing on everything except for gun control it's so they they actually say the ambivalent right are not conservative or they tend not to be they're actually fairly progressive on a lot of issues but critical of democrats opposing the establishment left makes you the opposite i guess but hold on there's an important interest centrist makes you right now that's true that's crazy but here's this is the point i want to make they have a group called the um the stressed sideline which is considered not left or right however the majority of those in what's considered the stressed sideline are center-right so when they plot them on a map from zero then left and zero and then right the middle of the road people who are not politically active are center right what that means is moderates independents republicans liberty-minded individuals are probably leaning towards right right right-leaning politicians

and ideas and away from democrats so i think it says a lot for what's to come but i also think it says that democrats are tribal in their positions what i'm hoping is that people realize the pitfall and being tribal and then more and more people move to more of a kind of a centrist mentality because that's where i think most people lie most people's beliefs are conglomeration of both sides most people are in the center i agree except you you're far right apparently i got a lot i got to wrap this up all right man tim poole you're the [ __ ] man thanks for coming on thanks for having me good to see you healthy and fun to be on youtube thanks for helping my medical issues yeah well i'm a doctor that was trending on twitter dr joe rogan all right um bye everybody [Music] [Applause] [Music] you