All Episodes

September 8, 2021 75 mins

In episode 984, Jack and Miles are joined by Cool Zone Media, Hood Politics, and rapper Propaganda to discuss the pushback on the Texas abortion law, unemployment benefits expiring, tent cities becoming a part of our landscape, what Ivermectin can do for sperm, the anti-choice “snitch” website, and more!

FOOTNOTES:

  1. Satanic Temple to challenge Texas abortion law citing religious freedoms
  2. Anti-Abortion Snitching Site Keeps Getting Wrecked
  3. Pandemic unemployment benefits just expired. What will families do now?
  4. Tent cities now part of the landscape
  5. Paste Eaters Beware: Ivermectin Is Coming For Your Sperms
  6. A Texas website asked people to snitch on abortions. They got furry porn instead
  7. TikTok Is Using Shrek Porn to Fight an Anti-Abortion Website
  8. TikToker Makes Script to Flood Texas Abortion ‘Whistleblower’ Site With Fake Info
  9. TikToker Devises Wild Scheme to Spam Texas Abortion Snitch Website
  10. Texas Abortion Law 'Whistleblower' Site Crashes After People Spam it With 'Fake Tips'
  11. Tech journalist thinks she's figured out how to shut down the Texas abortion snitch website for good
  12. Here’s How You Can Help Shut Down the Vile Website for Snitching on People Who Get Abortions in Texas
  13. GoDaddy Is Booting A Site That Sought Anonymous Tips About Texas Abortions
  14. Texas anti-abortion tip website gets new home with controversial provider known for neo-Nazi sites
  15. 'Lex Luthor Of The Internet': Meet The Man Keeping Far-Right Websites Alive
  16. LISTEN: Little Simz - Point And Kill ft. Obongjayar (Official Video)

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Transcript

Episode Transcript

Available transcripts are automatically generated. Complete accuracy is not guaranteed.
Speaker 1 (00:00):
Hello the Internet, and welcome to season two oh one,
Episode two of the day Lys Like Guys production of
I Heart Radio. This is a podcast where we take
a deep dive into America's share consciousness. Uh. It is Wednesday,
September eight. My name is Jack O'Brien. A K. Do
you have the time to change our paradigm to listen

(00:23):
to our takes that are left of center? I am
one of those hopped up on mountain dew. My white
ties will be shown, no doubt about it. Sometimes I
give my olds the creeps popping up with that warning.
It all keeps adding up. This cold gas must be stopped.

(00:48):
Am I just paranoyed? Or am I Jack? That is
courtesy of Concerned Citizen. Another a K that assumes that
the cold gas study is me just wanting cold gas
to be stopped instead of a historical study of what
happened with cold gastles taken away that reveals interesting things

(01:09):
about white people commit suicide. But hey, hey for effort,
and I am thrilled to be joined as always by
my co host, Mr Miles grab Man. These these nuts
don't even go oh baby, I like them, raw, oh baby,
I don't like them. Raw. Oh babe, I don't like
them raw. Yeah, baby, I don't like gam roll, give me,

(01:33):
give me almost, give me peauz, give me, give me
some peating nuts. But here's what I say, cast off
that natural charged bom for y'alls. I like my nuts,
like my weed roast squad. Okay, bub you got you
know what's going on. You heard about the argument we
had about raw nuts. They gotta be roasted because I
don't think else there's tastes like a bunch of google.

(01:56):
So yeah, we're team roasted over here. Although I wasn't
saying give me you like, give me cocaine, but I
think he's just making it rhyme because it sounds weird
when you're like, give me alms, give me guys, give
me and you're like, whoa easy easy? That that kind
of party. So yeah, shout out to you Love evoking
the dirtiest of them all because he's he knows who.
Thanks children absolutely well. We are thrilled to be joined

(02:18):
in our third seat by a brilliant poet, political activist,
academic MC podcast, host of the Must Listen Artists, Hood Politics,
Graffiti Artists, Let's Go, and Must Listen Hood Politics with
prop on cool Zone Media. Please welcome the brilliant and
talented propaganda. What's so West West? Glad to be in

(02:42):
the zeigeisty? You feel me not saying those are two
of the dopest songs, y'all. I'm going on record saying
those are the two of the best. Yeah, you know,
we our best for when we have a musician on,
I will say I've a I've always wondered why that?
What's that accent? The the early Yeah, yeah yeah, And

(03:08):
I'm like, you're like mimicking a British like it's that
it sounds like it's like you're pretending to be British.
And I'm like, blink, y'all from San Diego, Like you think,
I don't know? That's not y'alls. Yeah, I'm saying to that, Yeah,
the emo voice is just really bad English accents that
dudes are trying. That's why don't And you're like, yeah,

(03:30):
is that British? Good day? I don't know what's going on.
Why are you doing this? Why are you doing a
fake British accent? It's college's a Jamaican accent where I'm like, oh, yeah,
why are you doing this? B did you see the
Andrew from All Gas No Brakes are now Channel five News.
He made a documentary with Ched Hanks. He dropped it.

(03:53):
It's only on his patron right now, but he dropped
a teaser on the YouTube and the video is so
fucking wild because Ched Hanks is just going off and
with that patois you know, he's talking like he's from
the Islands, and yeah, there's just a genius back and
forth in it where I just I just want to
tell just check it out because it's yeah, there's it's
a very clever interview that I think he was doing. Okay,

(04:15):
I can't wait. Pats Wise, pretty pats Wise, pretty uh,
pretty flawless, Like I'm not gonna lie, and that's his Yeah,
that's his cultural appropriation defense. He's like, then, how come
every fucking Jamaican is hitting me up saying respect general?
You know. Yeah, they're like, oh yeah, John, he goes

(04:46):
off on this thing and then it's anyway, it's chaos.
It's yeah. I will have to link to that in
the footnotes because this clip is yeah, oh man, I'm
ready for it. That's that sounds amazing. Alright, prop We're
gonna get to owe you a little bit better in
a moment. First, a couple of things we're talking about today.
We're talking about how people are pushing back against the

(05:08):
Texas ban in their own ways. We are going to
talk about how as the US cuts unemployment benefits, more
rational countries are actually looking into four day work weeks
around the country and finding out that they work really well.
We are going to check in on the sperm of
the unvaccinated. We we've just never know, gotta we we

(05:31):
always have to take that temp check. We're gonna talk
about how it's gross. We're gonna talk about how tense
cities are rising up well, homelessness and the un housed
population actually goes down in numbers and why that is.
And yeah, we're gonna talk about Andre three thousand, all

(05:52):
of that plenty more. But first, prop we like to
ask our guest, what is something from your search history?
My last search history was a medicine wheel totem, so
I turned out I sat on the grandmother moon rock.
So long story short, I spent the last four days

(06:15):
at this UM therapy counseling like youth camp type situation
where you like go and down the woods and it's
just this like full processing your inner child, all the
ship that you you know that black people never do
that you should do, right, So I went to go
do it. They had a medicine wheel, you know, this

(06:35):
rock thing they had like the labreath, but in a
in a weird twist of dissonance. It it was in Nashville,
but on fucking plantation. I was like, this is a plantation.
I don't know how in the hell y'all want me
to be open and vulnerable at a motherfucking plantation. But
I got over it, you know. And anyway, it took

(06:58):
a while, but I got over it. But so the
last thing they had was this medicine will and I
was looking up what the grandmother Moon told them meant
and what does it mean? Do you know? Yeah, apparently
it's like the spirit that guides the cycles of life
and mostly as it's tied to the cycles of the

(07:19):
feminine energy, so feminine life cycles, menstruations. How that's tied
to the tides and the seasons. So it's supposed to
be the guidance for the female soul. Ended up sitting
on it, which is cool because I mean, I'm a girl. Dad.
It's the only women in my house. So I'm like

(07:39):
and then and it was basically saying like you should
open yourself up to the sacred feminine and the feminine
side in you and that like see how cycles can
process and cleansing of life, death, YadA, YadA. So saying
like you need to open up your feminine side. And
I'm like, that's the only side in my house. I
ain't got no option but to open up to the
feminine side, Like how can you not wearing sandals? Probably

(08:02):
basically if you opened at the feminine side, is Jesu
said in liquid swords because it's feminine like sandals, he
was jess got some questionable lies. I was like, I
don't know what the hell this means, but I think
I'm bringing it up like once a week, my favorite

(08:22):
never it will never shake it, and that's a minimum
feminine like sandals. Yes, I was like, I remember immediately
every once in a while you just saying like, what's
wrong with sandals? Man? Yeah, you know that what's wrong
with sandals? I was like, you have been to the beach,

(08:43):
you know where sandals? Tim's only at the beach. Tim's
all these yeah Tims wallabies or fucking you gotta wear
Clark wallabes or to the beach, to the beach just
fully dressed in a hoodie in the ocean, like, come on, fab,
it's not even functional anyway. Yeah, I don't think we

(09:07):
had much of beach beach attire. There's now just gigantic
hockey jerseys, which I had to of. So yeah, that's
my last search engine. Nice? What is what? Something you
think is overrated? Don't done? Okay? The album I tried?
I tried. Man, It's like there's like a cruising altitude

(09:32):
that you should expect from somebody who's made that many records,
you know what I'm saying, Like it's of course it's
going to be this good. You know what I'm saying.
Of Course it's gonna be hits. Of course it's gonna
be sonically amazing. You're gonna give us bars. There's gonna
be something super catchy. Of course you're gonna have some
cool features. Of course you are right. But like that's

(09:55):
just man, you know, don't God, don't sell me a
lobster when you when you know it's a cod like
it's just like you know, this is it's a good card.
But like just and then that all you saw at
Michael Ravenport that video where he was just like, don't
give me no fucking excuses. Well the beat here, look,

(10:18):
does it slap or not? Is it? Is it a
fucking bob or not easy? You know what I'm saying.
And I and I felt myself doing that with the album, like, well,
I like this bar these eight sections, that's super dope.
It's like, look, man, do you like the record or not?
You know? And I'm like yeah, yeah, and I'm like, no,

(10:41):
it's good. Yeah, yeah, you know what I'm saying, Like,
I'm like, that's what I'm saying. It felt like both
him and Drake's albums just felt like they they know
people are gonna buy it and listen to it either way,
and they're just playing the consumer for being like, y'all,
we're gonna buy this ship anyway, even if it's even
if I'm not putting everything into it, so deal with it, yeah,
because it meets it meets that minimum standard. It's cruising altitude.

(11:05):
And I'm like, but don't tell me you're putting your
heart and soul in this right right right, just tell me.
A scale model of his mother's house in the stadium
in heaven in front of everyone, remarried his divorced wife
in front of everybody. So I'm like, okay, so I'm

(11:27):
like the theatrics, I get it, but like, okay, man,
at the end of the day, it's like was Anthony Borden,
He's like, look, man, it's a burger. You caught his thing.
You add whatever you look, this is meeting buns. You
could you can put whatever, pineapples and all you putever
you want, burger, Doc, do you think do you think

(11:49):
he is able to tell at this point that he
dropped the turkey for the most part, No, We're isn't
the way he's been talking for the last few years.
He's so gassed up on his own ship, and he
has a ton of people, you know, perpetuating that around
him that yeah, I can't. I would. I would be
really surprised if he said, like, yeah, that was super undisciplined,

(12:11):
like I should have waited, like you know, but it's
a it's a lesson, you know, for me as a creative,
because he talks like he's he's already has he has
the whole fucking already figured it out. Yeah, I mean,
he essentially did say that without putting it accepting any
blame for it. He was like, they put it out
without my approval. So that's him being like, it's not
it's not, but that's like what wasn't done. That reminds

(12:33):
me of like I remember, like like in high school,
like our track team was really good and there's this
one kid who was still talking all this ship about
how he's good in the two hundred and like he
was gonna smoke this other kid out of meat and
he knew out the blocks. This guy fucking had his ass,
so he pulled up like his hamstring sucked up and yeah,
and he's like, yeah, no, man, something happened. I would
have had him though. That's what that that Kanye feels like.

(12:54):
We're like, yeah, I wasn't ready and they put it out. Yeah, no,
you knew you were just a lot of here. Even
the baby was like the Baby's manager because he said,
because you know, like food's kept getting pulled off the
record and we'll probably gonna talk about it later, but
how that has manager. He was like, look, man, he
put it out. His manager said he didn't approve the verse.

(13:14):
That's why we pulled it out. His manager pulled a
statement like, why in the hell would I take my
artists off of Kanye album? Right? Why would I do that? Like?
What are you talking about? Of course we approved it,
you know, and and that to me like that that
makes that tracks? Why would you? Why would you say? No? Yeah,

(13:37):
a lot of foolery. Do you think that there are
seven good songs worth of ship on the album? Like
if he had just cut it down, because I was like,
my my initial reaction was like, this is the you know,
cheese kick Factory menu of you know, just like just
stuffing everything in there that they possibly could. And then

(13:58):
like that, I feel I could have got it to
the twelve. Yeah, he could have got it to like
a seven to twelve. I mean, yes, obviously artist is
it wouldn't have stood. I just yeah. And then but
then you say, like, yo, like cars drop out late.
Those are long ass records. Yeah, I'm saying, So I
get that. He's like, well that's what I do, you

(14:20):
know what I'm saying, And I'm like, yeah, but they
didn't miss on those. I don't know what to say, bro,
you didn't miss yeah, because Dark Fantasy was only thirteen,
so you know he can he can go between them
all but you can. Don't think. I think. I think,
like we were talking about last week check, it's just
that the Spotify ship has completely changed how people look

(14:40):
at an album, like what it means to listen and
chart and all that. So now it's just like game
computer algorithm. Yeah, it's not about the art anymo. It's
not about the bars, it's not about the beats. Your
thoughts on the Drake album. I haven't listened to a
single Drake album. I'm kidding, Nah, I haven't heard it yet.

(15:02):
I yeah, really, I haven't heard Drake's record yet, you know.
And I mean it's like it's kind of like my
suspicion is it's gonna be a bunch of singles. They'll
all work. You know what I'm saying, It'll be It'll
be it'll be great. You know what I'm saying. It's
like the same thing. It's like, it's gonna be great.
It's it's can I'm even strong. I mean, I did
the junior high version of going through an album where

(15:24):
it's like, if it's not connecting in three seconds, I'm
hitting skip and yeah I got I got to the
fifteenth track pretty quick just listening to the album like that,
and I was like, well, but then he put then
they all all then all these people put out songs
in between albums that you're like, that should have just
been on your fucking album. Yeah, that song is gonna
lose mixtape stuff, but it is what Yeah, what is

(15:45):
something you think is underrated? Prop oh three stacks Andre
three thousand, But that's what Immediately I was like, I
hate that he's not on everyone's top five. And I
absolutely come from I'm like keepers of the Flame, old Guard.

(16:06):
You know, you don't wrap over your lyrics. Like when
you say freestyle, you mean freestyle. You know what I'm saying, Like,
I come from lyrical miracle. That's where I come from,
you know what I'm saying. Yeah, yeah, right, you know
what I'm saying. I come from that Quasar spinning post bars. Right.

(16:26):
Having said that, it's like, but Andre can do that,
and he can do great like he can do he
can do it all, you know. And it's like, and
he's got that Kendrick thing that even his singles are lyrical,
like you're still wrapping your ass off, you know what

(16:47):
I'm saying. And it's emotional and like so like my
personal everybody got the top five. I mean there's some
top five that's like undisputed. You know, you can't talk
like j M pop Nas big like this this you
can't this is it's undisputed, Like there's no other I
get it. But like for myself, I'm like, I just

(17:14):
Beryl mach Andre three thousand, you know what I'm saying.
I'm like, I don't three Stacks black thought like these
dudes where you're just like, why are why are they
not mount Rushmore? You know what I'm saying. So like
for me, like three Stacks to this day, I will
scream on the top of the mountain that like y'are

(17:34):
not giving him as flowers? Yeah, I think, Yeah, I
mean I wonder if it's because you know, Andre isn't like,
you know, like a cipher rapper like those other guys
you're talking are, who is just coming straight for the
bars and just coming for your neck in a battle
kind of person. Because he really gives he gave it
a like more of an art form, you know. I
feel like Kendrick will look at what Andre did and

(17:57):
realize that there's a lot more that you can do
with rapid them merely just having great you know, metaphors
and things like that, because I think one of my
favorite of Andrea songs is a Life in the Day
of Benjamin Andre. I love that song from the Love
Below and it's such a non single, but he does
his storytelling game is so fucking just on point. His

(18:20):
laser focus that I was like, this, there's not even
a fucking like a real hook on this song and
he's just destroying it. So yeah, for me, I'm like,
he's using the palette of wrap in a much different
way than a lot of other m c s are.
And I think that's what I think most people don't like.
I don't think articulate enough about what makes him exceptional exactly.

(18:41):
Nailed it on the Idawold Record that Everybody Missed is
an album they did going on with the movie. He
got a song called Crundo metro Phobia, just the Fear
of clocks, and he talking about he talking about just
being afraid of running out of time, and I'm like,
how are you This man is like did anybody It's like,

(19:03):
y'all come look at this, Like that's the way I felt.
I'm like, are y'all hearing this? And I'm not. I know,
I'm not crazy. This is brilliant and yeah, it's like
anyone would skip it, right, you skip it because just
you would. It's not a single. I feel like the
like he can just say whatever he wants on a song,

(19:27):
Like the rhyming is almost like it's just being done automatically,
like he having to like force Anny Ryan's just he's
saying whatever the funk he wants to say. It's like
he definitely feels like the only person who like when
you look at a written verse, you're like, nobody else
could have done that, no one could have done this, yeah,

(19:47):
on this, on this, on this song that leaked. It's
like I usually, because like you said, I'm a poet,
I'm a rapper. My first stop always when I see
a song, see a concept, I'm like, how would I
approach that? M And sometimes where I'm going, how would
you approach that? And I'm like, I know this wool
gonna do you know what I'm saying? It's like people
got like it's like most most rappers are like a

(20:08):
five four to five trick pony, Like I know what
you're gonna talk about, right this dude. The idea of
saying I'm talking to Kanye's mom and asking him to
go find my mom in heaven because I got some
questions for her, like where you right? How do you
think of that? Saying like yeah, yeah, it's not he's

(20:30):
not even trying. It's like it's like it's like he's
not even trying, right, Yeah? Yeah, do you hold out
hope that solo albums coming? Are you happy with the features?
I love it? And it's almost like that's even more
why I think he's so goaded that he's just like
how wrap and I feel like it? Right? Yeah? Yeah?
His energy is truly of someone who doesn't His ego

(20:52):
isn't threatened at all by people, be not publicly acknowledging.
He truly like he lives from his inside and jacks
that outward. The outside does not inform his inside, and
that's true. You know, self actualization, true self worth is
to know that no matter what is happening exists outside
of you that has, in no way will interrupt or

(21:14):
cause chaos to what you are. You know you you
know and live and breathe as an artist or person.
M Yes, all right, let's take a quick break and
we'll be right back to talk about Texas and we're back.

(21:37):
And you know, I think some people were looking to
the official channels of power after Texas functionally banned abortion,
and like, are y'all gonna do something, which I think
is natural. Marrick Garland said the d o J will
help protect clinics that are under attack as they find

(21:59):
a way to remedy the effects of Texas abortion band
Aiming Klovischer and Elizabeth Warren are calling for the filibuster
to get stomped out, but that's just doesn't seem like
there's any movement on that front. Yeah, and if heroes
like Caitlyn Jenner who are like, I agree with what's
happening in Texas, you're like, nobody asked you want to
sit out right, Listen. A lot of Republicans have been

(22:21):
really quiet too. Yeah, they know it's a loser. Yeah,
that's a loser. And but that's the problem as the
Democrats know it's a winner, and so they're not gonna
do anything other than kind of let it, let it burn. Well, yeah,
that's like anything. It's like, oh, let's find an issue
that will motivate people and in the interim allow people

(22:42):
to die because we're not going to address it immediately
and just draw it out to motivate votes, and then
we'll act like we didn't know what the funk y'all
were talking about when we win the election. Kind of
the pattern we're seeing, And yeah, I think everyone was
trying to figure out how to help in their own way.
We talked about just generally like this is a time
for people to be a little more in touch with

(23:03):
your activist side, to figure out how you can factor
into mutual aid networks, how you can factor in to
offer your skills or materials that you may have to
help in service of movements like this to protect each
other because as we're seeing, leaderships are doing it too slowly.
And it's just really wild to see just all the
different ways that this has come out. Like first, the

(23:25):
site itself had to keep like that, you know, the
like the bounty website where people could go like report
you know, suspected abortion activity essentially for the ten thousand
dollar whatever gift card to Costco whatever they're giving out
that like that site they had, they had to find
a new server, like a hosting service because go Daddy
was like nope, sorry. Then Epic was like another one

(23:47):
that they went to that usually hosts like trash problematic places.
They're like, nope, so they've had trouble, trouble just generally
hosting the infrastructure. But then the young people were also
coming through. There's this one guy on TikTok who kind
of went viral his name Sean Black Black Underscore Madness
twenty one because he wrote like an algorithmic script, Like

(24:10):
he wrote a script basically to just spam the website
with a bunch of fake nonsense tips to you know,
gum up the works. So I just want to play
this because it's just it's just wild to see, like,
you know, how every even people who love their computers
and are just trying to contribute, are sharing this information
and it's leading to a lot of movement to hear
the update. Unfortunately, the i P band me found out

(24:32):
this morning. So when I asked his society gives me
something that looks like this, but before that has able
to get about Twitter. So right now he's walking through
like just all the code and what he's been able
to do to spam this website. You might be asking
yourself what he made an Iowaish shortcut, Well, it picks
a random city county and Texas zip go and all
the other information put it in form iomatically submits it.

(24:54):
So if you go to the website from your iOS device,
is a web page with the four click the shore button,
you click the shortcut can automatically sitting before damn it
again hit that five seconds him man, So yeah, this
young man saying, hey, you can done this io iOS

(25:15):
script and you'll fuck their website up. That the Kingdom
come and a lot of people have been hopping on
there was this. He said he was inspired by this
other woman's ticktok to just be like, fucking just go
in there and put some dumb ship. Just say Greg
Abbott is in there and say the accupistation is his
ask stinks? Yes, like keeping forcing them to go through
all this ship. But you know that that was this

(25:37):
young man's version to just figure out, hey, you know what,
this seems like an easy way to spam a website.
Here's how you can't make it hard for them. Yes,
gen Z is undefeated. I'm like if you were these
people were born on the internet. Yeah, yeah, yeah, you
just can't. We merely playing it. We're playing it like

(25:57):
there's there are people that just you're just too good
at the Internet. And I'm like just seeing the idea
that that dude figured out. I'm like, they're too good
at the Internet. There's just you can't I think about
people trying to like Who's who? Who? Who am I
thinking about little Nozex. He's just too good at the Internet,
Like there's just an extension of him. I feel like, yeah,

(26:21):
like people who love their computers, but I feel like
it's more just like an extra extension of their person
that they're just like it's able to think as easy
as it is for me to manipulate my fingers on
my hand, Like that's them with the Internet. It's just
this is You're right, it's an extension. I am hardwired.

(26:45):
They can just do it, you know. And and and
the idea that that's the way they chose to like
this is my activism. You know what I'm saying. Make
me feel like a T one terminator. I'm like straight,
uh yeah, I'm the Swords and aversion these kids is liquid,
Like just yeah, it's incredible, bro. Yeah, that's that level

(27:06):
of brilliance. Yeah, because they're almost like the closest I
came to it was being like in Madden, like on
Super Nintendo when you knew, oh man, this play works
every time I've I've done every fucking I've played the
game enough to know this mother for whatever reason, it's
a glitch and it works. That's how a lot of
these people understand the Internet, where they're like, oh, yeah,
nothing's a problem because I can I can make whatever

(27:27):
I need to happen just can happen. And yeah, there
and it is again to see that sort of energy
being taken into something like this, You love to see it. Um.
One other group, though, quickly, that has decided to get
you know, throw their weight around in this debate over
abortion access is the Satanic Temple. Um. They are using,

(27:48):
you know, their i r S recognized religious status to
challenge the bill as well, and they're saying that their
followers have a right to an abortion because it's part
of their religion. They said, quote, the Satanic Temple stands
ready to assist any member that shares this deeply held
religious convictions regarding the right to reproductive freedom. Accordingly, we
encourage any member who resides in Texas and wishes to

(28:08):
undergo the Satanic abortion ritual within the first twenty four
weeks of pregnancy. To contact the Satanic Temple so we
may help them fight this law directly. They've done this
kind of stuff in the past two because the're saying like, well,
if that's a religion, then this is also the deal.
Like where they said if you're gonna have ten commandment
stuff in the Capitol building I think it was in
Missouri somewhere, like the ALFA met in there too. Just

(28:30):
keep it funky, you know, because if we're going to
represent all religions, right, um, and you point, this is
more of a point than like I think, a real
true legal challenge. But everyone is sort of again even
talked about well if if this is the case, if
we're going to this heartbeat bill and we're going six
weeks as they cut off, then is that gonna affect
like you know, child support and things like that, because

(28:50):
if we're really going to go there, are we really
going to go there? I find it I I have
to put on I have to put on my my
theological had here, uh, the history and theology, like you know,
understanding that evangelicals weren't always anti abortion, like that's they

(29:16):
weren't always that that was a political moment, which I
know is like anathema to um like a modern conservative
Christian to think that, like there was a time that
Charlene think like this, but to even more again, now

(29:37):
I'm putting my theology had on. Once upon a time
I considered seminary mainly because I just I just like learning.
I just find everything I was. I was like, man,
I'm finished the seminary, then I'm gonna go to this
Muslim one, and then I'm gonna go to this Buddhist. Well,
I just I just think it's interesting. Um. Anyway, deep

(29:57):
Cut went back in to make I wasn't tripping. But
there was an old law in the Book of Numbers
in the in the Hebrew Bible All Testament Numbers, chapter five,
verses eleven through the end of the chapter, where if
a man suspected his wife like creeped on him and

(30:23):
he was overcome, as the scription says, with the spirit
of jealousy, he could take her to the to the
priests right and make her swear an oath that I
can't do nothing right. And what the priest would do
was make this concoction they said that would taste bitter
in her soul right as to if she was telling

(30:43):
the truth this concoction would just run right through her.
But if she lying, it's going to abort the child.
M hm, that that that you're supposed to drink this
water that's going to induce an abortion. Yeah, I mean
it's in the law, right, and then the law says

(31:04):
that after that the man is free, he's forgiven, and
she has to bear the iniquity. And I'm like, so
you're telling me, tell me abortions in the Bible, right,
that's so. So I part of me feels like I
don't know. I don't know if anybody ever read this
thing actually, you know, like that this it's some ship

(31:26):
in here. It's yeah, But I'm like, I just don't think.
I don't think y'all ain't never read this ship like
it's in there. And now, granted we're still talking about
ancient people. I'm gonna get him the benefit of the
doubt in the sense that, like you know, the ancient
number one and number two, most of the other most
of the other tries would have just killed the lady. So,

(31:48):
you know, saying so at least they saying, well, just
abort the child. Like what I'm saying, what I'm trying
to tell you is if you want to talk biblical,
you're mean like, I'm gonna need you to unpay act
the way you think about this. It's just it's just
one of those like just kind of just kind of
putting that in there. I don't I don't know what
it has to do with the law, but I just like, hey, actually,

(32:11):
before you start saying, you know what I'm saying, this
is where your God stand. I need you to like,
I do feel understand the complexities of the way for
which your God is approached this topic. I do feel
like a lot of Baptists would be on board with
a woman's right to choose is between her husband and
his priest. I feel like they could get get on

(32:32):
board because it's not the it's not the actual procedure
that bothers them. It's the lack of control over I
feel like in a lot of situations. But but just
a couple of highlights from the story, the Texas Right
to Life claimed so after people started spamming them with
Shrek porn and uh other like uh, you know, false claims,

(32:56):
they said, we have it all under control. We anticipated
this real confidently, like an action movie villain. At the
end of the first act and then hey, they so
that's when they blocked people from outside the US, and
that's when a single teenager was able to find the
workaround for that. And also shout out to Gizmoto's Showshana Woodinski,

(33:20):
who pointed out that it violated Good Daddie's terms of service.
So Texas Right to Life also, by the way, exposed
the private infot of three job applicants, which was stored
in unprotected directory on its website. So just not the
not the best of any of this. So once Go
Daddy kicked them off, they went to the dude who

(33:43):
his name is literally Rob Monster. He runs a website
service company called Epic and calls itself the Swiss Bank
of the domain industry. But really they're just like they
enable white supremacy. They like when Go Daddy shut down Gabs.
They came to the rescue and helped host a gab

(34:03):
after the Synegon shooter. Yeah, parlor as well. But even
Rob Monster wouldn't host the snitch site. After receiving complaints,
they found the site violated their terms of use and
it was shut down. So I really wonder, like, who
who thought the snitch site was like I'm like, this

(34:23):
is an honest question, like why would you think this
was a good idea? Like, I just who would think
of this? This happens all the time in my experience
in like Southern Baptist communities, like talking about each other
and like the other person sins. So I wonder if,
like within the people who are part of the anti

(34:48):
choice movement, if they are, you know, that it just
seems more natural to them. It seems like a better
idea to them than the rest of the world. Right, yeah,
all right, let's move on to where we're at with
unemployment in the US. I know, like in the in
the mainstream media, there's a lot of headlines about US

(35:08):
misses its jobs number for fucking whatever August I don't know,
I don't know whatever month we just lived through, and
so that that's going to filter down to us in
some sort of probably in humane policy. But well, you know,
we've also in the past talked about how other countries

(35:29):
are experimenting with a four day work week and having
great results. Yeah, it's just it's just wild to see,
Like when I'm scrolling news headlines, one thing will be like,
you know, Scotland also now participating in pilot program for
four day work week and then the next one is
like seven point five million people will lose some or

(35:49):
all of their unemployment benefits. And the just difference in
just the basics on how we look at employment and
working in the culture around work and what it means
for like the actual human beings. Because yeah, like we've
talked about this a lot, how much like we love,
we love a four day work week around here, like
as an idea, I mean, it makes sense. Whatever is

(36:11):
more efficient is what should be happening because that allows
people to live more of their lives with their families
or their passions or whatever it may be. And you know,
the last thing we saw was like this huge study
that was like years long. They said, hey man, we're
having a real hard time finding an excuse why a
thirty two hour work week wouldn't be good for people.
And most recently, I think in twenty nineteen in Japan,

(36:35):
Microsoft Japan again, but Japan is fucking you want to
talk about work culture where like you know, Japan, only
a few places people like in a modern country or
developed country where people die from overworking, like in office
job and like that kind of exhaustion so for Japan
to kind of even engage with like maybe there's a

(36:56):
better way to do this, I was like, okay, well
what's going on. So Microsoft they gave twenty they're like
all their employees, twenty three, hundreds of them in Japan. Specifically,
they said, you can choose like your own, you know,
flexible work style that's gonna kind of come out to
a four day work week, and let's just see if
there would be something good that comes out of it.
They fucking had a forty percent increase in productivity and

(37:20):
then like exponential growth in people's like feelings of positivity
and like just feeling better about their quality of life
just because they had the flexibility to figure out how
they could work in in a more efficient way. They
even said, look, we're not even gonna have fucking meetings
that are more than thirty minutes, Like, let's really figure
out how to make things as efficient as possible. In

(37:41):
the US, we've had a congress person introduce a bill
that he's saying like, yeah, in America, we should look
at a thirty two hour work week. We really need
to do it because all of the data we have
supports this move. And again, as he says shorter work
week would benefit both employers and employees. Are like pilot
programs run by government men and businesses across the globe

(38:01):
of showing promising results. Productivity climbed report, people reported better
work life balance, less need to take sick days, heightened morale,
and lower childcare expenses because people have more times with
their families and children. It's just all fucking there, but
we won't do it. And meanwhile, you know, you juxtapose
that with what we're looking at in the u S,
which is cut the benefits to force someone into a

(38:24):
situation where they have to take a job that they
don't want, because that's where we're at. That's the that's
currently the like the philosophy, or at least a lot
of the economic analysts are like, well, we have eight
and a half million people unemployed and we have ten
million job openings, so I think that's gonna fit. Yeah,
that's gonna fit like a fucking glove. And we're continue

(38:47):
to see that that's not the case, and we still
get these same dumb, fucking fake cast talking points or
the unemployment benefits are making people lazy and ship like that.
And there was a new new research came out for
every eight workers who lost benefits, only one found a job.
So even people who lost job like lost jobs, they
were having trouble finding the work that was actually relevant

(39:10):
to them. They said. The leading reasons why unemployed aren't
taking jobs have little to do with government money and
everything to do with health and economic crisis, child care
scarcity and cost, fear of getting or spreading COVID nineteen
and taking care of someone with the disease or getting
sick themselves, according to the survey, and we're kind of
like stuck in this loop of like just only measuring

(39:31):
our success based on shareholder value. It's so toxic the
way that the mainstream media covers the ship, because it's like,
these are people making the best decisions for their health,
for their ability to survive. It's the same ship with
the the unhoused population has gone down, but they're more

(39:52):
conspicuous now because they're not going to shelters anymore because
they know that shelter are deadly because their COVID outbreaks
there in a lot of cases, and so they're living
on the streets and accumulating things that they need to
live on the streets. So now you are seeing the
unhoused population in your community much more than you used to,

(40:15):
and the like it's not being covered as like yeah,
of course they're doing that because that's what is saving
their lives, Like that's what it's just being covered like, well,
this is disgusting, like it's a problem. And like the
same with like people not going back to work. It's
like turned into laziness instead of you don't want to
be out in like a place that doesn't respect your

(40:38):
fucking like like your health, like especially right now while
we're living through a global pandemic. But the like that's
everywhere like across the center. Yeah, we did an episode
on we the Royal We I did episode on the
politics about the ending of these unemployment benefits and what

(40:59):
what Miles brought up as far as like the theory
being well, if you're getting free money, why would you
go back to work and how that's just not playing out.
Like the the owner of What's the Job Monster was
was the the jobs Like yeah, he was like, we're

(41:20):
just not seeing it in the states that y'all ended
it early. Who was ain't applying for jobs? And when
we did that episode, they was what was in the
news then was like Applebee's was offering free appetizers or
if you came to get an interview, And to me,
it's like to your point, Jack, like when you think

(41:42):
about economic models, like economy models, you know, sociological trends,
it's like, I just there's this weird like, but are
y'all talking to actual people though? Because like, yo, my
models and who are you modeling it by? I remember

(42:02):
in economics, I remember my undergrad you had they had
the the the average man was like what you what
you modeled all of your economic models on? But like
that's not a real person. You know, nobody has nobody
actually has two point five kids. You know what I'm saying, Like,
that's not a person. So it's like, how you modeling

(42:24):
your whole model and what you're telling me things is
happening based on a human that don't exist. If you
just actually talk to a human that exists, the ship
makes perfect sense. Why would I go back to his job?
You had a year off on a job to realize
this job was some bullshit. I was tired all the
damn time. I ain't like the work, and you ain't
pay me enough. Why the hell would I go back

(42:45):
right like this just like this just seems so easy.
Like or if you're an employer, just go, I wonder
why nobody's coming give and getting our jobs. Maybe we
should offer appetizers or maybe you should benefits my nigger, Like,
how about pay them better? How about treat people better?
Why do you think did and just like yeah, the
homeless thing is just like it's like you're not talking

(43:05):
to actual people. Do shame makes sense if you just
talk to actual people, right, yeah, because everything is is
done on a balance sheet. And that's why it's so violent,
because it doesn't take into account people's humanity. They just
look at well, eight and a half million people with
new jobs. I got ten million jobs opening the recovery
is only a matter of time. But it's right there

(43:26):
for you. Yeah, they're not just yeah, it's just the idea.
They're you know, they're not just looking at it at
as humans. They can't do it. There's no nuance to it.
It's not eight and a half million desperate people, you
know what I mean. It's and they're not seeing it.
It's not. This is not eight and a half million
people where maybe many of them need to take care
of a sick child or having a parent they have

(43:47):
to take care of. It's definitely the way they look
at it. It definitely can't be someone who's living in
a region where housing and food insecurity is like a
real threat. It certainly isn't somebody who is going through
it emotionally trying time because they've lost a lot of
loved ones and a job and it's an omnique crisis
for this this person because it's easier just to say, well,

(44:07):
this number, this number equals problem solved. But that works
only for a little bit, because now you're just seeing
all of the blood and carnage that comes out of
treating people like fucking numbers and not as human beings
with the vidual needs that have to be taken into consideration.
And it's not accurate and and it's becoming less and less,
so like on it could happen here. The You're Fellow

(44:30):
Cool Zone Media podcast Daily Show with uh Lebron James. Yeah,
Roberts are Lebron James were okay, but they they interviewed
an economist who was saying that now that everything is
fucked basically, now that we are living in a you know,

(44:51):
post normal world where like everything from temperatures to disease
spread to you know, the the environment are no younger
at a point of equilibrium that they call it, like
they you need to be thinking about the economy as
the way that like desert environmentalists think about the desert,

(45:11):
which is like if you if you average the temperature
of a desert, it's gonna give you like seventy. But
that's because it drops to forty and then goes up
to in the morning. But like economists are working on
it from from an average and it's just not gonna
it's not going back to the average any anytime. So yeah,

(45:33):
I think when I when I another one in my
past life, when I when I was teaching high school,
I thought, in like this, the school was like Rice
mac dab in between sort of three different like hoods,
and there was a little boys and girls club that
was like across the street from the school. And I

(45:55):
remember my ad the administration put together this total like
tutoring in after school program. They I mean, boy, when
I tell you, they was breaking their arms patting themselves
on the back with this uh this little after school program.
They did this enrichment for these you know, these inner
city kids who you know, need these programs, and for
the life of them, I remember sitting in this meeting

(46:16):
me and that I remember the vice principle was used
from content. So we we used to just look at
each other during these meetings and just be like, what
what are y'all doing? You know what I'm saying? But
they don't know where they are right so they would
make yes they and just just so confused. I remember
these people just being so befuddled as to why students

(46:37):
that they thought needed this wouldn't come. And I'm like
part of the town, like you, I don't even have
to finish it. I don't even have to finish it.
See what I'm saying. They're like, it's there for them.
It's like you like you, okay, you're trying to ask
this kid to walk through for Lujiah, you know what
I'm saying to go to like like not like it's

(46:59):
just just the fact that like I just don't understand
why I have to tell you this, Like you work here,
You're talking to the same students I'm talking to, Like
I don't understand what you don't understand, Like what is
you looking at? And like you said, you're looking at documents.
You're saying, well, the average seperature of seventy degrees and
it's like, okay, it's you're distant for many of the

(47:19):
students who would be it's easy to walk to I
I don't understand for snacks. Yeah, I like, wait, what
does it mean to go on the other side of
Hyde Park? Oh? I don't know, you know what I mean?
And they're like, it's it's really yeah. And again it's
because we don't have we're not taking into account people's humanity.
We have people who look at human life is facts

(47:42):
and figures, and we just can't work. It's just it's
wild too, I think all of us, because even in
the situation you're talking about, or we're talking about, if
you speak to people and understand what the threat the
threats are to their well being, then you can actually
make a better vision rather than just like this brutal,

(48:02):
fucking math of like they have a million people, no jugs,
ten million jugs. Cut the fucking and let's see what happens.
Because the first thing in this research that was done too,
they said when people's benefits get caught up, the first
thing isn't that they go looking for a job, they
start tightening up and they start spending less. That's what happened.
That's the first thing people do not go say, Okay, well,

(48:23):
now I guess I'll take a job that will not
acknowledge my offer me any dignity or anything, or acknowledge
my humanity, and I'll go back to this whole way. So, yeah,
it's a tough And then like and then I also here,
I have people who I know, we're like, well it's different,
have a small business and things like that, Well, then
you should be advocating for medicare for all. Hell, think
about it aren't costs. Those aren't costs you would have

(48:45):
to have anymore because that ship would be covered. And
I know that's a huge that's a huge item of
financial burden as an employer is providing those things. So
then get on board because you can make it easier
for yourself too. And I and I'm not trying to
say it's all that simple, but we really need to
begin to shift how we look at the most basic
issues and and put humanity at the forefront or people's

(49:07):
individual experience to understand how to give people the best
outcomes with these policies. I love how you even add
like just the this is in your own best interest situation.
That's like if you got employees happy, people stick around,
like I want you to like it here, you know
what I'm saying, Like so like I don't understand, like

(49:29):
that's to your benefit, you know what I'm saying. And
like you said, when I think about like my assistant
that you know I pay, like I pay her what
I pay her because I don't want her to leave.
She good at her job. So I'm like, okay, well
what's it gonna take for you to be for you
to have to go be somebody else's assistant to make

(49:51):
ends meet? Because I'm like, I can't afford that I
need your attention, So I'm gonna pay you enough to
make sure your attentions here. And if say, if you
tell me that's the problem, like hey, I'm gonna need
a little more. We're moving to this, then like all right,
let's figure it out because I can't afford to lose
you like it don't make I'm not gonna be like,
well you should be lucky. I'm letting you like nah,
Like even on a selfish situation, That's what I'm saying.

(50:13):
Even in my own self interests. It makes sense to
be like, oh, you're telling me, you're telling me insurance
is off my books. It's on the States books. Hell yeah,
I ain't got paid for it. Okay, cool, let's go.
You know, like y'all they're tripping. Man, I don't understand
why nobody. It just seems so logical, like you said, right,
and it's and I think because we're we have so

(50:34):
much propaganda that we're hit with constantly that it's it
takes a lot of your time effort to even look
past all that ship and try and see the things
for what they are. And it's it's tough for a
lot of people. But until we really get there, I mean,
we're gonna just keep making these same mistakes. I mean
that I will just say that it's you know, let's

(50:54):
look at Jeff Bezos, like, you know, there there's the
examples where it's better, it's more sustainable for society. But
we also have a World's Richest Man that the last
twenty five years have created whose primary innovation was treating
people like ship. So like the the rewards are there

(51:15):
for the people who do the short term thinking and
just grind it until the wheels fall off and like
and then they get to go to space, and when
they go to space, it gets covered five times as
much as fucking climate change. So it's just it's it's
a large social problem of like what what we reward

(51:36):
with our attention and what we reward with like the
the rewards in our in our culture. Yeah, we have
to redefine what ballling is and balding should just be
providing for your community. That's you know, not exploiting the
people that work for you so you can take off
on a spaceship. That's yeah, that's like early two thousand's baling.

(51:56):
And you know what I think we don't we're not
connecting like how much how much good comes out of
people having empathy and that that is truly something that
you know, I wish society we could reward people with
more for having that the forefront of the things that
they do. Yeah, all right, let's take another quick break
and we'll be right back. And we're back, And like

(52:30):
we said, we do like to check in with the
sperm of the unvaccinated every once in a while. And
I feel like listeners know, the last few weeks we've
we've been letting them know about how unvaccinated sperm will
be the new crypto ak, the new gold standard. You know,
the anti BAX crowd gave us this theory. It should

(52:52):
be noted this did not come about the uh you know,
independent research. It is a theory that was created by
the scientific minds that brought you taking horsty warm. Yes, yes,
but yeah, so I mean, let's let's run through it
real quick again. Why all our sperm is trash, because
all the firm is trash. Because if you know Bill Gates,

(53:15):
he's behind the whole depop global depopulation fucking movement. He's
the fucking architect of this ship. And his whole thing
is that. Look, don't get it, because he's trying to
kill everybody and depopulate the art. So it's only about
like five million or whatever number they think is whatever
the goal for these people. And then because of that,

(53:35):
people that are unvaccinated will have the most sought after
sperm because they don't have Bill Gates Microsoft shot and
and it didn't turn their sperms into becoming Mr Clippy
asking if you need assistance when you're using a word document,
so speak for yourself. Yeah, Hi, do you need something
help the fun is this? But yeah, yeah, because mr,

(53:59):
that's a weird. This theory has been well and truly debunked,
mostly because it seemed to be more of a wish
they were holding out for it, like to be like, yeah, man,
that's the other thing that could be really cool. If
we're not vaccinated, then are all their wives are gonna
want to funk out? Like you got that good? So there,

(54:21):
Robin Finankia at WOTT just did a little thinking. She's like, well,
I know that, and we've known that this is bullshit
because they're pointed like they're really like the dumbest headlines
to say that this is proof of you know, like
a whole conspiracy. And said, I wonder if there's any
research on what I ever mechtin does to sperm, because
that's their big miracle drug. And I'm curious that for

(54:42):
all this energy about being sterile, have they even done
a little bit of just research and iver mectin. Well,
she did, I don't know what's in it. She found
this study and it said this from the results obtained,
it is evident that iver mectin therapy. Again, I just
want to say this is from a study that was
done on h human beings because we know it's made
for animals. But this is on a narrow study where

(55:04):
there was a human application of ivermectin for a certain illness.
Uh not COVID. But again, this is what happened when
human beings were taken iver mactin. Quote. It is evident
that ivermectin therapy has has significant adverse effects on the
sperm functions of male uncle sir sciasis patients that's the
illness that were being treated. There was a significant reduction

(55:24):
or dropping the sperm counts of the patients after their
treatment with ivermectin. Furthermore, the studies showed a significant and
remarkable drop in the sperm motility of the patients after
their treatment with ivermectin. As for the morphology of the sperm,
there was a rise in the abnormal sperms after treatment
compared with the morphology before the commencement of treatment. These changes,
no doubt, are are as results of the effects of

(55:46):
the drug on the sperm function of the patients. Mm hmm.
So while y'all are out here with your other just
reest again because I don't know what this is all
in a fucking effort to feel about what you believe.
But the ship is also right there saying this could
and will fuck your sperm up. They also said they

(56:08):
recommend caution in the use of iver mecton and animals
meant for breeding. M hm, okay, so that's already on
the that's already on the on the box is Hey,
this thing messes up breeding, so maybe y'all shouldn't. Yes,
just yeah, they're meant to be bread Uh, maybe slow
down on iver mecton. But absolutely amazing. This is just

(56:30):
like the it's just the irony of it is. It's
it's so fucking weird and cruel. I don't even know,
like to laugh, and just like this is it's just
so weird that we go further weird. I was talking
with my friend right and it's just like I feel
like we're looking at this another realignment of society, you know,
like on some level, like like since the fucking Enlightenment

(56:52):
or something where it's really that where people are departing
in different directions on what they believe are what our
society means, like it is meant to be or not
meant to be, just the nature of our relationship to science.
There's just like all that, and it's and it because
it goes deeper than political ideology because you have liberal

(57:13):
people and conservatives who are kind of a whill be
on the same page with ship like this. So I'm
curious to see what the effects of propaganda plus this. Obviously,
this pandemic has put people under tremendous stress that it's
triggered this like I don't know, like slow motion, I
don't know, I don't know what to call it, but

(57:33):
it's it's it's a phenomenon that I'm still having trouble
like really getting my head around precisely what is happening.
I mean, I'm telling you it's like, I mean you
think Bill Gates is trying to depopulate In my mind,
I'm like, I feel like Earth is trying to depopulate
the Earth, right. It's being like a, yeah, Earth is
doing his best, but yeah, I think you're I think

(57:56):
you're hitting it on the head. Like a history nerd
in me like thinks back to like the Bronze Age
and like the sea people whoever the hell they were,
which really weren't just like one group of people, but
how it like effectively reshaped Earth, you know, and like
that that we were on this particular trajectory. I mean,

(58:18):
it was like the eleven seventy seven BC, like the
connectivity between Like it's so weird to go all the
way back to this, but I mean like there was
like effectively the ancient version of like the G seven.
There was like a global economy like the world then.
I mean, this is high, like this is the golden

(58:40):
age of what we consider antiquity. And then just and
then it just stopped, you know, like it just collapsed.
And a lot of that had to do a lot
of people don't know. It's what climate change. People was
running from their old places, and then everybody got sick
where they were getting copper. And when you got sick

(59:00):
where you was getting copper, then that just messed up
the whole global economy, like it just and that was
because of climate change, Like there was all these like
and then there was these different new diseases started traveling
because people got to connect, and it just over. It
just turned over Earth, and you know what I'm saying.
And so when I think about moments in history that
that has happened, it's like you're right, it's like you

(59:22):
you've never you've never had the where with all to
sit in the middle of it and go like, I
think we're in I think we're in the moment, you know,
and it feels like you're right, I feel like we're
in it. It's like what country in Europe hasn't collapsed? Right,
Like they've all collapsed. It's all happened, you know what
I'm saying. So you're just like, what's about It's coming up, guys,

(59:44):
it's gonna it's gonna happen, you know, or it's it's happened,
you know, And just a lot of there's just a
lot of good paint on the top of this you know,
funky car wreck that it still looks like, oh, I
think it's okay, and you're like, no, it's it's there's
a a lot of issues because there was a piece
written by someone who like this e R doctor who's

(01:00:04):
sort of saying like people need to actually talk about
how the medical system has actually collapsed here, you know,
like that's not being discussed enough. It's always like it's
on the brink or things like that. But from his
perspective as a doctor, he's like, when you have people
dying in the waiting room of preventable illnesses that aren't
COVID because just the way the entire system is set
up to not actually like try and treat people as

(01:00:27):
quickly as possible or as equitably as possible, that it
leads to these kinds of just terrible, terrible things. Like
someone who had like some kind of like paincreaties thing
going on and then he just died in the waiting
room because he couldn't get to the you know, medical
intervention that he needed because of the IC you being
overrun with COVID patients. And yeah, it's there's just a

(01:00:49):
lot to grasp at the moment. And I think that's
why I'm like, I don't know if it's happening, because
we were looking at so many different issues simultaneously. But
we're also seeing how people choose to address these issues too,
whether it's to completely ignore it or to kind of
ignore it acknowledge it and other people want to go
fully into it and try and do something. But it's yeah, yeah,

(01:01:12):
this is this has existed throughout many different phases. Official
there's just something different. I don't know, it just feels
very different. Yeah, it's like with all the doom and
gloom of just how weird this is and bizarre and
like of the idea of saying that there's a a
significant and countable number of society that would take a

(01:01:32):
horse d wermer rather than an approved medicine made for humans,
that would seriously that that's not a joke. They really
this is really where they are. Like the severity of
that coupled with the in my mind just again a
longer view of history and like that. But there is

(01:01:55):
an after that, you know, like like I said, like
like going back to like Europe as example, there's still
such thing as France, you know what I'm saying, Like
it's still exists, you know what I'm saying, There's still
such thing as Greece, Like these are still places you
can visit, but it it went through a thing that

(01:02:16):
you're like, I don't don't want to go through whatever
we're going through. But like it's like it's it just
feels like I just feel like we're playing Jenga here
and just yeah, it's gonna fall guys, Like you know
what I'm saying, It's yeah, it seems like from a
broad historical perspective, like this is it's like that you

(01:02:39):
mentioned the Enlightenment and like that was brought about by
the printing press, and like it feels like the Internet
is the opposite of the printing press, because where it's
like the print printing press taken to it's like most
logical illogical extreme, where it's like the printing press was
a engine that could run a certain at a certain rpm,

(01:03:00):
and the Internet is just like pushing it. And that's
that's not a cool take. It's a fucking like blood
Uni bomber take. But it really feels like there's we're
at a point where we need to figure out how
to regulate how information is consumed or I don't know,

(01:03:22):
I don't know what would going to be uniquely affected
by it in this country. I mean, granted there's anti
vax movements across the globe, but like you're especially like
there's this combination of American exceptionalism plus slowly decimated education
system over the last few decades where we're not creating
many critical thinking people and we're mapping that on top

(01:03:46):
of like this American identity, which is like fucking can't
tell me nothing about ship. Yeah, yeah, that is it's
it's it's affecting us in a very specific way. Yeah,
it's it's it's just a yeah. I'm like, you know, what,
what is the next thing after this? Like what happens
when this phase of whatever we're in runs its course?

(01:04:06):
Then what is born out of that? Are we going
to pick up the pieces and try and do something
different or is just going to accelerate towards whatever the
end path is for this? I don't know. I mean
the I I talked a lot about how the inventor
of the loudspeaker blamed himself for there as a hitler.
The you know, the Rwandan genocide. Radio stations played a

(01:04:28):
huge part in the spreading of that, and like we
haven't yet gotten We've gotten like small pockets around the
world of Internet caused versions of that. But I mean
that is like that's the danger, right mm hmm. But
I think we need to end Yeah, America seems like

(01:04:49):
one of the top candidates, which is fucking terrifying. Yeah,
and we got the most guns from there, you know,
And I you you'd hope that this is where people
begin to see what the problems aren't there and and
do what's right or trying to improve things. And I mean,
like I'm hardened by seeing things like you know that

(01:05:10):
like a lot of Gen Z kids are being more
and more interested in working in climate work, like as
like any other generation. So there's you know, things are moving,
but yeah, like everything is very much in flux in
a way that yeah, to be open to liken to yeah, yeah,
to be open to have that type of imagination to say, like,

(01:05:31):
I know that there's a world out there that's like possible,
and and I'm being real like flowery and poetic, but like, yeah,
I like to imagine a better future that like it
sometimes does require act almost all the time, like a
sort of divesting in the one we're in now, you
know what I'm saying, and just having to like look
at the bits and pieces of their that are like

(01:05:52):
what's worth saving? What do we need to just like
take a big old erase or two and just be
like all right, may let's just go ahead and start
over here, you know, and having the guts to do it,
you know, And and the type of again like imagination
to say that like it doesn't have to be like this,
it can be something else. I don't know what that
what else is, but I know it can be something else,

(01:06:15):
you know, And I feel like, you know, to self aggrandize.
I feel like that's where the poets and the artists
and now the podcasters come in. And you know, what
I'm saying is like help like spark that imagination collectively
about like what we can do to see this world better.
Mm hmm, well put all right? Well, proper as always

(01:06:39):
so amazing having you on t DZ find you. I'm
following prop hip hop dot com. We just released a
like a like a virtual performance. It's like an hour
long poetry and rap thing interview. There's some cocktail recipes
coffee on there. That's a proper at pop dot com.

(01:07:01):
That's also all of my Twitter and Instagram handles. Probably
a pop the Politics pod on network these are as,
Sophie says, my pod father's uh so I am and
your pod child, Yeah, yeah, you have politics pot yep
and is there By the way, I do want to
say that that for anybody who's lacking hope right now.

(01:07:23):
The conversation we just had that ended with beautiful things
said by both of you. Started as a conversation about
a trash sperm. So you know, there's always, there's always
so we can turn things around. Yet, is there a
tweet or some of the work of social media you've
been enjoying. Yes, yes, yes, And oh man, it's a

(01:07:49):
thread and I was hoping y'all wouldn't cover it, and
I'm so glad you haven't. Well maybe you have and
I missed it. But when the news came out that
l Curry was getting a divorce, I think we mentioned
it when we did not read through it. I'm gonna
read through this thing. This is the greatest so good

(01:08:15):
writing anywhere. Yeah. I was like, who is this guy?
Sign him up now? So so he quote tweets that
Delp delen Stone, your curry are getting divorced after thirty
plus years of marriage. And I'm just gonna read through it.
He say, this is who is a former NBA player
Steph Curry's mom? Who is you know, one of the

(01:08:37):
most beautiful people? Just yes, period. Yeah. And it's sad
to laugh about this because like it's it's very possible.
Steph listens to the show, you know, and like, you know,
it's like you never want to make a mockery about
somebody's parents divorcing, and this threat is undeniably brilliant. Yes,

(01:09:02):
so he says to his brother's name, Solomon Missouri. That's
his ap mentioned. He says. Let me tell y'all something.
You don't want to be out here. You think you
want to be out here because you're not out here.
Next threat, when you get out here, you ain't gonna
want to be out here no more. Last time you

(01:09:22):
was out here, out here was different. You think something better.
I come to let you know. The best you're gonna
get is what you already got. I don't know why
you don't want to do the work. You're gonna come
out here and you ain't gonna like it. All they
do is start a podcast to talk about plate fixing

(01:09:46):
fourteen minutes, fourteen minutes and be it out here. You're
gonna start saying, these females, if you can make your work,
do so. You don't want to be out here. Learning
TikTok dance is and falling off of milk crates. Love
the wife of your youths They wore but listen, but

(01:10:09):
they wore round. Now you better pray about coming out here.
You figure's a game to you in the middle of
six k people in a penny and she she pointing
her finger at you, wrapping all of something flow Milly
lyrics you don't like Do you like to mirrick? Do

(01:10:30):
you like to marry charcoal ice cream? You better learn
to like it. I'm not even dead, y'all. You know
it goes on. You don't know nothing about sneaky link.
Now you're knocking on the door something twenty two year
old with three roommates because she got a side piece.

(01:10:50):
You're gonna be wearing hotty t shirt by Thanksgiving. You
better ask your wife to forgive you. You better go
listen to plimonade and pray about it. You don't got
the cholesterol to be out here. You're not eating. They're
not eating butter pecan. No more Blue bell ain't even
out here. You're gonna be chasing sealis with red Bull.

(01:11:13):
You know what the group chat is. You better learned
because you FeTNA be the subject. You know how to
make a mimosa too low. It's sixty crab leg ice
coffee and ten percent bait pin. But love. Wherever we're wrong,
go back and make it right. They're pegging out here.

(01:11:37):
They I'm trying. I'm not trying to scare you. I'm
trying to prepare you. These people are the children of
Rihanna bored in the fires of chaos. Bro Okay, it's
two more, he says. He's say you're ready to leave
your wife for thirty years until you wake up and
your body surrounded by rose quartz and moon water. Oh lord,

(01:12:02):
my message it's simple, Dale Curry, go home and be
a family man. Oh man, looks like these people are
six crab. They it out here, check it out here.
They say you're not ready. They was, They are the child.

(01:12:26):
They are the children of Rihanna, born in the fires
of chaos. This man beautifully, Yes, that's the one. I mean,
that was beautiful. Miles. Where can people find you and
as their tweet you've been enjoying? Yeah, find me Twitter,
Instagram at Miles of Gray. Also, the other podcasts would

(01:12:47):
be like ninety days check out four twenty day Fiancee
with Sophia, Alexandra and I So a couple of tweets
I liked. The first one is from Michael Benjamin at
m f Benji tweeted, some of you have huge I
have married parents vibes. I know that I get it right.

(01:13:09):
Environment right, You're like, why you're like a checked their
feet watch their parents are together on Christmas? Right? Yeah?
Exactly And then at Shelby the Clown tweeted, you're not
that dog's parents. That dog has parents that are also dogs,
and you took him away from them. Let's be real
love that sent to me. Yeah, let's see. Certified hater

(01:13:33):
boy tweeted, I can't with this little nas x. Back
in my day, rappers were hard like Tupac, who were
a nose ring and leather boostier and went to art
school for ballet. You can find me on Twitter at

(01:13:53):
Jack Underscore. O'Brien. You can find us on Twitter at
Daily Zite. Guys were at the Daily Zitegeist on Instagram,
and we have a Facebook fan page on a website
dailys like guys dot com where we post our episodes
and our footnote or link off to the information that
we talked about in today's episode, as well as a
song that we think you might enjoy. Miles, what are

(01:14:15):
we sending people to go listen to? Okay, So again,
just like I said yesterday, one of the best albums
that came out last week is that from Little Sims
from the UK, one of my favorite artists that I've
you know, I was slipped sleeping on for far too long.
Her new album is just fantastic. But this is a
track with a new track from her called Point and

(01:14:38):
Killed featuring Bong Jr. Like you know, this has like
really great just African rhythms but also in like the
and the vocal stylings are like super on. Point and again,
Little Sims just makes fantastic music and she's so solid
as an MC. So like when she starts rapping, you'renna like,
oh my god, that shows fucking fever. What's how did that?

(01:14:58):
How did that just go by me? So I'm gonna
just keep caping for Little Sims. Check out Little Sims
Point and Kill. Alright, go check that out. The Daily
Zai guys, the production of our Heart Radio. For more
podcasts for my heart Radio, visit the I Heart Radio app,
Apple podcast, or wherever you listen to your favorite shows.
That is going to do it for us this morning,
but we are back this afternoon to tell you what's

(01:15:19):
trending and we'll talk to you all that I

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