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November 21, 2024 • 104 mins
Unleash the Right Wing's Victory in the Culture War! In this pivotal episode of RMTS 161, we navigate through the battlefields of today's cultural landscape, showcasing how the right wing has claimed victory in various fronts. 🎯 What's on the Agenda: Elon Musk vs. Twitch: Explore the legal showdown where Elon Musk takes on Twitch, turning the streaming platform into his personal legal playground. Trump's Cabinet Picks: Dive into Trump's latest cabinet selections, analyzing how these choices could redefine the political chessboard. The Cosco Guys: This humble family, may actually have a very big problem on their hands.... Booom! 💥 Special Offer: Gfuel Partner – Use code RMTS at checkout for 20% off to fuel your intellectual battles! 👉 Subscribe & Engage: Tune in for sharp commentary, witty analysis, and discussions that might just shift your perspective. Don't forget to like, share, and subscribe for more cultural warfare insights! 💬 Join the Debate: Ever faced an ideological skirmish at a dinner party or a family gathering? Share your stories or your take on these topics in the comments below. 🔗 Stay Connected: For daily doses of political wit and cultural commentary, follow @HotloadsZac and @verliswolf on X. #RightWing #CultureWar #ElonMusk #Twitch #TrumpCabinet #Cosco #RMTS #PoliticalDebate Just remember, in the grand theatre of life, everyone's got a role to play, even if it's just arguing over the last bulk pack of toilet paper at Cosco.
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Transcript

Episode Transcript

Available transcripts are automatically generated. Complete accuracy is not guaranteed.
Speaker 1 (00:00):
If you know fifty homeless people that bought together and
was like, Okay, we're gonna build this plot of land
and it's like just a fucking abandoned lot in the
middle of a city, and they're like, hey, we don't
have much, but this is our shithole. We bought this
for ten thousand dollars and pulled together the money that
they panhandled for and then they just built shit out

(00:20):
of like the scraps that they find everywhere. I would
applaud it. Yeah, that'd be very fucking cool.

Speaker 2 (00:26):
That'd be really cool.

Speaker 1 (00:27):
But no, that's not what they're doing.

Speaker 2 (00:29):
Yeah, they waste it on drugs and then steal everything
and then they build their sense city on someone else's land.

Speaker 3 (00:35):
Society, how's it going, everybody?

Speaker 1 (00:48):
Holy shit, it's been fucking a while.

Speaker 2 (00:51):
Not really. The election was two weeks ago.

Speaker 1 (00:54):
It feels like it's been forever. Man, it really doesn't.
And I don't necessarily know exactly why it feels like
it's been forever, but it feels like it has.

Speaker 2 (01:02):
I've just still been working myself to death with the
New World, and then Pokemon Go or not Pokemon Go,
Pokemon's TCG pocket had to come out, so I'd played
two video games at once, but at least Trump.

Speaker 1 (01:12):
Won, Yeah, exactly. And the ship that Trump is doing
is doing so yeah shit, Actually I thoroughly love it.

Speaker 2 (01:20):
But yeah, it's it's all good stuff, and it's just like, yeah,
he's he's actually doing like that. And the lay guy thing,
which is like tear it all down, rebuild it. The
shit doesn't work. Everyone agrees unless you're just like completely
cooked and can't agree with the thing Trump does.

Speaker 1 (01:34):
And the crazy thing is is, if you look back,
you know, ten to fifteen years, anti establishment people were
asking for exactly this exactly.

Speaker 2 (01:43):
Now parties have flipped.

Speaker 1 (01:45):
Yeah, they flipped again, and it makes no fucking sense.
We are now the party of the working man and
the people that just don't want to deal with shit anymore.
That was the Democrat party, you know when Obama got
put in office, because that was a retaliatory pick.

Speaker 2 (01:57):
Libertarians.

Speaker 1 (01:58):
Yeah, it's it's so interesting. The big one that I
saw is not even like Elon or anything else. I
kind of expected them. But our boy, Brandon her Era
has come up as one of the top few choices
for the ATF, which is absolutely insane.

Speaker 2 (02:16):
Well, is he actually getting consideration. I've just been seeing
him be like hey pick me, pick me, and a
lot of people agreeing with that.

Speaker 1 (02:22):
I don't voting.

Speaker 2 (02:24):
Yeah, I don't know.

Speaker 1 (02:24):
If Make America Healthy Again website, he's one of the
top few choices, and if they're doing voting, obviously you
know he has millions of fans that will absolutely just
push him.

Speaker 2 (02:36):
Yeah. Well, I think the biggest thing that proves the
parties have flipped is that Republicans are the ones wanting
to get fat and seed oils out of our food,
Whereas you know, like two decades ago, the whole like
banning soda or the soda sugar tax and stuff, that
was like the biggest thing Republicans were against. And now
it's like you have Democrats supporting and defending seed oils

(02:58):
and fats. It's I don't understand.

Speaker 1 (03:02):
I saw some I don't remember. I think it was
you sent it to me. Yeah, they're trying to Yeah,
I can actually grab that.

Speaker 2 (03:09):
It's probably like the most recent thing in the discord
chat as well.

Speaker 1 (03:12):
Yes, what you gonna call it? That ship is fucking crazy. No,
but it's not.

Speaker 2 (03:16):
I got it though, That's what I mean. Like I
was talking to my Trump deranged friend, and he was
actually defending seed oils. And he says, I'm the one
in the colt listening to a conspiracy theory that seed
oil is a bad for you. I'm like my entire life,
all thirty one of my years, I've been told seed
oyles are bad for me. And now that I'm waking

(03:37):
up because the Conservative Party is in a huge, big
health fitness movement. But because that started with Joe Rogan,
it's all bad. Seed oil is good. Now, drink the
raw oil because it's healthy.

Speaker 1 (03:47):
This one, this one's crazy. Mister Kennedy has singles as
an example of a product with too many artificial ingredients,
questioning why the Canadian version has fewer than the US version,
But he was wrong. The ingredient was is roughly the same,
although Canada has natural coloring made from blueberries and carrots,
while the US product contains red dye forty yellow five

(04:08):
and blue one as BHD, a lad made chemical that
is used for freshness according to the ingredient label, isn't
BHD Also the thing that's in mountain dew that bans
it most places.

Speaker 2 (04:21):
I don't care what it is, just the absurdity of
saying RFK is wrong for saying there's artificial ingredients and
fruit loops and then listing artificial ingredients, especially carcinogens like
the dyes that people again, leftists the entire time over
the last twenty years have just been like, yo, we
need to get these dyes out of here. They cause cancer.

Speaker 1 (04:42):
And then guys that not only cause cancer but are
linked to things like autism, ADHD, hyperactivity, and children conspiracy theorists.
You're like, it's fucking insane. Like I remember when I
was a kid like ten, ten to fifteen years old
and everything was okay. The anti anti vax people were

(05:03):
absolutely insane because you know, they had a little bit
of common sense with what they were saying, but connecting
all of the dots and it's like, okay, so they
weren't as crazy as we thought they were because they
were actually saying something that was valuable. Now we also
have a massive problem because we're actually fighting against what
the hell was going on.

Speaker 2 (05:22):
Well, it's because it's been twenty years of this. It's like,
oh wait, a second autism is like a thousand times
more common. Now, maybe we should take a look at
all of this stuff again.

Speaker 1 (05:32):
Rough estimate on the numbers, it's about Back in the
eighties nineties, it was one in ten thousand or one
in twenty thousand, and now it's one in thirty five.

Speaker 2 (05:44):
I've refuse to believe that one in thirty five number,
but I know it's what people are saying, and it's
probably close to true. Like there's one in every classroom
now instead of one in every school.

Speaker 1 (05:55):
Well, the problem is is what autism actually is. Autism
isn't a diagnosable thing.

Speaker 2 (06:00):
Yeah, we talked about this with the umbrella, but it
seems like if you pump a developing child with chemicals,
they become belligerent. Who would have guessed?

Speaker 1 (06:11):
Well, you see it even when you look at people
that consume soda or people that consume their real sugar soda.
You know what I'm saying, Like there's such a difference
in transparency there that it's weird to genuinely see the
difference because there is a big difference. There's a big
fucking difference in between type one and type two people,
and it's changing, it's changing in the moment as we speak.

Speaker 2 (06:32):
M hm. But just like the lefts incapability of accepting reality,
in fact, just because the conservative says it, like, I
think we've won the culture war if we have them
taking shots of seed oil to protest, and that's actually
what they're doing on TikTok. Now that's the trend. Whe
It's like, see, seed oils aren't bad for you, And
it's like that's the only thing I've been told. What
happened to your hippie olive oil shit that we've been

(06:53):
hearing about for the last decade, Yeah, olive oil is
better for you. Instead now it's like, now rape seed's
good as like some kind of fat that you need.
But it's like, no, we're getting fat everywhere. That's the
problem is that all of our food is poisoned. That
it's not like, oh, I can just avoid the seed
oils if I think they're bad. It's like they are
bad objectively and grab any label, like right here there,

(07:16):
peanut butter. I was like, yo, this is I live.
I live off peanut butter because I do like that
just thing, you know, two spoons a day and that's
four hundred calories. This is a meal right there. And
it's like, all right, what's in peanut butter, vegetable oils,
rape seed, cotton seed, soybean so oh, hydrogenated, Yeah, it's

(07:36):
my peanut butter is hydrogenated oil blend. Why we're dying.

Speaker 1 (07:42):
The weird one that I remember, probably like ten years ago,
and I don't remember exactly what it was before this,
if it was just fried and vegetable oil or whatever,
but the chips changed y oh yeah, from some sort
of oil to all being sunflower oil and lays lead
the charge and changing all of it. And I don't
think exactly. I think it was health wise though cheap. Oh,

(08:07):
it's cheaper.

Speaker 2 (08:08):
I don't even think it's for health. It seems like
they move to the cheaper, shittier alternative.

Speaker 1 (08:13):
Yeah.

Speaker 2 (08:13):
I think that's why everything tastes bad. Everything has cotton
hydrogen a cotton seed and vegetable oil in it, and
now everything tastes bad. I think that even applies to
the candy bars, Like why does my uh butterfinger taste horrible? Now,
that's because it's all fat. It's all the ship that
needs to be banned and then left this are going, Nah,
you guys are crazy conspiracy theories. He's a completely healthy

(08:34):
for you. As they inflate to three hundred pounds and
all their children are autistic.

Speaker 1 (08:40):
Okay, so this might actually make sense why they changed it. Then,
so lay switched to sunflower oil to significantly reduce the
amount of saturated fats in their chips. Okay, I understand.

Speaker 2 (08:49):
Saturated fats are the good ones, right, trans fats are
the bad ones.

Speaker 1 (08:54):
I don't. I think on trans fat is absolutely horrible, Like, yeah,
the worst one. But the option opted for heart healthy
oil with higher levels of monos unsaturated which is shit
because that's the fake and poly unsaturated fats, which is
also fake and considered beneficial for cholesterol levels while maintaining
the taste of the product.

Speaker 2 (09:15):
Yeah, and it turns out like the whole fat studies
and all that's just wrong anyways, So it's like sun
flower is bad. I think canola oil is the best
one for like the bad oils, and then like you
want olive oil, canola oil, then maybe sunflowers third, But
everything's bad. It has oil that doesn't need.

Speaker 1 (09:32):
Yeah, it's just it's it's fucking weird. It's really weird.

Speaker 2 (09:35):
And Democrats and Democrats during the Obama era, that's all
they ever talked about was getting rid of seed oils.
And now and now we say it and they hate us.
Trump's arrangement is wild. But I think that's that's how
we know we won the culture war when we've got
them to reject reality that hard. And now the whole
fluoride thing, like, oh, Alex Jones said, florid, Therefore it's

(09:59):
automatically good fluoride. We need to just keep pumping it everywhere,
even though it's like, but it's a completely unnecessary mineral.
We do not need it for survival. Just brush your
fucking teeth and use mouth wash. You don't need fluoride.

Speaker 1 (10:11):
Yeah. No, And we even had that entire conversation back
a couple months ago where like it completely degrades a
lot of the things that we're looking at. Yes, it
increases fucking oral health, but it causes fucked up, weird
shit to happen with your brain.

Speaker 2 (10:28):
IQ is down. Like that's the thing where it's like
IQ is down like five points from just the natural
one milligram per leader. Is it one milligram per leader
a fluoride in the water supply.

Speaker 1 (10:41):
Right now something like that?

Speaker 2 (10:43):
Yeah, it's it's it's a very high amount. Or maybe yeah,
it's it's a very high amount. And like that amount
the default amount they're putting in the water is lowering
IQ by five points and pregnant women.

Speaker 1 (10:54):
I'd love to see the difference in between people that
are on wells that do not get fluoride and then
people that are on city water that do.

Speaker 2 (11:02):
Well. That's what these tests do because it's like, oh,
areas that just have less fluoride compared to ones that
have more. You do the study, it's like, Wow, their
kids actually just plummet in IQ.

Speaker 1 (11:12):
It's it's so fucking interesting because yeah, you know, back
in the day, we were looking at the Republicans being
the educated ones, like the ones that have college degrees,
the ones that start businesses and everything else, because it's logical.
Now we're seeing the people that are in school are Democrats,
but at the same time they might be the ones
with lower IQ because of things like that.

Speaker 2 (11:33):
That's actually already proven that the entry level for college degrees,
like undergrad IQ has fallen from like one ten to
one hundred. So now every average idiot, well, one hundred
IQ eight that great and once you go blow then
you're unsalvagable. So like yeah, like so now like people
with ninety to one hundred IQ are going to college,

(11:53):
getting C grades and then coming out with a degree
and pretending they're smarter than everyone. That's actually like literally
happening the amount the barrier of IQ has lowered for undergrads,
and that's because the Democrats started flooding in.

Speaker 1 (12:05):
It's wild and as stupid as it sounds, both of
us could go to college right now and literally do
the half asked work and not give a fucking continue,
not changing anything we're doing, just show up and put
in a little bit of effort to finish it, and
we would still have at minimum the same grade.

Speaker 2 (12:24):
Say do exactly like, not not even try, not even
learn anything. And that's another thing like I've been trying
to show to my TDS friends where it's like, hey,
here's a Reddit post from five years ago before this
became a culturally charged topic about people saying like I
don't feel like I learned anything. It's like, cause that's
no one learns anything. You either go to university getting doctrinated,
or you don't get any life skills and then you

(12:44):
want your degree refunded by the government because you fucked up.
And I think that also takes low IQ to get
into or if you just listen to your guidance counselor,
and everyone's saying, just go to college. Why just go?
That's no inner monologue. Shit, that's that sub ninety IQ
that you don't have any abstraction. You can't for yourself.
I skipped college because I went. But if I use
those four years to just work eighty hours a week,

(13:05):
I can come out of that with tens of thousands
of dollars and either buy a house for cheaper rent,
or I can start a business. Or you just go
to trade school. Go to trade school, get a six
thousand dollars certification, become an electrician, fifty k on the start.

Speaker 1 (13:17):
Boom, exactly like it's and you can do that in
high school.

Speaker 2 (13:21):
Yeah, Like I got a year of vocation for free.
I had game design, completely pissed it away, even though
it kind of helped with like understanding gaming for YouTube.
But you anyone can do it. And then the Democrats
turn around and they go, look at you, dumb Republicans.
We're more educated. It's like, what's your basis for education?
More degrees? So the stupid people spending one hundred thousand

(13:42):
dollars and then asking for it to be forgiven with
the c average. They're the ones calling the person that
went to trade school started a business and now employs
five people and makes a million dollars a year the
stupid ones because they don't have a college degree, just arbitrarily.

Speaker 1 (13:57):
And it's stupid as it sounds. And I don't know
if this is anecdotal or not, but if there was
kids that they couldn't teach in normal school, they pushed
them through the trade school programs. There was special schooling
there ye all the high school students that couldn't pass
normal high school. So they legitimately pushed the kids that
couldn't do through votech but they couldn't actually get the

(14:19):
people that you know, had a brain in their head
actually to do the things that they needed to do.
You guys said, you guys were the smart ones. You
guys said that everything was going to be okay if
you guys got what you guys wanted. Guess what now
the people like AOC and everything else are going through
and actually withdrawing the woke virus shit, the the woke

(14:42):
shit that they were trading portraying everywhere they're abandoned.

Speaker 2 (14:47):
That's because there's just a grift. The entire thing also
if we want to talk about education, you look at
Democrat cities which have like incredibly high dropout rates and stuff.
So it's like, oh, inner cities perform worse in school,
they don't even make it to college. But if you
just go by the raw numbers of college graduates or
percentages or whatever, it's like Democrats when it's like, bro,

(15:08):
you are the most unscientific, uneducated, just impossible to comprehend
reality group right now, and it is getting frustrating.

Speaker 1 (15:17):
Is the hardest thing to judge. And I will be
one hundred percent on that entire argument, you know what
I'm saying. That's been my argument this entire time. There's
so many kids that just drop out because their mom
was a single momb or their dad was a single dad,
and they're like, oh, well, I have to provide for
this family, So they go deal drugs, they go work
at a fucking bodega or a fucking corner store and

(15:39):
just try and make ends meet. But yet, guys, we're
the ones who are failing them. Our government has failed
them for the past thirty years. Because that's what when
you hear the number one pick of the draft, he
doesn't thank his dad. He normally just says thank you mama,
thank you mama for bringing me and I thank god
that's it.

Speaker 2 (15:59):
Yep, coach for giving me a chance, thank you for
giving me the degree so I could make it into
the collegiate program. Yeah like that shit. It's the community
focus that drives it, I know. But that's also like
that's been the Republican position for decades, where it's like, hey,
we need to clean up the inner cities, we need
to find out what the problem is, and we need
to get these people on the right track. Democratics say

(16:21):
not just throw a welfare on them. They'll figure it out,
and then that doesn't work.

Speaker 1 (16:25):
Even in my experience, like living in a small city,
dealing with that shit from time to time and being
able to see that shit firsthand, there's a lot of
things that you can genuinely realize. I was one of
those kids that's like, I thank my mama for everything
my mama gets. First thing, I protect my mom, regardless
of what happens and what's going on and what words

(16:46):
I have to say to protect her. My job is
to protect her. No it's not. It should have been
my stepdad's job to protect her. It should have been
my dad's job to protect her. Should have been her
dad's job to protect her. That's whose job it is,
not her son.

Speaker 2 (17:02):
Yeah, you get a lot of weird social dynamics when
that happens, where like the son becomes the mom's best
friend and then almost gets into like that protective boyfriend
roll over it.

Speaker 1 (17:13):
And it's completely destroying the way families work. Because now
if a stepdad goes into that situation, what happens. You
got a kid that's protective over the mother. He steps
out of line once, then a fistfight happens in between
her kid and him. He's out on the street. Now.
It's insane. Yeah, the shit that has gone on is

(17:36):
fucking insane.

Speaker 2 (17:37):
And as they've seen from the last twelve out of
sixteen years being Democrat ruled, whatever they're doing ain't working.
Given a billion dollars to immigrants doesn't help the people
that need it, the citizens in the cities that need
it the most. And then you say that, it's like, oh,
you're just racist.

Speaker 1 (17:51):
Honestly stupid idea maybe absolutely, but fucking stupid idea. But
if we're going to get billions of dollars to whether
we're talking about Ukraine, whether we're talking about the immigrants
that we're moving here or whatever, why why not try
try for a second and give that money to the

(18:13):
people that are dealing with poverty. Does it fix the problem?
Absolutely not. But we're already gonna have an inflation problem
because we're fucking printing money and giving it to everybody anyway.

Speaker 2 (18:22):
Well, it goes back to the fingerpaints that we talked
about a couple episodes ago. Because Democrats want to help everyone,
They spread their virtue across the world, and a rock
and a tree on the other side of the world
is as valuable as their own community to them, because
everything must be perfect and utopic, even the the homicidal
maniac from Venezuela that gets dropped out here and then

(18:45):
lost in the system. They have as much rights and
as much freedom to be here as someone actually needs
it as a natural born citizen two Democrats. I've had
literally these conversations with my TDS friends where I was like, Hey,
did you see that thing where Biden Mistration has thirty
five thousand convicted murderers in this country right now from
foreign countries, And he's like, well, we can't trust their

(19:06):
criminal system. They belong here, my brain fucking melts it
out of my head.

Speaker 1 (19:11):
The crazy part about that is like they take the
Trump sound by they're not sending their best or sending
their worst. They're emptying their asylums and prisons into our country.
It's like he is speaking hyperbole, he's being exaggerative.

Speaker 2 (19:24):
He's not that's actually happening.

Speaker 1 (19:26):
No, No, I agree with it. I'm not disagreeing with it.
But even if he's speaking exaggeratively as a way to
sell what he's saying, like oh, they're eating cats and dogs,
they did, he's being exaggerative to get the fucking point
across to the people who will refuse to listen to
what he's saying.

Speaker 2 (19:42):
Well, the crazy thing is it starts out as exaggerative
and then people dig and they go, oh my god,
he was like.

Speaker 1 (19:47):
And then it meets the right what he's saying.

Speaker 2 (19:49):
Yeah, because he's like, oh, they're I'm saying the asylums.
It's like, okay, Trump, even as a maga person, that's
you might be just trying to drum up your base
a little much. And then the thing comes out like
two hundred thousand violent criminals or in this country as
illegals right now, It's like he was right exactly.

Speaker 1 (20:05):
And that's that's why I think some people have a
hard time understanding or comprehending exactly what he's saying because
he is being exaggerative. Can you people just fucking understand
that he's an exaggerative person, He's a he's a dude.

Speaker 2 (20:17):
That No, that means Trump live seven times during the debate.

Speaker 1 (20:22):
Yeah, No, that's not how things work. Guess how many
things were actually verified? Almost all of them m m.

Speaker 2 (20:28):
And then Kamala was the want to fight him out
every point.

Speaker 1 (20:31):
Yeah, and it's just so weird, like and honestly, I
will call Trump out for the bad things. I absolutely will.
He is not going to be a person that's able
to get across the line support if there's somebody who
did not support him at all, They're not going to
fucking jump jump on the boat and be like, hey,
let's go unless he shows something, Unless he does something
that drastically impacts things, and then they have a question

(20:53):
in their mind if they're going to understand and accept
it or not.

Speaker 2 (20:56):
I mean, that should have happened twenty sixteen, but it didn't,
where everyone was like, I'm getting more money back, My
taxes are better, everything's affordable. We can go on vacation
this year under Trump, and then they still just can't
accept like, oh, but that's because Obama's administration carried over
and we had good momentum from his policies. It's like, no,
this is all of Trump's doing. And he was also

(21:17):
doing a lot of work for the inner cities and
trying to reduce the need of welfare to ontol like
poor communities. He actually has policies for that. Biden did nothing.

Speaker 1 (21:27):
So if you look at twenty twenty one, and I'll
compare it to twenty twenty one, because I started this job,
the job that I'm doing now, you have PK, you
have online work and stuff like that, which was all
of my inca other than my workers' com stuff from
my neck. I made more that year. Well, I made
less that year and got more back than I did

(21:47):
for the past three years that I was working. It
was around six to seven K before Trump was in office.
After Trump was in office and his tax things hit
in nineteen twenty and twenty one, you have an increase
by about twenty percent. Just yeah, with the kid's tax credits,
just with the availability of what those things do.

Speaker 2 (22:09):
And everyone was saying that, but then it's just depending
on your level of derangement where it's like thanks Obama
in twenty nineteen.

Speaker 1 (22:18):
Like, Okay, if you want to give Obama credit for that,
I understand he might have a part in it, but
you also have to give Trump, who signed into legislation
so many of those tax cuts and increase in that
funding to get also.

Speaker 2 (22:32):
The China tariffs, just strengthening our economy like he did
so much. While Biden is in Hawaii and we have
no idea what's going on or kamal as in Hawaii,
Biden's in the Amazon. No one's been running this country
for the last two and a half years.

Speaker 1 (22:44):
Oh my god, that fucking video of Biden in the Amazon.
Cut to it, Zach, You're you're good at this. When
I fucking saw that, I was like, why the fuck
is there nobody behind him? Why the where the fuck
do you go? Did you just walk off into the
fucking jungle? Is this gonna be like a Logan Paul
thing where he we just stumble into the fucking jungle
and see Joe fucking hanging there by an anaconda? Like

(23:06):
what the fuck is going on, because that's not fucking okay.
You just let a senile guy walk into the jungle
and he has no fucking idea where he is, and
he's the wrong color to be there. We have big
problems now.

Speaker 2 (23:18):
Yeah, you wouldn't let your like if your grandpa was
in his shape, you wouldn't let him alone at Walmart.
M Yeah, like the entire things fucked like somehow, it's
still just everything is Trump bad and you look at
his appointments. The appointments are straight fire.

Speaker 1 (23:38):
Honestly, and I don't know if this is just what
he kind of selling me on it. The only one
that I don't fully agree with is Matt Gates. I
don't understand it. I like Gates too, but if what
he is accused of happened, I understand why you probably
shouldn't nominate him. I like him as a person, though.

Speaker 2 (23:56):
It's all the fake accusations. We've seen so much like
that dismissed, and I think someone on the View, like
on the View one the co host called him like
a pedo, and then what happened was they had to
make a legal retraction, like what p Goldberg was like,
we have a legal note before we cut to the
commercial break because their lawyers shot a brick when they

(24:17):
went off on like the allegations, and then it was
like Matt Gates's team has instructed us that everything was
like completely exonerated, and we need to remind people that
he is innocent.

Speaker 1 (24:27):
And that's exactly how it should be. Like the proof
of guilt or proof of innocence should be the thing
that fucking matters. It just should. That's why I completely
agree with that. But it was not talked about at
the same level as the allegation, and that's where the
problem is.

Speaker 2 (24:45):
Yeah, and that's why you think, like, oh, maybe Gates
did it. And then it's like I didn't even know.
It was like dropped gone, there's nothing lingering anymore.

Speaker 1 (24:54):
Like and that one, to me is the hardest one.
And I like Gates, I genuinely know.

Speaker 2 (24:59):
I love him. On Temple Well, he's like he's dialed in.
He's like an even more crazy Vance.

Speaker 1 (25:04):
Oh I love Vance.

Speaker 2 (25:05):
Oh I don't know. Yeah, every time Vance talks, I'm
more in love with him too. Like he I found
out about the whole parole program and we were talking
about it, and then he brought it up at the debate,
I'm like, got it. This is my man, love him.

Speaker 1 (25:18):
I think I think Vance goes to president next time.

Speaker 2 (25:22):
Oh, he's got this.

Speaker 1 (25:22):
We run. The question is is we have two picks
for VP. We have two very very very good picks
for VP. Do we give him the Trump rub again
and it's Don Junior? Or does it go Vivike.

Speaker 2 (25:38):
I was thinking Tulsi Vivic as like the Advance VPS.
I would be happy with like Tulci being the first
one president.

Speaker 1 (25:45):
Oh, I think I would too. But it's interesting the
allegations that are unhurt too.

Speaker 2 (25:52):
I haven't even heard of that. I guess this is
we've already said allegations. We're not like crazy trying to
find anything.

Speaker 1 (25:59):
It's like, okay, let make sure she's clean, like supposedly
she's talking about Russian talking points and everything else. And
it's iffy because how many people now have come out
and said, oh, yeah, I was receiving that money. It's
hard not to be like, yeah, well, you know, everybody
kind of.

Speaker 2 (26:15):
Does well that whole like Russian funding thing. If you
just look into it, it's like it's it's just so
many shell corporations that like no one's taking money from
Russia knowing it's from Russia.

Speaker 1 (26:28):
I'll say, a crazy thing. Fucking crazy and off the wall.
If Russia came to us and was like, we'll pay
you two thousand dollars an episode, guess what, there wouldn't
be a fucking missing episode ever. You know what I'm saying, Like,
if you're going to provide monetary value to create something,
regardless of what it is, and it's still within your wheelhouse,

(26:48):
why aren't we shitting on anybody? This is the same
shit that happened when stuff started becoming a sponsor to
people when this or that. Like, if you're not dictating
what the content is, then there is zero reason for
them to be like, oh, well they're Russian plans. That's
me being honest about it.

Speaker 2 (27:04):
Well, that's what I'm like trying to think about. It's like,
I think it's the same rule as any sponsor. If
a sponsor makes you break like your moral code or
what you want to say, then like if you if
you just go for the money, then that's what makes
you bad. But they're just like, hey, we like what
you're doing. Here, here's some money. I'm like, okay, I
mean that's not going to influence anything. I'm not going

(27:25):
to go pro Russia, and we're still going to be
critical when it comes up. But also like and it's
just so, And then you have to think about the propaganda,
because the left is so heavily propaganda as It's like, yes,
Russia bad for invading, I know, but I'm not trying
to like unravel it because somehow throughout the entire chain
of history, Communism isn't seen as bad as Nazis. It's

(27:47):
like wait a second, no, no, no, it's it's we
need to flip that back.

Speaker 1 (27:54):
Even crazier parties think of the money that was going
to Democrats and Facebook and everything else from not only
our government. But I assume assumption here.

Speaker 2 (28:06):
China definitely China, no assumption.

Speaker 1 (28:08):
You know what I'm saying, Like we see it even
with people like Lebron James or John Tina, they received
money in order to speak positively about them in the
problems with Taiwan.

Speaker 2 (28:20):
Mm hmm, that's that's crazy. There they are enslaving an
entire country and we're the one and Russia is the
bad one in the propaganda war.

Speaker 1 (28:31):
So positive on the Russia's side. Putin came out today
and says they will talk openly about a ceasefire as
long as Trump leads the conversation.

Speaker 2 (28:43):
Yeah, I mean that was like actually day one, he
was like, talk to Putin, We're getting Zelenski in. We're
gonna figure this out after like the nominations, Like duh, yeah.

Speaker 1 (28:53):
Oh.

Speaker 2 (28:54):
That was another thing about the derangement where it's like
that that whole list of things that happened in like
the first forty eight hours where it's like he appointed
that one woman so misogyny debunked, He's already restoring peace.
All the terrorist groups just immediately folded. And then I
was just like, okay, so why is Trump bad? He
got like the aura of Trump is so powerful that

(29:14):
like the world nature is healing and the world is
becoming better and he's and then he just couldn't take it.
He's like, Oh, all it proves is the Russian docket
was right or some shit. It's like that's what I mean,
Like that's since I think the problem is we have
to unwind the last twenty years of the culture War
being dominated by leftists because of the power of social
media and stuff propagandizing them, where we lost track of

(29:36):
like how things are and then also our institutions that
remember back in twenty thirteen, we had people like Sargon
of a Cat talk about how we were getting indoctrinated
through our education system. And then that's the whole thing
that goes back to what was that one guy.

Speaker 1 (29:52):
It even goes to things like your media. You have
Nickelodeon with all of the essay allegations that they dealt with, Yeah,
all of the inappropriate things they had our shows. You
have Disney Channel with the same thing, like all of
all of the children that are adults now have seen
things that are absolutely not acceptable in any circumstances, even
on like Super super super Little Kid. Shit.

Speaker 2 (30:16):
Yeah, well, who was that one Russian that was talking
about like the playbook for taking over our culture and
like the exactly.

Speaker 1 (30:26):
What you're talking about, but I can't remember his name either.

Speaker 2 (30:29):
Yeah, and then it's like, oh, you just listen to that,
and that should like be the anti propaganda where it's
like Russia is telling the Democrats exactly how they convinced
them to hate America, and then weird stuff just kind
of happened.

Speaker 1 (30:44):
Communists told us how communists hate America and how exactly
it works, and then we have people that are leading
the Democrat Party that are communists using the same exact
rhetoric as a way through indoctrinate the youth.

Speaker 2 (30:57):
Again on his jury, Besmanov, That's why I thought, I
was like Besmanov that I didn't want to confuse that something.
Whatever Ury Besmanov said about it, it was like the.

Speaker 1 (31:08):
Biggest and the biggest and craziest thing that absolutely blew
my mind was the fascist comments. Was for the past
four or five months, we've heard Trump is a Nazi,
Trump is hot Hitler, Trump is a Nazi, Trump is fascist,
and that's not fucking okay.

Speaker 2 (31:28):
Well now they're all undoing it. They're just like it
was kind of like when Kamala jabbed at Joe Biden.
They were just like it was just the debate. That's
just how you talk. It's like, oh my god, the
entire party is just liars and hate. And then whenever
it gets like whenever it turns against them, they just go,
we were just playing. You know, you just got a
banter like that.

Speaker 1 (31:47):
Like regardless of if you're give me no shirt down
the street or somebody who's in the top of the
Democrat Party, you cannot do that. You cannot demonize somebody
and make them into this big, crazy, negative force in
your mind that you cannot accept. And that's exactly what
you guys complained about in twenty sixteen and twenty twenty.

(32:11):
You guys said, Oh, I couldn't, I couldn't agree with Trump.
He's not my president because Hillary. Guess what, people saw
Hillary just as bad as people see Trump currently. Guys,
if we keep going down this path, if we keep
saying that this person's hitler, this person's a mad man. Guys,
they showed you this when Bush went to war. They
showed you this when we got gig Daffy out of

(32:34):
Egypt or Syria. You know what I'm saying, Like, we've
done this fifteen fucking times during just our lifetime. They're
doing the same thing again, over and over and over again.
And if you don't understand the game that is played,
you are going to get played by the game. Yeah.

Speaker 2 (32:50):
Now, I also going back to like the whole propaganda
thing we have. Oh yeah, like it's kind of fucked
up right now. She had like a rash on her tail. Yeah,
that's a kind of shame. Yeah, she got a rash
on her tail, comever chining it. Yeah, we can zoom
out if I got you. Yeah, she got a rash
on her tail and like a chunk of fur popped off,
so they had to shave it. She's fine, she just

(33:12):
needed to antibiotics. But like that shit's scary when they like,
because she's she's a hyper dog, Like, you aren't going
to be able to touch a husky's tail without them fucking
losing their shit. So they had to put her under
just to shave her tail and like clean it up
and see what's going on, make sure it wasn't like
really bad. Because I was like, I was like, look,
don't have to put her under. Just take a look

(33:34):
at her tail and give me in a box so
we could get out of here. They're like, now we
gotta do. And the scary thing is like, there's a
not a high chance, but a strangely high enough chance
that your dog just dies from the anesthetic. What what
do you guess, Like, what do you guess the odds
of like a dog dying from just going kot anesthesia?

Speaker 1 (33:55):
You're gonna say that it's obnoxiously higher than this, but
twenty five to thirty three percent.

Speaker 2 (34:00):
Oh no, it's definitely not that high, but like it's
one of those things where like you're thinking, oh, an
anomaly like one in ten thousand and one and fifty thousand,
that's just like a normal thing. Really, Yeah, I guess
that's for the comment section to because like you think, like, oh,
you just you know. Ever, people go out for surgery
all the time and they wake up what at ninety

(34:23):
nine hundred thousand out of a million of the time,
but with dogs, it's actually like a point two percent chance,
but there's one in five hundred.

Speaker 1 (34:30):
There's more to that with people actually, because there's so
many different medications they can use for it, because you
can be allergic to the main one, and if you're
allergic to the main one and don't know, there's a
chance you don't fucking wake up. Yeah, there's a chance
you're on event. There's a chance you go through all
of that shit.

Speaker 2 (34:46):
But it's still like just because you're very low. Yeah,
And like you'd imagine the for a dog, it's going
to be the same where it's like it should be
very low, Okay, you're just great well or something.

Speaker 1 (34:57):
The smaller something is, the more likely more you.

Speaker 2 (34:59):
Just out of props and also it's like a dog.
It's potentially or you would assume a less complex system
to just be like just knark out the dog and
then instead of having to like super duper put someone
over under so you can put do open heart surgery
on them, she just need to go to sleep.

Speaker 1 (35:16):
That's aren't my autism, Yeah, just not my autism at all.
But honestly, I would assume that they use relatively similar
in medication to put them down than they do to
put them to sleep. So I would assume that you know,
it gets.

Speaker 2 (35:28):
No, it's not that because well, what they do when
they put dog down is they put them to sleep
with that and then they just give them a lethal
something so they don't even feel it. They just get
tired and then they're dead. And that's going to be
very sad in a couple of years. But the thing is, like,
you think, okay, normal procedure to just like knock out
a dog to do whatever to them should be safer
than one in five hundred chance they die. Like one

(35:51):
in five hundred is right in that realm of I'm
unlucky enough for that to happen because my dog has
a rash on her tail so that freaked me out.

Speaker 1 (35:59):
But she can't back. I would shit myself too. Yeah,
and that's why like always something stupid like one in.

Speaker 2 (36:05):
Five hundred is if she didn't wake up. And this
was a couple of days ago. It's like I killed
my dog over a rash. It's not like a freak
like oh one in ten thousand, Damn, I got very unlucky.
It's a we didn't have to do this. That risk
is too high for my dog. But she's fine. And
that was just like a freak out thing. But going
back to the uh indoctrination with like Evergreen College, everyone

(36:26):
was talking about Evergreen College twenty fourteen. We're seeing it happening.
It's crazy. And then like at some point, because the
left has dominated the entire talking points because of social media,
it's it's gotten flips where it's like, oh, yeah, I
guess we're not allowed to talk about how communism is
objectively worse than fascism, but no, and Communis are allowed

(36:47):
to run around and preach. But if you like, if
you see anyone try to be a supremacist online, they
get shut down by everyone, like whenever they do those
Nazi rallies all the comments are Feds, like, get these
feds out of here. Look at that their flags are
fresh store bots still have the creases in them. We
don't accept you. But the community starts talking on social
media and the left just praises them. We need to

(37:07):
flip that ship around. Well, actually not flip it because like, no,
no acceptance for either group.

Speaker 1 (37:11):
How about that both of them were the fucking same. Yeah,
and you see and you see it with the comment
to wings Wings, what would do you think national socialism works?
It's like, buddy, it's the same fucking thing. It's all
the same fucking thing. Both extremes meet in the middle

(37:31):
at some point.

Speaker 2 (37:32):
The horse theory, it's it's horseshoe fact.

Speaker 1 (37:36):
It really is, like, well you basically get.

Speaker 2 (37:39):
To ten out of ten genocidal evil.

Speaker 1 (37:42):
Yeah, so fuck all of them, fuck all of them.

Speaker 2 (37:46):
Yeah, but for some reason viewed, yeah, it's communistm viewed
infinitely more favorably when it should never be that way.
It doesn't make sense. We're in a clown world.

Speaker 1 (37:56):
Well, you have the massive problems that communism and socialism
has caused, has caused in Russia, you have China. You
know what I'm saying, Like there's so many answers for
all of the crazy.

Speaker 2 (38:07):
Thing that you can't get a leftist to understand is
that it's the same thing, except it's just do you
and doctorate or do you uh do you in turn
other people?

Speaker 1 (38:17):
Or do you return your own people? What? Or do
you say that I said, do you use the population
saying that they own everything? Or does the government own everything?

Speaker 2 (38:25):
That's the only I'm talking I'm not talking about that
because like, yeah, socialism is the collective and communism is
the government, but it never works out that way. Well,
I'm talking about the difference between like Nazism and uh
communism killing people where genocide versus uh, your own people,
and I think killing your own people in a higher
degree is worse. So like that's you know what what

(38:50):
Germany did ten out of ten? What China did ten
point five out of ten? Evil?

Speaker 1 (38:55):
Yeah, so I saw this literally right before we started recording.
Nelon Musk has decided to sue twitch.

Speaker 2 (39:07):
I didn't want to go off to comedy talk yet,
even though it's probably safer. Well, okay, but you.

Speaker 1 (39:15):
And you know, we're treading into that territory of like, oh,
we need to start having a philosophical conversation.

Speaker 2 (39:21):
That's the interesting thing because I love learning. And that's
another thing about the deliberate, the wilful ignorance that you
find on the left because of Trump's arrangement is I
was like, you know what, let me try to understand.
Let me actually like I legitimately have been researching socialism
just to see, like just to one debunk them, like
if they try to say something like, oh, you claim

(39:42):
for socialism, but actually this goes against the collective theory
number three, and that just kind of shows like you
don't know what you're talking about. So one like winning
in debate, bro shit, and two just kind of like
figuring it out. And my overall takeaway from this Socialism's
retarded because and and my bigger takeaway is it's peasant
mentality that instead of having an infinite ambition to create

(40:06):
your own enterprise, you want the collective to give you
your seeds, give you your cow, and then give you your
parcel of land and then cap whatever it's going on.

Speaker 1 (40:14):
Like you want to see that, you want to see
the craziest thing is it's happened here that mentality as
a whole give me, give me, give me, shit is
the inner city.

Speaker 2 (40:24):
Well, that's why democrat cities and that's why we're in
the democratic socialism part. And see, that's why I thought
it was fascinating to take this dive to really understand it.
And then you also understanding it. Like what happens is
the benefit is the floor is raised, that there is
going to be less poverty because everyone's taken care of.
But then your ceiling is completely clamped, so you're stuck

(40:45):
in this small bandwidth. And that's why you will own nothing,
but you'll be happy. And I'm just like.

Speaker 1 (40:52):
What I said, and you will be nothing and you
will like it.

Speaker 2 (40:55):
Well, I'm talking about like the actual theory. We're in
a successful socialist society. You will own nothing, but you'll
be happy because all of your needs are taken care of.
You have your house, you have your farmland, you have
your guaranteed job, and then you can keep a little
bit of excess for yourself. And that's why democratic socialism
doesn't work, because the person that wants to work twice
as much as you to keep twice as much can't

(41:16):
have them in the system, comrade. And then the reason
why it always turns into communism is because people get
tired of not being able to have a yacht. When
you're looking over there at Freedom Land with people flying
around on jets and launch and you know, owning an
acreage of tigers that they can shoot whenever they want,
or some shit like whatever's going on in Texas. It's

(41:37):
like that looks like fun. I wish I had more
money so I could afford things instead of just like live.
It's peasant mentality.

Speaker 1 (41:45):
And you know, we have two of the biggest New
age kind of oh they've grown from nothing kind of
people in front of us. You have Elon Musk, who's
the most rich. He's the richest person in the fucking world.
He's from fucking South Africa and he's grown his ass
off in the United States. And then you have Vivek

(42:07):
who is also another immigrant and has grown his ass
off just working his ass off.

Speaker 2 (42:13):
And oh, the interesting thing is with doctor Oz because
he's like a recent nomination from Trump. Doctor Oz is
the son of Turkish immigrants that became a Harvard grad.
So it like debunks everything where it's like anti science,
but he's a Harvard grad. He also got millions of
dollars in funding to be syndicated on television for his research.

(42:35):
So he's well educated and well studied, and he's also muzzled.
Where's all your Like everything about Trump and conservatives is
just debunked by his appointings.

Speaker 1 (42:46):
Yeah, it's it's absolutely insane and it's stupid. And then
the last thing off keyboard.

Speaker 2 (42:54):
Yeah, and then the last thing about the socialism, where
I can also see like the idea of the theory
is if everyone can work up together, where like, yeah,
you can raise the ceiling and then pull up the
floor and then go for infinite production. But you know
what's better capitalism where you do it faster with more
opportunity through capitalism. And if we're going to waste billions
in welfare, we might as well put it towards our

(43:15):
people to pull them up, even though conservatives are traditionally
against that. We need to do something about this.

Speaker 1 (43:21):
No, And that's that's been my exact point. Like Trump's
tense city thing is crazy. It sounds like Hooverville is
all over again. And I will absolutely call that out
and call it as blankly as I see it. But
why are we letting the homeless effect and hurt our cities? Well?

Speaker 2 (43:37):
Yeah, why do we why do we have homeless crime
cities instead of government funded tense cities at least that might.

Speaker 1 (43:43):
Help still a city, like let's just move them, but
there is still a positive to it. They're they're now
going to have a place where they can actually call home.

Speaker 2 (43:53):
It's a funded a tense city. It's it's a it's
a little better off, but like as a whole, I
saw something where they shut down a tent commune or
like some kind of city where it's like, oh, they
have fresh running water and they were able to build
houses and they made all of this set up and
then the government tore it down and it was actually
just like a couple of just pieces of stolen wood

(44:17):
put together, and they were like illegally stealing generators in
gasoline and they like siphoned off a creek or something.
And the left was praising it as like, see, this
is what happens when you don't have the government and
the police oppression coming in. People build their own societies.
And it was just like the most ratty shamble.

Speaker 1 (44:35):
Shit, even if it is the most ratty shamble shit,
if you know, fifty homeless people bought together and was
like Okay, we're gonna build this plot of land and
it's like just a fucking abandoned lot in the middle
of a city, and they're like, hey, we don't have much,
but this is our shithole. We bought this for ten
thousand dollars and pulled together the money that they panhandled

(44:57):
for and then they just built shit out of like
the sc apps that they find everywhere. I would applaud it. Yeah,
that'd be very fucking cool.

Speaker 2 (45:05):
That'd be really cool.

Speaker 1 (45:06):
No, that's not what they're doing.

Speaker 2 (45:07):
Yeah, they waste it on drugs and then steal everything
and then they build their sense city on someone else's land. Society.

Speaker 1 (45:15):
It's just stupidity, man, It really is. Like, there's no
way to be excited about it. There's no way to
be happy about it because everybody's just pants on head
fucking retarded.

Speaker 2 (45:25):
Yeah, now we can talk about suing Twitch.

Speaker 1 (45:28):
Okay, so Elon Musk has sued Twitched for allegedly conspiring
the boycott ads. So currently, I know you haven't been
streaming on Twitch, you've been streaming on YouTube, but uh,
did you see the apocalypse that happen to Twitch?

Speaker 2 (45:42):
Yeah, finally it's happening. God, twitches needed in AdPocalypse. For
the last like seven years, all these thought streamers deliberately
giving softcore content to children.

Speaker 1 (45:53):
Not even not even how is that not it? Not
even twitch hose, I know that's not.

Speaker 2 (45:58):
What did it. It was a saw being anti semitic.

Speaker 1 (46:02):
It's Hassan and that that dude Frogan. It's a chick,
not a dude. That person Frogan who said some absolutely
deplorable ass discussion O.

Speaker 2 (46:12):
My TDS friends also defending Hassan because I'm like, why
is it that Hassan just like screams and yells instead
of gives a position. It's like, Hassan actually has some
really good points. Sometimes I'm like, give me one, and
I'm and then he says like, oh, you guys are
just strawmanding him over the whole uh nine to eleven comments.
It's like he says stuff like that every stream proof.

Speaker 1 (46:33):
And source everything, then says something crazy and then then
sits again and says that you're crazy if you don't
agree with his crazy.

Speaker 2 (46:40):
The guest lighting I'm so tired of, which is why
we need an ad apocalypse.

Speaker 1 (46:45):
It's it's absolutely insane. So this is where it gets
weird to me is I don't understand why Musk is
suing Twitch for for conspiring to boycott advert because if
they're having an AdPocalypse right now, they're losing their ad placement.
So was just Twitch removing Twitter ads? We're charging them

(47:09):
a lot different.

Speaker 2 (47:10):
Well, I don't know, but apparently something legal was happening there.
That's another thing where it's like, oh, your boy Elon
losing thirty billion off of X because he's completely terrible,
and all the advertisers.

Speaker 1 (47:22):
Twitch withdrew essentially money that they are replacing ads on Twitter.

Speaker 2 (47:29):
Okay, that's actually something I'm researched on because I have
everything covered when when I'm trying to beat up my
TDS friends. So it's like, Ill, what happens is there's
like other advertising collective groups that pull for the sake
of like those companies, and they're doing it in actually
illegal ways, so Elon Musk has every right to sue them.

(47:50):
Then Leslie says, like, see, Elon needs to sue innocent
people because his platform is failing so hard and he's
hemorrhaging money. It's like, no, this is actually like illegal.
SCC or FTC or whatever FCC for communications. I guess
because like FCC advertising practices are being illegally violated to
harm X, so you get to glow about how X

(48:10):
is harmed.

Speaker 1 (48:11):
He has legal recourse, Yes, it says Elon must file
the lawsuit against the members of the Global Alliance of
Responsible Media with claims that they work together to boycott
the platform. The lawsuit alleges that companies within the alliance
illegally banded together to withhold billions of dollars of advertising
revenue from the platform not formally known as Twitter, which

(48:31):
Elon must purchase back in October twenty two.

Speaker 2 (48:34):
See I'm dialed in on this shit. And it's not
just Twitch, it's everything. It's like McDonald's and General Mills
and stuff. That's because of like, it's not them, it's
not General Mills going that's too racist, and you know
Alt right over there, we can't afford it. It's like, no,
it's someone else. It's another company holding the bag of
money for the ads, making those decisions illegally, and then

(48:56):
people attack Elon over it. It's crazy.

Speaker 1 (48:59):
This comes as the Amazon owned platform is facing claims
of anti semitism and Islamophobia on the platform. Twich CEO
Dan Clancy issued a statement regarding that the claims on
November first, making it clear of the platform stands firmly
against hate and harassment in any form.

Speaker 2 (49:15):
That's a fucking lie.

Speaker 1 (49:17):
I've been doxed on Twitch.

Speaker 2 (49:20):
I mean, you just go on to any debate bro
happening right now, and you're going to hear anti white sentiment,
uh like anti Semitic comments anything. It's it's always just
going to be hate. You're going to see. Well, actually,
Dosney got banned because he was just saying like Trump
supporters need to die or some shit.

Speaker 1 (49:38):
So it's insane. No, it was the firefighter that died.

Speaker 2 (49:44):
He was, Yeah, no, but but he says about all
Trump supporters. He's like, hey, if you're a rallying and
take a bullet, I have no sympathy for you. It's like, okay,
but that that that's just the common discourse because Twitch
has become radicalized. So yeah, so get get at pocked.

Speaker 1 (50:01):
X's biggest and newest, you know, competitor has risen. I
guess it is called Blue Sky. It is the new Twitter.

Speaker 2 (50:11):
It's been around for a while, but after Trump won,
the lefties just had to flee X. And now they're
all on blue Sky. It's hilarious.

Speaker 1 (50:20):
So surprisingly, I know you have a topic about this,
but it has passed Threads, which is a meta's version
of Twitter. Yeah, which is surprising. I've thought that a
lot of those lefties and stuff would stay within that
ecosystem they Threads offer.

Speaker 2 (50:34):
It was like hard to use, the algorithm was terrible.
It was effectively the metaverse of social media, where it's
just like it's just a bad platform. No one's ever
going to use it, regardless of the statements or the sentiment.

Speaker 1 (50:48):
Surprisingly, it was still getting two million daily visitors as
of yesterday when it got passed by blue Sky.

Speaker 2 (50:55):
That's trash for social media these days.

Speaker 1 (51:00):
Absolutely, but it's you know, we were looking at true
social as about the same.

Speaker 2 (51:05):
Yeah. But when you think about like something meta owned,
like half of that is going to be from like Asia.
You know it's going to be Indian people just built
in Singapore and Malaysia and stuff, because I see that
a lot on Facebook now, where you just like see
different people from mostly like South Asia.

Speaker 1 (51:27):
A weird thing that happens here is there will be
towns that will have similar names and because they don't
pay enough attention it will all of a sudden start
suggesting Middle Eastern fucking towns to move in. I'm like
that there's sand there. There is no way in hell
that is anywhere close to here. That is a sandyard,
that is not here, that's not New York. I promise

(51:49):
you no way.

Speaker 2 (51:50):
Well, so that just kind of like goes to the
emergence of the Internet to these areas as well, that
they're just going to go to the largest social media
platform and they're going to be behind it. So it's
kind of like Facebook becoming old MySpace and then all
of these like new emerging Internet users going to MySpace
of our time. We're just like, wow, that's why AI

(52:11):
is blowing up, because they'd never been exposed to a
propagandized algorithm that's going to send them fake content twenty
four to seven. So they see Trump Jesus and they
just go beautiful, Wow, the Internet is such a magical,
fascinating place. And then they turn on the algorithm to
more people in their area.

Speaker 1 (52:28):
As stupid and as boomerish as it sounds, I fucking
miss MySpace. My Space was superior to Twitter and Facebook
for like ninety percent of things.

Speaker 2 (52:42):
The reason why I failed though, is because it was organic.
You can't have an organic platform. Everything needs to be
perma scroll, infinite algorithm guidance whatever.

Speaker 1 (52:52):
Well, there was no like homepage that actually made sense.
Like even if you followed people or had connections with
bigger accounts or whatever, there was still nothing to do
after it.

Speaker 2 (53:04):
It was impossible to engage with with Like you just
go on someone, it's just like their their page is
just random people posting on their board and all this
other stuff, and then music is playing like it was.
It was wacky, but there was no retention.

Speaker 1 (53:18):
I'm surprised that cohesiveness that oh, here put a song
on your profile. Here, use htmail and create your own profile.
I'm surprised that Twitter hasn't done those things.

Speaker 2 (53:29):
Well, that was back when people like to use the
internet and build a website. You had to be good
at it. You had to know what you were doing.
Now everyone just doing like AI scripting for half ass
shit or they're making inefficient code. Whereas if you go
to the earlier sites like that's why shit worked back
in the day, this programmer is actually cared and tried.

Speaker 1 (53:48):
Well, that's what's interesting that they weren't outsourced. How customizable
MySpace was, and the fact that nobody's caught onto that
level at all, like.

Speaker 2 (53:58):
Even because again it's against the permis scroll, it's against profit.

Speaker 1 (54:04):
I don't know it just it seems like it brings
your part of the world back to like customizable. Like
look at the look at how profiles on YouTube if
they looked back in the day. Now look at them,
They're so different. It is so much more boring, so
much more uniform. You cannot do anything different, you cannot
change it.

Speaker 2 (54:22):
Looks you explained why we can't have MySpace because you're
not allowed to have freedom. You're not allowed to open
up your pineal gland and create something cool for yourself.
You must be put into the COMMI box.

Speaker 1 (54:32):
Dude, I fucking love doing that shit. I genuinely did.

Speaker 2 (54:35):
The totality are not unitarian, I think is what it is.

Speaker 1 (54:39):
Utilitarian.

Speaker 2 (54:40):
Utilitarian exactly. You must be stuck in the utilitarian box
of this is.

Speaker 1 (54:45):
Everything is black and gray except being black and gray.
That is all we are. You are.

Speaker 2 (54:50):
You are in your cement box of a YouTube profile.
And if you the three percent expression you have inside
of it is what you must use to like exploit
the YouTube algorithm.

Speaker 1 (55:01):
It's just like no, you just you press the button.
If I decide to get views or not, it is
completely dependent on what you decide to press.

Speaker 2 (55:08):
You fucking weirdo, we say on YouTube being suppressed.

Speaker 1 (55:15):
Yep, actively thanks guys, Well.

Speaker 2 (55:18):
It's because me. I told you, like, bringing me on
means we're not gonna have growth.

Speaker 1 (55:24):
We have if we haven't missed as many shows. Honestly,
we're like ten percent ahead of where we should be.
We're uploaded like a half of what we're supposed to do,
and so.

Speaker 2 (55:39):
We need more bangers because like if we upload twice
as much but put like three sad, lazy episodes along
the way, that's worse than where we're at now.

Speaker 1 (55:48):
Oh absolutely, I completely agree. There's your reason for it
not to be agreed to. So as far as these
fucking guys, yeah, So what is happening with AI over there?
Is it just the the shit that's going on on Twitter?
What you need to pull.

Speaker 2 (56:04):
Up the actual blue sky post I gave you because
I've been on the bro. I am so dialed in.
I beat jd Vance to the parole program, I beat
everyone to the Facebook AI where I was like, this
house looks a little funny and not boomers. My mom
wasn't sharing this on Facebook. It was all the people
I added back in high school that are now just

(56:24):
kind of like having that cottage core cabin day dreaming
that like, look that looks like a real fucking picture,
doesn't it?

Speaker 1 (56:31):
Oh? It absolutely does. Hey, I yep.

Speaker 2 (56:34):
And that's that's why I's catch on, Like there's a
little bit of weirdness going on. So we already brought
this up on this show like a year ago for Facebook, yep,
And it's the same shit you post shrimp Jesus, all
the comments beautiful, wonderful, wow, amazing, inspiring, it's fake. And
then this is happening on Blue Sky. Look at how

(56:54):
many likes yep, thirty one thousand life. If we're going
off of the uh how Twitter works, where it's like
one to two percent is a good like ratio. That's
millions of views. That is the first thing I saw
when I went to Blue Sky, like the Blue Sky
Discover pages like.

Speaker 1 (57:13):
Okay channel already with eighty thousand fucking followers.

Speaker 2 (57:16):
Because that's the top thing on the algorithm. If you
go to blue Sky without an account, that's gonna be
one of the first things you see, and that's how
I found it, and that's in like their discover So
I'm just like, wow, look at that. All these idiots
move on over the Blue Sky and they immediately get
farmed like Facebook boomers somebody they yeah, some people are
on it. But that's kind of like the thing about

(57:37):
it where Facebook like everyone's like, oh, boomers are bad.
Facebook Boomers spread in disinformation and stuff ais bad. Bots
are bad. Ninety percent of Blue Sky comments are bots
saying beautiful. The rest are millennials falling for the Facebook
AI generations. Congratulations, you played yourself.

Speaker 1 (57:57):
They're playing themselves right out of the fucking is what
they're doing it.

Speaker 2 (58:01):
And then it also kind of shows like, oh, all
these users on Blue Sky, half of it's boted. Oh wait,
Elon Twitter's bad. X is bad because I get bot
replies every time. It's for some Blue Sky. It's worse
on every other platform. The fucking what's that fallacy? Recency bias?
The recency bias because people forget Twitter was worse with
bots before Elon Musk bought it, that it was only

(58:24):
completely organic.

Speaker 1 (58:26):
Or come look at my asshole, here's my only fans.

Speaker 2 (58:28):
Yeah, and you can't stop that.

Speaker 1 (58:30):
No, you can't.

Speaker 2 (58:32):
Yeah, so that's why I mean like eons, because it's
impossible to stop boding activity. We're already six no, actually
dead internet starting twenty sixteen, we're eight years in dead Internet.
It's probably been a decade of dead Internet. You can't
stop the bots, and then you go to a new platform.
They don't have the experience dealing with bots. Twitter refused
to deal with bots to pump their numbers. Blue Skuy's
not gonna do anything about bots and pump their numbers.

(58:53):
Only Elon is caring because he wants a real Internet again.
God damn, I hate everything.

Speaker 1 (58:58):
No, it's absolutely funucking right. It's absolutely fucking right that
you know, he is the only one that's actually standing
up and fucking saying something, and it's insane. I don't
fucking get it.

Speaker 2 (59:11):
M hmm. I saw a CNN report where it used
to be like seventy percent thirty percent Democrats Republicans on Twitter,
and now on ex it's like fifty to fifty. It
is perfectly bipartisan, despite and but in a bipartisan fair
space when you don't have an echo chamber, everything's far
right Nazi. This nazi that, and it's just wild where

(59:31):
it's like, oh, Twitter is the most fair social media platform.
CNN is admitting to this and people can't cope.

Speaker 1 (59:39):
It's it's fucking insane, man. And the fact that Blue
Sky is already getting overrun by this only has three thousand,
fucking three million people a day.

Speaker 2 (59:48):
Three million people a day, eighty thousand followers on like
a front page thing that's just posting AI because that's
all how stupid people are.

Speaker 1 (59:56):
Any content creators, like actual content creators, like the people
that work with us YouTube and Twitch and stuff like that,
if you want contact with them, go to every new
site that they post about and say, oh, I'm gonna
go here, because guess what, most new websites do not
close your dms, so they're automatically open. Most people do

(01:00:19):
not look at their settings. If you want to actually
have an interaction with one of these people, going to
the new sites is one of the best ways to
have weird, different connections that you never expected to have.

Speaker 2 (01:00:31):
That is how I met the singer of the Pokemon
theme song.

Speaker 1 (01:00:38):
I tried to get in touch with him to get
him on this show.

Speaker 2 (01:00:42):
He was on Minds and I got like into that
early wave of Minds when Timple was like super promoting
it and Jason Page that's his name, right, Yeah, yeah, like,
and I don't know, I think he actually like found
because I spent like a couple of Minds tokens to
like promote one of my Pokemon contents and then I
was just like, Jason Page responded by like Pokemon promoted

(01:01:03):
content and he is based as fuck. Yeah, I think
he's actually maybe a little too far qan on. From
what he was posting on Minds.

Speaker 1 (01:01:10):
He seemed like he would be one of the cool
guys just to have a chat with.

Speaker 2 (01:01:13):
Yeah, like, oh, I hit him up in DMS a
couple of times. I'm just like, Wow, it's it's cool
that you're here, and I like that you're actually able
to speak your mind, which is not what you expect
from the current state of the Pokemon Company being completely
d DEI.

Speaker 1 (01:01:25):
Yeah, no, So, yeah, he's one of the people that
I reached out to that never answered me. Actually it's
one of the few people.

Speaker 2 (01:01:31):
But yeah, I stopped using mind I don't even know
if he still uses it before like any of that.
Try to reach out to him again, I will. Yeah,
Like we got a based podcast over here.

Speaker 1 (01:01:41):
No, I reached out to him after you joined actually
probably like eight months ago or so. It's just funny.

Speaker 2 (01:01:47):
He was he active on where you were reaching out.

Speaker 1 (01:01:49):
Maybe I reached out to him. He posted a short
on Facebook, they believe or real.

Speaker 2 (01:01:54):
On there's no ways responding to Facebook, No.

Speaker 1 (01:01:57):
But it is. Messages were open, so you know, you
try and cash and all those because that's what you
should do if you have a business and you're trying to.

Speaker 2 (01:02:04):
Maybe find a website and just email him. That's probably
the best way.

Speaker 1 (01:02:09):
But he seems like one of those people where it's like, Okay,
you know you're a part of this, but at the
same time, you actually could do something that's interesting and
have an interesting conversation. So this fucking comment came up
on Twitter and I thought it was fucking interesting, so
I saved it. A while ago, this dude posted and

(01:02:29):
asked My teenage brother interviewed for a job at McDonald's.
They asked him why he wants to work there and
why he chose McDonald specifically, what is it an expected
answer from a teenager looking for an after school job
selling burgers.

Speaker 2 (01:02:45):
This is also why I hate what like the employment
area has become because of the overuse of getting degrees
because like now everything in like corporate America is so scripted,
like you have to play by their interview game regardless
if it makes any sense or not. So it actually

(01:03:05):
is one of those things where it goes back into
you're just churning out midwits to repeat the script, and
then that's how you get hired because you don't like
express anything. So there's probably an exact textbook answer that
some manager is looking for with that, But if you're
actually like an ambitious person, it's like I want to
learn some new skills. I want to actually like develop
how to work and just understand and broad in my stuff.

(01:03:28):
There's probably like a super stupid, like correct answer to that.

Speaker 1 (01:03:32):
Well, I think the other part of it is every
single business now other than.

Speaker 2 (01:03:37):
Like McDonald's is asking that question instead of Google, What
the fun.

Speaker 1 (01:03:41):
M McDonald's is asking that question because they assume that
you're not going to fucking leave McDonald's. They're trying to
say that you're going to treat this as a career
and you're coming here because you want to be here.
No McDonald's, nobody wants to work at McDonald's, and if
they do, they're probably not gonna leave. I understand your point.

(01:04:04):
Maybe they just want to be able to get a
free large fry a day. Yeah, maybe that's the only reason.
And if you hear that as their answer, you're probably
not gonna like it very much. You're probably gonna be
missing some fries.

Speaker 2 (01:04:16):
Like I understand. And also, I think the problem with
asking questions like that is because the people that are
taught how to respond to that textbook answer, they're the
ones that are gonna get hired, even though those are
the disingenuous ones. But then the honest people can also
be like, dude, I just need the money, but I'm
not going to hire that because like, well, you're just
gonna phone it in and you're not even gonna try.
Because ever, like, the labor force is fucked, but it's

(01:04:37):
also fucked because people are giving scripted answers to those
kinds of questions. You're not finding the organic workers that
just want to try and work like I did when
I was growing up.

Speaker 1 (01:04:45):
There's no fucking in between, nun. Yeah, and it's fucking.

Speaker 2 (01:04:49):
And that question does not filter, which so that's the
stupid thing about the question. I don't care about the answer,
or like you're looking for someone says I want to
be a McDonald's manager one day and maybe even use
that money to by my own franchise because I love McDonald's.
It saved me when I was a child, Like, you're
not going to find people.

Speaker 1 (01:05:07):
A teenager that says, hey, I see this as something
that I can do until I'm done with college, because
that's kind of what all the starting jobs kind of became.

Speaker 2 (01:05:15):
College red flagged me because like you're going to be
too busy, you're only going to be part time, and
you're going to be tired every time you're here.

Speaker 1 (01:05:21):
But that's still like if they said, hey, I want
to do this until I'm done with college, maybe become
a manager for a little bit, who knows what comes
from from there, I could understand.

Speaker 2 (01:05:32):
That it's better than most of the bums I worked
with when I was doing fast food, poisoning people with bleach.

Speaker 1 (01:05:37):
There's no fucking way. There's no fucking way that anybody's
saying that, no fucking way at all. It's a fucking game, man,
It's a fucking game.

Speaker 2 (01:05:46):
Like I said, you have to know and you have
to be given the textbook. If you're not, you're at disadvantage.
But the textbook doesn't make you a better person or
a better candidate. And that's why every high ree sucks
and all my food is cold and shitty and made
wrong because no one cares.

Speaker 1 (01:06:01):
Yeah, why did Donald Trump give people warmer fries than
the ones that I got two fucking weeks ago? There?

Speaker 2 (01:06:05):
Yeah, and then the rock and then the people that
like like me. When I was in it, I didn't
care where I was at. I wanted to work because
I needed the money and I wanted to start my life.
I came from nothing, so getting a two hundred dollars
check was like more money than I've ever held in
my entire life. That that's infinite when when you're nineteen
eighteen and even never had money before. So I was
happy to do it getting I worked one hundred Okay,

(01:06:28):
not on. I worked at least ninety percent every shift,
even when I was doing fast food, even when I
was flipping pizza and stocking shelves, because I was doing
it to earn my money. I was doing it as
a job. But those people are getting skipped over for
the for these stupid questions, because maners think they're going
to find someone that works, and the turnover goes up

(01:06:48):
because they're putting away people like me, and then we're
not We're stuck. The immigrants are getting our welfare. It's fucked.

Speaker 1 (01:06:55):
When I was working on a fucking subway, man like,
it showed me how to do what I do today,
like at a stupid fucking level, because when you have
a fucking line of people, you're buy I want to.

Speaker 2 (01:07:05):
Build discipline and learn life skills and learn how to work.

Speaker 1 (01:07:10):
The only thing you can do is work as fast
as you possibly can hand eye coordination wise, start my end,
everybody entertaining, entertained, and tell them stories or tell them
what the fuck's wrong and why you're by yourself, like
being a human and showcasing that to somebody else. That's
a skill a lot of people don't fucking have anymore.
And guess where I fucking learned it subway because you

(01:07:30):
get a line of fucking five people and you're by yourself,
and it fucking sucks balls.

Speaker 2 (01:07:36):
I think that's actually how I got how I landed
my toys r Us job Like. It wasn't a question
like that, but in the interview, I was just like
I'm a young kid with infinite energy. I'll do all
the shitty jobs. I just want money because I've never
had it before and i want to make it on
my own. Yeah you say that, and like that's probably
like the best way of finding someone that wants to
work that gets you skipped over for like forty jobs

(01:07:58):
in a row if you say shit like at an interview.

Speaker 1 (01:08:01):
Yeah, it's like the only thing you don't get the
good agree to you is like Walmart. Well, and that's
about it.

Speaker 2 (01:08:07):
Yeah, the jobs that like will shit on you that
no one else wants to take, but like you get
one of Like I was the best, Like I said,
I got promo demander in a month when when I
did fast food with zero fast food experience, I made
pizza before, but different than flipping.

Speaker 1 (01:08:20):
First, just being loud and fast, that's all you got
to do.

Speaker 2 (01:08:23):
No, just showing up and working. No, you don't be loud,
you shut up and you make sure every order is
completed on time, and that's how you get your promotion.
The guy that was loud. The guy that was loud
was the literally a Buffalo Wild Wings line cook. So
all those memes about like all the Buffalo Wild wings
line coach is being some crazy burnout. True, but he

(01:08:48):
got skipped over despite being like the loudest one that's like, yeah,
you know, this is a lot easier than lime coachs
I've got this done.

Speaker 1 (01:08:54):
Dude.

Speaker 2 (01:08:54):
Was like late twenties, early thirties, and then I was
just the quiet kid making sure every shift got fucking
completed on time, with everything done. And I got the
management position and they tried to like insubordinate me, and
that created a lot of tension. The workforce is great.

Speaker 1 (01:09:08):
Yeah, No, I struggled with the same thing, except I
was loud. I was the one that would like invigorate
the fire and just bitch and fucking complain if somebody
was shitting in the bed.

Speaker 2 (01:09:18):
Oh if I did that. I got written up when
I was manager because I was complaining about how shitty
our people were.

Speaker 1 (01:09:25):
When me and my girlfriend worked together, because we worked
together in the last place I worked before I hurt
my neck. She's like, no, you were allowed and obnoxious,
and everybody was okay with Like there was one person
in the entire team that didn't like me. That was it.
It was like, Okay, we're gonna rally around Zach because
he's the one who's making sure we're not getting fire.

(01:09:47):
He's the one who's doing the fucking shit that we
don't want to fucking do, so let's just get it done.
And it made like the cliche of a we're a family. No,
my team was actually like close knit and able to
congeal together and work when it really shouldn't have fucking worked.
You have fucking burnouts, you have dipshits, you have retards

(01:10:07):
all working together. That shit doesn't fucking work very well
if you don't have somebody who can actually lead.

Speaker 2 (01:10:13):
I was leading, but there's only so much you can
do when you got like four eighty IQ people on
your team and you're understaffed.

Speaker 1 (01:10:21):
Oh, absolutely absolutely.

Speaker 2 (01:10:23):
And the thing is like, even when I was out
on the window, I was I was entertaining on the
window and I was upselling like a motherfucker and people
love that. But I wasn't allowed to be at the
window because they needed me to cover three positions on
the line cause like, yeah, it's one of those things
like you show up and like you look, it's like,
all right, how many recommended for Friday evening? Five? How
many do we have?

Speaker 1 (01:10:44):
Two? Three?

Speaker 2 (01:10:45):
No, I've actually had two. It was like where we
had one person working walk up and drive through, and
then I did the entire kitchen. It was for burgers, dude,
I had to make burgers, bacon, and fries, well restocking
the entire line on a Friday evening because we had
two people.

Speaker 1 (01:11:06):
When I was working, it was you had to have
somebody there to cover you. And I was doing half
of the entire thing by myself. I was doing retissory chickens,
doing the entire fry hot case thing and the salads,
and I had to give it to people while cooking
the food all at the same time. And every single
time you stop doing one of those jobs, you have

(01:11:28):
to change your gloves because it gets gross if you don't. Yep,
So you just end up fucking losing it by the
end of the night because you're just like, why can't
you just fucking give me one person? You get me
three people in here, one person that rotates in between.
Seway we can go to fucking lunch and actually have coverage. Well,
I'm fucking cooking and nobody else can do it. Everything's okay,

(01:11:48):
Then no, no, that's too much fucking money.

Speaker 2 (01:11:51):
And then manage and then I was also a manager,
so I had to you know, balance the fucking sheets
and put in all the orders and stuff. So I
had to do like five jobs at once, and my
reward was fifty five cent rays on federal minimum wage
in Colorado, So I think I was making I think

(01:12:12):
it might have been a little bove federal. It might
have been seven dollars and fifty cents an hour. And
then I got bumped to eight h five and that
was the most money I've ever seen. Actually know, that
was less money I was making eleven sign spending fuck.
Because the thing is like, as manager, you were supposed
to get bonuses that if we had a ninety five
percent accuracy score and we didn't deliver like more than

(01:12:32):
three meals late, which never happening when you're under staff,
then you get like a fifty cent bonus the and
if you did everything right at the end of the month,
it was actually nine dollars an hour.

Speaker 1 (01:12:43):
Yeah, because we're gonna go and back pay you hashtag
we promise. It's fucking It's all bullshit, man, it's all bullshit.

Speaker 2 (01:12:51):
Yeah, that was my bonus when I got that, and
then they gave me fifty dollars stipend for free food.

Speaker 1 (01:12:56):
We would be told, oh, guys, we made fifty million
dollars in the past quarter, because I would see the
trucks come in and it'd be like, oh, this is
a million dollar truck. Oh this is nine hundred thousand dollars.
You'd get one of those a day. They'd be like, oh, yeah,
we made fifty thousand dollars worth, fifty million dollars worth
of profit this quarter. Like oh, damn, you guys undersold it,

(01:13:20):
didn't you. No, we're giving you guys all bonuses. Oh
how much three hundred dollars? Fuck you, we made you
fifty million dollars. Legitimately, do I expect all that profit
to go back to the people. Absolutely not. But you
separated one hundred thousand dollars or fifty thousand dollars to

(01:13:42):
give a fucking two three hundred dollars to every single
one of your workers. Your shit. That is shit. Like,
if you make fifty million dollars profit, you could split
up a million in between your fucking employees in one story.
That's not complicated. Sorry, it's just not.

Speaker 2 (01:14:00):
That's what turns people into socialists when they see that,
and then they just get very mad at the system.

Speaker 1 (01:14:05):
It does. It fucking does. Like I absolutely agree, should
you pull yourself up and keep going? Absolutely, should you
keep changing jobs and find something that actually values you
apps fuso lutely. But the fact that they can make
that much profit.

Speaker 2 (01:14:22):
And those jobs should pay their fair share.

Speaker 1 (01:14:26):
It sucks, man, It sucks when that's the only thing
that's available. It really does. So on a much more
fun topic, so HBO is currently making a Harry Potter series,
a TV series where each season is going to be
a book essentially. Yeah, they've recasted the entire thing that

(01:14:47):
we've started rewriting everything.

Speaker 2 (01:14:48):
I guess you have to explain to the audience. I
know what's going on there.

Speaker 1 (01:14:52):
But uh, I'm thoroughly excited for this. Like, Harry Potter
is one of my fucking things. It's one of the
series is that I fucking like. Obviously you have Harry
Potter poster at number one and number two Diagon Alley
poster behind me. Like there's a lot of shit, you know.
I like Harry Potter. This series has me thoroughly excited

(01:15:16):
content wise, with HBO making it, them putting this much
money and attention into it.

Speaker 2 (01:15:21):
Lea was a fucking banger of a game.

Speaker 1 (01:15:23):
And there's a second one I already want, Like it is
already greenlit, it is already being made, and it's a
continuation of the next story, which is fantastic. It's the
right way to go about it, New kid News session, whatever.
But it's a new story. But them so uh, I
guess they started getting backlash for JK Rowling being a

(01:15:44):
turf again, which I guess. She's a trans adverse something feminist,
so she's against trans people. And HBO said no, JK
has only added to the age to the Harry Potter series,
and we plan on keeping her entirely as a part
of this as we absolutely can. We're not getting rid

(01:16:05):
of her.

Speaker 2 (01:16:05):
It's like, yeah, the aura of Trump's win is that powerful.

Speaker 1 (01:16:10):
Yes, guys, they did the right fucking thing for ones.
They told them to go fuck themselves.

Speaker 2 (01:16:17):
I've been hearing through like a lot of different channels
were just like the Woke experiment failed. Silicon Valley's waking
up all these entertainment industries they've hemorrhaged money. They realize
like they tried the ideas props to them. They wanted
to see if the system could work. And equity and
all that fun stuff and more opportunity, but it just
doesn't in the real world. So now people are pushing back.

Speaker 1 (01:16:39):
It makes me wonder if it's suffer Jaguarn.

Speaker 2 (01:16:42):
That was hilarious.

Speaker 1 (01:16:43):
It makes me wonder if they genuinely felt like those
were things that they actually held as a valuable ideology or.

Speaker 2 (01:16:52):
It was all fake virtue signaling every flaskit of it.

Speaker 1 (01:16:57):
Because it's a fucking game. To me, it smells like
a game. It looks like a game. It seems a
lot like a game. Buddy, I think it's a game.
It seems like a game. To me. It seems like
an absolute fucking.

Speaker 2 (01:17:10):
We predicted this a decade ago, false moral superiority through
virtus signaling. That's all it is. It's a fake signal
to say I'm better than you because I pretend I care.
And then all it does is create unproductivity and slop.
And now that's the thing.

Speaker 1 (01:17:26):
We stand with Ukraine on Facebook.

Speaker 2 (01:17:29):
And that's not sustainable. It turns out I want to
do this.

Speaker 1 (01:17:33):
I think this would be hilarious. I want to grab
like a thousand people that have I Stand with Ukraine
as their Facebook banner and ask them where on the
map is Ukraine? And show them a map of Europe
without any labels on it, and I guarantee you ninety
percent have no idea where oh yeah, brain is.

Speaker 2 (01:17:53):
That'd be like, well, there's Jimmy Kimmel things where he
goes on the street and it's just like, what's eight
plus twelve? And then then everyone gets it wrong.

Speaker 1 (01:18:01):
I was hoping you were going to say non plus
ten and I was gonna say twenty one, but no,
it's it's hands on head, fucking retarded man. But I
am so happy that HBO actually stood behind her and said, no,
this is the writer of the content we're working from.
We're not fucking changing it.

Speaker 2 (01:18:20):
Get woke, go broke. Oh the Dragon Age Inquisition thing,
that's just another thing people are like, see, it's successful.
It got ninety thousand concurrens. It's like, bro, that's crap
in the modern era, that's like a million sales for
a game.

Speaker 1 (01:18:31):
That What what happened.

Speaker 2 (01:18:33):
Complete Dragon Age or was it Inquisition or was the
other one?

Speaker 1 (01:18:37):
Uh? I don't the old one couldn't tell you.

Speaker 2 (01:18:41):
Okay, yeah, Dragon Vailguard, Vailguard was it? So Vail Guard
is woke? Trash that I think it's the one where
you can have mastectomy scars, and half of the story
plots are about like parents not accepting their identity and
a lot of weird backstories like that.

Speaker 1 (01:18:59):
I think I've heard about it.

Speaker 2 (01:19:01):
Yeah, So that got like a lot of pushback where
it's just like it it just woke stuff that they
that they just kind of threw in and the game
lost a lot of pre orders, hit like eighty thousand
peak current viewers and maybe got two million sales. But
Inquisition costs like sixty million to develop, and that was
a decade ago. So now we have like a modern

(01:19:25):
game that probably costs two hundred mili to make, making
maybe one hundred mili because it went woke and got broken.
Everyone's defending it eighty k it's great. IGN says it's
nine out of ten and praise my gender identity and
all this stuff. It accepts me for who I am.
And then it's like, but no, the gaming community doesn't
care about that, And now I'm waiting for all those
articles come out where just like it's done now.

Speaker 1 (01:19:48):
And it's so interesting because there's so many games like
X Defiant every single time, Call of Duty does something.
Deserto comes out and says, oh, guys, X Defiance closing
is gonna be over real soon. Don't even tress about it.
Don't worry about it. It's done. X Defiant. Does you
know the numbers that it has been doing the entire time?

(01:20:09):
And it's like, oh, no, guys, guys, don't don't stress
about it. It's closing. Call of Duty is releasing season two. Yeah,
it's like, what the fuck is going on? Yeah, Dragonard Bill.

Speaker 2 (01:20:19):
Guard, this is weird. It's like really comparable to Concord
what happened with that? Where is like all that money
for nothing because none of the characters were appealing and
it just you put characterization over gameplay and it just
completely falls apart. And that's really what happened with Dragon
Age Fail Guard.

Speaker 1 (01:20:37):
I wonder what's going to happen with GTA six. Is
that woke shit going to bite Eta before the woke
shit's done?

Speaker 2 (01:20:46):
I mean, it's one of those things where that's too
big to fail. Oh, it's kind of like how Balder's
Gates still succeeded even with like baar fucking.

Speaker 1 (01:20:56):
Honestly, I and this might be my man by It
man Bias let me, man's playing for a second. I
made this joke to my girlfriend. I was like, we
started watching House of Cards, and I said sex, violence,
and nudity as the first three things at the top.
I was like, all of these things are my favorite,
all of them. I was like, you want to know
it's great about this show. It's filmed as a way,

(01:21:19):
and it's filmed in a way where absolutely makes sense,
Like it's real fucking life, Like you could suspend your
disbelief and it's real. Sex happens in real life. Violence
happens in real life, and guess what nudity does too.
I don't care if I see a dude ass as
long as I see a girl ass too, as long
as it's fucking equal and we're not just handhanding shit

(01:21:40):
in we're okay mm hmm. It makes me feel like
a lot of these things, a lot of these games
and stuff like that, that's finally bringing in nudity or
finally bringing in sex into games when we've had violence
for so long. It makes me wonder, actually, what is
going to happen next, because I think the next rally
is going to be a video game violence and video

(01:22:02):
game sexuality again.

Speaker 2 (01:22:04):
Well, I think it's because, much like everything that's happening
with the Left, it's way overshooting. I think balters Gate
succeeded because it put gameplay first and then they tried
to kind of paint it to where you could have
your horniest D and D campaign, and they weren't too
heavy with it, but it was still slightly offensive to people.
And I think that's because we're just seeing too much
degeneracy in the world. Like you can take a look,

(01:22:25):
what was it the Witcher. Didn't that have like sex
scenes and nudity or something like. You can get away
with it in a tasteful, non degenerate way, but when
you were like imprinting your fetishes into a game too far.

Speaker 1 (01:22:38):
But I think like even if we look back and
think back, there is the Playboy game on PlayStation two
that I'm sure had nudity. You had GTA that had nudity.
It's not like nudity in games is new, but it's
now becoming a more and more.

Speaker 2 (01:22:53):
That like when you're in a game stop you see
AO as a rating and it's like, whoa, there's a
tier above mature that that's wild, dude.

Speaker 1 (01:23:01):
I wanted to play those games. So bad, and I
understand that sounds fucking stupid.

Speaker 2 (01:23:06):
But I was like that, just what is that?

Speaker 1 (01:23:10):
Yeah? Exactly, Like that was always interesting to me, And
I know that's probably fucking off and weird, but at
the same time, it's like, no, it was interesting. It's
interesting to see a difference of like, oh, well, GTA
is mature, this is adult.

Speaker 2 (01:23:28):
Yeah, like I said, there's a tier above mature. I
didn't eve think that was possible. How do you go
higher than eighteen plus?

Speaker 1 (01:23:35):
How many fucks do they say in that campaign? I
don't know, It's it's crazy. So I got a question
for you, and I thought it was an interesting one
because I don't know if your girlfriend came to you
and I was like, hey, Burless, you fucking snore like

(01:23:55):
a fucking trucker, you fucking weirdo, And every single time
you're sleeping, you fucking roll over and you take the
entire fucking blanket. I want to sleep in our own beds,
in our own rooms. Do you accept that or is
that relationship over?

Speaker 2 (01:24:10):
I'd be done with that, Like as long as we
still sleep together. Sometimes if it's.

Speaker 1 (01:24:14):
Like a never never, there's no going back. You sleep
completely in different rooms.

Speaker 2 (01:24:21):
That just sounds like a not real situation. Like at
that point, that's just her telling you she hates you,
because it's one of those things where it's like, no,
you can still sleep together and cuddle and like enjoy
time and Netflix and pass out in the same bed
and it should be fine, or like getting slightly sleep
disrupted once or twice a week shouldn't be that bad
of a thing.

Speaker 1 (01:24:42):
Oh absolutely, I completely agree.

Speaker 2 (01:24:44):
But like I don't even understand how you can get
to a world of never, because like I'd like to
sleep by myself sometimes and just have the like the
option of like, yeah, I'll just go to my room
and I'll do my thing.

Speaker 1 (01:24:54):
If it's like a never, like just hitting the fucking
pillow and you're spreading you across the bed, you know
that that bead starfish feels right?

Speaker 2 (01:25:02):
It is? It is different, Like it is weird. How
like the first flop is like the most natural way
you just fall into the bed and that's the most comfortable.
If you reposition from the first flop, you never get
it back.

Speaker 1 (01:25:14):
Nope.

Speaker 2 (01:25:15):
Yeah, well, I mean like also there'd be like things
to try for something like let's get a better pillow
and if you're financially well off, let's actually get like
a really sick mattress that can maybe deal with this.
But if like there's no options, it's like you're never
we're never sleeping the same bed together. Yeah, it's over.
I'm not going to spend ten years bed detached from
the rest of my life bed detached with someone that

(01:25:36):
should be in a relationship. That sounds over. That's like
the fifty year loveless marriage kind of shit. Yeah, having
sex on your birthday, that's all you get. That's where
that's headed. But no, I'm thinking, like, if there's compromise,
I'm fine with it. I'm not offended if it's like, hey,
can we not sleep together every time?

Speaker 1 (01:25:49):
Sure, Like even dealing with my stepdad, and you could
hear him fucking snore through anything. He was the loudest
fucking person that snored. He had were sleep apnea, ever
he refused use the machine. He has like this start
of emphysima because of how much he's.

Speaker 2 (01:26:07):
I know, I'm probably not the best person sleep in
a bed with because I sweat in my sleep. So yeah,
and I'm not gonna be like just we're earphones or
like earplugs. For the rest of your life. Baby, It'll
be cool. It's like, no, if you can't tolerate it,
that's fine, but there has to still be like some
acceptance for that, because it can't be the most impossible
thing to sleep with someone exactly.

Speaker 1 (01:26:29):
And I don't I just I don't understand the people
that do this shit where it's like, Okay, no, we
need completely separate rooms, we need this, we need that.
Like I'm not one of those people at all. Like
if I'm in a relationship with somebody that is my
best fucking friend, that is the person I really.

Speaker 2 (01:26:44):
I mean, like that's I mean, like you don't have
love and you don't have willingness to compromise. If there's
no solution to that shuit, just go like King of
the Hill style where you get two double beds and
you can just split them apart or put them together
and if it's too loud, just go to the opposite
side of the room.

Speaker 1 (01:27:00):
Tried dampen exactly, Like, I just I don't understand. And
I remember watching so much nineties like TV shows and
stuff where they're like, oh, yeah, we sleep in different rooms,
and it's like, why the fuck do you do that?
Why is this even a relation that.

Speaker 2 (01:27:15):
Was very like conservative eighties women barely getting able to
vote kind of shit.

Speaker 1 (01:27:22):
It's just it's still weird because you can see the
through lines of what probably happens today.

Speaker 2 (01:27:28):
Actually, if anything, it's another flip where the man is
just kind of like, I want my privacy and the
woman goes to her cave until she's needed for food
and sex. And now it's the women independence making it
to where if there's any disagreement from the man or
any any inconvenience, the woman is now allowed to be
the free one. It's kind of like how like segregation
is back that people want like to segregate from others

(01:27:52):
instead of being forced into it. It's weird.

Speaker 1 (01:27:55):
I there's fucking stupid shit with that. Have you ever
s I think it's either Charlie Kirk or Ben Shapiro
and they're talking on stage and they're like, okay, so
you want there to be black safe spaces and black
only dorm rooms, and it pants the camera over to

(01:28:16):
the guy and he's white, whiter than the person that
was on stage, and he's like, yes, they should have
their own safe spaces, guys, they need their own space.
He's like this sounds like segregation, and I believe we
got rid of that a while ago, didn't we.

Speaker 2 (01:28:32):
Hen's my opinion, that is a bad thing. Didn't California
overturn like a segregation law because something happened.

Speaker 1 (01:28:40):
California overturned a segregation law. That would be the weirdest
fucking thing I've heard today, and I've heard some weird shit.
The fuck is this man overturns a segregation.

Speaker 2 (01:28:56):
It was, uh fuck, it was like actually like a
Jim crow. Was it that they were trying to like
reverse Jim pro laws or something.

Speaker 1 (01:29:06):
That'd be insane because I don't even think that they
were available to start.

Speaker 2 (01:29:10):
Like it was. It was one of the popular ones,
revyweight is abortion and the other one was a thing
or maybe it was like workers' rights. I think it was.
It wasn't that. I think it was something about workers' rights.
Were like, you can't discriminate, but now they wanted discriminations
so that more black people get get hired or something.

Speaker 1 (01:29:27):
Oh yes, I saw that. I saw this. It was
more about workers' rights kind of shit.

Speaker 2 (01:29:31):
Yeah, yeah, it's still kind of like the same idea.

Speaker 1 (01:29:35):
Yeah, No, that shit's fucking retarded. When they were the
ones that were using it negatively. It's fucking insane.

Speaker 2 (01:29:43):
It's completely flipped.

Speaker 1 (01:29:48):
Yeah, it was fucking hell man.

Speaker 2 (01:29:50):
I mean like the Yuribezmanov thing where it's like it's
a word that's I've heard and it's in my brain somewhere.
I don't know the sauce to pull it out of Google.

Speaker 1 (01:30:01):
So I saw these fucking I saw this fucking clip
from Jimmy Fallon, and Jimmy Fallon to me, seems like
one of those guys that just he's more acceptable than
Jimmy Kimmel. He's more acceptable than like the other dudes.
And I don't know if that's just because he's from
close to me or whatever, but he just seems like
a more regular dude. Is he a Lefty? Sure, but

(01:30:24):
he's more normal.

Speaker 2 (01:30:26):
It's one of the things where like he the left
ran away from him kind of.

Speaker 1 (01:30:30):
Yeah, exactly. Now, he would be considered probably closer to
a centrist, but he's a lefty. He's he's definitely a lefty.
He's from New York. I understand that. So, uh, he
had these fucking this family on they're called the Costco guys.
Have you have you seen these guys heard of these guys.
It is the most brain rot shit I've ever heard

(01:30:50):
of in my life. And I don't fucking understand why
they are fucking popular.

Speaker 2 (01:30:56):
You do, Rizzler likes chuck? What do you give at
the boom meter? Oo? Oh my god, fairly gave it.

Speaker 1 (01:31:05):
So the dad, his name's AJ, is like a jack
dude who I guess was a professional wrestler for a
little bit, but like never did anything. He was like
an indie dude who did like five or six dates
a year, and then all of a sudden, like, oh,
my kids are old enough, maybe I'll bring them to
the one now. And his main son, his name is

(01:31:27):
Big Justice, and he has these braces and my girlfriend
was like, oh, he's like fifteen or sixteen. No, this
kid is like overweight and like eleven, and he's like
pushing one hundred and twenty pound one hundred and thirty
pounds out like five two three. And then they have

(01:31:50):
the youngest son and his name is the Rizzler and he's.

Speaker 2 (01:31:54):
Yeah, Okay, that's who it is. I've heard of the Rizzler,
but I don't. I know nothing else about these people.

Speaker 1 (01:31:59):
And he's pushing like eighty pounds and he's like four
or five. He's straight up on oop balloopa or Grimace
from like McDonald's like, it's it's bad, It's fucking bad.
So these dipshits going Jimmy Kimmel and this is where
I heard of, not Jimmy Kimmel, Jimmy Fallon and I
heard of them for the first time. And Jimmy Fallon

(01:32:21):
hands in the Twizzler and he's like, this gets five
big booms boom, and I'm like, what the fuck, What
the fuck is this? So I go on a deep
dive of like who the fuck these people are, because
I'm like, why the fuck is my brain being infiltrated
by this dumb ass fucking shit about how many booms
this gets? Because this is the most Italian American fake

(01:32:45):
shit since Jersey Shore that I've ever fucking seen in
my life. And then you look at their comments and
it's all racist shit that they're not fucking bleeding all
of it their life on fucking TikTok, and I'm like,
not racist?

Speaker 2 (01:33:03):
What from people that support the Wrizzler? No anti whitet.

Speaker 1 (01:33:06):
Right, absolutely no, no like hard r like just comments
filled with it entirely. I'm like, what the fuck is this?
If if anybody did this on fucking YouTube or Twitter
or Twitch, they'd be fucking gone. They'd be gone. And
fucking second TikTok, this ship's just going, and there's hundreds

(01:33:27):
of thousands of people watching this douchebag just saying boom
fifty fucking times. I don't fucking understand it. That's like
some Yeah, I go another step deeper. Still don't fucking
understand why these people are fucking caught on about a
double chocolate chalk K cookie. I don't fucking I don't
fucking get it, man, I don't fucking get it. And

(01:33:48):
then he did it. He starts using his daughter who's
fourteen fucking years old, and there's sexual fucking comments in
the TikTok and the Instagram comments saying how she's so
attractive and way more perverse comments than that, and he
doesn't stop putting his daughter in videos like.

Speaker 2 (01:34:10):
So we got Daddy of five all over again.

Speaker 1 (01:34:13):
Now she's becoming, you know, the most integrated person in
the fucking channel and just being shown over and over
and over and over again. These people went from like
I would assume some people see it as wholesome a
dad and a son doing shit. You know that's cool.
It's stupid saying five big booms. But it's like the
you know, the weird dad and son that just have

(01:34:35):
the same sense of humor. It's weird for the dad
to have the same sense of humor as a kid,
and the kids acting a little bit above his age.
It's that weirdness there. Now it's gone to absolute weird
PDF level shit where it's just gone.

Speaker 2 (01:34:51):
Oh damn unless the meat Canyon were Costco guys video
that would have caught me all the way up in
three minutes.

Speaker 1 (01:34:57):
Damn it, But fucking hell were Costco guys. I just
I don't fucking get these guys. I don't understand this shit.
I don't understand exploiting your kids, because that's what a
lot of kid content is.

Speaker 2 (01:35:10):
Here we go me Jimmy fallon Big Justice, the Rizzler
face tutorial. It's not higher hel meat Cannon videos the
top comments.

Speaker 1 (01:35:24):
And he's showing them how to do the fucking mewing thing, Like,
are you people fucking so dumb that you don't understand
what the fuck this shit is? He's voila.

Speaker 2 (01:35:33):
He has Rizzler supporting smaller creators like Jimmy Fallon.

Speaker 1 (01:35:40):
The dude better have is he's eighty pounds at fucking
ten years old, and he could roll down a fucking hill.

Speaker 2 (01:35:50):
What's weird is like no one understands mewing that they
see someone going like it's like he's mewing. It's like,
that's not mewing. Yeah, But it's like whenever someone makes.

Speaker 1 (01:36:00):
A weird face, when you do it, when you do it,
mm hm does?

Speaker 2 (01:36:05):
I mean like whenever someone makes a weird face, like, oh,
he's not doing anything weird, he's just mewing. It's like
he's not even doing that, He's just fucked like you.

Speaker 1 (01:36:13):
Like the dude legitimately looks like an Italian version of
Peter Griffin. I promise you you can't see his draw line.
Do we want to do we want to shoot on
the kid? Absolutely not. But stop fucking pushing these retards.
Stop pushing them. I don't I don't get it. I
don't understand, and I don't know if I'm out of
touch where they are. But this is fucking weird. It
just it is.

Speaker 2 (01:36:35):
I mean, we've all read, we we've always loved sideshows
like I said, honey booboo and ship like that hoarders.

Speaker 1 (01:36:40):
But is that what this is? Is it like a
honey booboo or is this like an actual cultural thing
like fucking Jersey Shore where they're like, oh, one of
these guys is cool and it's like, oh.

Speaker 2 (01:36:53):
That's what I mean, Like it gets on ironic acceptance
since always been that way, and now it's turbo charged
by TikTok.

Speaker 1 (01:36:59):
I just I don't understand that.

Speaker 2 (01:37:01):
I mean, we've had degenerous to cash me outside girl
becoming famous because she went on syndicated television or national TV,
just like this Jimmy Fallon thing. It's the same shit,
it's a different toilet.

Speaker 1 (01:37:13):
I don't fucking understand, man, I genuinely don't. I don't.
I don't get it, and I'm willing to admit that
I might be out of touch.

Speaker 2 (01:37:21):
Pokemon evolution line.

Speaker 1 (01:37:23):
Goddamn it makes sense. It makes sense. Uh man, So guys.

Speaker 2 (01:37:33):
Actually, wait, the scary thing is like that is the
average family right now, though they just got popular with it.
But you have like the zoomer, like the late stage
zoomer that got kind of fucked up by the end
of it, and then you got the new zoomerjin alpha
kid that's completely rised out and fucked and then the
dad that just like, if I don't fall into this,
we lose everything.

Speaker 1 (01:37:55):
And the shitty thing is and this is this is
the fucked up part to me, and I hate this.
The dad is fucking jack. He's like, even if he's
just fatter than.

Speaker 2 (01:38:09):
Me, if I saw him had a gun range were
in a maga hat, I'd just be like.

Speaker 1 (01:38:12):
Yeah, No, he's a dude that you're like, if you
have to carry a two hundred and fifty pound thing
and you're like, hey, dude, can you grab that?

Speaker 2 (01:38:18):
He might Kentucky ballistics. He seems like a dude.

Speaker 1 (01:38:22):
Exactly like to me, he would be the logical dad
that's going to have two extremely fucking fit kids, and
he's the dude that you would want to possibly hang
out with.

Speaker 2 (01:38:32):
I wouldn't say fit, but I would at least like,
at the very least not terminally online, because like you
do see it like in the backwoods, you know where
you get Bubba out there who can fucking throw hay
bales all day and is still fat and his kids
are the obese welfare trailer trash kind of thing, like
that's what that looks like to me. So I can
still exist, but now it's just modernized.

Speaker 1 (01:38:53):
It doesn't make sense to me that you have him
and the youngest son, Wrizzler is legitimately Grimace from fucking McDonald's. Like,
it just doesn't make sense to me. And I don't
know if that's just what culture has become. Like all
kids are fat now, Oh, women are fat. I don't understand.

Speaker 2 (01:39:12):
We talked about seed oils. It's over every like seventy
overweight in this country, probably.

Speaker 1 (01:39:20):
Women. The average weight of women is overweight.

Speaker 2 (01:39:24):
Oh, dating apps are it's over. It's gg for me.
Everything's curvy, everything is. If you don't want a BBW,
get out here.

Speaker 1 (01:39:33):
And they don't understand what a BBW is. A BBW
is not four hundred pounds. It just doesn't. I don't
fucking get it.

Speaker 3 (01:39:39):
Man.

Speaker 2 (01:39:40):
Well they're not that bad, but you know, it's one
of those things where it's like there's we we got
no skinny goth chicks anymore. What am I supposed to do?

Speaker 1 (01:39:48):
You gotta find that Godammy mommy.

Speaker 2 (01:39:53):
No Trump on the bio, and I'm just out.

Speaker 1 (01:39:56):
I know you dude, you're swinging on both fences and
then you're fucking yourself. That's the problem. That's problem. Yeah, exactly,
you gotta swing on both sides.

Speaker 2 (01:40:07):
I decided to not become like Destiny and just completely fold.

Speaker 1 (01:40:13):
It's gonna be weird to see what happens with him.

Speaker 2 (01:40:16):
Oh he's losing it.

Speaker 1 (01:40:18):
He said one thing that makes a lot of fucking sense,
and I completely agree. He said, all of you people
that are dyeing your hair and putting gauges in your
nose and all that shit, we can't win with you,
so leave us the fuck alone. Just let them the
fuck go.

Speaker 2 (01:40:33):
It's crazy how he's kind of transcended into the Z
axis of the political compass because he who even knows
what he is. He's got like those conservative views, but
he's also hyperliberal. Cok, Like what where is he?

Speaker 1 (01:40:47):
But no fucking idea, no fucking idea. I don't understand
what he is. He is definitely more complex than I
think people give him credit.

Speaker 2 (01:40:54):
That's why that's like he's transcended. But now that's made
everyone think he's a freak. He's losing it, but he's
not wrong. You're not gonna be able to win with
people that are fighting for those rights, the rights to
go into bathrooms, the rights to go and fucking fight
in us. And then those same people are like, well,
then that means you're agreeing with literally Hitler. So it

(01:41:14):
doesn't matter if I have a gauge in my ear,
because literally Hitler is always bad.

Speaker 1 (01:41:21):
I saw the funniest video and we'll end the We'll
end the podcast on this, and I'll put the video
at the end for all you people that decided to stay.
It is the funniest cop interaction that I've ever seen ever.
So a cop comes up and he knocks on the
window and says, okay, guys, you need your ID registration insurance.

(01:41:43):
Dude pops out a cat collar and says, I identify
as a cat. This is my ID, hands on his collar.
He says, sir, what do you identify as? He says,
I identify as a cat. He says, okay, who is this?
Is this your boyfriend? He says, no, sir, I'm not

(01:42:05):
his boyfriend. I'm his handler or something similar to. The
cop looks back and says, sir, we can go about
this one or two ways. You guys can act normally,
and you know I might not even give you a
fucking ticket and everything will be okay.

Speaker 2 (01:42:24):
Yeah, just like just get out of my sight, or I'm.

Speaker 1 (01:42:26):
Gonna call animal control. He might get you up to
date on your shots. You have to pay seventy five
dollars to get back, and you probably will get a
rabies vaccine, and you know all of those things. And
the handler's like, ah shit, should I hmm? He's like, sir, sir, like,

(01:42:48):
can we just stop all this? Can we just this
is the most fucked up thing I've ever seen as
a cop. Honestly, you're contemplating letting him get a rabies
vaccine instead of just handing me your normal identification. This
is what's wrong with this country. And it fades to
black m.

Speaker 2 (01:43:07):
I feel like, of a better pledge, just be like,
all right, sore, where his papers or whatever? The cat was?

Speaker 4 (01:43:16):
Okay, So you do currently have a California driver's license,
you just don't have a physical copy on you at
the moment. That's my preferred method of identification, and this
is it's a cat caller. I'm currently identifying as a cat.
Fair enough, the information here in the tag I'm assuming
belongs to you. The boyfriend Yeah, it's so rude.

Speaker 1 (01:43:34):
I hope you know I'm recording.

Speaker 4 (01:43:36):
Well, it wasn't my intention to offend you, but he
just identified as a cat and you're wearing a Harrit's
Waltz T shirt. So forgive me if I came to
a conclusion that you guys are involved in some sort
of a homosexual arrangement.

Speaker 2 (01:43:47):
I'm not mad that you think we're together, but you're
using gender language.

Speaker 1 (01:43:50):
Besides, I'm not his boyfriend, I'm his owner.

Speaker 4 (01:43:53):
Okay, well, look, we can do this the hard way
if you like. I can have this car toad, because
last I checked, a cat is not licensed to op
motor vehicle in the state of California. We can have
animal control come get you to take you to a
shelter where your owner can retrieve you for a few
to seventy dollars after you're given the necessary immunizations, which
do include a raby shot, possibly even spade or neuter,

(01:44:13):
whichever you prefer or identify with.

Speaker 1 (01:44:16):
Is that what you guys want to do
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