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August 2, 2025 65 mins
The left have lost their mind over a woman looking sexy in a pair of jeans.  It's like women are the target of the suppression machine.  The Tea App, a women's dating app, has been hacked with photos, user names, and more released.  But some say it's just full of perverts, is this true?  Find this and more on today's That's Based.
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Episode Transcript

Available transcripts are automatically generated. Complete accuracy is not guaranteed.
Speaker 1 (00:21):
Welcome to That's Based Happy Saturday. I'm your host, as always,
Caleb Salvator reporting from somewhere underground. We're laughing our way
through the end of days, brought to you by Outlaws streamers,
Chris Baker Radio on Live three sixty five, and our
friends over at Drink Blood a Tyrants dot Com. At
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(00:41):
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order at the checkout. They've also got the Liquid Freedom
energy drink you see right there. Based. We'll get you
ten percent at Drink Blood Tyrants dot Com on that
product as well. Like I said, Mia is not joining us.
She's got some stuff she's working on right now. She'll
be back Monday. We have got a guest host here though,

(01:04):
Lavetti Vegas has joined us in studio. Oh my god,
I gave you a high.

Speaker 2 (01:09):
Oh my gosh. I wasn't even gonna mention him.

Speaker 1 (01:13):
How long until one of us gets a message about
I saw what you were talking about me.

Speaker 2 (01:17):
I don't think he watches your podcast, man.

Speaker 1 (01:19):
I think he probably does.

Speaker 3 (01:22):
Because I've mentioned I've dogged him out on this, yeah
enough times where it has to have come back to
him eventually, and he's ever.

Speaker 2 (01:29):
The only thing he's ever messaged me about that he
didn't like.

Speaker 3 (01:34):
Was when Richie Belgrave no omahak Median died and Julian
posted I wish it could have been like another new
pot died and I posted a Viva las Vegas, Yeah
for you know, Lovett Vegas.

Speaker 1 (01:49):
I remember that.

Speaker 3 (01:50):
You know, that's the one bad thing COVID didn't do
was take Lovetti when it.

Speaker 2 (01:56):
Had the chance.

Speaker 1 (01:57):
Well, well know, if he listens now, will be no doubt,
there'll be no doubt. I see, I remember when uh
I see. I remember one time when it was when
Rome and Bill used my show to do some type
of like fuck like they did it to roast him
and Terrence or whatever. They used my stand up show

(02:19):
for it.

Speaker 2 (02:20):
Which.

Speaker 1 (02:22):
They did it for those two as well. I so
that time I knew it was gonna happen and I
didn't care. The first time, I admittedly was not thrilled
because that got poured on me right before showtime, and
they were the headlining act, and I was like, I
don't know how this is gonna work. Excuse me. It
worked fine, but I get a message like a week
later after all this airs. Mind you, it's eight o'clock

(02:44):
in the morning on like a Thursday.

Speaker 2 (02:47):
Because he doesn't work a regular job.

Speaker 3 (02:48):
No, so he's off or when we're all going to
work productive, he's actually sitting at home being a diabetic.

Speaker 1 (02:55):
Right, So so I'm at home at this point, and
I get a message from him that says, I don't
have a problem with you or Scott. Mind you. Here's
what's happening at this point in time. When I'm getting
this message from him about imaginary local comedy beef. I've
got three people from mud in my house looking for
a carbon monoxide leak, trying to figure out if there's

(03:17):
a gas leak coming from my furnace because all the
alarms got set off, when in reality, my wife had
just turned the car on with the garage door closed
and tripped all the arms. I didn't know though, So
I'm sitting here as my house about to blow up.
Am I gonna have to pay four thousand dollars to
fix something? And He's messaging me about comedy beefs and
I'm like, there's no better symbol of where two people

(03:38):
are at in life in just different places than this
right here, this interaction we're having right here. So what's
new with you?

Speaker 2 (03:46):
Man?

Speaker 1 (03:46):
Before we do, we were gonna talk about Sydney Sweeney. Guys,
don't worry, it's a slow fucking newsweek.

Speaker 2 (03:53):
Yeah, we'll talking about Sydney for sure.

Speaker 1 (03:56):
She's beautiful, by the way, very attractive gal.

Speaker 2 (04:00):
Very attractive, very attractive. What's new with me? Not much,
to be honest with you, nothing, not much, I mean.

Speaker 3 (04:05):
Honestly, just alive. I'm gardening a bunch, you know what
I mean. Yeah, I have a huge garden. Potatoes, notally
no potatoes, I'm sorry. Tomatoes, tomatoes, yeah, some Boston cucumbers,
Boston pickling cucuvers.

Speaker 2 (04:24):
My wife makes pickles.

Speaker 3 (04:26):
Yeah, okrah, eggplant, lots of different kinds of peppers.

Speaker 1 (04:31):
See you guys, homestead and living off the land. Now
you got chickens.

Speaker 2 (04:34):
Kind of yea, No chickens.

Speaker 1 (04:36):
You can't do chickens big enough backyard. See. I could
do chickens, but I don't know if I want to
deal with the clucking. I don't know, man, because I've
heard horror stories about people not being able to sleep
because they get so.

Speaker 2 (04:51):
Loud at night. That'd be hilarious.

Speaker 1 (04:53):
So I don't have neighbors, right, so it really is
a matter. I can do whatever I want. It's about
my sanity.

Speaker 2 (04:59):
But you're a sanity. Yeah, so I think.

Speaker 3 (05:02):
So what I understand in Omaha they got to have
ten square feet per chicken is.

Speaker 1 (05:08):
That the law ten square feet in the in the coop.

Speaker 3 (05:12):
I can in your backyard and it can't be and
it has to be at least ten feet away from
any property line and twenty five feet away from any building.

Speaker 1 (05:25):
Hmm. That is pretty big.

Speaker 2 (05:28):
So it's you actually need some space in my backyard
is big enough?

Speaker 1 (05:31):
Or and hear me out, you build a privacy fence
and you don't tell anybody. There's also there's always that
possibility there is there's always that.

Speaker 2 (05:40):
You can't have roosters either.

Speaker 1 (05:42):
That makes sense that I can understand. That's a public nuisance.
I if my neighbor had a rooster, I would probably
shoot it.

Speaker 3 (05:50):
It'd be fun, though, to get a giant speaker and
play there's sound early five thirty. The more just blasted
real quick every day on the.

Speaker 1 (06:00):
What are they gonna do? Prove that it's not a
rooster first off, prove that it's me. Yeah, you know, I.

Speaker 2 (06:07):
Think it's going from your house, buddy. Why would I
do something stupid.

Speaker 1 (06:10):
That's so stupid? How much? How much free time do
you think I have?

Speaker 3 (06:14):
Like?

Speaker 1 (06:14):
What kind of idiot do you think I am? That
I'm out here doing this shit? Get out of here?
All right? Well, let's talk about Sydney Sweeney. Have you
seen the ad?

Speaker 2 (06:22):
Uh? Yeah?

Speaker 3 (06:22):
So I actually I watched a YouTube video of all
the ads, so the only Okay, so I got a
couple thoughts on it.

Speaker 1 (06:31):
First, Hold on, let's play it for people first. Okay,
and in case we have some audience members who are
living under a rock. This is the ad.

Speaker 4 (06:37):
Jans are passed on from parents to offspring, often determining
traits like her color, personality, and even eye color. My
jeans are blue.

Speaker 1 (06:49):
Sydney's tweeny Hasbury Keynes. So she's hot in the big
titty retard girl kind of way. Yeah, you know what
I mean. She's got the ssri I eyes, the sloth eyes.
That's the new thing. Yeah, cannons and sloth eyes.

Speaker 3 (07:06):
Yeah, yeah, like she's a little slow, she's a little retarded,
but she got some big tits.

Speaker 2 (07:10):
Yeah, I get.

Speaker 1 (07:13):
So what I tell my friends that are single all
the time, I'm like, you don't know who you're like, dude,
you can't find a girl. Just go get a big teddy,
retard bitch. They're not gonna leave you. They're not gonna
leave you walk around and not not like, hey, I
don't know if this is legal retarded. Just like you know,
room temp, I Q maybe a little bit higher, you
know what I mean? Well, room temp on a day
when you're too cheap to turn your AC on and

(07:35):
it's up to like eighty six in the house. Okay,
that kind of room temp. So yeah, okay, So what
are your thoughts on the Sydney Sweeney app So?

Speaker 3 (07:43):
Okay, so I play I'll play the double's advocate on
this one, okay.

Speaker 2 (07:50):
And I will say.

Speaker 3 (07:53):
I can see where some of so okay, some people
that are angry about it, I cane it because they
are hinting at her physical features, which happened to be
the blonde hair, the blue eyes type of thing, but
they're not saying it's better. She's got though she's hot,

(08:14):
she has good genes, she's hot. Yeah, that's kind of
what they're saying. They're not saying anything about racial superiority,
which is really what the outrage is about.

Speaker 2 (08:23):
They're basically who they're hinting at good racial superiority.

Speaker 3 (08:26):
So I guess my thing is, and I want to
be careful saying this because obviously, as a brown skinned man,
I'm not gonna I'm against racism obviously, sure, but I
don't want to be promoting racism. But at the same time,
I mean, what is them What is wrong with them

(08:49):
saying that she has good jeens because she looks good?
Are they saying that she has good jeans because she
looks good or because she's white? Because they could have
just had it. They could have had a Melissa McCarthy
up there.

Speaker 2 (09:00):
You know, she's hideous.

Speaker 1 (09:01):
Yeah, I know, but Rosie O'Donnell even worse, right, Okay,
had Rosie o'donna or or Ellen DeGeneres over there. Well,
that's the thing is Sidney Sweeney is is the closest
thing that gen Z has to as sex symbol, right
that she she happens to be blonde hair, blue eyes.

Speaker 2 (09:19):
Most sex symbols are.

Speaker 1 (09:21):
Many of them are. However, Michael B. Jordan also has
great genes. No one's gonna deny that.

Speaker 3 (09:27):
But see that now their argument is, no one's saying
that though.

Speaker 1 (09:30):
There's plenty of ads with like attractive minority.

Speaker 2 (09:33):
Yeah, yeah, but.

Speaker 1 (09:35):
It's a gene company.

Speaker 3 (09:36):
It's a gene company, and they're playing off the word jeens.
So I really, I guess at the end of the day,
I'm kind of playing the devil's advocate.

Speaker 2 (09:44):
Sure, exploring their outrage.

Speaker 3 (09:46):
Sure, all right, but I really personally feel like they're, uh,
they're just digging for outrage, and and it's kind of honestly,
it's annoying and it's tired to see. Like again again,
you're angry at everything. You can't ever be freaking happy,
Like this is another issue.

Speaker 1 (10:05):
If you're looking for something to get upset about. I
can see why you. I can see how they could
get where they're going. But American eagle, it's American eagle. Like,
how many black people wear American eagle. Let's be honest, right, well,
is there there? They're white people for the most part,
that's their.

Speaker 2 (10:25):
Suburban white people wear American eagle. Let's be honest.

Speaker 1 (10:28):
For the most part, I have lots of American eagle.

Speaker 3 (10:31):
Are you going to see American eagle more at Walmart
or Costco?

Speaker 1 (10:34):
Neither they're at the mall. Okay, well, I mean like
being worn, oh being worn more? Yeah? Yeah, Costco, Costco
for sure?

Speaker 3 (10:41):
Right, yeah, tell me about a lot of American eagle
being worn in an NBA game.

Speaker 2 (10:48):
Or a little Wayne.

Speaker 1 (10:48):
Concert fair fair, Well, here's like that.

Speaker 3 (10:52):
They're just they're just aiming for their people that wear
their clothes, and I don't know think they're really even
doing that. They're just picking the sex symbol to advertise
their clothing. They're playing off the word jeans because she's pretty.

Speaker 1 (11:05):
I think that's about how much thought went into this ad,
which is they're saying this is like a fascist dog whistle. Yeah,
I know, patriarchy and just all this stuff. I'm like, Okay,
first off, these have been the ads. Here's the Calvin
Klein ad. These have been the ads that were shoved
down our throat for the last five years. Okay, I'm sorry.

(11:25):
Sydney Sweeney's ad is superior to this. By the way,
Sports You're looking great there, manty a dude.

Speaker 2 (11:35):
I wish I had the money from that ad, I'd
have done it for the check. That dude, I'm not
above that.

Speaker 1 (11:41):
But but I mean, what those are the ads that
were shoved down people's throats for so long. You know,
the traditional ad for a clothing company is the hot
chick with cannons, right, and that's always been it. People
are like, hey, we're going back to a time where
they're not trying to redefine what beauty is. I don't
think it's got anything to do with their race. I
think for why they're wanting to pitch this ad, it's

(12:03):
just the fact that it's a hot chick and we're
finally going back to what America used to be, which
was loud cars, hot chicks, and guns. I'm all about it.

Speaker 2 (12:10):
And they have another add which she gets to an
old school Mustang and peels.

Speaker 1 (12:14):
Off, Yeah, exactly, loud cars, hot chicks. Yeah, they're gonna
put an A fifteen in her hand in the next one.

Speaker 3 (12:19):
They're they're not I don't really think they're they're not
trying to reinvent the wheel. They're trying to go back
to what the wheel was originally was, right, And I
think and look, and I'm for also what's been done.
I'm not obvious that Calvin klient Ad, you just showed
what was absolutely hideous, right, But I understand.

Speaker 2 (12:36):
The point of it.

Speaker 3 (12:36):
They want to be inclusive and they want to explore,
like there's lots of forms of beauty, not just the
typical blonde blue eyes type of deal.

Speaker 1 (12:46):
Sure well, I mean, my wife's not blonded blue eyes, right,
mine is. That's but the difference here is my wife
doesn't look like this guy, you know what I mean? Like,
that's that's a bit different.

Speaker 2 (12:57):
Though.

Speaker 3 (12:57):
That's ridiculous, but it's it's so I understand the point
of ads like that and what they're trying to do, but.

Speaker 1 (13:04):
I really don't. I'm not gonna lie.

Speaker 3 (13:05):
I think people are seeing that as progress, which it is,
but that doesn't mean that the Sydney Sweeney thing is.

Speaker 1 (13:14):
All progress good though regression is all progress good.

Speaker 3 (13:17):
Though I'm saying what they view that as progress, I
don't think that is progress. I think it's a bit
too far. That mannered a sports that's ridiculu, let's get
that attitude.

Speaker 1 (13:26):
But it's still technically progress. It's just we don't know
if it's good. Like because I can progress off a Cliff.

Speaker 3 (13:32):
Anything a society does, a culture does, that's new.

Speaker 1 (13:36):
Yeah, it's progress they think.

Speaker 3 (13:37):
I mean, look, I prove I don't I hate the
Nazi Germany thing because I mean I think it's used
too much.

Speaker 1 (13:47):
Good we're on the same. Oh I thought you were
just saying you didn't like Nazi Germany. Well I don't,
you know, but I'm more of a Mussolini guy.

Speaker 2 (13:54):
You know, he was what he was, very theatrical.

Speaker 3 (13:58):
But I think the Nazi Germany like like comparison everybody
makes and the word fascist, it's tossed around so much.

Speaker 1 (14:05):
They're watering down the word Nazi and fascist.

Speaker 2 (14:07):
They are the watering down. And I think it's.

Speaker 3 (14:12):
It's tossed it's way it's used way too much. Both
of them are way too much. But if you want
to compare it, that was viewed as progress and progression
in their society. Yeah, to do that, it's like we're finally,
you know, we're doing things.

Speaker 2 (14:26):
You know, we're moving on to the Yeah, we're moving on.
And so.

Speaker 3 (14:31):
Not all progress is good, you're in our progress is good.
But in the case of the Sydney Sweeney Ad, I
think they're just trying to be simple and straightforward and
to the point.

Speaker 2 (14:41):
Yeah, and trying to be funny.

Speaker 1 (14:43):
It's a joke.

Speaker 2 (14:44):
It's a joke.

Speaker 1 (14:45):
Fifteen seconds work where the thought went into it.

Speaker 2 (14:47):
Yeah.

Speaker 3 (14:47):
And then though I watched all of the ads, I
saw YouTube video that was all the ads.

Speaker 1 (14:52):
In the bathroom.

Speaker 2 (14:54):
Yeah, just a strong bit of lotion.

Speaker 1 (14:56):
Yeah, a little bit of lotion, some tissues, you know that.

Speaker 3 (15:01):
I mean, they were they were all the same. They
all said Sidney Sweeney has good genes. One of one
of the ads or one of the posters. I read
a poster has the words genes J E N E
S crossed out and underneath that is written down.

Speaker 2 (15:16):
Yeah, and you know jeans, you know.

Speaker 3 (15:18):
Yeah, So like they're they're they're obviously making fun of
the whole she has good genes because she looks good.
That like MSNBC saying that it's a slow regression to
a white dominated culture. And I want to say this
first of these are all white people saying, okay, like.

Speaker 2 (15:40):
When was America not white dominated.

Speaker 1 (15:44):
Like six hundred years ago, two hundred, three hundred.

Speaker 3 (15:50):
Years, Like I understand, like we're more inclusive now, like
rap music is popular and we love blacks and sports,
and he's not saying we should do that.

Speaker 2 (15:58):
We have a black president, those things are great.

Speaker 3 (16:00):
Sure, most people in this country are white, right, I'm
not saying that we should cater to white people.

Speaker 2 (16:06):
Shouldn't cater to anybody. But at the same time, like.

Speaker 3 (16:13):
What part, what memories they have, or like this country
was black or Mexican dominated, and suddenly now we're progressing
to this white domination. American Negles a Pop has been
a popular clothing company.

Speaker 2 (16:26):
Yeah, so they popped out of nowhere.

Speaker 1 (16:28):
My thing with this is for the longest time they
went Now. I'm not going to sit here and deny
that America doesn't have a bad history, right, but excuse me,
I have some questionable history with race relations and things
like that.

Speaker 2 (16:41):
It's a bad history, sure mean it is.

Speaker 1 (16:43):
But the problem here is you saw a lot of media,
or a lot of folks in media overcorrect and you
saw ads like that Calvin Klein one I just showed
with the transgender man and a sports braw and all
that crap, and what you saw was straight white people
were not used in advertisements. For the last six seven years.

(17:05):
We see one commercial with one straight white chick in
it who happens to be a bombshell and all of
a sudden, it's, oh my god, the world's coming to
an end. It's Nazi propaganda. I'm like, hold on, I
wasn't sitting here talking about how people wanted to put
me in concentration camps when for the last eight years
nobody on TV looked like me. I don't give a
fuck personally, but I don't see how it's how it's a.

Speaker 3 (17:28):
One way one of her friends I got a bar
or something like that. What's that you don't think of
these Sweeney's made out one of her girlfriends at a
bar or something like that.

Speaker 1 (17:35):
Come on, man, you gotta wait till after the show
to tell.

Speaker 3 (17:39):
I mean, she said she's straight, Like, I'm sure she's
straight ish.

Speaker 1 (17:44):
Every chick's a little bite if they get enough in them,
you know what I mean?

Speaker 2 (17:47):
Ye, That's what I mean.

Speaker 1 (17:48):
That's all there was to it. Here's some videos of
some folks reacting to it, though, if we want to
see some overreactions.

Speaker 4 (17:53):
Should we be surprised that a company whose name is
literally American Eagle is probably not, but it's still really shocking.
Like a blonde haired, blue eyed white the horror man
is talking about her good genes like that is Nazi propaganda.

Speaker 1 (18:15):
I think we should have that girl on to talk
about her bad genes.

Speaker 3 (18:18):
So I see the connection she's making. But you can't
just make the connection that is happening today because it
happened in Germany eighty years.

Speaker 1 (18:33):
Right, correlations not right, That's not the one I'm looking for.
And I see what you're saying, is saying, Okay, I
understand her point.

Speaker 3 (18:40):
A blonde haired, blu white person is talking about how
good their genetics are, right, how good their jeens are.

Speaker 2 (18:46):
So that happened in Nazi Germany eighty years.

Speaker 1 (18:48):
They also built libraries in Nazi Germany.

Speaker 2 (18:50):
They also were very anti cigarettes.

Speaker 3 (18:52):
They were yeah, okay, so and we talked about cigarettes
being bad?

Speaker 2 (18:56):
Are we now saying that that low key? That's the
same propaganda that yeah.

Speaker 1 (19:01):
Yeah, And you know what, I bet a lot of
these people support gun control and the.

Speaker 3 (19:05):
Baritarian and yeah, vegan vegan ves makes you great Zazi propaganda. Yeah,
you can't just say, you can't look at the Nazi
labels used so much well.

Speaker 1 (19:18):
And the Nazis a big thing that you saw when
they talked about like eugenics and genetics with the Nazis
was physical fitness. Does that mean you're a Nazi? If
you tell someone, hey, if your doctor goes, hey.

Speaker 2 (19:29):
The picture of that girl, I know he would think.

Speaker 1 (19:31):
So your doctor goes, hey, you're three hundred and fifty pounds.
You need to lose weight or you're gonna die. That
doesn't mean he's a Nazi. So just because right, just
because something was spoken about during that time period, doesn't
mean it's a Nazi. It it makes I I can
see where they're going. If I give them what's the

(19:51):
word I'm looking for, If I give them as much
of the benefit of the doubt as possible and as
much creative freedom as they'd like, I can see how
they kind of reached that. But the only way that
the average, the only way that a person can watch
that ad, in my opinion, to go that's Nazi propaganda
is if they walk around looking for things to get.

Speaker 2 (20:12):
Because you got to look at the context, they weren't
doing it. And here's the other thing. The Nazis weren't
like hiding it in gene commercials.

Speaker 1 (20:20):
It. They were just saying it.

Speaker 3 (20:21):
If you're if you're black, if you're jew, if you're
any kind of brown race, that's not one hundred percent white. Yeah,
you're absolute trash and your inferior. They were just saying it,
you know.

Speaker 2 (20:31):
What I mean.

Speaker 3 (20:31):
And I maybe she's saying, well, they got to inch
it in slowly. But like you look at it in
our country's history.

Speaker 2 (20:36):
You really don't have to.

Speaker 3 (20:37):
I mean, there's there's still neo Nazis. I walk around,
threw a skinheads in my high school. There Kaka is
still around, Like you don't actually have to be that right,
you know what I mean? And why would a giant company,
I don't know, she's here.

Speaker 1 (20:52):
Here's another one. This one's my favorite.

Speaker 5 (20:54):
Someone who grew up in a very rural Appalachian town
and wanted to escape all of the sentiments that that entails.
This Sydney Sweeney commercial is so embarrassing. Unfortunately, you can't
argue with people who tell those beliefs because they lack
critical thinking skills. So I think we should just start
shaming them instead. You are an embarrassment at Sidney Sweeney.

(21:17):
Go back to school or do some of Maiahuascar or something,
because that brain ain't braining too well.

Speaker 1 (21:23):
Is a girl do some drugs?

Speaker 2 (21:25):
There?

Speaker 1 (21:25):
That's always the answer. I love that video. For a
couple of reasons. Because it's a girl that's a solid
five with makeup on in a studio apartment giving life
advice to a multi millionaire sex symbol, a girl.

Speaker 2 (21:38):
That girls the same age as her.

Speaker 1 (21:39):
Probably probably whose life is my guess, would be a
train wreck. Yeah, and she's on there talking to Sydney
Sweety telling her what she needs to do.

Speaker 2 (21:48):
Brain ain't brain in, dude, Warren.

Speaker 1 (21:50):
Buffett, here's where you should invest next. You know, like
it's the same thing, It's the same It's literally the
same thing. Do you want my honest opinion of what
this is and what you're seeing the freak out here?
Because because this isn't the first time that the woke
mob has spurged out about things like this. This just
a Gene commercial just emphasizes how ridiculous.

Speaker 2 (22:11):
It all is.

Speaker 1 (22:12):
What I think you're seeing here is this is the
last dying gasps of people who have not only lost
the culture war, and the election in November was kind
of the exclamation point on the end of that. But
they made the difference is because conservatives lost the culture
war for years, right, you know, when everything was trending
left in culture with all the LGBT stuff, all that

(22:34):
conservatives lost the culture War for decades. Most of my life,
I would wager to say th reeforts of my life
I've spent with liberals dominating the culture War. The difference, though,
with this group of people that's just now coming to
terms with the fact they lost, is that they decided
they were going to make the culture War their whole
personality and that politics was all they had. These people

(22:56):
don't have anything else going. If they have a job,
it's a dead end one. They have no real hobbies
outside of arguing about politics. They don't have families, they
don't have a lot of friends. So they're gonna go
one of two ways. They're either going to totally check
out because they have nothing to do outside of canceling
people and starting outrage, and now that the outrage isn't

(23:17):
working and it's not getting them the result that they want,
which is people in companies caving for them, they're just
gonna check out. They're going to have mental breakdowns. They're
going to say fuck it, none of this is worth it,
and just hibernate in their house or apartment or whatever
until the end of time. Or they're going to double
down and they're going to freak out about genes commercials,
and the takes are going to get more unhinged, Like

(23:38):
you're gonna start to hear about like how Captain crunch
captain to slave ship or something like that. I mean,
it's just gonna get more and more ridiculous. And this
is the result of these people never being.

Speaker 2 (23:50):
One to the machine that compresses inside fit more of
them in.

Speaker 1 (23:55):
They can get more Yeah, that's right, they can get
more slaves of the Captain crutch ship. That's should sell
that shirt. Captain Crutches a slave man.

Speaker 2 (24:04):
A slave is just like stuck in this like this.

Speaker 1 (24:07):
Yeah, you know what I'm jasus just enough.

Speaker 2 (24:13):
Room to breathe, you know.

Speaker 1 (24:16):
But the thing here is is this is what happens
when you don't teach people how to lose when they're kids.
When you get your ass handed to you in the
basketball game, but you still get to go out for
pizza afterwards.

Speaker 2 (24:31):
And not even a loss. It's life.

Speaker 1 (24:33):
I know, you go zero to twenty for your season
and still get a trophy. Like I know, it's like
the boomer talking point, but I really think it's underrated.
How we it's not that we have to say, losing
a game or whatever is the end of the world,
because it's not. But you do need to teach people
that losing is a thing, and you don't like not
every not everyone's a winner, that there are winners and

(24:56):
there are losers, and sometimes life just you and the dick.
And it's not about how hard you can hit, to
quote Rocky, but it's about how hard you can get
hit and keep moving forward. So you get these kids
pizza after every game they lose it participation trophies. And
then they read these books and they watch these movies,
and they hear these stories about good versus evil where
good always wins and they just lost. So now they're

(25:18):
having to come to terms with the fact that maybe
those stories were all bullshit, or maybe they were the
bad guys all along, and they're really not taking that
well at all. And this is what happens when you
raise weak kids. I don't know about you. I can't
wait to beat my son seventy to nothing on college
football in the xbox because I'm going to raise a
strong kid, said the Well, every touchdown my son scores

(25:41):
on me will be earned.

Speaker 3 (25:43):
Okay, I think I think it's a lot of layers
to it. I think one of it is a lot
of them are younger people.

Speaker 1 (25:52):
Sure, and lacking life experience.

Speaker 3 (25:55):
Well, they lack life experience and they don't realize how
gray life.

Speaker 2 (25:59):
Can be mm hm. And they always want to nine
the time.

Speaker 3 (26:03):
It's gray, very gray actually, and it's it's they want
to use the good example.

Speaker 2 (26:09):
Actually they want to use the Nazi idea.

Speaker 3 (26:13):
They always use the Nazi like fascism, and because that
whole fight against Nazism is very good and bad, right,
the Nazis were bad.

Speaker 1 (26:21):
It's Star Wars, the ring. Yeah, but.

Speaker 3 (26:26):
It really if you actually understand World War two, like
it actually was not that.

Speaker 1 (26:31):
That uh, that black and white, that black.

Speaker 3 (26:34):
And white because like like my grandpa's brother.

Speaker 1 (26:39):
Fought in World War two blackside or whiteside black side,
Yeah right, he fought.

Speaker 2 (26:43):
On World on two, but he was in a black
only unit. He couldn't fight with white people.

Speaker 3 (26:47):
So even though he was fighting racism, yeah, he himself
was being racially secarate.

Speaker 1 (26:53):
We weren't even fighting racism. We were fighting European expansion.

Speaker 3 (26:57):
They did not use they did view it as fighting racism,
oh they did, they did. Yeah, there was like over
like yeah, yeah, I mean like there was over like
things said about how like they are race because I
mean because Nazi's made their racism very who they were,
you know what I mean.

Speaker 1 (27:11):
So it was very much a part I'm talking from
like FDR's perspective and perspective.

Speaker 3 (27:15):
It was that it was I mean it was it
was European expansion.

Speaker 2 (27:18):
It was the whole freedom thing.

Speaker 3 (27:20):
It was some racist elements to it, wasn't It was
a lot of different things. Sure, it wasn't just we're
just we're fighting racism to the end. It wasn't like
that whole flag they were waving. It was multiple because
they really couldn't say that when they were had again
a surrogator army in America.

Speaker 1 (27:35):
Right, But we also sided with Joe Stalin, who killed
ten times as many people as Hitler.

Speaker 2 (27:41):
That was more of an alliance of necessity versus Sure.

Speaker 1 (27:44):
Yeah, I mean when you talk about gray area, I
mean we made some questionable you.

Speaker 3 (27:47):
Want to say, yeah, yeah, we said it with Joseph Stalin,
who killed more people than Hitler arguably.

Speaker 2 (27:51):
Right, Yeah, and so and like for instance, like how Hitler.

Speaker 3 (27:58):
Germany invaded Norway Way in World War Two. April nineteen
forty Germany invaded Norway. A lot of people don't know,
Like Churchill was debating on also invading Norway.

Speaker 1 (28:08):
Oh was he really?

Speaker 2 (28:09):
Yeah?

Speaker 1 (28:10):
I didn't know that.

Speaker 2 (28:11):
So and Norway's was a neutral country.

Speaker 1 (28:14):
Yeah so.

Speaker 2 (28:16):
And I'm not I'm.

Speaker 3 (28:17):
Gonna get into deep into this, but like Roar two is,
it's very gray and people don't understand that because they
were gonna invade Norway to keep Germany from getting the
iron ore that was there. Germany invaded it to secure
the iron ore right, and they were actually debating on
invading it at the same time that Germany did invade it.
Germany just kind of got there first, and whether England
would have actually done it or not is debatable, but

(28:41):
it was like on the table, Yeah you know what
I mean. Yeah, so, and obviously the occupation might not
have been as rough, but that's either again Nordy here
nor there. The point of it is, though we look
back twenty twenty and it's partly the fault of our
education system to paint World War two was like this
victorious a good side versus absolute evil, which not Germany

(29:04):
wasn't absolutely.

Speaker 1 (29:05):
Yeah, this amazing.

Speaker 3 (29:10):
Good side. Sure, that was like like star Wars. It
wasn't like that. Yeah, well we're the better side exactly.

Speaker 2 (29:17):
You know what I mean.

Speaker 3 (29:17):
Yeah, And so a lot of young people don't have
that view of the world.

Speaker 2 (29:23):
They view it, I think partly because of World War two, honestly,
as very good and evil. You either are good.

Speaker 1 (29:29):
Or you're evil, and just the fiction they've read.

Speaker 2 (29:31):
But it's a fiction. There's in reality. Life is very gray.

Speaker 1 (29:35):
And and that's the thing is like it's like I said,
Star Wars, Lord of the Rings, movies like that, and
I don't have a problem with movies like that, but
I think what you're starting to notice and in media,
and I think this is another positive trend, so that
they'll probably call this Nazi propaganda as well, But you're
starting to notice a trend where TV shows specifically have
a whole lot more gray area to them, Like The

(29:56):
Sopranos is a perfect example. Yeah, that was, But so
that's more of a thing recently over the last twenty years.
You're starting to see this because Tony Soprano womanizers, scumbag
gangster sopranos, okay, but for some reason you end up
rooting for him. Kenny Powers is a more ridiculous example,

(30:17):
eastpounding down Kenny Powers, I mean, materialistic, narcissistic, racist, but
you're still rooting for him. I have a fucking tat.

Speaker 2 (30:28):
I think comedies are a little different.

Speaker 1 (30:30):
I have a tattoo of Kenny Powers, who's the most
unlikable character in television history, but I fucking love them
and I don't know why. So it's kind of like that,
you know, But I think that's a we'll see where
it goes. This new up and coming generation seems to
be a little bit more based. But so when we're
talking about there's more than just the race issue that

(30:51):
people have freaked out about here. There's also a gender
issue that people are trying to make an issue, even
though it's not really one. Let's go to our favorite
giant forehead libertarian Bimbo Hannah Cox. Here's what she had
to say on it on Facebook. She said, I found
the Sydney Now she parades around to a libertarian, but
she's a cultural Marxist. I found the Sydney Sweety Slash

(31:12):
A and E collab to be an odd choice for
a company whose goal one would think is to sell
clothes to young women. If that were the case, I
wouldn't or wouldn't they have chosen a public figure women
actually gravitate towards. Wouldn't they have avoided the whole sexual
aspect given that women, and particularly young women, are so
against it in media. So who was this ad for?

(31:34):
The answer seems pretty obvious it was for men. Can
we give her a round of applause for figuring that
out that the ad with the chick with big tits
was targeted at men? The simple truth is why they're
so emotional over it online, and that emotion is why
savvy stock market investors saw gold where the rest of
us saw blue jeans. It says boobs, blue jeans and
backlash Sidney Sweetey and the male gays economy. Sydney Sweeteye

(31:58):
isn't selling gene, She's selling nostalgia for the patriarchy. Get
a load of this retard. She's gonna foul out reaching
like that, I mean, nostalgia for the patriarch. Breaking news
reporter finds out that American Eagle sells close the men
to more at nine.

Speaker 2 (32:17):
Oh my gosh, oh my gosh.

Speaker 1 (32:20):
It's awesome.

Speaker 6 (32:22):
So even I'm rediscovering how the world has worked for
pissed off I know, you know that men masturbatee the
pictures of us, Well.

Speaker 1 (32:33):
What's crazy If you go and look at this girl's
like profile pictures on Twitter. They're not overtly sexual, and
she's not a bad looking girl, but they're not avertly sexual,
but they're no less sexual than the stuff you saw
on that ad. So you can make the argument that
she's going after the mail gates as well. So then
people rightfully call her out on her bullshit in the comments,

(32:56):
and she says this, it's funny how men are being
super emotion in the comments, as if they aren't proving
my point. So here's what you say something stupid. People
tell you this is stupid, and here's why it's stupid,
and then you just, oh, you're just being emotional. Don't
address what they say, just let them. We did a
whole show, like an hour long, where we broke down
a stupid video she made, and we were getting all

(33:19):
these comments and messages about how she is the most
bad faith political personality on the Internet's I want to
try to get her on the show, but there's no
way she will after I said, you could land a
plane on her forehead.

Speaker 3 (33:30):
So you know what's it's so insane. Is that same
level of nudity at a Pride parade.

Speaker 1 (33:40):
Well, far more, far worse than that.

Speaker 2 (33:42):
Is now self expression and it's beautiful.

Speaker 3 (33:44):
Yeah, and it's and it's And honestly, I sent you
this video a few weeks ago of this gay girl,
this lesbian chick, dyke, rug muncher, whatever you want to
call her, Taco pusher. But she said basically like like
she goes. You go to a Pride parade today and

(34:04):
it's a mixture, like it looks like I forgot what
she said something about like like an orgy got double
book with a kid's.

Speaker 2 (34:13):
Parade, Yeah, you know what I mean?

Speaker 3 (34:16):
Yeah, And like because people bring kids to Pride parades now,
and I remember in the nineties when I was growing up,
people didn't bring kids. They weren't kid related stuff. They
were more like almost like protest marches. Now, a Pride
parade is very much like a parade, like a Saint
Patter's Day parade, right, But they used to be more
like almost protests like marches, you know what I mean.

(34:36):
And they still had a very high sexual like feeling,
but they were known to not.

Speaker 2 (34:42):
Be like you're not gonna bring a kid to that
kind of thing. Yea.

Speaker 3 (34:45):
So it is interesting, like in the last fifteen years
to become kid friendly, but they're really not kids.

Speaker 1 (34:49):
They're not people just bring kids to know, we've just
lowered the standards for what constitutes is kid friendly.

Speaker 2 (34:54):
Exactly, exactly.

Speaker 3 (34:55):
And and she was saying in this video based that
you are proving what people used to say in the
nineties about gays is that you give them all the
room and the time they want, and they're just sex
freaks and pedophiles. And now you got people rock and
dildos in front of kids. Yeah, with their butt sheets

(35:17):
out and like their titties out and all these.

Speaker 2 (35:19):
Things going on, right, Yeah, And so.

Speaker 3 (35:23):
To see if somebody say that, oh, well, we're doing
this for the male gaze, well what if it's a
gay male at a Pride parade, then it's not a
big deal.

Speaker 2 (35:30):
Like, get out of my face. It's hypocritical.

Speaker 1 (35:32):
So here's the thing is the gays economy quote unquote
is a two way straight and it's a two way
street both ways. They put an attractive woman like that
in a jeans ad and yes, it's going to attract men.
Men are going to see it. Oh, that's a hot girl,
that's an American eagle, and it's going to click. But it's
also going to attract women who want to attract men. Oh,
that's how the hot girl dresses. It's the same way

(35:54):
when they put men in men's underwear commercials that are
jacked and they've got six pack abs and stuff like
Mike Wahlberg. Men, yeah, Mark Wahlberg. We don't want to
look at that, but we see that and go, oh,
that guy looks good. Not in an I want to
fuck him kind of way, but in an women will
want to fuck me kind of way if I look
like that. So the women will see that that's the
hot guy in the ad for the underwear. The men

(36:16):
will see it, that's the guy women like. It's a
two way street. No one's being objectified. They're all making money.
No one's being enslaved or forced at gunpoint or traffic.
They're all getting paid for I love when these fucking idiots,
these feminists. If a girl goes on OnlyFans and finger
blasts herself for five bucks a month, that's empowering. But
Sidney Sweety makes a half million dollars to sit there

(36:37):
in a jean jacket, and all of a sudden she's
being objectified and be treated like an id, like a
piece of meat, and like, what are we doing here?

Speaker 2 (36:45):
Yeah, that's that's it, man, that's it. That's it.

Speaker 3 (36:47):
But if Sidney Sweeney blasted herself on only fans for
ten bucks a.

Speaker 1 (36:51):
Month, she'd be the richest woman on earth by Christmas.
She would me what.

Speaker 3 (36:57):
But people will say like how bold she is? Ye, power,
she's taking back her destiny. And but let us see
her freaking meat flap, you know what I'm saying.

Speaker 2 (37:07):
But it's it's wild to me, it's wild. This is
why they didn't let women vote.

Speaker 1 (37:14):
This is what every society throughout history until told you all, this.

Speaker 2 (37:19):
Is how it was gonna happen.

Speaker 3 (37:20):
And then I'm kidding, of course, but I mean aside though,
like I don't care women whom women's she.

Speaker 2 (37:26):
Be able to vote, but you know, I mean, I'll
just aside, like this this is.

Speaker 3 (37:29):
Crazy, absolutely freaking crazy, dude, Like the level of hypocrisy.

Speaker 2 (37:34):
You nailed it on the head.

Speaker 3 (37:36):
Some girl five bucks a month gets completely naked and
shoves a cucumber up her pussy and it's one hundred
percent okay, But this same girl.

Speaker 2 (37:45):
Does an ad on TV for the Male Gaze and
and she.

Speaker 1 (37:51):
And it really. Honestly, man, the type of ads that
we grew up seeing in media, like with with Girls
in Him, that's pretty benign compared to some of the
innuendo that was on TV in like two thousand and six.
If you think about it, Yeah, that's pretty fucking that
wouldn't even no one would have been talking about that.
Like I remember sometimes when I was little, there were

(38:12):
commercials that come out of My mom would cover my eyes.
That one probably wouldn't even have caught her attention, you know,
it's it's pretty Yeah, No, I wouldn't have.

Speaker 2 (38:20):
Been that bad. Now.

Speaker 3 (38:21):
I mean you almost see a little bit of boob,
but it's no more boob than you would have seen
like with a swimsuit.

Speaker 1 (38:27):
You see more at the pool.

Speaker 2 (38:29):
That's what I'm saying. Yeah, it wasn't a lot my mom.

Speaker 3 (38:31):
But like I said, my mom would used to cover
my eyes for crazy stuff. That probably wouldn't have done it. No,
that wouldn't have done it at all.

Speaker 1 (38:37):
No, that wouldn't even have been a late night one.

Speaker 2 (38:39):
So American Eagle, you should double down and do it again.

Speaker 1 (38:43):
Well, that's The other thing that's crazy is everyone so
against over sexualization in ads that are targeted toward adults.
Kind of like you were saying with the Pride parade thing,
but we're moving the sexualization into books and TV shows
that are targeted to children. So you can't show a
hot chick with her tits out on an American eagle lad,

(39:03):
But for the love of God, you can show you know,
dildo's in books for six year olds.

Speaker 3 (39:08):
But half but have have a girl who's topless, who's
topless at a Pride parade and she just has body
paint on.

Speaker 1 (39:17):
Yeah, totally okay, and with.

Speaker 2 (39:19):
Kids there, and it's perfectly fine.

Speaker 1 (39:20):
It's not a big guy with his dangling hanging out
totally fine at the parade.

Speaker 2 (39:24):
Or like it's wrapped in like a hot dog shaped sockers.

Speaker 1 (39:27):
It's ridiculous.

Speaker 3 (39:28):
Elephant's you know what I'm talking about, Elephant underwear.

Speaker 1 (39:32):
I know exactly what you're talking about, and.

Speaker 3 (39:34):
Like, you know, hit a dig you know, and like
it's yeah, it's ridiculous. So kid's gotta wash this guy's
boner over his dad.

Speaker 1 (39:40):
I know who sings their kids to that ship?

Speaker 3 (39:44):
Dude, This girl I used to work with last of you.
I can pull up on my Facebook right now. Yeah,
she actually has like one hundred and fifty thousand followers
on TikTok. Yeah, this girl I used war she actually
got fired over it. Yeah, but yeah she she has
a tran son or trans daughter. I think it was
born a girl. Yeah and yeah, she uh, she got

(40:08):
pretty pissed off at me in training actually because she
went to some some uh axe murder house in Iowa.

Speaker 2 (40:15):
Oh yeah, and I wanted to go there.

Speaker 3 (40:17):
And film a fake ghost hunter thing like I'm and
like actually interview them like an actual ghost hunter, but
like asked.

Speaker 2 (40:26):
Them like do the have you the ghosts?

Speaker 3 (40:28):
And like having sex with the other like the horny
it was their freaking ghosts walk around for three thousand years.
It's gonna get a boner once in a while. Yeah,
you know what I'm saying. She watched the same girl
for the last twenty five hundred years. You know what
I'm saying. That gonna happen, dude. Yeah, we've just been
hot in the same place as smashed. Oh yes, did

(40:51):
that really personally as that's real life murder place and
people actually last there.

Speaker 1 (40:56):
Hey did you know him?

Speaker 2 (40:57):
God? Dude, I lived in a house in Virginia.

Speaker 3 (41:00):
This guy blew his brains out by the sink okay
before we moved in.

Speaker 2 (41:05):
And you know what my mom made me do. Huh
wash the dishes.

Speaker 1 (41:08):
Yep, damn right, you off.

Speaker 2 (41:10):
Some guy died there and.

Speaker 1 (41:12):
Toughing you up. That's well. And that's the thing with
taking your kids at the Pride parade is like you
always see the defense for that as well. I'm trying
to expose them to different types of Listen, Listen, there's
all types of different people in the world, and they're
going to be exposed to them sooner or at some point.
That doesn't mean you have to go out of your
way to expose them to it at an age before

(41:32):
it's appropriate.

Speaker 2 (41:33):
It's hyper sexual.

Speaker 1 (41:34):
My children are going to be of mixed race, right,
They're gonna deal with racism, They're gonna deal with all
kinds of bullshit. I'm not gonna take them to a
clan rally. You know, we're not gonna say, oh, the
neo Nazis are speaking today, let's go hear them. Son.
It's not That's not how we're gonna do that. They're
gonna be they're gonna deal with racism. It's fine, we'll
tackle it when we get there. But fucking it's absurd

(41:55):
to try to expose your children to sexual content when
they're that young. And it's absolutely child abuse, Absolutely child
if you brought your kid, if you brought your son
to a KKK rally, everyone would call you a child abuser, you.

Speaker 3 (42:07):
Know what I mean, Like it's the same thing.

Speaker 1 (42:10):
Okay, we got to go to the next topic here.
So have you heard about the t app? I've heard
about it. So the t app is where women and
you have to prove that you're a woman, so you
take a picture of your driver's license.

Speaker 2 (42:22):
NFL play for to get into it recently.

Speaker 1 (42:24):
Yeah, and they'll go and they'll talk about the men
they're dating and they'll, you know, you'll every man's got
like a quote unquote profile for his area where women
will they'll post his picture and they'll talk about their
experiences with him, kind of like a hot or not
type thing that that men used to do with girls.
But it's a little bit deeper than that. You know,
did he try to hit it on the first date,

(42:46):
did he pay for dinner? All those types of things?
What red flags did he have? And it's totally not
embellished at all and there being one hundred percent honest
and they would never lie about anything. But so this
app claimed to people that when you took a selfie
and uploaded your driver's license, they cleared the hard drive.
Well that didn't happen. They were wrong. They either lied

(43:07):
or they weren't as good at wiping their data as
they thought. Because the app got hacked and everyone and
I mean everyone on the app got their data released
to the public. All of their comments about everybody that
they thought we was said in private were linked back
to their faces. And for the record, men, these are
the women who are bashing you on the te app.

(43:29):
There's a so just so you guys are aware, this
is what you're up with, this is what you're up
against here. You know, the girl on the lamps makes
me glad I'm married. I know, dude, dude like this.

Speaker 2 (43:47):
I feel bad for my sons. Oh my god, the
world they're.

Speaker 1 (43:52):
Going no idea. Well, so a bunch of people got
together and they created their own app with all of
the users from the t app, and they set up
a one on one style thing where you'd go up,
your face would go up against another face, and people
would vote for the hotter one, and they have records
based on their wins and losses like you would in

(44:12):
a sporting event or anything else. And it's just been
I've never seen an app backfire as quickly as it did.
And the reason this app got started the CEO he's
a gay guy. He got tired, so it's still.

Speaker 3 (44:28):
A man, still a man, great job.

Speaker 1 (44:32):
Patriarchy is still involved, still there. I mean, if you
think about it, Sky As itself are the ultimate patriarchs.
If you think about it, They've they've totally removed women
from the equation. They've totally Here's the thing, dude, people
think that like being gay is like a liberal trait.
Let me tell you the deeper I've embedded myself into

(44:54):
Republican politics, specifically just in this state. The amount of
fucking closet case that are running these right wing campaigns
from behind this. Oh dude, if it got out to
some of their if it got out to some of
their base, the scandal that would be involved, Oh my god.
I could drop some bombs right now, and I could

(45:14):
have some people come on with receipts for those bombs.
But I'm a nice guy, so I won't do it.
But the conservative gay is the behind the scenes, I mean,
just just workhorse for the Republican Party and people don't
realize it. But so this guy created this app, and
the whole reason he created it was because his mom
kept going to these online dating sites and giving money

(45:38):
to African and Indian scammers she was falling for, so
he wanted her to be able. So that's that's how
this whole thing got started.

Speaker 2 (45:54):
His mom was an idiot. Basically, his mom was a moron.

Speaker 1 (45:57):
Yeah that's I don't okay. So I just felt like,
so I heard about this app being a thing. It
blew up like a week ago, and I'm sitting here
as soon as I see it. Because there's always been
like Facebook groups like this. It's like are we dating
the same person? Houston, Texas? Like that kind of thing.
So that's always been kind of a thing. But when

(46:18):
I heard about this app, which was an app where
you could create entire profiles surrounding men and they're not
able to defend themselves. There's no way to provide additional contexts.
Mind you, these aren't public figures. These are private citizens, right, yeah, yeah,
these are guys working at lows that are just trying
to do their thing, and you know, maybe they got
the wrong message on a data Maybe they were creeps.
I don't know, but they have no opportunity to defend

(46:40):
themselves and you're dragging them through the mud to thousands
of people online. I said when I first saw this,
I go, this app's a lawsuit waiting to happen. It
may not be the women making the posts because they
probably don't have anything to sue for, but the guy
that platforms this, that the company that owns the app
is going to get sued into bankrupt and all of

(47:02):
this stuff getting leaked might actually be a blessing in
disguise for them, because before someone got accused of some
type of heinous crime that they didn't commit. This looks
like it's all going to come crashing down.

Speaker 6 (47:14):
Uh.

Speaker 3 (47:16):
My biggest lesson to take from this, not even a
lesson the other people take from it, is every time
a company has said we delete your.

Speaker 1 (47:24):
Information, they never do.

Speaker 2 (47:26):
They never do. That is always a lie.

Speaker 1 (47:28):
But there's one that does it. Signal Signal does. Signal does.
And the only reason I know that Signal does is
because there have been court cases where the Feds have
tried to subpoena text from drug dealers and they couldn't
get them, so that the only thing Signal would show
is that this person was online at this time and
online at that time. They didn't show who anything was

(47:48):
sent to. Everything end to end was totally encrypted. So
signals the only one to my knowledge that actually I
don't think it's even that Signal doesn't delete. It is
the key signal never actually had as it it's going
from device to device, and when it's gone, it's gone.

Speaker 2 (48:04):
That's the difference, which is the smartest way to do it.

Speaker 1 (48:06):
Yeah, But if you're in a three hundred person group
chat on signal and some dipshit decides they're gonna leak
a bunch of text messages the left wing activists, you're
not safe there because they go to the news and
your name gets put on a fucking article talking about
white supremacy and violence against women, even though all you
did was make a Johnny Bravo joke. Okay, it was

(48:30):
gonna come out at some point, I'm fucking okay, my bad.

Speaker 2 (48:34):
Yeah, that's hilarious. We already talked about that.

Speaker 1 (48:37):
I've talked about it twice. I was asked to stop
talking about it, but we can cover it briefly if
you want.

Speaker 2 (48:42):
I mean, I already know about it.

Speaker 1 (48:44):
Yeah, you already know about it. The crowd already knows
about it. So it's like, yeah, I know that. One
of the people involved asked if we could stop. He's
trying to move on from it, and I respect that.

Speaker 2 (48:54):
So him.

Speaker 1 (48:56):
We're gonna take a quick two second break. I'm gonna
get a drink of water over be right back, all right,
And before we get into our next topic here, I'm
gonna give a shout out to our sponsors, Firecracker Farm.
It's Firecracker dot farm dot dot com, dot orger dot net.
If you use the promo code based you'll save ten
percent off your order at the checkout on Hot Salt.
Hot Salt's combination of Mediterranean Sea salt, Scorpion pepper, Carolina

(49:17):
Reaper and ghost pepper, and it goes great on everything.
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(49:41):
I'll get in my hank kill mode.

Speaker 2 (49:42):
Here.

Speaker 1 (49:43):
The show's coming back next weekend. This weekend, No Monday, Monday.
It's coming back Monday, August fourth, man, my mom's birthday
and Obama's birthday. Yeah, I know, I know. That's uh
all right, Well, let's go to the next one. Here.
It's uh so these uh here, here's a video. It's
been going around and it was initially shared without context
on Twitter. It just said, how do you feel about

(50:05):
these two guys? And I can't play the audio, so
there's not going to be any for those of you
listening at home, because Taylor Swift is a not a
real Nazi but a copyright nazi and it's a Taylor
Swift song in the background, and she will shut us down.
So here's the video and we'll give you some context afterwards. Guys,

(50:30):
fat all right, we get it. So that video was
shown as a sign of progress, kind of like progress
we were talking about earlier, and it said, how does
this video make you feel? And I think this was

(50:52):
posted by a conservative because I think this guy knew
what he was doing when he shared it. And you
had all these liberals that were replying to it, and
they were saying, well, if you have a problem with this,
you're just showing that you're a homophobe. Blah blah blah
blah blah. And as it turns out, the one of
the men in this video is a convicted child sex
offender who was a teacher in Pennsylvania that not only

(51:15):
sexually abused one of his own students, he made child
sexual abuse material of the victim. So he's a sex
offender and who so this is Yeah, So this has
sparked an online debate, and I think we're not seeing
the forest through the trees here. I don't think this

(51:35):
is a gay straight issue. So the way these guys
had this kid, they didn't obviously it didn't come out
of one of them, right, They didn't adopt the kid,
because a sex offender can't adopt a kid, you know,
like most sane states. The issue is they had a
surrogacy and there's no way to stop that. There's no
way just.

Speaker 2 (51:55):
To have by it.

Speaker 1 (51:58):
Now they just do the turkey based or thing insemination.

Speaker 3 (52:02):
You know my wife's uh my wife has a friend
and you know it's because they don't listen to this podcast. Yeah,
I was saying, no one listens to it, but I
know they don't. Sure, And that's how they had their kids. Yeah,
but an actual turkey baser though, he busted a nut
like on the kitchen table. And then why because apparently

(52:25):
because they're both very fat and he has a smaller penis,
so I can't really go inside of her very deep,
so he.

Speaker 1 (52:32):
Uh not a surrogacy.

Speaker 2 (52:34):
Then it wasn't a.

Speaker 3 (52:34):
Sac like an actual turkey baser. He slurped it up
with a turkey baser and then stuck it inside of her.
They'd give it a second mine.

Speaker 1 (52:41):
The Chinese food is gonna come up in a minute here.
And then for those of you wondering why I'm sluggish,
I have a brick of Chinese General sal Is laying
in my stomach right now. But that that's disgusting.

Speaker 3 (52:52):
That's that's what they actually did, Like no jokes, that's
how he had and it works.

Speaker 2 (52:57):
She got prended.

Speaker 1 (52:58):
That's because they're both overweight. That's what's that movie where
they break into the blind guy's house, don't don't breathe
or something like that. He does that, he tries to
impregnate the girl with a turkey baster because his daughter
died from like a dui or something, and he's trying
to get a new kid anyway. So the debate that

(53:18):
this has never.

Speaker 2 (53:19):
Even heard of that movie, to be honest with you, buddy,
sounds wildly.

Speaker 1 (53:23):
He's start going a blind guy and a home invasion
and a turkey baser. Yeah, all this stuff. But so
the debate that this has sparked online has been about
gay versus straight and all this, But I think it's
missing the point. I think the bigger problem here and
we can have the should gay people be allowed to
adopt kids debate another time. I have mixed opinions on
it myself. I don't have a problem if two dudes

(53:45):
want to get married, I can. I don't necessarily have
a problem with them adopting kids. But I can see
where people get tripped up with that one. My issue
here is the surrogacy thing. What do we do about that?
I mean the fact that you can have two people,
one of them like literally fucked a kid, went to jail,
convicted of it made child porn with said kid. They

(54:07):
can just go out and cherry pick a kid out
of some woman who maybe I mean, I'm not gonna
attack her, or I'm gonna give her the benefit of
the doubt and say she probably had no idea. What
the hell was going on? How is that legal? That's
the concern here. I do a lot of issues here, yeah,
like what first and foremost?

Speaker 3 (54:28):
And you know, I understand a lot of people have
their opinions and their ways they feel about it.

Speaker 2 (54:33):
Everyone's entitled to it, and I'm entitled to my opinion,
so I'm gonna give it m hm. Okay.

Speaker 1 (54:38):
Everyone's entitled to an opinion on this show except for women.

Speaker 2 (54:42):
Okay. And I'm clearly a man. Yes, cis gendered by
the way.

Speaker 3 (54:51):
I could never and just to put this into a
male perspective, sell my sperm and now a bunch of
kids out there.

Speaker 1 (55:00):
You know, women do it all the time.

Speaker 2 (55:01):
Women do it all the time. I could never do that.

Speaker 3 (55:04):
So the idea that a woman could like let someone
get her pregnant, whether it be with a turkey baser
or one of those like plastic McDonald's spoons whatever, but
and or through actual sex, which I'm sure for the
gay man, he probably disgusted the entire time. Yeah, I

(55:26):
never knew you get that gooey, Yeah, disgustingly right, and
then go through that for nine months just to to
give it away.

Speaker 2 (55:42):
To some woman hater.

Speaker 1 (55:45):
The patriarchs, the patriot out there, the gatriarchy, the gatriarchy,
and and.

Speaker 3 (55:53):
To give it away and and to never see it
again and when it's you know, I I I I
don't see how that's how woman could do that because
I can do that.

Speaker 2 (56:05):
With my sperm. No, and many of that, but that's
like thirty bucks of pop or well.

Speaker 1 (56:10):
And women are more like connected to the baby when
it comes out. There's that natural bond. And you see
that a lot of time with surrog para they're literally
connected with Yeah, yeah, it's fucking biological. But you'll see
these women don't want to give the kid up after
they have it. That happens a lot, really yeah, and
not a lot, but enough to where it's at, Yeah.

Speaker 2 (56:32):
Like I don't want to give it up and it's
like my kid.

Speaker 1 (56:34):
And I'll be honest, man, the surrogacy thing kind of
creeps me out. I don't know, it just feels like
you're playing God. Like you're going out and you're picking.
You want to talk about eugenics and Nazis and stuff
like that. You're going out and you're picking somebody who's
got the genes that you want your kid to look like,
and you're artificially inseminating them.

Speaker 2 (56:52):
Okay, you know they're a baby factory.

Speaker 1 (56:55):
There's a whole basically, there's a whole adoption. I mean,
there's a whole group of kids that need to be
adopted all over the country. And you're out playing.

Speaker 2 (57:04):
Because your husband's a sex offender.

Speaker 1 (57:06):
And you shouldn't be allowed to do the other thing either.
That's the problem. You shouldn't be allowed to do Like
I'm sorry. If we find out that you did a
surrogate parenting or a surrogate motherhood type thing and you're
a sex offender who abused kids, we're gonna take the
kid from you.

Speaker 3 (57:22):
I know a lot of times, like I don't care
if your going straight. There's contracts written up, like the
mom doesn't have any rights after birth.

Speaker 1 (57:31):
Yeah, you know what I mean. I don't know how
enforceable that is.

Speaker 3 (57:33):
I don't know how it is, but I know that
there's some instances of that, there's some to some level
that happens, right, Yeah, so she can't like but like,
wait a second, this guy's a sex offender, Like, no,
I'm taking the baby back.

Speaker 2 (57:45):
I want I didn't have some role in this kid's life.
And they're just like, no, you told us you don't
want that to happen.

Speaker 1 (57:52):
Well, and and that's the other belongs to us. That
that's the other thing is so one guy is for
sure a sex offender. The other Again, I'm gonna give
the benefit of the doubt. I don't know what his
deal is, but he's obviously decided that raping a student
that you were teaching and making kitty porn with him
was not a deal breaker for him, which I'm sorry

(58:14):
is a red flag in a partner if you're just
if that's it's it's look, I get it. Everybody make mistakes.
Shit happens. It's not like this guy was drunk at
nineteen and killed somebody in a dui.

Speaker 2 (58:24):
Yeah.

Speaker 1 (58:25):
Right. The problem with this is this is a very
specific disorder that has one of the highest repeat offender
rates of any crime out there. Because it's not like
murder where you were seventeen years old and you had
only ever grown up around gangs your whole life. And
a drug deal goes bad and you shoot somebody and
kill him. It's not like you were compelled to kill

(58:45):
that person, like you were gonna get off on it. Right,
that type of person can be redeemed. We're talking about
a very specific mental illness where this guy he's compelled
to do these things. He has a sexual attraction to
these people, to children that he's never going to be
able to get over, and your partner has at best
decided that's not a deal breaker for him. At worst,

(59:07):
I don't even want to go down that road. So
these two were basically allowed to recruit this kid and
groove and they're gonna God knows only knows what's gonna happen.
I mean, this is rape for sale essentially.

Speaker 2 (59:22):
I find it crazy.

Speaker 3 (59:25):
I'd like to know more details, Like and I'm not
saying one is okay or one isn't okay. I'm not
saying there is a world oh my god, I get
cards fell out. I'm not saying like there's a there's
an instance where any of this is okay.

Speaker 2 (59:43):
There isn't. But like.

Speaker 3 (59:48):
So for instance, and again not saying that this is okay.
But this girl, Lily Bowman two years ago ended it'll
be convicted. But she had sex with one of her students. Yeah,
she was twenty three, he was seventeen. Yeah, so that
actually age range is pretty close. Yeah right, yeah, still

(01:00:13):
inappropriate and she's still like, you know, it's a sex offender.

Speaker 2 (01:00:17):
She still is and should be.

Speaker 1 (01:00:19):
She should be. She groomed a student, yeah, she used.
It's the power dynamic there.

Speaker 2 (01:00:22):
Yeah.

Speaker 3 (01:00:23):
But at the same time, he wasn't one of her
students directly, but she was a teacher at his school.

Speaker 2 (01:00:28):
And she was on the trap team with him. She's yeah,
coach or whatever, right, doesn't matter.

Speaker 3 (01:00:35):
But still, so was a situation like that where they
were like close in age. I actually went to high
school with a guy. I was to high school with
a girl and me and her were like in the
eleventh grade, yeah, you know, sixteen seventeen, and her older
brother was a teacher.

Speaker 2 (01:00:55):
Yeah, and he was like twenty two.

Speaker 1 (01:00:58):
Yeah. I'm trying to see how the it doesn't say
Brandon's matter in Chesapeake County, it says inappropriate communications with
a minor age sixteen to eighteen years old. That's what
it says, yeah, yeah.

Speaker 2 (01:01:13):
Okay, So what was the kid eight years old?

Speaker 3 (01:01:15):
Or is it like a seventeen year old student and
he was setting him dick pics?

Speaker 1 (01:01:20):
Both are wrong, Both are wrong, but one's more wrong.
One is more wrong, you know what I mean. Let's
see he is. It doesn't say how old this guy was,
because that that's the difference. Was the kid sixteen and
you were eighteen? Or was the kid sixteen and you
were thirty? There's a difference. This difference there too. It's
a difference there too. So was he like seventeen years
old and he was like twenty three years old? It's

(01:01:42):
still wrong, but like, eh, right, I mean seventeen years old,
you're pretty much the kid's doing what he wants to do.

Speaker 2 (01:01:47):
Sure, you know what I mean. I don't think this
was coortion at.

Speaker 3 (01:01:51):
Seventeen years old, right, Certainly is some, but not a
ton as opposed to ten years old. Sure, so I
think that tail does stand to matter somewhat.

Speaker 2 (01:02:04):
But with that said, it still is wrong.

Speaker 3 (01:02:08):
And the whole thing of same sex couples having kids,
what are you trying to accomplish?

Speaker 1 (01:02:13):
Not a fan you, I'm asking?

Speaker 2 (01:02:17):
Am I a fan of it?

Speaker 1 (01:02:18):
Yeah?

Speaker 2 (01:02:18):
No, I'm not a fan of it. It is weird.

Speaker 1 (01:02:20):
Well, okay, I'm not a fan of it either, But
do you think it should be illegal?

Speaker 2 (01:02:24):
It's a strong word.

Speaker 1 (01:02:25):
Yeah, because that because here's the thing. I think it's
ideal for a child to have a father and a mother, right,
everyone agrees. Every statistic out there shows that the kids
do best in school in terms of crimes or excuse me,
not committing crimes. Career pathwise, everything always going to do
better when they've gotten the father and a mother in

(01:02:48):
the household. Now here's where it's.

Speaker 3 (01:02:50):
Especially if it's their biological father and biological mother.

Speaker 1 (01:02:53):
Here's where it gets weird is when you see a
single mother household, the crime rate goes away up, up,
the dropout rate, the literacy rate, everything you know goes
to shit. You see a drop off with a single
father household, but not near to the degree that you
do with a single mother household. You also see a
drop off slightly less with a two father household that

(01:03:17):
you do compared to a father mother household, but not
what you see with a single mother household. So if
we're going to use that type of data, you might
make it should we put single mothers in prison is
the question I'm asking. We all know how I feel.
We all know how I feel about it. Single mothers

(01:03:37):
to Alligator Alcatraz. That's our new march line.

Speaker 3 (01:03:42):
Single mothers ruined kids. They do, they do many, They're
horrible with them.

Speaker 2 (01:03:47):
No, don't think I think honestly, it's it's I mean.

Speaker 3 (01:03:52):
I think it's the role of fathers is such a
under appreciated role.

Speaker 1 (01:03:58):
It's the most important.

Speaker 3 (01:03:59):
And again with the patriarchy be evil thing that yeahoked
upon is not necessary. Yeah, statistics show you that it
is crucial, not impossible that someone could be raised well,
but yeah, it is so crucial to the upbringing of

(01:04:19):
a well.

Speaker 1 (01:04:20):
Rounded absolutely absolutely. All right, Well, like I said, we
got a condensed show this week. We'll be back to
our normally scheduled programming next week. Do you have anything
you want to plug before we get out of here?

Speaker 2 (01:04:36):
Plug my charger, room to die.

Speaker 1 (01:04:38):
There you go, perfect good timing. All right, Well, that's
been our show. Thank you so much for coming on. Brother.
We'll have you back on soon or the rest of
the folks cheat on your text is not your spouse
and stay based
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