Episode Transcript
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Speaker 1 (00:00):
This is HBr News number five twenty two. Aaron Pitsy
on End of Life Treatment, SBLC and ADL on Notice
where we discuss the news of the week and give
it the back of treat Hello everyone, and welcome to
Honey Badger Radio. I hope you guys are doing well
this week and that you're laughing at all of this
absurdity so that you are not consumed by it. I
am your host, Brian. I'm joined by, as always, my
(00:21):
lovely co hosts, Hannah Wallin and doctor Randmerkam. We have
a great show lined up for you guys today, so
please be sure to continue the conversations both in the
chat as well as the comments section. On this week's
HBr News. We're going to be talking about the latest
news because there's a little bit of confusion around it
regarding the goat of men's issues, or at least one
(00:42):
of the goats. There's a lot of goats, but she's
one of the big ones, Aaron Pitsy. And because there's
a little bit of confusion and we want to clear
the air and sort of like get into what's going
on with her. Cash Patel says, the FBI will be
cutting ties with the ADL and the SBLC, and we
have more. So stick around, it's going to be a
good time and be sure to join us afterwards for
(01:05):
the patron only show. So this could actually be its
own real show. And maybe I don't know if it's
of interest in anyone that works here at HBr, but
I think it is relevant. So I discovered one of
the I guess you could say, one of the final
bosses of wokeness in our media and culture, or feminism
(01:26):
in our culture. And it comes back to this organization
called the Geena Davis Institute. Yes, that Geena Davis, the
actress from Beetlejuice and Cutthroat Islands. What's the one with
a female baseball players and Filman Louise the lead of
their own Yeah? Yeah, Filman Louise.
Speaker 2 (01:49):
The Fly get some of her previous films.
Speaker 1 (01:54):
Long Kiss, good Night, No, for sure. So she has
a website that essentially acts like a kind of enforcer
group that pushes various, let's say, institutions of culture in
a certain direction. As I understand that they have a
tremendous amount of influence, They're not there, they're actually potentially
(02:19):
where Sweet Baby Ink comes from as an example, or
like they are the they are the brood mother of
the Aarnita Sarkisians and activists in our culture in the world.
So we're gonna go through the website the Genus Davis Institute.
Speaker 3 (02:34):
Wait for them to drive themselves off a fucking cliff.
Speaker 1 (02:36):
Yeah it's good. So, yeah, we're gonna be looking at that.
If you want to join us for that, please consider
becoming a Badger yourself, because it does a lot on
this website and we're gonna have a lot of fun
reading through it. But if you want to check it
out yourself, you should. I put a link to it
in the Patreon page for today's show, So go there.
It's everybody can access it. It's free. But if you
(02:57):
want to join us for the discussion, go to Badger
dot com forward slash subscribe to set up a monthly
subscription five bucks a month. We'll get you into the
Discord server where you'll be able to watch all of
the additional content and watch the shows live like the
Patron show that's gonna come on right after this one ends.
And if you give it higher levels, you can actually
participate in the discussions with us and tell us, give
(03:18):
us a piece of your mind, and you know so
like you consider doing that. That's be the Bagel dot
com forward slash subscribe. And if you don't want to
wake up one morning to find that we've been yeeded
from the Internet, then go to badgerfeed dot com or
honey Badger Radio dot com to find where all of
our archived content lives. All right, let me just pop
up the discord because I forgot to get the super
(03:39):
Chow channel set up here again, if you want to
send us a superchow, you can send us a direct
message which is not gonna get censored or otherwise controlled
by Google or YouTube. Go to feed thebadgel dot com
forward slash just a tip to send us a message
at any point during the show. All right, So with
all that out of the way, let us get into stories.
(04:01):
So aired Pitsy pictured here, the trailer blazing British activist
that founded the world's first women's refuge in nineteen seventy one,
is currently well. For a while there yesterday we thought
that she had passed away. Now we know that she's
old and this was kind of like something that was coming,
but turned out that she's not has not left this
(04:24):
mortal coil yet, but she is gravely ill and currently
receiving end of life care in a hospital, according to
a statement from Janice James, mbe of good Egg Safety CiCe,
an organization closely tied to her legacy. This clarification came
amid widespread online reports. There were updates to Wikipedia and
(04:45):
tributes to them from men's rights activists that announced her
death on October fourth, twenty twenty five, at the age
of eighty six. James emphasized that Pitsy remains seriously unwell
and under urgent medical attention, urgent supporters to hold off
on assumptions while keeping her in her thoughts. So Pittsy
if you guys don't know, and you really should. Often
(05:07):
hailed as the mother of the domestic violent Shelter movement,
has left an incredible mark on global advocacy for abuse survivors.
Her most groundbreaking achievement was founding the world's first women's
refuge in Cheswick Women's Aid in a rundown house in Cheswick,
London in nineteen seventy one. This initiative provided a safe
haven for women fleeing domestic violence, inspiring the establishment of
(05:29):
thousands of similar shelters worldwide, and fundamentally shifting publican policy
perceptions of intimate partner abuse as a societal crisis rather
than a private matter. Beyond shelters, Pitsy authored influential books
that amplified survivor voices, included the nineteen seventy four best
seller Screen Quietly or The Neighbors Will Hear, which drew
from her direct experiences and became a catalyst for legal reforms.
(05:52):
She also pioneered support for male victims by opening the
first refuge for battered husbands in nineteen seventy four and
challenging gender based narratives or gender bias narratives in the
nineteen eighties through writings like Prone to Violence. Her work
extended to international lecturing policy influence, such as contributing to
the UK's nineteen ninety one Children Act and founding organizations
(06:15):
like the International Network for Family Violence Intervention Programs. Despite
facing threats and exile from the UK in the nineties
due to her views on reciprocal violence, her advocacy has
empowered generations to address abuse holistically, earning her recognition from
diverse groups as a trailblazer for equity in victims support.
So she is not gone, but it looks like she's
(06:40):
on her last legs potentially. So I just want to
clear it up because yesterday I heard from I think
it was Mike Buchanan sent out a memo saying that
it was on the Justice Perman and Boys' website saying
that she was no longer with us, but they apologize
for that, and Mike beginning said, oops, turned out Aaron
(07:00):
hasn't passed on a relative. As an email are with
the following Hi redacted, Aaron has not passed on, but
is in hospital on end of life treatment. It may
be that my brother's posts on Facebook confused from people.
Imagine if Aaron knew, she would probably find it funny.
For now, she is as comfortable as she can be,
but understandably wants to go home kindness regards. So, yeah, I.
Speaker 3 (07:24):
Heard about the exaggerated rumors of her death yesterday, and
I looked into compiling some.
Speaker 4 (07:30):
Quotes as his tradition.
Speaker 3 (07:31):
But now that we've heard the well, not good news,
but the partial retraction of the bad news, I don't
want to talk about her like she's dead.
Speaker 4 (07:41):
Even if she is.
Speaker 3 (07:43):
If she's in an NHS hospital, and she's probably going
to die any second now, and not because she's on
end of life support at treatment, but because she's in
an NHS hospital.
Speaker 4 (07:56):
Presumably.
Speaker 3 (07:57):
It pains me to think that in her final moments
she's experiencing a fate worse than death. British hospitals in
general are typically run by feminist Zealots who, having found
out who Eron Pitsy is, they're probably rushing to give
her the same treatment they gave her dog all those
years ago. They didn't kill her dog by the way
they shot it, but it didn't die at the time.
(08:20):
It's a small detail and it certainly doesn't mitigate the
severity of the incident. By I hear that detail bandied
around a lot, and I just want to.
Speaker 4 (08:28):
Iron out that wrinkle.
Speaker 3 (08:29):
And in a way, I'm glad that Erin's legacy is
a relatively humble one that only made her famous in
sort of small esoteric circles like ours. Even though she's
been honored in the Order of the British Empire, a
cbe no less a Commander of the Order of the
British Empire, and she's almost certainly the only men's rights
(08:52):
Africa who will ever be bestowed with such an honor.
It's a saving grace that her legacy is not so
inf that she can't be spared the kind of demonic
vitriol that the infamous can expect. I'm sure there are
some demons out there who are already giving her the
(09:13):
Charlie Kirk treatment, already digging through her body of work
looking for any threadbare excuse for justifying her death and suffering.
But there's so few and far between that I have
been spared any exposure to them.
Speaker 4 (09:28):
As of yet.
Speaker 3 (09:29):
And it's probably very difficult for the demons on this
occasion because they don't know what to make of Aaron Pitsy.
While feminists all over the world were invading universities convincing
everyone to hate men, Pitsy was actually putting boots on
the ground and achieving something, actually devoting her time and
(09:53):
her space and her life to helping women who were
vulnerable and overlooked.
Speaker 4 (10:00):
But then she did the unthinkable.
Speaker 3 (10:03):
She also devoted herself to helping men who were vulnerable
and overlooked, and that sent feminists into a tail spin
because their whole worldview necessarily excludes the very philosophical existence
of men. Who are vulnerable and overlooked. Such adjectives are
(10:26):
anathema to the male gender in the feminist worldview, and
this worldview has continued to ravage its way through our
civilization in the fifty years since. And yet Aaron Pitsy
continued to fight against it for fifty years, even in exile.
(10:47):
Sometimes we like to casually brag that we've been doing
this for a dozen years or more here at Honeybadger Radio.
But it's hard to imagine if any of us will
have a tenure in this business as long, and has
said asked as Aaron Pitsy the og Honey Badger, So yeah,
I don't want to talk about her like she's dead.
(11:09):
I want to talk about her like she's listening to
me right now. And if you are, Missus Pitsy, and
you might be, but we have met each other that
one time in Norwich, and we hugged each other with
that mutual look of recognition.
Speaker 4 (11:27):
At knowing of each other's work.
Speaker 3 (11:31):
I am here by raising my glass to you, Missus Pitsy.
I'm raising every glass I have, even the glasses on
my face. Fucking here you go. I'm gonna see if
I can, if I can survive for another forty so
I can keep doing this, come rain or shine. Like
(11:51):
I don't want a statue built of me. I don't
want a state funeral with a fifty gun salute. I
don't even want.
Speaker 4 (12:00):
Or a cbe.
Speaker 3 (12:02):
I'm doing this because it's the right thing to do,
and there's every chance I wouldn't be here doing this
right now were it not for the og honey badger
erin Patria, Margaret Pitsy, Live Long and Prospect.
Speaker 2 (12:22):
Yeah, I want to know what a pioneer Aaron is.
Anytime we talk about anything, a lot of times it's
stuff I've heard Aaron talk about in the past. And
yesterday I was going through and posting as many of
the interviews with her as I could find on YouTube,
and you know, I was going through and listening to
(12:43):
bits and pieces of some of them as I was posting,
and I ran across one where I think, back in
the seventies or eighties, she talked about the un connection
to feminism that we're talking about right now on Thursday
nights on HBr Talk and it's it's like, even when
(13:05):
I have forgotten that I've heard her talk about something,
it's still there. She was. She understood more about what
was going on during that time I think than many
of the rest of us. She had her Eyeon feminists
for quite some time and what they were doing, and
(13:27):
I mean she had to because of all the threats,
and because they did come in and take over what
she was doing, took it away from her, pushed her
out of it, and changed it so that men couldn't
get the help that women were getting with their circumstances
of domestic violence. And you know, people, if you haven't
(13:50):
had an opportunity to hear her speak, you should search YouTube.
I believe there's also videos on Rumble. People may have
even put her speeches up on TikTok for all I know.
I don't use TikTok, but you should hear the things
that she has said, because she's had quite a bit.
(14:11):
She's talked about quite a bit, and there's a lot,
a lot to learn from this woman. I can't emphasize
that enough. If you're new to the movement, look up
her name on YouTube and just start listening. Don't listen
to anything ex Patriarch says, he's an idiot and he
(14:31):
lies about everything. And there's a good video on Blue
Orange debunking his claims about Aaron Pitsey. But that guy
is basically full of shit. But listen to what Aaron
says about herself and what she says about her history.
Look at some of the old videos of that show
her actually at the refuge and of people interviewing her
(14:52):
during the timeframe that she was running the refuge, and
you'll see what I mean. There is a wealth of knowledge.
And of course if you pray, pray for her and
her family, because everybody deserves and needs prayers at the
end of their life. And it is sad to hear
(15:14):
that she's in this condition, and I am glad that
she is surrounded by family. So yeah, and everything that
Mike said, you know, on top of that, just the
best way to love and and support and remember Aaron
(15:35):
is with prayer and go listen, go listen to her,
because the record of her voice is widely widely available.
Speaker 1 (15:45):
Yeah, she is one in a million, that's for sure.
So but she is for now still with us. Although
I felt that I would at least cover the story
to sort of clear the air on any confusion, because
there was some confusion about it, and fortunately the reactions
to the misinformation were you know, generally very supportive. And
(16:08):
now there's a sigh of relief at least for now.
And we will follow up if there are more developments, obviously,
and yeah, well I will you know, we'll get back
to you then when that happens. In the meantime, let
us know what you guys think about this story in
the comments in particular, is there anything about Aaron Pitsy
(16:30):
that you know that you thought you would share. I
know that one thing that was kind of interesting and
I brought this up before, but I thought was wild.
Is the actor Gerard Butler when she got that prestigious
award that basically do you have to call her commander Pitsy?
Is that is that? Is that kind of like when
someone is knighted and you have to say, sir, you know,
(16:51):
is that what it is? She Commander Pitsy.
Speaker 4 (16:53):
I don't think she would enforce it.
Speaker 1 (16:56):
No, no, but it sounds it sounds cool. Commander Aaron.
Speaker 4 (17:01):
You just have to say, aeron Pittsy if you.
Speaker 1 (17:03):
Want to aeron Pittsy CB. Yeah, yeah, so yeah. The
actor Gerard Butler apparently had knew her from when he
was a child and he had a lot of nice
things to say to her when she got that award,
and he put it up on a video. Every so
often I go dig it up and play it. And
if you guys don't know who Gerard Butler is, he
(17:24):
was Leonidas in three hundred. That's that's like the main
thing he's known for. But yeah, so anyway, I thought
that was really cool that, you know, you just you
just don't know like who whose life you can affect
in one way or another. So godspeed erin and will
we'll hopefully see you soon. Maybe I'll get an interview,
you know, this time. So all right, let's don't you
(17:46):
guys think about that in the comments. All right, next story,
try not to stay all right, Allison put this one through.
So I'm gonna read this out and then add a
little bit of context and maybe this will make sense. Okay.
So there was a male stripper pictured here named Stuart Kennedy,
forty two, from Aberdeen, Scotland, that was found guilty of
(18:08):
two counts of sexual assault at Perth Sheriff Court on
September thirtieth, twenty twenty five, following an incident at a
hen party on March twenty second, twenty twenty four. A
Hen party is like a what is that like a
bachelorette party in the UK? I don't know what a
hen party is, but it sounds like a bachelorette It's
a bachelor Okay, okay, so yeah, bachelorette party, Hen party.
(18:32):
I actually like the Hen Hen party. That's a I
like that dress is a firefighter?
Speaker 3 (18:37):
Say STAGNI right, do you have stagnis?
Speaker 5 (18:40):
Yeah?
Speaker 1 (18:42):
They kind of bachelor parties. But yeah, for some reason,
we have hands stagged hens. Yeah, stag parties. I think
we'll call them. But that's that sounds like something from
the old days. But anyway, so Gabrielle asked me to
play the Jerard clip. I'll look for it and maybe
if there's time, I'll play at the end. Okay.
Speaker 4 (19:02):
So.
Speaker 1 (19:03):
Following an incident at a Hen party on March twenty second,
twenty twenty four, dressed as a firefighter in a Magic
Mike's style performance at pref Hydro Hotel in Perthshire, Kennedy
grabbed and jiggled the breasts of the thirty two year
old bride to be a solicitor, despite her repeatedly saying
no thank you and visibly freezing in shock. He also
(19:26):
forced her to drink from a penis shaped straw, sat
on her, and made her handle a fake penis as
part of the act, which left the victim hysterical and
vomiting afterwards. Shaped.
Speaker 2 (19:38):
Yeah, they make all kinds of little penis shaped things
for these parties. In fact, in the US you can
get penis candy. You can get penis candy molds and
penis cake molds for bachelorette parties. It's a whole thing.
And boobs too, given.
Speaker 3 (19:55):
Feminists like to complain that rockets are penis shaped. I
mean anything that's it's a cylinder shape. So any straw
is a penis shaped straw, isn't it?
Speaker 1 (20:08):
Well?
Speaker 6 (20:09):
Head on it has like ahead they put the whole
shaft and head shape and sometimes if you get the
expensive ones, they'll have a little vein on the side
and everything.
Speaker 3 (20:21):
Do they complain about eating mushrooms because they're all basically
penis shaped, aren't they? Well, depending on how flat the
head is whatever.
Speaker 1 (20:30):
Yeah, okay, so where was I? Yeah? Sos pena shaped
straw and Kennedy denied the charges, claiming that he adapted
his routine for her size, never touched her breast, suggesting
any movement came from her arm waving during a YMCA spoof,
and that the performance was standard for such events with
(20:51):
no complaints from others, which apparently he had been doing
for a very long time. However, Sheriff Paul Reid ruled
the victims corroborated account credible, stated the act crossed into
criminal territory due to lack of consent. Sentencing was deferred.
Kennedy was placed on the sex offender's registry and remained
on bail, but a request abandoned him from stripping was denied.
(21:12):
This marks his second such conviction. The bride's sister, who
hired him for four hundred pounds, later called it a
one hundred percent mistake and I tried, I looked into
it a little bit more. Kennedy's defense said that essentially,
this is something that he's done many times, that it's
an exaggeration of harmless fun in a rowdy, alcohol fueled setting,
(21:36):
potentially influenced by the solicitor's background or post me to sensitivities. However,
let me see no counter evidence. There's no footage or
video footage that emerged to undermine the prosecution. Notably, This
is Kennedy's second conviction, with the court cited as agriding
(22:00):
further erodingclaves of isolated misrepresentation. Absent new peals or disclosures,
the judicial outcome stands as the most reliable indicator of events. So, okay, So,
and now that I'm hearing the story, I think the
issue is that there is only the testimony of the
women that were involved, and even though he said he
(22:21):
didn't touch her, they're just going with it, and the
sheriff is just convicting it, and they're calling it sexual assault.
So if you're a stripper, don't be like, maybe don't
do that. So, I don't know if you guys have
any thoughts on that.
Speaker 3 (22:36):
I don't know much about this guy or how he
got to the point where he thinks it's okay to
grope women in his professional capacity, allegedly, But from what
I've learned about the way women tend to behave themselves
during the nights, especially when uninhibited by chemical circumstance, it's
(22:59):
not all that surprising to me that he may have
reached the conclusion that physical touching is an acceptable boundary
to cross in such circumstances. This is something that Alison
and I covered in our review of The Magic Mike
Movie All that stem and something that over the years we've.
Speaker 4 (23:20):
Touched upon, for want of.
Speaker 3 (23:22):
A better phrase, where it has long been impressed upon
everyone that you're not allowed to touch the man or
woman who has been hired to dance provocatively about your
person at such special events. Men tend to understand this rule,
no matter how drunk those men might be. They generally
(23:44):
understand the rule that even when this female stripper is
grinding enthusiastically against your barely encased cock, you'd better not
let your hands so much as brush the tip of
the scant brick that separates you from these women's bodies,
lest you be ejected from the venue and potentially prosecuted.
(24:08):
And women are taught the same rule at their heen nights,
their bachelorette parties and whatnot, but they are less inclined
to follow such rules. Women, especially drunk women, tend to
approach these rules as a mere suggestion, and their decisions
(24:29):
to skirt around such rules are perpetuated by the lack
of enforcement Therein, they're not going to get chucked out
or prosecuted for these things. Like I said, I don't
know anything about Stuart Kennedy or how long or how
deep he's been buried in the business in which he's
found himself, but if he's anything like any other male stripper,
(24:51):
he's probably found himself groped and harassed and sexually assaulted
by countless drunk women who will flagrantly essue the boundaries
they are supposed to respect, because they, like everyone, have
been taught that it is only women who should have
any form of sexual boundaries, and that any man who
(25:16):
is employed to tread those boundaries has all together relinquished them.
That is to say, in all probability, this man has
probably performed in front of countless drunk women and has
had his body, including his penis, grabbed and fondled with
(25:37):
reckless abandon by countless women. Now, to some of you,
that may sound like some kind of perk, like some
kind of highlight of the day to day grind of
your work day. But I invite you toe to imagine
that it might not be. After all, after it happening
(25:57):
quite a lot of times, do you know, it's it's
very possible that Stuart Kennedy is gay. It is very
possible a disproportionate amount of professional erotic male dancers are gay.
It's conceivable, isn't it, Given that heterosexual men tend to
be rather reserved and they don't even like dancing, and
(26:20):
gay men do. It's conceivable that rather a lot of
professional erotic male dancers aren't that gay, and they only
work ten nights for the money, and after many instances
of being broked by hideous women night after night, they
get it into their heads that it's okay for someone
to grope the bodies of people they find unattractive. I
(26:42):
cannot confirm any of this. After all, for the gay
men who work these jobs as sex objects for drunk women,
they're after disadvantage if they ever admit that this whole
process of arousing women is actually hideous for them. I mean,
I have to wonder how often does this happen. Gay
(27:02):
men who are desperate for work find themselves performing like
a dancing monkey for drunk, idiot women, and then when
they mistakenly try to play the part of the stereotype
of a drunken heterosexual man by groping some woman's boobs,
they get sued and criminalized into oblivion, and they become
getting another victim of the rudderless nonsense that drunken heterosexual
(27:27):
women women have inflicted upon assault.
Speaker 4 (27:31):
Says a lot, doesn't it.
Speaker 3 (27:32):
Potentially, it doesn't matter if you're gay, you're a man.
Fuck you, but heaven forbid anyone fuck you or even
think about it. Don't you dare touch me. I'm a woman.
I'm here to touch you.
Speaker 4 (27:46):
My terms.
Speaker 3 (27:47):
Your terms are not a thing, you big gay fucking
game of words.
Speaker 4 (27:54):
I won't say it, but you know what I'm saying.
Speaker 1 (27:56):
Yeah, all right, Hannah.
Speaker 2 (28:01):
You know it's it's interesting this type of incident. It's
kind of common, I guess for bachelor parties or bachelorette
parties or stag parties or hen parties or whatever. Somebody
hires a stripper, somebody hires a sex worker to come in.
Female sex workers among the things they have to worry
(28:23):
about getting falsely accused and convicted on the basis of
just somebody's work and no physical evidence, no video evidence,
no nothing. Getting falsely accused and treated as an offender
for doing the job they were paid to do. That's
(28:45):
not one of their normal worries. Even when the person
that the sex worker was hired to come in and
interact with is uncomfortable interacting with a sex worker, which
does happen with men, especially in instances where you know
the bride is going to get jealous, which happens a
(29:06):
lot like don't you dare hire a stripper for your
bachelor party or your soon to be wife might cancel
the wedding if she finds out. It's going to be
very upset. And if you ever there was a there
was a movie with Tom Hanks back in the eighties.
I want to say where that was. That was kind
of the theme, right, he really wasn't He was reticent
(29:30):
and she was going to be mad at him for it,
and but but a hooker was hired. And it's that
that kind of storyline exists because that does happen to
men in real life where they really don't want necessarily
to take the risk of being accused of infidelity to
their soon to be life partner, and there isn't anything
(29:53):
they can do because they also don't want to hurt
the feelings of or offend the incoming sex worker, like
they don't want to piss off any woman involved in
the situation. And so it's if it's not your party,
it might be better like this. This woman's sister was
(30:14):
the one that hired the sex worker to come in.
And it's not your party, and you know that the
person that you're you're hiring for is maybe a little
more conservative about their behavior than you are. Don't try
to force the issue because stuff like this is likely
to happen. And if it's a woman, if it's a
(30:35):
woman's party, you know she can't she can't go after
her sister for that right. But maybe her husband to
be is also the type that that you know likes
his his bride to be to be a loyal bride
to be and not party with other men. Most most guys,
(30:59):
I think are like that. Those guys don't want to
know that the night before their wedding some other guy
had his hands all over their bride to be, just
like most women I think would prefer to know that
the night before their wedding some other gal didn't have
her hands all over their groom to be. Pretty pretty
(31:21):
standard stuff there, right, I didn't give my friends a
chance to do this. By the way, there was no
bachelorette party. I put the kabash to that. I was like,
you guys can throw one, but I'm not going to
be there, and that pretty much ended that discussion. But
in any case, yeah, don't don't do that. Don't hire
(31:41):
somebody on that night. You know, there's plenty of other
times to engage with this kind of partying if you're
going to do that, but the night before the wedding
or the party before the wedding, the last hurrah before
the wedding, not the best time to do that, unless
the guest of honor asks you too, and then then
(32:06):
you know you've got consent. Right, But what would a
woman do in that situation. She can't yell at her
sister because that's that's gonna get her in trouble. She
can't admit to her husband to be that she partied
with a stripper right before the wedding. So what does
she do when stories come out of you know, what
(32:28):
this guy was doing and what she was doing and everything.
But I didn't consent. It was I I feel victimized.
This guy victimized me. I am a victim. I didn't
do anything wrong because I am a victim, and I
don't know if that's what happened or not, because we
don't have video. We only have the word of the ladies,
(32:49):
And of course the sister's not going to admit she
did anything wrong. The other ladies may or may not
have been decent witnesses. They may or may not have
been too to know what was going on, and you know,
they may or may not have their own guilt over
did I let something happen that shouldn't have happened? You know,
(33:11):
did they push this woman into behaving in a way
that was outside her norm while she was drinking and
such like? We don't know. What's really reprehensible about this
situation is that a sheriff, not even a judge, but
a sheriff got to rule based on the word alone
(33:33):
of the women who paid this man to come in
that you know, he did the things he was accused
of doing without any video, without any you know, nobody
had their phones out, nothing, no no evidence of bruising
or like. If if what happened matched up to what
(33:54):
was said in terms of handling of breasts and stuff,
there would have been something. There would have been some
sort of physical evidence afterward, especially if this guy was
rough and and apparently there wasn't so, and then they
tried to get him banned from stripping The other thing
is if if they decided they didn't want to pay him,
(34:18):
and he insisted on collecting his fee. This might be
the case as well. Because we know that the women
have done that to cab drivers. Cab drivers have had
to start taking video of the inside of their cabs
to avoid being me too. We don't know that that's
what happened in this instance either, But those are two possibilities.
(34:39):
And so this guy could be on the the the
sex offender list for just doing his job, or he
could be a sex offender and and there's just no
evidence and we won't know. So, like I said, it's
best if you're if you're having some celebration for a
(35:00):
friend that's getting married or a relative that's getting married,
don't hire a stripper for that unless you have okayed
it with the guest of honor, because if you haven't,
or you really know that the guest of honor is
into that, because if you don't, you may be putting
somebody to people at least through something very unpleasant or worse.
Speaker 1 (35:25):
I think I'm going to I mean, I agree with
what you're saying. I think I'm going to maximize the
agency on the person who hired the stripper because if
it was the sister, then odds are she knows what
her sister likes and what they want to do. I
don't think that her sister had no idea that there
was going to be a stripper there, like the actual
(35:47):
woman who was the bride to be. And I think
that what happened was this and this guy's experience. He's
been doing this for I think he said he's doing
it for at least ten years or so, so he's
not like new to this whole thing. He probably has
a whole routine and it's just a job. He doesn't
he doesn't have like a special sexual attraction to this
(36:08):
particular bride to be. You know, maybe that's a little
bit of an egocentric thing if you think about it.
You know, if you've ever been to a strip club
and you've actually seen strippers, they are there to give
you it's like a it's like a waitress at Hooters.
They're there to give you the illusion that you're special,
but you're just a job and they're going to like
serve you as a customer and they're gonna move on
(36:30):
to the next person, hopefully get a good tip out
of it the strippers are hoping to get some money,
and that's basically it. I think that this guy is
probably no different. He probably sees lots of clients and
you know, there, he does his thing and then he
takes off, and that's it. No attraction to that that
that woman's not special, is what I'm saying. So to
(36:50):
treat it like a sexual assault assumes a lot from
the man and not from the you know, the woman
who who paid for this, who probably knew what his
routine was, most likely made like I had a conversation
about what he's expected to do, like how are you
going to be dressed up? What do you have in mind?
(37:12):
And she went along with it, and maybe you know,
the bride to be either found herself uncomfortable, but like
that she wasn't more uncomfortable that she expected to be
and then decided to blame him and get him in
trouble for it, or the sister pushed harder and harder,
and you know, saw that she was making her sister
uncomfortable and said, Okay, we're just gonna throw this guy
(37:35):
into the bus instead of saying, hey, I'm you know,
I made a bad call, or whatever it is. Or
they neither of them. They could have just been like, yeah,
you know what, that wasn't as much fun as I
thought it was going to be. Let's just like here's
your money, I don't want to see you again, you know,
and and just go our separate ways. But the issue
is is that they took this to the legal place
(37:57):
and he ended up on a sex offender registry and
all this other stuff, and I just don't I think that, like,
because the witness accounts are the other woman that was
at the party, I don't think I can trust it
because it assumes that this guy who's been doing this
a long time and has only had like one other
complaint according to you know, the story, and even then
(38:18):
we don't know what the conditions of that were. That
he for whatever reason just became like a sexual assaulter
that night around those people, and they both agreed and
he just like you know, has to deal with whatever.
I mean, if something happened, then you know, that's terrible.
But I have this feeling just based on what I'm seeing,
that we're not getting the whole story. And because we're
(38:40):
not getting the whole story, and it didn'ts appear to
be like a real sort of pursuit of due process.
It just kind of went to Okay, the sheriff said,
sounds creditible to me. He's guilty, and you know, we're
just gonna go ahead and put that through. And it
kind of ruined his life. So, you know, I mean,
I go back to my original statement, if you're a stripper,
then don't because I think that when you do things
(39:02):
like that, it puts you in positions with unscrupulous people
where unscrupulous things can happen to you because you're already
in an environment where that kind of stuff is going on.
But I think that, you know, like I think that
we have a there's a lack of accountability somewhere, and
I don't think it's on the stripper. That's basically where
I'll leave it at for that. I don't know what
(39:24):
Allison's thing was. She might have seen something different. I
know she's been big on the rape and domestic violence
stats lately, and I know that Mike brought up how
how often male strippers are manhandled compared to female strippers,
Like if you touch a female stripper, you get your
ass kicked, Like bouncers will descend on you and they
will beat the shit out of you and throw you out.
(39:47):
But like you know, male strippers, like we do, they
just we just assume that they're they're just gonna expect
to put up with some man handling, especially with what
happened at that romantic convention that we covered a couple
of weeks ago, where it wasn't even a stripper, It
was a guy in like costume and he got like
assaulted by a mob of women, of which there were
(40:07):
so many that he couldn't tell how many hands were
on him. So, you know, maybe that's kind of the direction. Again,
I'm not going to make any definitive claims either way
because we don't know enough. But I do have to
wonder how the woman who paid for this guy and
the woman whose bachelor party it was had no idea
that something like this could happen, and they're just like
(40:29):
completely shocked. And then that I'm finding a little bit
of a big pill to swallow. Anyway, let us know
what you guys think about this one in the comments.
Let me see if I got any superchows or super chats.
Send in some superchows and superchats, guys. I am watching
somebody became a seed thank you, not a feminist, for
becoming a seed. I guess that's like a member, a
(40:53):
member on the YouTube channel. It's like a YouTube membership.
So thank you for joining the community and becoming a member. Right, So.
Speaker 2 (41:02):
What you were talking about that guy that got manhandled
or woman handled that wasn't a stripper. Yeah, Periodically you'll
see a news story. The last one I saw came
out of Australia where a bachelorette party, the drinking and
the giggling and you know, all the screeching and all
(41:22):
the shit that happens when a bunch of women get
together and raise hell in somebody's home in a neighborhood
will get so out of control and so loud that
the cops will be called because of the noise, and
they show up, and the minute that they're let into
the domicile, whether it's a house, a condo and apartment
(41:44):
doesn't seem to matter. The women assume that they're strippers,
because so many times that's a stripper costume is the
cop costume where they start trying to tear their clothes off,
and their been the one that I saw out of Australia.
They declined to arrest the women for that behavior, but
did warn them about the noise and then left. But
(42:06):
I have to wonder what it must be like to
be a male cop getting sent into a situation like
that because you're not a sex worker. As a male cop,
you're just going there to say, hey, you know your
neighbors would really like you to tone it down a bit.
We know you're having a good time, but there are
(42:26):
no ordinances and people had to go to work tomorrow.
Please please keep it to a dull roar. And suddenly
there's a bunch of women around you tearing your clothes
off and you can't. You know, like if the cops
tase in that situation or they shoot somebody in that situation,
they're going to be demonized for it, right. But can
you imagine if a female cop showed up at a
(42:49):
bachelor party and the men started doing that, Nobody would
condemn her for those same types of actions tasing or
shooting or arresting people. So it is there is a
huge double standard there, and women do make claims when
they're embarrassed that they did something that maybe they wouldn't
(43:10):
have done if they hadn't been drinking, or if their
sister hadn't hired a stripper, you know, or something like that,
and then the guy who expects them to be loyal
and clean finds out.
Speaker 1 (43:21):
Yeah, uh okay, So I got a super chow from
Meredith G five dollars. Thank you, Meredith. HPR News number
five twenty two, Honey for the Badgers. There has long
been a problem for male strippers and female patrons groping
in clubs. In a club's for females, if a patron
even touches the performer, they will get kicked out. So
(43:42):
don't be surprised that you are in higher risk when
performing at a home. Yeah, and again, the guy's not
claiming to have been a victim of any assault, but
unfortunately the women did made a claim against him, and
it seems to have hurt him significantly. We don't know
if is sure or not. I'm just saying it's fishy
to me.
Speaker 2 (44:03):
It does happen. It him assaulting her, but him being
a victim of assault. Everything that female strippers that go
to people's homes and female prostitutes that go to beat
people's homes are at risk of male prostitutes and male
strippers are too. It's just that this is another. On
top of that risk that somebody might hire them to
(44:24):
come in and perform some type of sex work and
then me too them for taking it too far or
otherwise doing sex work that they were hired to do.
Speaker 1 (44:35):
Okay, thank you Meredith, And they got a super chat
from Albert Nata Retro who gives us five dollars Canadian
and says, there was an incident at one of the
Disney theme parks where a guy dressed as Gaston had
a woman removed from grabbing him. I remember that that
was a viral clip of.
Speaker 2 (44:51):
Any people acted like he was unreasonable for that. But
imagine if somebody came up and did that to say
Bell or pocahonas.
Speaker 1 (44:59):
Yeah, well, they have to draw a line. They have
to maintain it though, because if you permit that then
it's just only going to get worse. So anyway, thank
you for the super chats. And I found the drawer
butler post.
Speaker 5 (45:11):
Uh.
Speaker 1 (45:11):
This is your butler congratulating Aaron Pittsy on her award
and he I think he's drunk, so you know, bear
with him, but he does have nicest things to say.
So I'm gonna play this aerin. Hello.
Speaker 5 (45:24):
This is Jerry Butler, I'm a very dear friend of
your son. Amrs. We love you and you're going to
do great. Get you back on your feet. Thinking about you,
I'm sending you love. You're the best. I always hear
about your antics through a Mars and I have just
nothing but the utmost love and respect for who you
are and what you've achieved.
Speaker 1 (45:45):
And where you are right now.
Speaker 5 (45:47):
So we've got to get you back out in the
biker gang and the congratulations on the CBA. That's amazing, amazing,
and I know that's the summer, so I just invite
you myself to that. I'm inviting you out the biker
gang with Dams and I, so there's fun times to
come ahead tomorrow or the next day. I'm going to
(46:08):
leave you a message is do like the bas Viking.
Speaker 4 (46:12):
You'll like.
Speaker 5 (46:13):
You probably would't appreciate the second message, but you'll like
the outfits.
Speaker 1 (46:16):
I'll do it for that reason to try and come
up with something different.
Speaker 5 (46:19):
But anyway, I hope I get to hug you soon
and hang out with you again, and then sending you
would love God, bless take care, stay strong, to take
focused on me, because you got so much more to
give to us guys.
Speaker 1 (46:36):
Okay, yeah, take care all right. So that was Jar
Butler's message to Aaron. I think that, And Aaron made
a comment if you saw this, but she said, my
lost boy who I have adopted on This was twenty
twenty four February, so that's when I saw this, and
I was kind of blown away by that. But yeah,
(46:58):
Jar Butler recognizing Aaron's see pretty cool. So, uh didn't
know didn't know that to have a whole new respect
for Butler. Yeah, I didn't know that either, And apparently
he talks, I mean, did it? Is it not true
that Aaron got that accommendation because of her work with
(47:18):
domestic violence and the fact that she explicitly and openly
was trying to not make it into a feminist issue
or like a gender ideology in issue and just a
holistic one, like you know, there's abuse, it exists. Men
do it, women do it. Men are victims, women are victims, right,
And that is the contentious thing.
Speaker 3 (47:39):
What it's almost certain that she got it because she
pioneered women's rights. Well yeah, I guess so so much
that the British state had to overlook her men's rights
advocate advocacy and because she pioneered women's rights affocacy, like like,
like I said, no other men's rights Africa is ever
going to be given a n B.
Speaker 4 (48:00):
Never mind the CB.
Speaker 3 (48:02):
Yeah it's it's m B, then O B E, then
CB it's that's that's the lowest to the middle, and
then in the upper above that is knighthood slash game hood.
Speaker 1 (48:12):
Wow okay, yeah.
Speaker 3 (48:14):
So she had the third greatest of the B E things.
And like I say, it's almost certainly because of her
work towards women's rights. The British state was almost certainly
as confused as most feminists are as to how she
went into men's rights advocacy after that, they just overlook that. Well,
(48:37):
that doesn't matter. The fact is the fact that she
she she did, She made an effort towards women's rights,
and that's what's important.
Speaker 1 (48:46):
Yeah.
Speaker 3 (48:46):
Yeah, yeah, It's going to be a long time before
anyone can recognize what anyone does towards men's I mean,
because that's not a thing.
Speaker 1 (48:55):
No, no, not certainly from those But I think if
you know Aaron personally, which jar Butler seems to, he
seems to know her very well, then he must know
that she's also done the heresy, and he probably is
okay with it. I mean, he seems to be, so,
I mean, I'm not saying that like the greater public
(49:16):
recognizes this and that's why she got the award, But
I do think that it must be the case, in
my opinion, that jar Butler knows her enough to know
what she's actually about on top of the stuff that
she's getting recognition for, and it doesn't seem to bother him.
In fact, he's still, you know, is very happy for her.
So I don't know, I don't know. What I'm saying
(49:36):
is I think there's a lot more people that are
more red pilled than they let on, and they just
kind of like keep it under wraps because it isn't popular,
or at least they don't think it is. And I
think that's understandable. But anyway, we got to move on.
I just wanted to share that because Gabriel is instance.
I hope you're happy now, and we did that, so
(49:59):
thank you, and we're going to move on to the
next story.
Speaker 4 (50:01):
All right.
Speaker 1 (50:02):
I thought this was huge. So the United States Federal
Bureau of Investigations, under the leadership of Director Cash Pattel,
have officially split ways with the Southern Poverty Law Center.
The SPLC began in the early seventies and grew to
fame in the eighties for filing multiple civil suits on
behalf of victims of violence from the ku Klux k Klan.
(50:22):
They later branched out into helping other victims of discrimination
as well. However, in the modern day, their function is questionable.
In twenty nineteen, the SPLC fell for a troll campaign
to get the ok Hand Gesture labeled as white supremacist. Recently,
their so called hate map, which is a list of
all hate groups operating in the United States, has been
(50:43):
called into question. The map lists of late Charlie Kirk's
conservative youth organization Turning Point USA, as well as pro
men's rights group of Voice for Men, alongside the Aryan
Brotherhood and the KKK. Director Patel called the map defamatory
to mainstream a marias and that it was inspiring violence. Furthermore,
(51:04):
Director Patel said, referring to the SPLC as a whole,
their disgraceful record makes them unfit for any FBI partnership.
Director Patel has also announced a similar split with the
Anti Defamation League the ADL. Former FBI Director James Comy
disgrace the FBI by writing love letters to the ADL
and embedding agents with an extreme group functioning like a
(51:27):
terrorist organization, and the disgraceful operation they ran spying on Americans.
So that's big, Okay, So anyway, do you guys have
any thoughts on that?
Speaker 2 (51:36):
Anybody IF's not going to jump in, yeah, I'm going
to point out you have something.
Speaker 3 (51:42):
I'm gonna let you go first. I have some dark
thoughts that I think I'm not going to overlap with you.
Speaker 2 (51:48):
So please, I'm going to point out this isn't the
first time, right, It's just the worst time. And there
have been other organizations that have faced or attacks where there's, uh,
there's been some sort of action taken against them, up
until what happened to Charlie Kirk. The worst one was
(52:11):
also a gun violence. Yeah, I say gun violence, but
the individual holding the gun was the violent person. The
gun was just a tool that they used. This was
Floyd Corkin's motivated by the SPLC's hate map, attacked the
Family Research Council's headquarters because they were they were listed
(52:35):
as an anti gay hate group. They're they're simply a
Christian organization, So because they're a Christian organization, they were
listed as an anti gay hate group. That that alone
was enough to get this guy to go after them,
and he did shoot and wound a security guard at
their headquarters. So there was actually an attack with a
(53:00):
weapon on an individual. That was in twenty twelve, and
there there was a lawsuit and everything, and the SBLC
of course came out afterwards and condemned the attack and
all that. But what they've actually a hit list, and
their hit list features anybody who complains basically about being
(53:24):
discriminated against on the basis of not having victim points
from the progressive stack. And also it just they've they've
sprinkled in a few other organizations that have advocated for
violence and stuff, but they mainly feature organizations that complain
(53:45):
about discrimination on the basis of not having enough victim
points from the progressive stack, and and any group that
is is too Christian or any group that is too Republican.
Speaker 5 (53:59):
That's it.
Speaker 2 (53:59):
They're not really a hate watch group. They're a hate
list group that has a list of who to hate
and who to attack.
Speaker 3 (54:08):
All right, Mike fust me, that was quick, Okay, Well, yeah,
this all seems suspiciously like good news. I'm generally suspicious
of anything that seems like bad news, but I'm highly
suspicious of good news. I'm kind of irrationally fearful of Actually,
it's a condition called euphobia, the fear of good news.
(54:32):
I wrote a song about it once away back in
the day. It's on my album The Name with No
Band available on bad Gap. But it's not necessarily an
irrational fear. Good news has this nasty habit of arousing hope,
only to dash it on the rocks of disappointment at
(54:53):
leaving you feeling worse.
Speaker 4 (54:54):
Than you felt before.
Speaker 3 (54:56):
Now now you're not just cynical, you're dissip pointed. You
feel like a fool as well as a fugitive. In short,
good news usually only temporarily dips you into a false
sense of security. And to be honest, that's the FBI
in a nutshell, an it's any given countries government intelligence
(55:21):
agencies in a nutshell. It's supposed to offer security, but
it always it seems to descend into yet another tormentor
yet another reason to look over your shoulder. Back in
November of last year, I did indeed find myself embroiled
in optimism, I sang in related harmony about how things
(55:46):
are going to get better at least in the USA.
My own country still faces at least another four years of.
Speaker 4 (55:53):
An unbridled hell.
Speaker 3 (55:55):
So I distracted myself with promises of improvement in my
second favorite nation, the USA. And of course I faced
detractors who scoffed at my optimism and tried to dissuade
me from any hope that things would get better. And
(56:16):
then came the debarcle with the epscene list, and I
couldn't help but think, well, shit, maybe my detractors were right.
It's happening again. I swallowed a white pill, and sure enough,
my stomach is rumbling, and I think I'm gonna throw
up that white pill and go back to feeling like shit.
(56:41):
But now we're getting some good news. It looks like
another opportunity to take a white pill. Antifer has been
declared a terrorist organization. Meanwhile, the SBLC and the ADL
have been rejected as arbiters of what should declared hate groups.
(57:02):
This is what we wanted, this is what we've been
pushing for since twelve years ago. Maybe I should be happy.
Maybe I should take this as motivation to keep pushing,
maybe even to demand some kind of apology from these
half assed chain gang drama lama think tanks. After all
these years of defamation and incitement to violence, maybe I
(57:25):
should be gloating over my detractors, going see things are
getting better. I was right to be optimistic. But the
older I get, the more I realized that it's not
about optimism or pessimism. It's not about blind cynicism or
(57:46):
blind glory supporting. It's about impulse control. The whiplash you
experienced between hope and despair is what's bad for your
health and bad for unity.
Speaker 4 (58:02):
Getting thrashed around.
Speaker 3 (58:03):
In the turbulent waves of priests is what is to
be avoided.
Speaker 4 (58:10):
They say, no man.
Speaker 3 (58:12):
Is an island, and it's true, nor woman neither, of course.
But you can do your best to anchor yourself as
best you can, to experience the optimism and the pessimism
both as waves in the ocean, and to be able
to resist them in any direction until the time when
(58:32):
more information can temper your reaction. Some call it stoicism,
some call it zen. Whatever you call it, it seems
to be what comes with wisdom. That's the difference between
intelligence and wisdom. Intelligence is the speed at which you
(58:53):
can travel when assisted by the wind. Wisdom is your
ability to resist the wind and move without its assistance.
And that's why I'm so lazy, folks, that's my excuse
for being so fucking lazy.
Speaker 4 (59:14):
I'm waiting.
Speaker 3 (59:16):
I'm sat here in the lotus position, waiting for the
perfect moment to strike, like some kind of coiled python
hiding under a bush. I'm not hiding because I'm afraid.
I'm hiding because I'm preserving my energy. I'm no longer
interested in hunting mice and rats. I'm old enough and
(59:38):
big enough and ugly enough to know that sooner or later,
a medium sized herbivore is going to cross my path,
and then I will strike, and I will eat, and
I will eat heartily and be satiated for some time. Yes,
I am a reptile now. It's just it's a strange
(01:00:01):
paradox that as we progress forwards into old age, we
regress backwards through our evolutionary history. I suppose the next
step is amphibian, followed by fish, followed by some kind
of sea sponge, followed by single celled organisms. I'm fascinated
(01:00:23):
to say where that's gonna play out watch this space.
Needless to say, none of this is evolutionary advice. I'm
not a real palaeontologist.
Speaker 1 (01:00:34):
All right, So yeah, I mean I say, remain cautiously optimistic.
I think that it's fine to not get worked up
into a tizzy about all the winning and just say
it looks like we're going in the right direction. Remember,
we're trying to undo generations of damage in like record time,
(01:00:59):
so it's not gonna happen overnight, but it is something
that we should encourage if we see that it's moving
in the right direction. And that's that's all I think
we can do. And I think that that's why this
is looking good. But I'm gonna leave it at that,
and I'm not gonna say anything else about it. I
got a couple of super things to read out, but
(01:01:21):
if you guys have any thoughts on this, let me
know in the comments. Massa Rowe gave us two dollars
super chat and says, just saw the title not our
resident legend. Well she is eighty six, and but she isn't.
She's still with us right now, but just keep her
in your thoughts and you know, if you can try
(01:01:42):
to reach out, send her an encouraging message, let her
know that you're thinking about her. I'm sure that she'd
love to hear that. And it's never too late. I
mean it is, it can be, but it's not yet.
I'll say that. So thank you. Meredith g gives us
five dollars super chow and says if you're news five
twenty two. There is an original donor of Aaron's Refuge
(01:02:03):
who claims that Aaron Pitsy's book was partially based on
the real life story of Princess Diana's parents marriage and
that she extended help to Diana's mother. Wow, that is crazy,
you know what. I forget how small England is and
so like it is a small place you can, like
you know, run into famous people if they live there.
I suppose so. But thank you Meredith for that. Okay,
(01:02:27):
So I think that's all we have and we're gonna
move on to the next story. So let me know
what you guys think about this one in the comments.
So Elon Musk had some choice words when he ignited
a fierce online debate on September thirtieth, publicly urging his
two hundred and twenty seven million X followers to cancel
(01:02:50):
their Netflix subscriptions, framing it as essential for the health
of their children. The controversy erupted after Musk amplified a
post from the account Libs of TikTok criticizing Netflix's animated
series dead End Paranormal Park, a rated TV seven for
ages seven and up, which features a transgender teenage protagonist
(01:03:12):
coming out to a friend. And I'm going to play
that clip for you. This is the actual post, and
libs of TikTok shared this, And this show has been
on the air for a long time for I think
two years or something like that. Sound you guys can't
hear anything, all right? Hold on, yeah, you're right. Okay,
let me. I'll have to like start it over. Hold
(01:03:33):
on a second, just just sake me a second. Sorry
about that. I don't know why it does this sometimes
like a bug with this this app But okay, let's
play it again.
Speaker 2 (01:03:46):
It's not the park, Hey, it's me.
Speaker 7 (01:03:50):
I'm trans norma and everyone at school knows and everyone
at home knows, and being here it's like a.
Speaker 2 (01:03:57):
Whole new place.
Speaker 7 (01:03:59):
It can just be Barney, and I can choose if
and when I tell people I've never been happier, and
that's saying something. When I sent to day Chase by
terrifying zombie mass scots see reminded me how important it
is to live your life without apology. So I think
I got to give living here a shot, don't you.
Speaker 2 (01:04:17):
You don't need my permission. I just wouldn't want Courtney
as a roommate, all right, And.
Speaker 1 (01:04:22):
I have a couple more examples, I so you guys
can see it. So this is, I guess, a remade
Strawberry Shortcake. I remember Strawberry Shortcake as a kid in
the eighties. I mean, obviously it wasn't for me, but
my sister was into it. So here is a clip
from a new Strawberry Shortcake. There's a trans dress. In
case you guys are seeing it is a trans flag
on it. She's a trans berryer, Okay. And then I
(01:04:45):
got one more. This is from a different show. I
think it's like a young young adult show, or like
a teenager show. See him he I love how the
dialogue is intentionally triggering. Let's look at that little man.
Speaker 8 (01:04:58):
You guys are busy, but as you would see if
you looked at her and not her charge really is
not boy, I like, well, you are completely ignoring who
she is. You make her feel insignificant and she only needed.
That's not gonna help her feel good or safe or calm.
So I'm cheron Neil, please recognize her and who she is,
(01:05:23):
and if at all possible, could you find me a
non blue hospital gap all?
Speaker 1 (01:05:27):
Aren't they all blue? All right? So anyway, let's get
back to this. So there's a number of examples, and
they're all on Netflix. Although Netflix isn't the only group
guilty of this, but this is what this is the
specific story we're talking about. Is Elon Musk comments on that,
so anyway. Criticizing Netflix's animated series dead End Paranormal Park,
(01:05:48):
which features a transgender teenage protagonist coming out to a friend,
Musk reposted the clip with the comment this is not okay,
accusing the show of pushing pro transgenderism on children, and
quickly escalated by calling the creator, Hammish Steel a groomer
over alleged mocking of conservative activist Charlie Kirk's recent murder.
So on top of that, they celebrated Charlie Kirk's assassination.
(01:06:11):
He followed up with over two dozen posts in three days,
targeting other shows like The Babysitters Club, cocomelon Ada, Twist Scientists,
and Strawberry Shortcake Berry in the Big City for featuring
LGBTQ plus characters, interracial, gay parents, or drag elements, labeling
them as woke, indoctrination and sexualized content. The backlash has
(01:06:32):
polarized responses. Conservative supporters, including actor Rob Schneider and activist
Robbie Starbuck, hailed Musk as a defender against evil trans indoctrination,
with some users sharing screenshots of their cancelations and memes
depicting Netflix as a trojan horse invading family homes. Progressive
critics like Pods of America Cohorst Tommy Vader accused Musk
(01:06:54):
of hypocrisy for a self styled free speech absolutist to
embrace cancel culture against a verse represents. LGBTQ plus advocates
and outlets like Aaron in the Morning decried the campaign
as an attempt to erase queer visibility in media that
reflects real families, noting the targeted shows's positive intent for
young audiences. Netflix has not commented, but it's stock has
(01:07:16):
dipped two to five percent. In early October amid the uproar,
echoing past conservative boycotts like those over Dave Chappelle's specials.
I don't think those were conservatives that were boycotting Dave Chappelle.
I think those were transactivists. But Okay, though analysts doubt
lasting subscriber impact given the platform three hundred million global users.
Musk's personal history, including his estrangement from his transgender daughter,
(01:07:40):
Vivian Jenna Wilson, has fuel speculation about the intensity of
his focus on these themes, which Musk himself has said
they basically killed my son and that maybe this is
personal for him. But nonetheless, I guess like this could
be a challenging thing because I mean, I think that
this is grooming and I don't think that it should
(01:08:00):
be allowed. Like I'm not saying that gays can't exist
or trans people can't exist, but when you're creating a
show for seven year olds and you are talking about
sexual orientation, you are necessarily talking about sex, and I
don't think that kids need to be exposed to that.
I shared. There was also a Jurassic Park show for children.
(01:08:24):
I don't know what it was called, but it's some
Jurassic Park themed cartoon and there was a lesbian long
kiss in it. There were two women that admitted they
had a crush and they basically necked on screen, and
I said, is there a place for lesbian long kissing
in children's entertainment? And someone commented and yelled at me
about like how Disney movies have kissing too, and I
(01:08:48):
was like, well, I don't care if they read that
as well, but there is a difference between the kiss
of true love, which has like a symbolic message and
that's usually what the old Disney movies were doing, and
something that is I think just I mean, it's just sexual,
Like it's just sexual implicitly, and that's something that we
(01:09:09):
can't really ignore. So but I don't know, I mean,
what do you guys think. I give you the four
to you.
Speaker 3 (01:09:14):
I picture the scene if you will. Imagine if the
trans ideology being taught to children through Netflix was already
being taught to them in school. This sounds crazy, doesn't
It sounds like the kind of thing that would follow
from it being taught to children through Netflix through the
(01:09:36):
medium of voluntary persuasion that you are permitted to simply
switch off and stop paying for as and when you
see fit. But you probably know where I'm going with this.
It has, in fact happened the other way around. The
reason Netflix seems to think it's perfectly okay to teach
(01:09:57):
children to be transgended is because it's already being taught
in schools, sometimes in the sometimes in the syllabus itself,
but sometimes because school administrations have neglected to fire the
teachers who have taken it upon themselves to propagate trans
ideology to their students, regardless of the syllabus. As much
(01:10:21):
as this long overdue for this conversation to take place
over the subject of Netflix, and only on account of
a mover and shaker like Elon Musk bringing it up,
if anything, it's too little, too late, although I suppose
that's the only option at this point. Elon's not playing
for DJs. If anything, he's playing one d chess. He's
(01:10:45):
starting at the furthest point to which it's been taken
and working his way back. So I really hope once
he's convinced a few million people to unsubscribe from Netflix,
he starts addressing where the fuck this came from in
the first place. First, it was in universities, and obscure
(01:11:07):
independent films. Then it was in schools and in broadcast media,
and now it's in kindergarten and subscription services like Netflix. Personally,
I think it should be perfectly okay for trans ideology
to be promoted on Netflix or any independent product that
(01:11:27):
doesn't appear on any of your screens unless you pay
for it. That's not even an extremist libertarian perspective. If
you don't want your kids seeing it, don't pay them
to show it to your kids. Problem solved. That's, as
I said, that's the one d chest end of the issue.
(01:11:49):
It's very simple. But the next step is if you
don't want your kids being coerced and brainwashed into trans ideology,
then don't let them watch TV. Well, that's a little
bit more complicated, isn't it. TV is already being beamed
into your homes by satellite. You don't even have to
(01:12:10):
pay for a subscription. Those electromagnetic electromagnetic waves are already
in your house. All you need is an aerial receiver
to translate those waves into an audio visual feed. But sure,
at least you have the option of not even having
(01:12:31):
a television that your child can turn on and tune
in and watch when you're not looking. But when it
comes to schools, you might say, well, we have the
option of not sending our children to those schools where
their worldview is being taught to them by pangender furry
(01:12:53):
other kin teachers who will teach your children to be
tangender other kin furries, and for some reason, they never
get fired for teaching your children this. That would be nice,
It would be great if we had the option of
not sending our children to these degenerate indoctrination centers. But unfortunately,
(01:13:18):
in many states, in many countries, it.
Speaker 4 (01:13:20):
Is illegal.
Speaker 3 (01:13:22):
To neglect to send your children to these degenerate indoctrination centers.
If you refuse to subject your children to these mutated
communist indoctrination camps for seven hours a day for twelve
years of their most informative years, your government will confiscate
(01:13:45):
your children and they will arrest you for the crime
of not sending them to.
Speaker 4 (01:13:50):
These indoctrination camps.
Speaker 3 (01:13:52):
And call me crazy, but I think this is a
significantly more urgent problem than whatever the fuck Netflix is doing.
And I really hope Elon Musk is going to get
around to this at some point. Never Mind the stigma
against homeschooling children. I would rather people pull their children
(01:14:14):
out of school and then don't even homeschool. Then to
receive no education is better than to receive miseducation. Well,
as long as your children aren't going to school every
day and getting brainwashed by state propaganda, you can go
ahead and let them sit there in front of YouTube
all day, every day, learning whatever YouTube tells them. Hell,
(01:14:38):
you can even let them listen to Netflix every day
and absorb and absorb whatever propaganda they find there. It
can't possibly be any worse than what they're learning in school,
because to repeat Netflix is merely following the school curriculum,
(01:14:58):
the school curriculum that has been in place for years already,
the same way schools have been following the curriculum that
has been in place for decades already. To reiterate school
is mandatory in many states and regions. Netflix is not
in any state or region. So I have to tell
(01:15:19):
you Elon, even though I'm jolly certain you're not listening
listening to me, and after all, you and I have
never hugged in mutual recognition. Nevertheless, for rhetorical effects, I
have to tell you when you're quite done enacting this
(01:15:40):
Scotched Earth policy on Netflix. Can you please turn your
attention to the education system, because frankly, Netflix is just
a barnacle hanging onto the underbelly of the blue whale
that is the education system. Can you at least begin
to propagate the notion that parents should not be legally
(01:16:03):
obligated to indoctrinate their children into this bullshit in the
first place. I'm sure you're just taking this one chess
dimension at a time, but please, bro, it's already high
time you brought it to the second dimension of chess,
otherwise known as chess. Stop attacking pawns and start attacking
(01:16:28):
the king. It's the first rule of chess. Needless to say,
I'm not that.
Speaker 9 (01:16:34):
Actually I am good at chess. This is actually chess advice.
I am an actual doctor of chess. Fucking ignore me
at your peril.
Speaker 4 (01:16:47):
Ignore me.
Speaker 2 (01:16:50):
I I'm gonna go a bit of a different direction
with this, but I'm also going to say this isn't
just about Netflix, and I'm gonna go back in time again.
I feel like I'm doing that a lot lately. So
of course, during these it started to become a little
(01:17:11):
popular to somewhat you know, politically correct at least to
support gay rights activism, at least to the degree of geez,
leave leave them the fuck alone, right, Stop bothering these people.
They're not doing anything to anybody. Stop you know, beating
up on them, Stop going after their jobs, Stop trying
(01:17:35):
to chase them out of neighborhoods and so on. They
just are a little different. And you know, at I
people know because I've talked about it more recently, that
I'm bisexual, but I didn't have an identity for that
when that happened. I just understood that I was a
(01:17:56):
little bit different and these other people are a little
bit different. I didn't admit, even though I'd already had
my first girlfriend, that that was a thing. Right, So, yeah,
I got involved in At the time, it was just
gay rights activism a little bit, not heavily, And in
the in the nineties I met people that were more
(01:18:19):
connected to it, got a little more involved, and about
the mid nineties I think the first time I heard
somebody go on a rant that in order for gay, lesbian,
and bisexual people to have normal lives, the family needed
(01:18:39):
to be broken down in all social norms needed to
be erased. And blah blah blah. And the first time
I had that conversation, that argument with somebody where I said,
you know, you don't have to push abnormality on other
people as the new norm in order to argue that
(01:19:00):
there's a difference between abnormal and evil, the difference being
you can be abnormal if you're, say, a genius, but
that's not evil.
Speaker 4 (01:19:13):
Right.
Speaker 2 (01:19:13):
You can be abnormal if you're a virtuoso and some
area of skill and that's not a normal, right, but
it's not evil. And you can be intellectually disabled that's
not normal either, but it's not evil. There's nothing inherently
moral or amoral or immoral about those things. You can
believe in a very different religion than other people that's
(01:19:35):
completely harmless and be abnormal. You can be an atheist
and be completely harmless and be abnormal, not to be
confused with anti theism that wants to destroy religion, which
is harmful. But you don't have to be just like
everybody else to be okay. Wasn't enough of a message
for these people, because it really was never about gay
(01:19:59):
and lesbian right. It was never about bisexual rights. It
was never about treating people who are a little abnormal,
the same as everybody else in terms of human rights
and humanitarian treatment. It was it was about getting rid
of what is normal and getting rid of the connections
that people make with each other and the boundaries that
(01:20:20):
people have where you know, you say, all right, this far,
but no further in terms of controlling your life, your speech,
your family, your property, your children. And it sort of
started mid nineties where you'd occasionally see something, you know,
(01:20:44):
this this person is gay or that person. You know,
it's supposed to be gay. Maybe that character is gay,
and that character seems a little gay, and and but
they're likable, right, and so you're supposed to like them.
And there there were there were more shows that came
out that sort of started pushing the boundaries of you know, well,
(01:21:07):
what will you tolerate? What will you tolerate? And at
first it just seemed like it was, you know, trying
to get across the message again, leave these people alone.
They're not doing anything new, They're just they're just doing
things with each other in their own homes, consensual adults.
Leave them alone. But over the years, the the extremist
(01:21:29):
in of what at the time was the gay rights
movement that morphed from gay rights to Rainbow, to GLBT
to LGBT, you know, and and so on with all
the whole alphabet jumping in. Eventually it started to become
you're not allowed to refuse to participate, you're not allowed
(01:21:52):
to have a boundary, you're not allowed to be not
like us, You're not allowed to have your own identity,
and this is what they're doing with these shows. When
my kids were growing up, we did not have cable
because cable was one of the sources of this kind
(01:22:14):
of bullshit. So everything that my kids watched at home
that was curated, and it wasn't just my home. My
husband's extual wife was the same way. They didn't they
didn't sit around at at their their mom's house and
watch a bunch of pop culture bullshit either. Like my
stepdaughters grew up on edgy tails, stuff like that that
(01:22:39):
was designed to at least be innocent and wholesome and
not a bunch of weird shit. And you know, my
son grew up on YouTube. I suppose some people would
think it was weird shit. We watched things like The Tick,
and we watched you know, a bunch of bunch of
(01:23:00):
old TV shows and cartoons that I already was familiar with.
We watched movies that we picked out from when you know,
my husband and I were growing up, like we must
have watched the Goonies a thousand times, and so, you know,
that's the kind of thing that the kids grew up on.
(01:23:20):
They still had exposure to pop culture, but they had
that baseline of, you know, we're watching something mom and
dad wouldn't like, and they had a little resistance to
it here and there. You know, that had quite a
bit of resistance to some things, and they understood when
something was pushing on their boundaries and not just preachy.
(01:23:41):
It's not just a matter of being preachy, right. It
stopped being just preachy when you started getting accused of
isms and phobias for exercising your right to decide whether
to consent or refuse. And that includes whether or not
(01:24:02):
you're dating somebody of the same sex illogical sex. You know,
whether or not you're expected to have an attraction to
somebody who is obese or unattractive, and those aren't necessarily
always the same thing. Whether or not you're uh. You
(01:24:24):
stay within the bounds of your own race when you're
dating people and so on, that stopped being about anyone's
human rights and it stopped being about leave these people
alone when it became but they don't have to leave
you alone. You are not allowed to say no, you're
not allowed to refuse to use these pronouns. You're not allowed.
(01:24:47):
You're not allowed. And that's where we are now, right
m hm. So when it comes to Netflix, sure, they
they they're doing the same thing, right, They're they're trying
to indoc tonate people's kids. And I usually would just
tell people, you need to curate what your kids are seeing.
They're gonna hear about this at school, they're gonna see
(01:25:09):
it at other people's houses. I to this day, one
of the few movies that still gives me nightmares was
The Exorcist. We weren't allowed to watch that. Jaws was
another one we weren't allowed to watch that. We went
over to our buddy's house and saw it and wasn't
allowed to watch us when I was too, but I
sneaked out of my room when my parents had it
(01:25:30):
on TV. And I to this day hate porcelain dolls.
Don't ever make me stay in the same room alone
with one, you know, so your kids are going to
have these influences, and it is one hundred percent fair
for people to boycott based on this. Nobody's obligated to
pay you to tell them you're not allowed to have boundaries.
(01:25:53):
Your boundaries constitute isms and phobias, and your boundaries, we're
going to continue to attack until you lose them. That's
the first thing. The second thing is it stopped being
about consenting adults the moment children were targeted back in
these when they started inserting this activism into children's programming
(01:26:21):
and Gen x's parents, the boomers didn't notice, or it
wasn't so open and obvious to them that they would notice,
it stopped being about consenting adults, and it hammered home
that it was not about consenting adults. Every time this
(01:26:42):
movement has insisted on a right to break down your
children's boundaries, and they always want to target the next generation.
In the next they may not be able to fully
get rid of an adult generation's boundaries. Right an adult
generation already has those established, already can say I will
(01:27:03):
tolerate this, I'm okay with this, or I will not
tolerate this. I'm not okay with this. But children still
have enough plasticity to their brain, they're still developing. To
the degree that you can trick children, You can groom
children into not forming certain boundaries, the boundary where they decide.
(01:27:27):
I have a right to decide what speech I will
use and what speech I will not use. I have
a right to decide who I want to date, who
I'm not going to date. I have a right to
decide whether or not to buy this service or product,
and I can say no to it. So for all
that you've heard from the left, from feminists, from communists,
(01:27:51):
from the LGBT element op movement that it's about consent,
it's about erasing consent, mean that I'm not bisexual anymore.
It doesn't mean that I don't support leave these people
alone if they're not doing anything to you. It means
I don't support going after other people's children and erasing
(01:28:15):
their boundaries so that they will tolerate whatever the state
does to them later on. Which is the ultimate goal,
the ultimate goal. People think you know that pedos are
the ultimate goal here. That is not the ultimate goal.
The ultimate goal is to get your children primed to
(01:28:36):
accept a digital ID and a social credit system wherein
the state tells them right down to what whether or
not they are allowed to own a game console, what
they may and may not do, by deciding that if
they do things the state doesn't like, they're not going
(01:28:58):
to go to jail per se, but they're not allowed
to pay for a taxi or for an exit from
the gates of their fifteen minute city where they live
and work if if work still exists, or maybe they
don't have access to that universal basic income that the
(01:29:19):
state gives them in digital currency that they can't hold
in their hand, and they can't withdraw from their bank
because they bought the wrong thing, which is what is
it's like to live in China. If you buy a
game console instead of a washing machine, it affects your
social credit. If you say the wrong thing online, it
(01:29:42):
affects your social credit. And this is actually about that,
And it has absolutely nothing to do with leave these
people alone. They're not doing anything to you. It has
everything to do with you're not allowed to say no,
and you're not even allowed to think it. And if
(01:30:03):
you can't be manipulated into forgetting that you have a
right to refuse or consent, then your children or the
next target. Someday you're going to get Hey, someday, you're
not going to be able to fight back, and if
they won't fight for you, then you're fucked and they're fucked.
(01:30:25):
And that's that's the real deal.
Speaker 3 (01:30:27):
This is what I meant by euphobia, about the fear
of good news. This is what late gen x's and
early millennials had in common. We all thought that Dee's
was great, that nothing bad happened in thedes. But this
is the point we were. We were all presented with
this idea that nothing bad was happening in the dees.
(01:30:48):
But in the meantime, the worst possible shit was happening
in universities, and it was spreading into schools at the
time because we we were all around eating pizza and
playing rock music like this, like this would be our
future forever, this is gonna be great. But in the meantime,
(01:31:09):
the communists were fucking working their way through the through
the universities. That if you, if you, if you just
let your guard down and assume that it's going to
be this way forever, then shit's gonna happen to you
twenty years.
Speaker 4 (01:31:24):
In your future. And it fucking did.
Speaker 3 (01:31:27):
And this is what I mean when you let your
guard down, when you assume that everything's just going to
be great forever, then then you invite the bullshit that's
going to happen, and it's happening now. So like we'd
like to think, and this is something that ought to unite,
that the gen xs and the millennials, and I wish
(01:31:49):
it would, But in this day and age, we find
the gen xers fighting with the boomers and the millennials,
and we really ought not to because there's nothing to
do with generations. It's to do with this, with this
communist madness that's been fighting its way through our institutions
(01:32:10):
to pardon It started with the Boomers, and it got
worse in Generation Acts, and it got worse in the Millennials,
and it has and it will get worse with the
Zoomers and indeed the Alphas. It will all get worse
if we don't fucking knuckle down and figure out that no,
(01:32:32):
this this, this is a phenomenon that's only going to
get worse.
Speaker 4 (01:32:35):
With every generation.
Speaker 3 (01:32:37):
And we should have learned this in the nineties while
we were all sat around listening to subversive rock music
and eating pizza, like the fact that we thought everything
was all right, was what let our guard down and
and and let the communists invade the universities, indeed the schools.
(01:32:59):
It was indeed schools at the time, as any of
us might remember. I mean, it got through to the
universities in the sixties, and it was in the nineties
that it got through to schools, And now in the
twenty twenties is getting through to kindergarten. That's how deep
(01:33:22):
the termites have dug. And now we're wondering how normal
people think it's all right to celebrate the death of.
Speaker 4 (01:33:33):
Charliekirk and so on.
Speaker 3 (01:33:35):
Like, like, people haven't asked me how has it got
this bad?
Speaker 4 (01:33:38):
And I like, because because people.
Speaker 3 (01:33:42):
Have been taught this ship from kindergarten. That's because we've
let it get that far, because we assumed it was normal,
even from the earliest of our ages. And it's not
just in the last ten years. I mean, those of
us who have been talking about this shit for the
(01:34:03):
last ten years like to wax lyrical that it's only
been this bad for the last ten.
Speaker 4 (01:34:09):
Years, But no, it's been this bad since the nineties.
But we distract ourselves.
Speaker 3 (01:34:14):
In the nineties, we assumed that everything was fine we
assume that this was the best period in history, But no,
it's it's.
Speaker 4 (01:34:26):
Been getting worse and worse since the sixties.
Speaker 3 (01:34:28):
Well, it's been getting worse and worse since the nineteen
twenties politically speaking. But it's been getting worse and worse
since a thousand years ago, since the advent of romantic chivalry.
And it's very difficult to get that across to people in.
Speaker 4 (01:34:44):
The modern age.
Speaker 3 (01:34:46):
Well, it's been happening for a thousand years.
Speaker 4 (01:34:48):
No, yeah, it's been happening for a thousand years. No, yeah,
it has.
Speaker 3 (01:34:53):
It's just only been politicized by feminism in the last
one hundred years. And I don't know how I get
this across people without developing a channel that's been trying
to convince people of this for the last twelve years.
Speaker 4 (01:35:10):
And yeah, here we are. Here, we are right now
trying trying to get.
Speaker 3 (01:35:15):
Get it across to people that it's been getting worse
for the last thousand years. How do I even how
do I even? How does anyone even I get I have?
That's what we're here to try and get across.
Speaker 4 (01:35:30):
Good luck everyone, Yeah.
Speaker 2 (01:35:32):
I'm trying to stop evening and odd Yeah, there you go.
Speaker 1 (01:35:37):
All right, So I got another super child, and then
we're going to get to the next thing, which is
going to the patron show. So someone named itsy Bitsy
Huntsman gave us five dollars and then fifty dollars. I
don't know what the fifty is for. I don't know
if that was a mistake. I hope it wasn't really
appreciate the support and says none of that should be
(01:36:00):
anywhere any children's media. I guess near any children's media.
Not only is it brainwashing, but bloody hell, it's a
blind death. Victorian Orphan could write better than that slop. Yes,
I agree, it's terrible writing. I mean, it is made
for kids. But you know, when I was growing up,
and I'm not going to drag this out too long
because we're over time, we used to have PSAs at
(01:36:21):
the end of cartoon shows and they were common sense
things like, you know, don't leave the stove on when
you're cooking, make your you know, make sure that you
you know you're listening to the to the fire alarm,
don't play in the street.
Speaker 2 (01:36:36):
You know.
Speaker 1 (01:36:37):
It was like common sense. Yeah, don't touch power lines, right,
don't eat candy bars. Try eating fruit instead, like they
had these PSA's at the end of cartoons like He
Man and Gi Joe, and they were common sense things
that were useful. You know, now shows are all PSAs
and they're all pushing trans ideology, intersectional feminism, and other
(01:37:01):
woke garbage, which, if you think about it, the fact
that I'm mentioning the PSA's I watched growing up tells you,
tells you that I actually absorbed that information. And I
remember those PSAs and I remember thinking about them a lot,
and they did have an effect, especially on a child. Right,
So can you imagine an episode, well, sure, sure, Captain
(01:37:23):
Planet fat Albert.
Speaker 2 (01:37:25):
No, no, no, I mean I don't mean Captain Planet.
There was an episode of Punky Brewster about taking the
door off of your refrigerator that stuck with me so
strongly that when my parents passed away and my son
was staying at their house trying to get things straightened out,
and the refrigerator went bad and he put it out
in the garage like he put it out in the evening,
(01:37:47):
and I made him go back out there in the
dark with a flashlight and take the door off of
the refrigerator because I just couldn't stand the idea that
it might be in a closed with the door still
on it and some kid might break in there. Like
those PSA is really did stick with you, and it
(01:38:07):
does tell you like how influential that stuff could be
even when an individual is not necessarily all that young
when they see it.
Speaker 1 (01:38:17):
Right, And so like my point is like these things
are not ineffectual on children, because the healthy messages that
we got as kids, they definitely stuck with us and
then we got rid of them and that would have
been okay for not the fact that we replaced it
with something else. So that's where we are now. But anyway, look,
(01:38:37):
I really got to wrap it up there. Thank you
for the super chats and stuff, guys, and thank you
to Hannah and Mike for joining me on the show.
Let me know what you guys think about this one
in the comments. Do you remember PSAs and your shows
growing up? What do you think about this kind of content.
I know that we've been talking about this stuff on
Netflix for a long time and other sort of streaming services,
(01:38:57):
so it's not new to us, but it is telling
that it's going really mainstream now, so that is something
worth considering. Anyway, thanks guys for coming on the show today.
If you guys like this video, please hit like subscribe
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be heading off now to the Pageing Show to talk
(01:39:19):
about the GENA. Davis Institute, so hopefully we'll see you
guys there. And uh yeah, thanks guys so much for
coming on today's episode of HBr News and we will
see you next Tuesday. Oh no, wait, actually not, We're
gonna see you on Wednesday. We're moving things around. Just
next week. Yeah, but okay, aye, guys, Man's right activists
(01:39:40):
are machines, dude, Okay, they are literal machines. They are
talking point machines. They are impossible to fucking deal with,
especially if you have, like especially if you have like
a couple dudes who have good memory. On top of
that too, Holy shit, you're fucked