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November 29, 2025 • 64 mins
Happy Thanksgiving Day! This just might become a little heated depending on who joins in.
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Episode Transcript

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Speaker 1 (00:00):
All right, hello everybody, and welcome to Honey Badger Radio.
My name is Brian and this is the Twitter X
space xpace Conversations or x space chats. I don't know
this is gonna be like for now. I think a
substitute for the Badger Lodge conversations because the X space

(00:22):
lets anybody jump in and I can just kind of
like police it from here. I think it just works better,
and you know, it can be a little bit more
confrontational if people want to be confrontational, which I welcome.
So I'm currently on Alison's account, so people are probably
seeing this Twitter space and thinking Alison is in here,
but it's not her, it's me. But I am here

(00:45):
to take your chats and anyone who wants to jump
into the Twitter space. There's a link in the description
for the space, or you can just follow us at
Honey Badger Bite on Twitter or x I keep calling
it Twitter, I don't know. I don't know if we're
calling it expert Twitter anymore. And yeah, just come on

(01:05):
in and I'll like give you, you know, ask a
request to speak, and I'll give you an opportunity to
say a few things. You know, you can yell at
me or whatever. But I also wanted to say Happy
Thanksgiving to my American brethren, my brothers and sisters in Christ,

(01:25):
because tomorrow's Thanksgiving and I am currently engaged in the
Nativity fast. But in the OCA we allow Thanksgiving exceptions,
so I'll be able to eat meat tomorrow, and well,
actually I can eat meat starting tonight because in the OCA,
the day begins when the sun goes down. It's it's weird,

(01:48):
but that's how it works. But anyway, so it's Thanksgiving.
So happy Thanksgiving guys for those of you guys who
are here and hanging out. And in the event that
there isn't anybody who joins with I don't know why
that would be, but it's starting to look that way.
I will say that I do have something to talk
about that we can get into as well, but first

(02:12):
let me do the things. So, if you guys want
to send us a message to any point during the
show today, please go to beat feed the Badger dot
com forward slash just the tip to send us a message.
It's the best way to get a message to us.
You'll be able to write whatever you want. You won't
get censored or restricted. You'll be able to write long
paragraphs if you really want to. And yeah, we'll get

(02:34):
most of what you put in because Google takes a
significant chunk of the superchats and the superchats of all
kinds of other shenanigans with them, So why bother with
the shenanigans. Just avoid the shenanigans and send us a
message directly. So, yeah, that's feedabadge dot com forard slash.
Just a tip. We are currently doing our monthly fundraiser

(02:54):
if I recall, and we need some help with that.
So if you can help us out there, you can
go to feed thebadger dot com ford Slash support. Remember
when we used to write Badger media blitz, I felt
like that just drove people away because it was too
much to type. But yeah, it's just support feedbbadger dot
com for Slash support or just go to feedbadgers dot
com and you can navigate to the support page. Okay,

(03:16):
so what do you guys got going on for Thanksgiving?
So I am here in Virginia and Lindsay and I
have no family, so we are going to basically be
spending it together with Jojo and we have turkey and
cranberry sauce. I think she bought the stuff and mashed

(03:39):
potatoes and pumpkin pie. No, sweet potato pie. I like
sweet potato pie. I think they both taste about the
same in my opinion. I know that's crazy, but they're
very similar. But yeah, sweet potato pie. So it's gonna
be amazing and I can't wait. And tonight we're gonna
have chili, which I'm also very excited for because I

(04:00):
haven't really been eating all day, so that's something to
get excited about. But yeah, we don't we're not going
to be seeing any family. I hope you guys are
going to be doing something that involves family or friends
or something social, and yeah, we will see what happens
with that. So there's this article a couple things that

(04:22):
are been going on that we could look at. I
don't know what you guys are interested in. But first,
there's a woman named Afton Baine, it's the weirdest name
I've ever heard, who is running for Congress of Tennessee.
I want to say, yeah, Tennessee's seventh special election. And

(04:43):
apparently a clip of her has been going around of
her discussing the kinds of things that I guess a
you know, politician in a state like Tennessee would be
concerned with things like the patriarchy. So let me find
the Uh oh, it's not it's not here. This is
her page. Obviously, no, nothing damning will be leaked from

(05:06):
her page, but I can certainly, I can certainly find it.
So let's let's let's look for it because I saw
it and not long ago. And uh yeah, these are
the kinds of things that have leaked out. So she's

(05:27):
done a lot of crazy stuff, made an ass of
herself many times. She's definitely an activist more more than anything.
And yeah, here's a clip put up by Lips of TikTok,
which's usually pretty good. And we'll give this a listen
really quick, make sure that the sound worksops.

Speaker 2 (05:48):
I think, as an organizer and as an activist, like
we really have an opportunity here in this country to
to talk about what type of policy, progressive policies we
want to see as young women, and I think we have,
you know, as as birth, you know, as women who
can give birth, men and women who can give birth.

(06:08):
We could maybe leverage that as collective bargaining, which is
the basis of this book.

Speaker 1 (06:12):
That I'm not.

Speaker 2 (06:14):
I've just started reading but called birth Strike and how
we can really leverage collective bargaining when it comes to
having children in this country. And so for example, like
I'm not going to give birth until the United States
government concedes ABCD.

Speaker 1 (06:30):
What do you think about that? Seem a little much?
I think? Okay. So she's definitely a progressive. Of course,
she is intersectional feminist, and she's quite radical. She's also
like she kind of hates her own state of the

(06:52):
There have been clips of her saying that she wants
to leave Tennessee, but she's like running for office, so
she wants to fundamentally transform it. But here's the thing,
she's pretty popular. She might win that seat with women.
So it's just what I guess what I'm getting at
is the framing is this, Okay, regardless of her policies,

(07:15):
we're at a We're in a really strange point in
history where women can be running for office or anybody
for that matter, men too, and have absolutely insane policy
ideas or beliefs that would normally be like it would
kill your political career, like to be like, for example,
in America, if you were like a Muslim, you couldn't

(07:35):
possibly win a seat, especially after nine to eleven. Right,
and now, like you know, we got a guy who's
going to be mayor in New York that's a Muslim,
and like you have like states like you know, Minneapolis
and Michigan. I think that are basically being like taken over,
you know, at least some of the larger districts. So

(07:55):
we've gone. And I think a lot of it has
to do with a lot of negative sentiment towards I
guess America as a patriarchal system, so as like inherently masculine.
Even if you could argue it isn't, but that doesn't matter.
It's perceived that way by these people. And so in particular,

(08:17):
women are voting in like crazy, you know, like amounts
because they want to prove, I think, on some level
that they can undo what they perceive as the damage
that men have done with the last election, right, the
last presidential election. So they're really trying to turn things around.
They're ramping up to eleven. So this woman has really

(08:38):
crazy beliefs. She's she throws tantrums, like there's video of
her trying to like, you know, break into a room.
I guess Yeah, she's trying to get into a room
here in what I assume is the capital. That's her
or these two, I'm not really sure. And they have
security come and grab her and anchor out of there.

(09:01):
She's not supposed to be there, and they and they
have to do this, and of course they screamed and
they cry. There these are members of government acting like children. Sorry,
that was completely and they're like, like this would happen
to anybody, like you would. You gotta get a ring

(09:23):
with this. I mean it goes on for a while,
but absolutely like childish behavior. And this woman is winning
seats in Tennessee, as you can see. Let me see

(09:46):
if I can find it here. Yeah, so the pretty close,
pretty close here. These are polls only two points behind
the latest poll for Tennessee's seventh special election next week.
No wonder Republicans are panic jerry mandering reds. It's across
the country. This is a Trump plus twenty two district.
So this woman is killing it. I think it's I

(10:06):
think it's because she is basically like willing to say
the most crazy shit. So let me see, is anyone joining, Oh, yeah,
we got a guy, we got a botch TV Hey, Botch,
if you want to say anything, let me know, send
me a message. I also have something else here. I

(10:29):
have this, So anyway that's afton Bane, I might I
might cover this on a news story and yeah, so
this is a storming Governor Lee's office, being physically removed
by officers and screaming uncontrollably. Yeah, then we have something else.

(10:57):
Like Goodfellow says, when women cry, women cry when they
are not hurt. They're doing it to manipulate. Yeah, they're
doing it to get a man to step in and
do something. It's like, why do why are women online
the biggest proponents of political violence, like on social media
that they're the ones saying, you know, we have to

(11:19):
do something about this. Whoever the enemy, right, we have
to take them out. How they victimize themselves help. Yesterday
on the news show, I covered a story of a
woman who was a Republican that did the same thing
that wasn't even necessary. I think it was just for
the attention. She wanted to go famous, like Jesse Smollett.

(11:41):
It wasn't even a necessary move, and it was I
think it was harmful to the cause of the Republican Party.
To be honest, because it's fuel for the left, especially
if it now that it's obviously a hoax. Nobody wants that,
so I think it's just really childish. And then we
have this article from The Times. I think that The

(12:02):
Times is just short for the New York Times. It's
called men are in trouble, But whose fault is it?
A survey found that the demands being placed on men
by women and society has pushed them to a breaking point.
And what's interesting is that in the article. I'm not
going to go through the whole thing right now, but
in the article there's a claim that men, younger men

(12:23):
are more progressive and that they're rejecting like traditional gender roles,
but that they want to protect and provide for their families.
In that's what they're saying they want to do, so
they want to protect a provider family, but they're also
rejecting their general It's like, dude, that is a gender role,

(12:45):
if that's the term we have to use, it's just
a masculine trait to do that. You're not actually bucking anything.
You're just trying to get permission to do something that
you naturally do by saying or at least like claiming
that you are like bucking something, right, it's ridiculous anyway.

(13:10):
So this today's stream is only going to be about
an hour, So I hope that some people, you know,
have something they want to say or they want to
jump in and talk. So I don't know. I mean,
maybe it's a little slow because it's it's Thanksgiving. But
I did a little bit of digging to get an idea.
So I have this summary of the sort of like

(13:34):
general sentiment around men's issues, like men's challenges. Okay, and
this is what I got. This is like getting a
temperature on the internet in general. So men face significant
challenges in the modern world, including including loneliness, emotional struggles,
sexual frustration, confusion about identity. Yes, that makes sense because

(13:56):
it's like I want to be a man, but being
a man is bad, so that should be confusing, and
difficulties adapting to shifting social and economic roles i e.
Women are making more money and they're essentially men have
to make even more than women do. Some argue that
men themselves are largely responsible for the problems they face.

(14:18):
This perspective suggests that societal expectations of masculinity, such as
emotional suppression, the glorification of dominance, and the avoidance of
vulnerability have led men to harm themselves in others. Now,
I'm not reading this because I agree with it. This
is what the general like. There's basically like two minds
on the issues that men face. One is that one

(14:40):
which is the sort of like feminism TM position. Right,
this is the problem with men is that they're the problem.
For instance, men are more likely to die by suicide,
partly due to higher access to lethal means like firearms
and a cultural reluctance to seek help, even though mental
health struggles are widespread. Economic challenges are also attributed to

(15:02):
men's choices, such as undervaluing education and underperforming academically, despite
women now outpacing men in many educational metrics. Again, this
is the claim, This is the sort of these are
the feminist claims, right, Education is shit. We just saw
there was like some I just saw something where there
were people in university that had their reading level was

(15:28):
below middle school so their ability to read was below
middle school level and they were in college. So education
is not doing anything. It's not good. It's turning them
into activists, it's equipping them with like you know, understanding
of things like power and privilege or whatever. But it's

(15:49):
not actually like equipping them with life skills like mathematics
and the ability to read and write so form coherent
sentence is you know, things like that Happy Thanksgiving to
Peter Houston. What's up all right? So yeah, So anyway,

(16:12):
critics argue that men's frustration with diversity, equity and inclusion
initiative stems from there, not from actual disadvantage, but from
losing under advantages they previously held. Again, this is the
feminist perspective. So men are suffering, it's their fault. They're
you know, they're losing their privilege and this is why.
And of course none of this is very encouraging. It's

(16:33):
intended to it's intended to emasculate, but it's also to
demoralize men, to make them feel like, you know, everything
that they are suffering from they deserve, and that's a
that's a terrible I think it's an evil, wicked thing
to do. Conversely, though, and this is what's a little

(16:54):
bit encouraging, I suppose, is that more people are starting
to realize and wake up to the reality that all
of that should I just read as bullshit. Conversely, others
emphasize as systemic and societal factors play a major role.
The decline of traditional male roles, such as breadwinning or
dominant social positions, has left many men feeling obsolete and disconnected,

(17:16):
especially as societal values change. The expectations for men to
be emotionally stoic and physically strong persists even as these
norms no longer align with modern realities. Furthermore, men's struggles
are often dismissed or mocked when they attempt to express vulnerability,
which discourages open dialogue and support seeking. The lack of
emotional safety in relationships, where men may fear being labeled

(17:38):
fragile or weak, further exacerbates their isolation. There is also
a growing recognition that blaming men for all their relationship
failures or societal problems is counterproductive and oversimplified. While some
men may fail to take accountability, the root of many
relationship issues lies in mutual patterns of self sabotage, lack
of emotional introspection, and unequal power dynamics that affect both genders.

(18:02):
The idea that men are always to blame for failed
relationships overlooks the complexity of human behavior. And shared responsibility. Yeah,
but we can't blame women, so that's like impossible non starter, right,
I mean we do that here. But oh we got
a request. I will approve it. Okay, Botch you can

(18:22):
talk if you like you hear me, Okay, yeah, I
can hear you.

Speaker 3 (18:28):
Okay. I just wanted to say to your point that
it's kind of like it. It's kind of like when
to your point about the whole blaming men thing, as
we've seen that that's a a conclusion that's often drawn,
which is absolute bs as we come to find. I

(18:51):
don't know if you've seen it recently. I can't remember
who it was, but it was some like politician I
think I can't remember what her name was, but she
was saying like how men were to blame for like
relationship issues and how uh if you wanted better marriages,
then stop watching porn, like she was just blaming porn.

Speaker 1 (19:13):
She's yeah, I think so she's a she's a yeah.
She's like an out of touch, some out of touch
Christian commentator that basically does what all of these like
Christian women do that they're basically just feminists, though honestly
they're well no, because they're they're trying. They're taking on

(19:34):
a leadership position and trying to tell men what they
should be doing, and they're not actually helping them. They're
just trying to like draw the boundaries. Like, oh, well,
you know, this is how I figure out what's wrong,
because I'm men aren't leading correctly, so I'm gonna blame them.
But she's out of touch, right, yeah, because because I

(19:55):
think she's like, I know what you're talking about. She's
been married for a while, so she doesn't really know
what the reality is. I don't know if she has
any sons, but if she does, she's yeah, well, I mean,
if she does, she's gonna find out that. That's that's
what I'm saying. She's gonna find out if she has sons,
she's going to find out the reality. And it's not

(20:15):
it's not porn. Porn is not the cause porn symptom. Yeah. Yeah,
men wouldn't be watching it if if they had, like
even even if they weren't having sex, but like even
if they were moving towards something like uh like a
committed you know, relationship or marriage, they wouldn't be one

(20:36):
stimulation one. Yeah, exactly, exactly.

Speaker 3 (20:39):
Yeah, Yeah, it's It's funny how like they go to
porn because you know, it's the easiest thing to blame.
It is like the video games caused violence argument. It's
the same thing. And it's just it's just weird, man, Like,
you know, it's like there there's a reason they want to.

Speaker 1 (20:59):
Face is are going they don't look at and talk
honestly about the problem. That's all. That's that's all it is. Yeah,
it just makes it easy to like you can just
make that address that and move on and then assume
that men. And this is the thing that that is
most frustrating about what because Pearl Pearl Davis went after

(21:22):
these women and and I'm grateful for that. You know,
she gets a lot of ship, especially from our artists,
well not especially from ours, but a lot of you know,
like that the the you know about the Whisper networks,
the feminist circle, sewing Circle, Whisper Network, feminists, so you

(21:42):
know what I'm talking about, the like online the like
they're sort of like secret secretly networking with each other
to like take down people like you know, Andrew Wilson
and uh and roll and stuff like that.

Speaker 3 (21:59):
Obviously it's not because they're just gaining and.

Speaker 1 (22:02):
Yeah, I know, I know, but they're but they're trying
to and I think it's because they're like it's so anyway,
getting back the getting back to what I was gonna say.
So the reason why I find it so frustrating is
because I understand what it is they want to see,

(22:23):
but they don't understand how difficult it is to get running.
It's like there used to be a mechanism that men
had access to that allowed them to be like able
to to realize their potential. This is outside of women

(22:43):
like so not even including like women, just like men
on their own right. And we have handicapped men for generations.
So we have two or three generations of men who
have been absolutely like handicapped because their you know, mother

(23:08):
like it's sort of like what Jessee Peterson says, you know,
like you have like your mother's spirit. And it's because
that's how he says it. But what I'm saying is
if you take like I think it comes back to
the father, he take the father out of the home
for a generation, and then the next generation doesn't have
a father in the home, and the next generation doesn't
have a father, then you have like three generations of

(23:29):
fathers missing, and then you expect that boy that's a
product of mother single mother homes for three generations to
just immediately get his shit together and just become the
man that you know, to become like the father that
he doesn't actually know. He doesn't know his father, he
doesn't know his grandfather, he doesn't even know his great grandfather.
He doesn't know where he comes from. His name doesn't

(23:50):
mean anything to him. Like he used to mean something,
your last name. You could say, I am a this
and it meant something. Today it means nothing. Especially for
men and women. They're not even taking their man's name,
you know, I mean they're taking their their.

Speaker 3 (24:06):
Their but but yeah they're not.

Speaker 1 (24:11):
But what I'm saying is this is so like you
have these these these men in this situation, these young guys,
you can't just say, you know, like get your ship together, right,
Like it's a start, but it's not the solution, because
what they need is uh an environment to find their like,

(24:36):
find their footing, I guess, like find what what it is.
They discover their identity uninterrupted, undistracted, and it's and definitely
without women nagging them. And so what all something was
doing was just nagging them. She was just nagging them.

Speaker 3 (24:53):
From the Yeah, right exactly. I like your point there
where you mentioned it's on like a foundation that these
men have nothing to stand on, you know. It's just
it's and when they try to build that foundation or
have this uh steps to take it, it's being like

(25:14):
stripped from underneath them. And it's and it's like one
of those things where it's like you can't expect men
to win or to have their shit together if you
don't give them the opportunity or give them the tools
to turn into good men or turn turn into the

(25:35):
men that you know you would want to have kids with,
or you would want to you know, build with. You know,
you can't, you can't have anything without a foundation.

Speaker 1 (25:48):
You know.

Speaker 3 (25:49):
It's it's it's almost like they're expecting the result. Like
it's almost like a scientific experiment where you do You're
it's like that one it's like a school project where
you have that one kid that doesn't want to do anything,
and then the other two or three kids end up
getting the having to do all the work. It's like

(26:10):
you're expecting someone to do all the work, but they
have no they have no foundation, They have nothing to
go off of. So it's like, if you got nothing
to go off of, how are you going to do
the experiment? How are you gonna get the best results
if you don't have anything to try or go off of,
you know. And it's like and then not only that,

(26:30):
you're basically saying your ship and the educational system is
saying to men you're inherently evil, you're bad, you're you're
pieces of ship, whatever you want to call them. And
then it's like you're demoralizing them, so they see no way,
they see no reason to get better, because what's the

(26:51):
point if you're just gonna sit there and talk to
shit to me the whole entire time, you know.

Speaker 1 (26:59):
Yeah, yeah, And well and a lot of guys get
this wrong too, because there's a lot of men who
would tell other men, well, you just need to do
you know, X, Y and Z. But like those guys
probably did have their father, and they had a network
of support, and they had, you know, like all the
things they needed to like fundamentally understand. Because this is
the thing, like we act like everyone's just the same. Well, yeah,

(27:21):
like everyone's the same, But more than that, it's like
we act like everyone just kind of like comes into
the world knowing what they are, having a like a
good understanding of the self, and a lot of people
don't realize that most of If you do have that,
or if you're in the process of doing that, you

(27:42):
might feel like you know everything about yourself, but you
probably don't. But you at least got like a starting
point from you know, your relationship with the men in
your life, including your dad, but like not limited to that,
you know, and guys that don't have that, they're going
to look for it in They're gonna look for another men,

(28:02):
but they may not get it from the right men.
They might get it from men their own age who
also don't have like a foundation, Like you know, where
do where do gangs come from? In like the inner city? Well,
they're all like they're all like their own age, and
they're like maybe there's like one that's like a couple
of years older than them, but none of them have fathers,

(28:23):
and they're like looking at that guy to be like
the leader and have an understanding of what it means
to be a father, and they're following that person's lead
and so that this is like what they're modeling their
behavior on. And yet we we blame them for doing
the best they can, or at least like we're responding
to whatever is is, whatever they can get their help from,

(28:47):
instead of like asking the question, like, you know, how
do we like are in a healthy way? Because that's
I mean, that's where gangs come from. It's like because
like boys like looking for you know, a sense of
belonging and a person to to follow and imitate and
like build on and and once they've done that, once

(29:08):
they've entered that world, it's really hard to get him
out of it, which is why like you know, people
become you know, repeat offenders, career criminals, whatever. And yeah,
so like a fatherless atmosphere is right for that.

Speaker 3 (29:24):
So absolutely. And I could attest to that because I
grew up without a head. So I mean I had
my grand I had my grandfather who I lived with periodically,
but I looked at everything that my mother did and
did the opposite. And that's not to throw my mother
under the bus.

Speaker 1 (29:44):
But did your father was he like did he model
like whether he meant to or not, But did he
model behavior for you to follow? Oh? No, you didn't
have a father. Did you know him a way?

Speaker 3 (29:57):
When I was young? Ah, but from what I do know,
he cheated on my mother. He was, you know, kind
of a womanizer, kind of did whatever he wanted. The
time that I do remember being with him, and it
was very very short because he passed when I was
like four or five, So the time that I remember

(30:21):
being with him, it was very infrequent. Often actually, even
my mom would tell me that he would spend maybe
about an hour with me, or maybe fifteen to thirty minutes.
And then because my mom and my dad were separate,
separated before he passed, and so I would go from

(30:47):
his place to my mom's, which I think she was
living with her mom, my grandmother at the time, and
so he would basically be like, I'm tired of him.
He cries too much, which, by the way, I didn't
from what my mom had told me is I was

(31:09):
not a fussy baby. I was not someone that was
difficult to entertain. So he basically just didn't want anything
to do with me. So basically I had I didn't
have him, but I had my uncle and my grandfather.
But it still wasn't the same. Because I spent most
of my childhood being alone. I had to learn how

(31:32):
to cook, I had to learn how to make peanut
butter and peanut butter sandwiches when I was like five
or six years old, because my mom would be working
late and that would be my dinner for the night.
And you know, that wasn't my mother's fault. But to
be fair, her dating life was awful. I would notice
her bringing strange men in and out of my life,

(31:53):
and I don't know, I don't know how many men.

Speaker 1 (31:57):
Yeah, I mean, well, look, I'm not saying it's share
of your mom, but if she was bringing home strange
men before you were born or like after you were born,
I mean, she was probably bringing them home before you
were born, and you might have been a product of one,
and that might be why he didn't want to be involved.
And I think that that's on your mom, like to
be honest, Yeah, yeah, And I'm again I get it,

(32:19):
like people make mistakes, but it starts by saying, you
know what, I shouldn't have done that, And that's I mean,
that's just what I'm seeing. So I don't know the
details of your life. And forgive me if I'm like
way off the.

Speaker 3 (32:32):
Mar No, No, that's what it was like, That's pretty
much what it was, you know, And and even as
a growing up as a kid, none of the guys
that she was with ever tried to develop a relationship
with me. I was invisible to them. Like she was
with this guy for like twelve years from when I

(32:53):
was ten all the way up until I was twenty two.
And I'm twenty six now, yeah, yeah, And so he
wanted nothing to do with me either, Like I would
be in my room playing my video games.

Speaker 1 (33:05):
Do them?

Speaker 3 (33:05):
I think? And yeah, me, I keep to myself like
you're the parent. I shouldn't have to make the effort.
You should, you know what I mean, Because I'm the kid,
like I'm not like and he had a kid from
a previous relationship. He wasn't married to this woman, but
he had a kid from a previous relationship, and that
drove a wedge in between me and him, you know,

(33:27):
because I was an only child, so I had to
be the bigger brother. And I was like, I ain't
signing up for this. So, you know. But the guy
that she's with now, which is her second husband, and
you know, I thought my mom would never get married again,
but she's been married for two years. And I think
to the new guy, and because I'm older, now we
don't talk to each other. I don't really have much

(33:49):
of a relationship with him. But right, that's because I'm older.
You know, I'm twenty six and he's like forty. So
that's a little bit different than being a kid.

Speaker 1 (33:59):
And you know, weird, but yeah, weird because you guys
are kind of close in age when you think about it.
But maybe maybe I don't know, so yeah, I mean,
like what the reason why I said that is because honestly,
like you know, there's countless stories, like countless stories of
people men and women who were raised by single moms

(34:20):
who have a lot of problems as a result. Maybe
they were abused. I'm not saying that you were, but
a lot of people are abused by there by the
single mom or by you know, the men that that
single mom brings home, or by stepfather or something like that,
and there's usually like substance abuse and a lot of
like sort of like you know, sinful living.

Speaker 3 (34:39):
I was violence, I will say, in the time that
I was with when my mom was with the other guy,
So there was domestic violence in the Yeah.

Speaker 1 (34:50):
Well yeah, sure, I mean I'm not surprised by that,
but like, my my thing is I hear lots of
stories of this, and it's all, you know, really like
it's not good stuff, Like I don't want that for anybody.
I think it's terrible. But what I'm really sick of
is no one's saying why did the woman choose to

(35:10):
sleep with this man? Like no, And and again I'm not
even saying that because you can like make the same
cycle of violence argument or like cycle of abuse argument
where you know, a woman picks like men that are
bad for her because her like you know, she was
raised in an environment like that, and that becomes normal
and like how she sees you know, whatever, it.

Speaker 3 (35:31):
Is normal normal to her.

Speaker 1 (35:32):
Yeah, that's what I'm saying. It normalizes in her mind.
But like at some point where you know, this is
what Aaron Pittsy was trying to work on, was to
like break the cycle of violence by at least confronting
the reality that women are a big part of that,
like in the men that they choose, and in the
way that they behave towards their kids, and in the

(35:55):
way that they behave in relationships. Because you know, when
we think, like essentially the mainstream narrative the sort of
not even yeah, it's mainstream to the point where everyone
accepts it as normal. Is that if I say this
is a domestic violence situation, just the phrase domestic violence
makes people think, oh, wife beating, Like this is just

(36:15):
wife beating, and this is what the feminist movement has
pushed out. They literally call it that. They say, well,
we just call it wife beating because that's what it is, right,
and without agnology that women, Yeah, women are just as
much a part of that. You like, it's it's usually
bidirectional violence. And actually women tend to initiate violence way

(36:38):
more frequently than men. And we can't even accept that
baseline fact. That doesn't it doesn't even necessarily need to
balance anything. It just needs to be seen as the truth.
Then we need to see women as agents of their
own Like they make choices, They decide who they like
take home, they decide who they sleep with, they decide
whether or not they're going to get pregnant, they decide

(37:00):
whether it.

Speaker 3 (37:00):
Is what they were anyway, was the agency what? But
they didn't want consequences of set agency?

Speaker 1 (37:07):
Well they yeah, sure they liked the idea of making choices,
but that but not that it has negative consequences sometimes.

Speaker 3 (37:15):
Right, exactly, you know, And I think I think I remember,
for instance, you and Allison you covered that story about
that young man that was assaulted by these women at
this convention.

Speaker 1 (37:29):
Yeah, but I don't remember. I know the guy who
was assaulted. His name was said. I think, yeah, maybe
that guy.

Speaker 3 (37:36):
There was that guy, and then there was another guy
that was that you guys covered that was.

Speaker 1 (37:40):
All that was roped by a horde. Yeah. Yeah.

Speaker 3 (37:46):
And it's like and even and even the said guy like,
when I heard about it, I'm like, and then I
heard what that woman had to say and she basically said, oh,
that's embarrassing for him to say that. I'm like, excuse me.
And then I know that Asthmund Gold he covered it
and he was like, if I did that with another

(38:08):
guy and the victim was a woman, I'd be in jail.
And I'm like, here, hey, you would be, you would be.

Speaker 1 (38:19):
You would be.

Speaker 3 (38:19):
But is it because is it because a guy is
supposed to just like it?

Speaker 1 (38:27):
We just don't. I just don't think. We just don't
think women are a threat.

Speaker 3 (38:30):
We're just gonna accept that now, Like.

Speaker 1 (38:33):
Yeah, no, we just don't take women. We just don't
treat them as a threat. We we just don't like
we we just don't. We don't like they can, you
know they can. They're their stories of women murdering their
especially their babies, Like they murder babies, not just in abortion,
I mean like they actually killed their babies. No, they

(38:54):
actually and throw them in a dumpster or something, you know,
drown them what ever, they try to kill their baby.

Speaker 3 (39:01):
I recently read a story where young a woman had
lost a custody battle here in Texas, and uh, this
was like recent, this was like maybe the beginning of
this year, I think something like that. And uh, she
made her son say goodbye to her father through a voicemail,

(39:23):
killed him and then herself.

Speaker 4 (39:27):
So just to deny that, yeah, it's it's just like
it's just like yo, and people don't want to acknowledge
this if the thing that happens.

Speaker 3 (39:39):
But yeah, that's why we don't want to acknowledge that of.

Speaker 1 (39:45):
You know, women being behaving badly. Just put it that way,
just not not to say that this is what all
women are, but just to say this is what women
are capable of. That's it. I just I just like,
just like men, I just want to be able to
acknowledge that they are capable of it, you know.

Speaker 3 (40:03):
Yeah, so I mean every every human is every yeah,
you know.

Speaker 1 (40:08):
It seems like such a non uh, you know, non controversial.

Speaker 3 (40:13):
It seems like a common sense sort of thing. But
what is It's a common sensical sort of thing. But
it's like one of those things where it's like men
are such predators and they're awful and they're terrible and
they're and and then you get I mean, I've seen
you and Allison scroll through TikTok. I'm pretty sure if
you search the words where are the good men at

(40:34):
you'd probably find a thousand thousands of videos on that stuff.
Like you guys will never find or never. You guys
will never not find something dumb to cover because because
there's always gonna be something, there always is something. It's

(40:55):
like the other the other time you were covering drama, Queen,
I think it was, and it was a TikTok video
of the of a man, and I love the joke
that you made about the man, like because he had
no shirt on, but he was walking outside and he
was talking about how people don't want to communicate anymore
and how he saw this young lady that was on

(41:15):
her phone and she was outside, probably watching Netflix on
her phone or something like that.

Speaker 1 (41:19):
Oh yeah that's old, but yeah them or that.

Speaker 3 (41:22):
And the One Lady and the One Lady, And then
Dram McQueen was like, nobody owes you a hello, And
then you made some joke about like, well, at least
she's not walking around naked with his thing out, like oh,
I'm just trying to say hello, like yeah whatever, and
he's like, yeah, yeah, I meet you. It's like it's
like it's like, yeah, we're not walking around with her,

(41:45):
you know, parts hanging out just saying hey, hello, how
you doing, like you know. And and I told a
friend about it and he goes, was she homeschooled? And
I said, I don't know, but like apparently saying hello
to her triggers Well, yeah.

Speaker 1 (42:04):
I think that women are let's just say, they're so
safe that they can uh see any interaction as like
a threat to their space. So they've we've made them
too safe from everything, so you know, like if so,

(42:26):
if you remember, do you remember it's a classic video
woman walks for ten hours in New York and she
gets cat called. It was like an old video.

Speaker 3 (42:40):
Oh yeah I've seen that.

Speaker 1 (42:42):
Okay, Yeah, and so like, you know those are She
claims that it was just her walking for ten hours
in New York, which is a lot of walking. Like
that's crazy, that's that's a lot of walking. But I
guess we'll just have to believe it.

Speaker 3 (42:57):
That's a lot of walking.

Speaker 1 (42:58):
Even for me.

Speaker 3 (42:59):
I'm handicap and I could walk for ten minutes. I
can't walk ten minutes, let alone ten hours.

Speaker 1 (43:05):
Yeah, so she walked for ten hours, and but out
of the ten hour video, she got about a two
minute clip. So two minutes are a clip, and it's
all like the cat calling, right, and there's a little
of it, but most of the cat calling is just

(43:25):
guys saying hello. So what I'm saying is is that
that and that's like an old video, So that means
that you know, that woman. I don't remember what her
name was. I don't even know if she like we
knew her name. But the Wound did a ten hour
video in New York and drama Queen are they both

(43:46):
have the same standard for what constitutes harassment on you know,
in public, and that is men saying hello. So and yeah,
of course the attitude is you know, you're not owed
a hello. Used to be you're not owed, you know,
a relationship. Now it's like you're not owed a greeting.

(44:07):
And I think that women are only gonna further Like
I don't know, shrink.

Speaker 3 (44:14):
I just said, how how are you doing? I didn't
ask for you to for you to send me nudes?

Speaker 1 (44:20):
No, I know, I know.

Speaker 3 (44:24):
No, that sounds so stupid because like, you know how
us guys are, Like let's say I walk past you
and I'm like, and I didn't know you to say,
for instance, I didn't even know you, I'd be like
i'd give you that, you know that like head jerk
that like men give like that what's up kind of
nod that how you're doing? Kind of like nonverbal like communication.

(44:45):
We do that all the time, or like we say
how you doing, sir? How you doing? Like I'm good,
how are you?

Speaker 1 (44:51):
Well? You know what? I will to be fair though
where I live. I live in the South in Virginia,
and I don't I can't do that and including women,
and I don't have any issues. But you're kind of old.
So maybe it's because they're older women.

Speaker 3 (45:10):
But yeah, well also it's Southern hospitality, and I know
it's a stereotype, but it's actually a legit thing. Yeah,
Like I mean, I'm I'm ten minutes. Like there's like
where I live, uh, you know, in Texas, there's like
I swear to God, there's like five five to ten minutes.
Within five to ten minutes, you'll find five churches within

(45:31):
each other, and everybody's like praise Jesus and this and that.
And I grew up in a Christian household, but it's
like everybody is so neighborly, you know, and so community
like m and I think a lot of these people
like if you don't grow up in that or you
don't live in that, you don't get it. So like

(45:54):
somebody's saying hello to you or somebody like you know, uh,
like I noticed that a lot of people say down here,
they say darling or honey.

Speaker 1 (46:04):
You know.

Speaker 3 (46:04):
I've I've I've always called every woman honeying her sweetheart,
and none of them have ever said anything, which I'm
always like very careful nowadays because.

Speaker 1 (46:13):
You never know, but I get never I've never had
any and sweetheart all the time. But I don't I
don't think anything of it. I just think it's a
Southern thing. That's it.

Speaker 3 (46:24):
Well, yeah, it's yeah, I don't.

Speaker 1 (46:26):
Think, oh my god, she wants it, like, no, it's
just it's and that's okay, it's still it's still nice.
It's still nice. Like I mean, my wife gets it
too from women and they'll call her, you know, honey
or sweetheart too.

Speaker 3 (46:42):
So I mean it's a I mean, oh yeah, I
mean it's it's just an endearing thing. It's not meant
to be, you know, a sexual or anything like that.

Speaker 1 (46:54):
I think that's that attitude is like a yeah. It's
like if you you know, if you want to university,
or you live in a big city, or you watch
too much TV, you're gonna have that opinion that any
man who says we are actually is trying to hurt
you in some way.

Speaker 3 (47:11):
It's like, not everybody's trying to hit on you.

Speaker 1 (47:14):
Yeah, you're not that important. Hey, showbiz Sam, did you
want to speak or are you just like lurking me
or welcome to lurk if you like? The show is
gonna be going for another fifteen minutes and then I'm
gonna end it there. So I oh, say, here's something
interesting that while we were talking on the topic of

(47:35):
greeting people. So, Lisa Brighton, do you guys know who
Lisa Brighton is. I had her on the show once
a while ago, and she posts a lot on acts
about like men's issues. She's very cool, and I think
she's like pretty conservative, like I thinks. She writes for
EV magazine and she is always posting, like, you know,

(47:56):
just sentimental, nice things about man. And she said, call
me crazy, but I believe if more women had gratitude
and showed appreciation for men rather than disdain for men,
the world would be a much better place. Now that's
her post. Is there anything about that that you guys
find defensive? Like, do you think anything about that?

Speaker 3 (48:17):
I saw that too, I saw your response to it.

Speaker 1 (48:20):
Oh yeah, yeah, I did respond to it, right, What
did I say?

Speaker 3 (48:24):
You said, it's not crazy at all.

Speaker 1 (48:25):
I believe no, yeah, it's not a crazy I don't
think it's crazy to say.

Speaker 5 (48:28):
No.

Speaker 1 (48:28):
I don't think that's crazy at all. But someone reposted her,
someone named Meg, and of course they had to take
a shit all over it somehow, even though there's nothing
like anti woman in this anti man, all it is
is if women showed had gratitude and showed appreciation for
men rather than disdain for men, the world will be

(48:50):
a much better place. And this Meg person says, call
me crazy, but I believe if more men left women
alone instead of harassing and abusing them, the world will
be a much better place. It's always about feelings for
men and safety for women. That's why you can't compare
missonry with and misogyny. Where did that come from? Ladies?

(49:10):
How could you?

Speaker 3 (49:11):
How could you take that post and spin it and
turn it into.

Speaker 1 (49:16):
Well, why don't they stop raping us? Are you being
raped right now?

Speaker 3 (49:22):
Meg?

Speaker 1 (49:23):
Is the rapist in the room with you?

Speaker 3 (49:24):
Oh my god?

Speaker 1 (49:25):
Like that that is an unhinged response, unhere.

Speaker 3 (49:31):
For you and for you and Alison. I don't know
how you guys tolerate this. Like when I watch you
guys cover all this stuff on on the maintaining frame,
I'm like and I and sometimes I see Alison get heated.
It's like and it's like, holy crap. I take medication

(49:51):
for high blood pressure. I wonder what her blood pressure
is when she starts doing this, because it's like because
like my tolerance for BS is like low, So like
I don't know how, Like when you're reading these articles
and you're seeing these things, how it's like, man, I've
lost my faith in humanity, Like, I just don't. How

(50:15):
do you keep saying? How do you keep saying? Because
I wouldn't. I'd like, because I know this is online,
but the fact that there are people that actually believe
this enough to post it enough.

Speaker 1 (50:28):
To know they're yeah, they're just they they just I
don't know, Like, dude, this is a war zone. That's
why I don't like Allison's following many of the most
hostile crazy feminist accounts. I'm using her account to host
this space, right, yeah, and I mean other than some
of the friends like here's Paul elim and and I
know she probably follows follows Janice and Tom Golden and

(50:51):
some other people. F house funny, but like, some of
the feminists in this feed are absolutely unhinged women. They're
just absolutely unhinged. Yeah, there's my reply. It's not at
all crazy. It's not that should be obvious.

Speaker 3 (51:07):
No, no, And like I've had conversations about this with
a couple of my friends and even some of my
female friends, and they even said, like, if you, if
you genuinely feel that way about people, you would never
go outside, you would never do anything, because, let's face it,

(51:29):
if if a man wants to hurt somebody, or if anybody,
woman or man wants to do it, they're going to
do it anyway. They're going to do it anyway. Like
like that, That's just.

Speaker 1 (51:41):
The way it is.

Speaker 3 (51:42):
Like, you know, like, am I gonna stop interacting with
women because I had one abusive X and and and
and and and a bunch of horrible women in my
life and throughout my childhood. No, I'm not gonna stop
interacting with them just because of those people. Yeah, Like
you know, and I don't know how you could take
something that is positive like that young lady had posted

(52:05):
and say and say something like, oh, well, you know,
call me crazy, But if men stop doing this, I'm like,
have you been outside?

Speaker 1 (52:18):
We go outside? Everything. I think everything on here is
an opportunity for women to score points. That's why I said.
That's why I said that this is a war zone
because social media is call of duty for women and
they use it to I love that analogy. They do it. No,
they use it to destroy other women and men in

(52:40):
terms of their relationships and their reputation and their credibility
and modern everything is an opportunity to tear somebody else down. Yeah,
they call social media is call of duty for women.

Speaker 3 (52:53):
Absolutely, except when we went through it, we were just like,
screw you, screw you too, Okay, you want to play later?
Sure m h. We didn't. We we didn't.

Speaker 1 (53:05):
We didn't like take it and be like this is war.

Speaker 3 (53:09):
Like you know, it was just all fun and games,
banter like really, like it's it's still the same way
on call of duty. It's still the same thing. Same
guy talks trash on a video game, We laugh and whatever.
Now it's just it's like god forbid, if you god forbid.
I hate to be a happy woman that loves her

(53:30):
husband because then I'd really get attacked.

Speaker 1 (53:34):
Yeah, yeah, I'd.

Speaker 3 (53:36):
Really get attacked. Like what did your husband do for you?
He's just a decent dude.

Speaker 1 (53:46):
I wouldn't. You know what though, I wouldn't. I wouldn't
unless you were prepared for the slings and arrows. I wouldn't.
I wouldn't ask my woman to go online and stick
up for me unless they choose to do it, because yeah,
you would become a target. But you know, like I
have seen Rachel Wilson, she is like she stands by

(54:11):
Andrew Wilson online all the time. She sticks up for him.
There was this clip. I wonder if I can find it,
but there was this clip. Andrew was on the Whatever podcast.
He was debating this feminist who didn't do any preparation
because a lot of times they don't. They just presume
that they have the moral position and so they just
go in ready to morally like throw their weight around.

(54:34):
And she wasn't prepared, and so she was getting absolutely wrecked.
And Andrew said, you don't you know, he was basically
getting to the point where he felt like she was
just being obtuse and uncooperative and disagreeable and contrarian just
for the sake of it, because she didn't have any arguments.

Speaker 3 (54:55):
Oh yeah, Alan, when they have no arguments, they go
straight for insulting.

Speaker 1 (55:00):
Well, she went after She didn't attack him personally, she
went after his family. She basically said that, you know, oh, Rachel,
you know your wife doesn't she have like children from
another man? And and is that And tried to like
say that that's not like, it's not I don't know
like that she's that's something about that is not Christian
or whatever. It doesn't really matter. She was just trying

(55:21):
to throw mud and she was trying to hold him
stands that she does not hold herself to by saying, oh,
you're raising you know, somebody else's kids or whatever, although
he also has some of his own kids with Rachel,
and he cussed her out for that. Some people are saying, oh,
she won, but she didn't really make any arguments. She

(55:42):
just made him upset. And I can see that going
after someone's personally like going after their the people in
their life, especially the people that they like, you live
with and raised, like going after your kids or something like, yeah,
I think that you're you're entitled to get a little
bit pissed off about that. But not only that, but

(56:03):
Rachel called into the show right after.

Speaker 3 (56:05):
I remember that I saw.

Speaker 1 (56:06):
And set her straight on the whole thing and said,
you know, like explained her whole story and was like,
you know, I shouldn't even have to do this because
you're like, you're I'm just doing this for you know,
like for Andrew, for my husband. And I was like
that that's a wife right there, that's a keeper. I
don't care what anybody said. Yeah, they're not common, but

(56:29):
that's one of them. And I I, you know, that's
just something admirable. So I can see you know that
that that's an that's an example of like doing it well,
but most most people can't do that. I don't think
that they have that.

Speaker 3 (56:46):
For each other. I mean it's I mean, that's that's
really sad. You know that, Like, yeah, I've watched episodes
of the Whatever podcast and you know, and I I
think I remember Brian saying something to the effect of,
you say that you want a guy that you want

(57:07):
this guy that does this, and this guy that's nice
to you, this guy that is this, and this guy
that is this. Pick that guy. Then, you know, pick
that guy, but you won't because you want a guy
that excites you. You want that guy to treat you
like shit. And then there's and then all the women
on that side of the panel, they're like, no, you're wrong,
you're wrong. And I'm like, then why don't you pick

(57:31):
the guy that you that that that wants to treat
you like you should be treated? And I'm like, how
is he wrong? He's not wrong at all, Like he's
just saying you pick you pick a horrible person. And
then and then you complain that he's horrible.

Speaker 1 (57:49):
Right, you can't. I'm sorry I want to give Alan
requested to speak. I'm to let him talk because we're
almost done here and I want to give him a
chance to say something.

Speaker 3 (57:58):
I know Alan, he's a good dude. I met him
the other night.

Speaker 1 (58:01):
Oh yeah, yeah, how.

Speaker 5 (58:03):
You doing, guys? I met Brian the other night. I'm
from Scotland, so I'll try to speak slowly. As you said,
he's talking about about Andrew and Rachel Wilson. I'm a
big fan of both, so I thought I would jump in.
I think, I think I actually I did see that
episode you're talking about, and I have noticed that basically

(58:26):
nobody really attacks Andrew's arguments. They kind of attack Andrew,
and it's kind of it's kind of a cheap tactic.
They kind of the idea is to role Andrew and
they have some sort of victory because they can't beat
him through logic. And I did see obviously Rachel coming
on and defending her husband as usual. And it's just

(58:49):
interesting when you watch those shows, you know, but that nobody,
nobody really challenges his argument. They just kind of have
a go at hand.

Speaker 1 (58:57):
Personally, this is what, Yeah, this is how leftists argue though,
because you know, we used to have some like they
were male we call the male feminist at the time,
but they're basically left. It's the same thing. And we
used to have them on our show, and almost always
their tactic was they would try to, like, you know,
state their position, and then you would counter their position

(59:20):
because you've heard it a million times and he's like, well,
here's all the evidence that counters your position, here's the
reality of like you know, what we live in, Like
whatever the argument, it doesn't really matter. And when they
realize they're losing, then they just go after you personally,
or they go after your credibility, or they go after
the people you associate with or whatever. But it's it's
always how they operate because they don't have arguments, so

(59:42):
they just and what they try to do, what their
goal is is their goal is to get you to
react angrily, and then they claim victory because they say, oh,
well you lost your pool, right, and they'll be like wha, well,
calm down, why are you so emotional? Are you triggered snowflake?
You know, things like that, and that's how they and

(01:00:02):
that's how they win. I put that in quotes, but
but that's how they win arguments is they upset you,
and it doesn't it's really just silly and childish. But
this is the thing, like why I have a lot
of admiration for Andrew and Rachel's marriage is that they

(01:00:22):
stick up for each other. And this makes it very
difficult to go after somebody's reputation because that's what they
usually do, is they go after like they try to
divide you, you know along like oh, so your friend
here or your wife or your husband or whatever. And
if you if you reject the premise right off the
bat and say I'm not going for that, then they

(01:00:43):
have nothing. And and this is like if you expand
that to the macro level, this is what they do everywhere,
Like this is how they divide men and women, black
and white, like whatever, right, that's that's what they do.
And it's it's uh, the.

Speaker 5 (01:00:57):
Do on as read what they do on here. You're
helping a debate with somebody on here. Straight away, they
try to go to the name calling and hope that
you say something back, like you know how they're always
calling you you're either a racist or a sexist or something,
and then you've not said anything racist or anything sexist,

(01:01:17):
so they try to get you to say something and
then they can go and I knew you with that
or all along. But if you never play along with
that game, they don't know what to do and they
just go up to the name call themselves.

Speaker 1 (01:01:29):
That's right. And that's why I reject those labels, like immediately,
I've flat out you know, and I tell people if
some don't let people try to convince or you know,
to call you a racist or sexist or whatever. If
you know that you're not, then that shouldn't affect you
should not be making excuses or explaining you're like, well,

(01:01:51):
here's why I'm not a racist. Don't do that because
you lost, because that's what they're trying to do. If
you tell them prove it and then you leave it
at that, or just say, you know what, I don't
know what that word even means anymore, So I don't
really care, you know, Let's get on with the argus,
talk about the case.

Speaker 3 (01:02:07):
That's what I say. I say, Yeah, fine, fine, I'm
a misogynist right now?

Speaker 5 (01:02:13):
What? Yeah?

Speaker 3 (01:02:14):
Exactly what?

Speaker 1 (01:02:19):
Yeah?

Speaker 5 (01:02:21):
I think you can beat them though, without having to
give them any credit whatsoever. If but most people, when
you when you win by logic, you don't have to
resort to any of our tactics. I find that. I
actually it's funny you said that. If you look at
my pinned tweet, that's basically what it says that when

(01:02:42):
you're wrong, you should have met you're wrong. There's nothing
wrong when I'm wrong, But don't let other people tell
you you're wrong. If you're not. You should know yourself.
Get to know yourself first, realize that you're you're suring
what you're saying, and don't let other people bully you
into mitting something when when you don't need to.

Speaker 1 (01:03:02):
All right, well, I'm gonna end the show here, Alan,
do you have any final thoughts before I let you go?

Speaker 5 (01:03:09):
Then I was just looking through to see him was
on and I recognize Brian's name, so I just popped
in to say all the way, I'm going to try
and join a few more of these spaces.

Speaker 1 (01:03:18):
Yeah, I'll try to do them more frequently, but like
maybe once every other week or once a week or
something like that. Yeah, try to do more. I'll definitely
do one around Christmas time.

Speaker 5 (01:03:31):
Yeah, I'll join enough.

Speaker 1 (01:03:32):
I see you then, Okay, all right, hopefully I see
you all right, guys. Yeah, see you later, man, Happy Thanksgiving.
I know you guys don't celebrate that up there, but
maybe you should do that.

Speaker 5 (01:03:44):
But happy thanksgivin to you guys. I don't, but I
hope you have a God.

Speaker 1 (01:03:50):
I will thank you, all right, guys, Brian, Happy Thanksgiving
to you too.

Speaker 3 (01:03:56):
Yeah, Happy Thanksgiving to you too, Brian. Even know your
name spelled wron.

Speaker 1 (01:04:01):
No, I beg to differ. I think I'm the one
with the correct spelling. Okay, all right, I'm gonna I'm
gonna mute the space. But thanks guys for coming on
the show. If you guys like this video, please hit like,
subscribe if you're not already subscribe to the bellflonifcation, leave
us a comment, let us know you guys think about
what we discussed on the show today, and please please
please share this video because sharing is caring. Thank you

(01:04:23):
guys so much for coming on today's episode of the
Twitter Spaces. We'll be doing more of these and maybe
they'll get more like hot as time goes on, and
we'll see you guys in the next one. Have a
happy Thanksgiving if you celebrate it, and even if you don't,
have a good Thursday
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