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November 12, 2025 • 103 mins
Welcome to HBR News where we give the badger treatment to the news of the week! This week we will be looking at some follow-ups to previous stories, a WW2 veteran speaks of the cost of men's sacrifice, Mamdani assembles an all female cabinet for transition, and more!
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Episode Transcript

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Speaker 1 (00:04):
This is HBAR News number five twenty six sour on Mom,
Donnie assembles a harem WW two veteran's tragic realization. Will
we discuss the news of the week and give it
the Badger treatment. Hello everybody, and welcome to Honey Badger Radio.
I hope because they're doing well this week and you're

(00:25):
laughing at all of this absurdity so that you are
not consumed by it. I am your host, Brian, and
I am joined by, as always, my lovely co hosts,
Hannah Wallin and Mike Stevenson the random or cam that is.
We have a great show lined up for you, guys,
so please be sure to continue the conversations both in
the live chat as well as the comments section. And

(00:47):
if you guys, don't mind smashing that like button right
as we begin, because it often helps us, however, in
whatever small way, to reach more people while we are
streaming live, So please help us out by smashing the
like button. It doesn't take any energy or effort to
do that. So anyway, on today's HBr News show, we're

(01:08):
going to be talking looking at some follow up stories
revolving around sort of like incidents around January sixth, like
a unfortunate retraction that the BBC is expected to make,
as well as Nancy Pelosi news which we will get into.

(01:28):
A World War two veteran from the a UK veteran
that is speaks of the cost of men's sacrifice. Mamdani,
that's the new mayor of New York. Zorn Mamdani assembles
an all female cabinet for transition and more so, stick around.
It's going to be a good time and be sure
to join us afterwards for the patron only show. So

(01:50):
if you guys don't know, there is a new Predator
film that came out, and I believe it's called bad
Lands Predator bad Lands, and yeah, there hasn't been a
good Predator since maybe Predator two, but but this one
is extra bad. It's probably like in some people think
it's not, you know, like there have been worse ones,
but I think this is the worst because of the

(02:12):
degree to which it emasculated essentially the entire franchise. It
just cuts up up.

Speaker 2 (02:20):
He's already dead.

Speaker 1 (02:21):
Yes, it's already dead. Slate is doing a bit of
a victory dance around the movie because it did I
guess it did succeed, and so they had this article
called the Predator franchise has gone woke, but it's and
it's not going broke. The Killer bad Lands cements the

(02:43):
macho movies is unlikely turned into feminism. Yes, they did that.
They went after the thing that you love and they
are laughing at you. So we're gonna talk about this
one in the Patron show. And if you guys want
to join us, become a go to Feed the Badger
dot com Ford slash subscribe five bucks a month. We'll

(03:04):
get you into the discord server, will be able to
watch all of the additional content just like you were
watching this one right now. And if you can give
it higher levels, you can actually participate in the conversation
with us.

Speaker 2 (03:15):
So they're going with the racist angle, like the Predator
was originally played by a black guy, like this seven
foot black guy and it's obviously he's like got the
dreadlocks and everything. Like they go on about the Orcs
being obviously black, but they don't, you seem to give
the Predator is obviously black. Whatever. Whatever, we'll talk about

(03:37):
it in the after show.

Speaker 1 (03:38):
We'll talk about it in the after show. So again,
that's Feed the Badger dot com Ford slash subscribe to
become a member. And if you don't want to wake
up one morning to find that our channel has been
yeaeded from the internet, please go to badgerfeed dot com
or Honeybadger Radio dot com, which is where all of
our content lives. Shout out to the Rumble Gang as well. Okay,

(04:00):
so with all of that out of the way, let
us get into today's stories. So first up, we got
some follow up news regarding various sort of like January
sixth or January sixth, adjacent of you know stories. So
in a major scandal that's rocking the BBC Director General

(04:22):
Tim Dale, oh and I'm sorry, Tim Davey and new
CEO Debra Turnus resigned on November ninth, twenty twenty five,
following explosive revelations by the Telegraph of elked internal memo
accusing the broadcaster of serious and systemic bias. Did you
guys know the BBC was biased, including the misleading editing

(04:43):
of Donald Trump's January sixth, twenty twenty one address in
a Panorama documentary titled Trump a Second Chance. The memo,
authored by former BBC advisor Michael Prescott, detailed how producers
spliced together non contiguous contiguous sections of his speech, such
as trump phrases about fighting like hell and walking to

(05:06):
the Capitol, to falsely portray him as directly inciting the
Capital riot, prompting widespread outrage over journalistic integrity and impartiality. Davy,
who had led the BBC for five years, accepted ultimate
responsibility for what he's calling mistakes, stating the decision was
his alone amid mounting pressure from critics, while Turness, in

(05:29):
her role since twenty twenty two, lamented the damage to
the institution she cherished, but insisted the outlet was not
institutionally biased. President Trump celebrated the exits on true social
brandon the executives, very dishonest people caught doctoring by perfect speech,
and thanking the Telegraph for the expos as UK political

(05:51):
figures from Reform UK's Nigel Farag to Liberal Democrat leader
Sir ed Davey Wade in calling for reforms to restore
trust in public broadcasting, and as another I want to
do the both of the follow ups. So there were
three stories, but one of them is a little bit like,
let's say, an unreliable story. This is the pipe bomb.

(06:13):
So I left the pipe bomb thing out because it's
still kind of up in the air. It's very contested,
so I don't think it's worth mentioning, But I will
say as an aside that Nancy Pelosi. Former House Speaker
Nancy Pelosi at eighty five, announced that she is no
longer going to be seeking re election in twenty twenty six,

(06:33):
ending a congressional career that began with her nineteen eighty
seven special election victory in San Francisco. She is remembered
as the first woman to serve as speaker. From two
thousand and seven to twenty eleven and again from twenty
nineteen to twenty twenty three, Pelosi played a central role
in passing major legislation, including the Affordable Care Act and

(06:55):
climate initiatives, while leading Democratic opposition to Republican policy. Her
decision follows California voters' approval of Proposition fifty, a redistricting
measure she supported to strengthen Democratic representation in future elections. So, yeah,
she's out. She's like eighty five, So.

Speaker 3 (07:16):
Okay, so she's forty years ago.

Speaker 1 (07:19):
Yeah, we need that's for sure.

Speaker 3 (07:20):
You know, better late than never, right, Yeah?

Speaker 1 (07:26):
So anyway, oh yeah, I want to show you guys
the video of this guy. This is a video the
BBC put outs like fifteen seconds or TikTok put out
rather General Tim Davey resigns over Trump documentary edited. I
guess there's no sound, so don't worry about that.

Speaker 2 (07:42):
No, no, there is. He just doesn't say anything. He's
just walking along looking, you know, like politicians do when
they're disgraced, just to.

Speaker 1 (07:51):
Get right, people walking out of court.

Speaker 2 (07:54):
Rooms or you know, media executives when they've been disgraced.

Speaker 1 (07:58):
Yeah, okay, so Hannah or Mike, go ahead, chime in.

Speaker 2 (08:02):
If you want to go first, please do because I'm
going to be at this for like twenty minutes.

Speaker 3 (08:09):
We got regarding the BBC, like even Americans know and
and and they're not ours. We got nothing to do
with the BBC. They got nothing to do with us, right,
but even we know how biased they are. So it's
it's you can't even say, oh, they got caught. They
got caught. Now, everybody already knew, except for people who
have their heads up their butts, which pretty much describes

(08:33):
people over sixty five right now, maybe over seventy now
more more over seventy boomers boomers have their heads up
their butt, but yeah, the rest of us kind of like,
tell us the sky is blue. Next is the news
going to report that water is wet? By the way, everybody,

(08:53):
in case you didn't know, I'm female, Like, can we
can we give anything else that obvious?

Speaker 2 (09:00):
Not according to Twitter insisting that you're a man.

Speaker 3 (09:06):
That's why I created the meme. But but you know
that's that's BBC reporting. They would they would call me
a man right now, as far as as far as
that goes, like it's it's news, but it's not news.
It was it I told you so. But Nancy Pelosi,
like I, it's kind of bittersweet. I was hoping at

(09:30):
some point during the last forty years that she would
be uh run under, you know, like somebody else would
would come in and take her place, something else would happen,
get her out of there. No, And the longer she
stayed in power, the more obvious it became that she
wasn't in power because the people wanted her there. She

(09:52):
was in power because the establishment wanted her there. And
of course we all know how she got while she
was in there. So it's not even gloat material because
she made all the money she was ever gonna make
from being in there, and now that accountability is going to,

(10:13):
you know, start looming on the horizon, like maybe they
might vote to not let people exploit what she exploited,
which essentially was insider trading from the top. Then she's
gonna leave because she won't. She's gonna take her ball
and go home like boohoo, Nana, Hey, hey hey, goodbye.

(10:37):
But aside from that, like they're just gonna replace her
with another establishment crony. They're gonna with another establishment puppet
unless and I sincerely doubt it in where she's coming from,
unless the people step up and overwhelm the polls, which

(10:59):
not her district, I doubt it. So we're just gonna
see Nancy Pelosi the Senior replaced by either a Nancy
Pelosi the second or an AOC. I wish this was
better news, but I am still glad she's gone as

(11:20):
far as that is concerned. And it if even if
all of the I guess there's like two pretty decent
female maybe congressmen and senators in there somewhere, even if
it got was to get if we got rid of
all of the women in Congress, had them all retire

(11:44):
or voted them all out of office and replaced them
with say, millennial or zoomer men. It would be a plus,
but that's not gonna happen either. So this is probably
the best we can get right now, is that we're
going to get. We're going to get at least a
less unfortunate to look at model from Pelosi. So and

(12:13):
I don't know if we'll ever even see her face
accountability for all this shit that she's pulled, like unusually
better at at least somewhat you know, gray pills instead
of straight up black pills on shit like this, but
not this time. And there's really not there's no great
news here. There's just news. It's not bad news that

(12:38):
it's not great news, like there's still going to be
women holding these types of position of power that have
no accountability and no connection to the people whatsoever, because
they'll be able to use your misogynists if you don't
want her in there, and the establishment will be able

(12:59):
to put their puppets in those positions until you know,
people wake up and maybe boot them all out. So
best bet for something like that, and I hate to
put this on the next generations, is for millennial and
zoomer men. Just start running for public office. Start in

(13:22):
your cities and your counties, and just start getting into
public service if you feel capable and inclined to do
that type of job. Don't think gosh, I couldn't do this, Gosh,
nobody's going to vote for Just campaign, Just do it,

(13:43):
Just run, and you know, start working your way up
the chain until you can push these people out at
the other end. And that's going to be the only
way to get rid of the establishment puppets and the
establishment beneficiaries. And why I say not? Why am I
not saying and women, because right now women can still

(14:09):
use you're a misogynist. If you disagree with me, you're
a misogynist. If you hold me accountable for something I
did wrong, you're a misogynist. If you don't think that
my policy propositions are the right ones. You know that
we can't have women running the country as long as

(14:29):
they're able to do that when that has no effect.
When people say, okay, call me a misogynist, but I'm
still not voting for your ideas. Fuck you. You know, look
at me. I'm a misogynist. I don't like that woman
who cares like when that happens, when women are embarrassed
to try to use misogyny as a you know, as
a as a budgeon, as a thought terminating cliche, especially

(14:54):
in positions of responsibility, then then women will be ready
for positions I responsibilit But aside from that, that's That's
pretty much all I've got to say about this combination
of stories at this point. It's interesting news, but I'm

(15:16):
not ready to get excited about it yet. I can't
get my hopes up, Okay, Mike.

Speaker 2 (15:25):
Yeah, yeah, I too. I'm not holding out for any
prospects of getting the truth about January the sixth for
a long as time, not about the mysterious absence of
the National Guard, or about the fucking pipe bombs that
we're still not sure what the fuck do we even
say about, or at least we're not going to get
any official confessions about it from the bad actors involved

(15:52):
until every one of those bad actors is dead. That
certainly seems to be the pattern. Anyway. We've got a
list as long as your arm and both legs of
treasonous atrocities committed by intelligence agencies, and that's just the
tiny percentage of the ones we theoretically know about, and

(16:14):
we didn't find out about any of those until everyone
involved was dead, or at least presumed dead. Perhaps we
should be thankful that such atrocities are put in the
hands of bone rattling liches like Nancy Pelosi, who will
die of liver failure any day now. I can only

(16:35):
hope my liver sticks it out for longer than hers does,
and of that I am quietly confident. But yeah, this
is how they get away with everything. This is how
they present us with the illusion of eventual transparency. They're like, yeah, yeah,
it was us, we did everything, But the people on
the hook for it are all dead now, so there's

(16:57):
no one left alive to be held accountable. Yah, sucks
to be You Eat all of our balls, pan fried
medium rare with black Travels shavings and a red wine
jew and trust us, bro. There's definitely no one still
alive who is still accountable for anything that's still going on.

(17:19):
Heavens to timbucktoo. No, the present day just happens to
be the only time in history when that shit still
isn't going on. But in the meantime, everybody, please do
feel free to speculate as to what's going on. If
you happen to get it right, we'll disappear you and

(17:41):
call it a suicide, or we'll just charge you a
billion fucking dollars. On the other hand, if you get
it wrong perfect, we'll use your misapprehensions as part of
the smoke and mirrors that we rely on to keep
everyone guessing you Like how the left in general was

(18:01):
radio silent about the Epstein files right up until the
Trump administration failed to deliver on its promises about them.
Then all of a sudden they gave a shit. And yes,
it goes both ways. I'm sure if it turns out
the FBI was lying about Charlie Kirk's killer, the right
will conveniently forget about it until it's politically expedient for

(18:23):
them to remember. I know, the left and the right
can't agree on anything pretty much by design. That's that's
what happens when a nation is divided against itself by design.
But surely, if anything, we should be able to agree
that the FBI does not tell the truth, nor does
any intelligence agency anywhere in the world. They are under

(18:46):
no obligation to tell the truth. If anything, they are
under an obligation to obfuscate the truth. No matter how
expedient it might be to tell the truth, the whole truth,
and nothing but the truth, there is always a lie
that is even more expedient. And it's not just the

(19:07):
clandestine intelligence agencies, it's every government department and every media outlet.
In the pockets of every government department, their mandate is
not to tell the truth. Their mandate is to control
the public. If the public really did know the truth,

(19:29):
the whole truth, and nothing but the truth, this entire
house of cards would collapse overnight, cats and dogs living together,
mass hysteria, etc. Which makes it all the more hilarious
that people across the UK are acting like it's a
sudden revelatory scandal out of the fucking blue that the

(19:55):
BBC would so uncharacteristically doctor footage for partisan political purposes.
What the BBC lie by omission unbelievable, inconceivable. Betch are
you for real? Are we seriously putting on this classical pantomime?

(20:17):
Is that we only just discovered that the BBC does this,
But that's one of the that's one of only two
things the BBC does lie by a mission so as
to demonize anyone who threatens it's a gemony and shake
down the British people for TV license money to fund

(20:39):
the perpetuity of that gemony. The BBC is a fucking
lime machine. It is a self licking ice cream of lies.
Is there really anyone who doesn't know this? Well, yes,
alas there are millions of people who don't know this,
millions of people who who on one side of their

(21:02):
face will swear on their lives that they would never
trust the government. Oh, Heavens to Mogadishu, no, we would
never trust the government. And yet every day they switch
on the government lie box and they believe every lie
it spins. And you can tell them, you can say

(21:23):
to them, you know the BBC is lying to you, right,
But then they'll they'll look at you that the cogs
will will crank around in their heads for a couple
of seconds, and they'll go, do you have any proof?
And then with a dead pan face, they'll slowly turn
their head back to the BBC and continue listening intently

(21:44):
to the lie box, every word slipping seamers seamlessly into
the part of their brain labeled definitely true, no proof required.
And it's not just the boomers, and it's not all
of the boomers, but it is mostly boomers, and it
is most of the boomers. This is their church. Well,

(22:07):
it's way more sinister than any church. I mean, people
might go to church like once a week on Sundays
to listen to abstract takes on ancient morality. But people
have been switching on the government liebox every day for
fifty years or more, and they think they're being told

(22:27):
factual information about concrete reality. You might think it's difficult
trying to reason someone out of the teachings of their church,
but you haven't seen a jam thing until you've tried
to reason someone away from the hypnotizing tractor beam of
the liebox. It is completely impossible. It's their primary sense

(22:52):
organ at this point. If their eyes and ears tell
them one thing, but the TV tells them the opposite thing,
they will believe the TV every time, no matter what.
I forget who it was, but there was some guy
who went to China and it recalled that the Chinese

(23:15):
people in general don't watch the news. They don't bother
with it because they know it's propaganda. They know they're
not allowed to, you know, publicly question it. But at
the same time, everyone, everyone in China knows it's not factual.
Information on the news is just state propaganda. It's getting
blared out at every airport like CNN is in the States,

(23:38):
like the BBC is in Britain, but no one pays
attention to it, pays attention to it in China. They
just yeah, no, it's just white noise in the background.
It's just the government telling us what to think. Everyone knows,
no one cares. And it truly is a haunting revelation
when you realize that for all the totalitarian efforts of

(24:01):
the CCP, the Chinese people are nothing like as successfully
brainwashed as the general British public or the general Western public.
They don't know that it's just government propaganda. They think
it's real news. They think it's the only real news,

(24:22):
and that everything else is propaganda. It's it's it's pretty
ironic that those of us from from Gen X and
early millennials that our parents used to tell us that
we should stop watching those silly cartoons on the TV,
like like like ThunderCats and the Human and and we

(24:45):
should instead turn on the news, you know, learn about
what's going on in the world. That was that was
the meme. That was what they told us. Well, all
along those cartoons were presenting teachable moral truths in the
form of, you know, cautionary tales, while the news was

(25:05):
doing nothing but filling their heads with upside down back
to front lies that told them the complete opposite of
what was in fact going on in the world. And
now that we're the adults and they are entering what's
called the second childhood, we're out here desperately trying to

(25:27):
tell them, you know, you really shouldn't watch the news.
It's rotting your brain, it'll turn your eyes square and
all that shit. But yeah, to no avail, with no
hope of cognitive penetration whatsoever. And only just now, after
a century of this, has the telegraph finally seen like

(25:51):
one ray of light gravitationally lensed around its blind spot
and gone, oh shit, guys, don't free make out or anything.
But I think the BBC lies to us. That can't
possibly be true. The BBC would never lie. No, seriously, Look,

(26:13):
two of them had to resign. They admitted they lied.
They said so themselves on the BBC. Oh oh ah, Well,
in that case, if the BBC said so, then it
must be true, and then they just go back to
the BBC. They sit back down again and press play

(26:34):
like nothing has happened, packed like sardines in a crush
tin box, puppets on strings, invisible forces, speaking in a
tongue that dribbles and lashes, salivates in the ashes of
the gap in between you and me. It's it's a
phenomenon that's beIN popularly christened the Murray Gellman amnesia. Look

(26:55):
it up if you like. It's when you you read
a lie in a newspaper that you know is a
lie because because it's a subject that you happen to
know quite a lot about, but then you turn the
page to another article about something you don't know much about,
and you resume your assumption that you're being told the truth.

(27:16):
I do wish it had a catchier name than Murray
Gellman amnesia, because it's a phenomenon that happens all the
bastarding time. But it kind of doesn't matter what it's called,
because it's a kind of amnesia that those who suffer
from it cannot know that they have it, because they

(27:36):
just forget every time. All they can do is forget,
because to remember would be to come to the harrowing
realization that your head is full, full to bursting of lies,
just lies, and if you emptied out all those lies,

(27:58):
there would be practically nothing left in your head. It's
it's it's the sunken cost fallacy. It's the lowest sea
bed of the sunken cost fallacy. You've got an entire
ocean of pressure on top of you, and and you
can't escape it without dying from the bends. Where do

(28:20):
we go from here? The words are coming out all weird.
Where are you now when I need you? Who are
my real friends? Have they all got the bends? Am
I really thinking this?

Speaker 4 (28:30):
Low?

Speaker 2 (28:30):
Yeah, I'm just I'm spitting out lyrics now and it's
getting silly, all right, all.

Speaker 1 (28:37):
Right, Well, all I'll say is the truth is coming
out and people will have to do with it what
they will, and that's that's all we can hope for. Mayer.
The g gave us a super child just now, just
came in breaking news. Niggas five dollars, she says, HPR
news number five twenty six. Honey for the Badgers. I

(28:57):
feel like the BBC story is that don't pay attention
to that man behind the curtain moments in our story.
The BBC is a government organ that has been in
a regime change in multiple countries, from Iran to Ethiopia.
Why does anyone trust the BBC? Because, look, I'll tell
you from an American perspective, because I used to think

(29:19):
the BBC was trustworthy too, like years ago, and a
lot of it had to do with the fact that
they had English accents, and I just thought that made
them more credible. And I think there are a lot
of Normies that do. They're like, oh, well, maybe less
so now because back when I would come across it,
it was we didn't have the Internet the same way
we do today, so you would just get your stuff

(29:42):
from American television or Canadian some Canadian influence. But they
sound like us basically, and if you heard an English
person telling you something important, you just took it more seriously.
I'm sorry, it's true. On the flip side, though, if
they're Irish or Scottish, you took them even less seriously.
But but I mean now I think that, yeah, I

(30:04):
think we're just seeing that they are the Look, they
are government funded organizations, they are government arms, and that
should make them suspect but American like, uh, you know,
we don't technically have uh, you know, government media, but
we do because they're they're definitely bought and paid for,

(30:24):
so it's not not like there's much of a difference.
But look, I digress, thank you for the super chowd.
I just wanted to say, at the end of the day,
the truth is out, especially about the the fact that
uh you know, uh Nancy Pelosi told the she did

(30:44):
tell the the National Guard to stand down on January
sixth because she wanted this thing to become chaotic, because
she was essentially like you know, wanting to be able
to make make the people think that Trump caused this problem.
So it was an opportunity kind of like you know,
what happened on October seventh, or what happened with there's

(31:06):
another instance of like people allowing something bad to happen
so that they can then oh yeah, like the government shutdown,
So the Democrats initiate the government shutdown. People are afraid
their snap benefits are going to be taken from them.
They don't look into these things. They don't understand who's
actually behind the shutdown, but they're told it was Trump's fault,
so they blame him. So that's another example. But anyway, it's.

Speaker 3 (31:29):
Almost like certain long ago projects that the CIA was
running on the American people never ended. They do this
shit all the time, and you see it all the time.
There have been there have been stories that have come

(31:50):
out and reported on incidents where you know, this this
guy or that guy has been arrested and you know
he was gonna do this terrible thing, that terrible thing,
you know, fire bomb something, or engage in a mass shooting,
or there's been several of them, and then you find
out that he was just somebody chatting in a forum,

(32:14):
hadn't said anything violent, hadn't thought about doing any thing violent,
wasn't planning on doing anything violent, wasn't talking to other
people about doing anything violent. But a fed noticed this
guy was a little mentally ill and a little a
little bit vulnerable, maybe a little bit not that bright,

(32:38):
maybe a little bit isolated, maybe a little bit socially
isolated in particular, and so you know, took advantage of that.
One of the guys they did this too, with schizophrenic
A couple of them were underage, and slowly groomed them
into and and and went through the whole process not

(32:59):
just said a few things and got them to change
their mind and become violent, but helped them, you know,
by by getting weapons for them and explaining to them
how to use them, and giving them a bunch of
propaganda to get them upset, and even even initiating the

(33:22):
idea itself to do whatever it was they ultimately get
arrested for. And and then it comes out in court. Gosh,
the the the motivator, the mover and shaker in the
entire beginning to end situation that this individual was arrested
for was the FED that was trying to catch somebody

(33:47):
in this quote unquote extremist group doing something wrong. And
the ironic thing about it, you know, everybody has faith
that the FBI and other federal agency, all these three
letter federal agencies are working for them and protecting them
and everything. The FBI's original mandate was to track down

(34:10):
corruption in government, and they became a corrupt government agency.
And it weeding the corruption out of the FBI is
so difficult and dangerous that it has resulted in multiple
lives being put on hold to ultimately destroyed, ultimately changed forever.

(34:33):
And just in the last few years and that's where
we are now. So of course everybody's skeptical now, and
most people weren't before. Like I was. I've been skeptical
of the news media ever since I was a kid,
like maybe thirteen, fourteen years old, and some you know,

(34:53):
bigger newspaper wrote something completely bald face about a protest
that I was at, and the people that were protesting
against our protest were violent, and they blamed the violence
on us, and it was it was bullshit, and I

(35:15):
knew it was bullshit, and I asked my dad, you know,
why do these people lie? So he tells me this story.
The short version is university in northwest Ohio called Bluffton
College has an annual water balloon fight, and it's usually
about twenty or thirty guys. Maybe if they're really having

(35:37):
a hot, dry year, you know, or hot humid year,
even just an uncomfortable year, they'll get you know, sixty
or eighty guys on the campus that throw water around
at each other water balloons at each other's first water
fight of the summer, first really hot day, and you know,
they hoot and holler and have a good time, and

(35:58):
that's it. There's no they don't do any damage to
any property. Nobody gets into any you know, mischief or anything.
It's just guys on their university campus outdoors throwing water
balloons at each other, perfectly normal stuff, right. But and
I can't remember whether it was sixty eight or sixty nine,

(36:21):
somewhere around there. Whatever year it was, the Kent State
riot happened, and there were riots all over the country,
little riots, bigger riots all over the country because of
the Vietnam War and because of other tensions that were
happening simultaneously. And the annual Bluffton College water fight happened,

(36:46):
and this local cop gets called to the scene by
some professor that was, you know, kind of had a
wild hairper butt, and so he shows up and he
starts yelling at them, like Barney Fife to cease and desist,
go back to your dorm rooms and everything. And they
completely ignored him and continue to have their water fight,

(37:08):
and so he panicked and he called for backup, and
they treated it like something big was happening, and police
showed up from outside the community and they were chasing
these guys. There's a wooded area much it was much
bigger back then than it is now. But guys are
running around back and forth through the woods, and they
all got back to their dorm rooms and nobody got

(37:30):
busted for anything. But the newspapers covered it as though
it had been a huge riot on the campus with
off campus rioters attending and everything. And my dad said,
you know, that was back then. I've never believed anything
I saw in the media since then, and you shouldn't either.

(37:52):
Always double check, always, you know, check the facts. And
of course back then, you couldn't just get online and
find out what people were saying on social media. You know,
you would have to cross reference with other media. You'd
have to. If there are people that you knew that
knew something about it, you know, you talk to them
because if you got your story from the mainstream press,

(38:15):
you knew it was probably wrong. And of course you
get treated like a conspiracy theorist for saying that. But
it's not a new phenomenon. This has been going on.
My dad's a baby boomer. He was a baby boomer.
I'm a gen xer, you know. I it's been going

(38:37):
on forever. So yeah, if you're if you think that
you can trust any large media outlet to tell you
the whole story, on anything. You're you you've got the
wool over your eyes. You're an idiot. Start looking around,

(38:57):
because and this goes not just for CNN, NBC and
all the it goes for Fox. It goes for what
are the new ones One America News Network, Newsmax, all
those anything big anything that. If it's on television, you
should double check everything you hear. If it's on the radio,
you should double check everything you hear. I don't have

(39:20):
to tell people that about the Internet. Everybody's already figured
that out about the Internet. But yeah, in the establishment media,
you have to do the same thing, and you should
be able to cross reference it with what you see
on social media, especially from people who were there. If

(39:40):
somebody that was there tells you that the media has
it wrong, don't just dismiss that because it's probably true.
But everybody's also got their own perspectives. So don't make
up your mind on this shit based on what one
source tells you. You have to do your research, especially

(40:02):
if you're voting for somebody or deciding you know what
you're going to do about a situation based on this reporting.
You even have to do that with the weather now, So.

Speaker 1 (40:15):
Yeah, yeah, all right, Well, thanks guys for the commentary,
and thank you guys in the chat. Let us know
what you guys think about this one in the comments. Okay,
now we got to move on to the next story.
I want to show you guys this video. Maybe i'll
set it up a little bit. I'm sure a lot
of you guys know about this one. So recently, the

(40:37):
United Kingdom celebrated Remembrance Sunday, which is a commemorative holiday
very similar to the United States's Memorial Day, so it's
sort of the same thing, right. As part of the day,
Good Morning Britain hosted former Royal sailor and the oldest
poppy salesman in the UK, Alec Pennstone, on their program.

(40:58):
The highly decorated one hundreundred year old D Day veteran
did not waste time nor did he mince his words.
When asked to reflect on his service, Penstone spoke, so
I'm going to play the clip for you and we're
going to come back on the other side.

Speaker 5 (41:14):
What does Remembrance Sunday mean for you? What is your message?

Speaker 6 (41:19):
My message is I can say in my mind's eye,
rose and rose of white stones, of all the hundreds
of my friends and everybody else that gave their lives
for what the country of today.

Speaker 3 (41:37):
No, I'm sorry.

Speaker 6 (41:40):
The sacrifice wasn't worth the result that it is now.

Speaker 5 (41:44):
Oh well, I'm sorry, what do you what do you
mean by that?

Speaker 1 (41:48):
Though?

Speaker 6 (41:50):
What we fought for and what we thought for was
their freedom with father. Even now is the downside worst
and what it was, I'll voulte for it.

Speaker 5 (42:03):
Oh, Alex, I'm sorry you feel like that, because I
want you to know that all the generations that have
come since, including me and my children, are so grateful
for your bravery and all that for service personnel. And
it's our job now, isn't it to make it the
country that you've fought for?

Speaker 4 (42:23):
You?

Speaker 3 (42:23):
Absolutely, and we will do. We want to.

Speaker 6 (42:26):
I'm so wonderful another our people like you.

Speaker 1 (42:30):
The word around we will do.

Speaker 5 (42:34):
And I guarantee that everybody watching at home will be
wanting you to send sorts of love. We've got another
little bit special thing for you, Alec. We've got the
D Day darlings here, come on over, guys, we we
we You've got a little.

Speaker 1 (42:50):
Yeah, they're trying to like well alter the tone, let's
say so. Anyway, I just wanted this has been making
the rounds, and I guess my my main reason for
sharing it is, remember who it is that dies in war.
And you know, philosopha cat who is a I guess

(43:13):
she's a relatively big like you know on X and whatnot.
Her Let's just say she didn't have very nice things
to say. She said, no, they fought for exactly this,
they just didn't know it because they were lied to.
I think that like what this guy, I don't know
if you guys know, but he he worked in blue

(43:35):
collar job and he couldn't wait to like get old
enough to serve his country. And I think that the
the idealism of those people of that time. I don't
think we should let's say, I don't think we should
dismiss that because of what we're what we're sort of

(44:00):
wrestling with now, especially because they're not to blame for that.
So I don't know, like this is like the the
fact is in the world sometimes there's going to be
conflict and there's going to be war, and it's men
that are going to fight in those wars. Now, what
we want is for those wars to be just and

(44:20):
at the very least right. But it is the reality
of living in the world. And this man, I think
that he's looking at his country and he is like,
this is not the country I fought for, and that's
where his lament comes from. And he is not wrong
so anyway, and of course nobody knows how to cope

(44:43):
with his reality. That's why they're just like, oh, what
do you mean? I don't understand, right, but they understand anyway.
I want like leave you guys to say your thoughts
on it.

Speaker 3 (44:53):
It had not nice things to say, philosophic cat Was
she from Britain or is she from the United States?
Because I it sounds like she's from here and not there.
I think one thing that a lot of younger Americans

(45:14):
seem to have forgotten was the difference between why the
US got involved and why Britain got involved. Because Britain
was under direct attack, they were bombed, they didn't This
wasn't an overseas foreign war for them, right, France was taken.

(45:39):
That's their neighbor. So it Yeah, that's a really heavy
thing for him to say, and he must be in
a lot of pain seeing what's going on in his
country today. I mean, I know other British people are
as well, but I cannot imagine and what he went

(46:02):
through during his time in service, much less going through
that only to find that, you know, in your golden years,
what are supposed to be your golden years if you
survived all of that, the politicians of your country are
just tearing it to shit. He was nice. What he

(46:28):
said was mild compared to what you know, he could
have said about what's going on right now there. And
I really feel for that guy. That's what a time
for him to have to see happen.

Speaker 2 (46:51):
Yeah, you kind of help, but feel for him. The
obvious initial reaction to what he said was sadness, like
the gut ranching, heartbreaking sadness, largely because of the tone
of his voice. He sounds like he's about to break

(47:13):
into tears. But if you watch the rest of the interview,
that's that's just how he talks. Like he's old. He
you know, he stutches a lot and stuff. But I
think he's expressing anger, but he's expressing it in the
only tone of voice that he knows how to. And
you know, whatever sadness I felt during that interview was

(47:35):
only so fleeting as to be immediately steamrolled by ever
more frustration and rage because he didn't get to elaborate
all that much on what he meant when he said
in the follow up, our freedom is a dance site
worse than what it was when I fought for it,
which freedoms. What does he mean by our freedom? Does

(48:00):
he mean British people's freedom, does he mean men's freedom.
Does he specifically mean British men's freedom. Either way, he's
absolutely right, but it's been left up to us a
lot on the Internet to outline in what ways he's
absolutely right. And in a nutshell, it's that we can't

(48:21):
bloody do anything in this country without a license, except,
of course, invade it or the country or destroy it
from within. And we can't even criticize the people invading
and destroying it, or will get arrested to the tune
of twelve thousand arrests every year just for social media posts,

(48:45):
a number that dwarfs any other country per capita or otherwise.
I don't think this old fella knows all that much
about what happens online. He doesn't strike me as the
sort to sort of doom scroll. He probably just watches
the TV where everyone assures him that everything's just fine.

(49:10):
And peachy, and that we're all better off than ever
because of diversity and equality. But he probably goes outside
sometimes and he has a quick glance at what the
streets look like and what the people in the general
vicinity look like and sound like. I wonder what he

(49:31):
might be lamenting with regard to such experiences. And I'm
left only two wonder because the patronizing propaganda puppets interviewing
him didn't ask him to elaborate any further. It was just, oh, halck,
I'm so sorry you feel like that, because I want

(49:53):
you to know that all the generations that have come
since are so grateful for your bravery. And it's our
job now, isn't it to make the country the first
of all? No, not all the generations are grateful for
this man's efforts or sacrifices. On the entire contrary, the

(50:15):
hippie boomers didn't give a shit, the gen X punks
gave even less of a shit, the flaming fagalloon millennials
actively give anti shits, and the self avowed communist Zoomers
are in full revolt against the freedoms for which he fought,
like the freedom to have a nation, to have a

(50:40):
sovereign people unmolested by globo homo socialists and their various
hired mercenaries. National Socialism was not defeated in World War II,
ladies and gentlemen, just nationalism defeated by socialism. So yes, Alec,

(51:09):
old boy, I'm afraid you are correct. Your sacrifices were
not worth it because Britain didn't win the war Socialism did.
It conquered Germany and turned it to rubble. It conquered
Russia and turned it to rubble, and it has conquered Britain,

(51:29):
and it is in the process of turning it to rubble.
It's in its late stages. At this point, it's still
in its early stages. In the United States. It's the
only corner of the anglosphere where there is still any
hope left. And if you allow the patronizing propaganda puppets

(51:53):
on the TV to interpret this old Chap's statement, they will,
of course plunge them into upside downland. Oh we agree
with you, Alec. The problem with Britain is there isn't
enough freedom for asylum seekers, there isn't enough freedom for women,
there isn't enough freedom for fucking troons, It's an irredeemable

(52:16):
tragedy that these modern day heroes are not given absolutely
everything for free. That's what you meant by freedom, wasn't it.
Alec No, no, don't speak, don't don't don't try to speak.
Your tears speak more than real evidence ever. Could keep going.
Everybody fight the good fight, and remember old white men

(52:36):
are the enemy, and do be sure to join antifer.
They are the real freedom fighters who fought the Nazis
at Normandy.

Speaker 1 (52:46):
Yeah.

Speaker 2 (52:47):
Sorry, there is not enough space in my brain for
sadness or pity. That shit just slows you down. You
need to get angry, ladies and gentlemen, and stay angry.
This is what anger is. Four. It is the essence
of justice. Anger is the distillation chamber that ferments justice.

(53:11):
One does not look back in anger. One looks forward
as long as the injustice is still happening. We look
to the future, and we concentrate this anger into a
laser beam of rage. It is the destiny of the
strong men created by hard times. And yes I do

(53:34):
mean strong men. It is weak women who create the
hard times and strong men who create the good times.
Everything else is a footnote. I will die on this
Hill five hundred times, and I will die five hundred
more to be the man who died a thousand times
to fold out out your door.

Speaker 1 (54:01):
All right, Uh, yeah, that's that's good. So let us
know what you guys think about this one in the
comments again. I just I think it's like going pretty viral,
so a lot of people have thoughts on it, and
I think that's a good thing because it's getting out there. Okay,
so I got some super chat things, so we'll go

(54:22):
ahead and take a look at those. The one good
man gives us five dollars and says, I demand one
billion dollars. All right, thank you. We don't have a billion.
If we did, I wouldn't be doing this. Thank you. Though,
Nova fan twenty one gives us a rumble rant for
one dollar and says, there's a reason why some people

(54:42):
say if we went back in time and told soldiers
what would happen to their countries, things would turn out
very differently. Yes, I agree. All right, thank you for
those super chats and superchows and rumble rants, and now
we're going to move on to the next story. I
just think this one is kind of funny because it's

(55:03):
so predictable. All right. So so New York City mayor elect,
who just recently won the election thanks to women. Now,
some people are saying, is like down to like, you know,
ethnic lines and stuff, and yeah, I think there's a
lot of data that supports that. But when you consider

(55:25):
the actual population of New York's women versus their Muslims,
I'm betting the women are the ones that got them in.
But anyway, New York City Mayor elect Zoron Mamdani, the
thirty four year old Democratic socialist who became the city's
first Muslim, South Asian and African born mayor. Ever, after
his November fourth victory, announced an all female transition team

(55:50):
on November fifth. That's all you gotta do. Guys. You
can be an absolute demagogue dictator, but if you say
I'm making my cabinet women, nobody, they're just going to
be celebrations. So he's got an all female transition team
on November fifth, co chaired by former FTC chair Lena Kahn,
ex First Deputy Mayor Maria Torres Springer, nonprofit leader Grace Bonilla,

(56:15):
and budget expert Melanie Hartzog, with Ilana Leopold as executive director.
The team draws on prior city hall experience to guide
the handover and implement Mamdannie's progressive agenda, including rent freezes,
free public transit, free Lamborghinis, universal health care, you know,
whatever you want, whatever you want, free everything, and city

(56:37):
run grocery stores. The group will recruit deputy mayors and
agency heads, while retaining Police Commissioner Jessica Tish As Mamdannie
navigates early criticism from President Trump and pushes for gender equality,
no equity, and a bold policy reforms in his generary
first twenty twenty six administration. And I wanted to address something.

(56:59):
Somebody in the racle chat said, ask it if I
clickbait much because I titled it Zorn Mamdani assembles a harem,
And no, that's not clickbait. That's literally what he's doing.
He has basically created a harem and they are his
harem girls that are going to help him with the
initial steps of setting up the New York government. Tell

(57:22):
me I'm wrong. That's not clickbait. That's just what it is. Okay,
So anyway, this this is how, this is how you
gain political power. Just appeal to women. Just appeal to
them in every way that, you know how, and it
always works and it really upsets me, annoys me. Actually
that when I point this out, fucking like identity politics

(57:45):
obsessed wig nats will be like, well, actually, brown people
came out and like higher percentages. Yeah, but the city
has more women than it does Middle Eastern people. And
the women came out in droves and there, and it
was declared like and I mean it was all women, like,
all different colors and shades, because he promised women free shit.

(58:07):
That's really what it came down to, Gibbs, Yes, please,
and that's how he won. But anyway, anyway, this is
just Trudeau like two point zero and I mean that
basically in New York. So I don't know you guys
have any thoughts on this, but I'm done.

Speaker 2 (58:20):
Oh yeah, no, Brian, I'm sure it's just a coincidence.
Don't worry about it. There are plenty of female politicians
who got where they are entirely on their own merit,
especially women of color. This is just as likely as
any other role of the dice, just like it was
a coincidence when Justin Trudeau did a similar thing with
his parliament when he said he would and just like

(58:43):
Joe Biden did a similar thing with the Supreme Court
and his running mate when he said he would just
like all the pilots, the aircraft mechanics, the firefighters, the
police officers, the structural engineers, and the armed forces. Just
because the ratio of brand new, unexperienced lesbian women of

(59:06):
color happens to increase right after the DEI hiring policies
are introduced doesn't mean there's any causality in that series
of events. And you're an evil chauvinist bigot if you
insinuate otherwise. Every time another lefty tyrant promises a great replacement,
it's just a coincidence when that great replacement happens right

(59:29):
on schedule. And it's also just a coincidence when people
burn to death and planes fall out of the sky
and bridges collapse and entire cities start filling up with
crime and poverty and used needles and rivers of human shit.
Just because it happened after the Islamo socio feminist coup

(59:52):
doesn't mean it happened because of it. As a matter
of fact, it happened because there wasn't enough Islamo's socio feminism.
Next time, we'll push it even harder. Oh, but last
time it didn't happen at all. It was just a coincidence.
Real islamo social feminism has in fact never been tried.

(01:00:13):
Why just the other day I saw a straight white
Christian man.

Speaker 1 (01:00:17):
In real life.

Speaker 2 (01:00:20):
Naked in an alleyway, eating a live pigeon and shitting
into a styrofoam cup.

Speaker 1 (01:00:24):
So there you go.

Speaker 2 (01:00:25):
Are you telling me we don't still live in a
Christian nationalist, white supremacist patriarchy?

Speaker 1 (01:00:30):
Push?

Speaker 2 (01:00:31):
Sure? How very dare you? How dare you? Thank you
for coming to my ted talk. That'll be fifty thousand
dollars please.

Speaker 3 (01:00:40):
You know, I got flamed, sort of semi flamed at least,
not really flamed on ex the other last week because
I haven't been on for a week, just because I
may have said something that included Islam was right about

(01:01:01):
women women, you know, not not a standalone statement. I
believe I said something to the effect of, in response
to two pro life arguments, women arguing in favor of
abortion have a tendency to prove that Islam is right
about women, and wholly hell the female butt herd over

(01:01:22):
that it was it was fun because like there's a
degree to which, you know, like if you if you
flick the wrong nerve, especially on you know, women who
are more openly guyinocentric, instead of the covert guinocentrists that

(01:01:42):
kind of try like they will, they will just howl.
They turn into female versions of werewolves, you know, just
just absolutely psychotic. But if you do it to the
ones that are covert gynocentrists, they will pretend to make

(01:02:04):
reasonable arguments, and every syllable comes out of their keyboard
as if it were bitten into it by a snake.
And when you expose the slippery slitheriness of their statements,
you get an even bigger werewolf. And that's basically what happened.

(01:02:30):
But women will vote for men like this who promise
them every fucking thing under the sun, and they'll celebrate. Oh,
he's got an all female transition team. This guy is
really pro woman. He gets us, He gets us. And
as soon as he starts assuring in his crazy communist ideas,

(01:02:57):
as soon as problems start erupting in the city, and
as soon as his policies start impacting them in ways
that they are not comfortable with, ways that make them
feel unsafe, who are they going to blame not this guy,
because that's politically incorrect. They can't say anything about him, right,

(01:03:19):
They certainly can't admit they were wrong. God forbid women
admitting they're wrong. It's, you know, one of those things
that like you have to reach down your own throat
into your guts and pull them up out and hand
them over to somebody. In order to do that. If
you're female, it's very uncomfortable. No, no, they'll they'll blame

(01:03:42):
Where are all the men? Right? Where are the men?
And when they say that, they don't mean men who
look like they're fearless leader and his all female team, right,
They mean the nearest working class white male who they
think should give up his right to be non violent

(01:04:05):
and serve as their unpaid bodyguards. That is where this
is going to end up. We'll be hearing it next year,
maybe the year after. Where are all the men? Where
are all the men? Well? What happened to the one
that you voted into office? Why isn't he doing things
to protect you? Why isn't he making you happy? You

(01:04:30):
picked him for a virtue signal, you picked him for gibbs,
and you picked him because you knew he would do
this bullshit virtue signaling tokenized all female transition team. But
you you didn't think about what was going to happen
to your city. So I wait for New York. But

(01:04:54):
I don't feel sorry.

Speaker 6 (01:04:57):
It's just.

Speaker 3 (01:05:00):
Sad to see that this is gonna happen, and it's
gonna be that way for you know, till Tilly elect
somebody else, and if they're smart enough, they'll elect somebody
entirely different. But if they're not, well, it was nice
knowing you in New York.

Speaker 1 (01:05:21):
Yeah, it's gonna have to be more uh suffering before
people learn. But I guess yeah, Like like we'll see
people businesses are gonna leave because they don't want to
get taxed. It's gonna be like California and mom, Donnie
doesn't actually have to make good on anything. He can
just like claim to and then when it inevitably collapses,

(01:05:45):
he can just blame Trump or the or the corporations
for leaving or capitalism or whatever. And if he can
like rhetorically get the people to believe it, then they're
just gonna swallow it hole and the suffering will continue
and the resentment will grow. So I guess we'll see,
but yeah, that's yeah, but remember, guys, Islam is the

(01:06:12):
most feminist religion. This They've actually said this. So remember
that when the right wing feminists come out and they're like, oh,
the Islam is so bad to women, why did you
guys support it? No, this is not. It's bad for
everybody if they're not Muslim, and it's even bad for
people who are, I guess in some ways. But they're

(01:06:33):
going to miss the point. This is why I made
a video on my channel where I basically made the
case that it was women that got him in and
it was women and basically, like almost every state that
you know voted blue, which by the way, I'm not
like that concerned with because most of the places, well

(01:06:55):
all the places that went blue have historically been blue.
So it's not like a complete like you know, shift
in the wind. It's just those places doing what they do.
You know, Illinois, Virginia, Pennsylvania, New York, California, those places
are are going to be blue because they've always been blue.
And it's because of the cities, you know, like where

(01:07:15):
I live. It's barely libertarian here. A lot of people
have their guns and their gats and flags, but Richmond
and DC make it blue, make the state blue, So
that's not gonna change. So yeah, I mean, I'm not
concerned about this as some kind of paradigm shift. It's
just those places going the way they always go. And

(01:07:37):
it just shows you the people who live there, don't
you know, they're ignorant. They just go off of emotion.
Somebody tells them they're gonna make them feel good, you know,
with their promises and words, and they go along with it.
And the people who are the most susceptible to that
are women. And when I explain this people who really
want this to become like a race war or something else,
they get angry because they don't want to look at

(01:08:00):
their women. Like this is the thing about the laughable
white nationalists online. They will the groypers et cetera. They
will continuously pretend like women are not going to be
a problem for them, and they don't see that women
are the problem, Like they are the problem, and not
just for white nationalists but for everybody. And basically, if

(01:08:23):
we can get to a place where women are not
harming us but are actually helping us, then all the
other stuff could probably melt away. Like honestly, all the
other stuff is a distraction. If you're not dealing with
a relationship between men and women, you are not addressing
the problem.

Speaker 2 (01:08:41):
So anyway, if anyone wasn't sure how sarcastic Brian was being,
no is the most feminist religion. No, it is the
most feminist, preoccupied with rabidly preoccupied with protecting women. Yes,
and that's why that society collapsed almost immediately. They've been
practically living in the Stone Age for the last thousand years.

Speaker 3 (01:09:04):
Well, they're they're rapidly preoccupied with protecting their women.

Speaker 2 (01:09:12):
And this is something.

Speaker 1 (01:09:14):
People more women in their women more, Yeah.

Speaker 3 (01:09:17):
Bringing more women into their fold. But one of the
things that mothers teach their sons in their culture is
that women who comply with their cultural morality are protected
and should be protected from, you know, any kind of mistreatment.

(01:09:37):
So you know, in other words, women who don't go
anywhere without a chaperone and uh, and then eventually get
married and then don't go anywhere without a chaperone. Like,
those women are protected and you shouldn't mess with them.
But any women who don't comply with your cultural morality

(01:09:58):
deserve whatever they get and you can do whatever you
want to them, and they're not people, and therefore, you know,
it doesn't matter what you do, you're not you're not
engaging in abuse, and you're not committing a sin. And
that is that is female relational aggression using men as

(01:10:19):
an instrument. And it's it's not just a lot of
people think they'll see what the men do in response
to that teaching, and they'll think, well, those men are
bad men and they're stupid. No, it's not that those
men are bad men and they're stupid. It's that those
men are used by their mothers, by the women of

(01:10:40):
their culture as an instrument against the women of other cultures.
And you know, some of them figure it out and leave,
some of them don't stay right. Some of them, you know,
figure it out and don't participate. But others never figure
it out. It's not because they're stupid. It's because it's

(01:11:03):
a culture wide belief, and just like culture wide beliefs
of other cultures that may not make sense, some of
which can lead to all kinds of difficulties like starvation
or inability to handle illnesses and stuff like that. If

(01:11:25):
you're from outside the culture, it doesn't make sense to
you because you pay attention to a picture that maybe
is a little bit bigger than what they're paying attention to,
or you're missing something, some bit of information from inside
their culture that makes it make sense from inside their culture.
And that's it doesn't necessarily mean that you should put

(01:11:47):
up with it or tolerate it. But if you mistake
it for merely being a feature of stupidity or merely
being well, men of this type, this this origin are
bad and other men are good, then you don't have
the tools that you need to eradicate it, especially if

(01:12:13):
you try to rescue those women without changing the way
that they think. Because if you rescue them without changing
the way that they think, they will bring that to
your culture too. And you know, it's it's not something
that I'm talking about from a distance. I've seen that

(01:12:35):
up close and personal, and when you're the target of it,
it hurts. All right, it's very it's very sharp. We'll
just we'll just leave it at that. But yeah, this
isn't something that is as as simple as that patriarchy
over there, and people really need to understand that, yeah,

(01:12:59):
you know, because it's it's it's very dangerous to fail
to understand the cause of a problem and then just
try to deal with the problem without understanding what you're
dealing with.

Speaker 5 (01:13:14):
Mm hmm.

Speaker 1 (01:13:16):
The last thing I'll say about this too, is that
everything that Mom Donnie promised could be a lie because Takiya.
So that's another thing that probably a lot of ignorant
asked New Yorkers just bought along with. I mean, but
he made a really catchy song on TikTok.

Speaker 3 (01:13:29):
So anyway, you know, I visited New York when Giuliani
was mayor. Yeah, that's that's probably why this makes me
so sad, because Giuliani's New York was definitely cleaner and safer,
and uh, this is gonna make things a lot worse,
and their New York's probably not going to improve until

(01:13:51):
it gets another Giuliani.

Speaker 1 (01:13:53):
It's gotta get worse. That's the only way where people
are finally gonna be like, you know what we gotta
vote for. We got to look at this differently. We
can't just go with the guy that promises things all right.
So I got a super chat from Albatross four nine
two zero and he says New York is gonna turn
into the UK really quick. Well, yeah, I'm guessing more

(01:14:13):
like London. Nova Fan twenty one gives us a dollar
on rumble and says, get ready to see what future
generations teach their boys and girls what responsibility and accountability mean.
Scary times for a lot of people, no matter how
you look at it. Yep, that's true. And then the
Assassin of the Gray gives us ten dollars and says
YouTube centers my post comment below, and I guess I'll

(01:14:36):
read the comment. He says, all the boroughs of New
York are between thirty to sixty percent foreigner. This will
only get worse. Prepare for morality patrols and grooming gangs
in the open. And I still have family in New York.
We'll get them out of there. And you know what, Yeah,
like I said, and when these things happen, you know
what they're gonna do. They're just gonna blame men, because
that's what they do. When when you get grooming gangs,

(01:14:57):
it's gonna be it becomes a male problem, not a
grooming gang problem. And so it's there's always a way
to like deflect it to men, you know. But anyway,
let us know what you guys think about this in
the comments. Appreciate the super chats and all that. Okay,
last story. And this one I didn't do a write
up because it's basically like spelled out right here. This

(01:15:20):
is from the Skeptic Research Center Team new finding a
majority of gen Z, millennial and politically conservative men agree
that men are more discredited against in hiring decisions than women.
Most women disagree. Surprise, surprise, they're completely divided on reality.
Fifty percent of gen Z men and fifty six percent

(01:15:42):
of millennial men agree with the statement. In America today,
men are more discriminated against in hiring decisions than women.
Only around thirty percent of women agreed with this. So,
and there's graphs here to show it.

Speaker 3 (01:15:57):
Just what a survey question that they asked this question,
and and what sex you are? And when people said
yes that happens or no, that doesn't.

Speaker 1 (01:16:05):
No, they're asking if they believe that men are more
discriminated against in hiring decisions than women are. So whether
or not it's taking place, it's asking if men think
that they're discriminated against more, and if women think that
men are discredited more.

Speaker 3 (01:16:25):
And so I can tell you why, I can tell
you why, right, I can tell you why the discrepancy
right now? Right, men recognize that if a person isn't
hired because of their sex. If their sex is the
reason why they're not hired, that's discrimination. If they're not
hired for some other reason, Uh, and it doesn't have

(01:16:48):
anything to do with their sex or their race or
you know, anything like that. It's they're not hired because
they're not qualified for the job, they don't have the
right degree. Uh, the better candidate with more experience, there,
more knowledge, or just just better fit for the work
environment or whatever came along, then that's not discrimination. Right.

(01:17:11):
Women think that if women don't get hired, it's discrimination,
but if men don't get hired, it's not. And so
they're asking a completely different question to women than to
men because they're not They don't realize that women and

(01:17:33):
men don't have the same definition of discriminated against.

Speaker 1 (01:17:40):
Maybe well, let's let me finish reading this, Okay, So
there's a graph here. Sixty one percent of politically conservative men,
forty three percent of moderate men, and forty one percent
of liberal men agreed with the statement. In America today,
men are more discriminated against in hiring decisions than women.
So the difference between like, you know, the sort of
political leaning doesn't matter that much because it looks like

(01:18:02):
a decent number maybe fewer liberal men, but a decent
number of men in general recognize this is like an issue,
or at least that's how they see it. Women across
political groups agreed at a substantially lower rate. These data
come from the American Political Perspective Survey, collected from August third,
twenty twenty five to September twenty six, twenty twenty five,

(01:18:23):
with three thousand American adults who speak English. All respondents
needed to pass one attention checks to a duplication check
and three time to completion checks for fraud and five
bot identification checks. For more information, see and it has
a link to the original study. So yeah, so basically

(01:18:43):
men look at the women, so we got like boomer women,
boomer men too. They don't really believe it, but like
gen Z millennial and the millennial men thing is actually
like surprisingly really high for men and gen X. So
you can see this is the statement in America today
men are more discriminated against and hiring decisions than women,

(01:19:06):
and more men believe it.

Speaker 3 (01:19:08):
And well, I will bet you of the reasons. Bet
you're part of the reason millennial men are noticing it.
More is because of their age. If you're between twenty
nine and forty four and you're seeking a new job
right now, you're leaving one job for another, you're more
likely to face age discrimination if you're male than you

(01:19:30):
are if you're female. I've noticed that just in the
workplaces that I've been in that my employer, you know,
in different places, has turned down guys that unless they
had some feature like that made them particularly attractive to

(01:19:52):
that workplace, they have experience in that specific field, and
they're specifically useful to that job environment. You know, they're
they're they're too old to hire in as a new employee.
But a woman the same age isn't. And I've seen
that more than once, and it's not considered age discrimination

(01:20:14):
legally unless they try to get rid of you to
you know, keep from paying your pension or something like that,
or you're you know, over over I think it's over
fifty when they start screwing around with your hiring and promotion.
But if you're in your thirties, like especially your late thirties,

(01:20:38):
and you're trying to start a new and a whole
new workplace, they do again like treat men like being
a little older is a big detriment to hiring them
when they don't do the same thing to women. And
it partly might be because they know that women have

(01:21:00):
taken a break to have kids, whereas men don't have
that reason why they are changing jobs or starting a
new job. So then they assume that men are disgruntled
from an other workplace or weren't a good worker in
another workplace, unless they've got really good recommendations, where they

(01:21:23):
might not assume that about women. But it doesn't matter
what their assumptions are, it's still discrimination and it still
makes it difficult for men to find jobs. The other
thing is men of all ages are disadvantaged by the
fact that the federal government gives your employer a tax

(01:21:44):
break for hiring recipients of certain welfare programs that are
more likely to be women, particularly single mothers with children,
than they are to be men, especially not single men
out children. So yeah, you're more like more likely to

(01:22:06):
not get hired because you are a man because the
women you're competing with might be a drag on the
federal budget, and the federal budget wants to offload them
to your potential employer. And while the employer doesn't really
care about your gender. Your gender makes you you less

(01:22:29):
likely to have federal backing like that when you try
to get that job.

Speaker 2 (01:22:38):
Yeah, anyone, anyone can feel discriminated against. That doesn't really
tell us much, especially given the state of the fucking
education system, where women are compelled to feel discriminated against
no matter what happens, and men are compelled not to.
But we're at this stage where millennials and Gen x's

(01:22:59):
are in the middle management stage where they're in charge
of the hiring or the casting or whatever. They're the
people who are handed the paperwork from up on high
giving them the guidelines as to who they are supposed
to hire for the sake of diversity and equity and inclusion.

(01:23:23):
So they're not just working on feelings. They're looking at
the fucking paperwork and going, oh, yeah, this, it says
right here that we are supposed to hire women, that
for the sake of equity, we need at least at
least fifty percent women, at least if we have ninety

(01:23:44):
percent women, that's that's absolutely fine. That's that's not discrimination.
You know, like in areas like teaching and nursing and well,
all kinds of fucking places at this point, because it
only goes in one direction. There's no paperwork that's come
down from up on high in the government or up
on high in in whatever CEO positions that are having

(01:24:09):
the arms bent by the government in the first place,
telling telling everyone to hire more men. No one's being
told to hire more men. It's in if If they were,
that would be zexism, and that would be I mean,
in a lot of places illegal, it would count as
illegal discrimination. But yeah, being being told that you have

(01:24:30):
to hire more women because raisins that's that's that's just
that's that's just the norm at this point. We need
more women, we don't need more men. That is what
people are being told. That's why, that's why all of
these useless fucking HR jobs exist for women, and all
these you know, all all the fucking useless jobs in

(01:24:52):
Twitter that Elon Musk had the good sense to fucking
acts when he got in there. There's so many of
these companies that are just flourished by useless, fucking women
who are only there to be in daycare basically, to

(01:25:12):
just put women in useless positions just for the sake
of meeting these pointless fucking quotas. Like like I said,
these are not just feelings, these are orders from on
high that are being mindlessly followed, well not mindlessly followed,

(01:25:33):
followed because they have to or they won't get the
gibbs that have been promised to them by the government.
This is so much more scandalous than most people realize.
The government is forcing us to take women out of
the homes and to be given the jobs that men,

(01:25:54):
qualified men would ordinarily have, so that women don't get
it distracted by this patriarchal notion of being homemakers and mothers.
Heavens Tibetsy, No, we can't have that, women being brothers
and stuff and men being the providers. No, no, no

(01:26:15):
that given that, that's how it's worked for all of
human history, that's how it cannot possibly work.

Speaker 1 (01:26:20):
Now.

Speaker 2 (01:26:21):
We need to change things. Why because we need to
change things. We need to change things for the sake
of changing things. If that's how it's always worked, then
that's why we need to change it, because that's how
it's always worked. Because because that's all we do, We
change things for the sake of changing things. That's leftism

(01:26:41):
in a nutshell. That's this fucking communist revolution in a nutshell,
just change things, just shake everything up, Just shove everything
in a fucking snow globe and shake it up and
chuck it against the wall until it smashes everywhere. That's

(01:27:01):
that's that's what's happening. And people can see this. It's
not it's not just a feeling. People can see this
because it is happening. Is it's right there in black
and white. And that's that's what's being reflected in this
as as as best as possible. There's still a lot
of men who are like, oh, we can't we can't
admit that this is happening, because like what happened to

(01:27:22):
James de Moore and James Demore is just the most
high profile case of this happening. And and then that
explains the roughly fifty percent of men in most generations
who were just like, no, I haven't I haven't seen this,
I don't feel this, and I can't see it. My
eyes and ears are lying to me.

Speaker 1 (01:27:41):
And it's why.

Speaker 2 (01:27:44):
The majority of women in all age groups like, no, no, no, no, no, no,
no no no no, I'm not being positively discriminated. We
deserve these jobs because we are women's because we have
always been oppressed by all men everywhere, ever, and and
and and therefore we deserve these gifts. And yeah, it's it's,

(01:28:10):
it's it's going to stay this way and and until
we can slip ourselves out from under the thumb of
the of of of this fucking hyperreal machine. Good luck everyone.

Speaker 1 (01:28:25):
I don't know, I.

Speaker 2 (01:28:26):
Don't know what the fuck we do.

Speaker 3 (01:28:28):
You know, if if you want to get into a
profession where you know, more than ninety percent of the
workforce is male, and that's probably not going to change,
you have to find a job that is dangerous or
really dirty and disgusting, or involves heavy labor. It's not

(01:28:55):
you can't just go find a job in an office somewhere.
In fact, if you look at it, it's it's it's
jobs like and it's not necessarily you know, construction is
one of those, right, More than ninety five percent of
construction workers are male. And that's that includes in supervising

(01:29:17):
and stuff. In fact, uh, it's it's even higher in supervising, right,
or or jobs that are extremely mentally taxing, like almost
almost all of air traffic controllers, specifically the air traffic
control workforce male mostly male. People who work in plumbing. Plumbing, plumbers,

(01:29:37):
pipe fitters, you know those guys. They're ninety eight percent male.
Power line workers, something like ninety seven or ninety eight
percent mail right, Auto techs mostly mostly guys that work
on cars. So it's you know, sewer workers, mostly male.

(01:30:00):
People that go down in and break up fat bergs
and have to take the risk that that a needle
is in the in the sewer is going to puncture
their hazmat suit. Those are mostly men. Carpenters people at
work with with blades all the time and nail guns

(01:30:20):
and everything else that that can crush your fingers and
slice and dice you. Mostly male. You know people people
who work in HVAC use you know, h VAC certification,
heating and air conditioning, refrigeration texts there, mostly male. You

(01:30:41):
don't want to get refrigerant on your skin. You have
to move to a warm climate after that if you
and that's if you're lucky, but yeah, you don't. You know,
like the guys that climb the towers a couple hundred
feet high radio towers to put a light bulb on

(01:31:02):
the top. Not very many women do that. You know,
the people that fix power lines while sitting on a
helicopter because the power line is not accessible from the ground.
Don't ever see any videos of women doing that. You know,
even the military is eighty five percent male, even with

(01:31:24):
all the incentives for women to join it, when it's
truly dangerous work, when it's truly dirty, scary gross jobs
that are gross. Gastro entrology, for instance, really high percentage male,
very high paying job, much higher paying than say being

(01:31:44):
a pediatrician, which is a female dominated doctor profession, but
gastro entrologists, well, to be blunt, that's a shitty job
in some ways, right, but very high paying. Same thing
with infectious diseases specialists. More men than women do that.

(01:32:06):
It's not as as stark difference, but it's still pretty
big difference because that's both scary and gross, and most
women are afraid to do that. So yeah it guys,
if you wanna, if you want to find a job
that you're not gonna get pushed out as easily because women.

(01:32:31):
You still have to deal with the fact that wherever
you go to work, there is one area of your
company that is going to be female dominated. Right then
that's human resources, and you don't want to deal with
them if you can help it. The fact that they
control your paycheck is bad enough. Uh but uh but yeah,

(01:32:54):
you almost you almost have to find something, you know
that that women won't do because it's it's too hard
for them, or they don't have the stomach for it,
or they don't have the courage for it. It's a
sad thing. Like men are good at many, many things

(01:33:16):
that are not dangerous or dirty or or difficult laborious.
Men can be great at things that are that are
none of those things. But the one place that men

(01:33:36):
can go that women won't invade in large enough numbers
to to really make a difference is where it's too
scary for women.

Speaker 2 (01:33:51):
Skilled tradesmen that is the way forward, Like plumber, electrician,
stuff like that, the kind of people who will always
be called out to, uh, to keep a house from
fucking crumbling to the ground. Those kind of jobs will
always be needed. You'll always find work, Like even if

(01:34:12):
there's a lot of saturation in the market, you'll always
find work because there's houses all over the place that
will always need skilled tradesmen to to keep that infrastructure afloat.
So yeah, fucking go for skilled trades because women won't.
We will knock over that ship something.

Speaker 3 (01:34:32):
The thing is that women are trying to get into
some of that right night, motorcyclist, it follows us and
listens to us, and has just experienced that in his
work and as a result has lost his position. And

(01:34:53):
and he was a skilled tradesman. And and he was
not just like go but also defamed in his field
because of a woman in his workplace. So it isn't
universal that you could just go to any skilled trade.

(01:35:15):
It has to be, unfortunately, it has to be something
that is so far out there that that you won't
find that you know, you won't find many women willing
to do it. And if you're in one of those
trades and a woman enters your workspace as a colleague,

(01:35:39):
consider finding a different company because she's probably the only
woman in your area doing that job. But it's best
to get away from her or find a way to
not have to interact with her, because all it takes
is one woman the whole company to start knocking men

(01:36:03):
out of the of the workforce.

Speaker 2 (01:36:08):
Well, that could be said about any trade or any
yeah section whatever, Like.

Speaker 3 (01:36:13):
It's just you're more likely to find jobs in those
sectors But it's not that you're safe from women there.
It's that you're more likely to not have to compete
with the same number of women or more applying for
those jobs. You still have to be on the defensive

(01:36:34):
when it comes to women. You know, if the workplace
is ninety seven percent women and your crew is fifty people,
there's still a chance that one of them is going
to be female. There's still a chance that she's going
to be a woke asshole and not you know, some

(01:36:56):
daughter of somebody that did the same job, and is
you know, one of the one of the gals that
can handle working with men. So it is the news,
isn't it's there's there's not a white pill here again,
this is a gray pill. There are jobs that men

(01:37:18):
do that are almost exclusively done by men.

Speaker 2 (01:37:23):
In that In that sense, the least safe jobs are
the cushy office jobs, and the most safe jobs are
the filthiest ones, like working in sewers are collecting garbage,
or of fishing for crabs in the fucking North Pacific
and stuff like that. And yeah, if that's what you're into,

(01:37:44):
then you know, biomeans go with that ship. But I'm
not going to recommend that men go with these most
dangerous or most chitty jobs just just because those are
the most safe from women. At some point, we we
we have to uh to move the battle lines on.

(01:38:04):
I don't want to call the battle lines on the
way whatever, you know what I mean. We can't we
can't keep falling back into the very shittiest jobs, because
that's that's what feminists are doing to us. They're pushing
us back into the sewers and into the fucking dump
trucks and and you know, into all those jobs that
women did in the fucking handmate's tale.

Speaker 3 (01:38:26):
You know what, what's got to be done to put
the cabbage to that is going to take a generation
or two. And it is two things. One, the the
system has to be pushed back on.

Speaker 1 (01:38:40):
You have to have a.

Speaker 3 (01:38:41):
System where it's recognized that discrimination against a man because
he's male is the same as discrimination against a woman
because she's female. And the other thing is women have
to be raised better, and girls have to be raised

(01:39:02):
to grow up and not become what women are today.
And that's women aren't gonna do that. Women are not
going to raise their daughters to be tougher and smarter
than they are, so dads are going to have to
do it. So I think I said this last week
and I'm going to say it again. The single most

(01:39:26):
important faction of the men's rights movement is the father's
rights faction of the movement, because without the input, without
the influence and mentorship of fathers, every generation of women
is going to be as bad as this one or worse. So, guys,

(01:39:48):
it is.

Speaker 1 (01:39:50):
It's on you.

Speaker 3 (01:39:51):
As much as you know, women like me can give
advice and talk to other women like I try to
talk to women about accountability.

Speaker 1 (01:40:03):
You know you can't.

Speaker 3 (01:40:04):
You can't, Jordan Peterson. Women, you can Jordan Peterson. Boys.
You can tell boys advice on how to better themselves,
and they will. They will look at that as an
opportunity to improve their lives. If you give girls advice
on how to better themselves, they will get offended and
they will have a flame war, and then they will

(01:40:26):
report you to an authority for misogyny and try to
get you banned from wherever you were doing that. You know,
and just like girls did when Jordan Peterson started telling boys,
clean your room, be better men, you know, be be stronger,
be smarter, make decisions with regard to to what the

(01:40:48):
consequences of your actions will be. You can say that
to boys, and boys will take it to heart. If
you say that to girls right now, girls will take
it to court. That's the difference between the sexes.

Speaker 4 (01:41:06):
And so.

Speaker 3 (01:41:08):
Men out there who have daughters, you need to raise
your daughter to take it to heart instead of taking
it to court. When someone says, choose your actions with
an understanding of the potential consequences and be prepared to
avoid consequences you don't want by choosing better actions and

(01:41:32):
handle consequences that you can't avoid because you want to
choose actions that are going to dump those on you.
Until we have that until we have that condition, in
the condition where the state doesn't say it's okay to
discriminate against men as long as women are benefiting, but

(01:41:54):
it's not okay to discriminate against women for any reason.
We have to get rid of that.

Speaker 4 (01:42:01):
You know this is going to continue, all right, Well,
that's basically it for today's stories.

Speaker 1 (01:42:13):
So we're gonna go into the Patron show now and
look at this article from Slate magazine. But again, all
I will say is that the purpose of that last
story was simply to show that people men in particular
are not ignoring or at least they're starting to see

(01:42:35):
that what they have been saying is not falling on
deaf ears and this is a this is a good thing,
Like that's how I see it, Like people are more
aware of it now than they have been. And then
we'll probably start to see some movement towards that there's
acknowledgement of the problems propping up in different ways all

(01:42:56):
over the place, and so like take the w guy,
it is something and let's just keep hammering away at it.
That's all I'm asking. So anyway, with that said, we're
gonna go into the Patent Show and look at this article.
If you want to join us, become a Badger yourself
by going to feed the Badger dot com forwards, subscribe
becoming a member of our community over on Discord, and

(01:43:20):
you'll be able to watch all the additional content and
participate in the discussion. So thank you guys for coming
on the show today. If you guys like this video,
please hit like subscribe. If you're not already subscribe, hit
the BELF notifications, leave us a comment, let us know
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show today and please please please share this video because
sharing is caring. Thank you guys so much for coming

(01:43:41):
on today's episode of HBr News and we will see
you next Tuesday.
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Las Culturistas with Matt Rogers and Bowen Yang

Las Culturistas with Matt Rogers and Bowen Yang

Ding dong! Join your culture consultants, Matt Rogers and Bowen Yang, on an unforgettable journey into the beating heart of CULTURE. Alongside sizzling special guests, they GET INTO the hottest pop-culture moments of the day and the formative cultural experiences that turned them into Culturistas. Produced by the Big Money Players Network and iHeartRadio.

Crime Junkie

Crime Junkie

Does hearing about a true crime case always leave you scouring the internet for the truth behind the story? Dive into your next mystery with Crime Junkie. Every Monday, join your host Ashley Flowers as she unravels all the details of infamous and underreported true crime cases with her best friend Brit Prawat. From cold cases to missing persons and heroes in our community who seek justice, Crime Junkie is your destination for theories and stories you won’t hear anywhere else. Whether you're a seasoned true crime enthusiast or new to the genre, you'll find yourself on the edge of your seat awaiting a new episode every Monday. If you can never get enough true crime... Congratulations, you’ve found your people. Follow to join a community of Crime Junkies! Crime Junkie is presented by Audiochuck Media Company.

The Brothers Ortiz

The Brothers Ortiz

The Brothers Ortiz is the story of two brothers–both successful, but in very different ways. Gabe Ortiz becomes a third-highest ranking officer in all of Texas while his younger brother Larry climbs the ranks in Puro Tango Blast, a notorious Texas Prison gang. Gabe doesn’t know all the details of his brother’s nefarious dealings, and he’s made a point not to ask, to protect their relationship. But when Larry is murdered during a home invasion in a rented beach house, Gabe has no choice but to look into what happened that night. To solve Larry’s murder, Gabe, and the whole Ortiz family, must ask each other tough questions.

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