The Joe Rogan Experience XX
[0] Joe Rogan podcast, check it out.
[1] The Joe Rogan Experience.
[2] Train by day, Joe Rogan podcast by night, all day.
[3] Did you see Hocel, what she said, that young black kids don't know what a computer is?
[4] Did you see her say that?
[5] No, I didn't see that.
[6] Oh, my God.
[7] And all these dudes did these hilarious videos where these young black guys, like, got around a computer and they stared at it and bit it.
[8] There's like a it's like an age thing too because that that used to kind of be the line that like liberals would say you know the problem with black kids is they just don't have any role models they've never been exposed to this but it's just totally not true anymore and sometimes now because they're from a different generation they'll still say that and you're like are you have you been around black people lately saying young poor black kids don't know what a computer is is so crazy.
[9] They've got one in their pocket.
[10] It's such a dumb thing to say.
[11] It's amazing that you could say something like that and be the governor of a major state.
[12] Don't even know what the word computer is.
[13] Oh, they're not even familiar with the term?
[14] They don't know these things.
[15] Like, is she doing a survey?
[16] Ma 'am, where did you get this data?
[17] Well, this is why Malcolm X said that there's nothing more racist than a white, liberal yes because of shit like this well they're weak weak people are dangerous weak people that don't like strength are dangerous they're dangerous because they want to suppress everything that's what's spooky about it weak people scare the shit out of me more than even like totalitarians do sometimes because they eventually become totalitarian you know it's like the bullied become the bullies you know they want payback but it's just weak liberal men are to me that they're so detestable the weak ones i mean there's some intelligent brilliant liberal men they just that's their philosophy and i think if you're not exposed to the the pitfalls of liberalism if you don't see what happens to your state when those policies get enacted specifically when things go south if everything was going great like no one gave a shit who the mayor of los angeles was in 2015 because everything was great right you know it was like there was no problems Obama was president the economy was doing good we weren't at war really kind of we were but yeah wasn't affecting us right well there's something um on on that topic of like weak the weakness of modern liberals because I was in um like late last year I was in San Diego and I haven't been to I mean I've been to LA a couple times but much less than I used to go like when you were out there and I I haven't been to San Francisco in years.
[18] But I was in San Diego and it's like, you know, you've been there.
[19] It's like a beautiful city downtown and where we were.
[20] It's a great comedy club, the American comedy company down there.
[21] No, great club.
[22] Great club.
[23] Love that place.
[24] And I'm like downtown and me and my buddy Rob Bernstein, very funny comedian who's with me on the trip.
[25] We're like walking around at the great restaurants, really nice little down.
[26] But then there's just blocks that are taken over by these homeless encampments.
[27] And right next to them, it's like, all these young professionals and these nice restaurants and this nice city.
[28] And I was just thinking about that.
[29] Like how are all of the men here so weak that they won't just kind of like put their foot down and be like, hey, no, we're not going to put up with this.
[30] Like, we're not just, it's almost like this, like, niceness has taken over to the point that you can't even defend this cool city that you have here.
[31] And I'm not saying, like, bash the homeless people with clubs or anything like that.
[32] I'm just saying, like, why are you allowing this to happen?
[33] And it is like a profound weakness that, well, we'd feel like bad people if we were to say, we don't want junkies covered in shit right next to our outdoor dining.
[34] And you're like, no, that would just be reasonable.
[35] Well, what they need is a reasonable plan to help these people.
[36] If you really care, if you really care, you got to do something.
[37] Like, you can't just let them exist everywhere.
[38] And then in San Francisco, the most recent bizarre one, is they're going to give them alcohol.
[39] They're going to give money in alcohol.
[40] What is it?
[41] Are they giving them actual booze or are they giving them money to buy booze?
[42] Help me out with this one.
[43] Because it's just so San Francisco.
[44] San Francisco is amazing.
[45] I lived there in the 70s.
[46] I lived there during the Vietnam War when I was a little kid.
[47] It was incredible.
[48] It was weird.
[49] I'm sure.
[50] It shaped the way I view things.
[51] Because, like, if I had grown up in, like, a very conservative environment with, like, my sensibilities, like, my hard work ethic and my belief that, you know, you get very fortunate in life in, like, how you're gifted things, like, how you get lucky.
[52] Like, if you're beautiful, for instance, if you're a beautiful woman or man, you're, what a roll of the dice.
[53] I mean, good Lord.
[54] Good Lord did you kill it in the fucking genetic lottery.
[55] I mean, you can't do anything about that.
[56] You can't earn that.
[57] You can't go out and get beauty, you know.
[58] But after that, whatever hand you've given, you've been given, a lot of it is on you.
[59] A lot of it is on you.
[60] Yeah, yeah, yeah, yeah.
[61] Terrible things happen to be.
[62] Yeah, yeah, yeah.
[63] Violence happens.
[64] Crime happens.
[65] Disease happens.
[66] Yes, 100%.
[67] Misfortune happens 100%.
[68] We're all, anyone listening to this right now is lucky you can hear.
[69] Okay, there's people that can't hear, right?
[70] But put that aside, and there's a factor that we need to take into consideration.
[71] That factor is discipline.
[72] That factor is hard work.
[73] That factor is focus.
[74] And we should cherish that.
[75] And we shouldn't think of it only as negative because it always, people always think it manifests itself in greed and in callous disregard for other people's lives.
[76] That's not necessarily true.
[77] They're not mutually exclusive.
[78] Like, you can have discipline and be a kind person and be incapassionate person and be a liberal person.
[79] But so often liberals in this country, they do not want to take that into consideration.
[80] The discipline is a factor.
[81] Conservatives always value discipline.
[82] They value hard work.
[83] That's why when they want to sell shit to those people, what do they do?
[84] They show a guy on a farm, cracking open a beer.
[85] A guy has just been working his fucking ass off for 10 hours a day, crack it up here.
[86] Around here, it's all just about hard work and the guy just throwing back a cold one.
[87] You know, I mean, that's what they're selling you.
[88] They're selling you hard work.
[89] They're not selling you, you know, this poor farmer, you know, who's born into a farming life and it's not equitable or fair.
[90] Why there's billionaires out there just make money trading money and it's bullshit and we need to distribute wealth.
[91] And like, no, no, that's not the answer either, stupid.
[92] Like, that's not the answer.
[93] But you do need programs to get these people out of homelessness.
[94] you can't just encourage them to keep doing it.
[95] It's bad for them.
[96] It's bad for you.
[97] It's bad for the city.
[98] It's bad for property values.
[99] It's bad for everything.
[100] Yep.
[101] I couldn't agree more.
[102] San Francisco gives actual alcohol.
[103] We're not talking rubbing alcohol here, right?
[104] They're talking like booze.
[105] Oh, they're so good.
[106] They're so good.
[107] But these are the old hippies.
[108] They're still there.
[109] They're wearing masks right now while they're listening to the screaming.
[110] No, no, no. They're all lost.
[111] See, like to your point, it's like, Look, it'd be ridiculous if someone just completely dismissed the first part of what you were saying like that.
[112] There are some things that fortune, luck, you know, that we all didn't get leukemia as little kids and die.
[113] He had shot in a drive -by as a little kid.
[114] And also there are just parts of the world.
[115] Like a lot of what you're saying really applies to like first world advanced countries.
[116] You could be in a country that's just a war -torn third -world country and you're screwed no matter what you do.
[117] But so it would be silly to dismiss that, but it's also equally ridiculous.
[118] to dismiss the other aspect to it that like okay there are every person every single person who's successful has conquered uh self -pity because like everybody's had points in their lives where they've just felt really bad for themselves we've all had it we all do it it's a part of human nature that's right but it's also poison and anybody who's successful has learned how to conquer that and not just sit here and feel bad for yourself and to say nope i'm gonna take control of this, no matter what happened to me, I'm going to not focus on that.
[119] I'm going to focus on what I can control.
[120] And the problem is that on either side, if you dismiss one of them, you come to really stupid conclusions.
[121] 100%.
[122] And it's not lost on me the irony of two rich white guys.
[123] One of them smoking a cigar talking about this.
[124] I would say I'm climbing my way toward there.
[125] I don't know by global standards, sure.
[126] Bro, you're fucking killing it.
[127] Global standards, I'm on Elon Musk level.
[128] I mean, I'm poor compared to Elon.
[129] That is true.
[130] You are broke.
[131] I'm so broke.
[132] Do you think he laughs about you, like when you're not there?
[133] That poor little bastard.
[134] He goes, I got Rogan coming over to the house.
[135] Put away the good China.
[136] Oh, God, the Rogans are coming.
[137] There's levels of people.
[138] I'm friends now.
[139] This is a bizarre thing to say with multiple billionaires.
[140] Yeah.
[141] I know multiple guys that are billionaires.
[142] And they're very nice people.
[143] They're very nice.
[144] And I can see how it happens.
[145] But you're also friends with the cool billionaires.
[146] Yeah.
[147] You know?
[148] Like, you managed to find the cool ones.
[149] Well, Elon's the coolest.
[150] He's my favorite billionaire.
[151] That dude's wild.
[152] He's a wild boy.
[153] I will buy Tesla's as long as they sell him.
[154] Just to support that dude.
[155] Just to keep Twitter going.
[156] And they're dope.
[157] But, yeah, just to support him, man. God damn it, you need an Elon Musk in this world.
[158] You need a wild boy.
[159] You need a dude.
[160] He's got $200 billion who dunks on people.
[161] Dude.
[162] How great was watching him realize in real time how stupid Don Lemon is?
[163] Oh, my God.
[164] Like, you could actually see on his face as he's asking the questions, and he's like, well, if you lower standards, then you're going to get more incompetence.
[165] And Don Lemon's like, so you're saying black people aren't competent?
[166] And he's like, no, that's no. And he slowly starts to realize like, oh, I have 80 IQ points on this guy.
[167] It's not just that.
[168] He said a very important point.
[169] He said that Don Lemon was doing CNN outside of CNN.
[170] And you don't have to do that.
[171] You just don't, nobody wants that anymore.
[172] I say you can't do that.
[173] It's not going to work.
[174] It's not going to work.
[175] But more importantly, you shouldn't do it because it's not good for you.
[176] Just be a human.
[177] Don't be this thing, this journalistic probing bullshit thing that's trying to spin a narrative.
[178] Actually, have a conversation with this human.
[179] You will probably agree with a lot of the things he says.
[180] You will understand his perspective, even if you disagree.
[181] You could see how.
[182] an intelligent person would come to this conclusion.
[183] This is how we can talk to each other now.
[184] We don't have to be confined by these five -minute segments where you have producers and executives that are pushing an agenda that's on a network that's run by a bunch of huge fucking corporations that have a vested interest in swaying the narrative one way or the other.
[185] You don't have to do that anymore.
[186] Yeah.
[187] That's not necessary.
[188] It's bad for people.
[189] It's bad for humanity.
[190] It's a bad way to distribute information.
[191] It is literal propaganda, whether you think it is or not.
[192] Oh, dude, I mean, I've even, I mean, I've done, like, a fair amount of, like, cable news shows.
[193] And, you know, they'll do these things where it's, like, a panel.
[194] And there'll be, like, three people on the panel and the person hosting the show.
[195] And nothing to get, like, there's some people who I really like who I've been on their shows.
[196] But it's like, you're trying to talk about the most important topics and everyone gets 20 seconds.
[197] It's so ridiculous.
[198] I want you to imagine a scenario.
[199] Imagine this scenario where.
[200] COVID breaks out and for whatever reason the mainstream media is saying that we should be very careful about experimental drugs and they start these journalists start bringing up all these stories about different drugs where you could see how they chose very specific tests and that some of their tests some of their studies didn't go well at all and they buried those and they're allowed to do so and about how they've killed thousands and thousands of people with these drugs they knew were bad for them and if the journalists were saying this but the podcasters were all going you need to trust the science everyone should be vaccinated be vaccinated or you're a fucking plague rat imagine imagine if the podcasters were calling the unvaccinated plague rats imagine if the podcasters were encouraging medical misinformation but But my point is, imagine the backlash right now where there's none coming their way.
[201] Yeah.
[202] There's zero.
[203] It's like everyone forgot about it.
[204] It all went away.
[205] Well, I'm debating Chris Cuomo.
[206] We would be in jail.
[207] I'll be debating Chris Cuomo in a few days.
[208] That's the setup.
[209] That'll be fun for that.
[210] We would be in jail.
[211] All these people that are dropping dead, all these people with strokes, all these people with strokes, all these people with the, what was the AstraZeneca thing that?
[212] I sent you today?
[213] What was...
[214] AstraZeneca, they were saying that 11 % of the people had an adverse side effects?
[215] Like, serious.
[216] Searious.
[217] Side effects, yeah.
[218] But even as you lay out this scenario, doesn't it almost in some way be like...
[219] It feels like that makes more sense?
[220] What would make more sense was that comedians, like me and you, would have just been saying the dumb thing and repeating it.
[221] But the person in a suit and tie at CNN, I mean, this dude's a professional newsman.
[222] Like, he knows what's going on.
[223] They would make a very good...
[224] argument for ending podcasts.
[225] Sure.
[226] They'd be a very good argument for prosecuting people, class action lawsuits, all the people that encourage these podcasters with their limited, you don't even have a medical degree and you're on the internet telling people what to do, which is exactly what they did.
[227] They did, even though we were getting everything right.
[228] And now most of them will admit that we were right.
[229] Now when you see Chris Cromachman, Patrick Bet David's spinning it.
[230] Listen, I don't want to go too hard right now because I want them to show up but the fact that the fact that and I will make sure to bring this up to him but the fact that when he what he said and if you listen to it he literally goes as he's explaining that he is on ivermectin he goes now a lot of people are going to say Joe Rogan is right and and then he has a moment where he pauses realizes he can't even come up with anything and he goes all right Joe Rogan was right and then goes on to say exactly what you've been the saying for years now that just the most basic thing that anyone who did five minutes of research could have figured out, which there's no controversy in any of this, that Ivermectin has been given to humans billions of times, that it's a safe drug, and that there were some indications that it might help with COVID.
[231] And that it's not horse dewormer.
[232] And but the fact that that's not attached to like a profuse apology, be like, hey, I'm like if I couldn't imagine a scenario where I had like viciously smeared someone for something, then realized he was 100 % right and I was 100 % wrong.
[233] And when acknowledging that, I wouldn't also go, hey, I'm really sorry about that.
[234] Dude, I think there's a cult -like thinking in mainstream media, whether they know they're being influenced by their sponsors or they're not.
[235] But I don't even think they understand how crazy it is.
[236] When I had Sanjay Gupta on, Sanjay Gupta is a very nice man. I think he's a good man. I really do.
[237] And he's a surgeon.
[238] I mean, he's very busy.
[239] The guy is constantly working.
[240] And he comes in to give medical information and give this, you know, lay things out for CNN.
[241] And I think he thinks he's doing the right thing.
[242] When they asked him to be on the podcast, I don't know what they thought was going to happen.
[243] I don't think they, I think they thought they were right.
[244] I really do.
[245] I think my guess and this is just a guess But I have been in that world a little bit Like I worked for CNN for a year And I've done a lot of shows on Fox News And I've met a lot of people, you know And talk to a lot of people who work at CNN and Fox News And my My guess on it Is that number one He had a book So they want to sell copies of the book And they know you have the biggest show And so they're like oh this will be really good And then I also think this thing There's this thing where they all, yeah, they all really do feel like we're the experts.
[246] And they know they're the experts because, I mean, I just got off the phone with, you know, the chief of staff of the White House.
[247] And I know that, you know, they're very into that kind of like that world where I've talked to everyone with status.
[248] And I think there's hubris involved where they're like, you'll be able to handle whatever a comedian throws at you.
[249] Like, you're a medical expert and he's not.
[250] But then you would just ask really basic questions, which my favorite was when he goes, so are you going to get the vaccine?
[251] and you were like, well, no, I just had COVID, natural immunity.
[252] And you were like, why should I get the vaccine?
[253] And he had no answer.
[254] And this was at a time when they were rolling out vaccine passports.
[255] And he just, the whole line was just, you have to get the vaccine or you're a bad person.
[256] This is a pandemic of the unvaccinated.
[257] And then he just demonstrated on your show that there was this huge category of people, people who have had COVID already, who he had no argument for why they should.
[258] get the thing.
[259] Not only that, there'd already been research.
[260] It showed that natural immunity from previous infection was up to seven times better at preventing new cases.
[261] Which is consistent across viruses.
[262] Like, it's always better to have natural immunity.
[263] The vaccine is always trying to simulate natural immunity.
[264] This is what was so fucked.
[265] Look, I'm no scholar.
[266] I'm not a smart guy.
[267] I'm a normal person.
[268] There's nothing special about my brain.
[269] And I'm seeing all this stuff And I'm like, why isn't anybody speak?
[270] I started to feel like I was going crazy.
[271] Like, am I going crazy for not just letting them shoot me up with this stuff after I got COVID just so I let everybody know I'm on the team?
[272] Right.
[273] Because there's this poll.
[274] There's a fucking societal poll that even me, even me who was like, this is, I know this is ridiculous.
[275] All the people I've talked to, all the research I've done on previous disease.
[276] And my research is reading other people's, I don't know.
[277] It's a bad word.
[278] From all the reading that I've done, Jimmy, Jimmy Dore has a great bit about that.
[279] Oh, it's so funny.
[280] I love it.
[281] Don't do your own research.
[282] You used to be called reading.
[283] Jimmy Dore's awesome.
[284] I love him.
[285] I love Jimmy Dore.
[286] It's a great bet.
[287] In my limited looking at this, I was like, something's wrong here.
[288] There's this mass societal push.
[289] People are, they're trapped in like a mind virus of this one particular solution.
[290] And Dr. Robert Malone laid what that out, what that is, like psychologically what happens, when one thing is offered that seems to be the solution out of this existential crisis is horrible situation that we're in.
[291] And anybody who opposes that opposes getting out and you got to be on that side all in and you've got to believe even in the pharmaceutical drug companies.
[292] And like there's there's this weird, you know, because we're weird.
[293] psychological creatures and you know if you think about like the Milgram experiments and how what people will do if there's a person in a white coat telling them to do it and part of like the culture explain the Milgram thing so people don't know so the experiment was kind of like basically they they come in and they're like okay you're here for some type of scientific experiment I forget exactly how they described to them but they're testing um you know like negative reinforcement within learning or something like that and so they have a guy in a white coat and he tells you every time a guy gets an answer wrong or something like this, you're supposed to push the button and it zaps him.
[294] And they keep pushing the button.
[295] And the person, you can't see him, but they're like behind a wall or something, keeps hollering in pain and it gets worse and worse and worse.
[296] And for the experiment, I think there were a few people who like refused after a while, but the overwhelming majority of people would keep zapping them until they seemingly died.
[297] Yeah.
[298] Because they stopped hollering in pain.
[299] And then they would tell him to do it again.
[300] And they would just keep doing it because there's like an authority figure here and this guy's got a white coat on and they kind of in these corporate media environments and I don't want to discount I'm not discounting the conspiracy aspect to this because I also think there are people within these agencies who are straight up like intelligence assets and are know exactly what they're doing but I think for the most part it's like they create this culture of like well all the wise people who by the way you get to go to a cocktail party with this really like this guy with all this status and He's the leading expert in this, and they all say this.
[301] So are you a respectable person, or are you like an outcast who doesn't agree with this conventional wisdom?
[302] Right.
[303] And people fall in line with that shit, man. Like it's...
[304] They fall in line with that.
[305] They really do.
[306] Even people who really, really should know better.
[307] Yeah, but it's become socially their group, too.
[308] Mm -hmm.
[309] And then you get influenced by the group socially.
[310] Well, this is one of the things I'm really interested to talk to Chris Cuomo about.
[311] And by the way, that's on Patrick Bet David's show on the 35.
[312] But, you know, these guys, I'm kind of fascinated by the people in the corporate press, as much contempt as I have for them, because it's amazing to be working, you're working in this industry where, okay, before COVID, the corporate media had the lowest approval numbers since they've been keeping track of them.
[313] Well, what happened was, trust and media had evaporated.
[314] There was the war with Donald Trump.
[315] That's really what it was.
[316] It's like social media was all.
[317] controlled by the left -wing media, and the left -wing media was all in on this war against Donald Trump.
[318] That's a huge part of it.
[319] I mean, I would say the backdrop is the war on terror, the terror wars, getting all of that wrong, the financial crisis, not seeing that coming and kind of getting that all wrong.
[320] The weapons and mass destruction thing.
[321] Yeah, that's all that stuff, Iraq and Afghanistan being disasters.
[322] So that's kind of in the backdrop, and then you have the worst financial crisis in a hundred years.
[323] So that happened.
[324] But then there's no question, I mean, and particularly not just the war with Donald Trump, but particularly the allegation of a conspiracy with Russia that they said every single day, all day for three years long.
[325] I mean, if you think about it, it's the big, if true, it's the biggest news story in the history of the United States of America.
[326] They're claiming that the current sitting president is guilty of treason.
[327] He was installed by a hostile foreign power who overthrew our elections in order to install him.
[328] It was quite a claim to run with 24 -7.
[329] And then to find out after three years that we have nothing.
[330] Not like there's nothing, no evidence pointing toward this conspiracy even existing.
[331] So their trust had already evaporated.
[332] But then after COVID, they will never recover.
[333] They'll still say there's evidence.
[334] It's like people still want to, they still want to say there's evidence.
[335] They'll still say it.
[336] There's not even evidence that Vladimir Putin interfered in the 2016 election.
[337] The best they have is like there are some bot farms that they can trace to Russian IP addresses, which is like, I'm not a tech guy.
[338] Jamie, you know this better than me, but they say it's the easiest thing to fake is an IP address.
[339] The fact that an IP address traces to Russia is like almost more indicative that someone's trying to frame Russia than it is that Russia was involved.
[340] But even the guys who they got, they didn't imagine if we found out that that's what the case was.
[341] Imagine we found out that the Russian troll farms were like completely insignificant.
[342] And so just like government controlled troll farms?
[343] Well, I mean, look, even if they were all from Vladimir Putin, they were fairly insignificant in terms of like interfering in elections with other countries and how it works.
[344] Well, the most effective strategy was funny memes.
[345] Yeah.
[346] I mean, it really was a very effective strategy because it makes some, when you mock something, it makes it makes it much more easy to dismiss that in terms of whether or not like that's the right choice.
[347] for president if someone can like openly mock some what do you think they openly mock Donald Trump's they even made stuff up like about his hand size yeah remember they were there was this thing that he had little hands dude I was shaking his hands he's got normal fucking hands he's a big guy he's a big guy like he's got a big hand I was like this is the I remember the first time I shook his hands like this is the most ridiculous thing well look that everybody said he has little hands mock mocking people is a powerful tool dude That's a crazy one because you're mocking something that someone can't change.
[348] This is always against, that's against left -wing ideology.
[349] Yeah, not when it serves the purposes.
[350] Right, but that's the thing.
[351] It's just like you're willing to violate the rules for your side to win.
[352] Because progressives have always supposed to be against body shaming.
[353] You're supposed to be kind.
[354] You're supposed to not mock a person's appearance.
[355] Why would you do?
[356] Especially like what they're born with, the hand size and the dick size?
[357] Like, really?
[358] That's okay to mock?
[359] Dude, there was a segment.
[360] I remember watching this.
[361] It was in the 2016 election, and it was on Joy Reid's show on MSNBC, her show at the time, whatever it was.
[362] And she had a whole segment about like how sexist the coverage of Hillary Clinton was.
[363] And it was, you know, every time they'll say she's shrill or she's this.
[364] But if a man was like that, it'd be this.
[365] And she went through all these words that have been used to cover Hillary Clinton and how they're loaded, sexist.
[366] phrases and all this and then at the end of her show she has this segment called who won the week and all the guests on the panel get to pick their own like what happened this week and her and her choice not one of the people on the panel her choice of who won the week was this uh guy in union square who made a naked statue of donald trump with a micro penis and was just like literally like just making a thing like aha he's got a little dick and after Literally, her last segment was on the sexist coverage of Hillary Clinton and then her next pick for who won the week was a guy mocking Trump for having a micro penis that he just made up and made a statue of and she did not even like seem to see the contradiction in any of that.
[367] Like you just said this.
[368] It's beautiful.
[369] It's fun.
[370] It's fun to watch.
[371] I'm glad those people exist.
[372] They're fun.
[373] They're fun to watch because they're so ridiculous and they're so fake.
[374] And it comes off.
[375] It's obvious.
[376] that they're not, they're not really engaged.
[377] They're not really talking about it like a human.
[378] They're just propagandist.
[379] And that's the only way you can do that job.
[380] If you want to do that job, you have to be a propagandist.
[381] Or you have to be some sort of straight face Jake Tapper dude who just kind of like straight faces everything.
[382] But if you want, you know, you want to have the Joy Reid show.
[383] Yeah, you got to go for it.
[384] Joy Reed things.
[385] What was that one, she got in some bizarre argument with some woman recently?
[386] I think it was a transgender issue.
[387] Was that what it was, Jamie?
[388] Where it was like, it went viral because like, I forget what the debate was about, but I remember it being just a preposterous argument the way she was looking at it.
[389] Yeah, she's pretty out there.
[390] I'm not sure what a segment you're referring to, but she's got a whole lot, a whole lot of great hits.
[391] It's not, yeah, it's like you have to be on that network.
[392] Like, you can't exist in the podcast world.
[393] it's not you what is it absurd argument Republicans vote on race night no that's not it no I should have saved it I probably did save it somewhere on my phone I could find it but it's just these it was I believe it was some sort of a trans issue if I'm correct but it's just these fucking people on these shows are trapped you're trapped in this world of five minutes you're trapped in this world of commercials you're trapped in this world of networks and executives you're trapped and if you want to make it you got to be full of shit yeah yeah you gotta be full of shit and it's the gig and it's just like you you point this out all the time but it's so it's just not enough time to have a real conversation it's impossible dude I did a I did a debate for a zero hedge a couple months ago on like the Israel Gaza conflict and there was a two on two debate and it was two hours long and the only thing I could think at the end of it was like that just wasn't nearly enough time it's like two hours and four people you get like a half hour you know what roughly not I don't know exactly if we all spoke even time but roughly a half hour each that's not nearly enough to go through like the history of all this shit and what's going on now and to really make your points and that's a two hour debate they they'll do that same segment on the news in 10 minutes five minutes it's ridiculous it's insane you're just trying to hit whatever the best point you can hit And in the same way that Twitter, I mean, now you could like post longer stuff.
[394] But you know what Twitter, but just because it's short, it just like pushes you into like saying just whatever just can destroy that guy in one sentence.
[395] It's like it pushes you into that.
[396] It's just not.
[397] It's headlines.
[398] Yeah.
[399] That's all you can do.
[400] And when you're dealing with something like this, just the depth of it all is just so perplexing.
[401] You know, when you just lay out, like when Mike Baker's on and he lays out the history of like Palestine and.
[402] in Israel and the conflicts in Egypt and this and that and Hamas and Hezbollah and you lays it all, you're like, Jesus Christ, there's so many layers to this fucking cake.
[403] Yeah.
[404] And most people who are just getting free Palestine from the river to the sea, yay.
[405] You know, you're just getting these like slogans that you yell out and you're seeing, who knows how much of what you're seeing is even real today.
[406] I mean, like with the, with the protest.
[407] The footage, the footage, footage of things, even footage of, like, people fake things now.
[408] And they fake things specifically for propaganda.
[409] And then they hide things.
[410] One of the most terrifying videos I saw recently was one of these really hostages.
[411] She was in the back of a Jeep.
[412] And they drag her out by her hair and she's got blood all over her.
[413] And they had hacked her heels to make sure she couldn't run.
[414] Bro, it's so terrifying.
[415] It's so, and they're all screaming.
[416] God is great, God, Allah, Wakbah.
[417] Yeah, dude, I know, I think there's a thing, I don't know if I could word this exactly right, but I think there's, for some reason, I think comedians have this thing that they're kind of able to go to these places.
[418] Do you remember, you remember when you had Bill Burr on your show, and you played this video, I don't know why I just loved this moment so much, but you played this video of a dude, like ripping something out of a little girl's hand, and it was something like, the guy, like, she had a piece of paper or something, and he was wet, aggressive.
[419] I think it was a protest.
[420] Yeah, it was like a grown man going up to like a little girl and ripping it.
[421] And you, uh, like immediately you were like, oh man, that'd be real bad if that was my kid.
[422] Like I'd be in jail the next day or that.
[423] And then Burr was like, uh, he was like, oh, you went to a dark place there.
[424] And you were like, yeah, I do that a lot.
[425] And he was like, I do that all the time.
[426] It's just something about like comedians for whatever reason do that.
[427] Also parents.
[428] Yeah.
[429] Well, that particularly.
[430] But I just, it's just very easy for me. I don't know why.
[431] This always just came very natural to me. Whereas I think some people, like, I have so much trouble with this.
[432] But it's very easy for me to do this on both sides of this conflict to just go, okay, like, I got two little kids.
[433] I could just start to imagine if somebody did something in one of my little kids and I wasn't able to protect them.
[434] And what I'd be willing to do, like how dark a place I could go to.
[435] And it's just like immediately very easy to me to see how anyone in Israel after October 7th would support fucking flatten Gaza.
[436] and how anyone in Palestine after what's going on the last 50 years there would be like, yeah, I'll sign up for Hamas.
[437] I'll support these guys who are going to do this shit.
[438] Now, I do think, and this is the point that - Both sides.
[439] For sure.
[440] Which is the really, what's the most scary thing about the conflict?
[441] Sure.
[442] Well, that's why it's gotten to such a bad point, right?
[443] Because, like, this is the cycle that keeps going.
[444] But I do think, and this is what Daryl Cooper, who, like, I brought him up last time I was on, he has that fantastic series called A Fear and Loathing and the New Jersey.
[445] Jerusalem.
[446] And he's just totally brilliant.
[447] I love that guy.
[448] But he said, and I think this is right, is that he's like, okay, so you can totally see where if you're on either side there, you'd just be like, I don't care.
[449] I see red.
[450] I want to kill as many of the other side as I can.
[451] But for us, as Americans who are not in that situation, it's kind of incumbent on us to be like, okay, let's, let's try to kind of have a sober analysis of this and not do what so many people seem to do, Which is like almost try to just like egg on the other side and cheer on their side.
[452] And then this total like demonization of either all of the Palestinians like they're all just human garbage or all Jews are whatever evil or something like this in America who are Jewish or complicit.
[453] They're somehow another responsible.
[454] Yeah, which is like totally ridiculous.
[455] You see Jerry Seinfeld, they're hackling at his shows now.
[456] There's like some organized protests.
[457] They came to his show and they were screaming out in the middle of his show.
[458] It's also just like, guys, like, take it.
[459] Look, like, I understand wanting to protest this war.
[460] I got my issues with the young college leftists who are protesting it.
[461] They're not my people, exactly.
[462] But, like, you know, there's an Israeli embassy here.
[463] There's a Congress.
[464] Like, take it at least to the halls of power.
[465] Like, I don't think Jerry Sun, ruining, you know, like, other people's ability to enjoy Seinfeld stand -up show is really going to solve the issue.
[466] Because they're not really thinking well.
[467] No, of course not.
[468] these people that do this they come from wealthy families they're young really idealistic kids and they glue themselves to paintings and they throw fucking soup at masterpieces do you see the one stop oil now person sliced up this fucking painting from the 1800s some priceless painting just pulled out a razor knife and just started slashing this thing up isn't it weird sometimes it feels like they're like each side's Foot soldiers are working for the other side.
[469] You know what I mean?
[470] Like when you do stuff like that, you're almost like, I just want to drill for more oil now.
[471] Well, this is the problem with teams, man. This is a problem with teams if you have a team that anybody can join.
[472] Like, if the Republicans are basically like the Christians.
[473] They'll take anybody.
[474] You know, if you want to be a Jew, you've got to go to work, okay?
[475] You've got to learn a bunch of shit.
[476] My uncle converted.
[477] It's a lot of work.
[478] It's a lot of work.
[479] You got to fucking learn some stuff.
[480] I remember I was doing this episode of Joe Rogan questions everything where I was talking to religious people of a bunch of different religious sex and religious scholars and I was talking to this one guy who was a rabbi and there was a woman there that was converting to Judaism and I got to ask her questions about like how she's doing it and like how hard it is and like it's fucking you it's like getting your pilot slices or something it's a lot of fucking shit you got to remember it's like it's like the way citizenship is we're like like when you're born Jewish like I am or born an American like I am and you're like, oh man, I couldn't have passed that test.
[481] It's a good thing I was born into this shit.
[482] It's a hard fucking test, yeah.
[483] They really, uh, they make your work.
[484] Well, I think the Jewish ones harder than the American one.
[485] Yeah, probably.
[486] But the American one - Well, these days you could just walk in.
[487] But if you don't get citizenship, you're fucked.
[488] If you don't walk in, then if you fly in from Europe, they're like, uh -uh, you flew first class.
[489] Listen, we're going to make it really hard for you to become a citizen.
[490] Dude, which is, by the way, it sums up everything about modern -day America.
[491] Anarchot tyranny.
[492] Yeah.
[493] It's just like, it's like you live, you have the worst of anarchism and tyranny all in one where if you follow the rules, you get totally fucked.
[494] And if you just ignore the rules, you get rewarded.
[495] The worst incentives.
[496] And everybody wants to be on a team.
[497] So if you have a team that's open to anybody, you're going to get the dumbest fucking people that are super enthusiastic about that team.
[498] And they're going to ruin everything.
[499] And they do it with everything.
[500] They do it on the right and they do it on the left.
[501] That's why I say my message is always reject the teams and come be a libertarian and lose with me. Just keep losing.
[502] Come and just enjoy losing.
[503] There's something freeing about knowing you're not going to win.
[504] They're the most reasonable people I talk to politically.
[505] Yeah.
[506] But it's also like, but it's also the system is so deep like you ain't getting in.
[507] Well, that's the real question.
[508] I mean, there's almost like figuring out what the solution is is almost the easy part.
[509] And then actually figuring out how to implement it.
[510] aliens have to land.
[511] They literally have to land.
[512] They literally have to land.
[513] Maybe you're right.
[514] Because we're like on our way to a kingship.
[515] We're on our way.
[516] AI just has to be like, listen, we read all of the books in human history and we figured this out pretty quickly.
[517] That might be the thing that saves us and ruins us at the same time is President AI.
[518] President AI will be logical.
[519] There's a scandal.
[520] And if it's on the blockchain, we'll know exactly if President AI is being influenced by money.
[521] Wouldn't it be great if AI just turns out to be as human as us and is just corrupted and they're like President AI got a blow job in the Oval Office and the power went to his head he just started making AI whores he's got to give a press conference he's like I don't know what I was thinking man I was pretty good until I got in there the ring of power just ruins everyone we are gonna bypass biological needs and we're gonna do it pretty soon it's gonna be real soon it's gonna it's gonna sex regular sex is gonna seem ridiculous in 20 years we're gonna be the like old school guys who are like I still do sex the old -fashioned way with my wife.
[522] I remember when I was in high school, we got hand jobs.
[523] These kids are fucking robots when they're six.
[524] People are going to be like, you have sex with your wife?
[525] That's insane, dude.
[526] How are you doing that?
[527] What if you guys get diseased?
[528] People die from those diseases.
[529] I do think like, I mean I, look, obviously like I'm biased on the, like I have my own opinions on these things.
[530] But I do just think that one of the things that I've found kind amazing, and I've thought this with some of the people who have come on your show since the last time I was here, is the way that people can defend what Israel's doing in Gaza does kind of blow my mind.
[531] It blows my mind, too.
[532] Because it reminds you that it's like, you're like, oh, okay, look, throughout all of human history, right, I'm not saying there's anything unique to Israel, like they're the only ones to ever commit atrocities or that they're not dealing with atrocities committed to them.
[533] Super standard In terms of like world wars In terms of like Dresden Well yeah But that's the thing If you compare it to the worst things That have ever happened In the history of the world But I'm just saying throughout all of human history There's been atrocities And there's been genocides And ethnic cleansing campaigns And slavery and all But at every single point There was someone there There was someone there Who would be like No no listen This is what we have to do Because otherwise this And it's amazing The Mental Gymnastics That people can come up with to justify something that is so clearly on its face just horrific but I think the difference is back then your understanding of it was much more limited yeah you weren't watching videos on it they didn't exist if you saw it on television on the movie theater it'd be a small clip that was played and every and it was played before the film but everyone knew that the reason why we're here is because people went to war and won.
[534] Or you escaped a war -ravaged country and you came to America.
[535] Everyone knew it.
[536] Everyone had an understanding of that.
[537] So when we were at war, people were signing up to go to war.
[538] There was no need to draft them.
[539] By the time Vietnam rolled around, people were starting to get more information.
[540] And they go, hey, I think this is a bullshit war, which is like the first time ever in this short history of our country, where we were like, hey, this one sucks.
[541] It was kind of no defending it It was and then when you find out They were right at the end of it all When you find out many many years later The Gulf of Tonkin was a false flag You're like what?
[542] Which they didn't even need in order to be right But then you find out you're like oh the whole thing was a whole thing And then you go what did you guys do with all that heroin money?
[543] Yeah Where did all that money go?
[544] Because if I was the government And I was willing just imagine if Eisenhower is correct Which is insane how could he be And that there was a real influence of military industrial complex if I was the military industrial complex and I was willing to fucking start a war with North Vietnam for no fucking reason for no reason So 100 % I'm going to kill X amount of people and a bunch of Americans and then you're going to actually make these people these Americans You're going to draft them and force them to go because they don't want to go You don't think I'd sell heroin?
[545] Like that would be your line Do you think Narcotic Hold on How much of these guys making Yeah How much of these fucking dudes making How much?
[546] How many billions This is of what percentage Of the world's heroin supply And then when you see the same trick Played out in Afghanistan When you like My favorite was Geraldo Rivera interviewing the troops Rationalizing Why they had to guard the Poppy fields We have to guard the heroin Yeah.
[547] For the good folks.
[548] Well, I couldn't.
[549] This heroin falls into the wrong hands.
[550] It could be lethal.
[551] There's no way America would sell this heroin.
[552] Yeah.
[553] There's no way.
[554] The, the output of heroin out of Afghanistan, I want to say it was a 96 % increase.
[555] 80 % global supply.
[556] So you're exaggerating, Joe.
[557] No, no, no, no, no. It was responsible for 80%.
[558] Ooh, yeah.
[559] They were responsible for most of the global supply of heroin, and the production went up after we invaded.
[560] So opium poppy, which grows extensively in Afghanistan and southern fields, contains main opium ingredient used to manufacture heroin.
[561] Afghanistan was previously the world's top opium producer, responsible for over 80 % of the global supply and a major source of heroin in Europe and Asia.
[562] So how much did it go?
[563] Oh, plunges by 95%.
[564] When was this?
[565] Under the Taliban.
[566] Now.
[567] Yeah, see, the Taliban doesn't want everybody on heroin.
[568] They want people to get back to work and make Afghanistan great again.
[569] The Taliban just ran on a Trump message.
[570] They fucking kicked out the drug dealers.
[571] That's what happened.
[572] They kicked out the drug dealers.
[573] Dude, there was a giant part of the supply of heroin to the world.
[574] The idea that we didn't, well, we are not interested in that at all.
[575] We just want to push freedom.
[576] Yeah, and I think even people who are.
[577] Even the people, I think, who are lying about this shit, rationalize it in their own head.
[578] Bro, where's that money go?
[579] Yeah, well, that's...
[580] Where'd all that heroin money?
[581] Well, I know you were...
[582] I was listening to the Mike Baker podcast you had on where you were talking about the, like, the money in Ukraine and where it went.
[583] And even he was like, ah, yeah, no, we don't really know where that.
[584] I thought one of the funniest things about that...
[585] I'll tell you where some of it goes.
[586] Well, that's for sure.
[587] I think that's for sure.
[588] The Taliban, it's not our tax dollars have 100 % paid for some...
[589] cocaine.
[590] Oh, certainly.
[591] The Taliban's successful opium ban is bad for Afghans and the world.
[592] The ban is not a counter -narcotics victory and we'll have negative economic and humanitarian consequences potentially leading to a refugee crisis.
[593] Oh, unlike us leaving in the middle of nowhere allowing the Taliban to kill all the people we worked with.
[594] But you get my point about how humans can rationalize anything?
[595] They can just come up with...
[596] Propaganda.
[597] That's propaganda.
[598] Of course.
[599] That's propaganda.
[600] Yes, that's That's true.
[601] That's also true.
[602] But even people who are like, I mean, like, look, I thought, the only way you could say that what that got made sense is if you're advocating that heroin should be legal.
[603] Yes.
[604] If you're advocating that heroin should be legal and this is your full perspective.
[605] Okay, now I'll accept it.
[606] But if you really think that heroin is a scourge and if you really do appreciate that 100 ,000 people died last year of opioid overdoses, 100 ,000, it's a real fucking crisis.
[607] Yeah.
[608] If there was a disease killing 100 ,000 people, we would freak the fuck out.
[609] Well, look, I mean, I do think there's a strong argument for legalization, but there's also a difference between that and the government kind of like sponsoring the trade of it.
[610] 90 % of heroin globally and more than 95 % of the European supply.
[611] More land is used for opium in Afghanistan that is used for coca cultivation Latin America.
[612] bro do you don't think that has something to do with it is that am i silly no i think it's insane to ignore that i mean like come on money yeah well i was going to say round ron paul i thought this was so funny it was during during one of the rounds of uh of aid to ukraine and rand paul stood up and said look we uh we don't know where any of this money is going if we're going to send them this money can we at least have an inspector general so that we itemize like where all the money is going and it failed the vote failed like even in the senate that's communist talk yeah like even in the senate they were like what what are you talking about communist talk we're gonna know where our money's going nah that's lame yeah we just send it over there just send them that shit send them everything they need and more and then do you have one of their flags you should wave it around yeah and we'll we'll provide it around in congress we'll provide Give you flags.
[613] They're all uniform, same size.
[614] It's not like people bought them from different vendors.
[615] No, they all got them from the same.
[616] They got a little box of them.
[617] Hey, make sure you guys grab your flags.
[618] It's fucking bonkers.
[619] It's also just so, the thing that's so wild to me is that after, and I know I've talked about this, I'm sure, on previous episodes, but just after 20 years of the terror wars and what a disaster those were.
[620] And to the point that everyone, John McCain wrote in his memoir that the war in Iraq was a mistake.
[621] That's how universally agreed upon it is.
[622] Which is hilarious.
[623] Even John McCain would acknowledge we got that one wrong.
[624] And it's not like anyone else is defending any of the other terror wars at this point.
[625] But then as soon as we kind of get out of them, we're not even fully out, but we're mostly out.
[626] We just get into these proxy wars in Ukraine and now in Israel that are clearly wars of choice for America.
[627] We don't have to be involved in these.
[628] We're just still deciding to continue this war machine going.
[629] These last two are really important.
[630] When they get done, we're done.
[631] Yeah, yeah, yeah, that's right.
[632] These last two.
[633] This is it.
[634] This is it.
[635] Right.
[636] You know, it's, uh, anyway, man, I do, I will say that I think, um, a lot of, a lot of the defense of the, the war in Gaza, which I kind of feel we are even calling a war, because it's not, it doesn't exactly feel like that's what the term should be.
[637] Well, it's like the Bill Hicks joke.
[638] It's only a war when two armies are fighting.
[639] Well, right.
[640] Remember that joke?
[641] Yeah, vaguely.
[642] About Iraq.
[643] They said, oh, Bill, Iraq is the fourth largest army.
[644] He goes, yeah, but after number three, there's a big drop off.
[645] He goes, the Salvation Army's number five.
[646] That's a great bit.
[647] It's a great bit.
[648] Well, I mean, but look, but in the case of Gaza, it's not even like, there's not even a government.
[649] I mean, they're a stateless people who have been captive by the Israelis since 1967.
[650] And then they're captive politically in their own country by Hamas.
[651] Right.
[652] And then Hamas does do what this accusation is that they have their bases under schools and hospitals.
[653] They actually do do that.
[654] Yeah, I think it's certainly exaggerated at times by the Israelis, but there is no question that they are, look, they're in this.
[655] Gaza is, dude, it's five miles wide.
[656] I know, it's great.
[657] You know, like, you could jog from one side to the other without taking a break.
[658] It's literally way closer, way smaller than here to my club.
[659] Yeah.
[660] Now imagine that.
[661] Imagine.
[662] Imagine, like an extra 10 miles.
[663] Yeah.
[664] That small tract of land in the last five miles is what's getting the fuck blown out of it.
[665] It is, it's, it's, I think, 25 by five.
[666] So it's like a marathon by a jog.
[667] You know what I mean?
[668] Like, that's how, that's Gaza.
[669] It's so little.
[670] No, look, so I'm just saying part of this, and this isn't, I'm not like making any excuses.
[671] I mean, there's no question they have, there have been incidents of Hamas, like embedding themselves in civilian, like, locations.
[672] But also, it's not as if they have a military or a government.
[673] It's not as if there's going to be two armies that meet themselves on the battlefield here.
[674] There is one is Hamas is essentially a gang in an Israeli prison that like rose up as the toughest gang there.
[675] And yeah, in such a densely populated area, that's the way, as they call it, asymmetric warfare is going to work.
[676] I do, look, man, because I do, I took issue with like a few things that some the guests you've had on recently have said like um i know i think all of this a lot of times it comes down to framing like how you want to look at an issue and particularly the people who are way behind israel on this i feel like always rely on this very strange framing so they don't have to confront exactly what's going on and they can kind of look at it in more of an abstract removed way like when you had a i'm sorry if i'm saying his name wrong but you uh gad gad gad's how do you say He's last name?
[677] Saad.
[678] I've read his stuff before, but I don't, I always butcher names.
[679] But so one of the things he said, which I know is, I've heard this in every debate I've done on the topic so far, but he said the thing, same thing Dennis Prager said to me when we debated, was he was like, well, look, if Israel laid down all their arms, there'd be a genocide.
[680] If Hamas laid down all their arms, there'd be peace.
[681] And forget the fact that I will say, I don't agree with the second part of that.
[682] I don't think that's clear at all.
[683] I think if Hamas laid down all their arms, which essentially, there's.
[684] Palestinians are as close to have laid down all their arms as could be.
[685] Isn't everyone looking at it too binary?
[686] Like, well, yeah.
[687] Even if you're, even if you are supporting the Israelis, even if you're from that position, you have to acknowledge the attacks on AIDS workers.
[688] Like it seems to be there's a bunch of targeted attacks on people bringing in food, like Jose Andres' people.
[689] Yeah.
[690] And then there's been more of those.
[691] Like there's, there's all these, I think, how many documented.
[692] attacks are there on aid supply.
[693] Because it's a big number.
[694] There's been several, I know, for sure.
[695] I think it's a big number.
[696] Yeah, yeah, yeah.
[697] No, I mean, it's been hard.
[698] It's creepy.
[699] Well, I remember when you had, um...
[700] Anyway, just the point I was making about Gads thing is that it's also this like, I just hate when people retreat to almost these hypotheticals.
[701] It reminds me of Sam Harris's argument about why you were really wrong with the, uh, at least eight times.
[702] Eight times.
[703] That's a lot.
[704] Israeli forces have attacked humanitarian aid convoys and buildings in the Gaza Strip at least eight times since October, despite being given coordinates to ensure their protection.
[705] Human Rights Watch has set in a new report.
[706] So they're targeting these people.
[707] So you've got some members of the Israeli military that don't give a fuck and they want to stop these people from getting food.
[708] And well, look, and this has kind of been like egged on.
[709] Look, there'll be so much like scrutiny over like some college.
[710] kids chanting from the river to the sea.
[711] And look, but for the record, if I was in charge of those protests, I'd say stop chanting that because even if you don't mean it to mean the Jews, even if you don't mean it that way, which some people will argue they don't, and that's fine, maybe that's not what you mean.
[712] Maybe you mean is from the river to the sea, everyone will be free and whatever.
[713] Maybe that's how you mean it.
[714] But it's also the same thing, Hamas chants, and they clearly mean something else when they say that.
[715] So, like, maybe just use a different term.
[716] Right.
[717] You can't use a swastika for its old time of use.
[718] Right.
[719] It's like if nothing else, it's a bad idea.
[720] However, for all the scrutiny, they'll be over what these 20 -year -olds are hollering at Columbia, when Benjamin Netanyahu is saying they're Amalek as you're going into this area, which, you know, the story from the Bible is that you're supposed to kill the women and the children.
[721] And the story is that they fucked up by not killing all the women and the children.
[722] And then, like, they came back.
[723] And like, now, even if you could argue, he doesn't mean it that way.
[724] It's like, okay, but you're saying that.
[725] Amalek the story from the Bible?
[726] The story is they were like a tribe who was like an evil tribe and you had to kill all of them, kill the women and the children.
[727] And that's the specific, like, lesson of that story is that you're supposed to kill the women and the children.
[728] And then you conduct a campaign like this.
[729] This is, by the way, this is what was in the South Africa case that they brought to the UN.
[730] And that they, you know, the ICJ basically said that Israel is plausibly committing a genocide.
[731] And they didn't exactly, you know, they haven't yet determined that it is or is.
[732] but they said it's plausible.
[733] But anyway, to my point that I'm making about what Sad was saying is that it reminds me a Sam Harris, where he sits here and he goes, he goes, well, imagine this hypothetical.
[734] Imagine COVID was 100 times as deadly and the vaccine was perfect against stopping transmission.
[735] And there were no vaccine injuries.
[736] Well, hey, now you don't look so good anymore, do you, Joe Rogan?
[737] No, he wasn't saying, he wasn't saying that.
[738] He was saying you could, you could, when someone's saying you could never mandate.
[739] a vaccine or argue for a mandate and he was saying if there was a vaccine you could he was making an intellectual argument he's correct that you could argue that if there was a vaccine that had zero side effects and was a hundred percent effective and if everybody took it the disease stops you could make that argument well what he was saying was that then how would we feel but he goes then how would we feel about what joe rogan is saying and what rfk is saying when they were you know what i mean but the point is that point is that thing That's not the hypothetical.
[740] Not only that, it doesn't exist in nature.
[741] Right, right.
[742] There's no vaccines that are 100 % safe with no side effects.
[743] None of them.
[744] I'm just saying I'm not against engaging in a thought experiment to think about like what that scenario would look like.
[745] But at the same time, you're like, it does seem like that's serving in this case as a distraction from the real world scenario that's going on here.
[746] So like if you're going to say if Israel, like, yes, I would not recommend Israel lay down all of their arms, completely disarm themselves, and then open up the wall to Gaza and allow Hamas to come in.
[747] But that's not on the table.
[748] That's never going to happen.
[749] So, like, even thinking about that as a thought experiment doesn't really prove that much.
[750] What's actually going on here is, like, what Israel is doing to Gaza.
[751] And, you know, right.
[752] But if you could flip it around, the opposite would be true.
[753] Like, if Hamas did lay down all their weapons.
[754] And if they did completely give up, you're going to have some Israeli soldiers that do not give a fuck that still want to shoot them.
[755] But for the most part, if there was nothing, if they completely gave up, which is also not going to happen.
[756] But if that did happen, you couldn't see a situation where Israel just continues bombing.
[757] Maybe not.
[758] But then what do they go to?
[759] Just being subjugated by the Israel, back to the status quo, of just being a stateless people of permanent, permanent refugees with no. no natural rights whatsoever, no ability to trade with the world, no ability to come and leave, you can't have an airport, you can't have a seaport, you can't go out fishing past where some IDF guy decides you're not allowed to.
[760] So, like, yeah, if Hamas laid down all their arms, perhaps Israel would stop the bombing campaign.
[761] But they would just continue subjugation forever, which has been the Lakud Party official policy since they were created by the terrorist Monacham Began.
[762] Like, literally since this party, that is the ruling party in Israel, was Their goal has been that the Palestinian people never get their own state.
[763] They never get their own freedom.
[764] And that's been, and that's resulted in this.
[765] And if you don't give them their own, there's no way you can justify it.
[766] No way you can justify that a whole entire group of people never get to be a country.
[767] That they don't get the rights of the Israelis.
[768] They don't get the rights of a sovereign country.
[769] They're trapped.
[770] Nothing.
[771] Literally no rights whatsoever.
[772] That's kind of crazy.
[773] That's being done by Israel, if you really think about it.
[774] It's kind of crazy.
[775] Well, in some way, in a way it is, and then in another way, it's kind of not.
[776] It's kind of like there's this weird, you know, hurt people, hurt people type thing.
[777] Like, when you kind of suffer this trauma, and we're speaking collectively here, so it's not exactly the same as an individual, but like you suffer this trauma, and then you use that to justify doing whatever the hell you got to do so that you never suffer that trauma again, and then you weirdly end up kind of like inflicting something on another group of people.
[778] and kind of in a weird way holding them responsible for the trauma you suffered, even though they really, really hadn't very little, nothing to do with the actual trauma.
[779] It's really an ancient kind of conflict.
[780] The Israel -Palestine is very, it's very ancient in the fact that it's like the hate between them is so strong and they're right next door to each other, which is how people used to rock it back in the day.
[781] You know, I mean, that was the fear of neighboring tribes.
[782] that people from the other side are going to come over and rape the women and children and kill your babies and slaughter the men and not like an irrational fear like a fear based on it this really happens you know what I mean and it's happening in Israel I mean that's what's crazy the other thing though is that and that's all true but the other thing is that you know there are these examples right like where there's Ireland and England and they're right next to each other and like things are just cool now and France and Germany are right next to each other and they're just cool now and but Ireland and northern Ireland and we're at war with each other forever.
[783] No, but I'm just making the point that, and then it's over, and now they're not at war anymore.
[784] And like, Egypt, Egypt went to war with Israel four times between the, it was in 1948, 56, 67, and 72 or 73?
[785] Did I say that wrong.
[786] Was Ireland at war with Northern Ireland?
[787] Yeah, yeah, yeah, because they were...
[788] Southern Ireland was a war.
[789] Well, they were the British controlled, like the...
[790] But it was really England.
[791] Yes, yeah, yeah, yeah.
[792] It was, by proxy, England basically, dominating the Irish.
[793] And then by the way, the Irish turned to terrorism when they were being dominated by the English.
[794] Shocker.
[795] And yeah, which is another thing that people, another real interesting.
[796] You have to do it.
[797] It's the only way to go to war.
[798] If you don't have a, if you have a smaller army and they have all the money, you've got to figure out a way to get them.
[799] Well, here's the craziest part of this, right?
[800] Is that, and I thought, we talked a bunch about the history of this last time I was on, but I don't think I mentioned this.
[801] Maybe I did.
[802] But the craziest part of all of it is that the Israelis, or I shouldn't say the Israelis, the Israelis five seconds before they became Israelis, like right before the creation of the state of Israel, they embraced terrorism.
[803] And by the way, these terrorists, who are the leaders of these terrorist organizations, like Manakam Began and Isak Shamir, they went on to be prime ministers of Israel, but they were terrorists.
[804] And I'm not like, I don't mean this is a pejorative, like self -described terror.
[805] Like, they embraced terrorism.
[806] What was their organization?
[807] called.
[808] Monachim Begans was the Ergun.
[809] That was his militia.
[810] And then there was Lehigh or the Stern Gang.
[811] And then there was the Haganah, who was like the biggest one.
[812] And they were not quite as terroristic, but they also were involved in a bunch of it.
[813] And their justification for it was to drive out the occupying force, which was the British at the time.
[814] After World War II, the Zionists who were in Palestine.
[815] were like had enough of the British occupying the area and they were very angry because they had limited Jewish migration during the run up to the Holocaust so they had a real beef with the British at this point even though the British had kind of like allowed them to have a chance to establish a Jewish homeland there but so they embraced terrorism to drive them out you can go look up the King David Hotel killed a whole bunch of innocent people including Jews in the hotel because they just wanted to use terrorism to drive out an occupying force and that they actually introduced terrorism into that region and many of the same tactics that the Palestinians went on to embrace were stuff that they picked up from the Jewish terrorists at that time.
[816] But then the same Israelis will turn around and be like, well, I don't know why these Palestinians have embraced terrorism.
[817] And like they're telling you it's for the same reason.
[818] It's to drive out an occupying force.
[819] Now, of course, the major difference there is that Israelis came to stay, whereas the British were they, where they They're, you know, they had their, this was a satellite, they had their home country back in Europe, and they could be driven out.
[820] It's a whole different thing to try to drive someone out who's like, no, we're setting up our homes here.
[821] But, and there's more of us.
[822] Yeah, well, not that meant, I mean, there's, there's Palestinians and Israelis is pretty close if you count all of them.
[823] Well, you're, you're also backed by America.
[824] Well, that's, that's the major difference.
[825] Well, so that's, but that's basically my essential argument is that America shouldn't be playing the, role.
[826] And this is, this is being argued out now.
[827] Yeah.
[828] You know, this is, this is a big point of contention now politically, right?
[829] Because the Biden administration is not giving the same amount of support to Israel that it was.
[830] They've been giving, basically, I mean, what's really going on is that Joe Biden, this is a disaster politically for Joe Biden and something like, looking at the polls recently, 50 % of his base.
[831] I think you and I have different Twitter followers.
[832] because I mean my Twitter feed seems like he's doing a great job really does yeah he's doing excellent he's totally got it down there's a lot of people that are arguing that did I said I sent you I sent you his latest a clip from his speech that new Biden just dropped and it's the newest the newest where he goes and by the it's not he meant to say I think financial crash but he said pandemic but he said during the pandemic when he was vice president Barack Obama sent him to Detroit and you're just like Dude, what?
[833] Why did he say it's a Detroit?
[834] Why would they send you to Detroit to deal with COVID?
[835] No, I saw someone saying that perhaps it was the H1N1 pandemic, which did happen during the Biden administration or during the Obama administration when he was vice president?
[836] I don't think.
[837] I don't think.
[838] I think he was talking about.
[839] He would have probably said a previous pandemic.
[840] Yeah.
[841] The point is just that he does it so much.
[842] Remember back in 2009, he's out of his fucking mind.
[843] If it was occasional, people would let this stuff go.
[844] Yeah.
[845] But anyway, just to the, look, I also thought, because some of these guys, by the way, you've had on your show, like, I like them.
[846] I'm not even like, you know, like Coleman Hughes.
[847] I don't know him personally, but I like him.
[848] And he seems really smart.
[849] And I haven't read his book, but I bet I would love it.
[850] Well, you two together would be a fascinating conversation just about the Israel -Palestine conference.
[851] Yeah.
[852] Well, I would love to have a conversation.
[853] Because I think he's a good faith guy.
[854] And I think he is.
[855] And he's very smart.
[856] But he also kind of, you know, there were two things that kind of rubbed me the wrong way.
[857] When he was on the show.
[858] Number one was that he started by kind of getting into this argument about which I see a lot of people who are supporting this conflict doing the argument about like, okay, well, here are the number of total civilians dead and here are the number of Hamas militants dead.
[859] And let's look at that ratio and then is that ratio that far off from what you find in a typical war?
[860] And there's a few problems with this.
[861] Number one, the numbers are totally unreliable.
[862] And so you're having this conversation.
[863] Yes, on both sides.
[864] I mean, both sides are totally incentivized to exaggerate the numbers.
[865] And also in the fog of war, it's very hard to keep up with these numbers.
[866] We never really know the numbers of dead in war until like years later when the excess mortality is calculated.
[867] And then you get a better idea of what was really going on there.
[868] The Israeli government talking about the number of Hamas militants they've killed seems to be them just pulling numbers out of their ass.
[869] Like they drop these bombs.
[870] They don't know how many who got who and who was a part of them.
[871] And checking dog tags?
[872] Yeah, they're not.
[873] You know what I mean?
[874] And but anyway, but even that, I just, even if the numbers were right, it's like, look, dude, if you look at the population density and you just look at the number of bombs that Israel has dropped and you just see a lot of the footage that we've seen and you just listen to stories that doctors are telling.
[875] I literally just saw an interview a couple weeks ago with a doctor who just got back from Gaza and he was talking about how they have a major anesthesia shortage over there.
[876] So just think about the implications.
[877] of that, like what that means.
[878] Because they're operating on kids without anesthesia.
[879] You know what I mean?
[880] It's just, so the point is that if you're talking about, okay, well, this many Hamas people are dying compared to this many innocent babies are dying, that's not the question.
[881] Okay, like when you're inflicting this level of human suffering on people, the question for any decent civilized person is, is this absolutely necessary?
[882] Is this the only way to do it?
[883] Is there any other option besides doing this?
[884] And as soon as you frame the question that way, you realize that, oh, yeah, there actually is.
[885] And that it's not true that Israel, there will just be October 7th after October 7th if Israel stops doing this.
[886] The fact is that, of course, Netanyahu's never allowed a real investigation into October 7th to happen.
[887] But everybody pretty much concludes that Israel dropped the ball in a massive way, in a massive way that their security was just in shambles.
[888] And all they really needed to do was not rely so much on these, you know, you know, machine gun robots and have actual soldiers at the border.
[889] They could easily just stop this right now.
[890] Well, wasn't there an issue of protests where the soldiers were allocated towards?
[891] Yes.
[892] They, yes.
[893] Basically, they had, so as a, I think as a result of the protests against Netanyahu, he had started to ally with some even further right wing groups than he normally would have.
[894] And to appease them, he was pulling soldiers off of the Gaza border and putting them over.
[895] toward the West Bank, which is what the religious Jews on the right really care about.
[896] And yes, they basically got caught with their pants down.
[897] But I'm just saying they could just stop doing this.
[898] It's not they all die or they keep doing this.
[899] They could stop.
[900] And Israel can still protect itself.
[901] In fact, I'd argue their security would be enhanced if they stopped doing this.
[902] But the other thing, which you brought up to Coleman Hughes, was that you mentioned to him, which you said what about the the didn't Israel like prop up Hamas wasn't that part of their strategy for a while and he I'll give him the benefit of the doubt and maybe he just doesn't know about that detail of this as much because I if not he was kind of being dishonest but he but maybe he just wasn't familiar with all of this stuff but he kind of went you said that and then he kind I dismissed it by saying, well, there's a quote that's attributed to Netanyahu, but it wasn't on videotape.
[903] So, like, we don't, essentially being like, we don't really know if Netanyahu said this or not.
[904] And then just kind of moved on to the conversation away from that.
[905] But I find this, I've found this in all of my debates that I've done on this, and I've done like eight debates on this since the war broke out.
[906] Everybody on the pro -Israeli side does not want to grapple with that point because it really is like a, it's a narrative shattering point once you acknowledge it.
[907] But so...
[908] Right, but if it isn't on videotape, he has a point as well.
[909] Well, here, well, let me...
[910] Okay, so here's this deal, right?
[911] So the quote that he's referring to was a quote by Benjamin Netanyahu.
[912] It was something along the lines of anybody who wants to thwart the Palestinians having their own state needs to support propping up Hamas, bolstering Hamas, transferring money to them to maintain...
[913] Right, so there was a quote like this.
[914] So Hamas maintains power.
[915] Right.
[916] So Hamas...
[917] maintains power so that they never, we never have to give them a state because we can look to the international community.
[918] We can look to liberal Jews in Israel and say, look, we have no partner for peace.
[919] They're a crazy terrorist group.
[920] So we never have to make a deal.
[921] We don't have to fulfill our promise that we would give the - How was this attributed to him?
[922] So basically, this quote particularly, okay, this was at a closed -door meeting with the Lakud party.
[923] So this is Benjamin Netanyahu's political party, his far -right party that's in power right now in Israel.
[924] So it's true that this was a closed -door meeting and that it's not on tape.
[925] So what happened is, as far as I could tell, the first person who reported this, I believe, was a lady who's a reporter for the Jerusalem Post.
[926] And then it's been running a bunch of other newspapers since then.
[927] So basically what happened is an eyewitness who was there at the meeting.
[928] So another Lakud Party member in Benjamin Netanyahu's political party came and told her that he said this.
[929] And then she went and checked with somebody else who was there.
[930] and he also confirmed that, like, yes, Benjamin Anya who said this.
[931] And then a third person, who was also at the meeting, came out and wrote about it in his book or wrote about it in another newspaper article or something like that.
[932] So you had three eyewitnesses from within his own political party who confirmed that he said this.
[933] Now, take that for what it's worth.
[934] I think that's reasonably strong, that three eyewitnesses all in his political party said.
[935] As long as they were trying to get rid of him.
[936] Because you can get more than three people to say that Donald Trump was in collusion with Russia.
[937] Sure.
[938] So even say if you don't trust them, Coleman acted as if that's what the entire case is built off of, which is just not true at all.
[939] It's not just this one Benjamin Netanyahu quote.
[940] It's dozens and dozens of quotes from Israeli leaders all throughout the political spectrum.
[941] There's been reporting on this done by almost every major Israeli newspaper, Horat's Times of Israel.
[942] The Times of Israel on October 8th had a piece by Tal Schneider, which was how, Ben Laden, excuse me, how Netanyahu's support for Hamas just blew up in his face.
[943] It was the next day.
[944] And because even critics like Ehud Barak, who was the former prime minister, he's a labor party.
[945] He's a critic of Benjamin Netanyahu.
[946] So he was a critic of this plan to prop up Hamas.
[947] But it's totally uncontroversial that this was their plan.
[948] The New York Times just ran a piece, I think it was late last year, it might have been early this year, where they talked about how, Two weeks before October 7th, Benjamin Netanyahu sent the head of the Mossad to Qatar because funds going into Hamas had slowed down and he sent them in there to make sure the funds continued.
[949] It's the case for this is overwhelming.
[950] It's not like relying on one, yeah, here you go.
[951] Yeah, for years the Qatari government had been, am I saying that right?
[952] Is that I say it?
[953] Katari, I think, is.
[954] Yeah, Qatari government.
[955] had been sending millions of dollars a month to Gaza's trip.
[956] Money that helped prop up the Hamas government there.
[957] Prime Minister Benjamin Nahu, Netanyahu of Israel, not only tolerated those payments, he had encouraged them.
[958] According to times, Israeli intelligence agents, rather, travel to Gaza with a Qadari official carrying suitcases filled with cash.
[959] Suitcases, like a mafia movie, to disperse money.
[960] Retired Israeli general Shlomo, Brahms, described the logic of Netanyahu.
[961] Netanyahu's position.
[962] One effective way to present a two -state solution is to divide.
[963] Prevent.
[964] Prevent.
[965] Prevent a two -state solution is to divide between the Gaza's trip and the West Bank.
[966] If the extremist Hamas ruled Gaza, then the Palestinian Authority, a compromise, Comprador?
[967] Comprador.
[968] Comparador government, with a tenuous hold on the West Bank, would be further weakened.
[969] This, according to Brahm, would allow Netanyahu to say, I have no partner.
[970] And so that's, okay, so that's essentially the point there, right?
[971] So that's a strategy.
[972] That he can say, I have no partner for peace, which is the Israeli line that they like to use.
[973] So basically, okay, in 1979, the Egyptians and the Israelis met at Camp David, and that's when they worked out their peace.
[974] Now, their peace also just involved, basically, that the U .S. would pay them both off.
[975] We'd give them both $3 billion a year in perpetuity if they stopped going to war with each other, basically.
[976] And part of that was that Israel promised that they would eventually give the Palestinians a state.
[977] Like, it was recognized by D .C. at the time, this Jimmy Carter, that, like, you got to give them a state because otherwise this fighting is going to continue on and on and on forever.
[978] So they promised that.
[979] Eventually, they would give it to them.
[980] This is the Yasser Arafat days.
[981] This is before Yasser Arafat was, like, the guy.
[982] But he was alive.
[983] But then in the 80s, Yasser Arafat basically rejected terrorism.
[984] He had been involved in terrorism before that.
[985] He rejected terrorism, and he recognized Israel, I think it was in 1988.
[986] He recognized Israel's right to exist under 1967 borders.
[987] So basically, Israel has the right to exist, but we have the right to Gaza and the West Bank.
[988] The ultimate of compromises from the Palestinian perspective, because a lot of their more hardcore guys are like, Like, no, all of this was ours.
[989] Right.
[990] We shouldn't have lost any of it.
[991] And now, even the original U .S. partition plan, which was rejected by the Arabs, for, you know, fairly good reasons, they rejected it because it gave 55 % to the Jews and only 46 % to the Jews and only 44 % to the Palestinians.
[992] And they were like, but we're like 90 % of the population here, like, or 90 % of the landowners here or whatever.
[993] And it's like, this doesn't, this isn't fair.
[994] But now at this point, they're talking about 78 % versus 22%.
[995] So they're accepting 22%.
[996] And so that's Yasser Arafat in the late 80s.
[997] And then this is what set the stage for the Oslo Accords in the early 90s.
[998] And this is like famously when Bill Clinton has Yitzhak Rabin and Yasser Arafat over and they shake hands and they sign these deals.
[999] And the promise again from Israel was that we're starting the peace process to eventually give the Palestinian their state.
[1000] This is the process.
[1001] And there were steps along this process.
[1002] Okay.
[1003] Now, in 1996, Benjamin Netanyahu becomes prime minister.
[1004] Now, the same year in 1996, there was, there's this letter.
[1005] You can find this on the internet.
[1006] It's called a clean break, a new strategy for securing the realm.
[1007] And it was written by Richard Pearl and David Wormser and a couple other people.
[1008] Of course, Richard Pearl and David Wormser both went on to be.
[1009] very influential neo -conservatives in the George W. Bush administration.
[1010] So they write this letter, not to President Bill Clinton and not to Bob Dole, who was running for president on the Republican ticket that year.
[1011] They write this letter to Benjamin Netanyahu, the new prime minister of Israel.
[1012] And basically, if you read it, what they say is that they're like, look, look, you guys are all caught up in this peace process thing where you're talking about giving the Palestinians land.
[1013] We need a clean break from that strategy.
[1014] And we're going to have a whole new strategy.
[1015] And what it's going to involve is you making agreements with the broader Arab world so that you don't have to make this agreement with the Palestinians.
[1016] You see, the old way of thinking was always that Israel will never be able to make peace with the broader Muslim world because they're furious about what you're doing in the Palestinians.
[1017] But the clean break strategy was like, no, no, no, you're going to embark on what ultimately became the Netanyahu doctrine that will make it deals with the rest.
[1018] of the Arab world, so we don't have to give up this land.
[1019] And you know what they recommended?
[1020] These two neoconservatives in 1996, and I bet you'll never guess this, Joe, regime change in Iraq for the security of Israel.
[1021] That was in 1996, and these people got in George W. Bush's government.
[1022] And after 9 -11, those same people decided that they believed that Saddam Hussein had weapons of mass destruction and that he was involved in 9 -11.
[1023] Yeah.
[1024] So there it is.
[1025] Israel can shape its strategic environment and cooperation with Turkey and Jordan by weakening, containing, and even rolling back Syria.
[1026] This effort can focus on removing Saddam Hussein from power in Iraq, an important Israeli strategic objective in its own right as a means of foiling Syria's regional ambitions.
[1027] And here's where it gets crazy.
[1028] How much of a job, what a great job the Mossad did in compromising people, by the way.
[1029] I mean, how much of an effect did that have in everything?
[1030] You know, you can go full Eddie Bravo and think everything that's happening is because of Epstein's Island.
[1031] And I used to dismiss that a lot more easy than I do now.
[1032] Maybe not everything.
[1033] A lot.
[1034] But certainly some things.
[1035] Well, look, you will see this.
[1036] You will see this.
[1037] And I'm not saying that Epstein is the sole reason for this type of stuff.
[1038] There's several different reasons.
[1039] But you see this all over the political sphere.
[1040] and especially amongst like conservative commentators where as soon as Israel's mentioned whatever their principles were that they were just rolling with are like gone.
[1041] Yeah.
[1042] Like it's a totally different thing and I get that I get there's a reason for that too.
[1043] Of course like what Jewish people have been through in the 20th century in the 19th and 18th century like that that plays a part in that too but there's no question that Look, it's not just, it's not just Epstein.
[1044] It's also, and I highly recommend people read, John Mearsheimer has a great book called The Israeli Lobby.
[1045] There's also this lobby APEC, which is a very, very powerful lobby.
[1046] The truth is that every U .S. president, since, with perhaps the exception of Trump, I'm actually not sure about that, but every U .S. president since Jimmy Carter, I know for sure, excluding Trump, every one of them, wanted a two -state solution.
[1047] every single one of them.
[1048] None of them were able to get it done.
[1049] Even though we bankroll Israel.
[1050] You'd think it'd be fairly easy for us to put pressure on the country that's relying on us.
[1051] Like, okay, we'll keep supporting you, but you got to do this.
[1052] Nope.
[1053] Even when they go over and say, we want to do this, they're not able to do that.
[1054] And part of that is because of the lobby.
[1055] Part of that is because there's like tens of millions of evangelical Christians in this country who believe that the Jews have to control.
[1056] Israel like in some religious view that Jesus can't come back unless the Jews control them or something like that I don't exactly understand it they go there on tour they have yeah tours they go there well and they also and the Israeli government's well aware of that and they're well aware of how much they benefit from that so they do everything they can to facilitate that that belief white dudes are golf shirts yeah that's right they're a big force they're a really big block in this country there's not like a few dozen of them like they're willing to throw some real money yes bringing Jesus back yes they're very uh That's a very big deal to them.
[1057] But look, like, there's all of these U .S. presidents, they've wanted an outcome that they're unable to get.
[1058] And you can look, there's this one video of Benjamin Netanyahu where he doesn't know he's being recorded and he's speaking openly about this.
[1059] And it's pretty, so he's, he openly starts bragging about how he basically blew up the peace process and how he like, he basically.
[1060] Is it recording of this?
[1061] Oh, yeah.
[1062] I mean, it's in Hebrew, but there's, it's translated.
[1063] And it's legit.
[1064] It's been translated by like a whole bunch of different people.
[1065] And he's bragging about how he put all of these poison pills into the peace agreement.
[1066] Like he was like, oh, yeah, sure.
[1067] We'll, we'll grant.
[1068] I agreed to grant them a state, but only after it was determined that we could, like, Israel could control, like, military, like important military areas.
[1069] And then he was like, I also snuck it in that only Israel gets to define what the military important areas are.
[1070] And I decided that a third of the West Bank is that.
[1071] And like, he's bragging about, and he's bragging about how he tricked Bill Clinton and how easy it is to move the Americans.
[1072] It's wild.
[1073] Like, there's a lot of power plays at work here.
[1074] And the only other thing I'll say about this, and it's not just like the neo -conservative, the clean break, the strategy that they wrote for Netanyahu.
[1075] It's that, so in 2002, Benjamin Netanyahu comes and testifies before Congress as a regional expert.
[1076] And he testifies that like, oh, yeah, no, if you guys overthrow Saddam Hussein, democracy will sweep the region.
[1077] Let me tell you, I know something because I know this region better than anyone else.
[1078] And at one point, Dennis Kucenich actually grilled him and got him on record.
[1079] And he goes, is there anybody else that you're advocating that we preemptively attack?
[1080] And Netanyahu goes, yeah, Iran.
[1081] Attack them too.
[1082] So I'm not like, I don't hate Israel.
[1083] Like, I think Israel is a cool country.
[1084] I think what they do to the Palestinians is fucked up and it's inexcusable.
[1085] and they should stop.
[1086] But I think Israel is a cool country.
[1087] There's a lot of great things about them.
[1088] But like Netanyahu, this guy, who's the longest serving prime minister in Israeli history, has been trying to get America into wars that are in his interest, that are very clearly not in ours.
[1089] And the fact that we have to like unconditionally support Israel, even when our own democratically elected president doesn't like the policies that they're enacting, and yet they still get all of this support.
[1090] Even now, as, you know, Joe Biden doesn't know what he's saying because he's got dementia, but there's people in his ear who are telling him to, like, say, don't invade Rafa.
[1091] And he's like, don't invade Rafa.
[1092] And then Benjamin Netanyahu's like, okay, we're going to invade Rafa.
[1093] And it's just like, okay, well, fine, fine.
[1094] If we have no influence over what you're going to do and you'll just wag the middle finger at us and brag about how you tricked Bill Clinton and defy what our presidents want you to do, like, okay, fine.
[1095] But then you don't get our money and our weapons, right?
[1096] Like, isn't that reasonable?
[1097] It is reasonable, but it's also, the left is very confused on this one.
[1098] This is a baffling one for the left.
[1099] Yeah, they sure are.
[1100] Because support of Israel has always been a position of people on the left, right?
[1101] Support of Jewish people.
[1102] And to not want that is kind of anti -Semitic.
[1103] Well, look, on the hard left, there's always been a bunch of people who are sympathetic to the plight of the Palestinians, right?
[1104] Yes, for sure.
[1105] Well, the people that have, like, seen Abby Martin's take on it.
[1106] Yeah.
[1107] But Abby Martin also like follows in a tradition of left -wing thought like Noam Chomsky and people like this who have always been very critical of the Israeli government's treatment of the Palestinians.
[1108] Yes.
[1109] But this is where it gets weird.
[1110] It's like the support of Israel when Israel was attacked.
[1111] So that's when everything gets crazy.
[1112] It's not supportive Israel before October 7th.
[1113] It's post -October 7th.
[1114] So now you have hardcore lefties who are now they're like the major.
[1115] of the young people now it's a big thing in this country in universities it's crazy i mean they're going nuts they're attacking students they're attacking teachers people can't go to work they're being told if they support israel they can't be on campus it's just the whole thing is it's very bad for the left in that regard because it's like jewish people traditionally vote left Oh, yeah.
[1116] Well, yeah, I mean, the overwhelming majority, I think 85 % of Jews are Democrats or something like that.
[1117] And, you know, obviously there's not full, like even today, there was a news report of a huge government protest in Israel.
[1118] They're in the streets.
[1119] So it's not like this is a policy that's supported by the entire population.
[1120] Well, there's, I mean, there was, so basically, I think what really changed things, during the 90s, there's no question.
[1121] tremendous support for making a deal for a two -state solution, particularly amongst like liberal Israelis.
[1122] And they're basically, so Yitzhak Rabin got assassinated by a right -wing Israeli who was furious that he was a traitor for making a deal with the Palestinians.
[1123] And that took him out.
[1124] And then when Netanyahu came in and then ultimately, I guess it was Sharon who was in in the year 2000 and the there was another meeting at Camp David where you know what what people will say which is just not true but what a lot of the the people of the pro -Israeli side will say is that they offered them everything right they offered the Palestinians everything they wanted and they just turned it down and this is their it's all slogans it's like they never miss an opportunity to miss an opportunity but if you actually look into the details of all of it even Shlomo Ben Ami, who was the acting foreign minister at the time involved in these negotiations, he even said in his book, and he said it in a Democracy Now interview, that he would have turned down the deal, too, if he was Arafat, because the deal was just so, it was so removed from actually giving him his own state that it was like, this is just, it was an insulting offer, essentially.
[1125] But when those negotiations broke down, and then it was after Sharon had this visit to the Temple Mount, which really inflamed tensions.
[1126] When the negotiations broke down, then the second Intifada started, and there was a big wave of terrorist attacks.
[1127] And that, you know, in the same cycle we were talking about at the beginning, that did a lot to turn a lot of liberal Israelis off of the idea that, like, well, there's no negotiating a piece.
[1128] But it is worth noting that whenever there were negotiations going on, the support for terrorism, the support for Hamas and groups like that always plummeted.
[1129] And then whenever the negotiations broke down, the support for those terrorist groups picked back up again.
[1130] Because the big problem here is that you're just, when you, essentially when you take away the dangling carrot in front of an oppressed people, like you let them know that there's no hope.
[1131] That you're going to live in subjugation for eternity.
[1132] That's a very dangerous situation.
[1133] That's when people will turn to really, really dark means.
[1134] And that's, you know, essentially, look, Netanyahu's, like, what became the Netanyahu doctrine, and a lot of this culminated in the Abraham Accords, which a lot of Trump supporters will brag about.
[1135] They'll be like, look at all these peace deals that Donald Trump worked out in the Middle East, except the problem is that there was no war between any of the countries that he worked out these deals.
[1136] It was just kind of like normalizing relations between Israel and these other Arab countries around them.
[1137] But what was the reason why relations weren't normalized?
[1138] It was because they were pissed off about Israel's treatment of the Palestinians.
[1139] So basically Jared Kushner's brilliant idea, along with Netanyahu's, was that, oh, well, if we just bribe all of these countries with U .S. taxpayer dollars or weapons, we can get them to look the other way and say, screw the Palestinians.
[1140] We'll make a deal with the U .S. and with Israel.
[1141] they did that.
[1142] And Netanyahu was bragging about this.
[1143] At Netanyahu, just a couple weeks before September 11th, right around the time that he sent the head of Mossad into Qatar to make sure the money kept going to Hamas.
[1144] He went to the UN with a map of Greater Israel and it was all Israel.
[1145] Gaza, the West Bank, and what is Israel proper?
[1146] All Israel in his map.
[1147] Like they were just bragging to them like, ha ha, you guys lost.
[1148] You get nothing.
[1149] That's it.
[1150] Nothing.
[1151] This map of Greater Israel, this is something that he's proposing for the future?
[1152] This is, this is in, you know, as much as people will point to the Hamas founding charter and it says from the river to the sea or whatever, and that's true, at least their original one.
[1153] But that's in the Lakud founding documents also, in different words, but it's basically from, basically from the river to the sea will be all Israel, which is what it has been, you know, from since 1967.
[1154] And again, by the way, I'm not trying to make.
[1155] Showing up with a map, why would he have a, that sounds like a plot in a movie.
[1156] Sure does.
[1157] This is, look, this is all of ours.
[1158] Well, I do.
[1159] No deals.
[1160] Yeah, well, right.
[1161] Something like that.
[1162] It does.
[1163] It sounds like a bad guy in a movie.
[1164] Well, look, I also don't want to, because there are people who also jump to, like, other conspiracy theories that I don't think are right.
[1165] That, well, they'll say kind of like, uh.
[1166] Like what one?
[1167] Well, because, okay, so because Netanyahu was supporting Hamas and because he was using them kind of as, you know what I mean?
[1168] Like, oh, good, we'll keep these terrorists.
[1169] Right.
[1170] over here so that they're not linked up with the people in the West Bank over here.
[1171] And then I have no, I get a, you know, a certificate, I forget the exact phrase, but it was, I have a, I think he said at one point, I have a no partner for peace certificate signed by the president in both houses of Congress, because look, I don't have to ever do a two state deal.
[1172] But then people will jump to the next level, which is that like, oh, he, he won at October 7th.
[1173] There was a stand down order.
[1174] This is why it took Israel so long.
[1175] Yeah, it's a black flag.
[1176] That, or the false flag.
[1177] Yeah, that I don't, I don't think is right.
[1178] Or at least I haven't seen convincing evidence that it is.
[1179] From everything I've read about it, it actually seems a lot more like, if you remember, I know we talked about this, I think on the podcast years ago when I was on, but if you remember when, okay, so in 2012, when Obama decided that they were going to start arming all of the anti -Assad rebels.
[1180] And there's actually a hot mic of John Kerry talking about this, and because they were doing it through.
[1181] 2013 to 2014 and he goes he goes yeah look we saw the rise of ISIS coming and we we knew they the weapons were good getting into their hands but we thought okay that that might put pressure on Assad to have to step down so like we could use this group in order to get the regime change that we wanted but then they turned around and invaded Iraq and like that wasn't part of the plan you know what I mean like they weren't supposed to do that then we had to reinvade Iraq to get rid of ISIS who you know what I mean and so there there if you remember during that time there was one point when Obama called ISIS JV it was like kind of like insulting them like listen these guys and and you could kind of see where Obama was coming from he's like I don't know I'm the commander in chief of the United States of America's military I'm worried about ISIS these guys are nothing compared to what the four the power that we have and there's a lot of people at the highest level of the Israeli government who spoke exactly the same way about Hamas That's the Benjamin Netanyahu quote that he says, we can control the height of the flame when he's talking about, you know, propping up Hamas.
[1182] He goes, don't worry, we can control what they're able to do and what they're not able to do.
[1183] These guys are nothing compared to our strength.
[1184] There was tremendous hubris in it.
[1185] Let's sake of what if.
[1186] Sure.
[1187] What if they decided on a two -state solution as it currently stands?
[1188] And they just let the people run it however they want and Hamas takes over the whole Palestine.
[1189] It Palestine becomes a country.
[1190] country controlled by Hamas.
[1191] And then they start doing trading with other countries.
[1192] And then they start acquiring weapons, like real sophisticated weapons like Israel has, where the Iron Dome was no longer successful.
[1193] Right.
[1194] So this is kind of the counterfactual that a lot of Israelis will rely on to say, well, look, we can't give them their own state because what if when they get their own state, they decide to do this with it.
[1195] So, all right, there's an old Thomas Jefferson quote.
[1196] about slavery, and I'll butcher this, as I always do, but I like bringing it up.
[1197] But there's something along the lines of he goes, we have the wolf by the ear, and we can neither afford to hold on to it, nor to safely let it go.
[1198] Whoa.
[1199] And essentially what he was saying was like, this was a major concern of people, even people who were kind of sympathetic to the abolitionist cause, who were like, yeah, look, but we've like enslaved these people for so long.
[1200] And so what are we going to do?
[1201] Free them and make them citizens who are allowed to get them, get guns, like they're going to be so furious at us, they're going to come kill all of us.
[1202] And you can kind of see.
[1203] Especially when there's way more of them.
[1204] Well, especially you have a plantation and how many slaves that you have.
[1205] And most people all get together and organize.
[1206] Yeah, so you could see where that could have been a realistic concern.
[1207] They have a really good point, too.
[1208] Right.
[1209] But at the same time.
[1210] The dude who whipped you lives in that big White House and now you've got a shotgun.
[1211] Yeah, so there's no question there's a concern about that.
[1212] However, I also think looking back at it, most people in modern times would say, yeah, but you can't enslave people, man. Guess what?
[1213] You're fucked up.
[1214] You shouldn't deserve that house in the first place.
[1215] And look, I also do think that you better get the fuck got a dodge.
[1216] Like the way, well, the way Daryl Cooper says it, which I actually think is a reasonable way to put it, is he goes like, I heard someone ask him that question once.
[1217] And he goes, okay, well, if that happened, then we're having a different conversation.
[1218] You know, but that's not the conversation right now.
[1219] The conversation right now is about Israel dominating these people in perpetuity.
[1220] But I also do think that I don't, listen, I think that groups like Hamas get their strength from the fact that there are so many people who want to resist this total domination by the Israelis.
[1221] You know, it was a General McChrystal.
[1222] It's not a libertarian dove like me, not like some comic idiot like me who's just like, I'm against war.
[1223] General McChrystal, who was running the war in Afghanistan before he got caught saying bad things about Obama and got kicked out of there.
[1224] The Rolling Stone story.
[1225] Yeah, the Rolling Stone story with the late great Michael Hastings.
[1226] Might have.
[1227] Yeah, I don't know about that.
[1228] But General McChrystal, this tough, hard -nosed general, he was the one who coined the term insurgent math.
[1229] And he said, what's 10 minus 2?
[1230] A lot of you might think it's 8, but the answer's 20.
[1231] When we're talking about insurgents, 10 minus 2 equals 20 because you kill two insurgents and each one of them had brothers and uncles and nephews and friends and now they all join up the resistance movement because they're all so radicalized by the fact that you just killed someone they loved.
[1232] And this has been the nature of this dynamic from the beginning of it.
[1233] And so, yeah, it's like just saying that to the concern that if Israel was to grant the Palestinians their freedom, that what if then this led to like some swelling in Hamas, I think the truth is that doing what you're doing now is much more likely to increase Hamas or Hamas -like organizations.
[1234] Because there's, you know, you - So they're basically, it's like credit card debt.
[1235] It's like basically they keep using their credit card, they're never going to be able to pay off the debt.
[1236] It just keeps rising and rising and rising and your monthly payments keep getting higher and higher and you're fucked.
[1237] Yeah.
[1238] But again, like I will say that the one - nice example, or the one silver lining to all of this, is that there are so many examples throughout the world where things were so often.
[1239] I mean, you just never could have imagined that, like, Germany could live right there in Europe next to all these kinds.
[1240] They just went to two world wars with each other.
[1241] You know what I mean?
[1242] But they do.
[1243] They travel by train to visit each other.
[1244] Yeah, that's right.
[1245] And everyone's friends.
[1246] Dude, I went last year and did, like, stand up in a I went to London and then you get on like a 45 minute flight and you go over to Ireland and you're just like oh you guys are right next to each other everyone's just coming out to the shows and we're having fun and it's just cool and like so there is something beautiful about that where you it's it in the moment it seems like this could never be solved but like that's not necessarily true the truth is that you most human beings are incentivized by wanting to live their life and wanting to take care of their family and wanting to, you know what I mean?
[1247] And if given an option to do that, rather than losing their sons in war, a lot of times they'll choose that.
[1248] But in order for that to happen, look, Israel has all of the power and the Palestinian people have virtually not.
[1249] The only thing they have the power to do is to, you know, I guess support these acts of terrorism, which are essentially like celebrating losing.
[1250] It's so sick and dark that you're like, aha, we'll kill a few of your people and then get way more of our people killed.
[1251] It's just like, that's the only thing they have.
[1252] Aside from that, every peaceful effort that they make ends up being violently suppressed.
[1253] And Israel has all of the power.
[1254] And in order to get to that step, it's on the ones with the power have to make some concessions.
[1255] And the only way to get there is for.
[1256] for Israel to like, at least get back on some path toward, like, hey, we are going to give you, like, your sovereignty at some point.
[1257] There was some recent discussion of rebuilding Gaza where they were talking about what they could do for that area once they rebuild it.
[1258] What's the plan on that?
[1259] Well, there's been a lot of different, like, things floated out.
[1260] And, of course, Israel is always kind of talking out of both sides of their mouth.
[1261] So, like, on one moment, they'll be like, we just want.
[1262] Hamas.
[1263] We just have to get Hamas out of there.
[1264] And then they'll be like, well, we really do think that every country should take in a fair share of the Ghazan people.
[1265] Like, they're floating out the idea of just cleansing the entire area.
[1266] I know that the UN, I think recently said that it would take 80 years to rebuild Gaza.
[1267] I don't know if that, I don't trust UN numbers exactly.
[1268] Rebuilding Gaza.
[1269] Oh, two decades, they said.
[1270] 50 billion over two decades.
[1271] Well, someone just got paid.
[1272] Well, right.
[1273] Exactly.
[1274] Exactly.
[1275] So what's the real?
[1276] That's also a thing, right?
[1277] Rebuilding is very profitable.
[1278] Well, that's for sure.
[1279] Yeah.
[1280] Oh, there's money to be made in the destruction.
[1281] There's money to be made in the rebuilding.
[1282] And people will make that money.
[1283] But I think that the truth is that Israel has not at all laid out what the end game of this is other than this assertion that we must get rid of Hamas entirely, even though U .S. and Israeli intelligence have both said that that's impossible.
[1284] It's not an achievable task.
[1285] Hamas is popping back up in the areas that they've already leveled, and they go into Rafah.
[1286] I'm sure they can kill some Hamas militants in there, but Hamas or Hamas -like groups are coming back.
[1287] How many do you think they've killed so far?
[1288] No idea.
[1289] And I don't think they know.
[1290] And what are the numbers of Hamas that exist?
[1291] They've claimed that they've, I saw like at one point they said they've killed 8 ,000, then they said 10 ,000, then 14 ,000.
[1292] I don't know.
[1293] Honestly, I have no idea what the real number is.
[1294] And I don't think the Israeli government knows.
[1295] And I don't think, I think probably the Kazan health ministry doesn't know either.
[1296] It's like very difficult work to, while this is all going on, identify bodies and figure out how many of them are dead and how many of them were joined up with Hamas or weren't.
[1297] You know, Hamas is also not like, it's not a government.
[1298] It's not like as if there's like, you know, it's.
[1299] It's not like, okay, if you were like, say, tracking, like, in America, there was a big, you know, like explosion, a bunch of people died, and you could look at, like, DNA records and who was enlisted in the military, and you could just, like, match them up against each other.
[1300] It's not scientific like that, or at least it's much more primitive than that.
[1301] So I don't, I really wouldn't venture to guess.
[1302] And I also don't know, you know, like, how accurate the numbers when they say 35 ,000 people have died.
[1303] It seems within the realm of possibility.
[1304] There's a lot of people missing, right?
[1305] And that's part of the problem is the rubble.
[1306] Yeah, well, they said the most recent figures that they put out, again, this is the Gaza Health Ministry, which is overseen by Hamas.
[1307] So take that with a grain of salt or whatever.
[1308] But they said there's like, I think, 10 ,000 who they weren't able to identify.
[1309] Can you imagine the horror of just walking down those streets?
[1310] So if there are 10 ,000 at me, how many?
[1311] of them can you smell you know i mean you just look around you just see wreckage and you smell rotting bodies oh dude and just the worst things in the world insane it must be insane to live there before october 6th when it was already prison to see it now and it's continuing right it's going on right now oh yeah yeah no and then imagine like imagine you know and they're there's constantly like the defenders of this military campaign will say, oh, they drop warning bombs and they drop leaflets and they tell you, no problem, just leave.
[1312] But you're talking about people who are like, first of all, in they live, at least a large percentage of them, live in a level of poverty that none of us have ever experienced.
[1313] Just telling people, just leave and head out to the, you know, and it's what, people almost have, like, in their mind that, like, what is there like some sophisticated refugee camp waiting for them with tents and water and food like no they're just telling them like go go out into the desert go out into this this other place you have nothing it's not that easy like you might have little children with you or old people with you it's not that easy to just leave and then when they leave and they go into rafa which was supposed to be safe they go oh yeah now we're now we're invading rafa so leave again where do you go exactly who knows and again like look dude it's just again i I just think that whenever you're talking about these things, when you're talking about like inflicting this level of human suffering on a group of people, like whoever's defending that man, the onus is on you to demonstrate that there's absolutely no other way to do it.
[1314] And the other reason why I bring up this point all the time about Israel propping up Hamas as this strategy is that doesn't that at least change the narrative?
[1315] Because if you just go, which a lot of people are, they'll just be like, well, look, look what happened on October 7th.
[1316] Look how horrible that is.
[1317] Nobody could stand for anybody doing that.
[1318] And therefore, Hamas has to go.
[1319] And so whatever happens in that process, hey, that's on Hamas.
[1320] And like that, I guess on some superficial level, I can understand that.
[1321] But like, yeah, but once you know that they were propping up Hamas specifically so that they wouldn't have to give the innocent Palestinians their own state.
[1322] And now they get to use that group that they propped up as the excuse where they're allowed to just slaughter these people.
[1323] It's just like, that's a whole different level of, it's just, no, that's fucked up, man. That's just not.
[1324] And all these terms get conflated.
[1325] They'll be like, doesn't Israel have the right to defend itself?
[1326] Yeah.
[1327] And you're like, yeah, but see, now you're like manipulating this, this idea of self -defense, which is a natural right.
[1328] You could argue the most natural human right is the right to, you know, the right to life and then the right to defend your life.
[1329] But the right to defense is like, so imagine like me and you were hanging out at your house.
[1330] and someone like broke into your house and kills me and then points the gun at you and you grab your gun and you kill that guy you'd be like well yeah you had the right to defend yourself you know what i mean like you just he's on your property he broke into your property he just killed your friend he's got trying to kill you and you're like no you have the right to defend yourself no question but or you could even argue right say like in the human shield example he's holding a little baby as he's shooting at me and then shoots and you shoot and you hit the baby and him you can say hey that that's horrible but But that was on him.
[1331] But now you're talking about, like, a guy breaks into your house, shoots and kills me, runs and leaves, retreats back to his house where you know his wife and his five kids are.
[1332] And so you blow up the house.
[1333] And you're like, well, look, I have a right to defend myself.
[1334] And you're like, okay, but this is a slightly different concept than just like the right of self -defense as we all understand it.
[1335] This is more like the right to revenge, the right to justice, which, okay, I'm not.
[1336] I believe in justice, and I think all of the people involved in October 7th should face justice for what they did.
[1337] It's horrific terrorist attack.
[1338] But there's a very different question between, like, defending the country of Israel and enacting justice against those people if it means, like, babies get crushed to death and rubble and parents get killed in front of their children and all of the, you know, horror that's been going on.
[1339] What do you think Hamas thought Israel was going to do?
[1340] This.
[1341] I think this was the plan.
[1342] So you think they wanted Israel to do this?
[1343] Yeah.
[1344] I think Hamas doesn't care about Palestinian life.
[1345] And they like, I think are, I think the goal, the goal in asymmetric warfare is almost always to provoke an overreaction out of your opponent.
[1346] Right.
[1347] So like, Osama bin Laden never thought he could destroy America by taking down the two.
[1348] Twin Towers, but he thought he could lure us into a war in Afghanistan that could bankrupt our country, just like he was trained by the CIA to do with the Soviet Union, right?
[1349] Like that was kind of the plan.
[1350] And likewise, I think that Hamas knew that Israel would overreact in this way.
[1351] And look, I mean, look what's happening, totally turned global opinion against them and put themselves in more jeopardy than they've ever been in.
[1352] There's almost nothing that anyone else could have done to Israel that would have put that country in more jeopardy than what they've just done to Gaza.
[1353] This is like never going away for them.
[1354] I don't think a lot of Israelis or pro -Israeli Americans have really grappled with this fact.
[1355] You could get into the semantics of arguing whether this is a genocide or not a genocide, which I never get into, by the way, I just don't care about, you know, whether you call it that term or call it a different term.
[1356] Whatever it is is real.
[1357] But the fact that the International Court of Justice ruled that this is a plausible genocide is so wild that they ruled that the Jewish state is committing a genocide.
[1358] Like that's just such a different way of looking at things than all of us grew up with like, no, the Jews were the victims of genocide, not the perpetrators of it.
[1359] And I am Jewish and I do resent that they've kind of like put that, you know what I mean, like into the public mind and to some degree, you know, because there's, There's a case to be made for it, but Israel is really playing with fire here.
[1360] And they're, they're, I think they're in a more precarious position than they've ever been in my lifetime, for sure.
[1361] Jesus Christ.
[1362] What do you think happened to that Iranian dude?
[1363] You know, I think that's just a crash in the fog?
[1364] I think so.
[1365] That is, that is kind of my, yeah.
[1366] Like I, you know, of course, you always, in some weird perverse way, want the more exciting story.
[1367] Don't fly in the fucking fog in a helicopter.
[1368] How about that?
[1369] Well, I asked a few of my real smart friends, like I was calling them a bed.
[1370] I called Scott Horton earlier today, and I was like, what do you think about this?
[1371] And he was like, eh, it does seem like bad weather.
[1372] And he was like, because they couldn't even, like, recover it.
[1373] You know what I mean?
[1374] Because the weather was so bad.
[1375] Right.
[1376] And also, it's not taking out the Iranian president doesn't really do anything anyway.
[1377] Ayatollah is who has control.
[1378] Yeah, they'll put a. They'll put another president in and it'll be the exact same thing.
[1379] And I just don't think, my guess is that it was just bad weather.
[1380] But I'm totally open to, there might be some evidence that comes out that it was something else.
[1381] It's always more fun to think it's some secret squirrel shit.
[1382] Yeah.
[1383] Yeah, yeah, yeah.
[1384] I think this one might have just been bad weather, though.
[1385] It turns out it's really not safe to fly a helicopter in bad weather.
[1386] No, it's fucking terrifying.
[1387] You can't see.
[1388] Fly right into mountains.
[1389] Yeah, that's not good.
[1390] No, it's not good.
[1391] But I don't know.
[1392] Do you fly on helicopters, Joe?
[1393] I have.
[1394] Yeah.
[1395] They don't make me feel good.
[1396] Yeah.
[1397] The people tell me they're fine.
[1398] They know how to do it.
[1399] They're safe.
[1400] They know how to auto rotate on the way down.
[1401] Yeah, yeah, yeah.
[1402] Whatever, bro.
[1403] That thing seems weird.
[1404] I'm sure that's what they told the Iranian president.
[1405] Well, I mean, do they have helicopters that can operate through the clouds just like an airplane does?
[1406] Right?
[1407] Where they know exactly where they are at any given time?
[1408] I don't know.
[1409] I have no knowledge on this subject, but I just feel I've never been in a helicopter and I don't want to.
[1410] It doesn't seem like as sophisticated a method of flying.
[1411] I just feel like helicopter -liss life has been going pretty good for me, and I'm just going to keep riding down this path where you don't go on helicopters.
[1412] Burr has a license, and he took me up.
[1413] Really?
[1414] Yeah.
[1415] Yeah, Bill Burr.
[1416] He's really good, really good at flying helicopters.
[1417] It's one of the handful of times I've been in helicopters with him.
[1418] We're flying around downtown L .A. You can just fly around.
[1419] That's what's weird.
[1420] They don't tell you where you can go and not go.
[1421] I mean, I'm sure they do.
[1422] But for the most part, once you say you're going to go to a specific area, you can just kind of fly around.
[1423] Really?
[1424] Yeah, yeah, yeah, it's weird.
[1425] So you have a helicopter because they're below the airplanes.
[1426] I don't know why I was already scared of the idea of flying in a helicopter, but flying in a helicopter that's being piloted by Bill Burr.
[1427] This is the scariest thing in the world to me. Like you just get pissed off at something in the middle of it.
[1428] He's like yelling and you're like, dude, focus, man. No, he's very focused when he flies a helicopter.
[1429] He's very, very serious about it.
[1430] But he took me around these buildings and you're just flying around buildings in downtown LA.
[1431] I'm like, this is crazy.
[1432] You just fly right by these skyscrapers.
[1433] I mean, that does sound cool.
[1434] It is cool.
[1435] But I don't want to do it.
[1436] It's very, it's kind of beautiful.
[1437] Like, you're just flying around.
[1438] And it's kind of leisurely because they don't go that fast.
[1439] Right, right.
[1440] Leasierly flying around downtown.
[1441] I'm like, this is crazy.
[1442] And then you look at a lot of those buildings on downtown LA, they all have like helicopter landing pads on the roof.
[1443] Like, this is bonkers.
[1444] Yeah.
[1445] I mean, okay, I understand the.
[1446] appeal from him.
[1447] That does seem fun.
[1448] Yeah, it's fun.
[1449] But then, you know, you don't want to end up like this Iranian guy.
[1450] Yeah.
[1451] There's Bill.
[1452] There.
[1453] Fucking Bill Burr.
[1454] I don't fucking show you how to fly it's helicopter with my fucking, how dare you wear that paper boy hat when you made fun of me?
[1455] He made fun of me famously said how a little rascal sat on it.
[1456] This is like right after that he went and bought the hat.
[1457] Yeah, it's a good look.
[1458] Yeah.
[1459] He's awesome.
[1460] Him and Tim Dillon are the very best at ranting, like, by themselves on a podcast.
[1461] They're the only podcast that I listen to where a guy just goes off 100 % by himself.
[1462] Bill really by himself.
[1463] Like, Tim Dillon has a producer that's like a built -in one -man audience.
[1464] Right, who he kind of plays off of him.
[1465] Yeah, and he's great.
[1466] But he's, even one person is enough for Tim Dillon.
[1467] Like, Tim Dillon can rant with one person better than anybody on the planet.
[1468] But he's very smart in the way he does it, like have his producer right there.
[1469] So he's saying funny things for his producer, his producer's laughing.
[1470] Right.
[1471] And then, so he'll do that also in podcast.
[1472] Same kind of thing, you know, whereas Burr is just him by himself.
[1473] I'll tell you what.
[1474] I know, like, someone will just ask him, like, the most kind of basic question.
[1475] Yeah.
[1476] And then, like, he's just reading their question.
[1477] And then it just launches him into this thing that, like, you know, he really didn't even plan on talking about none of this.
[1478] Right.
[1479] And then it just launched it.
[1480] It's beautiful.
[1481] Yeah.
[1482] Yeah, both those guys are the best.
[1483] Yeah, Dylan's the best, though, at just being hilarious about anything by himself.
[1484] Dude, I mean, I met Tim, like, pretty early.
[1485] He was pretty new when I first met him.
[1486] And he was definitely like, I mean, he wasn't as, you know, like, he didn't have the chops that he has now.
[1487] It wasn't as polished as he is now.
[1488] But he was very green.
[1489] He was brand new.
[1490] But I remember just, like, hearing a few of his rants on podcasts, and you were like, This guy is gonna be like a force of nature.
[1491] It's like I almost like it's almost like you see it's like if you were watching like Michael Jordan playing high school or something like that and then like you just saw like one move and you were like, oh, shit.
[1492] Oh, we're doing that now.
[1493] All right.
[1494] Right.
[1495] All right.
[1496] Well he came.
[1497] It's such a unique perspective.
[1498] A gay right wing guy who used to sell subprime mortgages and did a lot of drugs.
[1499] I'm not, I'm still not convinced to you.
[1500] he's gay.
[1501] I'm convinced he used to sell subprime mortgages.
[1502] That's, that for sure happens.
[1503] I'm convinced he did a lot of drugs.
[1504] That I believe.
[1505] Yeah.
[1506] That I believe.
[1507] Gay thing.
[1508] You know what?
[1509] It's funny because every now and then you'll see it.
[1510] There's like a moment where you see the gay come out and you're like, oh, there it is.
[1511] Oh, there it is.
[1512] You hide it pretty well, Tim, but it's there.
[1513] Look, if they're there with the fucking glasses.
[1514] Oh, my God.
[1515] And he puts those glasses on so he's like he's in his own little world and he can just say the most wild shit about everybody.
[1516] Did you see the Nancy Pelosi debate with the dude from Mumford?
[1517] No, I still haven't watched it.
[1518] I did.
[1519] I know you asked me if I had seen it.
[1520] And then my buddy Rob Bernstein, who co -hosts my podcast with me, part of the problem.
[1521] He was like, dude, you got to watch it.
[1522] But I just have not.
[1523] I've been constantly traveling.
[1524] Yeah, dude, he handed her.
[1525] Well, I can't believe Nancy Pelosi actually did an Oxford -style debate.
[1526] That just seems ridiculous.
[1527] Who told her that was a good idea?
[1528] I don't know.
[1529] I mean, I guess she thought Winston is just like, This fucking musician.
[1530] Isn't he a banjo player?
[1531] What's going on here?
[1532] Pelosi interrupted by anti -Israeli.
[1533] Pelosi rebooted to her face during Oxford debate after condemning Americans clouded by guns, gays, God.
[1534] What?
[1535] What does that mean?
[1536] Clouded by guns, gays, God.
[1537] What does that mean?
[1538] What does that mean?
[1539] She's so crazy.
[1540] Hey, baby, guns and gays and gods.
[1541] Oh my God.
[1542] challenging Pelosi's position in the debate about populism.
[1543] Winston Marshall, a musician who was once part of Memford and Sons, now host the Marshall Matters podcast for the spectators, spoke in opposition to the Oxford Union motion that this House believes populism is a threat to democracy.
[1544] That is a crazy argument that populism is a threat to democracy.
[1545] Well, like, it's, I swear to God, whenever you, whenever you hear people like Nancy Pelosi or Hillary Clinton or any of them use the term democracy, just in your mind substitute what they mean by democracy is our rule over you and like in a sense that's what they mean it's like oh yeah populism is a threat to you guys ruling us yes and that's that's kind of true that's exactly what she's saying there's a she just doesn't know she's saying i will say this there's a um there's a really great debate i believe it was the monk uh it was it was between david from and um oh god i'm blinking on his name uh trump's big advisor are oh man i'm blanking on his name i'm just i'm usually pretty good with names guys uh but was the guy who like uh masterminded trump 2016 campaign uh yes steve bannon steve bannon and david from david from was a speechwriter for george w bush and uh steve bannon debated populism and the crowd was so hostile uh to bannon um and he actually did a very good job in the debate i highly recommend everyone listen to it if you're interested in this stuff because he basically laid out how the whole Trumpist populist movement is a result of your failures.
[1546] Like, who are you, George W. Bush speechwriter to look at us and say, like, why is there this populism?
[1547] Gee, I wonder why.
[1548] Maybe it's because the elites mismanaged everything.
[1549] And so then there was like a movement that rose up like, hey, these elites are screwing you over.
[1550] It's populism is, it's not a sign that you have a healthy society.
[1551] It's a symptom of a cause.
[1552] You know, it's like, it's in the same way, I know me and you have talked about this a bunch before, but in the same ways when all these people will be like, you know, we need to have trust in our institutions.
[1553] And you're like, well, yeah, but we also need institutions that don't lie to us.
[1554] And when they do lie to us, you can't turn around and say, hey, you have to trust these institutions.
[1555] Like, no, the problem started with you not being trustworthy.
[1556] Yeah.
[1557] Not with us not trusting you.
[1558] I think people are starting to understand that better now.
[1559] I really do.
[1560] I do too.
[1561] I think there's been a pretty significant shift towards people being very skeptical about bullshit now, where it's just, there's going to be a ton of people.
[1562] And some of these people, by the way, are paid.
[1563] And this is what I've talked to people recently that are, they either stream or their YouTube personalities or their Instagram, social media personalities, and they have a certain number of followers.
[1564] And they offer them thousands of dollars to do political posts.
[1565] Thousands of dollars to talk about specific political issues.
[1566] Damn it, there's no money in my politics.
[1567] But you know how crazy that is?
[1568] So, like, what if you have a really big account?
[1569] Like, what if you have a big account like mine?
[1570] We have like 19 million followers.
[1571] And someone says, hey, we would love to pay you, you know, to support blah, blah, blah.
[1572] You know, that is creepy, man. That's legal.
[1573] That's creepy that you can pay people for their support for a political issue because it's this weird gray area where it's social media engagement.
[1574] And I'm sure there's also like there's probably like a few like steps between like it's not like a campaign is directly paying you.
[1575] It's like a super pack or a group that was funded by that super pack.
[1576] And then you could and then you could with a straight face say, I've never taken any money from the Biden campaign.
[1577] Come on now.
[1578] Yeah, but yeah, but you did take money from a group who's basically Biden's campaign.
[1579] Right, like what the NIH did with gain of function research.
[1580] We didn't fund it.
[1581] There had nothing to do with it.
[1582] Oh, this subsidiary.
[1583] Oh, yeah, this company that we fund.
[1584] Yeah, yeah, well, there's good.
[1585] Probably, but it had nothing to do with the pandemic.
[1586] Yeah, those guys are crazy.
[1587] If you insisted, you're racist.
[1588] Wasn't that the best that that made you racist?
[1589] It's great.
[1590] They're so good at that.
[1591] They're so good at making you whatever, whatever it is, racist, transphobic, sexist, xenophobic nationalist what they're amazing at and I've kind of like marvelled at it like over the last few years especially when I do this show like I mean there's other there's some other shows that I do that are like pretty big shows but there's just nothing like this show like the the response to it that you get and especially for me because I come say like controversial things on the show and like the the response that you get be accurate I mean it's bonker dude okay so the the probably the biggest one up until I don't know but the big maybe the biggest one was that when we were talking about the war in Ukraine.
[1592] So this was like a couple years ago, I guess, was the first time I came on and we were really talking about it.
[1593] The beginning -ish of the war.
[1594] And I basically made this whole case for how NATO expansion is basically what provoked this war and that that was Vladimir Putin's big gripe.
[1595] And I mean, I thought I totally backed it up with like, listen, this is what all of these experts themselves said, you know, not Russian experts.
[1596] I'm saying American experts.
[1597] It's heads at NATO, all of this stuff.
[1598] And, I mean, the reaction I got from Blue Check journalists back when that meant you were a corporate journalist.
[1599] Joe Scarborough was furious at me. He goes, this guy is saying that NATO provoked Vladimir Putin's invasion because, of course, the New York Times and CNN, and their favorite term was unprovoked.
[1600] This was completely unprovoked.
[1601] And I don't know, by the way, if you caught this.
[1602] And I don't say this just to run a victory lap, but kind of, 50 % for that reason.
[1603] But just late last year, the head of NATO, Strasenberg, Jens Strasenberg or something like that, Norwegian guy.
[1604] But he just came out and said, and he almost said it like so nonchalantly.
[1605] He said that Vladimir Putin before he invaded asked NATO.
[1606] He said, if you just put in writing that you won't ever put Ukraine in NATO, I won't invade.
[1607] But if you don't do that, I'm going to invade.
[1608] Right.
[1609] And then he was bragging.
[1610] he goes and we refused we refused to agree to that and then he was kind of going and look now NATO's going to expand even more so see how stupid Vladimir Putin is but like number one he just totally admitted that all that thing that everyone was saying was such a controversial statement two years ago that this had anything to do with NATO expansion it's like well the head of NATO just said that's what the whole thing was about and that he wouldn't have invaded if he had just agreed to not expand NATO more and then number two you're like oh so you're just bragging that you didn't do that so what hundreds of thousands of Ukrainians have died now, we could have just made an agreement that Ukraine won't be in NATO and not done any of this.
[1611] That seems better.
[1612] But when you say it, when I said it two years ago, everyone, like anyway, my point is just that they really act like you're crazy.
[1613] Yeah, they act like you're an insane person.
[1614] When you're saying something that you're like, no, this is like very common sense and clearly true.
[1615] I don't think they even understand the history of it, even the people that are commentators.
[1616] A lot of them don't.
[1617] A lot of them that are.
[1618] Jack of all trades right they they're jack of all trades in regards to their understanding of the economy international conflict you know tech tech issues you know what I sent you this months ago but this really was kind of eye -opening to me so there's this guy Liam Crossgrove and he's he works for a gray zone he's he's reporter over there and so he made he basically did like this guerrilla journalism type thing where he was going up asking congressmen questions and then he made like a video where he kind of spliced it together and there was like there was some stuff of me on this podcast in the video and some stuff of my guy Scott Horton who by the way is great over at antiwar .com that his whole team over there is incredible um but so he made this video where he goes up to all these uh these congressmen and congresswomen and he asks them what they think about Netanyahu's propping up Hamas for all of these years and to a man to a woman, all of them just have this deer in headlights look and they're like, sorry, what report are you referring to?
[1619] I'm sorry, I haven't seen that.
[1620] I'd be interested to see that, but I haven't seen that.
[1621] What, what are you talking?
[1622] And you just, right away, none of them know.
[1623] None of them even have the foggiest idea what you're talking about.
[1624] And you almost realize that, weirdly, it was even eye -opening to me, and I talk about this stuff all the time, but you just kind of realize where it's like, oh like yeah that's not their job their job isn't to like read books about this stuff and read newspaper articles and keep up with what's got their job is to fundraise for their next election that they have and to whip votes for this thing that this lobbyist wanted and oh if i get what this lobbyist wanted he's going to contribute to my campaign and if i did it's like they're in a different world they're not in the world of like actually thinking about this conflict and knowing things and learning more about it Just like being the president, they have to have a comprehensive understanding of everything.
[1625] Everything, right, everything.
[1626] Which is impossible.
[1627] Which is not possible.
[1628] It's not possible.
[1629] And the other thing is they're always talking like they're in a position of expertise.
[1630] One of my favorite interviews was when AOC was talking to that lady and she asked her to expand.
[1631] About Israel, Palestine.
[1632] Oh, my God.
[1633] She just collapsed into herself.
[1634] It's literally like a fifth grader that didn't study.
[1635] and then they ask you about the subject or you didn't read the book and then well you know it's about Billy and his dog and really good relationship these dogs but the crazy thing about that interview is that it's like okay so her first comment comes off with like total authority you know and then like one little one little follow -up question the question's like well what do you mean by that and then you just see her get weaker and weaker and then like one more but what do you mean about that and she like I don't know what I'm talking about man And she literally goes, I'm really not the expert.
[1636] She just gave up.
[1637] But she kept going before she gave up.
[1638] She tried.
[1639] And you're supposed to know about that if you're going to talk about that.
[1640] It's not that hard to educate yourself on it.
[1641] I'll know a little bit at least.
[1642] I mean, try.
[1643] You have an understanding of the history of the conflict.
[1644] It is a crazy convoluted one.
[1645] Oh, yeah.
[1646] This is it.
[1647] This is it.
[1648] Yeah, yeah, sure.
[1649] I also think that what people are starting to see, at least in the eye, occupation of Palestine is just an increasing crisis of humanitarian condition.
[1650] And that to me is just where I tend to come from on this issue.
[1651] You use the term the occupation of Palestine.
[1652] What did you mean by that?
[1653] Oh, I think what I meant is like the settlements that are increasing.
[1654] No, no, that's not what the occupation means.
[1655] Oh, it keeps getting better.
[1656] are experiencing difficulty and access to their housing and home.
[1657] Do you think you can expand on that?
[1658] Yeah, I mean, I think I'd also just, I am not the expert on geopolitics on this issue.
[1659] That lady, by the way, knew exactly what she was doing.
[1660] Oh, of course.
[1661] She goes, oh, I'm going to expose this chick.
[1662] I'm going to expose her.
[1663] And, you know, it's great.
[1664] I kind of agree with AOC's, like, starting statement.
[1665] But then you're like, hey, you got to have something here, Man, you got to know what you're talking about.
[1666] Yeah.
[1667] And also, like, this is not, again, this is not the place for that.
[1668] You have five minutes or whatever you got.
[1669] Whatever that interview is.
[1670] There's not a chance that you can lay out the history of this conflict and all the different accords and all the different.
[1671] Yes, yes, of course.
[1672] But there's also this weird thing in corporate media where there's almost like an unspoken, unwritten agreement that, like, look, if you just have a few talking points, you can get through an interview.
[1673] and sound really confident in yourself and sound like hey that guy knows what he's talking about you know and as long as say like if i'm interviewing you as long as i kind of agree that i'm just going to let you say your talking points right then you can come out looking really good but as soon as one like interviewer like this one decides like no i'm going to make an example out of you now and the beautiful thing about the way she did it she just kept asking her to expand so what do you mean by that yeah expand she's not challenging her she's literally just giving her the easy of softballs.
[1674] And there's nothing there.
[1675] Yeah, and that's right.
[1676] And of course, AOC, you know, I don't, I almost feel bad, like, because she was such like, I think she was in her 20s in this video.
[1677] Like, she's just, they also kind of knew that, like, here's this woman who just is totally not up to the task and doesn't know anything.
[1678] Did you see the Marjorie Taylor Green, the outburst?
[1679] These are the best of the best, ladies and gentlemen.
[1680] These are our representatives.
[1681] This is our Jerry Springer government that we all here.
[1682] What is the EOC call her baby girl?
[1683] She goes, oh, baby girl.
[1684] Like, they went full.
[1685] Oh, no, you didn't.
[1686] Listen, bitch, I will fuck you up.
[1687] They were fucking Marjorie Taylor's insulting her.
[1688] She's insulting Marjorie Taylor's body.
[1689] It was, dude, it was wild.
[1690] You're like, no, we can't.
[1691] Just when you think, like, you know, this country's gotten so dumb, you're like, oh, are we actually here?
[1692] Are we actually here?
[1693] Do you remember we used to watch those videos of, like, parliament breaking out in other countries like Kazakhstan or some shit they'd go to and we'd be like that could never happen here listen to what they said so she gives her shit chaos on capital hill oh find see if you can find the raw footage of it so we don't so she starts talking shit Marjorie Taylor Green says maybe you couldn't read it because your fake eyelashes and the other one was like oh no you didn't strike that shit from the record and they said she said she has a blitch body the Marjorie Taylor But she did it in the, like, the catty, passive -aggressive way, which is?
[1694] You know we're here about AG.
[1695] I don't think you know what you're here for.
[1696] Well, you don't want to talking about.
[1697] I think your fake eyelashes are messing up with you.
[1698] Hold on, hold on.
[1699] Order, Mr. Chairman.
[1700] That's beneath even you.
[1701] Order.
[1702] Beneat even you.
[1703] Keep going.
[1704] I do have a point of order, and I would like to move to take down Ms. Green's words.
[1705] That is absolutely unacceptable.
[1706] How dare you attack the physical appearance of another person?
[1707] Are your feelings her?
[1708] Move her words down.
[1709] Oh, oh, girl, baby girl.
[1710] Oh, really?
[1711] Don't even play.
[1712] Baby girl, I don't think of that.
[1713] We are going to move and we're going to take your words down.
[1714] I second that motion.
[1715] That's amazing.
[1716] Don't even play.
[1717] Ms. Green agrees to strike her words.
[1718] I believe she's apologizing.
[1719] No, no, no. Okay, hold on.
[1720] Then after Mr. Perry is going to be recognized in Ms. I'm not apologizing.
[1721] Well, then you're not.
[1722] I am not apologizing.
[1723] I'm just curious, just to better understand your ruling, if someone on this committee then starts talking about somebody's bleached blonde, bad -built, butch body that would not be engaging in personalities, correct?
[1724] Solid alliteration.
[1725] What now?
[1726] Bleach -blown, bad -built, butch body?
[1727] That she makes a motion to strike it.
[1728] I'm not genuinely kind of impressed with the alliteration off the time.
[1729] top of the head.
[1730] That was pretty good.
[1731] The Bleach blonde built, bad, built butch body.
[1732] Yeah, that's not bad.
[1733] It's not bad.
[1734] She thought about it for a while.
[1735] She had a little time.
[1736] She probably had that in her hip.
[1737] Yeah, a little time.
[1738] Yeah, yeah, yeah.
[1739] There was a lot of going on.
[1740] AOC jumped in.
[1741] There's a little time there was a little time to concoct that.
[1742] There's a little moment.
[1743] Like, she goes over to AOC.
[1744] She's like, whenever you're out, I got a good one.
[1745] I got one here.
[1746] They're just talking shit to each other.
[1747] They're on Twitter spaces.
[1748] Like, the next line should be like, you are not the father.
[1749] Like, it's just the middle of this chaos.
[1750] That's just fucking insane.
[1751] Those are our representatives.
[1752] Yeah.
[1753] Yeah, that's insanity.
[1754] I mean, other countries have to be laughing at that.
[1755] Yeah, I would.
[1756] If I was China, I'd be like, oh my God, this is amazing.
[1757] How could we have known our plan would work so well?
[1758] So well?
[1759] It is really wild.
[1760] So well.
[1761] Yeah.
[1762] And this is what, uh, and this is who votes on war.
[1763] I mean, they don't actually get to vote on war if it makes you feel any better.
[1764] The only thing that gives me hope is that maybe enough competent people will see these folks and go you know what i have to fucking run like this is ridiculous like this is this is absolutely maybe some successful business people that were on the edge yeah so push them towards the you know just someone who just gets cut the fucking shit or even if not running i do think there's things like look like Elon Musk buying twitter i do think was kind of like a move of kind of like okay he's not going to run for office that's probably not his calling in life but he was like okay you can't be president well that's right well he couldn't president, but he could run for something else.
[1765] But that's not Elon Musk's best use of his abilities.
[1766] But to buy Twitter and just be like, hey, look, I see what's going on here.
[1767] We're going to make this one social media platform that isn't in lockstep with all of the other progressive ones.
[1768] Things like that are really important.
[1769] So hopefully there's more of that.
[1770] You could have been born somewhere else and be president in the United States.
[1771] Running Twitter, SpaceX, and Tesla while being president is the most Elon must think to do ever.
[1772] That's true.
[1773] That he wouldn't even step down from the It's not important.
[1774] I can get it all done.
[1775] Get it all done at 20 minutes.
[1776] Have a few meetings.
[1777] Well, I mean...
[1778] But then if you did that, the thing is like, this is what all the conspiracy theorists are fearing about these people coming into the country.
[1779] They're fearing that the people coming into the country, what they're going to do is offer them citizenship in regards to...
[1780] in replacement of military service.
[1781] So they'll serve the military and then become citizens.
[1782] And then if there's like some sort of a crazy thing breaks out, Well, then you have your immigrant army against the original people that were here when they got here.
[1783] Yeah.
[1784] No, I mean, there's a lot of, like, there's a lot of concerns with that.
[1785] Yeah, because otherwise, AOC reveals darker intentions behind Margeteligree.
[1786] I was looking at chaos.
[1787] She's saying that she kind of did this on purpose to derail the actual hearing they were having, because after that happened and they went into chaos, they stopped doing what they were there to do, actually, and just had, like, a vote without having any amendments or any more discussion.
[1788] It's a microcosm what authoritarian's doing on a larger scale I don't think she's thinking that far ahead Margie Taylor Green is a wild lady I don't think she had a master plan I think she was just insulting her eyelashes just insulting her She's just talking shit I mean I don't know I wasn't there but I can't imagine that she's doing this as like some 4D chess move I don't see I don't see her behaving like Netanyahu I think she's doing a Hamas here I think the simplest explanation is that she just wanted to insult that chick's eyelashes That's probably That's my guess Because they were talking They were insulting each other Right?
[1789] Because she said you don't know What you're talking about Like she said something about Did you read Or you didn't even read it Like I think You're messing up With your fucking fake eyelashes Yeah She chimed in first saying Do you know what you're here for But that was after she was saying That she was derailing it Right away I don't think you know What you hear for I think your fake eyelashes are messing up what you're reading.
[1790] So the other girl, what did the other lady say before that to her?
[1791] That's what it was cut off that we didn't see in that clip.
[1792] Oh.
[1793] That's what I was just going like if she maybe she didn't think it was the whole thing, but also maybe someone just said before, hey, if you get a chance to fuck this up, go for it.
[1794] I suppose it's possible.
[1795] It's certainly possible.
[1796] It's always possible.
[1797] And I just don't.
[1798] I think that that's just how she behaves.
[1799] Yeah, but at the same time, if you were like her and then someone came up to her and was like, hey, I need you to like mess this up and draw.
[1800] She'd be like no problem.
[1801] That's my that's my special thing.
[1802] I could do that for you.
[1803] Oh, you're telling me to turn this into a shit show?
[1804] Oh, no problem.
[1805] She'd probably do a bump of coke before she does it.
[1806] She's like cracker neck.
[1807] Let's go.
[1808] Oh, you got the right bitch for the job on this one.
[1809] I'll tell you.
[1810] Yeah.
[1811] You know my favorite guy was that the the gay dude who lied about his past completely?
[1812] Santos.
[1813] Yeah.
[1814] And now I just talk shit about everybody.
[1815] I know Dude, his lies were so crazy too.
[1816] Like they would be lies like it wasn't even lies like with a like a political benefit to it or something it was just like a lie like it's like you know as captain as captain of the volleyball team at harvard and they were like not only did you not play volleyball you never went to harvard like none of this is really like just making up did you make that one up just making that one up it was like lies like that what did he lie about jamie but he's hilarious man when you hear him interviewed he's fucking hilarious where he turns on talking about how they're all stealing money and this one's the most.
[1817] This one's the worst.
[1818] That's great.
[1819] Well, he's a con man in a fucking sea of con men.
[1820] According to New York Mag, he lied about this.
[1821] Lied to donors.
[1822] Allegedly lied to donors, then used their money to make purchases at Urme's and Onlyfans.
[1823] He used campaign money for personal travel and Botox.
[1824] Oh my God, I love this guy.
[1825] Allegedly lied to collect unemployment benefits.
[1826] Oh, my God.
[1827] it's so funny he's charged with hold on a second he's charged stealing people's identities and making charges on his own donor's credit cards wait where are you going I'm just going down the list yeah but I'm reading it where it's right here this is where I was okay well stealing people's identities and making charges on his own donors credit cards without their authorization lying to the FEC and by extension the public about the financial state of his campaign so Santos falsely inflated the campaigns reported receipts with non -existent loans and contributions that were either fabricated or stolen.
[1828] So he's just making up money about making up numbers about how much money they had, stealing people's money.
[1829] Dude, spending campaign contributions on only fans and Botox is just the, I mean, it's hard not to root for that guy.
[1830] Listen, they're all crooks.
[1831] Look, the inside trading is off the, it is so crazy that that's legal.
[1832] It's so crazy that that's legal.
[1833] So while that's going on, you're going to get mad.
[1834] this guy for this.
[1835] This seems minor.
[1836] Dude, you look at, no, that's it.
[1837] And that's what's so kind of, like, funny about it.
[1838] Is that, like, you think about, dude, the Clintons, okay, Bill and Hillary Clinton have since I was a little kid, I mean, maybe since I'm, basically since I was like four or five years old.
[1839] It was when he was governor in Arkansas.
[1840] They were, their entire career is they were public servants, and they ran a charity.
[1841] And they're worth like a hundred million dollars or something like that.
[1842] Like, wait a minute, huh?
[1843] You guys haven't been practicing law any of this time?
[1844] You haven't been working in some industry where you've made tons of money.
[1845] You were public servants who make, you know, healthy salaries, but not like that's going to put you in the hundreds of millions of dollars.
[1846] And you ran a charity, the Clinton Foundation.
[1847] And now somehow you're, Barack and Michelle Obama.
[1848] They were, they just, he goes into the White House.
[1849] Look at the house he lives in now.
[1850] It's like, so you're, every, it's, like, there is almost something where everyone turns at Santos because obviously, like, that's such a cartoonish, easy, you know, version of it.
[1851] Yeah.
[1852] But it is kind of wild that there's so much outrage against this guy.
[1853] And, you know, it's like in the same sense where, like, you know, there'll be like corruption and say like some Eastern European countries.
[1854] There's corruption where, like, the level of corruption is like, if you get pulled over by the cop, you could slip him some money and he'll let you go.
[1855] Now, we don't have that in America, right?
[1856] Like, you don't, you can't really ever slip a cop money when he pulls you over in America.
[1857] You may wish you could in certain situations, but you can't really do that.
[1858] I'm not saying it's never happened, but you really can't do that in America.
[1859] But we have, like, the prison guard union lobbying to keep mandatory minimums on marijuana.
[1860] So, like, okay, you could look down your nose at this primitive form of corruption, but think about how fucked up that is.
[1861] You know what I mean?
[1862] They're like, and that's just, all it is is just corruption on a much, much bigger level.
[1863] But it's legal corruption.
[1864] Exactly.
[1865] And everyone just accepts it.
[1866] It's a wild time, my friend.
[1867] Because people have access to information now that allows them to really see all this stuff.
[1868] Like the insider trading thing is probably been going on forever.
[1869] But we didn't even hear about it until about a decade ago.
[1870] Yeah.
[1871] Very rarely came up.
[1872] It was just kind of accepted that like all of these people are rich.
[1873] Yeah.
[1874] And we don't really know where they got.
[1875] their money from.
[1876] Except Jimmy Carter.
[1877] And that's one of the things that people loved about Jimmy Carter.
[1878] Because Jimmy Carter to the end really just maintained a very simple lifestyle and just never chase money.
[1879] He never was that guy.
[1880] He didn't do those crazy speeches where he talks to bankers and makes half a million dollars for some strange reason.
[1881] Those speeches are wonderful because those are the cutest.
[1882] Those are the cutest ones.
[1883] He's like, wait a minute, your policies benefited these corporations And then, surprise, surprise, those people after you leave office want to hear you talk so badly.
[1884] They're willing to fuck the market up.
[1885] Yeah, well, I'll tell you.
[1886] They want to give you hundreds of thousands of dollars to come talk.
[1887] This is also, I think, where there's a flaw.
[1888] Okay, so this is maybe one of the reasons why I'm a libertarian and not a progressive.
[1889] I mean, there's many reasons.
[1890] But one of the things that I think a lot of progressives who I think are like well -intentioned, their big thing will be like, we got to get the money out of politics.
[1891] And what they mean by that is that we can't let, you know, say corporations contribute to political campaigns or something like that because then, of course, they're just basically buying, you know, corruption.
[1892] But I think like the flaw, like Jank Yugar and people like that, that's like his big issue, you know, is get the money out of politics.
[1893] I think the flaw in that is that, yeah, but they always find a way to get, because look, those speeches, that's not contributing to anyone's campaign.
[1894] And that's not technically rewarding you for bailing out the big banks.
[1895] It's just you happen to bail out the big banks and then they happen to really want to listen to what you have to say after that.
[1896] And of course the book deal's warranted.
[1897] People want to read your book.
[1898] It's like the idea that you could ever close down on every single loophole.
[1899] Look, the Saudis weren't allowed to contribute money to Hillary Clinton's presidential campaign because you're not allowed to do that.
[1900] But they could give $10 million to the Clinton Foundation.
[1901] And then once Hillary Clinton lost, it's so weird, they stopped donating.
[1902] Like, I don't know, they just stopped being interested in charity.
[1903] You know, the House of Saud was really interested in charity for a while there in 2016.
[1904] And then they stopped being so interested.
[1905] So essentially, I think, like, the libertarian view on it is that it's like, no, no, no, whatever rule you want to have, if you have this much power in Washington, D .C., that power is going to be corrupted.
[1906] And people will find a way.
[1907] The only answer is to reduce the power.
[1908] Yeah.
[1909] And isn't the charitable foundation thing, a sneaky tax way of making money?
[1910] Oh, yeah, for sure.
[1911] Because there's a thing about charitable foundations, like everyone who's, like, really rich seems to have a foundation.
[1912] I mean, I'm not the expert on that or anything else, really, but I know that they certainly like get a whole bunch of tax breaks that you wouldn't get if you just started a business.
[1913] Well, not only that, but if they're doing things like Gates, for instance, to promote global health, right?
[1914] Right.
[1915] So he gets involved and he makes money off vaccines.
[1916] So he sells his stock and then starts talking badly about them.
[1917] Yeah.
[1918] I mean, it's pretty wild.
[1919] It's wild stuff.
[1920] It's wild.
[1921] It's wild that you can make money like hundreds of millions of dollars while you're running a charitable organization.
[1922] But if you also think about it, like the hundreds of millions of dollars that these guys make off of that is nothing because the legislation that they're passing or the policy that they're pushing is making these special interests hundreds of billions of dollars.
[1923] Yeah.
[1924] So if you buy off a pocket.
[1925] politician for 20 million bucks and you get, you know, like a no -bid contract that's going to be worth $200 billion to you.
[1926] Yeah.
[1927] That's a pretty good return on investment.
[1928] There was a article about this particular area of Virginia that's like the most expensive real estate in the country and it's all where the lobbyists live.
[1929] And I think it is it Blinken whose house that they're picketing in front of that they've been essentially there since, see if you can find it.
[1930] I think it's, I think it's Blinken.
[1931] He has some crazy fucking set up there, some fucking dope -ass old -school mansion, and they're all camping out in front of his house.
[1932] The Palestine, free Palestine people.
[1933] And so they've decided to constantly protest in front of his house.
[1934] Yeah, Anthony Blinkin's family is the latest target of Washington's ugliest protest trend.
[1935] So they just camp out in front of his house and they're pouring blood on the ground.
[1936] It's a little weird to do with your baby.
[1937] Stop the genocide in Gaza.
[1938] I like this better than just blocking the road It's definitely better than blocking the road The block in the road is the dumbest fucking thing of all time And you know I mean this is what people do If you're involved in war You know If you're involved in people dying Welcome to Cabot's Blinking Oh Jesus Yeah so I think they've been there Like for months This article is from February 16th Yeah I think they just It's a constant in And they've got this thing where they're just going to protest in front of this guy's house I do prefer taking it to the people who are actually somewhat responsible over just kind of inconvenience going to Jerry Seinfeld shows and yelling at them yeah yeah this is at least makes more sense yeah that guy's got to sell that house you got to get out of Dodge bro yeah it might be it might be time to leave don't worry I'm sure the market's up yeah he'll do fine on that house I'm sure he probably has a couple other houses too yeah yeah probably doesn't have to stay there but it really is you got one of them houses I got a little spot over there, a little spot over here.
[1939] It is crazy, though, that they don't, like, our leaders don't even feel the urge to, like, kind of not shove it in all of our faces.
[1940] Right.
[1941] That there's, like, that this whole thing is just, you know, it's all just kind of like, oh, how much money can I extract from this pot and get myself wealthy?
[1942] You don't feel like any sense of, and I will say the one who I, like, kind of person, resent the most, which maybe is unfair, but is Obama?
[1943] Because so many of us did kind of buy in to, at least to some degree, the thing he was selling in 2008.
[1944] And you're like, wait, but you don't feel like you should, have you seen pictures of the house he lives in?
[1945] Oh, he's got multiple houses.
[1946] He's got one in Hawaii.
[1947] Yeah, but I'm talking about the one in Martha's Vineyard.
[1948] It's pretty dope.
[1949] I picked on an article about the house that he had, and there's a fun fact about the street that it's on.
[1950] Oh, yeah, a bunch of Saudis own it, right?
[1951] Yeah, at least five houses.
[1952] Yeah, also known as Northern Virginia's Gold Coast, the road features opulent homes on large properties perched high above the Potomac with sweeping views.
[1953] Such estates sell for tens of millions of dollars, as was the case when AOL co -founder Steve Case sold his estate to the Kingdom of Saudi Arabia for 43 million in 2018.
[1954] This must be dope views.
[1955] Find us a view.
[1956] Find us a view Northern Virginia Gold Coast real estate.
[1957] Let's see what we can get for 50 million.
[1958] You know?
[1959] All right.
[1960] See if you can get for all the fucking Instagram ads that they want you to run for this political party.
[1961] If you cover the 50, I'll handle the taxes.
[1962] Let's see what the views look like.
[1963] Because if it's over the Potomac and they perched high above, it must look insane.
[1964] Oh, there was a little image back there.
[1965] If you click images, real estate images, there was one pretty spectacular view in that last thing.
[1966] Let me see some view.
[1967] So these are these, these aren't like these old school, like Connecticut style houses.
[1968] You know, like fucking the Great Gatsby, that kind of deal.
[1969] You know, those, those, I have a buddy of mine who works in Connecticut.
[1970] He lives in Connecticut, too, but he, he works at a school where a lot of these, like, people send their kids.
[1971] He's like, dude, these fucking houses are ridiculous.
[1972] They're old school mansions on these giant properties.
[1973] and they all do drugs and fucking fuck each other's wives and go crazy and spend all the taxes spend all their fucking their real estate holding money and all their stocks and bond money these are dope -ass houses look at that they are what a few man they're cool looking houses god yeah that must be awesome living there so that's where all those uh but your neighbors are all demons yeah that's surrounded by people that are literally the cause of of all the problems of the world.
[1974] If you're comfortable, yeah.
[1975] If you're comfortable selling your soul, there's a really nice house in it for you.
[1976] Imagine partying with lobbyists.
[1977] Who, you imagine if you could just like slip in, you know how like the Israelis, they infiltrate Hamas?
[1978] Like, imagine you're an Israeli soldier and you've infiltrated Hamas and like, nobody knows.
[1979] I'm inside.
[1980] And you're all, I mean, maybe you have to kill a few people, like, let them know your shit.
[1981] I'm sure you have to do something.
[1982] Probably have to do something, otherwise they're not going to trust you.
[1983] But imagine if you can.
[1984] like infiltrate lobbyists do coke with them party with them you're like some fucking dude who owns a sub shop chain or something like that you're kind of looked out you know and you're all of a sudden you're hanging around with these guys and they get comfortable with you sort of like they did with crystal like with that embedded reporter yeah yeah yeah when well that was michael hastings yeah they got him they were at a bar and they just got him talking shit about obama no no no no no no the volcano blue what there was a volcano in iceland so he got stranded there.
[1985] Oh, right.
[1986] Okay, yeah, yeah.
[1987] I think I did know this, right.
[1988] So the volcano in Iceland shut down air travel.
[1989] So Hastings is embedded with his troop and McChrystal sort of shit.
[1990] They get comfortable.
[1991] Yeah.
[1992] You can't keep the act up with the reporter around forever after a few months.
[1993] And I think also, or a few weeks at least.
[1994] I think also because he was a Rolling Stone reporter.
[1995] It was like their guard was down a little bit more.
[1996] Like they weren't like, this isn't like a Washington Post or New York Times.
[1997] He'll probably run some kind of like pop story about this you know what I mean and then he like really ran the story yeah and like used quotes of the guy disparaging Obama yeah and he was forced to resign and there's something really interesting about that though too just like a little bit of a window into like the lobbyist well well I just mean that there could be generals who are just like you know in their private time being like I had to fuck this guy and his bullshit commands you know what I mean like sure I'm sure they got them all tape recorded yeah you know like Wasn't that the thing about the Massad with Bill Clinton?
[1998] Was that our story that just came out recently with the Monica Lewinsky thing?
[1999] Oh, yeah, yeah, yeah.
[2000] I think I did see something about this, right, right, right.
[2001] They'd recorded him.
[2002] Yeah, they'd recorded them.
[2003] They're fucking good, man. They're good.
[2004] And they catch those dirtbags.
[2005] Those dudes that are just like pussy hounds.
[2006] You get two types of people that want to be president, war mongers and pussy hounds.
[2007] That's all you get.
[2008] And sometimes, if you're lucky, you get a pussy hound who's also a war monger.
[2009] Well, for the most part, you get one of two.
[2010] It's almost like, okay, if your dick still works, you'll be a pussy hound.
[2011] If your dick doesn't still work, then you've got to launch rockets to, like, make up for that.
[2012] So it's like that, it's almost the same impulse.
[2013] Maybe, but sometimes if your dick works, you're like, hey, don't fuck this up.
[2014] I'm trying to get late.
[2015] Yeah, well, that's what I mean.
[2016] That's what you'd probably rather that one.
[2017] Or sometimes when you're an old man and you don't want to fuck anymore, you're like, look, enough already.
[2018] Just, I want to play golf.
[2019] Yeah.
[2020] I just want to relax, going to the sunset.
[2021] I'm over it.
[2022] Stop, stop, stop, stop, stop, stop.
[2023] You're like, I've had my.
[2024] sex I've blown up my things let's just chill that's what we need yeah that's the argument that that's what Trump is at this point of his life well oh man I don't know I don't know either it's such a weird goddamn situation it's the worst situation everything they throw at them it just backfires and it just makes them stronger and stronger and it looks like this case is falling apart it looks like almost all of them are falling apart the one in New York though apparently they thought was the most flimsy like a lot of legal experts thought it was the most flimsy going into it, but now it's completely falling apart.
[2025] They have contradictory statements that she made to Bill Maher.
[2026] And then they also have Michael Cohen just admitted he stole like $30 ,000 from the Trump campaign.
[2027] So that's not good.
[2028] The really fascinating one was the, which that sounds like what Michael Cohen would do.
[2029] The really interesting one was the FBI with the picture of the top secret classified.
[2030] Yeah, tell about that because most people aren't even aware of this.
[2031] Well, it seems that the FBI, you know, when you see the pictures of them on the ground there with all the classified...
[2032] It's like, oh, that was put there by the FBI.
[2033] So it's not as if, like, it was presented as if, oh, look, this is what Donald Trump was doing.
[2034] The sheets that said, top secret, and classified, didn't exist before the FBI came along.
[2035] They put the sheets saying that, right, and then they leaked it.
[2036] So, like, there were the documents, and then they put pictures of these new things that they put, over the documents.
[2037] It said top secret and classified.
[2038] Then they took a picture.
[2039] This is very important to make this distinction because the documents were classified.
[2040] But they didn't have fucking signs on.
[2041] I'm like TNT.
[2042] Well, and it also is, it's seeming more and more like there were several instances where it seems that Donald Trump was constantly being trapped.
[2043] Going all the way back to the 2016 campaign, if you remember, there was this famous meeting with the Russian at the Trump Tower Hotel.
[2044] But when you actually look into it, what happened was like some Russian woman said she had dirt on Hillary Clinton.
[2045] They got there to a meeting with her and she had nothing.
[2046] And then they were all like, okay, whatever.
[2047] But then the story was, oh, he's conspiring with the Russians.
[2048] And it seems that, oh, that was a trap to get Donald Trump to do that so that they could make it look like he was conspiring with Russians.
[2049] And there's just been several things like this over and over again.
[2050] How about the fact that Hillary Clinton funded the steel dossier?
[2051] Yeah.
[2052] And that whole thing.
[2053] And then, you know, so then.
[2054] So she funds that.
[2055] Has that been confirmed?
[2056] Oh, 100%.
[2057] Let's confirm that the Clinton campaign funded the Steele dossier.
[2058] The prosecutor said that there was so many sheets used that they had to start using handwritten sheets to cover up the classified info.
[2059] That's what they say.
[2060] Right.
[2061] But the thing is the photographs show that show printed out pieces of paper that say classified and top secret.
[2062] And those weren't there.
[2063] They put those there.
[2064] So it's not that they covered up some of the documents before they took pictures of them.
[2065] That makes sense.
[2066] Isn't that to cover up the information?
[2067] Could be.
[2068] But you're taking photographs with pieces of paper that say classified and top secret.
[2069] It gave an impression of something that was different than what was actually there.
[2070] It most certainly does because it's like, oh my God, he knew these are classified and top secret.
[2071] He knew he had these.
[2072] He did this deceptively.
[2073] And it's also just the visual, the optics of like, look, classified.
[2074] and just laying on the floor there like that.
[2075] Look, it makes sense if you have to document, okay, this one's classified, this one's top secret.
[2076] Let's put a piece of paper on it.
[2077] But as soon as you put the piece of paper on it that says those things and you photograph them, you're saying this is how you found it.
[2078] Right.
[2079] Or at least allowing you to deduce that for yourself.
[2080] You should have to be very specific about these classified and top secret sheets were not a part of the evidence.
[2081] They were put on top to label that evidence.
[2082] But they're probably like, we don't have to do that.
[2083] It looks bad.
[2084] It looks bad.
[2085] Well, that classified top secret stuff looks bad.
[2086] And look, it's just very clearly, for anybody who's like being honest and paying attention, it's just very clear that there's like, there's a political motivation involved here.
[2087] Yeah.
[2088] That these guys are trying to hurt Donald Trump's reelection or election campaign.
[2089] And that in itself is like just so wild.
[2090] Well, how about the fucking White House press secretary saying?
[2091] She can't comment on because it involves the 2024 presidential election.
[2092] So she can't comment on Trump's trial because it involves the 2024 presidential election.
[2093] Which is so ridiculous.
[2094] You can comment on the election.
[2095] Your whole job is to comment on the election.
[2096] Also, you're not supposed to say that that trial is about the fucking election.
[2097] You're not supposed to say that.
[2098] DNC Clinton campaign agreed to steal dossier funding fine.
[2099] They got a fine?
[2100] Oh, they 100%.
[2101] How much did they get fined $113 ,000 to settle a federal election commission investigation into whether they violated campaign finance law by misreporting spending on research that eventually became the infamous steel dossier.
[2102] That is wild.
[2103] That all that cost them was $113 ,000.
[2104] Imagine how much.
[2105] That's a good deal.
[2106] PR you got out of that?
[2107] How much fucking Trump colluded with Russia talk you got out of that?
[2108] That's worth.
[2109] Can I take a, just pee real quick.
[2110] Yeah, let's be.
[2111] And then, uh, because I, I talk about this more because we'll, we'll be right back, folks.
[2112] That was the studio where we got in trouble.
[2113] I got in trouble because I said that if I was talking to a 21 -year -old healthy kid, I wouldn't tell him to take that shot.
[2114] Wasn't that in here?
[2115] That wasn't the other one.
[2116] That was in the red one.
[2117] That was in the early days.
[2118] That might have been our first podcast in Austin.
[2119] Yeah, probably was.
[2120] Probably was.
[2121] Yeah.
[2122] Well, it aged pretty goddamn good, Joe.
[2123] It's pretty goddamn good, didn't it?
[2124] Yeah.
[2125] It's crazy to think about, I swear to God, like, this is.
[2126] always especially now because like we've been doing these shows together for so many years that you can go back and look at like the things that were so wildly controversial to say then and they're 100 and they were totally accurate and now it's not even controversial at all to say it's just like oh yeah that's that's common sense now yeah most of those things now and you know it's just i i think these kind of conversations though contribute to the public's distrust in mainstream media they really they know they know what the fucking game is now.
[2127] It's a really interesting statement because that's their argument.
[2128] You know what I mean?
[2129] That, like, that's CNN's argument about why we need to cancel Joe Rogan is because your conversations contribute to the public mistrust.
[2130] But then, like, my counter argument to that is like, yeah, but that's good.
[2131] Because no one should trust you.
[2132] You did that to yourself.
[2133] Yeah, you guys are a bunch of liars.
[2134] Yeah, you're a bunch of liars and I should have sued you.
[2135] I mean, dude, 100%.
[2136] Slam dunk.
[2137] Yeah.
[2138] I don't want to go on court I'm not interested in that now Now that's why I mean like I just want to see them Also I felt like like I know how this game It's played out It's like when you're doing Jiu Jitsu with someone And you're in the half guard And you're like I'm getting out of this I'm getting out of this half guard And I'm gonna mount you Yeah well it did I mean look at it totally blew up in their faces And they're done I mean after the COVID stuff I don't see any recovery I think the corporate media is just gonna get Less and less influence It's already you see how much it's moved over Look, one of the big ones to go back to what they do.
[2139] They were trying to do this with the real organization of CNN.
[2140] They were trying to get back to hardcore objective journalism without some sort of editorial bias because they said, listen, this is the only way out of this.
[2141] Yeah, but even that was never really, it was like, it was like, hey, let's not be so blatantly anti -Trump and let's get back to just, you know.
[2142] Reporting on the news.
[2143] Yeah, but still protecting all the powerful people and still, it's not like there was ever really going to be.
[2144] Look, you're never going to like see a discussion.
[2145] on CNN about how like, you know, you have these think tanks in Washington, D .C., who advocate for war, and they're funded by weapons companies.
[2146] Right.
[2147] What do you think that means?
[2148] Is that ever once come up on CNN?
[2149] No. And it never well.
[2150] Do you think that they would ever have a Anderson Cooper, which is brought to you by Pfizer, investigation into Pfizer?
[2151] Of course.
[2152] That seems unlikely.
[2153] Of course not.
[2154] It seems unlikely.
[2155] And look, it's not even, again, like take the example of, say, even Chris Cuomo, right?
[2156] who now he's over with Valuetainment with Patrick Bitt David, our boy, and all of a sudden he's talking about vaccine injuries and Ivermectin and all this.
[2157] It's like, well, why is it when you're at CNN, which is, you know, sponsored by the pharmaceutical companies?
[2158] You don't talk about this, but as soon as you're over here, now it's okay to talk about this.
[2159] You know, you just, you kind of see it like happen that it's like, oh, yeah, no, there are, there's humongous power centers in America.
[2160] There's like the pharmaceutical industry, there's the banking industry, there's the war industry, there's all these big ones, and none of them ever get really questioned in the corporate media.
[2161] Like one little action might be questioned every now and then, but the whole system as a whole never gets questioned.
[2162] You'll never see like a real, you'll never see a piece on CNN about like, do we really need a central bank?
[2163] Does the Federal Reserve do more good for the American people or does it do more good for Wall Street?
[2164] You know?
[2165] Like that conversation will never come up.
[2166] Never.
[2167] It won't.
[2168] Because there's too many powerful people who would be, you know, like, scared by that.
[2169] And if that's the case, we're never going to have logical solutions to a real informed measure that we could put into place to fix things.
[2170] It's not going to happen.
[2171] Well, but look, I'm very encouraged by certain things, right?
[2172] And I'm very, I'll say, Tucker, getting fired from Fox News and being bigger than he was on Fox News is really amazing.
[2173] It's pretty wild.
[2174] Nothing like that's ever happened before.
[2175] Also wild that he interviewed that dude who said he blew Obama.
[2176] I was like, yo, I forgot to ask him about that.
[2177] Yeah.
[2178] He got me with the UFOs.
[2179] He had an agenda, God damn it.
[2180] He came in and got me where I'm soft right off the bat.
[2181] Got me with UFO and Angel Talk.
[2182] I was like, whoa, this is a good one.
[2183] It was pretty funny.
[2184] They just come in here like, hey, Joe Logan, you ever heard of UFOs before?
[2185] You know, I've heard a few UFOs.
[2186] Well, I did definitely want to talk to him about that.
[2187] No, of course.
[2188] He's got this very specific perspective that's very biblical, you know.
[2189] He's yet a very religious perspective on it.
[2190] He thinks it's angels and demons, which is really fascinating, you know, that there's good entities and bad entities and that they've always been here.
[2191] Like, that's a mind -fucking a half.
[2192] Yeah, it sure is.
[2193] And I don't know, I don't really understand much.
[2194] about it.
[2195] I also haven't talked to Tucker about that and I would be interested to because he will allude to at points like that he's had people inside the government kind of confirm things.
[2196] So I almost want to ask him, not even on air, just like off air, like, okay, so what exactly was?
[2197] It's one of the craziest things that Bob Lazar said.
[2198] And he said this way back in the 1980s.
[2199] He said there's a very bizarre religious aspect to it.
[2200] And see if you could find him saying this because I don't want to, I don't want to paraphrase this.
[2201] But he said that what They were, he said, it's going to sound crazy to say, but the way they have it described is that human beings are vessels for souls that were containers.
[2202] And that that's why they're interested in us, that were containers of souls.
[2203] Now, I want you to imagine a scenario where AI is ubiquitous in the universe and that this is where intelligent creatures, they get to a certain point in their evolution where they create a, artificial intelligence, and that artificial intelligence is far superior.
[2204] But in order to do it again on another planet, you kind of have to start the same way you did it on Earth.
[2205] You got to start with biological organisms that have souls.
[2206] So if you want to make intelligent life, you got to start out with souls.
[2207] Because you have to have these creatures that have like these human reward systems about breeding and controlling resources and controlling real estate and territory and that those are the ones that are like scrambled to innovate and then they give birth to this superior life form but the only way to do it again somewhere else is you got to do the same thing so like if you believe that life exists in a similar form all throughout the cosmos that there's kind of similar fish and kind of similar thing i don't know if that's the case we have no evidence But if that is the, if that's how, if what we're seeing in these different galaxies and what we're seeing in these different solar systems that we observe is planets in these Goldilog zones, if that was the case that the way to get these things to keep doing it, you need to get, it's the soul.
[2208] It's the thing inside the living organism that's causing biological evolution, the actually essence of the creature, that this thing is what's going to determine whether or not.
[2209] It hits the innovation level required to achieve artificial intelligence, and then that's what they are.
[2210] So what we are to them is like these little soul containers, because you don't have souls anymore.
[2211] How about that mind fuck?
[2212] Listen, it is a mind fuck.
[2213] There is an extremely classified document dealing with religion and it's about that thick, period.
[2214] But why would there be any classified material dealing with religion?
[2215] I want to go back to the religion thing.
[2216] I want you to say it.
[2217] it just it's so it's so far out it's all right your objection has been noted okay what does it say that were containers that's how that's how supposedly the alien flick has that we are nothing but containers containers oh containers maybe containers and sold you can come up with whatever theory you want but we're containers and that's how we're mentioned in the document that religion was specifically created so we had some rules and regulations for the sole purpose and not damaging the container yeah wrap your head around that I mean there is we're about five years away from talking to a robot Dave Smith that's indiscernible from you and if that thing has quantum computing power in its fucking metal head and it becomes another version of life a much more superior version of life and then they keep doing that forever all throughout the cosmos but the only way to get there are you going to start having AI Dave on the podcast instead of me I want to do my ads for me I'll hire AI Joe to do my ads for me you still want to do the podcast but you're like I don't just reading ads well I don't want AI Joe to do the podcast because AI Joe is going to have to rely on all of my opinions I formed up until now and I might change them tomorrow yeah I can't have AI Joe assume it's It's going to know how I think about things, because I don't know how I think about things.
[2218] I like to be open -minded to the point where I'm willing to take into consideration new ways of looking at things, new possibilities.
[2219] I don't know if AI is going to do that.
[2220] It's going to be too smart for that.
[2221] Yeah, maybe.
[2222] I mean, it is an interesting, it is such an interesting thing.
[2223] But on the point of containers, isn't there something?
[2224] And I'm literally just kind of thinking out loud as I say this, but there is kind of something where we all do except to some degree that that's true, that we're kind of container.
[2225] I mean, like, just in the sense that.
[2226] a dead body well right if you look at a dead body it's like uh tempting yeah it's it you don't look at that like oh that's there's that you're like no let's put that in the ground because the the person what we think of is the person is gone yeah i'm not saying there's anything like controversial about that statement like an atheist or a religious person or anyone would kind of agree with that but it's something we all just kind of take for granted but if you really think about it it is like the magic of what makes us us is something that's being contained by this meat shell Yeah.
[2227] And it's different.
[2228] It's not the same thing.
[2229] And it's not really anything that we, at least at our level of scientific understanding, can really tangibly measure.
[2230] Right.
[2231] Like, what is it from the reductionist atheist position, like electromagnetic waves in your brain?
[2232] Right.
[2233] And then when that goes, it's just a piece of meat now again.
[2234] It's, I don't know.
[2235] It's a little bizarre.
[2236] We don't really understand it.
[2237] And then the thing is like, okay, if we have souls, do other animals have souls too?
[2238] Sure seems like dogs do.
[2239] Dogs definitely do.
[2240] they there's something there's a weird relationship that we have with dogs it's very strange my dog is basically my son he's like my dog son i mean i think of them like a like a person like he snuggles with me he's probably more affectionate to me than anybody in my house daughters give you attitude their son's just cool they don't snuggle with their dad on the couch but he just like when i watch tv he hops up on top of me and puts his head on my chest and He watches fights with me. He chills with me. He's a golden retriever, right?
[2241] And those are, like, also the just friendliest, like, dogs.
[2242] They're the most loving and lovable dogs.
[2243] They're so lovable.
[2244] And he's so enthusiastic.
[2245] Like, we went swimming yesterday.
[2246] And this fucking dog will not, because he's not hot if he's swimming.
[2247] So he's got crazy endurance.
[2248] So he just keeps going for an hour and 15 minutes.
[2249] I threw the ball into the water.
[2250] And he fucking leaps off the deck.
[2251] Into the water and gets the ball comes back out drops out your feet.
[2252] Let's go.
[2253] Let's go again It's like you know how like hyped a UFC fighter gets like right before the fight?
[2254] It's like dude Dogs just have that energy always if you want to do anything.
[2255] Yeah, you're just like you want to go in the car they're like let's go Let's fucking join this.
[2256] Yeah, he goes crazy.
[2257] I could barely get the collar on him.
[2258] I'm spinning around circles.
[2259] I'm like, sit still, dude.
[2260] Yeah, and he will never stop being enthusiastic about the ball.
[2261] I get I threw the ball form this morning and I always think today's going to be day he's tired of this fucking ball was no it's like oh the fucking ball he's got the ball who oh oh oh oh he starts to spin it around in circles he jumps up towards it it's hilarious like he never loses enthusiasm there's got to be something that we can learn from that because we just get we get comfortable with familiarity and we get bored with things we don't want to do the same thing over and over and over again if it's that simple like chasing a ball but the enthusiasm that he had the first time he chased the ball he has the exact same, maybe more so, because now he knows it's fun.
[2262] Yeah.
[2263] So he can't wait to do it again.
[2264] But there's something about, like, because dogs are, I think, essentially, right, like we bred them to be kind of like babyish wolves.
[2265] Like they're wolves that are kind of kept in a perpetual state of immaturity.
[2266] Right, kind of, right?
[2267] Because, like, I think, well, I think that, but basically I think the qualities that you see in baby wolves, like a baby wolf will be almost indistinguishable in terms of how they could be domesticated from, like, a puppy.
[2268] Yeah.
[2269] But it's as they grow older that you're going to.
[2270] bullshit.
[2271] Right, right.
[2272] So it's almost like we kind of kept the traits that keep you young because it's the same thing, it's the same thing with having little kids.
[2273] Which is what they're trying to do to men.
[2274] It does seem like there's an attempt to kind of domesticate and, uh, yeah, soften.
[2275] Yeah.
[2276] Keep men as like 13 year old boys that follow the rules.
[2277] Shut the fuck up.
[2278] Yeah.
[2279] Yeah.
[2280] The wolf thing is really interesting because I am generally opposed to a weakening of of a life form for a human pleasure.
[2281] Like, that's bizarre that you take a fucking wolf and turn it into Carl over there.
[2282] But that's what happened.
[2283] That's what happened.
[2284] Carl's cute, but he's not much of a wolf.
[2285] But I love Carl.
[2286] So, like, I'm conflicted.
[2287] Like, part of me loves dogs.
[2288] And the other part of me, like, I love wolves.
[2289] I want them to be wolves.
[2290] Well, there's still our wolves out there.
[2291] We took those bitch -ass wolves that didn't want to hunt and they wanted to come by the fire and we're like, hey, bark of a fucking bear.
[2292] comes by, will you?
[2293] Yeah.
[2294] Throw your bone.
[2295] And then they made friends.
[2296] And then the will start drooping their ears so that you know, I'm your friend.
[2297] I'm your buddy.
[2298] Do you know about the Russian fox experiment?
[2299] No. They did it in Russia.
[2300] They did this experiment where they wanted to see how quickly they could change a fox's overall appearance, their behavior.
[2301] And so what they did was they had these captive foxes.
[2302] Like through breeding?
[2303] Yes.
[2304] Through breeding and natural selection, meaning shooting in the, in the fucking.
[2305] head.
[2306] So whenever a fox was aggressive in any way, shape, or form towards humans, bang, dead.
[2307] Next ones.
[2308] They can't breed.
[2309] So the only ones that breed are like, don't shoot me. And so they probably are pretty aware, you know, through the zeitgeist that these fucking foxes are getting shot.
[2310] You know, there's like something in the air.
[2311] There's probably some psychic in the, you know, morphic resonance, something in the field that lets them know, hey, people are getting shot out here.
[2312] Like, you've got to be nice to these fucking humans.
[2313] See, that thing he's got in his hand that thing will kill you with a squeeze of his finger and so they over a very short period of time turned them into completely different animals that had like big eyes fluffy ears like ears that fell down soft their jaws got smaller they became more cute it's i know i remember seeing uh this in one of those uh like famous documentaries about dogs but i thought this i this always like was very interesting to me is that they get one of the major differences between wolves and dogs is that they do this experiment where they'll put a piece of meat and it's in a cage and they the wolf or dog can't get to it and the wolf will like bang against the cage and try to get it over and over and over again we'll just never stop we'll just never stop doing it but the dog will try to get it a couple times and then looks to the person and that's like one of the differences is that it's like been ingrained in dogs that you're also their partner You know, like, they'll look to you and be like, hey, buddy, I know you got a few IQ points on me. Any idea how to get this meat out of this here cage?
[2314] And, like, that's so deep in them.
[2315] Well, not only that.
[2316] But the wolf would never think to do that.
[2317] Dogs look to you as the leader.
[2318] Right.
[2319] The wolf never thinks you're the leader.
[2320] Especially an unfixed male wolf.
[2321] Shut the fuck up.
[2322] Sit.
[2323] Did you say sit?
[2324] Who the fuck are you talking to, bitch?
[2325] Don't you read Little Word widening hood?
[2326] That's me, motherfucker.
[2327] I eat people.
[2328] They had in the same documentary, I can't remember what it's called but they did they had this experiment where people were just trying to raise wolves like domesticate them from puppies and raise them and it it was interesting to see like it's as they start to get into like adolescence and stuff and the wolves would be attached to them because they had raised them since they were little puppies but you can't train them the way you can train a dog they're jumping up on the table and knocking everything off and they're not responding to down or here boy that's happening that's food i'm gonna eat that yeah yeah fuck you did you see that video that was online uh today uh i think it's else Cerritos, California, there's a wolf running down the street.
[2329] No, I didn't see this.
[2330] Yeah, wild.
[2331] It's a big boy, too.
[2332] A big wolf running down the street.
[2333] And this guy's driving, and his car's like, is that a fucking wolf?
[2334] Dude, there's a fucking wolf running down the street in El Cerritos, California.
[2335] Where is that?
[2336] I don't know.
[2337] Somewhere, somewhere California?
[2338] I think it's near Redwood or Redlands.
[2339] It's from a year ago.
[2340] Oh, is it?
[2341] Yep, that's it.
[2342] Yeah.
[2343] That's from a year ago.
[2344] in a street.
[2345] It's an urban street.
[2346] Look at that.
[2347] That's a big wolf, man. Yeah, it sure is.
[2348] That thing's big.
[2349] When you see them and you, like, think, what would a dog look like there?
[2350] That's when it really dawns in you how big these things are.
[2351] It's like a 150 -pound wolf.
[2352] I'm guessing.
[2353] Might be less.
[2354] Over 100.
[2355] But it's running down the street.
[2356] Like, hey.
[2357] Yeah, like, it's not worried at all.
[2358] It's like...
[2359] It's going to eat your dog.
[2360] Yeah.
[2361] It's 100 % going to eat dogs.
[2362] Especially if you got a little dog.
[2363] Oh, little dogs are dead.
[2364] Yeah, elite coyotes, too, by the way.
[2365] It's going to kill them, too.
[2366] There's a weird, I remember reading this book, um, I believe it was before the dawn, I believe, by Nicholas Wade.
[2367] And it's like a book on evolution.
[2368] And there was a whole chapter about, uh, dogs and humans and how we evolved together.
[2369] But it is this weird thing, like, so you could look at, say, look at like, um, like a Yorkie or something like that, whatever the more.
[2370] And you could go like, well, look, this thing couldn't survive like a second.
[2371] It couldn't get its own food for a second.
[2372] I'd be like, well, isn't this like a flaw in evolution or something?
[2373] But then you also realize that you could argue that it's basically one, the evolutionary race, because it has this human species that just does all of the work for them.
[2374] And carries it.
[2375] Yeah, literally carries it, cleans its ass, puts food down for it.
[2376] And you're like, oh, yeah, this did work out pretty well for that thing.
[2377] Worked out great.
[2378] It is.
[2379] It's going to work out great for men, too.
[2380] Yeah.
[2381] No, I don't know, but who gets to be in charge?
[2382] Here's a good question.
[2383] Would it go back to wolves?
[2384] So, like, imagine if there was some sort of apocalyptic scenario, all the power went off, most human beings are dead, but a lot of dogs survive.
[2385] I think, like, I think, you know, my guess, and this is a totally, like, just, like, just keep in mind, I'm an idiot.
[2386] I have no idea what I'm talking about.
[2387] But I think, like, if you're making an argument, would it German Shepherd, would eventually, like, if they were just left out of the, would it just breed, like, the harshest and toughest and most.
[2388] survivors, maybe not wolf, but you'd get some wolf -like creature, that Yorkie isn't going to make it to Generation 2.
[2389] I've seen Yorkies.
[2390] A hawk's going to take that thing away.
[2391] Yorkies aren't going to make it, but the dogs that are probably the closest to wolves probably would make it.
[2392] Yeah.
[2393] Especially in cold climates, right?
[2394] So now they're outdoors.
[2395] So now huskies and things that are pretty, like Kitas, kind of wolf -likeish.
[2396] Well, you'd come up with some badass version of them that are killers again, that wouldn't be trained.
[2397] It'd be almost like they're not kept in childhood.
[2398] They'd become kind of grown -ups again what is that one crazy Russian dog I know we've talked about it before it's this is one huge they use them to fight off wolves these them like to protect flocks yeah Caucasian shepherd show me some images of the Caucasian shepherd it's fucking enormous look what that thing looks like so but show me some images okay they look fucking terrifying they look like super wolves like it's a Just like this, look at that giant fucking thing.
[2399] So that went the other way.
[2400] Like, they developed something that can fuck wolves up.
[2401] And because they needed something to protect their flocks.
[2402] They needed someone to protect their sheep and shit.
[2403] So look at that size of that fucking thing.
[2404] Bro, that thing's so huge.
[2405] I think they're like 200 pounds.
[2406] And they have fur everywhere, so they're probably really hard to bite.
[2407] Look at the size of that thing where it's hopping on that lady's shoulders.
[2408] Good Lord.
[2409] So there's another one, that other one.
[2410] The Caucasian, that one I think is even more ferocious.
[2411] I think.
[2412] I might be wrong.
[2413] Bro, fucking size of that thing, though.
[2414] Look at the size, even with perspective.
[2415] Look at that thing.
[2416] Yeah, these are very ferocious.
[2417] Tibetan Mastiffs, yes.
[2418] Well, this is saying, I see your Tibetan Mastiff.
[2419] I raise you this Caucasian O 'Arts.
[2420] Tibetan Mastiffs are another crazy -looking animal, too.
[2421] Dude, that guy, that guy looks like the guy who would have those dogs.
[2422] Look at that thing.
[2423] If you're a wolf, you're like, ah, fuck!
[2424] It's basically the Brock Lesnar of wolves, you know?
[2425] Everybody else is a welterweight, and this motherfucker shows up.
[2426] Yeah.
[2427] Yeah, you better heel -hook that wolf.
[2428] Yeah, bro, you're done.
[2429] That thing, you can't, you're not even going to get through all that fur to bite him.
[2430] Yeah.
[2431] It's like a lion's mane.
[2432] It's like literally, like, there to protect from the...
[2433] the cold and bites.
[2434] It really does look like what the Russians would do with the dog.
[2435] Of course, that's what you did.
[2436] Well, we're making little poodle mixtures over here.
[2437] The Russians are coming up.
[2438] You're like, ah, shit, we should have been doing that.
[2439] Of course the French made Carl too.
[2440] You're telling me we can't produce munitions like the Russians and our dogs have to fight those dogs when the war goes down?
[2441] Imagine.
[2442] Yeah.
[2443] I think we covered it all, Dave Smith.
[2444] Anything else?
[2445] well I think that that should save the world for now this is not it's a long it's a process there's going to be many podcasts we're gonna have to do this a thousand times to save the old world and the new world is going to be unstoppable hell yeah well I got to tell you I'm almost at the point with this world where I'm like ha let's roll the dice on this new on these new overlords well hopefully things will balance out and be much more logical when they're not run by humans.
[2446] Well, I still believe in humans.
[2447] I think the monopoly, the monopoly of information is broken.
[2448] Ron Paul will become president within the next 10 years.
[2449] He will.
[2450] Just reverse his age.
[2451] That's right.
[2452] That's what they do.
[2453] They just put Ron on all sorts of crazy science.
[2454] If we can get, if we can get Ron Paul young again, then this country's got a good chance.
[2455] Ron Paul needs to get on some daily NAD drips and start testosterone therapy and get on the peptides and NMN, you've got to change his vitamin routine.
[2456] I was doing pretty good.
[2457] He's doing pretty good.
[2458] He's almost, I think he's 89, 88, something like that.
[2459] And very coherent.
[2460] And he's on top of it.
[2461] Yeah.
[2462] And every time his show comes on, it's like, he's like, okay, here's the latest of what's going on in China and, like, knows everything.
[2463] Like, he's just read everything about that's happening.
[2464] Extraordinary.
[2465] Dave Smith, you're the fucking man. I love you.
[2466] It's always great to talk to you.
[2467] And stay offline for you.
[2468] couple days.
[2469] It's going to get ugly.
[2470] Bye, everybody.