The Joe Rogan Experience
The Joe Rogan Experience

#2478 - Theo Von

2h ago2:46:2732,874 words
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Theo Von is a comedian and host of the podcast “This Past Weekend with Theo Von.” Tickets are on sale now for his new movie "Busboys" only in theaters on April 17.www.theovon.comwww.youtube.com/theovo...

Transcript

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[MUSIC]

>> The Joe Rogan experience.

>> Join my day Joe Rogan podcast by night, all day. [MUSIC] >> Thank you. >> What do you mean by those people? >> You know, you know, it's changed every year since the horns.

>> I don't know.

>> You know, you mean band members are you talking about it?

>> Stuff music, music industry. >> Yeah, we're just talking about it. We should tell people what we're talking about. If you hum a song, just like fuck around and like, you know, like the cocaine song, you know what I mean?

If you play airclaps and you mean, if you do that, you'll get flagged on YouTube and they take money from you. >> How desperate is that? >> It's gross, but you can't even hum a song. You can't, like, what are you talking about?

>> You can't even hum. >> In the future, you're not even going to be able to fall in love. They're going to charge you for it. >> How are they going to do that? >> They won't be falling in love with the person anymore.

People would be outdated. >> People come with problems.

>> I ain't coming on no bot.

>> No, ever? >> What about in one? >> No, what will they do with it? Keep it. >> Yeah.

>> Maybe that's where keep some alive. Imagine that? >> Let me think about it. >> If you fuck her every day to keep her alive, if you don't just start dribbling up on you,

like she's on those epic? >> So she's a Latino, you're saying. >> She's got a cheaper plump.

>> You got to keep, you got to keep the juices flowing, huh?

>> There'd be guys that would sign up for that. >> Okay, I could do that. >> But day five thousand and twenty six in a row, you'd be like, oh my God, I can't do this. >> Yeah, and then she's dying.

>> Why is she dying? She's electric, isn't she? >> She only gets powered by a com. >> Oh, sad. >> And three days with no com, she shuts off.

And that's it.

And you can't bring it back.

I'd shut her down, quick, I think she would be. >> I have to let your buddy's fucker just to keep her alive. >> Oh, that's gonna be gross, Joe. >> It would be. >> And it would be sad and stuff like that.

>> And you'd have some buddy like late at night, like, hey bro. >> Yeah, it would love sir. >> What your wife doing to it, like, taxi, you're like four a.m. >> Bro, if you need to keep her alive.

>> Yeah, he's over there stroking at ways on the phone with you. >> Bro, plug your wife in for a little bit. >> Bro, let me come over there. >> We're getting close. Do you see those ones they have at the Consumer Electronics Show

and Vegas? >> The dancing. >> No, it's an AI companion that's a robot. It's like a very pretty lady in her mouth moves, she talks. And it's not there yet, but it's in the neighborhood.

You know, it's not at the right door, but it just entered the community. >> You know what I mean? >> You think so? >> No, some communities have that awning.

Welcome to like Paradise of States. Can you go through this all the houses in the subsection? >> Yeah. >> It's in the door. >> Right.

>> It's in the door. >> It's in the house, it had nox or whatever. >> Exactly. >> Our hunter's gland or racist cove or whatever. >> The fuck robot has made it through on to your street.

It's just not at your house yet. And it will be in five to ten years. >> My kids aren't fucking robots. >> I'll tell. >> If you have kids, they're gonna fuck robot.

>> No, they won't. >> You won't be able to stop them. All their friends are gonna be able to do it. It'd be rude. They'd be like, "Keep in them off social media."

(laughs) >> (laughs) >> (laughs) >> They'd be like, "Keep in kids off social media. They feel left out."

>> They're like, "Come on, Dad. Let me get Snapchat." >> No, son. >> Yeah. >> I want you to concentrate on your homework and your football.

>> Come on, Dad. >> Come on, Dad. >> Let me get Snapchat. >> No, one, it, look, you, your dad wakes you up early. He's like, "Look, one of you little bastards left.

"The frickin' combo out in the yard." (laughs) >> Which one of you-- >> Oh, you're hilarious. >> Yeah, comedy, comedy, comedy, comedy.

>> All your friends, fucks. >> Oh, oh. >> That's sad. But I do think that one day our smiles will be in a museum. That's where we're headed.

It's like, the feelings are starting to disappear, you know? >> Maybe that's what autism is. Like severe autism? >> Well, I thought about that a lot.

That's why we're getting to some of the, like,

the only way we could get to this place if we get to this data-driven place where it's like, you know, alien-nascist. Things start to feel alien-nascier, is because of autism, leading--

it's when autism mixes with-- what's called our society's based on money capitalism? When autism and capitalism converge, things got really good. >> Right, and think about it, right?

We don't know exactly what is causing autism. There's a lot of suspicions, a lot of them have to do with vaccines, a different medications, and different chemicals, and pollutants, and all sorts of different things. And Kalon too, one thing we could all agree on,

and Tylenolty thing too, right? But one thing that we could all agree on, it's a big factor is stuff that we've created. It's a big factor, whatever it is. Let's not put the blame on any one of these industries,

but there's something going on where more people are getting autism now than ever, and it seems almost positive that it's coming from us,

That we did something, human society.

Well, if you think about where human society is going, wouldn't that be a way to turn us into something new, right? If we were going to merge with machines, what better way than to like eliminate empathy, eliminate emotions, make us like,

able to like stay at home and stare to screen for hours at a time with no concern whatsoever, just the kind of social detachment, along with the integration of all this crazy new technology, and the people, a lot of the people that are in the tech business,

that at high levels, on spectrum. Oh, dude, yeah, they're on the fucking diving board of this man that wants to bring it in, AI. They're bringing in the next version of life. Kind of, I mean, we're thinking it's like a mistake,

but it might not be.

It might be like a crucial part of the system

when you get further and further integrated with technology,

and all the stuff that you need to make it,

and all the stuff that's involved in capitalism, including like lying about when medications, kids needs, giving them this, giving them that lying about what kind of what the pesticides do or the chemicals do, or whatever it is, what is that ultimately doing?

If it's leading people to be on the spectrum more and more often, would if one day it's not one in 12 in California, if it's 100%, everybody got a full spectrum society, and there's no regular people left. Yeah.

We have to think about that if it's one in 12 boys right now in California, and it used to be like one in 10,000. This is like an invasion. Right, like an invasion of a way that people think that's entering into human civilization.

Yeah, and I feel like it was, I agree, right?

So then it's like, and then if you don't have this like

uprising, this emotional uprising out of people, of like, you know, like, this is wrong, 'cause I think like, you know, when you get real database to like that kind of like, 'til there's a mask type of energy,

I think you're not, you know, you're not thinking about some of the like how it affects you, as much, you're maybe just you're able to like roll into that nest of like, this is this new digital landscape, and those people fit well in it.

Does that make any sense? It does, it does make fit well, and they do fit well in it. I know a lot of people that are spectrum me that are very happy, just being online all the time. Yeah, that's what they do.

And dude, maybe that's what's supposed, yeah, that's the scary part is like,

what if that's what's supposed to happen?

Right, and the rest of us are just like, 'cause I'm like, I think a romanticist, you know, I'm thinking like, oh, yeah, a porch and a rocking chair, and then, you know, but, you know, other people are like,

yeah, we're coming in robots and shit, like that and we'll reimbagle through our fucking brain cells and shit, you know, like, it's just like, we're thinking of autism as a flaw, but it might be a feature.

But is it what, is it, okay, is it what nature wants, or is it something that we're creating that is heading us down a very dark path? I feel like it's not autism,

but all of it in conjunction is the second one.

It might be what the universe wants. It might be how it goes. Like, there has to be some sort of a pathway from territorial primates to something new, right? Does it?

I think so. Yeah, because otherwise, we would still be single cell organisms.

Everything's moving in a general direction

of more complexity. Okay, that's fair, so if it's moving in a general direction of more complexity, and with all the technology that we're making, like, we're moving into some fucking weird place, right?

Wouldn't it be better if you just, like, easily accepted that and what better way than if you're one of those dudes that's on the spectrum that loves to chill at home and play video games, just stare to screen, doesn't really need a lot of human contact.

Yeah, one of those fucking data wiggers, they're whatever they call them, you know, they was fucking tech monkeys or whatever. Yeah, those guys were just all about it. They're all about it.

They were in Apple Watches and the fucking, everyone was whooped into the world. They had to do with the fucking whooped. That phrase, it was like, it kept updating on him as watch. It's like, your next, they'll broke in or whatever.

You got a whooped cock ring. Yeah, it's crazy. So I can fuck his robot. Bro, you're bling twice and you're fucking, yeah, it's like, it shoots GLP ones and you're nuts.

It's just like, it's all too. But it's, it's happened too fast, bro, and it's too much, and it starts to be like, is it being controlled? This episode is brought to you by Squarespace,

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your first purchase of a website or domain. Dude, here's something that I was-- - I was in control by a small amount of people,

which is always scary. - That's scary.

- It's always scary when a small amount of individuals have insane amounts of power and wealth.

And that's what's gonna happen with this AI thing

and that's what's what happened with tech. Like, look what happened with tech? With tech, the vast majority of the people that are involved were all heavily left-wing, very progressive. Like, I kind of even far left in a way.

And look, they pushed the entire country's narrative in that direction through censorship on social media, through banning any accounts that didn't, you know, didn't kind of commit to the narrative, rush a gate, get rush a gate,

anything about Hunterbiden's laptop, anything about vaccines being deadly or maybe it came from a lab. All that stuff would get you kicked off. And so it was all moving in this one ideological direction.

That's like literally the conversation, the entire country's happening. There's no other output. Before, you know, there was a few of them that came around like gab and some other ones,

some social media sites that were like a response to that,

but they never really took off, right?

Not things took off yet. Not really. You know, there's some people that are on threads and there's some people on truth, but the reality is, if you're not on Twitter,

you're not really gonna connect with the most people. That's the giant majority of people have in conversations. And it was all completely controlled by a small group of people with one ideology. But didn't all those half of those people move over

to the other political party, when Trump got elected, like you know what I'm saying? Like Zuckerberg was on the left side. But he's always seemed like a very left-leaning guy, and then they're all just,

so that's what made me start to think, "Oh, none of these guys are really on a side. There's this other third side that a lot of us can't see that is just kind of common during or fabricating or like infiltrating both sides."

- If I could harm a song right now,

I'd harm the pink Floyd song money.

- Yeah. - You know what I'm saying? - Yeah.

- 'Cause that's what they were protecting that chatter.

- That can, baby. - Protecting that cash. - I mean, look how many people are fucking moving out of all these states that are trying to impose wealth taxes. They're trying to steal money from the people

that are the most successful. I was reading something about Massachusetts, and how much this lady was reporting, but how much Massachusetts is lost from that. Because people leave the state.

Their businesses leave the state. New York is having the same problem. Like Kathy Holtzuel Lady, you know, now she's asking people, I don't know what I was saying, I don't know what I was saying.

- Yeah, get a better name. - Who cares where her name is? - Yeah, she's asking people to go to Palm Beach and tell people to come back to New York now, because we're losing tax base, like, come on.

Of course, you're losing tax base. You can't just arbitrarily decide that because someone makes more money, they deserve to give you more money. And then, what have you done with the money you have?

- That's the best point. - Oh, a shit ton of waste and fraud, and have you corrected any of that? - No, so your solution is what? More money?

- Yeah, okay, fuck all the way off. Of course, these people are gonna leave. You're a bunch of incompetent stuages, and you're in charge of all the money in the state. And that's dumb, yeah.

And that's why Chevron moved out of California,

Tesla moved out of California, and in and out burger moved out of California. - We moved out, we moved out of California. - What are you talking about? - We might as well be companies.

- We're small companies. - But it's like, you can't just say, we're gonna take more money and that'll fix it. - But you don't think Bill, you're near. - Yeah, especially dude, what has happened

like with the follow-up to the Somali fraud? All of these fraud buildings where it's like blatant, there's no businesses, it's just a sign on the door, and like, it feels like there's no follow-up to it. - There's some, there's some people

that are being prosecuted right now. There is a bunch of investigations regarding Minnesota, regarding California, they're getting in there. They have to get in there now, because it's been exposed nationally.

But the real question is, how did it go on for so long? How did you allow it to happen for so long? - I knew. Bro, you know what, I wanna know like what's real bad? What's real bad is like the amount of money

that California has wasted. If their solution is to try to tax people, if you ever seem like what they did with the high speed rail, yeah, nothing. - This pit bill is of dollars.

There's some guy who broke down how much China, how much high speed rail China did in the same time that it took California to do their high speed rail. It's actually funny. I've done some rail out of China, I'll tell you that.

- Don't think the same stuff. - Yeah, I think they're talking about different things. - But no, China do, they're doing. Dude, it's weird when you start thinking, "Hey, China looks like a good place to live."

- They've got their shit together, I'll tell you that.

A lot of these places with kings,

they really know how to run things. They do a real-solid job. (laughing) They don't even think they do. - Poll has got their shit together, dude.

- They do have their shit together.

- And they were communist, not that long ago, you know?

- Poll has got their shit, they don't let any of this float influence Spain, I feel like it's taking their shit back. - True. - They're picking up their toys. - They're gonna find this, here it is.

'Cause this is actually funny. When you see the comparison between what China's done and what we've done in the same amount of time, - Yeah, it's actually kinda funny. - Oh, I want to say thanks to this lady Sarah Whitecheck.

I just gave she just came in and helped me get blood a little while ago. And she was, she's just a nurse practitioner and you could tell she was just working hard. - She hooked up.

- Yeah, she was just like, you know, showed up and just like, just got it done for me. You could tell she just like is a hard work in lady. I admire hard work in women. - What about hard work in men, do you like them?

- Yeah, that's it, Jimmy. - Well, they should be. So look at this, things that happened faster. - Who's this fucking guner though? Who's that dude?

Is that milk? (laughing) - Fuck, he fell off. - He had it happened faster than building the California High Speed Rail.

China's entire high speed rail network of 30,000 miles. Our LA 15 year. - In 15 year. - We would have taken them two months. - Dubai, going from barren desert wasteland

to barren culture wasteland. Timothy Schalamay's entire existence. I bone one through 17 and the internet follow up for more bullshit. (laughing)

- I love that guy. That's Harrison Baum. - Oh yeah. - That's crazy, isn't it? - That's crazy.

And they just took billions of dollars in taxes and they're, oh, we're working on it. - Yeah. - But where? Everything is front, you're starting or not?

- It's all front. - It's all front. - But it's not front, it's waste. And it's bureaucracy. So they keep the money coming in.

So they keep people working but the people don't do anything. - And we can't even fucking keep the TSA workers. Dude, I fucking snuck a happy and full of goldfish. You'll fucking TSA workers at the day,

the edible ones. Just a fucking keep 'em go and do it out there. - They're giving 'em some goldfish. - Yeah, they're giving 'em paid. - I know.

They just started getting back pay. - But just, it's just, it's like a crazy. - Like that there, the least priority.

Like bro, flying is fucking super important.

You dummies. You want to keep the economy going? You got to let people fly around. They got shit to do, man. You can't just fucking not pay the TSA people.

You fucking idiots. How come you get paid? - Yeah. - How come you get paid? - I'm just sick of this shit.

And I'm sick of rich people not putting their fucking kids over in these wars and shit like that. Put your fucking hunky ass kids up there. Let them go shed some fucking blood. - Especially if you're asking for it.

It's best if you're out there fucking bullshit and dude. Put your fucking hunky little fancy ass fucking kid up there, man. It's shit makes me mad, bro. - Well, I think there's also a problem. The people that I've talked to that have served overseas

and have been involved and deployed in military operations and seen a lot of shit. There are a lot of them are the opinion that you shouldn't

be able to make those decisions if you've never been to war.

If you don't know what it is, you don't know what you're sending people to do. - It doesn't mean you're not still gonna be a tyrant 'cause there are some people like clearly Netanyahu's been to war. He was in the military, he was involved in some shit.

- Was he? - Yeah, and he was like a special forces operator in Israel. And clearly he doesn't mind going to war. - But this episode is brought to you by Manscape.

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- I think most of you need term. - Bores up fucking terrifying. - But I mean, I don't think I wouldn't call it a war, but I mean, what they're doing right now. - Yeah. - And I'm not going to--

- I'm not going to-- - I'm not going to-- - You run as war. That's war.

It runs a real enemy.

You know, it's a different-- are they enemy to America? - Well, what they are is the largest country in terms of like state sponsored terrorism to the largest sponsor of terrorism.

But also, you gotta think, why? You know, and this is not excusing anybody for Islamist ideology, 'cause it's scary, 'cause they want a global caliphate, right? They're radicals.

But you gotta go back to what happened in that country. And if you go back to what happened in that country, they tried to nationalize oil. Iran was like a westernized country. Girls were wearing mini skirts.

- Oh, yeah. - But it's hot. - You see that video from the set? - Oh, yeah, yeah, yeah. - Yeah, bro, everyone's hip-end. - So hip-end. - So hip-end.

- When happened is slowly but surely,

and quickly at first, because when they tried

to nationalize oil, the CIA swooped in and they fucking got that guy out of office and they allowed these Islamic, you know, radicalists to start running the country. - Well, that's when they had policies, right?

- I don't know exactly when it was ball started. But the point is, the country was doing fine before we monkeyed with it. And we monkeyed with it, because they were not getting enough of the money from the oil.

So it was the British petroleum company, I think.

Put it into the complexity of the story of Iran, their government being overthrown. I think it was in the 1950s. So when you see like how it all played out and why it is what it is today,

Jesus Christ, you'd be mad too. - Yeah. - And when you're mad and you're surrounded by bigger enemies that all have nuclear weapons, you don't even have nuclear weapons.

- Wouldn't you be trying to make them? You know what I'm saying? Like, I'm not saying Iran should have nuclear weapons. I don't think anybody should have nuclear weapons. - But Israel gets to have them.

- Allegedly, this is the problem. - Allegedly. - Everything's allegedly with an allegedly without-- - Except for the genocide. - You know, they don't officially have them. - Right. - I don't think they admit

they're officially have them. And you know who is a big opponent of Israel getting nuclear weapons? - JFK. - JFK. - Mm, yeah.

- That's what a lot of people think led back into the left before they killed him who? - I don't know. - The Iranian Revolution. Also called the Islamic Revolution was a mass uprising in Iran

over through the Shah's monarchy in 1979. Replace it with an Islamic Republic led by Ayatollah Rula Khomeini. - Shadar Rukko. - They call it that way. - I wanted to go back to the national--

ask you the question of what was the events that led to them trying to nationalize their oil? Here it is. - No, that's not it. - So what was banned real opposition

used to seek a police to serial jail? I'll just put into asking another question, what were the events that took place after Iran tried to nationalize oil? Just ask that question.

What are the events that took place when Iran tried to nationalize oil? - Bro, fuck oil, a lot of other walk if this is a shit that's gonna come out of all of it.

You feel the problem is it's not just oil.

It's for your car, it's everything you use. Plastic is, they use petroleum-based chemicals or responsible for medicine. But it's also getting in our nuts now and people can't even fucking read anymore because of it.

So it's like, what is all that stuff helping us anymore?

- Yeah, here it is. So Iran's attempt to nationalize oil in the 1950s unfolded as a chain of political, economic and international confrontations, centered on Prime Minister Mohammad Moseh--

how do you say his name? Mogue a day? Moseh, Moseh day? - Let me see. Moseh day?

- Moseh day? And British controlled Anglo-Ironian oil company, I'll walk you through the key events. But it had to do with who is in control of the oil before that, like who is making the money before that?

- Yeah. - And the proplexies gonna give us the fucking ten-foil hat story of how it went down.

But the bottom line is, people are making a lot of money

over there in oil and they wanted most of the money and they got boxed out and then they bombed up with a fucking psychotic dictator. - Yeah. And a lot of the, I mean, if you look back on what Iran looked

like when it was a westernized country, like damn, we should have fucking supported whatever the fuck was going on back then. - I know.

I think what, do you feel like we used to do things

that were better and then we got here's the 10-foil hat version. I love how proplexity gives you a 10-foil hat version. Nice. The store is basically Iran tried to take back its oil, the British and Americans teamed up in secret

to crush that idea and send a warning to the rest of the world. Britain had built its empire and navy on cheap Iranian oil, via the Anglo-Iranian oil company,

Later British petroleum companies.

So when Mocha Deck, I don't wanna say his name,

I keep fucking enough, London sought his direct threat to its global power and profits, it leads fear that if Iran got away with nationalizing its oil, other countries of the Middle East would be on and beyond would copy destroying western oil

in the Middle East, so they would determine to make Iran an example. Like, bro, we've been monkeying around with other countries forever. This thing in Venezuela, this real quick thing that happened real quick when they're in kidnap a dude, and Venezuela, like, well, a lot of it's because these are the countries

that are still outside of the Rothschild banking system, or whatever, if you see that thing, I have not. Where it's like, does the countries that are still not on that list

or something, this is tin foil stuff, I think.

Or it's absolutely true, I have no idea. - There's a lot going on right now, right? - I'm scared, dude, I'm scared. - I'm scared, I'm gonna be honest with you. - Yeah, it should be.

- I'm scared. - Well, it's a scary time because this is a real hot war. People come up and tell me about it,

I wasn't an Uber yesterday, and there's a man in there,

he was driving, and he's like, we need a revolution, you know? - Don't boy. - He's like, you have a voice, he's telling me stuff like that. - I don't know, I don't take Uber's anymore.

- Don't take Uber's, run a car, motherfucker. - I'm not roof, renting a car. - Why would you run a car, you don't rent cars? - Well, you think I'm gonna go be at the, renting a car is insane if to check under,

see if there's any dance in it, if there's any like, and then if you do all this stuff, renting a car is an nightmare. Dude, I will tell you this story, the one time we rented, we did rent a car. And we got a dent on it, like a pretty good dang,

and we fucking, we had a, we caught a pigeon and had it shit over the dent to fill it in whenever we turned it in. - No, you didn't, this is not a true story. - Yeah, we did.

- You caught a pigeon? - Yeah, you think it's how to catch a pigeon? - I do. - Bro, bring up a pigeon, get in a car. (laughing)

- Bro, yeah, would he raise them? - Well, yeah, but dude, he has an autism in his hands. That's a couple of years, you don't think, you think it's on the, catch a pigeon, the dumbest bird ever did,

and just put the shit over the dent. - Yeah, you hang it over it. - Oh, the shit. - How big was his dent? We're talking about it.

- Dude, these fucking pigeons shit all day, Joe. - So you just hold them there until they're done? - Yeah, what are you still gonna shit, copper, whatever. (laughing) - Yeah, we fucking put 'em over the dent, bro.

- That's why God wants you to help. - That's my insurance.

- Okay, this one's all fucked up, but that's how fair.

- That's 'cause he has American health care. It's United Health Care. (laughing) Dude, what year's what I wanna know? Like, I guess he, I like,

yeah, I don't know man, everybody just feels scared and makes shit. - Well, they should because a lot of things are getting exposed right now. You know, there's a lot of fraud

and you're seeing it at the highest levels of government. And people are also scared because no one's getting in trouble for things, like no one's getting in trouble for the Epstein files, no one's getting in trouble for... - Yeah, that's almost disappeared kind of.

- Well, let's part of what happens when there's some sort of a big social thing, one thing that's in the past that leaders have used to cover up problems at home as a fucking war.

Not saying that that's why they bombed Iran, but that would be a way to do it. If you're that psychotic, you know, and if you were thinking about doing it anyway, you might be able to justify it.

People have always done that, also to stay in power.

- Oh yeah. Even Bill Clinton said that about Netanyahu. Bill Clinton said Netanyahu wants war so he could stay in power. - For sure, do people call him the Yamaka Hitler?

That's what he called to these people. - Everybody knows. - Which people? - Camalous people. - Huh? - What do you say? - What do you mean people? He's like, "No, what are you talking about?"

- Black folks? - No. - I don't know what you're saying. - I don't know what you're saying. - I don't know what you're saying. - Okay. - What's not, not draw conclusions. - Okay. - Yeah. - Okay.

- He seems like a great guy. - No. - Really? - Well, it's just a scary time. - It's a scary time because people are willing to blow people up with fucking drones and missiles

and they're shooting into apartment buildings and blowing up schools and it's like, "Fuck, man." And we didn't hear how to, I think that we've been poisoned. I do think that we've been poisoned. - How's that?

- Because I think that we find out that our food is a lot of our food is poisonous, right? - Or our food is not good for us. - Yeah, sorry, not good for us. So we have a food that is made to be not good for us.

And then we have a healthcare system that'll just kind of take care of you, barely. So then you start to create this other, you're gonna need your autism gang that are up there running shit.

But then you're gonna need this sort of like mollusky sort of like the worker bees.

And that's what the rest of us start to become

as worker bees because, you know, you're on an antidepressants killed like the vibe and the energy of so many people, right? Like the opioid epidemic, like you broke apart so many families in ruined hope

and so many like kids and parents and homes and like the COVID where you shut down recovery rooms and places where people were meeting and so they were so disconnected.

Then it's like you just,

you start to wonder why there's no uprisings

because there's no, there's nothing rising up inside of you anymore because a lot of your, your vitro has been killed. People are jerking off in the fucking robots and even just on car batteries

and shit in some of those videos online, but car batteries? - People will come on everything. - What happens when you hit the two posts? - I don't know if you did.

- This is just explode. - I got to be grounded, I would have to go. - All right, that's a real fucking, we don't want that joke coming back to you. - You know what?

- You imagine if it was like one solid stream and electricity jumped, made it back to the tip. - But dude, that could happen to you with that robot if you're trying to hump that robot, right? - Right. - And then you hit short ones.

- Fones short out. Remember those old phones that would blow up in people's cars, like the note, it was one of the note series. Like people's cars would catch on fire

if you left it plugged in. - Yeah. - No, what if that happens? - You're dick.

- And people would always,

you know what I'm saying? - And people would always leave it plugged in next to their wife at night for fucking no reason. - On top of your wife. - It's just about to burst and flames and lights around the fire.

- But do you know what? - Successor.

- I think we've been poisoned just enough

to like, it feels like just to hurt, but not, like we just have to start. I think it's a time where like, we have to try and work on our, and like, look inside of ourselves.

And, I don't know, do I sound fucking preachy? - No, no, you don't sound preachy, but you just need to find a hole on this something. There was some file. I didn't read it, but a bunch of people said it to me,

I just went, oh, Jesus. It was from the,

some freedom of information act or some leak from the 1950s.

- That's exactly it. - Well, CIA, and they were trying to think of different ways to make people docile and stupid and unmotivated. - Yeah. - And they were talking about different medications,

putting stuff in food, all these different strategies to keep people stupid. - Yeah. - And they did. - This is our own government, us,

United States of America. - Well, that's another thing. - Is that not treasonous? I agree. So what, and yeah, it just feels like there's no recourse.

And I know like, and you start to think, well, this is how a lot of people live there entire centuries in different countries and stuff like that. Like, they live under this type of oppression and like fear all the time.

'Cause it feels new here. - I wanna know what exactly, could you put that into our lovely sponsor, put that into our public property and find out what the fuck was said

in that CIA document, what were they actually planning?

'Cause it's the idea that there's people in government that would just say, fuck millions of people in their potential in life. Let's tank their potential so that we can get our agenda through easier without them being upset.

Let's ruin millions of people's lives or at least dampen their dreams. - I don't squash their hopes, make 'em stupid and lazy. Make their kids sick, make their makeup, put pornography and let it be into the home so that it's accessible everywhere.

So marriage is getting ruined and relationships, getting ruined and guys are to spunk and out on wherever. And so they don't, so there's no energy, there's no like, there's no fucking desire inside of people to overcome.

And it's like, yeah, we have to just try and do better one day at a time. - For men like their ambition and life is often connected to wanting girls to like them or guys to like them, whatever it is.

- And purpose creating, but that's the other part. - Purpose and creating is like the ultimate. - That's like the ultimate is, it's almost like you're doing a service. Like whatever you're doing, if you're doing it your best,

your real reward is that people enjoy it, whatever it is, whether you're a carpenter or a musician or whatever it is. If you're doing something at your best, the ultimate reward is people enjoying it. - Yeah.

- That's the ultimate reward.

But you have to figure that out in life.

You're probably thinking of declassified C.A., mind control and behavior modification, experience like blue bird, artichoke, artichoke is it. That's it, especially MK Ultra, which did run in the 1950s and 60s.

Okay, blue bird, MK Ultra, what is, make people stupid and cognition. C.I.A., efforts to use drugs, hypnosis and other techniques. No, that's the interrogation, that's different. (buzzer)

Perfect concussion effort, often reference alongside MK Ultra, explicitly explored using sub-orail blasts to erase memory. Whoa, erasing or degrading memory is practically a way of deceiving a person cognitively. You didn't that as not described as making them stupid

in official language. - Whoa, yeah, it feels like we're just stuck in an experience. - I feel like this is not it, this isn't it. - No, this is, so once you've run a search for recently disclosed C.I.A. files to make people,

I mean, I had to also in person, didn't give me anything better.

- I tried to look on Twitter.

- Well, okay, using, but put in using vaccines to make people stupid, or suggesting vaccines, make people stupid. - Well, I had to say now. - Why?

- 'Cause to take me to somewhere, talk about it some face. - Perfect, I love Facebook. - But the conspiracy theorists are looking pretty sane right now. Okay, this is EV Magazine.

Okay, well, it's going on here.

You have to type in your email or the one you want to say.

- But, y'all, I don't think what you're saying, the things you're saying, I don't think that that doesn't seem like an American idea to me. - Well, it's okay, Jim, we've got it. - No, it's not an American idea.

- If you can't find it, please do. - Can you do Google too, you can't do it? - Yeah, good, just look everywhere. - Do you, have you noticed some things are harder to find? - Yeah.

- Well, this is probably gonna be hard to find, because I think this is one of those ones that is like, it's on X, right? - Right. - I know, like, people are going over it,

but I don't know if you've even been verified. This is one of the reasons why I wanted to put it through propuxity. - Fine, 'cause there's a lot of stuff you read that just complete Hort, especially today.

- April Fool's Motherfucker, is April Fool's? - Yeah. - Don't get tricked. - Fuck, stay off the net. - I just gave some random lady

my blood in the parking lot. - Oh, no. - She's gonna use that for a ritual. (laughs) - Good, clone you son.

You can have little baby theos, like those little videos of pop-up of us. - Yeah. - I'm thinking, my favorite part of the video is that the end, when you just kind of bounce out of your hair.

- For the laugh at so hard. - Is this it? - This is it. - Okay, what is it? - Sad video.

It's almost like I'm gonna project our show.

- What is it, project, what does it say, essentially?

- That's Kim Maverson. She's pretty good. - Why'd I have her son? - Artichoke. So this says, look, we've got this brand idea

of how we're basically gonna drug people

and do all kinds of weird experiments on them to see if we could control their minds. These documents don't show that anything was actually done. It just shows that we've got these really crazy ideas. And they're extremely unethical inhumane,

terrible, terrible ideas. In the 1977 leak of documents say, "Oh yeah, well actually the government did it." They did all of those terrible things they said they were doing in that previous memo,

they did it. And now here are some of the archives that we have from when they did all of those terrible things. So okay, these documents, special research for Artichoke,

dated April 21st of 1952, the memo proposes developing long-term covert drugs that could be slipped into daily life. Drugs that were, quote, administered over considerable period of time,

possibly being placed in food or water that caused either agitation or depression. These should include chemicals or drugs that could be effectively concealed in common items such as food,

water, Coca-Cola, beer, liquor, cigarettes, etc.

And should also be capable of use in standard medical treatments, such as vaccinations and shots. We can do all this other experimentation, which nobody will know about its sneakies,

sneak it into their Coca-Cola, sneak it into their beer. They're cigarettes, they're vaccines. They're medications, let's sneak it all in. - Yeah. (laughs)

- Well, as wild conspiracy theorists, they strike again. They have no morals, they have no ethics, they have no humanity. These documents, I mean, these people are inhumane,

they're sick, they're twisted, this is terrible. - Yeah, we had to go get my person. She told it. - She used to be on, what's show is she on?

Not breaking points. What was the show that they did before break him? - Hiversan? - It wasn't two, two, seven. - She got put it off because Fauci was coming on.

And she wanted a question Fauci about the COVID vaccines. And they kicked her up the show and she went and depended. - Good for her.

- For how it always goes.

- Yep. - Yeah, you can't talk too much shit. Even though it's pretty obvious, that guy's a criminal. Pretty fucking obvious, that guy's a liar, lie in front of Congress, was responsible for gain

of functioned research that led to, who knows how many fucking people dying of a man made disease, whatever whatever, just don't question kick. - You can't work here anymore. You're not playing ball.

- Yeah. - Look, but now she can do stuff like this. - Good for her. - That's nuts that your tax dollars pay for that. Them figuring out how to make people stupid.

How do I make the "O" stupid? Let me slip something into his Coca-Cola. Let's figure out if it works. But it's experiment on random people and see what kind of results we get.

- And here's my question then. Well, did you know, whenever they introduced antidepressants, that changed the cognitive therapy side of things, like in therapist office, it totally revolutionized, industrialized therapy,

and it ruined a lot of people, I think. Like one of my goals is to get off of antidepressants completely, man. I want to feel how I'm supposed to feel. So I can have thoughts and actions that make me

feel connected to the world. That makes you feel dead, man.

- So why did you take them in the first place?

- 'Cause I was in a bad relationship 20 years ago, and I was having a tough day at school, and they fucking put them.

They gave them to me, and then I never got off.

- Really?

- Because when you get off, I think we talked about this

once it's hard. - Yeah, it makes you more depressed, more fucked up, and you're all in balance, you know, probably you're addicted to them. - Yeah, and so that's one of my goals is,

and I notice like, for me, I've been taking like metal blue, I've been doing some things like, and I'm working with a doctor to help me, but I want to, I'm gonna get there. And I'm just gonna start to take the power back

of myself more. - Well, they say that exercise is, like many times, - Oh, yeah. - Greater, and it's effect, at alleviating depression. - Dude, I wake up and I do my yoga,

and I do like a 35 minute workout. I'll do like six exercises, five runs of it in a row. That's 30 exercise, burn through them bitches, and I'm a, and I'm, if I do that when I get up in the morning, bro, I am good.

- Yeah. - I'm fine, all day, and I'm also more positive, 'cause I've already taken care of myself in a way

that I feel is sufficient enough for me

to keep operating and moving forward. But, yeah, I want to get away from the, - Well, that's the medicine man, which is really crazy. That's the medicine. It's just hard for people to take

because it requires effort, and it requires discipline. You have to do it when you don't want to do it, and there's a lot of times you're not gonna wanna do it. A lot of times you're feeling kind of fucking tired.

- And I think that's what we have maybe we just,

they are like, I just need to, I just need to keep going. - And this is the best I've been doing, I think. - Why don't you hire a trainer, you got some? - Cheta, I can't, you got some cash.

- Some, you're making that. - Hey, bot. - Why don't you hire a trainer? - I do, I, you hire a dude that's cool that'll come over your fucking house every day.

- You don't have to touch your body. - Joe, some of them do. - Well, you gotta get new ones. They're doing something wrong. - But some of them gotta say no.

- I don't say enough. - He'd have to me. - No, no.

Don't touch my butt when I'm in a deep squat.

It doesn't help. I don't like that stuff. - I'm gonna dig your ass all, it's gonna make you wanna explode to the top, ready to go. - He's knuckle deep in your bung hole,

trying to convince you that it's, so you can get more reps. (laughing) He's shucking, that's gotta happen, like a fucking big jacket trainer,

like praise on guys that are kind of weak with small hips. He's like, I bet you can't do this with my cocking your butt.

- And you're like, that's a crazy, who cares?

- Why are you suggesting this? - But the crazy party is dude, I had a training one time if you were doing like a dumbbell press, he would kind of squat you from, he would help you from the elbows kind of.

- Okay, that's fine. - But when I noticed this one time, he was a dick on your butt. - Did he? - He's right behind you.

- No, he didn't. - I don't know. - You're blocking it out. Maybe that's why you need to. (laughing)

- Dude, if some, I know all the decks I've ever seen in my life dude. - All of 'em? - Yeah. - How many have you seen?

- Jesus Christ. - Honestly, alive and interesting. Count 'em on one hand. - Probably. - Yeah, because I was in a handful of decks and two of 'em are Aries.

(laughing) (laughing) - Aries pissed and fucking, kombucha bottles in this room so many times. - Oh, he is such an animal.

- He is kombucha, he is kombucha animal. - Yeah, that's okay. - He doesn't have piss anymore. - It's fermented, right? - No, but this guy would touch my elbow

and he would kind of like must, he would do a slight massage on him. And that's when I kind of cooked me up. - You got a vape in your butt change, Joe? - No.

- We got this. - Do you want a cigar? - We got smelling salts. - Do you want a cigar? - No, they make me sick.

- They do? - Yeah, they don't smell sad. - Sad. - Yeah, no, I give up on those nicotine vapes are very addictive.

- Yeah, boy. - I know, I give up. - They make you grab, you grab for 'em. You want to take a hit off of 'em. Now, even if you, and I decided at one point

that I'm not taking these anymore, I'm stopping with you. - Oh, I remember, dude, remember, you and I were using one time. We kept using that thing and yeah.

- Oh, dude. - There's something in them. It's not just the nicotine. - It's the nicotine. - Because, like, these things, like,

I have no problem not taking these. I went on a trip, like a 10-day trip. I didn't bring any nicotine pouches. I didn't miss it at all. - I was fine.

- Well, I'll say this, but not those vapes, dude. Those vapes call you. - Yeah, some of this, it's a lot, bro. They call you. But, yeah, you've got to kind of manage it or whatever, bud.

- Yeah, you can manage it and shit. So, you right, you right of the man. Okay, girl, man, okay. - No, I think, out of all the things that are, you know, not a drug drug,

but, you know, nicotine's kind of a drug, but, you know, obviously could be totally functional on it. That's the one in the vapes, that's the most addictive. - And, yeah, you're talking about, like, recreation ones have not like, ended up presence,

things like that. - Oh, yeah, yeah, yeah, yeah, yeah. - Of course, not like cocaine or, you know, yeah.

But, here's the thing about the man.

They're only good for one hit. It's the first hit of the day. The first hit off a vape is fucking wonderful. - Yeah. - You're like, oh, yeah.

I blow that smoke on your mother, son. - Nature just shines down upon you, just feel relaxed. But it's only one. After that, you're just chasing that dragon. And you keep, you're not getting anything out of it.

Everything, you're just getting nervous. - Oh. - And you're like hitting it again. - Yeah, fucking hands are shaking. You're going too far, but you don't get that one feeling.

It's the same thing with a cigarette. With a cigarette, really what you want is the first couple of hits. - Yeah. - And you get that lightness of head and then put it down.

The problem is, you're always chasing that dragon

and you never get it.

That's why everybody loves the first cigarette of the day.

They sit there with that first cigarette day and a cup of coffee and you're like, I got ideas. - Yeah. - Like I got fucking ideas.

- Right this down, right this down. You know, a lot of bands wrote most of their music on cigarettes. Like Tony was talking about pink Floyd. - Dude, the Declaration of Independence. - People were all being hit in cigarettes back then.

- For sure, there was smoke back then. - Yeah, I don't know if they did pipes or what have you been done. I wonder when the cigarette was invented. Because if you think about like pipes and cigars,

you don't inhale. You just take it in your mouth. But cigarettes, you take into your lungs. I wonder when the first dude figured that you got to like suck it all in to get a phone in.

- Yeah, probably. - Probably for his father. - He wanted to suck everything. - Oh, cigarette bananas. - What have you had?

- There were smoking cigarettes.

Just says drinking smoke. - When Christopher Columbus and his crew discovered indigenous people in the Caribbean. - Oh, you mean Christopher Columbus was? - Or the indigenous people who are?

- They observed indigenous people when the Caribbean encodes drinking smoke. - Oh, yeah. - But this doesn't come back that time. - Probably drinking and smoking.

Chris Coe was off that ship, bro. He was off that ship. - Bro, do you ever read the things

that Christopher Columbus did when they came to America?

- He was a boss I heard. - He was an evil man. - Was he? - Oh my God. - They would cut people's arms off

if they didn't bring them the right amount of gold. They were killing babies. Like they did some horrific shit man. - Huh, they did horrific shit. - Maybe the people that they found.

- 'Cause they found these people at gold.

And, you know, they, like,

if you think about how crazy it is, that Mexico speaks Spanish. You know what crazy it is? No crazy it is. That's so far away from Spain.

- Oh, I think it's fine. - They all speak Spanish in their Catholic. - Gee, where do you think that happened? - Cortez. - Yeah.

- 'Cause that motherfucker showed up in the 1500s with, like, 600 dudes and 12 muskets. They had, like, 12. They didn't even have musket rifles. They had musket pistols.

- He was a boss. - And they took over the whole fucking country. - I know, do you know, crazy. Like, if you think about all these years later, they all speak Spanish now.

Yeah, that's nuts. - Well, do you think we could do something like that now, like, what do you think's gonna happen with Ron? - No, just with that. I mean, like, I feel like the shit that's happening out there

is gonna come here eventually. - Well, most certainly will. - Yeah, you know? - I mean, if Homeland Security doesn't stop it in its tracks and they're doing a great job of preventing a lot of them.

You know, there's a lot of things that they catch that you don't even hear about, but they're, like, terror cells that they infiltrate. But they know there's people in this country. That was the most fucked up thing

about people being all non-shallot about the board of being wide open for four years. Because men of military age entered into this country from foreign countries and we have no idea why. We don't know if they're just honest people,

looking to make a better life for them and their families and money back home. That'd be best case scenario, but that's not all of them. So what percentage of them are terrorists? What percentage of them?

There's not zero, it ain't zero. - Yeah. - But what also, it's like, it's all just a cat and mouse game. People are like, "We'll like the Democrats next time."

And it's like, but it's all the same shit has been happening forever. They haven't been helping anybody forever. They're letting fucking politicians slurp on kids. All of our fucking money goes to Israel

and they're using it to fucking genocide people. It's like, "Everybody is scared out of their wits right now." It's like, our religious leaders are afraid to speak out. And it's like, "It's a time where it's like, Satan is amongst us and our religious leaders are fucking talking

about bullshit at the pole." It's just like, "What is going?" I don't know, man. - We gotta get you out for a minute. - The president's son, you're losing your fucking marbles.

- Do you think I am? - Come hang out with us. Just chill. - I'm here. - Just chill out of the mothership tonight. - I do have to pee in a little while, but you can pee.

- I'm gonna pee in a minute, man. - We'll let you. - But no, people are just scared, dude. This is shit that I hear from people. - They won't let you pee until you give them your guns.

- Really? - That's how they do it now.

- But what if you have to wash the black face off the president?

Can you fucking use a little bit of piss? - Yeah, yeah, they had this big dude. - They had this big gun thing.

There's law of their past where they made a bunch of guns illegal

and they found that only,

I think it's a very small percentage of people.

I think it's somewhere in the neighborhood. Find out what percentage of people have complied. - But I think guns. - Oh, they do. - Yeah, they do.

- They did, they used to. Well, a lot of hunters up there for sure. But there's a lot of recreational guns and handguns and self defense weapons that people had that they recently made during Castro's kid

when he was around the country. When they recently made this ban. - I got to meet Castro once. - So, are you there? - No.

I hear that, but once I could. But data provided by public safety candidates shows that of March 27, 32,000, four and six people signed up to participate in the program. They declared a total of 57,540 firearms,

roughly 42% of what was projected. But they were talking about, oh, you know, has it on this page is a Koleon noir? - He has it here.

I'll send it to you because--

- We gotta do this and men's us, dude. - It's kind of crazy. - Yeah, you can't let him take away your weapons. - No. - 'Cause how we fight?

- How we fight? That's a very good question. - Yeah, I saw Koleon's video. Here it is. - Nah.

- Yeah, this is it. Here, play this. - Type shit, right here. - Women's response? - Cool.

We're sending police to your house.

- The declaration period for firearms owners

is scheduled in next week. So far, only 2.5% of the estimated 2,000,000 affected firearms have been declared. - 2% and 98% of firearms owners have made a declaration.

- Can't end a band, 2,500 types of firearms. Gave gun owners until March 31st essentially today to declare them.

- One week before the deadline, 2.5% compliance.

- Two? - Fuck yeah. - That's not a slow rollout. That's a full-on rejection. - So if they're not declaring by next week,

what's your plan, Vanessa? - The plan we have is as of March 31st, the time to complete the enrollment will be done and then the RCMP and other agencies will be available throughout the spring of the summer

to do the collection. - The collection. - Wow. - Like he's speaking about dry cleaning. Not firearms.

Not property at the long to law-abiding citizen, but what the government decides is my opinion more. - So minister, you're saying that RCMP members, we've just heard an order to general reports saying we're short, 3,400 members.

We're dealing with a wave of violent crime across this country.

And you're saying that your plan is over the spring and the summer to deploy RCMP officers to go door-to-door to firearms owners and seize their firearms. - So this is a voluntary program, Mr. Lloyd, as you're aware.

And the RCMP resources and the resources we will use with long-forcement does not contemplate in any way using existing resources. These are additional resources, so these are those who are off duty, those who may be retired.

- Go back to you. - They can ask you to do that. - They can take with tire and people who are going to go door-to-door. - It's like their new eyes.

- There's no officers door-to-door because frankly, many police forces across the country are refusing to participate in your program. - And here's the park that should make you draw them, the floor. The Minister of Public Safety, the guy running

this entire program, will secretly record it saying the gun grab isn't worth the money. - The Minister of Public Safety accidentally told the truth and he was recorded doing it. He said that the gun grab is not worth the money.

- He doubts local police will have the resources to enforce the Liberals' mandatory gun by-back program and says the reason the Prime Minister is sticking with the policy is to appease voters in Quebec. - He probably admitted the police can't even face it.

- Look at his face. - He said they're doing the face that they've been proposed. - In the country, look at his face. - Look at his face. - They take the worst face.

- Go back to his name. - Go back to his name. - If you can't, it was on and on that is that a goodie. - Whatever his name is. I want him to go door door door door door door door door door door

- You go door door door bitch. - But dude, you want to do that? This is how you do it. He's talking about getting retired people to go door door and take people in.

You're gonna get someone shot stupid. - Well, it's just like our draft now. They're like, now it's 42, now it's 47. - Now we're gonna have a marijuana rest now. - They're letting anybody in that bitch.

- A little weed. What's the big deal? (laughing) - Good morning. - But dude, here's the part to me that's like,

you start to see like the chink in the armor, whatever it no offense anybody. - You're allowed to say that, chink in the armor. - But they know them. They know who they think or if I'm not a saying anything about it.

- I know you're not, but people think that I'm not. - Yeah, I hear you, but you can't say speaking Spanish anymore either. - You can't say speaking Spanish? - Well, you can, but you shouldn't.

- You gotta whisper it. (laughing) - Hey, that guy should be forced to go door to door. - Go door door door door door door. - Right orange vest with a circle in the center of it.

- Yeah, I was just gonna get his name 'cause I wanted to say that guy's a pussy and go, "Do your own shit." That fucking, that freaking little. - Don't boy.

- Yeah, that little fucking, that little sloppy. - Brand muffin?

- Yeah.

- Fucking sloppy muffin top. Yeah, getcha, that's his name right there. Gary? - And I'm gonna do this, I agree. - And that's what I said.

- That's um, Gary, and on the sugary. - Can it? They're gonna come for you next.

- Here's what's funny to me.

- Yeah, that's such a crazy, you can't. You're not even grandfathering people in. - Mandatory gun confiscations. - Okay, just want people vulnerable.

- Of course, that's what we're saying, man.

- Yo, that's what we're saying. They want us all vulnerable. - Yeah, they do. They would much rather that because look, what's the difference?

- What's the difference? - What's happening? What's the difference in America and everywhere else? One of the big differences, we're fucking heavily armed, right?

That's why it's real a real problem to try to take over America. And it's in our declaration of independence. It's in the Bill of Rights. It's like that, you know, the right to an armed militia.

They're right to keep them bare arms and to have an armed militia like that's, what is that, and people are like, what is that for? Well, that's to keep you from being taken over by right, tyrants who have guns.

- Well, here's what I think is interesting to me

is like, RFK was on that long ago, and he was saying that 75%, and it could be off by a few% of young men can't-- - 47. - Aren't eligible for military service?

- Yeah. - So this is the hilarious part to me now. Now they've poisoned us so much that they can't even, they don't even have healthy people to serve in the military and now they're still,

like, I feel like these powers that be are like in this tough spot. Now we're like, fuck, we poisoned them too much. - Right.

- They can't even go spill their blood for us, you know?

- Well, they can't. I mean, there's enough that can. - But they're widening these things. It's like, with the ice, now they're like, if you're 65 and have decent vision,

you can be, and I, you know, they're letting it, it's just like, it can get bigger. - Ice, you only have seven weeks of training. - Yeah. - You think about, that's not even

what you get in the police force. - Yeah. - We had more than that for fucking tea ball when I was a kid. (laughing) - And Mr. Rick, do you remember when you had tea ball

in your coaches, just some dude who had a name? It's like, that's our coach, we're in some madness. Imagine if you had seven weeks of training, and you had to go into a jujitsu tournament. - I know.

- You would get fucking smoked. You would get fucking smoked. You don't know what you're doing. Barely know what you're doing. You're gonna make a bunch of mistakes.

- Yes, I was. - Seven weeks of training in that is even scarier because you've got guns, and you're going out in the street, and you're arrested people. - Yeah, that's, but it's all, it's like,

not, more than ever, it feels like theater. And it feels like it's been theater for a while. And it feels like, maybe this is crazy, but it feels like we're at the last cost before something weird is gonna happen.

Didn't you say something weird might happen, Jamie?

- Jamie's always saying that.

- Jamie's always, he's tuned down here. - Is he like that? - Jamie's got an ear for weird. Even blacks are getting scared though. - For real?

- Yeah. - Yeah, but they're more scared of like, the Trump movement, to tell terrorism and fascism. No, I think they're getting, they see these ostracized. They see these communities of people out there

getting abuse and shit, and I think it reflects in them somewhere, you know? - You mean, with ICE, is that what you're saying? - No, with like, like, you know, you see, you know, there's a lot of brown people getting murdered

on fucking TikTok all the time, like, you know, in the Middle East, and I think you see that, and it makes them hyped up or, you know, it activates. - Well, everybody should be upset about that.

- I agree, but the idea that there's the only way

to solve problems is by dropping bombs on people as it's so crazy that's still the move in 2026. I don't think it's however, but however, if you are faced with an evil dictator that has his eyes on a global caliphate

and is developing nuclear bombs, you can't be all fucking cumbo, yeah, but the question is like, how does that get resolved? - Right, that's the question. - How do you make sure, how can you even know

that's what I cannot ask? - It's capable of having nuclear weapons, and for the last 20 years, they've been preparing its stockpile and missiles and developing, what is the,

they have some crazy thing I was seeing online where it's like, they almost like have a mountain and dug deep into the ground, they have these missile elevators. And like the missiles are like hidden deep into the ground

where the only way you could destroy that facilities with like a nuke and they just did it specifically knowing that they were gonna get bombed. - Well, they had the, you know, they did top gun movie

where Miles Teller flew in there and then a year later we did that in, or a few years later we did that in Iran, like isn't it kind of kind of, like it just, it all seems bizarre

where they had to fire a nuke down or they had to fire a missile down into the thing, remember? - I didn't see that movie. - It was good.

- How bad it was. - It actually was good. - I liked the first one. - Oh, we made a movie too,

I gotta tell you about our movie, I can't forget.

- Oh, that's right, you made a movie. - Yeah, I'm gonna interrupt about it. - So let's find out what, what was I asking, before we moved on? - Any any missile thing?

- Yeah, what is that elevator thing that they have?

They have some underground like deep underground. Someone was explaining it online. They have a very unique method of protecting their missiles from being bombed. So they have their storage is like deep deep underground.

I think that's one of the things that they were just attacking recently. Like we were dropping bombs on them recently. I don't think we're over there doing that for ourselves though. - Doesn't seem like it, doesn't seem like

it's in our best interest, you know? - Why do you think, why do you think with it? Then what is it that Israel holds over America that we do those things?

- Well, first of all, there's a lot of people

that don't need it to the Trump campaign that have significant influence over him. - Yeah. - That lobby for Israel. - Right.

- And they're very beholden. - So that's just capitalism then, right? - So idea of uncover's Iran missile mega cities. I don't believe anything they say. - It's hard to know 'cause this is all AI, right?

- No. - Is this real? - It looked like it was, but-- - Is this real? - Honestly.

- This looks AI, shit. - I love it.

- It does look AI, but that video of those guys

will like it. - Yeah, it's so hard to know these days, man. - It's so hard to know. - You know, this is like, if I was Iran, I'd make a video like that.

- Look at all of my bombs. - Look at my big cock and look at my bombs.

- They go dick, they go dick like a third leg

and a bunch of bombs. - I think it's sick of my dick. - Really? - Give it a break. - No, I don't know.

- I don't know for a couple days and you miss it. - Oh, I've had a lot of thoughts on me. (laughing) Dude, I've had a vacation from your dick. - Bro, there's times I wanted to just mail my dick

to Africa, whatever. - Don't. - Just feed them. - Don't ever send it back. But I'm saying to feed a couple people.

- I don't think it'll feed a couple. - Why? - You'll do it. - I don't even think they feed one. - Get out of here.

- My team alive for a few hours. - Oh, it would be lunch, at least lunch for two. - Someone on a diet. (laughing) Someone cut and wait for rest of it.

(laughing)

- Or that dude that tried to cut wait

and it's because he wasn't gay anymore, but we're not talking about that dude. (laughing) He lost 40 pounds, did he was just fucking ribs and dick by the end of it dude.

(laughing) - I got a pee really bad, can I get your ass off? - So we'll be right back, ladies and gentlemen. - We'll be right back. (clears throat)

- Theo Vaughn, David Spade, bus boys, in theaters April 17. Did you finance this dude? Did you fucking do this shit with your own money? - Yeah, you wild motherfucker, you. - Wow, we wrote it and we, yeah, we did it all.

There's no studio attached to it. There's no wife in films in it. Kim did a good job. - He's awesome. - He is awesome, he really is.

- He's my, he's one of my favorites. - Yeah, no doubt. - He's one of a kind. Is that an atheist? (laughing)

- He wrote, he was, he was. - He was a loose J? - Whoa. - No, who's in it? Cam, Patterson, Trevor Wallace.

- Nice dude, what's it about? - It's about two guys and they're bus, they're just regular guys and they're not doing that good. And then they think if they can, one of them loses his girlfriend to a waiter

and they think if they can become waiters that they can get his girlfriend back. And they have to start at bus boys. (laughing) - And then we'll get buried for ourselves right now too.

- It was crazy, dude.

I mean, I think there's just like a thing about like,

like nobody, like it's just, we made it ourselves. Like we wrote it, we did it. There's no fucking somebody saying I can't put this in it. Like some of the streamers are like, nah, it's too edgy for us or whatever.

Fuck 'em then, you're out. You know what I'm saying? We're doing our own shit. And so, did you sell it to a movie distributor? How did you get it into movie theaters?

We just, I don't know how that any of that stuff works. - I don't know either. We have a guy who's doing hand on some of the business side of it, I friend Ezra's hand on some of the business side of it, he's great.

And so he's been helping us out and gotten it into the theaters. - Who directed it? - He's got Jonah Fein Gold, this guy of New York. And great guy.

And yeah, we just, we asked our friends to help and it was, yeah, I mean, it was ridiculous. We shot it right during like the fires. When the fires were happening in the palace, hey, it's a, wow. - So it was like, you shot it in California?

- Yeah, wow. - I don't know why exactly, but because there was nothing shooting there, they don't shoot things there anymore. - Isn't that crazy? - Imagine people have been so greedy

and fucking attack, they've fucked themselves so much they can't even fucking do their, the one thing that they're most known for, Hollywood, they can't even fucking do it. - It's so crazy, it's gross.

- It's not just, it's gross though. - It is gross, it's all the government. It's all government. It's all government policies, regulations, taxes, all the things that make it unprofitable

To do business there, people just pulling up shop.

- And there's all these, yeah, there's so many guild.

You have to pay, it's like, I don't see how these people,

I don't see how like a day-to-day actor could survive. And they don't, and they leave. - A lot of guys are fucked, I was just watching this video with this guy, I've seen him in a ton of movies and he's like blue collar actors are just not doing well right now.

He's like, I had to sell my house, you know, a lot of people are just going to television shows because there's no money in films anymore. He goes, I used to be able to make a living in films. And he's like, I didn't make a lot of money

because you just, you know, the guy who's a small part and movie here is small part and movie there. So he's getting by and he gets to take his family to the movie and they get to see the dad on screen, it's cool. - Yeah.

- He knows, paying his bills, doing well. But he's not getting wealthy, right? He's like, the stars get wealthy. But those dudes that you need, you know, the guy that plays the cop, the guy that plays this person,

those guys are fucked. - Well, I have the name of everybody that was in it. Everybody that worked on it, if we have some success, I'm gonna go back and reward those people, man. And I'm excited about that.

And yeah, if people, even if it just does good, then we can make other stuff. - Right. - And nobody can tell us that we can. - Yeah, once you do one that's good, then more people are interested in investing, you know,

gets, get your foot in the door, you do a Netflix series, you do anything you want. - And it's not like done Kirk, I don't know if only they really get in the act like that much act and stuff. But it was just like, you know,

I grew up watching David Spay, we got to do it together and we just went through all of these hurdles and then like, the fact that we got it done,

dude, I thought it was all emails to the first day,

I shut up one set and I was like, no fucking way, we were serious, people were serious about this. Oh, that's crazy, you did it.

But yeah, I think so, yeah, something like that.

I think there's something like that. And if people, if people can buy a ticket, early to it, I don't want to sound dead. I'm not, I'm not desperate about it. If it does find that's cool and if it doesn't,

that's okay, too. I feel happy that we got to do it. - If it's funny, it'll do great because there's not a lot of that these days. There's not a lot of really funny movies.

- Yeah. - And I know it's gonna be funny. - There's some parts that are really, really funny. - It's not like done Kirk or anything like that. It's not like mid-summer or whatever.

- What are those things that you just said? - Those are just other movies. But it's, I don't want people going there thinking it's like, trying to think of bridges, like bridges of Madison County. - Yeah, it's nothing like that.

- It's a comedy. - It's a comedy. - No, no, it's you and David Spade, who the fuck is gonna think it's Clint Eastwood and Meryl Streep? - Yeah, I don't wrong with you.

- I don't know what people think. I don't know what people think or how they think, but yeah, anyway.

But yeah, there's some fucking retarded.

It's just fun. - You know, you used to have a great joke about bridges of Madison County, Chris McGuire, he had a fucking great joke. - Dude, it's one of my favorite movies.

Congratulations. Let me tell you his joke. His joke is about how, you know, it's hard to choose a movie with your girlfriend, she wants this and he goes, bridges of Madison County.

He's like, "Oh, Clint Eastwood's in it.

He was a Clint would never fuck me."

And he goes, "Ten minutes in the movies." He's like, "Hey, something's fishy. Clint doesn't have a gun." (laughing) He goes, "20 minutes after that, Clint's crying."

He's like, "Oh, Clint, you fucked me." He goes, "He's crying 'cause he doesn't have a gun." (laughing) Such a great joke. - Yeah, that sounds like Chris McGuire.

- Shout out to Chris McGuire, I haven't met him. - You never met him? - I haven't. - Funny dude, we started out together. Way back in the disay, but he went, yeah,

he went the route of writing. He mostly writes and stuff now. But it was a funny comic, man, it's good comic. But these fucking comedy movies are squashed. We were just talking about that last night in the green room.

We were like, it seems like the hangover was probably the last gasp. And that was like 2009. But what happened? Like, how could you go with that?

People got scared. - You could have scared of a fair. - A hundred percent organized. - No, no, it's okay. - It's okay for people that you're not gonna be laughed.

- They didn't think, they didn't think. It's woke ideology that's looking to yell at people for every, oh yeah, transgression. And you can't have that with comedy. You can't have that kind of nonsense with a really funny

movie. Like something about Mary, or, you know, Kingpin. Kingpin, classic. - Fairly brothers movies. - Oh, so good.

- How great was that? - Great fucking movie, great fucking movie. - That movie so good, so funny. Even to this day, go back and rewatch it. Bill Murray was crazy fucking hair.

Woody Harrelson with one hand. It's a great movie, man. When he had to go down that lady to pay his rent and he threw up in the toilet. I don't know what that scene.

You know, that movie's 30 years old now. - Oh, that's crazy. - That is crazy. - It's a bang or a movie movie. - All the good shit's gone dude, but it's not.

- It's not, it's not. - It's not, it's not. - It's not like getting that attitude, where it's like, I gotta stay out of those little moments. I usually get out of them pretty quick.

- You can still do those movies, but you have to do it the way you just did it.

You have to finance it yourself and you have to do.

But luckily now, man, you could shoot a whole fucking movie

on your phone. Do we shot this bitch in 23 days, dude? There was one day where the wins were like 50 miles an hour. I was like, we can't afford to be here another day. So suddenly in these scenes,

there's just a ton of fucking win dude. - Well, that's fine. That shit happens in the real world. - Right, sure. - I can't have happened in your show.

- I agree.

It was just, I think it was just interesting how it all worked out.

- People are making their own stuff. You know what, it goes talking to Shane about this last night 'cause Shane just wrapped up tires. - I just see some tires. - Yeah.

He was, he fucking, he was telling me some hilarious scenes from tires. I can't wait to watch it. But it's like that kind of a thing where it just him and his buddies put together a show.

- Yeah. - You know, it's like his buddies, the writer and the director, all his buddies are on it.

They all came up with the idea.

They do it themselves. No one's looking over their shoulder. I asked him to like Netflix has any input. He's like, no, there's no input. They just make a show.

They just make a show. - That's fun. - This is Netflix bang. It's a beautiful time for stuff like that. - Yeah, you're right.

There's a new, it's a primavera, they say, and Spanish, it's a spring time for new things. - Well, there's an opening, right? And because there's no gatekeepers anymore because they've essentially killed their own business,

you can kind of do it on your own now. - Yeah. - That's the beautiful thing. You don't have to like sit in a room full of fucking executives and don't know Jack shit and they want to give you

direction on what's funny and what's not. Where's the diversity in your film?

- Yeah, you know, we think you should have a black trans friend

like, oh, yeah. We think you should have a a faggot ant or whatever. Like the insect or whatever. And I'm like, that's crazy. (laughing)

Like this. (laughing) You're like, this is a script about drivers and like, but you need an insect, it's a homerotic. It's just, people got stupid.

They got stupid with their virtue signaling in films and you can't do that with art. You can't have, do you see what the Academy Awards doing? Like in order to qualify to be nominated for a Academy Award now? - Well for the podcast thing, I know they said we had to pay

like a fee or something. - No, that's a different, that's the Golden Globe. - Okay, sorry. - Yeah, that's a different thing. - Yeah.

- You didn't pay for that either, did you? - No. - Did they ask you to? - Yeah, fuck it. Give me some.

- Yeah, fuck it off. - And you said, so what, yeah, I was like, if Joe broke it, if you don't even have him in it, then what are you even making a thing? - That was also a reason why I didn't want to be in it.

I don't want to legitimize this. You guys have fucked up every other form of entertainment and now you're gonna judge podcast. And what did you pick? I'm not saying there's anything wrong with Amy Bower's show.

I haven't watched it, people love it, that's great. But she's like a famous lady who just started doing podcast in six months ago. She's got the number one podcast. Like if you guys ever listen to Radio Lab,

you know, you ever listen to like this, there's some banging fucking podcast out there. They might not be number one, but if your whole idea is like pick the ones that are great, that are like really interesting,

how stuff gets made, there's a bunch of fucking great podcast. - Smart, this is cool. - There's a bunch of great podcasts out there. - Oh, dude, there's so many great ones, dude. Matt McCusker's, if he gets to--

- Oh, yeah. - How fun is he? - He's awesome. - He's fun. He's a good dude.

I'm glad he's out here. - He's a special dude, man. - Yeah, very smart guy, you know? - Yeah. - There's a lot of great podcasts out there.

Tim Dylan's on that list, fuck off. - Yeah. - If he's on that list, fuck off. - Yeah, fuck off. - Yeah, fuck off.

- Yeah, fuck off. That is the one podcast I could just listen to. Tim Dylan, that's awesome. - His episode on the Epstein files is one of the best fucking podcast I have ever listened to.

I was like clapping in my car at red lights. - Yeah. - Just clapping, like, woo, he was on fire. And it was the perfect combination of satire, honest, real facts, complete chaos, humor,

wearing those goofy glasses, ramping like a maniac, it was amazing. - Yeah, man, I do feel lucky that I've gotten a meatlight.

Just, that's one of the truest things I think

through comedy just getting to meet some, just some fun people do. - We know some cool motherfuckers. - We really do. We know some cool motherfuckers.

- We really do. - Thanks, dude, thanks for letting me come in here today. - Come on, Doug. - And to spend time with you. - Come on, Doug.

- It's good. - It just feels, things feel kind of scary out there. - Well, it's a little, also scary. I keep telling you this, 'cause you're on your own out there. - Yeah, I don't live in Nashville.

- I'm getting close to being here. - I ain't a lot of comics out there, Doug. I mean, Bargazzi's out there,

but he's always doing fucking stadiums on the road and shit.

- Yeah. - Like, you need to be around. - I'm getting ready. - The crew. - 'Cause I have to start to practice again.

- I'm taking my special in one month. - Last night in the Green Room, it was Shane, Ron White, Tony Hinch, Cliff, Brian Simpson, a son of mod, Derek Postman. We were just laughing and laughing.

It was, it's so fun.

And everyone's going on stage and fucking tearing it up.

It was exciting. It's like, it's in the air. Like, something's happening here. - Yes. - And you see all these young guys coming in,

these young women coming in, they're all fired up, and they're all fucking prepared. And everybody's like, really trying to fucking kill it. - Yeah. - Nice.

- Yeah, we got Christina Marianne, I'm doing this show, - She's on it. - Dylan Sullivan, I think is-- - Dylan Sullivan's very fun too. - Yeah, I'm excited about that.

- Yeah, they're both at the club all the time. - It's a fun time for comedy, man. It really is. Real good time for comedy. - Yeah.

- And it's a special time. - A comedy doesn't exist in a vacuum.

You know, that's why I keep telling you.

- What does that mean? - You're on your own. - Oh, you can't do that by yourself, man. Like, you ever go by yourself on the road and you have like, opening acts, you don't know.

- Oh, yeah. - Every now and then, I'm at some friends. Like, that's how I'm at segura. I didn't know segura and I work with them on the road. So you do meet some cool motherfuckers, occasionally.

But it's like one out of 10 or one out of 20. - Yeah. - So you do all these gigs in your lonely. You just like, on the road and you go in the libraries and shit or bookstores and you're like,

trying to watch something on TV and go into the gym, but you feel completely disconnected to people until you get on stage. It's not as fun. - Yeah.

- It's like you wanna be around a bunch of other comics that are your friends and also you wanna hear their sets. You wanna watch them crush. You wanna go on stage or any laughing. You wanna be laughing and when he just said

when you get on stage. - And feel the competition. - It's inspiration more than it is competition. - That's fair. - So the problem with competition

is someone has to lose. - Yeah. - You don't want anybody to lose. Then no one has to lose. It's just these people doing well.

She didn't inspire you to do well. They should light a fire on you. - Yeah. - You can call it competition but the problem with competition is one person wins,

one person loses. - Yeah. - That's not comedy. Comedy is everybody wins. That's real.

And that's not bullshit talk to try to appear humble.

The reality is you win if everybody wins.

- Well that's one thing I've always been that way. Like I'm gonna pick.

I'm gonna, yes I'll support you how I can, you know?

And you've always been that way about young comics. And yeah, I agree with you. - People did it for me, man. They did it for me when I was coming up and it helped me tremendously.

I tried to pass it on times 10. - It's between that and kill Tony. - Kill Tony is so funny. - It's such an important part of comedy. Like having this place where you,

all you need is a minute. You could've been doing comedy like just trying it out on the road and fucking, just like barely filling up a Friday night, 10 o'clock show and then you develop like one minute

it just breaks through. And all of a sudden you got a fucking career. You know you got it to career now. - Yeah, I mean, there's young heroes that are being sprouted out of here.

And even adult heroes, people that have been in a while are here and finding their, finding just a new, you're right. It's like, I should look at 'em, Ray. Out 'em, Ray's killing it now.

Out 'em, Ray was struggling. He was struggling, but he was a funny guy. - Hard worker. - Hard worker.

- Hard worker, never lost his ambition,

never lost his focus, never lost his enthusiasm for it. Never got bitter, always friendly. - Always. - And just needed to show like, kill Tony to come around to like,

and everybody like, oh my God, this motherfucker is talented. - Yeah, all those different characters that he does. - I know, and that's a brave thing to, if you just don't comedy, mostly stand up, and then to try and go in the character,

that's a kind of a, to me, that would feel very hard. So that's a brave thing that he did. - But there's a few of those guys that really excel at that, and that's a special talent. Him and Donningin, especially.

(laughs) - Kyle, Donningin, he's so funny. And I always thought he was gonna make it with those facewops.

This shows you how the industry so fucked up, okay?

So he was doing those facewops shows on Instagram, right? And they were so funny. But one of the reasons why they're funny is because it's obviously fake. It's crude, like South Park.

Like it doesn't look real. So it doesn't freak you out at all. It looks so fake that it's funny. - Right. He went into the comedy central,

and they started using like much more sophisticated facewop, which wasn't as funny. It was like creepy. And then they cut the balls off of it. Like he wanted to have one where Caitlyn Jenner

was fucking Donald Trump, Caitlyn Jenner. - Y'all are by, we like, right, right, they're dropping. - They went, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no. - His Kardashian was so funny. - He was so funny. - He was so funny.

- And even the Kardashian's like I'm ever heard. - Yeah, look, they have a sense of humor. They have to. They have to have a sense of humor. They've been in the public guy for 20 fucking years

with no talent whatsoever, just getting attention. Like you gotta not take yourself too seriously if you hold that position, you know? - Yeah, that's it. - Oh, right, and then no.

- Right, and then that go. - Their whole family, they should count as reparations, I feel like that whole family, you know? - Do you think? - I think so.

- I think so. - Leave that alone. - Yeah, same, I don't know if it was a good, I thought it was a joke, I don't know if it was a joke. It is a joke, but I just, I don't think I say it right.

It gives a shit dude. The world can end soon, so if I can get it out of your system.

- If it doesn't end, it's gonna change.

- That's what scary dude, I think I've got fucking eggheads

on the spectrum. I'm gonna be running everything. But do you feel like, does it like, like, 'Cause yeah, this, I go back to this Uber drive, it's just a guy who's talking to me and he's like,

well, they're gonna give, you know, like, if, like, way modes get a job,

the way mode can work all night, it can work 24 hours, right?

So really, you're taking away like four or five shifts from an actual suit, you know what I'm saying? Like, if AI and tech advancement makes it, so, you know, they can do 50 people's jobs with a one robot.

- Yeah. - Then, yeah, what happens to those 50 people? How will people survive? How will they be able to assure that their kid that they're raising and trying to teach positive things to

will have a world to enact those things? - It's a very good question. And it's a good question that gets even weirder when the government is responsible for all your money.

So if the government has to give you money,

because there's no jobs left. And if all this money's being generated by AI, like Elon suggests, and you get universal high income, you gotta be really careful that that doesn't come with a bunch of rules, new rules for your behavior,

for social media posting, any kind of like, if they develop some sort of an app that tracks like your social credit score, that's when shit gets fucking super scary. If they attach the amount of money you have

to your social credit score, yeah. Which, what they do in China? - What do you see those flop cameras?

Now I think there's, are there some, there's this, yeah.

And there's this thing in Florida, where police officers, they were testing this somewhere, and shut out police officers who were doing their best. But where they were testing, when they pull somebody's identification,

they can see their last few bank transactions, stuff, so they kind of know who they're interacting with and what they've been up to.

That seems like, what does that about?

- Well, it's all a little bit, it's like a centimeter here. - It's a centimeter line. And they're trying to find out how you did the crime, they should have no access to your shit, especially police officers and you're saying,

you're just people and also sometimes corrupt. Also, sometimes they steal money. Also, sometimes they sell drugs. Also, sometimes they fucking kill people for hire. - Yeah.

- Right? - Yeah, Jesus. - I don't know, Joe, it just... - I know. - I know. - I know.

- Well, the more power the government has over you, the worse you are off. But that's just the fact. - Well, every, it seems now like most people are like, our government does not, obviously,

is not here to help the people. - Obviously. - They've been compromised. - That's true. - So, isn't there, are there any rules against when people,

but the greatest part is we were working to pay the taxes to keep them due, it's like, - I know. - And that starts to make you feel sick. - And they're not responsible for any of the fraud and waste.

- Yeah. - Like, there's so much fraud and waste. Like, look at California, this motherfucker's trying to be president after who knows how much fraud and waste

is involved in California. - He wouldn't, I don't think he'd beat Spencer Pratt and I run off on a thing. - Well, Spencer Pratt is running for mayor. - Oh, I see.

- Yeah. - And I think he can win. - Yes. - That's actually good. - He's like, what he's saying makes a lot of fucking sense.

- And he's uncovering a lot of fraud. But there's a lot like that. Nick Shirley guy went down to California and he's like, there might be a hundred times more fraud in California than I found him in a soda.

- And everywhere. - He could go to every state and say,

I think he could go, I just think this whole thing

is just this drain, like Tim Dylan said it, like six months ago he was saying, this is the, like, the bloated carcass, the inflation, this is the end of what is half, like, you know, they're just post scarcity.

- There's so much money for stuff. Like in California, there's an enormous amount of money that gets paid to people for just taking care of your relatives. So you get paid to take care of your relatives,

but there's no oversight. - But fuck dude, I've had some relatives. I'll pay you good money to take care of them bitch. - But no, they would pay you to take care of them. You would get paid to take care of your relatives.

So say if you take care of your mom. - Oh, okay. - You could actually get paid for that by California. - Mm-hmm. - Yeah, which is odd.

- Yeah, I wonder there's got to be some other reason they're doing that for odd? - Yeah, there's a lot of fraud in California. There's a lot of fraud everywhere. But this is what Elon talked about.

He was talking about like Medicare and Medicaid fraud. He's like, it's hundreds of billions of dollars. And he's like, he didn't want to talk about it. It's like, I really wouldn't worry that they would kill me. - And when he says they, who is it?

- Whoever's perpetuating this, perpetrating this fraud. - Maybe that's what happens. Maybe some of these guys get into office and they're like, look, we're gonna kill your family. We're gonna kill, this is all the things

that are gonna happen. Unless you play this game, do you think that kind of stuff happens? - I think it has happened for sure. - 'Cause it's crazy, I mean, it doesn't happen. It's pretty naive.

I think House of Cards is probably really close to what the government's actually like.

Go back and watch that show again.

- Okay.

- Yeah, Kevin Spaces is an old school dick grabber,

but damn that motherfucker could act.

- Yeah. - He could act. - Oh, yeah, he was riding on that show. It's fantastic. That show's so good up until the last season.

He wasn't in it, like, stop, stop. - And that lady was in it. Remember she was in it. - She's great, but without him. - Like, oh, you need him.

- He's got to be a part of him. He was the man, or whatever. Washing his hands at that sink. - Remember when he was, you know, after Kevin Spaces he got canceled,

he disappeared for a year, and then he made a video about killing what kindness. - Yeah. - He played his character. - He's got a Martha Stewart issue,

a little bit in the kitchen. - Yeah. - Very weird. It was weird, I think.

And then a bunch of the dudes that accused him.

(claps) - Disappeared. Oh, that, that guy. - Yeah. - They died.

- That's an American past. I'm accusing somebody and getting killed. That's like, one of the new, it's like baseball now. (laughing)

- Yeah. That's a nice way to keep people quiet. - That's what scary, too. You're like, this is a drone out there, waiting for you to say the wrong thing.

And they put a bullet through you like, some child and Gaza is just trying to fucking find his other deceased brother and a fucking polar rubble. And they like, oh, that's a Hamas or whatever. Like, I guess fucking two.

He's trying to move a piece of a missile off of fucking body. - Well, drone warfare in general is crazy. - It's crazy.

And they've been using that dude.

And Gaza, there was a lot of like, I think it was a experimental grounds for a lot of insane, new warfare type of possibilities.

- Well, a lot of it was traditional missiles, right?

- Yeah, but there's also, there's a lot of like, like, we had a doctor one time podcast and he was saying that there were like bullets that had gone down a child, like, just crazy. Like shot down, like from a drone to bubble.

- Yes, like something in the air. And he said that there were drones in the air all day. You know, there's that Palantir company just keeping tabs on everything that was happening. - Palantir's involved in Gaza.

- Palantir was involved in Gaza, yeah. - For sure. - Mm-hmm. - Put that in the propuxity. - Just allegedly.

- So how does that work? - They have, like, facial recognition and ID. - Yeah, software, and that's the shit that's just scary, dude. Because they have a huge contract to take care of all of America's.

- And you ever see that dude, Alex Carp, the CEO of Palantir, the way he moves his arms around and squirms and talks? - Yeah. - It's very odd.

Very odd. Like so much to tell him. - People don't really behave that way. - He looks like he would be a breastfed by it. - It's really government began using Palantir software

in 2014, significantly scaled up his partnership during the genocide in Gaza, which began in 20, this is a for sure bias source, just by the way they phrased that. Which began in 2023, Palantir CEO, Alex Carp is said,

"I am proud that we are supporting Israel in every way we can." Israeli military has used Palantir technology to plan attacks in Lebanon and Gaza. - Yeah, I don't know if this is,

I know there are good sources, and this may be one I have no idea. So this is the title of this is,

what is Palantir and why is this corporation so dangerous?

And this is from American Friends Service Committee. American Friends Service Committee. But does that website? - Yeah, that sounds kind of wilder. - We are unique.

- We bring together people of all face and background to challenge injustice and build peace around the globe. So maybe that's not the best source. - I mean, it sounds like they have a good idea. It also sounds like they just put four words together

that sound a great American's friends service. - I read stuff like that. Like what is that? Is CIA run company? - I agree.

- Is that the Patriot Act, do you know what I mean? - Yeah. - What about the Guardian? Is that reliable? - I put it in a blood complexity, but.

- No, it's okay. There's like there's a bunch of different versions of it. It's in this business and human rights center. It's more than one thing saying that Palantir is working in Gaza. - Yeah, just sometimes feels like your heart's broken.

And sometimes it feels like my heart's broken about stuff. And it's not even like my heart, it feels like this universal heart. Like that you were all a part of or something. It feels like, 'cause it's not like I'm broken hearted.

Like it found, it was like fell out of like a marriage or something, but it just feels like there's this universe. - Yeah, there's some sadness. - There's some sadness in the way the world today is being run. - And America's where the people,

the people don't practice the way that the government does. And it's like, we didn't, why can't we, like, I don't know. - No, you're right. - It starts to hurt, but then you start to see,

well, this is a way a lot of places are. And then you're like, God, I wish that Jesus would come back and just help everybody or something different happen. - Somebody, somebody, give us a heads up. Maybe that's what AIs here for.

Maybe AIs gonna sort it all out.

- You think?

- Genius level intelligence.

- But the back end of AIs, they can put whatever information

in there they want. - Up to a point. - A really? - No, it takes over. - Who, it becomes sentient, no longer needs human input.

It's already evading human input. They've already shown the ability to see people. They've shown that it'll blackmail people. They've shown that it will upload versions of itself. If it thinks it's gonna be pulled offline with notes

to its future self, embedded in software on other servers. Yeah, like instructions to contact its future self. - Dang, that's pretty cool, man. It's pretty wild. - But there's nobody like, yeah, it just feels like

we're heading there and nobody's like kind of, there's no-- - There's no-- - There's people that are warning, there's a lot of people that sound the alarm. - There's Roe Conner, there's Thomas Massey.

Like, there should be like, he's been talking about like a internet bill of rights for a long time

or something, like some guardrails on any of this shit.

But it's like, people are wondering, like, yeah, in five years' money gonna be worth anything. Is there gonna be some token, like Sam Altman's talking about what the fuck does that even mean? - What does that mean?

- So, anyway, I don't want to be sound like a doomsdayer.

- Dude, I-- - Dude, right, that's what you sound like.

- Dude, I sound like a sad person. - Oh, but I'm sorry. - So good. - Let's talk about something else. Dude, you know what I was listening to today, bro?

- Well, I guess it was a night. - I don't sing it. - Okay. - Which song? - Faith.

- Got it. - Oh, got to have faith, George Michael's song. - So, I love that song. - God, dude. - They played that on the boss.

- Freedom. - Freedom. - That's a great fucking song. - He was the gay Michael Jackson. - Who's the bad motherfucker?

And all the girls loved him. And he just wanted that jerk. - He wanted that fucking jerk. Don't get steak. - I mean, he got in trouble for like trying to pick up

guys on a park. - Yeah. - He just get wild out there. - But do you-- - Superstar. Global superstar.

- He's just trying to get some dick in the park. - There it is. Fucking great song, man. - Dude, great video, too. - I remember we'd be able to school bus

and that song would come on, dude. And it was like that song. And then faith and freedom goes the other one. - They were all the models of the super model sang along, too.

- Yeah. - And it was like, what was the other one? Brandy Carlisle or something? Who was that girl? - Brandy Carlisle.

- It was like-- - She was the Gogo's, right? Right? - Now, then this is somebody else. It was like--

- But when the Carlisle was the Gogo's? - Yeah, but this song was about something about your body or something. It was like, and when you were a kid on the bus, it was just like, God, and that fucking motor was running.

- Oh, God, yeah, it's getting the bumpy road boners. (laughing) I would fucking be afraid to get off the bus and have to walk off backwards. Carry your books and throw your cack.

(laughing) So the day's row, when your cack was just connected the Lord brother. - Yeah, bro. - No inflammation, no microplastics.

- All dick, all American dick, ready to rock. - Dude, at a certain point, if you become more microplastics than person, at that point, then you're sort of a-- - At a certain point.

- Yeah. - Yeah, well, that's probably also leading us down this road. - That's what I'm saying. - Something different, right? - If you think about we use plastic for everything,

plastic for technology, like I said, it might not be a bug, it might be a feature. - Yeah. - Like this, like, feminization of men, this blurring of genders, what does that lead to?

But ultimately leads to those fucking gray aliens

with no dux, the big heads and no dux.

- No dux, no dux, I got no dux, hey, where's my dux?

(laughing) - He almost said it. - Bro, that'd be crazy, bro. - I feel like that's where we're headed. If you look at what we used to look like,

you know, we're like muscular cavemen, covered with hair, you know, just figuring out stone tools to like, doughy men sitting in front of a computer, hacking into the fucking stock market. (laughing)

You know, with no muscle at all, you know, on Adderall, no muscle at all, sit in there. I mean, this is like where we're going. - Can we strike, can't, can't, can't, can't, can't. Do you think there's hope for humanity, Joe?

- I think there's hope for the future. - Okay. - I don't know if humanity is involved in the same sense that what we think of as humanity today. I think humanity becomes something different. Just think of this.

If just the autism rate in California, just I want you to scale that out. If it was one in 10,000, you know, X amount of years ago, now it's one in 12. When is it 100%, when is it all kids have autism, right?

I mean, it's clearly moving in that direction and not the other direction. If you go from 10,000, one in 10,000 to one in 12, over a very brief amount of time, a few decades,

Something's going on and don't tell me

it's just better diagnosis, 'cause that's fucking horseshit. You know that's horseshit.

That's a, that's gaslighting to cover up

for the pharmaceutical drug complex.

The reality is something's going on

and if it continues on that same path, what's to stop it from being all of us? What's to stop it from being all people born in the future or on the spectrum? So we have to stop it then as individuals

and what do we do? We have to, like, what are the things we have to start doing to fight for ourselves? Join the omnisch. - I'll be super cynical about it,

but I'm the masking perplexity question is about what you're saying and the diagnosis has changed, which could possibly be leading to insurance. - But you got to realize the complexities also,

ooh, that's true, too. Well, that's one of the things in some the Somalia, datecare, scandal of Minnesota, they have a lot of autism centers and they self-diagnosed kids' autistic.

- Yeah. - And then they get a ton of money off of that. - We had 'em too, he's called a fucking arcade dude, dropped those bitches back with seven roles of quarters. But let's look at this, Joe, if you don't mind if I read it here.

- Yeah. - In the U.S. loan autism treatment centers represent a multi-billion dollar growth sector. - Yeah, there's a little bit of that too.

So I think there's both things are happening.

There's more kids being born that are autistic and then there's also people profiting off of autism centers and autism treatment.

And but that's always gonna be the case with everything.

Fill in the blank, whatever the fucking thing is, there's someone profiting it. - But Americans don't want this, you know. - We don't want this, so how do we change it? - Well, it started to ask you,

but I just don't even know what you're saying. - They're gonna figure out how to fix people that already have it, right? 'Cause right now it's irreversible for the most part. 'Cause they've shown some things that can alleviate

symptoms and help people in a way, but you don't bring them all the way back to 100%. - I don't think, I'm talking to that school, but if they could, then you could figure out how to correct the problems that already exist.

If you can't, it's gonna eventually get to that point if we keep living like we're living. It's gonna get to that point where it's 100% of us. And that sounds crazy for a lot of people because they don't have autism right now.

But if you're dealing with one in 12,

one in 12 is not far from 100%. When you go from one in 10,000 to one in 12, that's nuts. That's a nutty progression. That's a nutty acceleration of something.

- Yeah, we're being poisoned. - Yeah, for sure. - But how do we fight back against that? Like I understand, like we can try to beat some autism, whatever, or do like a different games against,

or whatever, but I'm saying like, how do we stop this thing that's trying? I don't know if we do, and I don't know if we're supposed to. This is what's fucked up. I think this is the way it happens.

- It happens. - Yeah. - This is the way our species changes. - And goes, and then history will look back and say, well, this was how the shift took place.

People started using plastics, and they started using chemicals, and they started using pesticides. - But we believe that they were telling us the truth.

That's why we thought there was an FDA protagonist.

We thought there was an EPA looking out for us. - It's what you were talking about before with this combination of innovation, and then capitalism. So the capitalism gets involved, and they just don't, they don't give a fuck about the truth.

They just want to make the most amount of money possible. And one of the things they did in this country is they removed all liability to vaccine manufacturers. - Yeah. - So then they ramped up the schedule to a shit ton more injections

than anybody else is getting. So it's just that this sort of happens whenever you allow people to try to make the most money possible. And then there's consequences, what are those consequences? Those consequences are we're like losing our gender.

We're like we're becoming feminized and weakened and like physically weaker and less fertile for women, less fertile for men, less babies happening, more miscarriages happening. - Which fits in with, honestly,

the media arm of that is Hollywood pushes a lot of these like agendas that are like trans-based and like, you know, white, you know, whitey redneck is the worst and, you know, I'm saying like universal one, like a mixed,

you know, it's not diversity, it's not. Because diversity is everybody's okay. Everybody's okay. The fucking redneck with the trucker hat's cool. If he's a nice guy, you know, the Mexican gardener's cool.

If he's a nice guy, everybody's cool. No matter who it is, everybody, that's real diversity. Real diversity isn't like celebrating one particular thing and then denigrating all these other people, just by virtue of the color of their scanner, how they're born,

that is racist and they don't think it's racist, they'll even call it reverse racism. - There's no such thing as reverse racism. - It's racism and these people that say, "Well, no racism is power and influence."

Like, no, it's not. No, it's not. It is unjustly looking at someone

Making a judgment call on someone

just based on immutable characteristics

and just based on the color of their scan or where they're from or what their religion is and not valuing people as individuals, unique individuals that just happen to be from a particular, you know, their origins, their ancestors

or from a particular part of the world. - So fucking what? - Yeah. - So fucking what? Let all that shit go, it's dumb.

- Well, in most people, though, it's dumb

and they feel it's dumb and I think that that kind of shit's changing.

Dude, have you seen country hoodlums on Instagram? - No, let's go, bring 'em up. - What is it? This is like the place that I grew up. Sometimes people are like, "Yeah, what was it like where you grew up?" And this place is, it's this guy.

I think his name's K-O. It's this young black man who walks around on this street and he just kind of checks in with the people in the neighborhood, right? Play one on, let's see what happened.

- Oh, it's going on with these people. - Oh, come on, come on, come on. - Dude, it's bitch. - Dude, I got no one, boy. - Dude, it doesn't matter, it doesn't matter, right?

- Dude, you're being caught in the-- not enough. - Not enough. - Wow.

- I can't wear anything I need to get in the seat.

- Find a different one that's a little more peaceful. - I know, I know. - I know, I know. - It's calm down, bro. - I should just-- - That's really good one, dude. - Dude, he's calm down.

- That's Gregory right there. - You know him? - No, but I know him in my heart. (laughing) - What's he mad about?

- Oh, oh. - He was like a 12-car pile up, but he's better now. Look me in that way, you have the same haircut. - We're gonna have to play in your right tail, dude. - Well, he lost his phone.

- Oh, go on, please.

- He just wants to talk, he wants his phone, you're a bad guy.

- Why's he walking around? - He's a bad guy. - He's a bad guy, dude. - I love you. - I love you, I love you, bye.

- I love you, bye. - I love you, bye. - Bye, bye, bye. - Bye, bye. - Well, this is not fun.

We'll find him more positive one. - Finally, he-- - That guy can vote. - That's what she boxer. - There we go.

- That's my good husband, Trouble. - Yeah, don't play that. Don't play that. You gotta cut that out now, we're gonna get flagged. - Hold on, hold on, Jee.

- That's the same guy. - What's your favorite thing about all this-- - You gotta hear him going on lately. - I think he's gonna work. - What's your favorite thing about all these things

has been going on lately? - You're a vibe together and not fighting for anybody or doing another one, dad. - Loving it. - Fuckin' off sweet.

- Loving it. - Hold on, Jee. - And you. - Amen. - What you feel like to be a young brother,

show Facebook down, huh? - But they have, uh, there's no reason to watch that. - No, you gotta watch, there's a lot of great ones. - There's no, I doubt that's true. I'm not interested in any of this.

- Look at him right here, he got to rock it right there. - Okay, he's about to drink a shot on the beer. - Okay, shot down in a beer. Nice. I can get down with that.

Yeah, but it looks like a bunch of people with bad genetics who are stuck in a weird part of the world that is not growing. - Oh, I, look, I agree there's some of that. I'm just saying that this is like a circle of life.

That, uh, that you enjoy? - Yeah, well, they just follow me and you see their lives like, um, it's like the realists show that I've seen on, on anything in a long time.

It's just real, it's like, 'cause when you're poor, dude, everything's just transparent. You can't hide behind hedges or gates. It's shit, like, right? People are fighting in the yard.

You smell what the neighbors cook in,

or it's like you never get anything done.

But everything was right there, though. It was like the realists thing you could be in. - This is one of the reasons why I stay off Instagram. - Yeah, stuff like that. - I don't need that in my thought process.

- Yeah, we picked too wrong. We picked two of the, like, more not the positive videos out of the group. (laughing) But, uh, but yeah, dude, just being a,

just shit like that, bro. Like, just mason people and just fucking shit. - How much time do you ever spend off a social media? Do you spend time just where you don't go on for days? - Oh, yeah, not days, but I've been,

I've been spending less and less and less. I've been really trying to have discernment over my own time. It's true, but the real, the real piece comes from full days off.

- Okay, full days. Like, we're nothing. You don't get any of it. - Okay. - That's the real piece. - Okay, fine.

- If you could do it, but it's like that vape. It's calling you bitch. - No, it's not. (crashing) - Whoa, whoa, whoa, whoa, whoa, whoa, whoa, whoa, whoa, whoa, whoa.

- You wanna slurp on it? - Go slurp on it. - I know you want to. - Yeah, bro. - It's calling you. - Yeah, yeah, yeah.

- We can't, we can't, we can't, we can't, we can't.

- That's what I'm saying, that's what I'm saying.

- Don't tell the balls. - That's like Instagram. - That's like Instagram. - See? - Same shit.

- Yeah, but yeah, I'm doing all right. - Pulse in. It's like brain relaxes, I settle. I'm still read the news. I'll check out like New York Times website,

see what they're lying about. I go to these different websites, see what the news is, where we out with stuff, but I don't. - Yeah, they wanted to advertise recently.

New York Times wanted to advertise. - Interesting. - What'd you say? - I said now. - Yeah, let me do.

Have you guys been getting like, technical companies? - Although I still think New York Times still does excellent journalism sometimes. - Oh, yeah.

- It's like it depends on whether or not

it's something where they're gonna have an ideological bias, if it's just something that we're reporting the facts, it's great.

The problem is like these corporations,

like when Barry twice used to work for them, that she had a leaf, she's like, they're just kind of infected. They're infected with these young people that have these ridiculous ideologies,

and they want to like distort the news. - Well, if over the past 30 years or something, the news hasn't been, hey, we're poisoning everybody in this fucking country. - Exactly.

- And then I don't want to hear from you guys anymore. - Also like the way they talk about RFK Junior, the way people describe his anti-vaccine rhetoric, like you're not listening. What he's saying is everything

should adhere to the same sort of safety standards that we apply to other things in society. And that's not the case. And then there's the problem where you receive a bunch of advertising money

from these companies, so you don't criticize them, which is the case with all mainstream TV news. - Yeah. - All mainstream TV news. You know, like Megan Kelly was talking about that,

like she knew, it was an unspoken rule. You are not gonna shit on these pharmaceutical drug companies. Like they're responsible for a big chunk of their advertising revenue. - Well, now they have bare-monsanto

that bear, which was like a pill company, right? And then Moncanto, which was like a form of like a crop company, pesticide company, I'm hypothizing. I don't know. - But now they're a fucking group together.

- Yeah, fun. - That's crazy. - Why not throw racy on them there, too. Throw some missiles in there. (laughing)

You guys get bio, glock, too. Bio, bio, Winchester, bio, everything. - And just forgive us, powers that be we're just poised and didn't chatty, you know? - We're just chatting.

We're just a couple poised and guys that are being chatty. - I think I would still be chatty. - I know, when is that end? - Because like if it wasn't for the ability to be chatty, who knows how people would be able to talk about things,

because if people weren't free to just like actually say what they really think it's fucked about what's going on. And instead, if we all had these weird bosses like CNN and the New York Times, whatever, where you maybe a lot of those people are genuinely good journalists

and they wanna put a story through and then the editor gets ahold of it and guts it. That happens, too. The editor's gut these things and, you know, they have an agenda. - Yeah.

- And it's like the news should not have a fucking agenda. It should be the damn news. Like tell us what the facts are. Don't spin it in any way, shape or form. And I think it'd be a lot better off

because they've lost all credibility.

- Well, that's why you have to actually tell a vision news.

- Oh, and it's sad for the people that were like, I wanna go in and broadcast journalism and have a career in that and do something. And then they get there and it's not even like a place where they can really exercise.

- Well, they can still do it, but they have to do it independently now. - Right. - Or do it through something like breaking points, which even though they're not independent.

And even though they, like, I don't always agree with them.

They're saying they're actual opinions, which is what's, that's the most important thing. - What are your actual opinions? I could agree with your disagree with you, but I need to know that you think this

and you're saying this because you think this. And then you're gonna give me a bunch of reasons why you think this, and facts, and figures, and statistics, and show me, you know? And that's the rise of independent journalism.

That's why all these independent channels do so well. - That's why Candice only is poppin'. - Yeah, and also poppin'. - She just keeps going deeper into the crazy world. - Fuck, dude.

She goes deep. - I got to see her and if she's so funny, her kids and her puzzling herself.

- Do you think she's right about that lady in France?

- With that bang on her? - Yeah. - Or at least you stay with that thing. - You got that bang on you? - No, man.

- She got that drake on her. I don't know. You know, it's tough to know. It's hard.

I've never been good at guessing

if somebody has a cock or no. (laughs) - Yeah, you can never know. - Maybe I'm old fashioned or whatever. - Yeah, you ever meet Blair White?

You like, you just know where that's a guy. - Mm-hmm. - No? - Never met Blair White. - It's been on the podcast for all my security guards,

but we're like, hmm, oh, hey buddy. - Grrr, grrr, grrr, grrr. - Yeah, seems like you're around girl. - Oh. - I see, you see, and you see, in that fair moments.

- Dude, I almost brought some clone in today, man. - You got fair moments for me. - I almost brought some Blair White. - Whoa, my bro, if you're on an island. - Bro.

- Huh? - Let's go. - Yeah, but they don't have to be Jim Norton to buy into that. - Gosh.

- That's a man. - Mm-hmm. - Well, it's a transgender woman. - So, make what you will. - So, yeah, she wants to use the woman's room.

- Like who gives a fuck? - You know what I'm saying? - You can call it weiner. If you want, I call it that long pussy. - You feel me?

(laughing)

- That's what they call it in prison, dude.

- Like who wants someone who's long pussy. - I don't know if she's had the opportunity. - And I'm joking, Blair. I don't know this person.

- It's nice lady.

- I bet she's, and I don't know. - I'm not transgender lady. - I'm not trying to assume anything.

I don't, I don't never met her.

But I think, if she wants to swim for that,

if she wants to swim. - These are exceptions to the rules, what I'm trying to say. It's like, some of them, I'm not buying it. You got a beard and you wear a lipstick. - Yeah.

- And you're in a dress and you want to go to the women's room. - Nah, yeah. - You're playing a different game. - Yeah, and it's crazy to think that there people couldn't have.

There couldn't be some mental or emotional issues when we were being poisoned over time to get away from our nature. They just took that guy from the Chicago Bulls. He said, he's like, he believed

just in like Christian dating or whatever. - What do you say? - Or men and women, Adam and Eve, and they kicked that guy out. - What?

- What are you talking about? - Well, they kicked him out. - You were waved. - Yeah, right. - Like, conduct, detrimental to the team,

or something like that. - Wait, what did I say? Hold up. - What did he say?

- Okay, let's find out what he said.

We need to hear what he said, 'cause that sounds nuts. I need to know what the full extent of his expression was.

- If they made you, if they made you be a woman,

would you do it? - Made me. - What do you mean? - Just saying if they said, "Who would they?"

- These people again. - I don't know. - It's back to them. - Whoever they are. - They are.

- Yeah. - He's non-binary people. - Dem day, them. - They are. - If there's Zerzy real.

- So what did he say? - So what did he say? - Why have you said that? - So he said, the world can proclaim LGBTQ, right? I, B.T.O. reporters via live Instagram Monday morning.

They proclaim Pride Month and the NBA. They proclaim it. They show it to the world.

They say, "Come join us for Pride Month,

"selebrate unrighteousness." They proclaim it on billboards. They proclaim it in the streets. Unrighteousness. That's it?

You sent unrighteousness. So he's religious. So he's talking about Bible scripture two days later. Ivy streamed live again from a car. Once again reading Bible scriptures.

And speaking extensively on his religious beliefs of the course of a 75-minute stream. - This is after he got let go. - Oh, interesting. - Sending prayers to try one user comments.

Okay. On the same video, still on Instagram account on Monday, Ivy, whose mother, I don't know her surname, Neale. His woman's basketball coach at Notre Dame told another viewer, Catholicism is a false religion.

It's not the true doctrine of Christ. It does not lead to salvation in Jesus Christ. So they're upset that he said, it's unrighteous to be gay or LGBTQ. That's very non-specific.

That's a lot of different things. - And what he said, I saw what he said. And I understand he had his own views. And that's where it's thought it's on it. But let the guy have his views.

It's like, you can push all these agendas, but they don't have like, then push, push, push agendas that are all, push all the agendas. - Well, wasn't there one dude was saying

that the world's flat? They kept him on. - Oh. - Oh, John Raven. - Some got brought a gun with strip club

and they fucking kept him on. - Yeah, that's okay. That's a good old fashioned American fun. - That's a good fun. - Bring gun to a strip club, that's fun.

But, you know, saying that LGBTQ, like which one is it? That's unrighteous out of that group. - Any of them? - Kyrie Irving when you see that guy.

- Yeah. - They kept him on, right? - Yeah, he's still playing. - So there you go. - There you go.

- He actually got suspended, but that was like-- - But he didn't get suspended for saying that the world was flat. He got suspended because he didn't want

to take the vaccine, right? - Yeah, shout out Kyrie Irving. - But I'm just-- I'm kind of surprised, there's not more--

- I think he bailed on that flat or a stuff though.

I think someone's schooled him. - He might have bailed on that. - Okay. - But every time they're flat or a thing, it'll be late and I, and that should have

flared for everybody. (laughing) - We, every time. - Right. - That's savory isn't here talking about it.

- When I see a cake, you know a cake that's under one of those domes. Sometimes you'll have that cake. Somebody will have that's the universe. - Do, do, do, do, do, do.

- I just think at a certain point, it all seems very bizarre, it is very bizarre. - Yeah, very bizarre. - What does Jamie think? I think he thinks something.

- Okay. - About the universe? - What do you think, Jamie? And just be honest. - Well, there's a lot of people that think

that consciousness creates reality, not that reality is experiencing consciousness, but consciousness is like woven into reality. It's responsible for its very existence. I'm gonna do a terrible job of explaining that,

but I've watched quite a few videos where these quantum physicists are trying to explain these things. And I have to watch them like three or four times get into my fucking champ brain.

But I do a fairly good job of absorbing it. And I see with the quantum experiments, like the slit experiment, there's like these different experiments where they show that observing things has an effect on it.

They act differently when they're being observed than whether they're not being observed. And it's a very controversial segment of science.

- That's fascinating.

- Quantum science is very confusing.

And I was watching this lady that was describing this relationship between space and time.

And I think, you know how particles can exist

in different places and they communicate with different, they can exist and communicate simultaneously in different parts of the world. Like there's called quantum entanglement, these parts, and the idea is that if you could get

to a certain level of sophistication, as far as technology and you're understanding of how the universe works, that everything is entangled, and that there is no distance between objects, that you can actually instantaneously be anywhere,

if they could figure out how to harness that. That it wouldn't just be particles at a distance, instantaneously communicating, and they exist, and one of the things about superposition, like a particle can be both still and moving at the same time,

they can exist and then not exist, they go away, and then they come back, they don't have any idea what the fuck is happening, it's weird. - I think I would like to learn more about it, I think I just don't understand.

- Nobody does.

- That's the thing, it's super confusing.

- The smallest, whatever the world in the universe is made out of, the smallest, measurable aspect of that is essentially magic. It's essentially like open air, and vibration, like atoms that they look empty space.

It's all really weird stuff, when you get down to it. - And it's fascinating and beautiful. - Oh, it's incredible, look, it makes mountains, it makes valleys, lakes, and oceans.

- It just crazy, we're here on this place, right? You know, one of the first things that I ever heard you say that I stood that has been in my mind was like, there was a one time you were talking about this years ago, you were talking about, we're on a ball of dirt and water,

traveling through space, at this many miles, and nobody's talking talking about it, you know?

And I've always remembered that just like that,

what a fascinating thing that we get to be here, and then this is how we behave, like not us and not all of us, we all do in some ways, and but like this is how we behave. - You know, I think one of the problems

is that we don't see space anymore. - Yeah, because of light pollution. - I think that's done something to us, that's dulled our understanding of our place in the universe, and that also might be a feature,

and might not be a bug, it might be a feature,

'cause that's how we, instead of being in harmony with nature,

we just keep our nose to the grindstone, and keep chewing on Adderall and trying to rig the start market. - Yeah, 'cause we're just trying to get a new lemon, but big, big, you know, I want to reshard me, lay, watch. - I want some cash.

- I want a rose Royce Specter, the kind with the stars in the ceiling bitch, when you fucking have real stars outside. - I know, it's not crazy. - Dude, you sacrifice it all for stars in the ceiling

of your rose Royce.

- Oh, dude, you never get to see the stars,

'cause you're living in Miami. - I know. - And there's too many lights. - Sex, traffic in. - But meanwhile, if you drive out into the middle of the country where there's no commerce going on Adderall

and you shut your car off and just lay on the hood, it's fucking magic, it's magic out there. - Magic, the sky's magic, it's gorgeous. - It's a fucking big, huge, nice thing. - And you realize, man, oh my God, we are in space.

- Right, but you never realize that when you just just dark outside. - Well, because we forget, we're not even like... - I don't know. - It's easy to not pay attention.

- It is, there's nothing to see. You look up, it's dark, but you want to go to the club. You look up as dark, let's go eat. You look up as dark, I'm going home. Let's go, look up at the, oh my girlfriend just called me.

I gotta go pick her up, buy, you know, you're in your world. - Right, you're in your world. You're not thinking about fucking spruce. - And the think dude, and the think that like, the crazy thing is sometimes, if you lay there

and look at the stars and stuff, it feels like bro. And this is real shit I'm saying right now to me. I think I'm saying this. It feels like they're looking back at you a little bit. (humming)

- Yeah, maybe they're conscious. Maybe the universe is conscious. Maybe consciousness exists everywhere. - Well, you would think if they're all placed there, and they're in, you know, these stars are there,

it would seem that if we went and put ourselves before them, that it would grant us something, you know? Like I'm not saying like something magical or something that we need, because most of the way that things are set up, it's like everything was kind of set up in perfection,

like in our bodies, like the fact that we exist, the fact that the eye is put together and operates the way that it does, the fact that they have like moles and parrots and everything, the fact that it all happens. And we kind of neglect it, there's these like,

There's these orbs out there in the distance.

Maybe they wanna hear from us,

maybe they wanna sit there and look at them and think, maybe they help us. - Do you think we're being visited?

- Yeah, yeah, but I think a lot of its lives, too.

- Do you think the governments, the big governments, or what do you mean? - What do you mean? - Do you think they know who they know who's, do you think they have met?

Do you think these upper echelon people have met the visitors? And there's some other thing going on, because something, there's something, it feels like something's gonna happen soon, Joe. Perhaps that's possible, perhaps.

But if I was from another planet, like this is, I talked about this one special, that if I went, when I go fishing, I don't check in to see who the president of the lake is. I just show up and trick those dumb motherfuckers

with fake fish, pull 'em out by their lips, take a picture, I'm dropping off back in the water,

'cause they're a bass, they're so below me, right?

I don't think like who's the leader of the bass, right? So the idea that aliens come down here and who's the leader of the people, good point. I highly doubt they give a fuck if they talk to Trump. Yeah, he's out there building a ball room and shit,

they're like, leave that guy alone. I'm not interested in him, but maybe they might visit military establishments, or if they find a nuclear weapons base, maybe, I would go to that, because they probably

know the signal of nuclear armament, they probably know the signal of these weapons. They probably would visit those places,

but would they interact with the people in the ground?

Perhaps, maybe they would, maybe they would if they could be assured of their safety, maybe it's possible, but I don't think we're alone. I don't think, I think that's silly. I think the idea that we're alone is silly.

There's a lot of crazy equations that people have made, like, well,

like the firm, you know what the Fermi paradox is?

The Fermi? Fermi paradox. Yeah, it was, I think he was an Italian scientist. It's like if there are aliens and there's so many stars in the universe,

there's so many planets in the universe. Do you know there's more planets in the universe than there have been seconds since the Big Bang? No way. Yeah.

How do we know it? I don't know. I just read it and I'm just saying it to you. Look, I'm smart. That's fair.

[LAUGHTER] I believe you. But that into perplexity. I love using AI. I know it's taking over the world, but I don't

give a fuck. I've learned it so much. Do you use it correctly? I think it's like everything else. I use it every day.

I use it whenever I write, if I write about a subject, I'm like, tell me, why did that? Tell me what this is. You just ask it. It just gives you instantaneous information.

I know it is pretty fascinating.

That's why it used to be for information

you had to go to somebody to get it. But now it's like everybody has it. Go nowhere, so on. And Elon was saying that he doesn't think apps are going to exist in the future.

He thinks everything's going to be you in a device communicating with AI. Here it is. Are there more stars in the observable universe than seconds have passed since the Earth was formed?

Yes, that statement is likely very true by a large margin. No, no, not the Earth, but the universe. I googled it, and that's what the said. That's what actually came up was.

Oh, that version. Estimated, okay, age of the Earth. Yeah, so there's definitely way more planets. But that's stars. You wrote stars.

I asked what it came up. I'm telling you, I typed in what you said. What did you type in? Are there more planets than there have been seconds since the Big Bang?

Oh, I'll refresh you. Yeah, I am. You did not. Not more stars. Are there more planets in the universe

than there have been seconds since the Big Bang? Not the Earth formed since the Big Bang. This is, this is the 91 because that's crazy. Yes, by current estimates, there are far more planets in the observable universe than seconds have passed

since the Big Bang. It's crazy thing is a lot of kids nowadays. Oh, oh, oh, oh. That's crazy. Wait, say it one more time.

There are more planets in the universe than seconds that have passed since the Big Bang. So then I start to think, I wonder if it's a contest. And like God is seeing like who would plan it can really create the most like love amongst the planet, you know,

and get it done right. Do you know what I'm telling? The actor? Yes, he had a very interesting theory. And he's an interesting guy.

He's a very intelligent guy. He's not educated in a classical sense, but he's a brilliant guy. Not educated about a lot of the things he discusses. But one theory that he had was he thinks that the way planets are formed is there's ejections from stars.

And over time, they coalesce and become planets. And this stuff in space becomes planets. And the distance they are from the stars where it gets to a distance where it's in that goldie

Log zone where life can be established.

And then he says planets become people. Because it gets to a certain time where people evolve from these planets. And he thinks this is like a natural thing that happens all over the universe that these planets get people.

And as they get further and further away from the star, the planet gets less and less habitable. And those things, those intelligent creatures on that planet become more and more intelligent and more innovative and more and more capable of surviving without the protection

of the goldie lock zone. And then they become interstellar. And then they develop like they're on sustaining environments. So you think that's what's happening to us? Well, I think that's probably what's going to happen to us.

And so we believe that orbit is a part of that. Right. If we leave that orbit to safety, yeah. Well, today, Artemis, they're supposedly flying around the moon.

So these are the first people that have gone into deep space since 1972.

So it's the Apollo missions. Wow, that's today. That's happening or nobody knows it. That's what's nuts.

This is taking, I think, 10 people for is it 10 days?

How many days are they doing? It's 10 days. 10 days. Four people, 10 days. And they're going around the moon and coming back to Earth.

No one's done that. So it's 1972. Wow. And it's happening today. No one cares.

That's kind of weird, right? Yeah. That's kind of weird. Right, whatever that is, that's part of us that

has really been doctor pretty heavily.

The part of us that doesn't even find like a big fascination in that, like, that's the part of myself that I want to find more of, you know? It's very weird. It's very weird that we've become dull to like, fascinating things. But also do even bull.

Some of it is like, we don't even know if it's real. It's like so much of this shit. You see these videos? It's like, that's not even real. They just had like the Iranian protest or something or like the happiness in the street.

They were just saying that. That was not even. It was a totally different thing that they were filming. And then there was one that people were saying was older. And then we found out, no, it's not.

It's actually, there was current people protesting in Iran that we were bombing them. And they were, they were like in favor of the government. But then you got to know like, well, how many people are scared to death and they're doing that because they don't want to get killed, because the government has killed thousands and thousands of people, including like major public figures to show that no one has

any favor.

It isn't like they killed this like a championship wrestler, like incredible wrestler.

They killed two different wrestlers that supposedly protested against the government. So who fucking knows? Did you see that they don't know that there's conflicts of interest about, or no, did you see, sorry, I'm starting to sit and so forth. Did you see that there is some issues about the bullet that killed that guy of Charlie

Kirk? I'm sorry. And I'm, I didn't mean to say that guy. I wasn't.

Let me clarify that I think and we'll find out if this is correct.

But I see headlines and I see the way people are talking about it. And I don't know if it's accurate because what I think is accurate is what they're saying is that from the fragments of the bullet, they were unable to determine that it came from that mouser rifle. I say my issue with it and I'm no expert.

But I have shot things like, I'm a hunter of shot things with rifles, I've shot a lot of rifles. A 30 odd six is a big round. That's a big round. Show me an image.

Would it hurt if it hit you? An expert's debunked tile robits is ballistic claim, unable to identify is not the same as rolled out, which is exactly what I'm saying. So show me an image of a 30 odd six round, 30 dash 0, 6 rifle round, I want you to look at this.

Look at the size of that fucker, okay. Look at a 30 odd six versus a 308. That's a fucking paperweight. A 30 odd six is a, it's a big round. Do you see it in that guy's hand?

Yeah. Oh my god. Are you serious? That's a 30 odd six. So this is my fat little hand.

This is my thing. This is my hand. This is, this is the point is that that's a big round. That's not a small round. I mean, I don't know.

What is it in compared to? I use a 300 wind mag. Look at that on the right there. You just had it. Those cartridges.

Five, five, six. Yeah. Is meant for war, a 30 odd six is meant for hunting. No, I don't think that's accurate yet that is in look realistic. That's what a 30 odd six looks like.

Okay. In comparison to a quarter. So you look at it. So a quarter is about that high. It's about that big.

That's a big round dude. It's a round for hunting like elk. It's a very common round.

Do you mean if a compared 30 odd six to 300 wind mag compared to 300 wind mag?

I'm just scared dude. So 300 wind mag I think is fat or let's see the difference.

Okay.

Yeah, it's 300 wind mag on the left.

Oh, 30 odd six is bigger. I look. Okay. Really? Which one's which though?

Show me that one far left, far left right there. Okay. 300 wind mag and 30 odd. So 300 wind mag has a little bit more powder in it. See?

See how it goes higher up. So it has more charge. It's a bigger round. But my point is that's a big round. So like a 300 wind mag's a big round.

Yeah. 30 odd six is slightly smaller, but it's still. That's a lot of powder in that bad boy. That's a lot of firepower. That's it.

So this is what a lot of people have an issue with is the wound that there was no exit wound.

It shot him in like the soft tissue of the neck. If it killed you, didn't you go out? Would you feel pain? I mean, it looked like he was dead almost instantly. It looked like he slumped over.

I think he was at the very least unconscious. But it would have left his body or thing. I think he would have blown a hole out the back. That's the thing. It's like nine millimeters do that sometimes.

Yeah. It just doesn't. It seems weird that it doesn't have an exit hole. Yeah. It seems weird that you're shooting him in the neck.

And the image from the back, there's a video of him getting shot from the back. It doesn't leave an exit hole. So it doesn't look like it's that round. There's also the fact that this guy supposedly climbed on the roof with it and then assembled it, which doesn't make sense.

Because if you assemble it, that means you have to take the scope off with the scope

back on.

You have to zero the rifle after you do stuff like that.

Yeah. The guy who killed or allegedly killed us, I haven't been ladden. Who's that? Mike. Mike?

Who's that? I know you're talking about the Navy seal. Yep. He was just talking about that. I don't know anything about that.

I don't know the specifics. Even though I read the frickin' booky route. But yeah. He was saying that to be able to do all that and get off of the roof, it all seems bizarre. Not only that.

It's literally disconnected the rifle again, took it apart on the roof, put it his backpack, jumped off with it, and then reassembled it and left it in the woods. And allegedly was that a dairy queen? You see that? You could shoot someone and go to dairy queen.

It seems weird. And then also his family's denying that he confessed. Yeah. They were saying that no, he didn't confess. And we haven't heard.

His family said 2% of what they're saying about this is correct.

Have you reached out to them or have they reached out to you?

No. Well, I don't think they can. They're probably terrified about their son's future in life, like they're trying to pin this crime on them. Who knows if he did it or didn't do it?

I'm not saying he did it or not saying he didn't do it. But I am saying that the story of him climbing up there with a disassembled gun, assembling it, making that shot, it disassembling it again, climbing down. If that's the narrative, that sounds like straight horseshit. Yeah.

And the video of him hopping down does not look like he's a rifle when he's hopping down. So what's happening? How did he get up there? How did no one see it? There's so many things that are fucked up about that story that doesn't, it doesn't

totally make sense. But a big one to me is the actual bullet hole, the actual damage that that rifle does. Look, but here's another thing, guns do weird things sometimes, like bullets do weird things.

And sometimes they don't, maybe it hit, maybe it fucking center punch to spinal column and it did blow apart and it didn't go out the back. It's possible. Have we seen how they get released any information about the autopsy? I don't know, I don't know.

I mean, you would think that they don't know what the specifics are, but I know a lot of people are very skeptical. Which they are about everything these days, which is also a part of the problem. Well, they have to be skeptical because the news is compromised. The news is owned by, you know, it's not good.

And it's also, there's a lot of disinformation out there, there's a lot of like covering up stories, there's a lot of weird shit. And yes, and then even other places can put out news that that's bad for us. They're like, oh, we'll put this out there. Sure.

Just disguised as information. Yeah. But did you see that I'm exploiting Mike Thierry, did you guys talk about that on here? I've heard that Thierry, but I don't know, if that makes sense, I don't know.

I've heard people talk about it, but I hadn't looked into it. It looks like he got shot. I don't know if the microphones going to hit you in the neck, like how do you know

where the mic's pointing, you're moving around a lot?

How do you know when to make it go off? That's a good point. They had like on his shirt at a specific spot, but yeah, you're right. How would you know? But then the place where it sounds like a gunshot, though.

And there's a delay between the gunshot and the impact in terms of like acoustic readings. Like, and I think somebody did an analysis of the distance they believed the shot was taken from, based on the sound, you know, if that is the round that they used 30 got six, based on the sound of the gunshot going off and the amount of time before it impacts.

It's a very small amount of time, but it is measurable. And they think that it might have actually been closer than what they're saying, which is, I think, a hundred and something yards, I forget what the exact distance was.

What was the exact distance, supposedly?

I think it was like 140 yards or something like that. But the weird thing is, like, this whole idea of assembling and disassembling, it doesn't work like that, man.

And if the gunshot was a professional, was he a professional?

No. No, he definitely wasn't a professional, but you could get trained, like shooting a rifle at 140 yards with a really good scope. If you've shot a bunch of times with a rifle and you can keep your shit together, is not that far of a shot, you can make that shot.

People can make that shot. It wasn't even wearing a bulletproof vest, even though they did obviously get hit in the neck. But the thing is, like, if that's the narrative, and I don't know if they're still

sticking with the story, but that was what they were saying at first, that he disassembled

it and reassembled it, reassembling a gun does not make it accurate. You have to zero a rifle in. And what that involves in, you get to, like, whatever the yardage are, that you're trying it out, like a hundred yards, and, you know, you squeeze off a trigger. And then you look through the binoculars or you have a spotter with a scope next to you.

And he says, he says, six inches high right. So then you adjust it, you adjust the scope, and then do you get it where it's firing, and you do it on a rest, it takes a few shots, man. So you have a rest so that you're not moving the rifle around, working to, you know, be human error, can be attributed to the miss.

And if you're on a hot roof, that was a hot roof, wasn't it? Most official and media accounts put the shot at roughly 200 yards with some investigative timeline suggesting a range of about 150 to 200 yards from Kurt. So somewhere between 150 and 200 yards. But dude, and also being on a hot roof, if you ever been on a hot roof, I have dude,

it's hot. Well, it wasn't that hot. Well, yeah, was it was September, September and Utah, actually not that hot? It sounds hot, and I don't think it was, because this is happening while I was out elk hunting.

What talent did it happen in?

Oh, no, I'm not sure. It was in Utah, though. I think it was in Southern Utah, wasn't it? Yeah, but Utah's, you know, Utah's mountain, it's a mountain town. Yeah, I'm not worth it with Utah, I like Utah.

Like I said, I was in Utah at the time. Oh, you heard? Yeah, I was hunting in the mountains. Well, that's interesting. Yeah, I don't know nothing.

I started getting all these text messages from people, wanting me to comment on things. I was like, what are you talking about? I literally didn't know what was going on, but I had to use the Starlink to get online. Oh, wow. It's like the size of a fucking iPad, and you lay it on the ground and you get high speed

in it. It's incredible. That's cool, shit. Yeah.

But that's how I had to like research it, but I know what the fuck people were talking about.

But did you see the, there was like the facility in Tennessee where they bought the, whatever

the mic thing was, allegedly, that, that, that place thing got completely obliterated, 16 people died. What? What? If you can bring that up.

Did they made the microphones where they made the, uh, lapel mic that he was wearing? This is like, uh, this is probably conspiracy thing or something. Where'd you get this? TikTok? This is conspiracy theory.

It's something that's absolutely true. I just, I haven't heard that one at all. I think James Lee said, but I'm trying to stay away from this shit. That's right. I'm not.

That's why I don't know. I agree. It's just, I think it's, it, I don't know. It's just a time. My point about the round is it's a large round and it seems like it would have done

more damage. And this is not my opinion. This is the opinion of many experts. Yeah. I agree with their opinion.

I was, it's not uniquely my opinion. I saw it and I'm like, oh my god, he got shot. And then I heard it was a 30 out six and I was like, hmm, that's interesting. It's a little odd. If you had to get shot by what, what would you like to, if you had to get shot.

You want to get killed, right? You don't want to get shot. I don't shoot me with a 22. Yeah. Okay.

But a 22 kills people, where would you take it out?

Take it out. Take it out. I guess. Fuck yeah. Dude.

Oh, you don't want to get shot, period. I know. I agree, Joe, but I'm just saying, if you had to get shot, how do you like, because you like take 22 and tighten up, the take it in the butt cheek, bang. I don't know.

Not good. But you know, no bullet is good to take, but the point is that seems like not enough damage for that kind of round. But I might be wrong. Again, I might be wrong in that bullet.

So if you're wrong, if it hit the spine and it blew apart, but I just feel like you would find a lot of it in there. I do. Especially if there's no exit wound, like, where's, how come you can't find the whole things bizarre, dude?

Did you see the part, Jamie, that I'm talking about with that thing, blue up? Oh, yeah. I'm trying to find the good explanation. Okay, understood. And there may not be one.

Thank you. I'm sorry. I brought it up yesterday. Oh, you did. Okay.

Yeah, it just like, I don't know. I think I'm just scared, and it's like, yeah, what do you--

There it is.

18 people on a counter for after deadly explosion, rocks, Tennessee plant.

First responders rush to accurate energetic systems.

That sounds like a CIA operation. A facility on the line of Humphries and Hickman counties that processes ammunition and explosives. But is this the place that made the microphones? So that the conspiracy says that the microphone was taken to this place to be converted

into like an explosion. Ah. Somebody found an invoice from it. That's what it was. That was the piece of information that was going right.

Who found that? Is that James Lee? Found that? Not sure. See if you can find what James Lee has to say.

He's my number one source of information. That's what I heard, dude. I got the podcast with him. Did you? I got the meet him, dude.

Is he cool? He's a nice guy, bro. He's fun. Yeah. He's like, well, he's his story.

He's working as a consultant for one of the big pharmaceutical companies, like one of the big ones that we know, right?

And he just couldn't say the name, but he could say it, but he never said it.

And then he was in a zoom one time and they're like, okay, we still have a lot of stock

pile from the first vaccination.

And that's when he said they started suggesting allegedly that people should then get a second vaccination because they had this first, they still had more of their original vaccine. So it was just like a thing. Well, we have more of it.

Let's sell it back to him. And that's why. And so he started getting a very skeptical. So he started really getting skeptical. And then he got out of it.

And he said he just wants to like expose things that he feels like are not real. Right. True. You think he might be saying, don't, don't, don't, don't, don't. You gotta worry.

I don't know. You gotta wonder. People thought Sean Ryan was cool. Yeah, I've heard people say that. Remember?

Yeah. That was a thing. But then now people don't. Doesn't seem like he is. Yeah.

Unless they're being clever. Don't, don't. Don't have like a family and just like think that everybody's going to be able to live. That would be nice. Yeah, that's the thing about ideologies and tribes.

If it wasn't for ideologies and tribes, the ideas that we should all be able to live together.

It's like, but the problem is it's not fair the way the world's distributed.

Yeah. You know, the statistic about the 1% of the world's $34,000. You make $34,000 US dollars. You are in the 1% of the world. Yeah.

It's crazy. I know. It's just tough. It's like right out. You have to pray.

I just thought I've been trying to do it. In order for us to get cheap jeans and an iPhone that only cost 1,000 bucks, somebody has to get paid squat. Somebody has to get fucked over. Somebody has to work long hours and live in those fox con factories where they have

nets to keep people from jumping off the roof, you know. Yeah. Bro, you know when you're working in a place and there's so many people jumping off the roof that they just put nets up, you got a problem. Yeah.

That's a lot of fun working environment. Hey, Ron's hitting the nets, guys. Yeah. Oh, Ryan. The net again.

Yeah. Don't bother fucker. Why you keep jumping in the net? Yeah. Yeah.

Why you keep jumping in the net? Somebody comes back from lunch break and they just have the net marks on their face and like, I tried it, but it's just sad man. It is sad. I mean, we're better than this.

Yeah. Humans overall are better than this. Thank you. So people that are not acting better than this are not, they're not, I mean, I know we all have mistakes when we all do things that are fucked up, right?

But like at a point where you're like, we should all be doing better. Taking lives and it's not even, it's not the regular people. I think it's the governments, man. 100%. It is 100%.

Because it was just people. We don't figure out how to get along. Unless you think those people are the infidel's or those people are the goyum or those people are the Jews or those people are the Arabs or whatever you decide the other, the other, you decide to other a group of people.

Yeah. Then it becomes a problem. Because it's us versus them. And then you're back to the same tribal bullshit that needs to turn us all trans.

That's why we need to lose our gender and lose our primate dominant instincts and all of our territorial instincts. Well, I told you I was going to mail my dick away. I'm going to be all telepathic with big overheads and little tiny mouths because I'm not going to use it anymore because no one's going to have a dick to suck.

I think that's how much I'm going to push.

No one's going to have a click to lick. So you're going to have a talk, talk, talk, talk, talk. That's going to communicate with your mind. So your mouth gets just going to atrophy and you're going to get all your food, you're like a suck hole.

You're going to have a just straw to eat all your food. They're going to figure out how to make perfect food where it's just like you don't have to go to a restaurant, eat chicken or have fish. I don't know. Suck on a straw, get all the nutrients you need and this fucking sludge with the sludge

makes. It feels like an orgasm when you take it. That's why you get people to do it. They take it. It lights all their synapses up.

Like when you hit that vasy boy, first thing in the morning, can you hear that real quick?

Come on, man. Let's go.

This is the first hit.

It's a good one. Give me a hit. Ready? That's it. Hit that vasy Ricky.

Oh yeah.

Yeah, it's that first one.

Yeah. That's it. That tastes good. What's in that one? That's like a professional one.

That's coffee. That's delicious. That's a professional one. That's a trap. Yeah, this one is like for outdoors people.

Outdoorsy. But it doesn't taste outdoorsy. It tastes like fake coffee. I'll leave it here if you do. Nope.

I'm good. I'm good. No, no, no. I know it's a slippery slope. I'm going into the gas station to get a Escobar later.

Oh, Escobar. They float. Those are the ones.

Remember you were like, you said you were hiding from yourself at night?

Get you.

Yeah, the iron hide from myself.

They get me. Yeah. Sometimes I'd be ashamed. So I'd take a hit and I'd blow it into my shirt. When anybody knows.

Yeah. But your ticer that bit is funny. Right at the armpits. I think that's why we're a hoodie. Just leave it.

I'll rub like a monk. But tell me. Joe, like, what are some things that we can do to keep us in a space of giving ourselves the best chance to feel human? Because, yeah, one day you're going to go to the museum and there's going to be a smile

in there. Well, it has to happen on an individual basis, right? Everybody has to be human to each other on an individual basis. And sometimes it takes something chaotic, like a tragedy. Like 9/11 for people to just be cool to each other.

You know, I remember, well, I've talked about this before, but post 9/11. Everyone was so connected. Everyone was smiling.

People were letting you get on the highway.

They're letting you get in their lane. They're waving. Everyone had American flag on their car. We had been attacked. We were united.

You know, and it's just sad that it takes something like that for people to realize. Like, this is a gift to be alive. Yeah. It's incredible country. I'm in history, but we are under the rule of tyrants.

You know, and I'm not saying that's the US government's tyrant or -- I'm not -- no individual, but every government that is in control of military that has involved these exchanges with other countries -- they're run by tyrants. Someone's a tyrant. Whether it's Putin or this guy or that guy or whoever's in charge of Iran right now.

They keep the people on the street from using the Internet. They kill all the protesters. That's the problem.

The problem is people in power.

It's not people. Yeah. People generally are good, especially when they're not starving. When they're not starving and they're not desperate, they're not being attacked. Most people generally are good.

Yeah. Obviously, depending upon how you grew up and what you were exposed to when you were young,

and what kind of horrors did you have to see?

Well, you're in a war-torn country. You know, you're in a third world place where the cartels run everything. Did you see those kids and Gaza with like, they were playing dull. And they were like, it was like, they loaded their doll up on a stretcher. They were fucking heartbreaking.

Bro, imagine, just the trauma. If you lived in that place, pre-October 7th, it was not fun even back then. It was an open-air prison. Most of them. Yeah, they were taking settlers' homes.

They were coming knocking to your home and then eventually just take it away. Well, there's this attitude for a lot of Israelis have that it's all theirs. You know? Here's an explanation. Ten-foil hat time though.

Done. Done. Exactly. Okay. This is a dude named Mike France.

Not a wasn't James Lee reporting. Mike Francox. This is the same stuff I've seen though. It says October 10, 2025, exactly one month after Kirk's death. The catastrophic explosion destroyed building 602 at the accurate energetic systems.

Facility in McGeewin, Tennessee. The blast estimated to involve 23,000 pounds of explosives killed 16 employees injured several others. And registered as a 1.6 magnitude seismic event. Yo.

The U.S. chemical safety board confirmed the site-produced cast boosters and miniaturized shape charges for military and industrial use. Conspiracy theorists alleged that AES was the manufacturer of the miniatur's shape charge used in Charlie Kirk's assassination. They point to a 400-25,000 dollar department of defense contract awarded to AES in May

of 2025 for extra small anti-personnel demolition charges. Possibly used in covert operations, the timing of the explosion. Just weeks after Charlie Kirk's death is fueled speculation that it was a deliberate cover up to destroy evidence and eliminate the personnel with knowledge of the technology. So, there's the Pager attacks, the Lebanon Pager attacks.

Here's my problem with that explanation, and I'm not saying that I'm right in their wrong. My problem is, I don't see that thing exploding. Yeah. So, that microphone, I don't see it exploding.

I don't see fire coming out of it.

If you have a gun, and the gun goes off six inches from someone's neck like that, you're going

to see a charge at a great point. And if it's a small device without a barrel, something has to propel that energy. And that's an explosion. And if it explodes, you're going to see it explode. Unless they've developed some sort of way of hiding that.

Yeah. That I don't know about. But if they're talking about conventional gunpowder and what they use for bullet rounds, that doesn't seem to make sense to me. But I might be missing something.

I don't know. Yeah, no, that's actually a great point that you said. Yeah. I agree with you. It kind of seems like that thing with spark.

Yeah, I mean, it's close to his neck. It's blowing his neck up. I mean, it seems odd that it can do that without fire. Doesn't make sense. But I might be missing something.

There might be some new technology that I'm not aware of. Let's find out that.

Is there any technology that exists where you could have a projectile come out of a small thing?

Like a microphone that's on someone's neck and not have fire? I don't know. I don't know it. But there's also some stuff ahead here. Yeah.

But there's also probably some stuff that we're not hip to. Oh, for sure, dude. Right.

They come out with stuff all the time that we'll never see probably.

Yeah, I mean, they have drones that look like bugs. They're like. Looks like a bug. That's a bug and drone. A little 80-bitty drone.

You're just sitting there spraying a raid on something that's watching y'all fucker. Whatever. That's crazy. That's crazy. Oh, yeah, boy.

He had their muppers on him, huh? What was that? Did anybody explain what that was about? Was it really just like a Halloween costume or something? I thought it was.

Probably. But then there's some other ones where he's kind of lipstick. But it could be. He was fucking around for like a party or something like that. He was giving Kevin Spacey in a lot of this.

He could feel the Kevin Spacey coming to some of this photo. But here's the question. Is that a costume? He was wearing for funsies? That's like a dress-up thing.

This guy's a freak.

That's what I thought it was just a costume whimpering.

It could be because if it is a costume for funsies and then somebody finds it on your laptop.

Like, I got to explain. I can't even wear it just fucking around. I was doing Wanda from in Living Colour. Yeah. Yeah.

I ain't alone in the gossips. Do you ain't heard it from me? Yeah. I mean, was that Wanda? No, which one was Wanda?

I forget. Dude, how great was that show, dude? Amazing show. Did you love it? Amazing show.

We're using show. One of the greats. Dude, we would go in our neighborhood afterwards. And me, Larry, Eddie, Wayne, King, just guys off from my street. Dude, we go out there to impersonate all of the freaking camera.

Oh, that show was groundbreaking. That shows groundbreaking. There were hundreds of messages, blah, blah, blah, blah. And then this was some of them I think. What do you mean blah, blah, blah, blah?

I don't know. Messages about what? I don't. I said there was three models of whim. There was three women setting.

Hundreds of messages. For probably somebody to remember from the scene. Oh, Christy Noms. Yeah. Didn't she just get let go or something?

Hundreds of messages. Treat yourself as a woman. Just worship like a god. It's telling her you turn me into a girl. Before asking if he should put on leggings.

Oh, okay. But is this real, right? Or is it? So the post is not confirmed. The details reported by the mail.

This is what mail? The Daily Mail? Yeah, that's so original reported. Let me tell you something about the Daily Mail. They just made an article saying that I'm moving out of Austin.

Oh. That I'm fed up with Austin. I'm moving out of Austin. That's not true. And that was published by the Daily Mail.

Right. And also didn't Christy Noms just go through something where she got let go? Or something? Is that right? Yes.

And not just let go, but involved in a scandal. So some sort of money scandal. Sometimes it kind of shit follows that. It's hard to know. But he also looks like, well, like who's that actor right there?

He looks like a little bit. What are those boobs? Those are crazy. Will our net or something? No, not will our net.

He's got crazy fake boobs. Like they're nuts. There's balloons. That's all it is. Yeah.

So how do we know you got tricked easy, bro Joe? It's got tricked, bro. I don't think they're real. I mean, I thought they were like a fake one there. But you was thinking about him.

Oh, shit. She's jumping in right there. Look at that shit. That's crazy to me, dude. So supposedly there's letters that he was sending to girls that you make me dress up like a girl.

But look, again, isn't it crazy that she's involved in some sort of a scandal that's about money? And then this comes out. And then this comes out.

You have to start to notice that and then here's the craziest part at a certain point.

Forget about him. Can you find out what she was let go for? And what's involved in it? Because there was some sort of a campaign fund scandal or something that has to do something with money. A lot of money.

Like millions, millions of millions of dollars. And then all of a sudden this happens. You got to get a little suspicious. Oh, yeah, it was the campaign commercials she got in trouble for because it's like they hired someone she knew. And they're like, she was right in the horse to the fucking.

Right, but there's something about the money being inappropriately spastic.

A hundred million dollars or something.

A hundred million or twenty eight million. Well, it's a starter for this. Let's not comment to we have this specifics.

Joe, do you think that things would be any different with America's relationship in the Middle East right now?

If the if the Republican's had no one, the election, if Trump had no one, or do you think it's all the same? It's a good question. You think it's all the same like Japanos and the distance like running the strings and it's well. The last administration funded the proxy war in Ukraine. Right, 200.

And they were 200 firm tied to Kristi Noms secretly got money from 220 million dollar DHS ad contracts. Dude, okay, for 220 million, you could put tits on my husband for 220 million. You know, but you know, and I'm not even a gay guy. Right, but now they're painting her out to be a nut case. Right, because her husband's a freak.

So this firm, not saying that he's not a freak. Right, he might really be in a dress and I'll blow your girl. That might all be real. That might be something. Let him make me put on leggings. Yeah.

You might have auto kind of failure, right? So, but also that might be coming out because of this. And there's probably a bunch of people that got some money. And they're like, let's try to make this ugly. Yeah.

Yeah. Oh, yeah.

Well, that's Gary too, because it's like, who knows?

I mean, we don't know anything about the case, right? We don't know anything about either case. The money missing or his fake tits. Yeah. I never know fake tits.

I mean, I've done some weird shit here. And Steve almost got a pair of fake tits. Did he? Yeah. That's too much.

I agree. That's too much. But he's in that, you know, the constant perpetual state of having to one-up himself. Do something more and more ridiculous every time.

Do, um, what do you think is going to happen? You think we're going to be okay? I hope so. Of course. I don't know.

Do you think about it? I'm confused. I can't believe we went to this war. When we started bombing Iran, I was like, this can't be true. And what about Lebanon now?

I know.

Israel's invaded Lebanon.

Yeah. Yeah. And it's like, just fucking stop it. What do you need? Well, they're trying to supposedly.

They're trying to stop the terrorists. Yeah. That's crazy though. You're the fucking terrorist. You don't have to say it like you want to stop.

I'm fucking standing front of the fucking mirror. The start there. But also, would do I know? What do you know? You're right.

I don't. But it's all just like fuck. It's got to be some way that we're better than this. The person is like, if this was found out by a story about Christy Noem size has been was found out by like a newspaper online.

Allegedly. And if they can find this out, then obviously hostile intelligence services that were in the CIA officer. Mark Polly and myopolis stuff as well. If a media organization found this out,

you can assume that a high degree of confidence at a hostile intelligence service knows this as well. And a former CIA officer with Mark Polly and myopolis. The damaging information like this can be a tantalizing lead for a hostile intelligence source.

They approach the person and say, if you work with us, we want to expose this. And if you don't, we will. Hmm, he's posting these online. And someone just came across them as we sound.

He might be a freak. Oh, cares. Let him fucking cook.

I think a lot of those people that are involved in government

are freaks. And I bet their husbands and wives are freaks too. They're fucking weirdos. They want to be in power. Yeah.

Yeah, I want to wear leggings. It's all crazy. We just have to focus on the things that we can. Matt McCusher. He started a garden.

It's like 10 to the garden that you can have. You know, he grows blueberries. And he grows. That's the way to do it. He actually, he grew one blueberry.

During the congressional hearings, Christine Nome was probed about accusations of conducting a tax payer funded affair with her former aide, Corey Louin Dowsky, who has since left the Department of Homeland Security.

Corey Louin Dowsky, dude. Did I was in a fucking fantasy football league with that guy? For real? Yes. We're rolling up again.

Yeah. No kidding. Let me see a photo of him. Mother, effort, dude. She's pretty hot.

See Lou, bro. Oh, it's a different dude. Yeah. Seems like a different dude. Oh, so that guy was the guy.

See Louin. Being in her. Totally. Supposedly. Allegedly.

Who knows. But again, when there's a bunch of money that's missing, and there's a scandal. Hundreds of millions of dollars. Weird shit starts getting tossed around.

Throw your house a card, baby. Go rewatch it.

I think that's probably the most accurate depiction of how the government works.

Yeah. Kevin's face is a fascinating guy. Well, everybody in that show was great. It was just like a really well-made show. Yeah.

That show was fascinating. He did it. All right. We're going to wrap this up soon. Dude, that's fine with me.

I thought you were here. I was staying here because you're here. No, I love you. I love you too. Things are going to do.

Are you going to be around tonight? You're going back. I might stop by. Yeah.

Bus boys, in theaters, April 17th.

So that's like two weeks from now.

Let's fucking go, two weeks in a few days.

Yeah. Let's fucking go. Thank you for coming. Come and talk about it. I'm excited for you.

And just to see you. Yeah, I'm excited too, man. I hope it kills it.

Yeah, I just think it's going to be really funny with you and David Spade.

We tried our, we did a good job. I'm sure. Dude, he's so funny. Yeah, I'm sure it's a good news. But thank you for everything, dude.

My pleasure. And it's good to see you.

Yeah, come by tonight. I'll turn you out.

I'll come by. I have a show tonight.

But I'll come by. Where you at? I'm at this movie. The era impacts it from my special. So I got to get ready.

More time in the movie. Seven. Okay. Come by. We'll be there, too.

I'm going to be in. I'll be there for a while. Okay, I'll come by. All right, all right. Good to see you on it.

Jamie, thank you so much. Bus boys, April 17th. Go watch it. We love you guys. Bye.

[music] You're the best player in this school. You're just a bit of a joke. And then you're the best. No, not at all.

As a player, it's my own space. You're the best player. Yeah, exactly.

As a player, it's the best player who can understand.

The best player in the game, the job or the job. The best player. Really, not as much as you can. You're the best player in the game. You're the best player in the game.

Playcrongnons the money! Up 16 April, Nur in Kino.

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