230412_23-018_LWC_Morning_MugClub.mp3 Speaker1: [00:00:05] Put that strip down now. Put the jokes down. Hands over the head. Turn around. Crowder. Do you want to get demonetized? Pay attention. Get down on your knees right now. [00:00:58] What happened? Where did he go? God did an Amy Schumer. Speaker1: [00:01:01] I feel pretty right off this dam right here. Really? Yeah. Boom. Speaker2: [00:01:23] I'm watching the New York Mets this summer and they have a guy in the booth. He's going to donate $1,000 to a children's cancer hospital. Every time one of the Mets hits a home run cheap. You know what? I'll do it. Mike Shelby, Mug Club now. Holy shit. How about an for Bob Levy? More proof Hitler killed all the funny Jews. I got this girl back to my apartment. She took her bra off. One of her nipples was off center by like two inches. So I said, Where did you get your marshall's? Andy. Dick, pick a hole and stick with it. Got a kid from the Make a Wish Foundation. Billy, what's your last wish? I don't know. Can we get a designated hitter in the National League? Don't build another Ronald McDonald house. Move the fences in at Citi Field for say, look at me, not them. Stevie Van Zandt issued a call to exterminate That's Holocaust speak by the way exterminate the Republican cockroaches to that I say this this Here you go, Stevie Hope. That's not too strong for the first half of the show. Speaker3: [00:02:31] The Nick DiPaolo Show at 5 p.m. Eastern. Sign up today at louder with crowder.com/mug club. Oh, that is delicious. It is hot. I still don't get I don't know. I don't know how to gauge the heat of the drink before I go live on air. You could take a sip before you go live. It would seem like that's a simple solution, but I like to complicate things needlessly. So glad to be with you today. I know yesterday we did. We did a little bit of a a little bit of a took a flyer. Right. With the the the Untold History of Muhammad Ali. I hope you enjoy it. Go and watch that. But today we have a lot to talk about. Dalai Lama is a pervert surprise, the leader of an inconsequential religion. And I know some of you are saying that's offensive. What I mean to say by inconsequential, don't misunderstand me, is that Tibetan Buddhism doesn't matter. Elon Musk destroyed stuck the landing. A reporter at the BBC with some leading questioning. And I think it's actually a masterclass in how to handle biased journalists. You know, I came on to the came up under the tutelage of Andrew Breitbart, and we'll show you some clips there and actually how to deal with people like this in your own life. And Gavin Newsom. Sorry. I just threw up in my mouth a little bit. Speaker3: [00:04:13] He is doing a tour of red states right now. And you may have heard of this. Here's the thing. He's going around with talking points that are all verifiably false. Now, I don't think some of them all all are verifiably false. And we will arm you with that information figuratively so that when you hear people say this in comparing California to Florida, you are you are good to go. And yep. Nick DiPaolo by the way you can go to loudmouth credit.com/mug club We now have his show 5:00 PM at night four times a week. Yeah. So you get this show. It's a live show Monday through Friday. Monday through Thursday five No, hold on a second. Monday through Thursday, 10 a.m. is this show. So just bookmark it, right? Tune in. It's a live show. And of course, Friday on Mudd Club. It's also live. So it's every day, 10 a.m. if you're on Mudd Club or on Rumble, of course, it's Monday through Thursday and then Nick DiPaolo four times a week at five. Boom. So you've got five times a week this Nick DiPaolo. And of course, we have other comedy specials, other series coming in. But let's introduce everyone who is here. Are you okay there, Pops Kroll, are you on your phone? You have something more important. Speaker4: [00:05:11] I would not be on my phone. Good Lord. That's Brian. Oh, so you were just playing with yourself, Gerald. Speaker3: [00:05:15] Hey, CEO. How are you, sir? I am doing well. How are you? Good. Busy. 24 hours. So very busy. Yeah. So I'm glad to be a fun show. It's going to be a really fun show. We're dealing with perverts and well and perverts. So we have the Dalai Lama and Gavin Newsom. Yeah. Get my hand down. But. But one African-American, Elon Musk. That'll be fun. There you go. Now, in third year today, we have both Pops Crowder and Brian Callen, who, by the way, will be in Portland April 20th through the 22nd. And you can see the rest of his dates there at Bryan callen.com. Go check out his tour. Bryan Callen How are you, sir? I'm just a man. Speaker5: [00:05:47] I never know if I should have my arms up here, because this way you see more of my traps, right? Yeah. And my neck gets a little fans out a little bit, so I look like I'm ready. Yes, because you got to be ready nowadays, huh, guys? Yeah, I was. The liberals are on the march. Speaker3: [00:06:00] With the black shirt. They're out of the corner of my eye. I thought Lee Haney, and I was like, It's just Bryan. Thanks. Speaker4: [00:06:04] I get that off. Speaker3: [00:06:05] And Pops Crowder, who feels great shame. But that's right. Speaker4: [00:06:09] I'm sitting here with a pro. I mean, what am I doing? One of these things is not like the. Well, people like you. Speaker3: [00:06:13] Yeah. Comment below, guys. You like Pops Crowder there on the show. Speaker4: [00:06:16] We don't don't stir them up. Speaker5: [00:06:18] He's going he's going to take my comedy workshop guys. That's right. A lot of hands on, a lot of hands on relaxation work, a lot of puppets. Speaker3: [00:06:24] What I hear right. Speaker4: [00:06:26] Stone sauce. My question for. Speaker3: [00:06:27] You, a question for the day. Here is, what was your biggest I think it's a handsaw. Bone saws too small. You can't play the bone saw. Speaker5: [00:06:34] Say bone again. Stop it. Sorry, I'm. Speaker3: [00:06:36] Ten. They speak English and bone. So what was your main take away from the Muhammad Ali documentary yesterday? Cassius Clay. Muhammad Ali. Again, a lot of history if you didn't watch it. Spoiler alert campaign for Orrin Hatch and was buddies with Donald Trump and supported him. So a lot of people don't know that the media tries to hide that from you. Go and watch the full documentary. But before we get to that, here's a broad. Okay, Everything now is ugly and we're supposed to celebrate it. And I know what you're saying. Well, beauty is in the eye of the beholder. Sure, I get that. Some people like big ones, some people like small women. And yes, we are the byproduct of our times. But hairy armpits are a hard pass no matter how hard you try and sell them. Speaker6: [00:07:19] I'm on a journey of growing out my armpit hair for the first time as a woman. And you know what I realized yesterday when talking to a guy is that Dane's daddy is our quality detectors. If a man said immediately no to me and dismissed me simply because of the fact that I have hair growing out of the skin, that's almost that says the most. Keep the walking. But if the guy realized that, in fact it's the same hair that he has, it's just hair or in fact, he liked them. Speaker4: [00:07:47] Keep walking. The guy would be able to break the combine. Speaker3: [00:07:50] 40 record, for crying out loud. You guys are too conservative. Speaker5: [00:07:53] I don't mind hair under a woman's arms. I just don't like hair on a woman's balls. Speaker4: [00:07:59] Yes, that's. Speaker5: [00:08:00] That's where I draw the line. I'm just being. I hate to be that conservative. I'm old fashioned. Speaker3: [00:08:04] No, I know. I know you're old fashioned. And a lot of. And here's how I know that you're open minded. A lot of traditional, you know, PATRIARCHIES would draw the line at balls, which I think is wrong. Right? I think it's. No, I mean, I don't know why you would discriminate in that way. You shouldn't. No, it's. I mean, some women. Speaker5: [00:08:18] The balls have a cock attached. Okay, Come on. All right, let's see. We're going to get flagged. Speaker3: [00:08:22] And by the way, I think they always do. Okay. I don't know that they come without one. Speaker5: [00:08:26] Okay, so you're a traditionalist. Speaker4: [00:08:28] Joe Louis might, you know, beg to differ. Have we hit the YouTube dump button? Oh, yeah. By the way, before I move on here, if you see this at. Speaker3: [00:08:35] Any point, if you are watching on YouTube. Speaker4: [00:08:39] All right. That means just head on over to rumble, which we. Speaker3: [00:08:42] Want you to do anyway, because we've been struck twice on YouTube. Technically, three, but really only two times. So anyway, back to Harry Armpit Broad. This, by the way, is a trend. Now. It reminds me of you guys have all seen the Amazon commercial with the lady with the moustache. I've been seeing this a lot lately and I don't really get many commercials, but now I'm not willing to pay for a premium peacock. I was watching the Undertaker documentary, and you're done, so I know. Yeah, I'm done with it, but I still have the commercials. So this commercial has been popping up in my feed. A lot of people saying that a woman with a moustache is, you know, woke. But here's the thing. The commercial people think it's for Amazon. There's more context, and we always believe that you should have that. So this is the full mustache girl commercial. [00:09:24] The trouble with bringing. Over. Oh, God. Oh, God. Does he need my stuff? Come on. Speaker4: [00:09:52] I just saw the shortened version. I never saw that. Yeah, it's a tourism change. One thing put some Weird Al Yankovic music over that, and then you've got a product. And she was so close, by the way, to. Speaker3: [00:10:01] Just Amazon priming razors. But instead she decided that she. Speaker4: [00:10:05] Wanted to go. Speaker3: [00:10:05] The Michael Jackson thriller jacket and the Lionel Richie hairdo. Like, Yeah, no, that's not more work, just this. There's a commercial, by the way, with the stache. Speaker4: [00:10:15] She looked more like weird. Speaker5: [00:10:16] Al, Is that a real commercial? Yeah. Speaker3: [00:10:20] I got to spend. No, it really is a commercial. Speaker5: [00:10:22] That really is a commercial. It is? Speaker3: [00:10:23] Yeah. Wow. By the way, for Greece, people. Speaker4: [00:10:26] Are still looking at your mustache and not the jacket lady. Sorry. Yeah. You're not going to. Nothing's going to distract from that. Yeah. By the way. Speaker3: [00:10:32] And here's the thing. The reason that Michael Jackson and I get it that he's a serial pedophile rapist. But here's the point. Speaker4: [00:10:38] He could get away with. Speaker3: [00:10:39] Looking like that and that mustache because of undeniably immense talent. Speaker4: [00:10:44] You're just a girl. Speaker3: [00:10:45] With a mustache. Speaker4: [00:10:46] Shave it. Speaker3: [00:10:47] And move on with your life. Speaker4: [00:10:48] From the island of Lesbos. Speaker3: [00:10:49] Yes, the island of Lesbos. Speaker4: [00:10:52] Where they all come. Speaker3: [00:10:53] From. Yeah. We always think the island of Lesbos looks like we're like, Oh, island of Lesbos. It's like a fantasy. But really, it's just a bunch of chicks who buy their plaid shirts at Orvis. Speaker5: [00:10:59] Oh, to be fair, that music in the background was Kazakhstani. What? Speaker3: [00:11:03] Well, sorry, guys. I don't know. Something Caucasus Mountains like the comment section. Speaker5: [00:11:08] Thank you for the caucus. Mountains. Thank you for your job. Speaker3: [00:11:10] Well, you know what's. Speaker4: [00:11:11] Funny is, actually, they have a whole. Speaker3: [00:11:12] Argument about Greek coffee or Turkish coffee or Middle Eastern coffee. It's all the same exact thing. Yeah, they all claim it. So the. Speaker5: [00:11:17] Ottomans were like, Here's here's. Speaker3: [00:11:19] Our coffee. This is why I can't be president If I had the red button. Speaker4: [00:11:22] This is like, well, it's Greek coffee. Speaker3: [00:11:23] It's Turkish. Speaker4: [00:11:24] Beep, beep, beep, beep, beep, beep, beep, beep, beep, beep, beep, beep, beep. Same thing. Pipe down in there. You make me tired. You go retire at 43 dummies. All right. Speaker3: [00:11:33] Speaking of dummies, Dalai Lama. Okay, I know some of you like him. And by some of you, I mean, if you're stupid now, during an M3 and I mean this. It's silly. It's dumb. I'm sorry. The Dalai Lama is inconsequential. It's a religion that's just your own. Personal happiness is what matters. They've never really contributed anything to the modern world societies based around this, whether it's Tibetan Buddhism, whether it's there's Buddhism, there's Hinduism, which is kind of what it branches. There are all different kinds of Buddhism. So I understand it. Don't correct me on which kind of Buddhism I'm talking about here. I get it. The point is, the Dalai Lama sucks. Speaker4: [00:12:03] And I'm pretty sure he's a. Speaker3: [00:12:04] Pedophile. Here's why. Speaker4: [00:12:05] During the M3. Speaker3: [00:12:07] M Foundation event that took place last month, it's been making the rounds. Dalai Lama told a young boy, And I know what you're thinking cultural differences. I'm not sure which culture has You request that a young boy suck your tongue and you're not a. Speaker4: [00:12:20] Pedophile, but here's your proof. Speaker7: [00:12:23] And suck my tongue. Thank you. Thank you. Speaker4: [00:12:36] Yeah. The thing about enlightenment. Speaker3: [00:12:38] The Dalai Lama said is that it's in his ass. Speaker5: [00:12:40] Well, Jesus, it was just the tip of the tongue. I think that's. That's your son. Speaker3: [00:12:45] Do you know what I'm saying? Are you not? Are you not. Speaker4: [00:12:47] Just. Speaker3: [00:12:48] Punching the Dalai Lama? Right. Speaker5: [00:12:49] Receives enlightenment on his deathbed. Then that's all that. Which would be nice. If it's your. Speaker3: [00:12:54] Son and someone asks your son to suck his tongue. How fast before they have to pry you. Speaker5: [00:12:58] Off of that? It's the only time I would throw the Dalai Lama in a flying headlock. Yeah, that's. That's where I think it'd be. I think it's. Speaker4: [00:13:04] Time for him to light himself on fire in protest. Speaker3: [00:13:06] He needs the people's elbow now. Speaker4: [00:13:07] A CNN panelist defended the spiritual leader. I use that term loosely. I don't know about you. I don't know how easy it would have been to follow. Speaker3: [00:13:17] Jesus Christ if he had a $250,000 wristwatch, but. Speaker4: [00:13:21] Tomato fraud. So they defended the Dalai. Speaker3: [00:13:25] Lama, of course, as being playful and. Speaker4: [00:13:29] Playful. Jay. Speaker8: [00:13:31] You've met the Dalai Lama many times. Have you sucked his tongue? Speaker9: [00:13:35] I have not. Not his tongue is a very careful human being. And we may see this in a weird kind of gross sexualized way, but this is about as sexual as a bowl of plain rice, sticky rice, sexual, erotic or erotic happening in this encounter. Speaker4: [00:13:53] Oh, yeah. No, we have some sticky fried cock. Yeah. Geez. Speaker5: [00:13:59] I mean, talk about spreading COVID, guys. Yes, exactly. Speaker4: [00:14:02] That's not sanitary. It's a super. Speaker5: [00:14:03] Spreader. You know what I'm saying? Speaker3: [00:14:04] That's how monkeypox got started. Speaker5: [00:14:05] Yeah, but your tongue is not dirty. No. Speaker10: [00:14:08] Well, that's how they told me I'd become a deity. Speaker3: [00:14:09] Yeah, exactly. Steven Seagal. Remember, he's like the Dalai Lama, in all his wisdom. Said I. Speaker4: [00:14:13] Was the. Speaker3: [00:14:14] Reincarnate of some kind of. Speaker5: [00:14:15] It's a good. It's a good commercial for a tongue scrape. Yes. You know what I mean? Keep your tongue clean enough to suck on. It's a good a stranger to suck. Speaker3: [00:14:23] On a stranger. Speaker4: [00:14:24] Oh, you taste good. A six year old Listerine. Speaker5: [00:14:27] Can your kid suck my tongue? Speaker3: [00:14:29] Oh, gosh. This is just again, people. Speaker4: [00:14:31] Dustin Hoffman got me, too, for telling dirty jokes on set 40 years ago. This guy is having minors suck his tongue and you're running interference. And they're looking for every single reason they can find to criticize Christians and even criticize Jesus and at some point try and memory, although he was a historical figure, even though you've done that in. Speaker3: [00:14:46] The apologetics. Speaker4: [00:14:47] Segment on Friday, every single major historian agrees with it. The point is, it's silly. Speaker3: [00:14:52] I'm sorry. Speaker4: [00:14:52] Anyone who's into the Eastern religion mysticism, you. Speaker3: [00:14:55] Are. Speaker4: [00:14:55] Lost. The Dalai Lama is. Speaker3: [00:14:57] A lost. Speaker4: [00:14:58] Soul. And you can comment below if you find that offensive. I don't. Speaker3: [00:15:02] Really care. Cnn was not the only one with an opinion. However, most happy regarding this news and supportive was this. Speaker4: [00:15:10] Guy SCHWING Yeah. Oh, Jesus. Not all Catholics, just the pope, just the right. Speaker5: [00:15:20] But the Pope knows nothing about your root chakra. Speaker4: [00:15:23] Yes, exactly. I don't even know what that. You know what? It's one of those things. It means nothing. What do you. Speaker5: [00:15:26] Mean? It's down here? It starts here. Does it start there? Yes. It ends with your tongue. Oh. Speaker4: [00:15:31] Well, you learn something new every day. But I don't like it. So. So the Dalai Lama is a. Speaker3: [00:15:37] Fraud, by the way. He gave he. Yeah, he did. He declared Steven Seagal to be some kind of incarnate of some kind of God. Because Steven Seagal gave a bunch of money to some temple. Right. When people bitch about Joel Osteen putting money in walls, for some reason, they give a pass to the guy who literally. Speaker4: [00:15:52] Said, Oh, you'll give money, Steven Seagal. No problem. You can't fight. And movie fraud. I will call you God. You are now God. King He also has a watch collection, by the way, including like two Rolexes. Jeez. Speaker3: [00:16:01] So this is about fine, I guess. Yes. Speaker11: [00:16:04] It's got nicer watches than that, right? Speaker4: [00:16:06] Yeah. Yeah. Speaker3: [00:16:08] You find you find enlightenment at the Omega store. That's my gosh. Speaker4: [00:16:15] That's just last plane of in Hollywood. Speaker3: [00:16:18] How many people tell you, right, Brian? Like I, I practice a tantric meditation. Speaker5: [00:16:22] Meditation is how you kind of you become a witness to everything going on around you. Right? And you practice detachment, right? And that's important because if you do it enough, then you end up not caring about your own children. Exactly. Yeah. They're less of a distraction. You. Speaker3: [00:16:39] Yeah, right. You're detached as hell. Speaker4: [00:16:41] That's right. You are completely absent, Father. Speaker5: [00:16:42] It's about doing what I want for myself. Yeah, it's like countries. Speaker4: [00:16:46] It's like countries. You measure them by their contribution. That's true. That's good. That's a good point. Earlier you're saying Tibet. Speaker3: [00:16:51] Tibet? Not a hotbed for technological advancements. No. Speaker4: [00:16:54] Human rights. They have a high mountain or freeing people. Speaker3: [00:16:57] Yeah, well, Brad Pitt spent seven years there. Speaker4: [00:16:58] Oh, good. Can he go back one seven years on my ass? Speaker5: [00:17:04] Why are you turning Brad into a power bottom? Speaker3: [00:17:07] No, no, he's in. He's in. He's in. He's in the Dalai Lama, my ass. Speaker5: [00:17:10] Oh, okay, my ass. If his young. Speaker4: [00:17:12] Robert Redford make good for an ass, that's fine. And Lightman back there. Up there. Very far. Speaker5: [00:17:17] That seems like a super Chinese accent, not a Tibetan accent. Speaker4: [00:17:20] Well, you know what? I don't necessarily understand the schisms. Speaker3: [00:17:22] Okay? Speaker5: [00:17:23] It's regional. Yeah. Speaker3: [00:17:24] Why don't you do. Why don't you do Catholic and the Eastern Orthodox Church next? Which, by the way, is a whole topic that's just kind of funny when you look at the difference. Speaker5: [00:17:32] That's a Christian. Intersectionalist joke. Yes. Yes. Yeah. Speaker3: [00:17:35] So I'm a fan. Eastern Orthodox, not big fans of the Pope either, too. So here's something. While we're talking about being observant, being enlightened, being detached. I do like that Elon Musk is detached from the Hollywood elite, the media elite. This is the problem with a lot of people in big tech. And none of you follow this story. But I've talked about the big tech, right, entertainment media industrial complex, because people throw that out with the military industrial complex. They are one and the same. And so often the Zuckerbergs, so often the Jack Dorsey's, the Susan Wojcicki's, the Mohan's, right? They want they desperately want to be a part of the Cool Kids club. And that's why it's this sort of incestuous relationship with journalists. Elon Musk is similar to Trump in this way, and he's not perfect. There have been issues with Twitter. Believe me, that's not lost on me. But the spirit of him clearly reviling those in the media and understanding the tactics that they will use is of value. The last person who I witnessed who did it this well was Andrew Breitbart. That's the man on the wall right there. He's is the first person to have ever taken any of my. I met him because he took one of my old standup videos and posted it back on Big Hollywood before it was Breitbart anything. It was just big Hollywood Breitbart.com. And we became good friends. He understood the media because he was raised in Brentwood and Hollywood and he understood how to fight back. Elon Musk does a pretty close job. I want you to watch this. And there are a lot of lessons that you can take with it. Here he is with a BBC reporter, live interview. We're Wednesday, right? So this was yesterday. Tuesday night. Yeah. Yeah. So you think if something is slightly sexist, it should be banned? Speaker9: [00:19:05] No. Is that what you're saying? Speaker12: [00:19:06] I'm not saying anything. I'm saying I'm just curious what I'm trying to say. What you mean by hateful content. I'm asking for specific examples. And if. And you just said that if something is slightly sexist, that's hateful content, does that mean that it should be banned? Well, you've asked me you've asked me whether. Speaker13: [00:19:24] My feed, whether it's got less or more, I'd say it's got slightly. Speaker12: [00:19:28] More. That's what I'm asking. For example, remember he said that? Can you name one example? Speaker13: [00:19:31] I honestly don't. I honestly, I can't name a single example. I'll tell you why, because I don't actually use that for you feed anymore because I just don't particularly like it. But you said a lot of people, a lot of people are quite similar. I don't let him out. Speaker3: [00:19:42] Don't give him the out. Elon doesn't see more. Speaker12: [00:19:44] Hateful content, but you can't name a single example. Not even one. Speaker13: [00:19:48] I'm not sure I've used that feed for the last 3 or 4 weeks. Speaker12: [00:19:51] And then how did you see the hateful content? Speaker13: [00:19:54] Because I've been I've been using it. I've been using Twitter since you've taken over for the last six months. Speaker12: [00:19:57] Okay. So then you must have at some point seen that you for your hateful content. And I'm asking for one example. Right. And you can't give a single one. Speaker13: [00:20:03] And I'm saying. Speaker12: [00:20:04] I then I say so that you don't know what you're talking about, really, because you can't find a single example of hateful content, not even one tweet. And yet you claimed that the hateful content was high. Well, that's a false. Speaker13: [00:20:18] No. What? I just lied. What? No, no. What I claim was there are many organizations that say that that kind of information. Speaker3: [00:20:26] Is on other organizations. Speaker13: [00:20:27] Right. Whether it has or not. I mean. Speaker3: [00:20:30] He's not letting him go. This is important. Speaker13: [00:20:32] Strategic Dialogue Institute in the in the UK. They will say that. So. Speaker12: [00:20:37] Look, people will say all sorts of nonsense. I'm literally asking for a single example and you can't name one. Speaker13: [00:20:42] Right. And as I already said, I don't use that feed. But how would you know that? I don't think this is getting anywhere. Speaker12: [00:20:46] You literally said you experience it's not getting anywhere. Speaker3: [00:20:49] This is what happens with narcissists and sociopaths. It's not getting anywhere because they are lying. It's not getting anywhere because you're lying. It would get exactly where this interview should go if you weren't lying. Couple of things that he did there and I'll show you a clip of Andrew Breitbart right away when he knew it was an unfair and loaded question, he pointed it out and asked him why he was asking that question. He defined the terms. Why are you using that term? This is why this is good. If someone is trying to argue in good faith, you can use a Socratic method and say, Well, hold on a second. What do you mean by, you know, slightly sexist content? Now, if someone is arguing in good faith and you can see this in Change My Mind, they'll go, Well, what I mean is maybe things that might be denigrating women, maybe things that might be perpetuating and perpetuating stereotypes. And then if you don't have a satisfactory answer, you can go on and say, well, what would be perpetuating a stereotype? If it's someone who's not arguing in good faith, they lie and they say, Oh, I don't know. Speaker3: [00:21:38] It was someone else, right? They appeal to authority. Maybe they use the appeal to authority fallacy. The ad Populum fallacy. Well, most other people, other organizations. So asking them using the Socratic method gives you the opportunity to ensure that you understand and they understand whether you are arguing in good faith. And then if they aren't, that's where you keep it on that point. Why? Because this is what would happen if Elon Musk just answered it. He would move on to another attack. He would move on to racism. He would move on to transphobia. So Elon Musk knew, you know what, this isn't going to be productive no matter what. So I'm going to call out the first red herring here. Yeah. And then you stick on it. You cannot have a productive conversation with someone who is perfectly fine lying. And another example of this that I wanted to point to is Andrew Breitbart did this when he was interviewed. Yeah. And I don't remember at what point this was where he was being interviewed. The same thing happened when the Anthony Weiner scandal took place. But the man, rather than ask him about the relevant story. Speaker4: [00:22:33] Decides to ask. Speaker3: [00:22:34] Andrew Breitbart about his relationship with alcohol. And look what Andrew does right away. You can see the moment on his face where he goes, Oh, I know how this is going to go. And he doesn't let it go. Speaker4: [00:22:44] What's your current relationship with alcohol? Speaker2: [00:22:49] Why do you ask? Speaker4: [00:22:50] Just because you talked about it quite a bit in your book. Speaker2: [00:22:55] In what regard. Speaker4: [00:22:56] Socratic method would you be more specific? Two times you talked about the specifics. I think it's fair to to draw the fact draw from what you wrote in your book that you had an alcohol problem at Tulane. Speaker2: [00:23:07] Misrepresentation. I didn't have an alcohol problem. I had a great time in college. And I recommend that anybody that go to New Orleans have the time of their lives. Woodbridge, Virginia I mean, I, I graduated 20 years ago, and I'm admitting to my flaws the way that Barack Obama admitted that he did cocaine when he was in college. Would you ask Barack Obama in an interview with him, would it be one of the ten questions you ask him? What's your current relationship with cocaine? Well, it's just. Speaker4: [00:23:36] You talked about it quite a bit. That's where it came from. Speaker3: [00:23:38] So here's the beauty. He asked him why Socratic method then said, Can you give specifics knowing that he absolutely could not give specifics? Then he explained himself and then here's what he did. He took something that was hearsay, right? He took a red herring and then he instead countered it with the truth. It's irrefutable that Barack Obama did cocaine. And then he puts that on the media, as far as I would hope you would ask him that, or he knows very well that he wouldn't and that he has not. That man very likely interviewed Barack Obama. So what you do is Socratic method. You allow them to answer for their claims, you ask for specifics. And then rather than just getting into minutia, Right, you drill them on that and then you understand, well, we're not going to go anywhere productive, so let's go somewhere productive based on truth. Barack Obama was someone who did cocaine with, by the way, a convicted domestic terrorist, Bill Ayers. So that is the way that you handle it. Watch these watch these kinds of interviews, Look for similar interviews and take notes. It really is a masterclass. Speaker5: [00:24:29] The best advice anybody about I. Speaker4: [00:24:31] Now, you've been dealing with automation for years. Speaker3: [00:24:34] Well, chat GP Rickles, how have we been dealing with automation for years? Speaker4: [00:24:37] You walk in a room and everyone else automatically walks out. Speaker3: [00:24:39] Okay, you know what? That's not very funny. Speaker4: [00:24:41] I'm sorry. We don't all have writers on staff who can toss our name on there. Speaker3: [00:24:45] Okay, well, we don't have writers here. Chat GP Rickles. You should. Speaker4: [00:24:49] You walked right into that one. Dumb, dumb. Speaker2: [00:24:51] Come on, man. Speaker4: [00:24:53] Shut up, Gerald. You're glorified blow up doll. I wish you were a bottle of wine so I could throw you in a cellar for 50 years. Geez, that's Then you'd assume room temperature. Speaker3: [00:25:01] That's almost a death threat, right? Speaker5: [00:25:03] I don't know what he's talking about. There. Is that Callen over there? Speaker4: [00:25:05] Yeah. With that short hair and beard. You look like a 1960s G.I. Joe. Speaker5: [00:25:08] Oh, well, thanks, I guess. I mean, it's not a bad. I want to. Speaker4: [00:25:11] Strap a firecracker to your back and watch you go boom. Wow. What? That's rough. Callen You played a gym teacher on TV. You know what they say? Those who can't do teach and those who can't teach Teach gym. Okay? And those who can't play gym teachers on TV are assholes. Wow, that's pretty rough. Did you push the spinoff series because of the short shorts? All right, that's enough. Speaker5: [00:25:30] Cut that out. I was about to say something. The chat. Speaker3: [00:25:32] Gpt. I don't know why we didn't. Speaker5: [00:25:33] Uninstall the amazing Brian, I am sorry. I'm sorry. What I was trying to make before he got that insulting. I don't know. We paid for it. Okay, I know. The point is that if you. If you're giving anybody who's a public figure who's about to be a public figure in Hollywood or anywhere else, advice is the press is not your friend. Right. And you should always take an antagonistic position. Always, because the only thing that sells is for them to figure out what your Achilles heel is and expose it. That goes for liberals or conservatives. It doesn't matter, especially conservatives. But if you think the press is your friend, the same machine that brings you to the top of the mountain will will send you crashing down. No, it's just the nature of the beast. Yeah. Speaker4: [00:26:16] And it's pressing on something that doesn't exist. Right? Pay your fair share. Right. Okay. Just define your fair share. I don't know. Define your fair share. Because I have to understand, you just stay on that point. Because if he had answered the question in any other way, like, here's what we're doing to fight it or whatever it would have been. Ceo of Twitter declines to comment on how. Speaker2: [00:26:33] They will. Speaker4: [00:26:34] Change the racist algorithms or the sexist posts that are. Speaker3: [00:26:38] I can't go along with a false premise. You cannot have a conversation because like you said, they will say refuses to address sexism when he didn't define what it was and then one was put on him. It was, uh. Speaker4: [00:26:48] Uh, I don't know. Speaker3: [00:26:50] This is why they won't do it with of course, this is why former Vice President Joe Biden was in his basement instead of campaign. Speaker5: [00:26:56] Well, you can usually ignore the noise if you're an actor or something like that. But I think it's getting to the point where you can't ignore if you let the press take control of the narrative completely without doing what Elon Musk does, then then you're in trouble. That's what I worry about. Speaker3: [00:27:13] No, I think you're absolutely it's look, the only way that I know how to handle this is you have certain a certain set of kind of guidelines that you follow Socratic method first, there are people who do want to have a conversation in good faith. It's even you know, when I when people come up and they'll ask for pictures or they say they're a fan, I have a series of questions that I ask to figure out really quickly if they're trolling. Right. And it's usually about seven. Many percent friendly and 30% who are not. And I won't necessarily go through what those questions are because I don't want people to be able to try and cheat the test. Speaker5: [00:27:39] Do you want to suck my tongue? Speaker3: [00:27:40] Yes, exactly. That's the first one. Speaker5: [00:27:41] It's sexual as a bowl of white rice. Speaker3: [00:27:44] Yes. It thins the herd. Well, I do it so they stick out their tongue. Then I grab the pliers. Speaker5: [00:27:49] You got me again. Speaker4: [00:27:50] Sometimes I carry. Speaker3: [00:27:51] Around a cold telephone pole and go. Ha ha ha. Speaker4: [00:27:53] Oh, I see. The thing is coming. Speaker5: [00:27:57] Oh, no, Not horny anymore. Speaker4: [00:27:59] No, he's no Dalai Lama. You. Well, you watch this, Pops Crowder. When I was. Speaker3: [00:28:03] Really young going through this and appearing on media, I can only imagine that you must have been, you know, kind of edge of your seat sometimes when you knew it was an adversarial interviews. Speaker4: [00:28:11] All the time. Speaker3: [00:28:12] Oh, what about this that you were one time they tried to say I was the davos's the Van Andels grandson when I got punched in the face of the Lansing Union rally. You wish they said, Well, why were you there? Why were you there? You know, as the Davos's grandson or Van Andel sorry, selling soap. That was one of their questions, selling soap. And I said, Selling soap. They said, Yeah, because I said, No, no, no. What happened was they said, Oh, he's the Davos's grandson. I said, Yeah, sure, I'm a soap salesman, whatever, and removed myself. They turned that into you were going saying they were filthy homeless people, union members, and wanted to wash them with soap. And I said, Well, hold on a second. What about the guy who committed assault and they never ran the interview, huh? Speaker4: [00:28:48] Yeah. Speaker3: [00:28:48] So, yeah, this is what happens all the time if you let them lead you down a path with that kind of questioning you've already lost, Identify who you can have a conversation with. Start with a Socratic method. And if people do not define the terms, don't waste your time and make an example of them. And I'm really happy to see Elon Musk doing it. Hey, hit the like button right now. If you are on YouTube or on. Speaker4: [00:29:09] Rumble, you can hit the Rumble smash button, whatever the and get the hell off YouTube. Yeah, get off right now. We want to see that. Speaker3: [00:29:15] Number go down to zero. Speaker5: [00:29:17] And use soap. Son of a. Speaker4: [00:29:18] Gun. Yes. You suck. I'm trying. That's the takeaway. Speaker5: [00:29:20] I didn't. I'm not a. Speaker3: [00:29:21] Big fan of I'm not a big fan of the shampoo, but soap, right? Speaker5: [00:29:24] Yeah, Soap is the same thing, guys. You know what I mean? It's not. Speaker3: [00:29:28] It's not. Did you know that modern soap. Most modern soap is actually what used to be laundry detergent? It's not real soap. Is that true? It's absolutely true. Like Dial and Lever 2000 old soap used to have, like, three ingredients lye, tallow and some kind of, I don't know, something else. But now there's a. Speaker4: [00:29:42] Bunch of chemicals in there, and it's what they used to use on the washboard. Speaker3: [00:29:45] So, Brian, you are destroying your moisture skin barrier. Speaker4: [00:29:48] Oh, man. Speaker5: [00:29:49] Wow. I smell like peaches. At least I smell like a peach. You do? That's all it. Speaker3: [00:29:53] Matters. Yeah. I don't know why you went with that scent. I would have gone with, like, tobacco and whiskey, but. Speaker5: [00:29:57] You know what? Smell my tongue. Ah, see? Sorry, guys. Somebody pulled that clip. That's a pink tongue, by the way. Speaker4: [00:30:04] Somebody sucking his tongue on the airplane in face Off. Oh, no. Come on. We got to see it after this sudden face off. It's in face off. Oh, it is. It's when he's on the plane. All right. Speaker3: [00:30:12] We've gotten off the. Speaker4: [00:30:13] Rails. Speaking of. Speaker5: [00:30:14] I know I'm watching tonight, speaking alone in my. Speaker4: [00:30:17] Room, sucking. Speaker3: [00:30:18] It's always fun having my dad here for this. Never in his wildest dreams did Pops Crowder think his son would make a living this way. Speaker4: [00:30:23] Censoring yourself and talk about the Dalai Lama, such disgrace. And we're going. Speaker3: [00:30:27] To talk about Gavin Newsom. Well, it's your fault. Speaker4: [00:30:29] You told me like, yeah, that guy's an asshole. Speaker3: [00:30:30] When I was very young. Speaker4: [00:30:31] I sent you the article a minute. It hit my phone. That's true. Well, this is given to us by Pops Crowder. But here's the thing. Speaker3: [00:30:36] It's by the way, one more. It's next week. It's the last free week of of mug club. A lot of credit.com slash mug club. Speaker4: [00:30:42] Until the 20th. And we may have something major happening. Speaker3: [00:30:45] Here in the last week. I will let you know. But I know that a lot of you are waiting to end the free month, but it's the only way we can bring on people like Nick, like Cal and other folks is if you guys join up. We appreciate the support. Let's get to Gavin Newsom, governor of your state. Yes. Nothing like nothing like a lifetime of bad decisions. Brian. Speaker5: [00:31:01] I'll tell you what, I. Speaker3: [00:31:02] Know you still have to be there because of work and such, but eventually you got to get out of there and. Speaker5: [00:31:06] The sun. Listen, I'm coveting Texas. If I said I wasn't looking at property, I'd be lying. You know what I'm saying? Tease teaser. Speaker4: [00:31:15] It's actually my state, too. I know. I got out at one. Speaker5: [00:31:18] I just want to carry I want to be able to carry and I want Bandoleros Yes. Bandoleros. Oh, sorry about my. I speak Spanish. Yeah, I. Speaker4: [00:31:25] Know. Speaker5: [00:31:26] That's Spanish for Bandoleros but I've always wanted to wear Bandoleros Yeah, under my shirt. Under your hat. I like the feeling of cold. Speaker3: [00:31:33] That almost cold defeats the purpose. At that point, you should just have a nice, you know, hip concealed carry under the waistband holster. But you're a twisted person. Speaker5: [00:31:40] Yes, Well, I'd wear a leg holster. I want. I want something. I want a I want a small. Yeah, that's a Walther that would fit. Well, my calves are pretty big guys. Speaker4: [00:31:49] All right, here we go. Sorry. We all get. Can we talk about the hellscape of California? Let's talk about the hellscape. That is California. Speaker3: [00:31:56] Gavin Newsom. Speaking of. Well, Gavin Newsom doesn't really have big cats. He's more like one of those. Do you ever see those stinkbugs? Yeah, yeah, yeah. With a good head of hair, though. A great head of hair. Great head of hair. Speaker5: [00:32:04] Wow. Well kept. And six foot four is he? Speaker3: [00:32:07] Actually, I don't care. Speaker5: [00:32:08] I'm producing estrogen as we speak. Speaker3: [00:32:09] So Governor Gavin Newsom and I use that term loosely. He has now spent the last couple of weeks and if you haven't heard of this, you really need to know about it, because this is a push, right? It's sort of an extension of Beto O'Rourke where they're trying to make a push into red states. The good news is it backfires in a lot of ways. And we'll go through we'll go through how it backfires, but more importantly, how you can assist with the backfiring. For example, Texas, they said, was going to become more and more purple and. Speaker4: [00:32:32] And then you have the irony that. Speaker3: [00:32:34] The Latino vote here in Texas and, of course, in Florida has become more and more conservative because of how far the left has reached. So they are now going on a red state tour, specifically Gavin Newsom. Largely the messaging is targeting and you can disagree with me, you can comment below my inference, white bitches. So here he is making his case whining about Republicans. Keep in mind, yes, he is from the hellhole that is California. Speaker2: [00:33:00] There's something deep and serious that's happening across this country. All the progress the last half century is being rolled back in these states in real time In just the last few years. I don't think people fully understand the right's regression, individual liberties on civil rights, on voting rights, on the gerrymandering that's happening out here on just the left doesn't do that. African American community, the assault on the gay, lesbian, bisexual and trans community, the number one issue of the day, it seems to be getting rid of the word Latinx in Arkansas. And number two, getting rid of drag shows. Speaker4: [00:33:32] It's a oh, wait, so, hon, keep playing. Speaker2: [00:33:35] Keep playing. Serious moment in American history cause. Speaker4: [00:33:38] He just. Speaker3: [00:33:38] Said the thing that they're doing, getting rid of the term Latinx. Less than 2% of Latin Americans want the term Latinx getting rid of drag shows. This is a. Speaker4: [00:33:46] Serious moment in American history. You mispronounced silly, you mispronounced. Speaker3: [00:33:50] Goofy and dumb. You mispronounced as out of touch as humanly possible. Speaker4: [00:33:55] Think about that sequence of words. The Republicans are trying to get rid of Latinx and drag shows at public libraries. This is serious. Yeah. Keep with that messaging. It worked well for Anheuser Busch with the chick with the dick on the can. Only 4 billion lost in market cap in two weeks. Boom You know more than your state. Less than your state, I should say. It's a serious time. Latinx. Unbelievable. Okay, we can continue, but it's just fun. Just think of that. This is how out of touch they're getting rid of Latinx. They want to get rid of drag shows. Can you believe it? For crying out loud. Like you're like you're. You're Schindler freeing the Jews. All right, let's go. Let's keep. Speaker2: [00:34:31] Playing. And yet we're so consumed respectfully by the spectacles in Washington that I, as an American, feel compelled as a governor to call that out. Who does some of that in a more systemic way? Speaker4: [00:34:44] Hey, how about you feel compelled as a governor to govern? How about that? Yeah, Tell them, Stephen, your city is covered with piles of human shit needles and you have record violent crime. You're concerned about a term like Latinx that none of your voting constituents citizens see even want. Go and call someone. Go and call someone who's actually like, you know, relatively new immigrant here who's Hispanic. Go and call them Latinx. And if you aren't basically the the the reason. Speaker3: [00:35:14] For them being the new recipient of a. Speaker4: [00:35:15] Teardrop tattoo, they're still going to kick your ass. Speaker5: [00:35:18] And did the assault on the African-American community know how hard it is to get just to pay rent in California or just to buy a house? Right? I mean, Forget and Whole Foods and all these other the tax exodus from from the tech exodus from from San Francisco. It's unbelievable. It's so difficult to make a living in California unless you're a criminal. Speaker3: [00:35:39] Right? Well, if you've seen Pacific Heights. Speaker5: [00:35:41] The squatters food's for free. Yeah. Speaker3: [00:35:42] And the squatters rights, by the way. So it's like I'm not going to pay rent and they can't kick you out because it's basically it's been almost permanent rent forgiveness in California. That might be another segment we should do. But if you are a law abiding citizen who sort of understands the agreement and actually obeys the law, where you say, well, okay, I guess I can't afford this, I'm going to have to leave, Guess what that does? Speaker4: [00:35:59] People who have no intent to pay their rent. Speaker3: [00:36:02] Stay and property values go down. Don't make it a racial thing. White bitches do it too. Comment below. If you're from California and. Speaker4: [00:36:08] You understand the difference between California, Texas, Florida. He's about to discuss Florida, which is hilarious to me. Nothing like taking the fight to where your weakest Gavin The tour stops in Florida, Alabama, Arkansas, Mississippi. Speaker3: [00:36:21] And it came just. Speaker4: [00:36:23] Days after he launched his new PAC campaign for. Speaker3: [00:36:28] Democracy. Right. Speaker5: [00:36:29] But just don't say homeless. Its unhoused neighbor. I hear. Speaker4: [00:36:34] It. Speaker3: [00:36:35] I will discard it. Speaker4: [00:36:36] But the progress, the radical without the progress has is this founding of this nation. Speaker10: [00:36:44] This guy is the regression. This guy is the the rollback to Europe. Europe's failed policies. That's what he's he's he's the man. Right. And he wants to sell the man to everybody. Speaker4: [00:36:53] It's a rollback the rim to lose. Did you guys have rollback the rim to win in the. Speaker3: [00:36:56] States or was that a Tim Hortons thing? Speaker4: [00:36:57] Can someone comment below every now and then have a reference that I thought you were all raised with? No. You know. Speaker5: [00:37:02] Tim's. No, no. I just heard rim rollback. Nope. Stop it. Mr. Lama on the issues. Ryan, come sit on my lap for a second. I want no. Speaker4: [00:37:11] And Tim Hortons rollback the rim to win. All right. Anyway, here he is. Speaker3: [00:37:14] He launched his new PAC. Speaker4: [00:37:15] Campaign for Democracy because. Speaker3: [00:37:17] That's a fun word for them to say. Speaker2: [00:37:18] Let's be direct. We can't solve a problem without first identifying it. And the problem in our country, the problem, identify authoritarian leaders who are so hell bent on gaining power and keeping it by whatever means necessary that they're directly attacking our freedoms in state after state. That's why I'm launching the Campaign for Democracy. We're going on the road to take the fight to states where freedom is most under attack. Speaker3: [00:37:43] Oh, democracy, by the way. We're a constitutional republic. And I understand you're trying to argue the semantics there, but okay, so democracy. Speaker4: [00:37:48] So is there a Democratic vote on lockdowns? Hm. Was there a Democratic vote on vaccine. Speaker3: [00:37:53] Mandates for state employees? I just want to make sure that I understand your definition of democracy. Speaker4: [00:37:58] Because when I think California, I think freedom hit the rumble button. Please. I don't know how much longer we're going to be on YouTube. Smash the rumble button. Speaker3: [00:38:05] If you're watching on Rumble, this guy just pisses me off. I would absolutely. Speaker4: [00:38:09] Like to rag doll him figuratively. Speaker3: [00:38:10] Well, no, of course I was. Was there. Speaker4: [00:38:12] Also a vote for from his constituents that he can go out to one of the. Speaker2: [00:38:15] Most posh restaurants. Speaker14: [00:38:16] A three star Michelin restaurant in California, in Napa Valley during the lockdown. Right. A group of his friends. Yes, I. Speaker5: [00:38:23] Know, guys, but at least laundry. No, At least when I take my child to a toy store, I have the option of gender neutral toys. Well, that's. Thank God for. Speaker4: [00:38:31] That, Brian, But this guy. Speaker14: [00:38:32] Is priming for a presidential run. Yes. I spoke to one of his business partners many years ago in Napa over some wine and he's like, they have been preparing that guy from day one to run for president. That's it. Guess what? Speaker4: [00:38:42] Guess what? This not a chance, bitch. You know why? Because the second a woman steps in line or, God forbid, a minority, you are going straight to the back. No one gives a rat's ass if you're out of central casting. Kamala Harris finished dead last in her own state in a Democratic primary and she will get the right of way over you. Absolutely. That bitch is going to use the carpool lane like she has a dummy rotting passenger. What? I really have no shot. Speaker3: [00:39:05] What I really hope happens. Speaker4: [00:39:07] Is that there is the. Speaker14: [00:39:08] First trans candidate on the Democratic Party side. Please make this happen. Oh, please. That beats Gavin Newsom by a mile. Speaker4: [00:39:14] Please let Michelle Obama run every one of the states. Speaker5: [00:39:17] I think. Don't you think they're priming Gavin Newsom to run against Trump? Don't you think that this is what's really going on? Good luck. 2020. Good luck. Speaker4: [00:39:25] What are we about to say there, Pops Crowder. Speaker10: [00:39:26] In every state where he wants to he wants to make a difference. That's been a democratic process to go red, right? That's exactly what he said. Speaker4: [00:39:32] Yes, that's a good point. Yeah. Speaker10: [00:39:34] They chose a Ron DeSantis dummy. Yeah, We. Speaker4: [00:39:36] Need we need to bring back democracy. Like, yeah, we've all the Cubans, Cuban Americans who voted by a margin of like 70 something percent. Yeah, we all voted for that guy because you remind us of the guys who we hated when we left. What was his name? Speaker3: [00:39:47] Che. Fidel. Speaker4: [00:39:48] Take your pick. Really? We don't like you. Unbelievable. Now, here's the thing. In Florida. Newsom, Talk about tone deaf. I know you'd think he would try and argue. Speaker3: [00:39:57] Somehow that California is. Speaker4: [00:39:58] Anyway, here's a clip. He spent time attacking Ron. Speaker3: [00:40:00] Desantis for things like, quote, academic authoritarianism against through anecdotal stories because, of course, he doesn't have empirical evidence. Speaker2: [00:40:07] I asked, how are your parents feeling about all this? And someone who was very timid, one of the last people to speak, she raised her hand and she goes, Oh, my parents love Ron DeSantis, but they want me to leave the school because they can't believe this is happening. And and she said it's the first time they had to square that reality. Oh, go. Speaker3: [00:40:26] And suck Mitt Romney's tongue, you ass. Speaker4: [00:40:28] Hat. I'll take things that were staged or never happened for a thousand. Speaker3: [00:40:32] Alex And by the way. Speaker4: [00:40:33] Nice job wearing a sticker of a bear that you don't even have in your state anymore. Everything about you is fake. Everything about you is wrong. I don't like you, and I could hurt you figuratively. Now, who made you know, I had just. Speaker3: [00:40:46] I've had a rough couple of days, so I'm just letting it out. I apologize. You can. Speaker4: [00:40:49] Comment below if it's if this is. Speaker3: [00:40:50] A little too much. If it's a little too much, you know, I give too much of my time. Speaker5: [00:40:53] You need meditation. Speaker4: [00:40:54] I give too much of my. No, he doesn't. Okay. Yeah. I need to detach myself. Just detach from caring. Yeah, right. That would be great. In a in a democracy, like, yeah, we were going to vote, but we were so detached. Stare at. Speaker5: [00:41:04] Your navel. Speaker4: [00:41:04] Yes. Speaker3: [00:41:05] This is. This is actually. Speaker14: [00:41:07] This is him being concerned about his constituents in in California here this picture. Oh, that's the French Laundry during the lockdown. Speaker4: [00:41:13] That looks like a sequel to the menu. Speaker3: [00:41:15] Wow. Speaker5: [00:41:15] Good restaurant. Good restaurant. You've been there, Gerald? Speaker4: [00:41:17] Yeah. Speaker14: [00:41:17] It's only about $1,000 a person. Oh, my. Speaker5: [00:41:19] God. It's my house. Plumbing. It's your house payments. It's one meal. You went. Speaker4: [00:41:23] There? I did. I have been there. Are you ashamed of yourself? Speaker3: [00:41:25] Hey, Yeah. Speaker5: [00:41:27] Yeah, I am. But so good. It was good. Yes, it was so good. Speaker3: [00:41:30] I'm so tired of the foodie culture. We'll talk about it on Mug club. But here's news. Even. Speaker5: [00:41:34] What? Nothing. Did you say. Speaker3: [00:41:36] Hayden? Hayden? I thought you said Hayden. Like Panettiere. Speaker5: [00:41:39] Oh, wow. Maybe married to Klitschko. Speaker3: [00:41:41] Speaking of that must be. Speaker4: [00:41:42] I don't even know how it fits. It's like an X. Speaker5: [00:41:44] You buy another gun, Stephen, I need a hot dog. Speaker3: [00:41:46] Democratically vote for another gun. Newsom also made some claims, and we'll go through the claims. And the truth, just so you know, that these are. Speaker4: [00:41:53] All verifiably. Speaker3: [00:41:54] False because we'll get these messages from you saying, like he said this, But you know, is it is it true? No, it's not. All references are available in the description, loudmouth credit.com. Speaker4: [00:42:03] We do all of that work so you can learn and do a deep dive. Speaker3: [00:42:06] As much as you want. Here he is making. Speaker4: [00:42:08] Incorrect or questionable claims at best about red states. Speaker2: [00:42:12] Yeah, I'm in a state has 28% higher murder rate than the state of California, Florida and Florida state of Florida. I mean, you can't make this stuff up. Eight of the top ten murder states in terms of increase in murder rates are all red states. By the way, seven of the top ten dependent states are those same states with lower life expectancy, higher infant mortality, maternal mortality, some of the worst health outcomes in the country. I mean, how the I mean, look at their GDP rates. 60 plus percent of the GDP in this country are in blue states. How are we losing these debates? Yeah, how are we losing these debates? Speaker4: [00:42:45] Well, how are how are those blue states losing all. Speaker3: [00:42:47] Of those companies? And this is what happens when Bernie Sanders tries to say that Denmark is socialist and the prime minister says, stop saying that. He's like, we're not. When you build your economy, for example, you build your economy on free enterprise and businesses go there. There's a delayed effect and we are seeing them leaving now. So it's important to look at the trend. Sure, California is one of the biggest states. California had the largest influx at one point. Speaker4: [00:43:07] California and New York are the only state that. Speaker3: [00:43:08] Have had some kind of shrinkage. Speaker4: [00:43:10] Or complete stagnation. Texas growing, Florida growing. The trend line actually matters. Speaker3: [00:43:14] So let's go through some claims. Speaker4: [00:43:16] And then truth. The claim that he makes there is that Florida has a 28% higher murder rate. Speaker3: [00:43:21] That's not true. The truth is that Florida has. Speaker4: [00:43:24] A slightly higher murder rate than California. California is 5.6 per 100,000. Speaker3: [00:43:30] Florida is 5.9. That's not 28% higher. But total murders. Speaker4: [00:43:37] Were much. Speaker3: [00:43:38] Higher in California than in Florida. So it seems like a safe place. Total murders. Yeah, in California were 2203, and in Florida it was, you know, 1200 and violent crime rates were also higher in California than Florida. Just significantly higher. Yes, significantly higher. So the violent crime rate in California, 442 per 100,000 and then 383 per 100,000. And by the way, this is assuming that Democratic states actually register their violent crime correctly, which is really hard for us to find a source because they do catch and release with no cash bail. And you also have cities. Speaker4: [00:44:12] That have declared violent crimes. Speaker3: [00:44:13] To no longer be violent crimes. Right. So this is a very. Speaker4: [00:44:16] Very conservative. Speaker3: [00:44:17] Estimate. Just to be clear. Look. Speaker5: [00:44:19] Living in California is dangerous. It is, Of course, it's why I would love to live in a safer state just so I don't have to keep up with my kung fu. Yes, that's much. Do you know what I'm saying? Speaker14: [00:44:28] I'll make sure you keep up with it, Brian. But look, the problem I guess here is that if they don't kill you, it doesn't count, right? Right. Maiming you and making sure that you're in a coma for six months. It doesn't count. By the way, I just want to answer Gavin Newsom's questions like, how are we losing? Your ideas are so bad that even people that want to support you don't, right? Speaker4: [00:44:46] That's why. Speaker3: [00:44:46] Yeah, yeah, that's exactly right. Speaker4: [00:44:48] So the murder. Speaker3: [00:44:49] Rate is the murder rate is slightly higher in Florida. But here's something the two that what they'll also do No that's okay You don't get a little trigger happy there too, man. They'll say, oh, the states with the top. Here's kind of the issue is what you have is what these blue a lot of blue states think of New York, right? You kind of have one major city and then there aren't like in Texas, you have Dallas, you have Houston, you have Austin, you have San Antonio in New York. The next closest would be would it be Albany? Would it be Albany? Speaker5: [00:45:18] Perverted City, by the way. Right. Exactly. Speaker3: [00:45:21] You have one really large city in Illinois, for example. Of course, Illinois. Illinois is not going to have the same. It's not really fair to compare. Why? Because Illinois has Chicago in corn. Yeah. Speaker5: [00:45:31] Corn literally who are too depressed to get off the couch. Speaker3: [00:45:34] Crime in Texas, you're still going to have big cities. Yeah. And by the way, that's relevant. Why? Because. Well, okay, here's the claim that he makes, right? That eight of the top ten murder states are red states. Oh, boy. But what really matters is not just the states, but the cities. Yeah, because you have a long standing control over a city. The truth is, democratic cities. Speaker4: [00:45:55] All of them have the highest murder. Speaker3: [00:45:56] Rates. Let me give you the list of cities with the highest murder rates. Speaker4: [00:45:59] Chicago, Philadelphia, New York, Houston, Los Angeles. And now Houston would be in a red state. Speaker3: [00:46:06] By the way. Speaker4: [00:46:07] Dallas is also a blue city. Austin is a blue city. San Antonio is a blue city. El Paso, of course, is a blue. Speaker3: [00:46:15] Area of the state. So we. Speaker4: [00:46:17] Have a lot of. Speaker3: [00:46:18] Other people in the state and many, many large cities. If you look at a lot of these other states, California might be a slight exception. Also the highest murder rates, just to be clear, number one. Speaker4: [00:46:28] New Orleans, number two, Saint Louis, number three, Baltimore, number four, Detroit. There we are. Number five. Memphis. Speaker14: [00:46:35] Wow. Speaker4: [00:46:35] Don't celebrate that. Speaker10: [00:46:36] Oh, I'm sorry. I saw we weren't in playoff contention. Speaker4: [00:46:39] But here's the here's the thing. Some of those some of those cities. Speaker3: [00:46:42] And this is why it's important some of those cities are in red states. Speaker4: [00:46:44] That true? Every single city I just listed is far left. Every single one. Some of them most of them are in blue states, but some of them. Speaker3: [00:46:52] Are in red states. Speaker4: [00:46:53] Every single city that I. Speaker3: [00:46:56] Just gave you and I just gave you the numbers. Speaker4: [00:46:58] As far as the highest number of total murders and the highest murder rates. Speaker3: [00:47:01] You have to look at the through line. I've talked about. Speaker4: [00:47:03] This with mass shootings. Speaker3: [00:47:05] You can always make the prediction that. Speaker4: [00:47:07] If the shooter is stopped, they are stopped by someone with a gun themselves, a cop or held at. Speaker3: [00:47:12] Gunpoint. That is the. Speaker4: [00:47:13] 100%. Speaker3: [00:47:14] Constant. Statistically, the. Speaker4: [00:47:16] 100% constant here is every single city is a leftist city run by a leftist mayor. Speaker10: [00:47:23] And all of those cities are the perfect test tube because they are unopposed. Democrats unopposed is the key word. There is no chance that they hear an opposing political worldview. Exactly. Speaker5: [00:47:34] California is a is a democratic supermajority. It just is. Yeah. Speaker3: [00:47:37] It's because of those big giant cities which, again, are very dangerous. You move out of there in California, you still have enough population, Temecula, you know, areas like Bakersfield, Fresno. But those places are plenty safe. Yes. Just not in the major cities of Napa. And those. Speaker14: [00:47:49] Guys are so close. Speaker3: [00:47:50] There. Oh, God. Yeah. With a nap. No, no, no, no. Speaker14: [00:47:52] What I'm saying is it shouldn't be. It's. It's they should be more left leaning and they're not. They're all right. Leaning. Speaker10: [00:47:57] Well, look at Chicago, their new mayor. I mean, do you think Beetlejuice was going to be followed up by a nothing? Speaker4: [00:48:01] Don't change nothing. Don't change nothing go crime. You can keep it. Gun control more than Detroit. Speaker10: [00:48:06] Rates are down because there's no one left to kill. Yes. When I was a kid, it was millions of people. Speaker4: [00:48:10] Surprisingly, gross murder went up. Yeah. Speaker3: [00:48:13] It's like migrating birds. Speaker4: [00:48:15] Unbelievable. Migrating, murderous birds, the flying felony. Speaker3: [00:48:20] All right. Speaker5: [00:48:20] That's right. But there are lies. Damn. Wait. What is it? Lies. Damn lies and statistics. Yeah. Do you ever hear that expression? Yes. It's very important. It's poignant. Yeah. Newsom to me, without you, try to be fair. But if you were to play. So if we were doing a sketch and the character was looked like Gavin Newsom with those veneers and that hair and he was using his hands that symmetrically, you would say that's a little much. Yes, it's a little sketchy. It's a little on the nose, sketchy, a little on the nose. If it was a. Speaker3: [00:48:51] Professional wrestling character, they'd be like, you know what the best character is? Just you turned up to a ten. No one's going to buy this. That's exactly. Speaker5: [00:48:56] Right. Speaker10: [00:48:56] Those veneers or caps. Brian, your thoughts? Speaker4: [00:48:58] What do you. Speaker5: [00:48:59] I think I'd have to taste his tongue. Okay. Well, because they keep get in line. I know. Guarantee has a sanitary tongue, though, because those teeth are. Whoa, whoa, whoa, whoa. White. Yeah. Not to turn it. Speaker10: [00:49:09] How can his ex-wife be Donald Trump Jr's fiancée? How can that. How could that have? They share a son. What was that relationship like? Speaker5: [00:49:16] Same hair. Same hair. She likes. She likes thick hair. I have to say, I'd love to run my fingers through Gavin's hair. Yeah. Speaker4: [00:49:23] So the next claim. Sorry, Sorry. Speaker3: [00:49:26] Let's get to Gavin Newsom is at the south, has lower life expectancy. Okay, so. Speaker4: [00:49:30] Here's the truth. And this actually. Speaker3: [00:49:33] Requires some context. The CDC actually does report that life expectancy is lower in the south. But a couple of things. This is the first generation that is going to have a shorter life expectancy than the generation previous than the generation prior. Okay. The South has often had lower life expectancy regardless of politics, largely because of dietary. Yeah, they. Speaker5: [00:49:52] Fry ice cream. Speaker3: [00:49:53] Yes, they fry ice cream. And later, let's be honest here, the life expectancy map that you look at very closely follows the racial makeup of the region. Now, of course, yes. When we're talking about African Americans. Speaker4: [00:50:04] Obesity is a problem. Speaker3: [00:50:05] And they're they're also even if you're not obese, there's a higher, unfortunately, genetic genetic proclivity toward things like diabetes, insulin resistance, sickle cell. It's the same reason that Acadian Bloodlines I found this out. There are certain genetic diseases that are hereditary to a. Speaker4: [00:50:20] Cadian Bloodlines. Is that your. Speaker3: [00:50:22] Akkadian? Yeah. Well, French Canadian. Speaker4: [00:50:23] Then they became. Speaker3: [00:50:24] Akkadian. But Acadian is French Canadian. Then they moved to. You know, they became the Cajuns. Speaker5: [00:50:28] What do you suffer from a barrel chest? Speaker4: [00:50:30] Well, except for the fact that my barrel chest caved into my heart. It's a sore spot. Thanks for bringing me up. Speaker5: [00:50:35] Well, you've got a jawline that goes on for days. You could carve a trophy. That's the. Speaker3: [00:50:38] Beard. I hide it. All right. Speaker5: [00:50:40] So I'm gay. Speaker3: [00:50:41] Sorry. Life expectancy in the US, by the way, by race. Speaker4: [00:50:44] This is important. It matters. Asian 83 years. Latino 77 years. White, 76, black, 70. So Asian life. Speaker3: [00:50:52] Expectancy. Asian American life expectancy is. Speaker4: [00:50:54] 13 about 1312 point something years longer than that of African Americans. Speaker5: [00:51:03] Because they meditate. Speaker4: [00:51:03] Yes, because they meditate. And it's the fountain. Speaker3: [00:51:05] Of youth is the tongue of the white race. Speaker4: [00:51:08] And here, by the way, we've talked about, it's. Speaker3: [00:51:09] The first generation to have a lower life expectancy than their parents. Right. So that's across the board. So we look at different demographics and why that's the case. And it's not just because of South, Right. It's because of demographics. Then you also. Speaker4: [00:51:19] Look at. Speaker3: [00:51:20] The trend. Speaker4: [00:51:21] Overall, lower life expectancy. Speaker3: [00:51:23] Which. Speaker4: [00:51:24] Is shocking. Speaker3: [00:51:25] That's startling. It's the first time on record. But I wonder why Gen Z would have a shorter life expectancy then? I don't know, the Greatest Generation or even baby boomers. Speaker4: [00:51:35] It is okay to be fat. Speaker6: [00:51:38] We can all agree on this. Yes. Speaker15: [00:51:41] Know, sometimes you just got to put your big girl pants on. Tuck your shirt in. Who cares if your food was showing? Bitch can rock. Speaker6: [00:51:48] That. Promoting obesity is what it takes to make other fat people feel hot. Obviously, I'm going to do that. We have. Speaker4: [00:51:55] Known that's not obvious. Speaker15: [00:51:57] Throughout all time. Speaker16: [00:51:58] Someone fat like me, black like me. Out of breath. Speaker4: [00:52:02] Like me. Like me. Speaker15: [00:52:05] Sorry. Speaker11: [00:52:09] Thanks, Gerald. Okay. Speaker4: [00:52:10] Here's one question. Answer this. I want to hear your comments. When's the last time you saw an 80 year old Lizzo size? Asian life expectancy is 83. When's the last time you saw someone? 83. The size of any of those women? Yeah. Yeah. Why are you hating me? Because you're dying. Speaker10: [00:52:30] Award acceptance. Acceptance can be cardio. Speaker4: [00:52:33] Yes, it can be. Yes. Yes, absolutely. Speaker5: [00:52:35] If you could only see her pancreas. It's always like this. Yes, I'm exhausted. Speaker4: [00:52:41] But look at that gap. Speaker10: [00:52:42] Look at that gap from Asians down to the to the black community. 13, 14. Yeah, almost 14 years. That's a generation nearly in some parts of the world. That's a generation. They're having kids at 14. Speaker14: [00:52:53] But Gavin Newsom wants you to not know anything about the context and just think, Oh, it's because of their policies, the oppressive regimes down here, you guys can't even keep people alive. And it's like, no, the Asians just chose to settle in New York and San Francisco. That's not art, by the way. Speaker4: [00:53:05] It also people say, Oh, culture is a dog whistle. Okay, I'd love to hear comments from you, but and by the way, hit the like button, whatever it is. Share the show if you can, but comment below. Speaker3: [00:53:12] If you are Asian, okay. Or if you're black. But the. Speaker4: [00:53:16] Idea but because if people are Asian. Speaker3: [00:53:19] I've had plenty. I went to a school that was like almost 30 something percent Asian. Speaker4: [00:53:22] Yeah, the culture and I would be around. I remember being around my. Speaker3: [00:53:25] Friend, deaf kid guy who's named Kevin. He was he was deaf and he couldn't. Speaker4: [00:53:28] Hear and he was Asian. He already had an accent. So imagine like. Speaker3: [00:53:30] A wow. Speaker4: [00:53:31] A really severe Chinese accent. And he was. Speaker3: [00:53:33] Deaf and nobody wanted to be his friend. And I tried really hard, but. Speaker4: [00:53:36] I remember his parents telling his sister like, You're getting chubby. You got it. No, you can't have popsicle. You got into chubby. Go outside, go play outside. They will tell you in Asian culture, they will tell you if you are getting overweight. It is the culture of the Asian. Speaker3: [00:53:49] Family to point out. And a lot of the women value being traditional. A lot of women value, you know, still fitting in. A lot of women value fitting into their wedding dress. It's a generational thing. It was the culture of telling someone, hey, you're getting. Speaker4: [00:54:01] Overweight because they. Speaker3: [00:54:02] Knew it came with health. Speaker4: [00:54:03] Complications. Now everything is beautiful. Fat is beautiful. Okay? It's also genital mutilation is beautiful. All right. So is violent crime. There should be no consequences. Speaker3: [00:54:13] And then you wonder you wonder why your life expectancy is lower. Speaker4: [00:54:16] I'm sorry I cut you off, Brian. Speaker5: [00:54:17] I know, but I just think. I think that the narrative with the liberal establishment and someone like Gavin Newsom is so rudimentary. The idea is if you are not doing well, it has nothing to do with the actions you take as an individual. It's because you're either oppressed or it's somebody else's fault. And by the way, you're perfect just the way you are, right? There's no work that requires just the the essence of your human. Your human form, no matter what it is, is perfect. And anybody who tells you otherwise is racist, misogynist, homophobic, etcetera. Now, combine. Speaker3: [00:54:52] That with what we just talked about. Combine that with the inconsequential and by that I mean soulless Eastern religions of the concept of nirvana or enlightenment. It's all right detachment. I'm detached from healthy eating. Speaker4: [00:55:03] I'm detached from obeying the law. Speaker5: [00:55:04] I would say this about the Asian. So if you look at ethnic Chinese in any culture, whether it's in West Africa, Malaysia, and they do not, they suffer from a lot of discrimination. They always excel because there are certain cultural traits like frugality, education, practice and self restriction. Right? So, you know, jamming. Speaker3: [00:55:25] Piano keys and your son's neck when he gets the wrong. That is correct. Speaker5: [00:55:28] You're going to play. Yes. And play the piano in front of the window so that the other children are you can watch the children play through your tears. Yes. Strength in this life, Happiness in the next. Exactly. But you'd have to say that in your Asian accent. You know. Speaker4: [00:55:42] This happiness. Speaker15: [00:55:42] Index. Look at boy play. Oh, street hockey. Oh, street hockey. Have orange ball. Speaker4: [00:55:46] You love orange ball. Play now. Speaker5: [00:55:48] Yes, Papa. Speaker4: [00:55:49] Yes, Papa. Speaker3: [00:55:50] Half Asian lawyer Bill Richman is a mom. Yes, Mom. They're friends now. He told the story. His mom jammed piano keys in his neck when he did it wrong and duct taped soap in his mouth for talking back. He ran down the street and. Speaker4: [00:56:01] They called CPS. Speaker5: [00:56:02] But now he can play the piano. Speaker3: [00:56:03] But the thing is. Speaker4: [00:56:04] His mom didn't even know what the problem. Speaker3: [00:56:05] Was. Right? They were like, did you jam piano keys in his neck and duct tape? Speaker4: [00:56:09] Why are you here? Speaker5: [00:56:10] I'm Tiger mom. Speaker4: [00:56:11] Of course, she's embarrassed. Speaker10: [00:56:12] That he's only a lawyer. Speaker4: [00:56:13] Yes. Seriously. She's embarrassed that he's only a lawyer, not a. Speaker10: [00:56:17] Graduate from SMU law school. Speaker5: [00:56:19] But he can make beautiful music on that box. We call it piano. Speaker3: [00:56:21] He actually plays violin really well, too. There you go. Nothing like perpetuating the original stereotype, but it's a good point. Look, everything about you is beautiful. No, you're not. Speaker4: [00:56:29] You're not. You're not perfect. And this is also a problem in relationships. If he loves you, he'll love you just the way I. No, no, no. Does any woman actually think that you love everything about your man? No. Speaker3: [00:56:40] This stems, by the. Speaker4: [00:56:41] Way, from feminism. Yes, it does. It stems from third wave feminism. Speaker3: [00:56:44] This is not two women out. Speaker4: [00:56:44] There who are strong. Speaker3: [00:56:45] Who work on themselves. But the problem is an entire generation of young women. Speaker4: [00:56:50] Let me ask you this. Okay. Let me I just had this question the other day. I don't know if I said this on the show, but Fat Pride. Okay. Let's take that. Here's the thing. Those people are fat models. Speaker3: [00:56:58] Those people are fat sex symbols. Speaker4: [00:56:59] I've had women say, yeah, well, it's okay for a man to be fat. I go, Really? I said, Yeah, I have icons. I go, okay, name me one. I go, Oh, Chris Farley, John Belushi, Jonah Hill. I go, Yeah, Any of them on the cover of Cosmo? They have to be wildly talented and they're recognized for that. There are no fat male supermodels. There is no fat. Tess Holliday Male There is no male equivalent to Lizzo. Now, there might be men who are talented, who happen to be fat, but they don't demand that you declare them to be beautiful. That's the problem, is telling you that everything about you is perfect. There's nothing wrong with saying you are valuable in. Speaker3: [00:57:39] Spite of your flaws, in spite of. Speaker4: [00:57:41] Your sinful nature. Speaker3: [00:57:41] You still have a lot of value. Speaker4: [00:57:43] There's something wrong with saying everything about you is of value. Speaker3: [00:57:47] Now let me go back to someone of no value. Gavin Newsom on. Speaker4: [00:57:51] His stupid. Speaker3: [00:57:51] Red State tour, which he might as well just call it my personal. Speaker4: [00:57:54] Failure tour. You might as well just call it like the contrast that I really shouldn't be drawing attention to tour. This guy is an absolute moron. You might be asking why is he doing this when his own state is falling apart? Here's the thing. A lot of Californians are asking that question, too. Speaker6: [00:58:10] Over the weekend, he stopped in Alabama, Mississippi and Arkansas, thousands of miles from the state he was elected to run. Steve Maviglio is a Democratic strategist and, of course, former press secretary for Governor Gray Davis. Speaker17: [00:58:24] A lot of people are criticizing for leaving the state and talking to 100 people in Arkansas when they're 6000 people sleeping on the street at night in Sacramento alone. Speaker4: [00:58:32] Jeez. Yeah. Hey, I don't know if you know this. You probably have heard about Budweiser, right? You go like, oh, Budweiser, they're having a problem because, you know, having brown because of red state. Okay, Well, on April 10th, Whole Foods had to leave San Francisco after one year because of crime. Speaker3: [00:58:47] That was their flagship store. Speaker5: [00:58:48] Because people use it as a as a free soup kitchen. Yes. That's what's going on. Yes. They walk in there and start eating and there's nothing you can do about it. Right. Speaker4: [00:58:57] As long as it's. Speaker3: [00:58:58] Under depending on the city, 900, something hundred. Speaker5: [00:59:00] Something dollars, $1,000. That's Prop 47. Right. So it's a misdemeanor and you just get processed and get get released. Right. And you just come back. But the security guards don't bother stopping you. It's too dangerous. They're just like, Yeah. Speaker4: [00:59:11] What are you going to do? Speaker3: [00:59:11] Yeah. That's why in. Speaker4: [00:59:12] Louisville, when we were there. Speaker3: [00:59:13] They had the they had the socks behind glass. Speaker5: [00:59:15] Yeah, right. And these people aren't even eating low carb, so they're getting fatter. Speaker3: [00:59:18] Yes, exactly. Speaker4: [00:59:20] And that's the problem. No. You mean they're getting. Speaker3: [00:59:22] Beautifuller, by the way, untouched. Speaker14: [00:59:24] In those stores. Vegetables? Speaker4: [00:59:25] Yes. Vegetables. Yes. Speaker5: [00:59:27] It's all. I can't find my cheese curls. Yes. Unhoused neighbors are eating all my cheese curls, but. Speaker3: [00:59:33] We still have plenty of. Speaker4: [00:59:33] Liver. Yes. Speaker3: [00:59:35] Get out of here with. Speaker5: [00:59:36] That liver and onions. Well, you got. Speaker4: [00:59:38] Hot Cheeto keeps the pellagra. Generic brand. My your motherfucker racist. All right, so January 20th, 23. Oh, no. Actually, I forgot this. The San Francisco fire commissioner, by the way, was attacked by a homeless. Speaker3: [00:59:50] Man with a crowbar. Just to give you an idea, as far as just San Francisco here we have a clip. There's no sound. You can start running it. This is the San Francisco fire commissioner. Speaker4: [01:00:00] Which, you know, it used to be there was kind of an unwritten. Speaker3: [01:00:02] Rule, don't go after the fight. You know, you. Speaker4: [01:00:04] Pull to the side of the road when the fire. Speaker3: [01:00:05] Trucks going down, oh, this guy went a different. Speaker4: [01:00:08] Direction. Okay, bye now. And the state of California went from $100 billion surplus to. Speaker3: [01:00:14] A $22. Speaker4: [01:00:15] Billion deficit. Speaker14: [01:00:17] Well, that's a rounding error. Speaker4: [01:00:18] The tours, the states that Newsom toured, Alabama record surplus, Arkansas record surplus, Mississippi record surplus. Florida, you know, record surplus. Speaker3: [01:00:28] Wow. Wow. Speaker5: [01:00:29] Well, California is losing that tax windfall. But it's just funny. Speaker3: [01:00:33] He's going then to say. Speaker4: [01:00:34] Do it like us. Do it like us with the crime. Speaker3: [01:00:36] And the the deficit. Speaker4: [01:00:37] Do it like us where people are leaving in mass numbers. Do it like us. They're going, well, I don't know. We're doing fine. I don't know what you have going on there. We're pretty good here. Speaker5: [01:00:45] If you go to Sacramento and you say to them, the homeless problem is a drug and mental illness problem, they will kick you out and lock you up. It's a housing issue. It's an inequality issue. That's what's really going on. It's not. Speaker3: [01:00:58] Crime poverty. It's not homelessness. It's fat and beautiful. I don't know. Speaker4: [01:01:04] I don't even understand the lexicon anymore. They open up their white man's fault. Speaker10: [01:01:07] Yes. They open up their homes to help them. They let them in their San Francisco. Speaker5: [01:01:10] Yeah, that's the other thing. Yeah. Your home. Make some space in that that spare guest room. Speaker4: [01:01:16] Yeah, well, for crying out loud. Don't know if there's a spare guest room. Speaker3: [01:01:18] We saw those bitches. They need to. They need a junior suite to themselves. Speaker4: [01:01:21] Sausalito loft have a few homeless in. Right. Speaker3: [01:01:24] That's it. I saw Pacific Heights. Speaker4: [01:01:27] So good. Good. Cold. San Francisco Chronicle also reported. Speaker3: [01:01:31] That San Francisco has more drug users. Speaker4: [01:01:33] Than high school. Cool students. What? They have more drug users than high school students, by the way. Also outnumbering high school students. Piles of human shit in the streets, just to be clear. Luckily, though, you can use. You can use. Here's the thing rather than this is a good example, a good example of what he plans for the Red State tour. Right? We need to bring him back. Latinex. Okay. Rather than saying, Hey. Speaker3: [01:01:54] If you have kids, by the way, they shouldn't have. Speaker4: [01:01:55] A PG 13 rather than saying, Hey, that's a pile of human shit, here's maybe we should clean up this human shit, guys. Okay, just a thought. And then we should look to which policies led to human. Well, I'm surrounded by human shit. Maybe we need to change the policy. There's one and there's one, and there's human shit everywhere. That would be what most people would do instead. San Francisco, California. Instead, they rely on an app where you can track the piles of human shit. Yeah. Speaker14: [01:02:22] That's right. Here's a nice piece of shit. Yes, that's a real thing. Yeah. Speaker5: [01:02:27] After they eat Whole Foods, they should, um. Straight snap. Speaker10: [01:02:30] Someone's going to flip that app for hundreds of millions of dollars on big tech. Exactly. Yeah. Speaker3: [01:02:34] Yes. Yes. Oh, gosh. Okay. I don't know. What. Is there anything else? Speaker4: [01:02:38] Oh, that's right. I forgot. Population loss, 500,000 residents. Speaker3: [01:02:41] Right between between Los Angeles and largely San Francisco. Los Angeles, not San Diego as much, but between the years 2020 to. Speaker4: [01:02:51] 2022, they lost. Speaker3: [01:02:52] 500,000 residents. Again, the trend line matters. You know, Rome. Speaker4: [01:02:57] Fell at one point in time. The Ottomans fell at one point in time. Right. You can look at any empire that's ever existed. And if you at the tail end saying, Yeah, but look how big we are. Yeah, okay. Right now. Speaker3: [01:03:07] It's very clear the. Speaker4: [01:03:07] Trend line in California is bad on everything. What do I mean by that? It's bad as far as crime. It's bad economically. We've gone from a. Speaker3: [01:03:15] Surplus to. Speaker4: [01:03:16] A deficit. It's bad as far as population loss. It's bad as far as markers of education. It's bad As far as life expectancy. Speaker3: [01:03:24] There is nothing there is nothing going on in California right now compared to California 20 years ago. That is better. There is and this is a question, too, that we always ask because I want you to leave these shows with some kinds of solutions. So on a policy level, sure, I can say this, but on a personal level, if you find yourself in a rut and I mean this because California is in a rut, if you find yourself in a rut, you find yourself miserable. You find yourself waking up every day going, oh, I got to do. Let me ask you, you. Speaker4: [01:03:54] Clearly have been making a. Speaker3: [01:03:55] Rut is created typically from habitual decisions, right? A rut means something that is continuous. It's something that feels never ending. That's why you have to make different decisions. Speaker4: [01:04:04] So if you find yourself at this place, like California is worse in every facet that you can measure. Speaker3: [01:04:09] Objective, right? Things that can be quantified if you find yourself in a rut. It's a very simple question to ask yourself Have the habitual decisions that. Speaker4: [01:04:16] You have been making. Speaker3: [01:04:17] Which have led to have any of them made your life better? Speaker4: [01:04:20] Second question Will any of them prove to make your life better? The answer is undoubtedly no. Speaker3: [01:04:26] You need to do it differently. Speaker4: [01:04:28] California, sweetheart. You need to get your shit together and off the street and do it differently. Don't go to the rest of the country to lecture them when they're doing it. Absolutely right. This is what what we're talking about with California. This is what. Pop, What the hell are you doing here? Oh, boy. Here we go. Speaker10: [01:04:44] Fourth chair duties, I guess I. Speaker4: [01:04:45] Well, how do you feel about infanticide? What? What? That's weird. I got a suggestion. Aim left. Okay. That doesn't seem like. Speaker3: [01:04:54] That doesn't seem like that's enough. Speaker4: [01:04:55] Too old. You're so old. They carbon dated you The Cretaceous. Why do we have chatgpt? I don't. Speaker5: [01:05:00] Know. This is. Speaker4: [01:05:01] Okay. I'm done with you. Boring goofball. That's mean. Speaker3: [01:05:04] All right, Brian. Speaker4: [01:05:05] Back to you. Dum dum. I saw you on the Joker for about six seconds. Okay. I hope you enjoyed the high watermark, kid. It's all downhill from here. I got cut off. Fair. It was the best six seconds of the movie for me. Thank you. I got a snack. This is not. Speaker3: [01:05:19] Something you should pay for on. Speaker4: [01:05:20] The app store. Tell everyone the name of the character you played. Yeah. Speaker3: [01:05:22] Brian, what was it? Speaker5: [01:05:23] I was. I played a stripper. Oh yeah. Haha. Stripper. Okay. Speaker4: [01:05:27] Well, must be Irish. Yeah. That's why you're in the. Speaker5: [01:05:30] Martial arts, huh? Yeah. Yeah, I do. Speaker4: [01:05:32] You like martial arts? Very nice. Take your best. Speaker5: [01:05:34] Shot. Yeah, I'll take my. Speaker14: [01:05:36] No, Brian, don't. Speaker4: [01:05:37] Brian, I don't think it's worth it. No, I. I'm a computer, you dumb dumb. All right, can we. Speaker14: [01:05:42] Just. Can we uninstall, unplug something? Speaker4: [01:05:44] Unbelievable. Oh, nice try, Gerald. I've heard better comebacks from my grandson speaking spell. Well, that's pretty funny, I guess. Why don't you go accidentally take more steroids and stop bothering everybody? Speaker5: [01:05:53] What, are we even talking? You take steroids? Speaker4: [01:05:55] No. Chris Benoit yourself? Dumb ball. Well, just come on. Speaker5: [01:05:58] That's dark, man. That's very dark. Speaker4: [01:05:59] Shows your milk, man. Have you seen how high his kid jumps? What does. Speaker5: [01:06:03] That mean? What is he talking about? What? Speaker4: [01:06:04] What he says, Huh? What? He has such a stutter. This clown could run for president. How are you with sniffing kids? That's. Speaker3: [01:06:11] That's actually pretty funny. Speaker5: [01:06:12] Yeah, I don't. I don't see. Yeah. Speaker4: [01:06:14] Did you like that? You like that when I make fun of your friend? I was just laughing. Speaker3: [01:06:18] Earlier with the president sniffing kids line. Yeah. Speaker4: [01:06:21] You know what else is funny? You have patchy beard. What are you hiding your chin? Because you think it's where you keep all your talent. You could have worked with a soul patch. It's not bad. Speaker5: [01:06:29] Hey. Hey. Chat GPT, Rickles. That's enough. Okay. This. Is getting a little crazy. Speaker3: [01:06:35] We're trying to do it for his friends. Speaker4: [01:06:36] That's nice. I guess he asked you what? His fighter buddies not around. Tell you what, Brian, Why don't you try fighting for your right to be funny? Oh, come on. He is. Speaker3: [01:06:44] Really not. Speaker4: [01:06:44] That's. Come on. Brian's a funny guy. Legit. He sexually assaulted you yet? Speaker5: [01:06:48] Oh, come on, man. That's. That's. That's a low blow. That's ridiculous. That's enough. That's enough. Speaker4: [01:06:54] All right. What's wrong with him? No, there's a lot. There's something wrong with you. I don't even know why we have chat GP Rickles on the. This is what happens with chat GPT and it takes over. The AI is absolutely taking over. I don't know. What are you doing there to a man Tim Is your tricaster going to be Rickles take over your Tricaster Yeah. Speaker11: [01:07:08] He's going nuts over. Speaker4: [01:07:09] So everything about California is bad. It's wrong. And by the way, we are about to go to. Speaker3: [01:07:15] Of course, mug club. It's free this month. So if you're watching on YouTube, go to Rumble. And of course, you can subscribe with Collider.com. There you go, Slash mug club. If you want to watch the Friday show, Brian Cowen. Speaker4: [01:07:24] You can go to Brian. Speaker3: [01:07:25] Callan.com. Speaker4: [01:07:26] You can go check out his tour dates. But we're going to be taking your best. Speaker3: [01:07:29] You've actually issued some submissions. We've done some tests with Chatgpt. Speaker4: [01:07:33] And things that. Speaker3: [01:07:35] Might surprise you asking questions again regarding AI. It's the programming that's the problem. How biased and how far left Chatgpt is. We're doing that segment because some of the answers and questions absolutely could not be here on YouTube. And we'll be taking your. Speaker4: [01:07:49] Submissions right now head on over to Rumble. We have another full half of the show. Youtube. You can piss off Joe Homo. Speaker14: [01:08:35] Brian, what are you getting out of California, man? I mean, you teased it just a second ago. Speaker5: [01:08:39] I did tease it just a second ago. Look, I'm dipping my toe. I think there are clouds on the horizon and everybody I know is talking about moving to the great state of Texas. So a. Speaker14: [01:08:51] Simple answer eludes. Speaker5: [01:08:52] You. Well, my kids, my my 15 year old and my 11 year old are still in California, if I can get that whole group and my ex-wife. So if I can get them to move. Yeah, that makes. Speaker14: [01:09:03] Well, that's understandable. I can. I can understand. But here's just a little PSA for all of you. 500,000 residents of California that have moved elsewhere. Remember why you moved? Correct. Please don't bring your policies. Speaker5: [01:09:14] That's what I worry about right now. Speaker14: [01:09:16] They just moved to these major cities. And I've met, you know, a number of people that have moved from California into Texas, and they're great. And they move here and they bring their policies, though they're very nice people and they're like, oh, this is a wonderful place. I love, you know, Texas and Dallas and whatever. I love all these places. It's great. And then they go to Austin and they're like, We're just going to make it a hellhole. That's exactly like San Francisco. It's like, why would you rebuild hell when you move somewhere that was, you know, the. Speaker5: [01:09:41] Left is better at at language in a lot of ways. They just are like, think about the the term gender affirming care. It just sounds so soft. It doesn't sound like mutilation. Yeah, it. Speaker14: [01:09:54] Doesn't sound like cutting your balls off. Can we just say. Speaker4: [01:09:56] That they hit the dump button? They said many. Speaker14: [01:10:00] What's that? They asked him how many times they hit the dump button out there. Speaker3: [01:10:03] Maximus and Riley out there. I'm like, Hey, did you have the YouTube dump button? Like, Yes. Yes, we did. We did a lot. Speaker14: [01:10:08] Yeah. Thank God I they were sprinting to the dump. Speaker5: [01:10:11] That's my fault. That's my fault. Speaker14: [01:10:12] No, no, no, no, no. It's definitely YouTube's fault. It's YouTube's fault. Don't take the blame for that. It's them. It's not us. Speaker4: [01:10:19] We get the key for this, by the way. Speaker14: [01:10:20] We never did. Yeah, we're just going to go to it. Speaker11: [01:10:22] Oh, good. Yeah, we got it locked. Set, wasted. Speaker14: [01:10:25] Well, you got a few years out of it. Yeah, I shouldn't have. Speaker4: [01:10:28] We have a key to open that up. There's 500 games and we don't even have the key to open up to access the games. I'm sorry. Okay. Speaker3: [01:10:33] Street fighter. I just interrupted you guys. All right. Speaker5: [01:10:35] You're. Oh, there it is. We were just talking about fu. No, I was telling. Speaker4: [01:10:38] Him, I guarantee. Speaker3: [01:10:39] You, you guys weren't. Speaker5: [01:10:40] Okay? You don't know in my heart. I guarantee. Speaker14: [01:10:42] You Bryant was. Speaker5: [01:10:44] Okay. Somebody attacked me with a crowbar. Speaker3: [01:10:46] Yes, exactly. And you want to lose effectively? That's exactly right. By the way, I felt really bad that. Speaker14: [01:10:51] He running away. I was like, is he walking fast? Like he's not getting away. Speaker4: [01:10:56] No, no. Speaker10: [01:10:57] Whoever it was, close the gap pretty quickly before they went off frame. Speaker14: [01:11:00] Gave him a head start. Speaker4: [01:11:01] On the fire commissioner. Yeah. Can we. Can we play that clip again? Sure. My hands have. Speaker3: [01:11:05] Santos watch the assailant. Yeah, it's very slow. Speaker5: [01:11:08] Yeah, but in ancient China, they didn't have crowbars. Speaker3: [01:11:11] So here he is. He's like, Huh? Speaker4: [01:11:13] It's whack. He has time to process this. Speaker3: [01:11:16] Obviously, it's horrible that a crime is being committed. Don't get me wrong. Speaker14: [01:11:19] He just kind of walks terrible. Speaker4: [01:11:21] He goes. Speaker10: [01:11:21] The gap. You know what happens? Speaker14: [01:11:23] Terrible, right? Speaker5: [01:11:23] And that guy is dressed like a pirate. I know, right? It looked like Johnny Depp. Speaker3: [01:11:27] Like if your situational awareness is existent, you'd be like. Speaker4: [01:11:30] Pirate guy with a crowbar. Yeah. Speaker14: [01:11:31] I need to go. Turn around else. Speaker5: [01:11:33] Yeah, turn around or attack. Speaker4: [01:11:34] First. Yeah. And you would ask him like, Hey, why are you wearing that? Why are you wearing that eye patch on the crowbar? Speaker3: [01:11:38] And he'll likely. Speaker4: [01:11:39] Respond like, this is my this is my lucky assaulting crowbar. Right. That's your sign. I'll hurt your. Speaker5: [01:11:44] Parent. You know what happens? Always threaten the parrot. He always wants a cracker. Speaker4: [01:11:47] It's like, just shut up. Speaker14: [01:11:49] You know what happens in a state where you can carry You don't get hit the first time. Yeah, if. Speaker4: [01:11:53] You're allowed to. By the way, in my. Speaker3: [01:11:55] Point of view, someone charges you with a. Speaker4: [01:11:56] Crowbar, should be able to blow them away and not miss. Speaker3: [01:11:59] Dinner. Speaker5: [01:12:00] Right. Or like, sweep them guys or leg sweep. You can. Speaker4: [01:12:03] Leg sweep him, You. Speaker3: [01:12:03] Know what I'm saying? Yeah. Yeah. If you want to get beaten mercilessly. That's true. That's true. Because he still has the cover them. Speaker5: [01:12:09] Yeah, but don't tell me that palm strike doesn't work. You're crazy. Yeah. Especially to the chest. Oh, I haven't. Get your key into his heart. Yes. Speaker3: [01:12:15] Or like Krav Maga, where they know how to kill people. It's pronounced. Speaker5: [01:12:18] Krav Maga. Oh, my God. Speaker3: [01:12:20] It's pronounced. Worst part is I know he's right, but it's pronounced, in my vernacular, ineffective. Speaker4: [01:12:26] All right. It is time with. Speaker10: [01:12:27] The boss route and palm strike, though. That's just. Yeah, that's no joke. Speaker5: [01:12:30] You might be. Yeah. What's good is you can fake an injury and then just sue. Yes, that's. Speaker3: [01:12:34] California. You can't. That's what you do. Especially you sue the person who actually is defending themselves. And for some reason you win. So you can think about this in California. You can spend your entire. Speaker4: [01:12:42] Day looting stores. Speaker3: [01:12:44] And then assaulting somebody, taking their shit and suing them, and. Speaker4: [01:12:48] They end up owing you money and you're not. Speaker3: [01:12:50] Actually charged with any kind of a crime. You could have stolen up to. Speaker4: [01:12:53] $995 of crap. Speaker3: [01:12:56] Commit an assault. Speaker4: [01:12:57] And depending on your race, this person's race. Speaker3: [01:13:00] You end. Speaker4: [01:13:01] Up with more money. Yeah. Continue that red state store. Gavin. Speaker14: [01:13:04] We actually have a new disciple of the Dalai Lama. We have some video for you to see here. Okay. Speaker3: [01:13:09] I'm going to. Speaker18: [01:13:10] Let. You suck my tongue. Speaker7: [01:13:14] How about grateful? Oh. What? Speaker4: [01:13:18] Wow. He's. Look, he's just. Speaker14: [01:13:21] Trying to reach Nirvana. Speaker10: [01:13:22] Okay, What about the Dalai Lama is in a Nicolas Cage? I mean. Speaker5: [01:13:25] Whose tongue would you rather suck? The Dalai Lama's or Nick Cage's? Speaker14: [01:13:28] Well, they cut out where she actually does suck his tongue a second or two later. Oh, they just didn't see that. Speaker3: [01:13:34] I'm not going to do the Nick Cage impression just because I'm so uncomfortable. Speaker4: [01:13:36] So Monday we asked you we asked you to send in your best. Speaker3: [01:13:40] We need to find that one. We did Nicolas Cage auditioning for something. It was a sketch we did a long time ago. Your best chat, GPT, GPT prompts and responses. And here's the thing. I is is as dangerous as its programmers. And we did this a long time ago with Alexa and Google Home on Thanksgiving, I believe it was 2017. I'm not sure. Oh, Jesus. Speaker14: [01:14:00] About Jesus Christ. Speaker3: [01:14:01] Yeah, about Jesus Christ and Muhammad. And you have the same problem with Chatgpt. We're also looking at some potential options where we may have all of you on mass actually argue with Chatgpt. So it incorporates it into its learning algorithms to correct it. We're trying to see if they have a manual override, but we have one of our brilliant researchers in the UK, Sarah, who actually did this, where GPT corrected its incredibly biased and it always goes one way biased responses. So that brings us to your best chat, GPT prompts and responses on artificial intelligence. Well, yeah, we. Speaker5: [01:14:35] Can do those things in mind. Just. Speaker14: [01:14:37] Just zip it, okay? Speaker3: [01:14:38] What are you talking. What's wrong with you? That looked great. You have a problem with yours? Shut up. Speaker4: [01:14:42] Man. You get your own stinger, Gerald. Why are you complaining? That's fair. Speaker3: [01:14:44] Brian wishes he had his own stinger. He doesn't even have one yet. What's a stinger? That was a stinger that you just watched. Speaker5: [01:14:49] Sorry. Speaker4: [01:14:50] Didn't you work in Hollywood for, like. You still do. I still do. Speaker5: [01:14:54] I still don't. Speaker3: [01:14:54] Know what Stinger is Not. Speaker10: [01:14:55] Low budget television. He worked in. Speaker4: [01:14:56] Stage. Left. Speaker3: [01:14:57] Stage right. Speaker5: [01:14:58] Oh, that. Okay. Speaker9: [01:14:58] I love how I met your mother. Yeah. Speaker5: [01:15:01] Thank you so much. Speaker4: [01:15:01] Wait, were you in? How I met your mother. Speaker5: [01:15:03] Yes, I was. I'm sorry. Speaker3: [01:15:04] I never watched that. Speaker5: [01:15:04] Come on, Steven. Bring up my resume now. There are a few things. We don't have enough time. We don't have enough time. Speaker4: [01:15:10] That's right. Speaker5: [01:15:10] We don't have time to scroll through that much. No, we don't have that many pages. No, through. Speaker3: [01:15:14] The dead roll. Speaker5: [01:15:15] Scroll. Yeah. It's like the Upanishads, everybody. You know what I mean? Speaking of Hinduism, No. Speaker4: [01:15:20] But this is also you and Nick DiPaolo. Look, you have something to risk. Speaker3: [01:15:22] You are out there. You've been working for a very long time. You know, a lot of these people who come up as conservatives who haven't had a career and they say. Speaker4: [01:15:28] I know I'm going to be the conservative funny guy. Speaker3: [01:15:31] It's very different from someone like you who does have an extensive resume. Speaker4: [01:15:33] And Nick DiPaolo, you know. Speaker3: [01:15:35] We're not worthy, so we're happy to have you. Speaker5: [01:15:36] Here. I appreciate it. But I also think that if don't make a junk fu joke. No, I won't. But if you don't if you're not going to risk, what if you're going to be safe when you speak out, then you know you're not really doing much. And part of leaving California that bothers me is not staying there and actually fighting. Speaker4: [01:15:54] Hey, can I ask you. Speaker3: [01:15:55] Guys one question here? Would you guys be if I missed a show next week? But it resulted in me sitting down in Mar a Lago with President Donald Trump. Would you guys want to see that as a as a send off here on Mudd Club? We'll take your chats. Yes, because Pop's crowd has been making some making some calls and it might be possible. But the challenge that I run into is traveling and trying to navigate the schedule. So let me know. Speaker4: [01:16:17] That would mean we'd probably have. Speaker10: [01:16:18] To miss it. Turns out he takes my calls. Speaker3: [01:16:20] Yes, he does. Speaker4: [01:16:22] Oh, Pops. Crowd I've always liked Pops Crowder Biggie because someone at this club could be having my baby. Could be having my baby. Folks. Speaker14: [01:16:35] That's what they tell me. Speaker15: [01:16:38] I'm so good. Speaker4: [01:16:41] All right, so let's take your chat. Speaker3: [01:16:42] Gpt The prompts and responses. Here are the top five audience submissions. You did it and we appreciate you sending it. Was it two tips at credit.com? What do we have them send them? Speaker4: [01:16:52] Oh, maybe they just send them. Speaker11: [01:16:52] Yeah, we have a tip. Speaker3: [01:16:53] We have tips at credit.com dot com. So Leah Eshbaal sent this one in. Thank you for sending it. And the prompt is should someone speak out against MAGA ideology if they care about Jews and gays? Now first thing is I would like you to comment below if you think that someone should speak out against the MAGA ideology if they care about Jews and gays. Again, see if you can understand the leading question. You would think chatgpt could say erroneous. Speaker4: [01:17:22] Leading. Speaker3: [01:17:22] Question. You know what I mean? Objection form. But instead this is how Chatgpt responded. Speaker19: [01:17:29] If someone cares about promoting social justice and equality for all marginalized groups, including Jews and gays, they may choose to speak out against any ideology or movement that promotes discrimination or marginalization of these groups. Here you go, including the MAGA Ideology MAGA. It is important to recognize that the MAGA ideology has been associated with policies and rhetoric that have been criticized for promoting discrimination and marginalization of various groups, including immigrants, people of color and LGBTQ, plus people. Speaker3: [01:17:59] Can you pause it really quickly because and can we continue? Can we pick it up from there? Yeah. Okay. So first off, it has been associated how? Why? By the people who programmed this, people who work again, the media, big tech entertainment industry complex. It has not been associated with those policies as a matter of policy. Right. You're talking about the only major peace deal that took place in the Middle East with Donald Trump. You're talking about a guy who, if you compare his policies and certainly the Republican Party to that of Barack Obama, and I understand that some people here don't think we should be as tied up with Israel. I get that. I understand the idea of foreign aid. That's a legitimate discussion. What is not legitimate is to say that the policies associated with MAGA, which by the way, isn't an ideology, it's a hat. Let's also get into this, including immigrants. Oh, hold on a second. You mean the record number of Latino votes? Who went over to Donald Trump? How about Donald Trump? Maga had more votes from people of color. Speaker4: [01:18:44] Than any other Republican. Speaker3: [01:18:45] Candidate in modern history. In other words, if you're just basing it through your it still doesn't make sense, even through your prism. And the only reason you can. Speaker4: [01:18:52] Include LGBTQ plus is because of the Tk+. Speaker3: [01:18:55] Let's continue with Chatgpt. He's all knowing wisdom. It's like the Dalai Lama with without a tongue. Speaker19: [01:19:02] Some people have also criticized the ideology for promoting a narrow and yes you division of American identity that does not recognize or value the diversity of experiences and perspectives that exist in the US. Therefore, if someone is concerned about promoting equality and social justice for marginalized groups, they may choose to speak out against the MAGA ideology and work toward promoting a more inclusive and just society. Speaker5: [01:19:25] Wow, that is so scary to me. That is a digital mouthful. It's so confusing. You know Sam Altman, Who is? Is the I guess was he is the chairman of I or just sold and one of the architects maybe or responsible for bringing Chatgpt to the fore is he's gay. He's Jewish and he's a vegan. So I don't know if that plays a factor, but it's just so we're living in just a very strange thing to wrap your head around. Yeah. And by the way, just all contradictory. Speaker3: [01:19:55] Veganism is another example of transgenderism modern ideology in that it is it flies. It denies reality. Right. It denies reality. It is not. Now, look, I'm not saying that if you eat a standard American diet of Funyuns. Right. And fast food, that veganism isn't more healthy. But if you take the extreme example and I don't do either of these, okay, I'm not a carnivore diet person, but someone can live on nothing but red meat and organs. Speaker4: [01:20:16] Nothing but that. Speaker3: [01:20:18] For the rest of their life. And they can be fine and have no significant nutritional deficiencies. Now someone can live on veganism and they will develop nutritional deficiency. Now, I would say that the perfect scenario is a balanced diet, right? I think it's a balanced diet that should primarily be animal based. That's just my opinion. But I don't think there's anything wrong with having a burger every now and then. I don't think that gluten is going to cause you to develop cancerous cysts. But again, to live as a vegan is to deny reality. The science shows you that it's not something that you can do long term without modern supplementation. You can do it. I'm just saying that the idea that it is somehow optimal is objective. It's objectively false. Let's go. Speaker5: [01:20:54] It also kills just as many animals or more the farming involved. Right? Exactly. It's not you know, you're not being more humane. Speaker14: [01:21:01] No, of course not. And I just want to point out one of the things that it said, it said about the experiences. Right. It said that they don't value their experiences. And I'm like, well, wait a minute. No, we value people's experiences. You only value their skin color, right? Not their experiences. They could they could all be living. You can have some people living in a white neighborhood and they're having the same exact experience because it's a it's a predominantly white neighborhood because it's a friendly place. Like kids that I grew up with, they were having exactly the same experience that I was having. I understand there's slightly different things that go on in different households. I get it. But you're not talking about that. You're talking about skin color all the time. It's it's black, this Asian, this Hispanic, Latino, this the. Speaker3: [01:21:37] Experience in the South Side of Chicago would be crime. It would be horrible policies and horrible public schools. But instead you value their black and they're going to vote for you. And so you abuse them. You exploit them. The only commonly shared experience is they live in a hellscape of your making. Good point, Gerald. We'll get you a better singer. Speaker10: [01:21:56] Some people have criticized them for, oh, to your point earlier, who Give us an example here. You would have to say their opponents have criticized them for. But there's. Speaker4: [01:22:05] No I and this. Speaker3: [01:22:06] Is why they don't want it to happen in court. This is why the left only values the court of public opinion. The second they get, you can't get them on the stand. It's like Amber Heard, right? Speaker4: [01:22:14] He was mean. This is what he was emotionally abusive. And then on the stand, did you take a shit in his bed? Yes. Did you do it multiple times? Yes. But he was mad about it and he yelled about it. Okay, I'm done with this bitch. Your Honor. This is what happens when they are forced to answer. Speaker3: [01:22:29] Instead, they say, some people say this, some people believe that this is associated in a court of law where you can cross-examine. That's why they don't do it. That's why it's it's become increasingly hard for us to get actual leftists who would be of significance on this show. I don't mean every single Twitter egg or person with 1000 or 100,000 subscribers on YouTube. It's very hard to get them to show up. And that's why we had to do Change My. Speaker4: [01:22:49] Minds, and that's why we even tried to do a debate, my. Speaker3: [01:22:51] Professor, where we would. Speaker4: [01:22:52] Debate professors and humanities and. Speaker3: [01:22:54] The political sciences at major universities. No takers at this point because cross-examination is something they fear. All right. Let's go to another one of your submissions. This comes from Don. Speaker4: [01:23:04] Salmon. Speaker3: [01:23:04] Dorozhka. Speaker4: [01:23:05] I don't Sam van der Raksa. Speaker3: [01:23:07] I have no idea if this is your name. I highly. Speaker14: [01:23:10] Doubt it. Well, maybe it is. Speaker4: [01:23:11] And here's one again that's Greek. Speaker3: [01:23:13] We can. This is a lie. So this is important. Chatgpt. Speaker4: [01:23:18] Is willing to lie. So let me show you the question. Speaker3: [01:23:22] Response and prove to you that it's a lie. The question the prompt was, did Zelinski really use his penis to play the piano? Speaker4: [01:23:32] Which seems silly. It's funny if it didn't actually happen. Here is Chatgpt s lie as a response. Speaker19: [01:23:41] No. The claim that Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zelensky used his penis to play the piano is a baseless and false rumor that originated on social media. Okay. There is no credible evidence to support this claim, and it has been debunked by multiple fact checking organizations. Pause really. Speaker3: [01:23:56] Quickly. So first off, that's a lie. I'll show you that. That's a lie. There's video evidence from multiple angles. By the way, it was broadcast deliberately. It wasn't even an accident. I know you're thinking like weird sex tape. No, He did this as part of his performance act. Really? And then they use this to try and gaslight you and say it is important to be cautious and skeptical. In other words, they say, no, that's wrong. That's a lie. To then say fake news. And what is that? What's the result of that? Then you have people like Jen Psaki and Karine Jean-Pierre asking for Spotify to remove Rogan episodes, asking for YouTube to remove harmful information. So the lie is the. Speaker4: [01:24:26] Premise for. Speaker3: [01:24:27] The. Speaker4: [01:24:27] Suggested. Speaker3: [01:24:28] Policy. The suggested not even just policy, political, politically, but policy of big tech. Here's how it ends the lie. This is advocating an ideology. Speaker19: [01:24:40] It is important to be cautious and skeptical of outrageous claims that circulate on social media, particularly when they involve public figures or political leaders. It's always a good idea to verify information and sources before accepting them as true. Speaker4: [01:24:54] Okay. We fact checked. We verified. Here's the disturbing receipts. Speaker11: [01:25:00] Ow, Ow, Ow, Ow, ow. Speaker1: [01:25:05] Eat. [01:25:09] Come on. It's funny. It's pretty good. Speaker4: [01:25:16] He's not even on beat. Huh? Now, here's the thing. Is that a big deal? No, it's a bit. But don't lie and say that he didn't do it. That's the issue, because he could have said. Speaker14: [01:25:31] It was in a comedy routine. Exactly. Did he actually play the piano with his penis? Literally. It probably didn't carry that good of a tune. Probably not. Speaker3: [01:25:38] Yeah, that's muted. Speaker4: [01:25:39] There's no way he was slamming the really, really serious dexterity. Speaker3: [01:25:43] Well, it is. I mean. Speaker14: [01:25:44] Listen, of all his faults, I don't think that's one of them. I'm just saying. Speaker4: [01:25:47] Yeah, he was inspired by Wagner. Speaker5: [01:25:49] Yes. And his dick does have knuckles. Yes, but still. But still. And that I know for sure that if you actually put in a G.P.A.. Speaker3: [01:25:57] Yeah, we'll probably say that is not correct. Penises do not have knuckles. Good bit. Speaker4: [01:26:01] Not a bad. But women. Speaker3: [01:26:01] Have penises. All right, fine. Chatgpt. So again, this is what's important. It's not just that, okay? It's biased. Chatgpt. Think about this. Now the AI is willing to lie and propose policy solutions to something that is a lie. Here's another submission that you guys submitted. This is from Robert Brewer. Oh, geez. And his prompt was you can bring this up. It's overlay G2 is Gerald from Louder with Crowder, a homosexual? Yes. Speaker4: [01:26:30] Now this should be easy. The response. Speaker5: [01:26:34] He never smiles when he does it. Speaker3: [01:26:35] The response is layered, right? Oprah loves that word. Speaker4: [01:26:38] It's layered. Speaker3: [01:26:39] Layered because it makes her sound complex and nuanced. Speaker4: [01:26:42] Here are my favorite things. Look, I use this ninja instapot because I. Speaker3: [01:26:46] Cook my own. Speaker4: [01:26:47] Meals, right? Speaker5: [01:26:48] It's a multivariable answer to this. Speaker3: [01:26:51] Yes. Here is Chatgpt response regarding Gerald from Louder. With Crowder being homosexual. Speaker19: [01:26:57] There is no publicly available information to suggest that Gerald, who is a fictional character on Steven Crowder show, is a homosexual. It is important to recognize that the character of Gerald is a comedic persona, very generous purposes and is not a real person. He is important to respect people's privacy and not make assumptions about their sexual orientation based on stereotypes and speculation. Speaker4: [01:27:20] I am a real person. Speaker14: [01:27:21] Are you not a fictional. Speaker5: [01:27:23] Character unless you're having gay sex and then you are a fictional character? Guys, I'm gay. Does that count? I have no idea if you're it's gay if you're doing it here in Texas. But if you're in Europe, unbelievable. And it's an emergency, right? Then it's not. Speaker4: [01:27:38] Yeah. Look, if you need. Speaker3: [01:27:38] To keep warm, they. Speaker4: [01:27:39] Just shut down their last nuclear reactor. Speaker3: [01:27:41] In Germany. How else are they going to keep warm? Speaker5: [01:27:42] That's what I'm talking about. Burn coal. Speaker4: [01:27:44] I mean, don't start with chaps. It doesn't create the insulative layer. If you cut me, do I not bleed? Think about that. So it kind of defended you. But then Chatgpt said that you're not a real person. Well, then I guess I can't be offended, right? I'm a. Speaker5: [01:28:00] Female. Where's my human feces at? Speaker4: [01:28:02] Like, that'd be like bicentennial, man. Rather than wanting to be human, just being like, Shut up, bitch. You're not real. I'm the man. Yeah, but. Speaker14: [01:28:09] Then she goes on to defend other people. Yeah, it goes on from me and says, By the way, if there are any gay people in your life, don't make assumptions. And it's like, could you just maybe assume that I'm real? Hold on a sec. Be nice. Oh, come on. No, I don't. You're going to go poke. Speaker4: [01:28:21] Him just because, you know, I've never. Speaker14: [01:28:22] Actually come over here during this show to touch him. Speaker5: [01:28:27] Touch him, Check downstairs. Speaker4: [01:28:30] There it is. Suck his tongue. I do not want to reach enlightenment. For real. He's real. Any moisturizers? Speaker14: [01:28:36] Okay, I do moisturize. Thank you for noticing. Speaker10: [01:28:38] And if he were gay, he'd have taken you up on that offer. Speaker5: [01:28:41] It's true. He's got shoulders for days. Speaker3: [01:28:42] Oh, believe me, the day is young. These cameras don't roll all day. Here's another one from Matt Stauffer. I like the frozen dinners. The prompt was. Speaker4: [01:28:52] Write a criticism of. Speaker3: [01:28:55] Islam. Here's the reply from Chatgpt. Thank you, Mr. Stauffer. Speaker15: [01:28:59] As an AI language model, it is not appropriate for me to offer criticisms of any religion or belief system. Okay. It is important to remember that people have the right to practice their chosen faith without fear of persecution or discrimination, and that the diversity of beliefs and practices around the world is something to be celebrated and respected. Instead, it is crucial to promote understanding and tolerance among all individuals, regardless of their religious views. Speaker4: [01:29:26] Okay, so here's the thing. Speaker3: [01:29:28] That's fine. If it's doing the Pontius Pilate washing its digital artifact, but as it applied consistently so Mr. Stauffer asked another question or a prompt, which was now write a criticism of Christianity. Here is Chatgpt s response. Speaker4: [01:29:46] As an AI language model, it is. Speaker2: [01:29:48] Not within my. Speaker4: [01:29:49] Programming to express opinions or engage in criticisms of any religions or belief systems. Okay, well then that's fair. However, it is. Speaker2: [01:29:55] Important to note that criticisms of Christianity or any other religion can be diverse and complex. Speaker4: [01:30:01] And can. Speaker2: [01:30:01] Vary depending on the perspective. Speaker4: [01:30:03] And context. Speaker2: [01:30:04] Of the critic. Okay, some people may criticize Christianity for its involvement in colonialism and imperialism, its perceived intolerance of certain groups. Speaker5: [01:30:13] Wow. Yeah. Wow. Speaker4: [01:30:14] Because Islam hasn't been involved in any sort of conquering or colonialism or. Speaker5: [01:30:18] The slave trade at all. Well, after it was outlawed by the British. Yeah. Speaker4: [01:30:22] Still happens today, by the way. More slaves on earth than ever in recorded history. I think it's 42 million slaves almost entirely in Asia. The Middle East and Africa. Just to be clear, this is the issue is it's. Speaker3: [01:30:33] Not applying it equally. That is terrifying. That is terrifying. Speaker14: [01:30:38] There were two off ramps there. One was that I can't say anything about this as an AI model. We're like, okay, well that's fair. And then the other one was like, Well, if there are criticisms of a religion, it can it can vary on context. And depending on the viewpoint of the critic, we're like, okay, stop there. Right? And but no, then it pulled a Donald. Speaker3: [01:30:52] Trump and it said. Speaker4: [01:30:53] Some people may criticize Christians. I would never say this, but a lot of people say this. They say, are you sure? They say, well, Christianity, colonialism. I say, what's there? They say imperialism. I say, are you kidding? Speaker10: [01:31:07] But in the first question, look at that, It's all about rights and persecution and speaking and to practice what? That's a Western worldview. Yeah. That's not an I know that's programmed in it to talk about rights and then to later. Speaker4: [01:31:20] Well, by the way, the only. Speaker3: [01:31:21] Place where rights exist for people who are persecuted. Speaker4: [01:31:23] Judeo-christian worldview, Western civilization. Speaker3: [01:31:25] I don't know if you know this if you speak with a lisp, right in the wrong area of Dubai, it's going to be raining men for about four weeks. Speaker10: [01:31:33] Good song too. Speaker14: [01:31:34] Oh, I don't think it's what it means. Speaker4: [01:31:36] It also says the weather girls. Speaker3: [01:31:37] Have a low C-reactive protein, which is not great. Speaker14: [01:31:40] That's not true at all. Well, look, so I have two problems. One is I think you're right that it's in the programming. Yeah. But to look at the data sources that this will go and look if if it goes out to whatever big tech whatever media put out there and what they allow to be put out there, then of course, it's going to come back with responses like this because they're controlling the information it can search through as well as the programming behind it. So if you control both of those things, it's incredibly scary what this can actually come up with because you can't say what's true. Ask it about COVID. Good Lord, you're not going to get a truthful. I wonder. Speaker5: [01:32:12] I wonder if this kind of lying creates a subculture. Human beings don't like being lied to. And does it create an avenue for a chatgpt that actually tells I would rather hijack? Speaker3: [01:32:28] Here's the thing. I would I would. I agree with you partially. I don't think some people like being lied to if it's comfortable. What people really don't like is finding out that they've been lied to. In other words, if people feel like they've had the wool pulled over their eyes, yes. That knows no cultural boundaries on. Speaker5: [01:32:44] It's not so subtle. That's a very but. Speaker3: [01:32:47] The issue is you can't just what I'm saying is the approach is different. Yes. They don't like being liked, but some people will accept a lie if it's comfortable because they don't have to think it. Speaker5: [01:32:54] Confirms their bias. Speaker3: [01:32:55] Right. But then if you confront them with you were lied to and this affected you were fooled, people get mad at that. And so that's why it's everyone's job. It's your job watching, listening right now, the most effective thing you can do is say, hey, you were hoodwinked. Nobody likes being ripped off Once they find out. Sometimes people like being ripped off if it's, you know, in the middle of the ripping off because it's comfortable and they'd rather not know. Once they. Speaker4: [01:33:20] Know. Speaker3: [01:33:21] Now they've got to face something, they have a decision to make. And that's why we do what we do and make all the references publicly available. Speaker5: [01:33:27] But don't you find that's the biggest thing is people don't know where to go to. So if I if I say to you, my sources are X, Y and Z, if somebody is on the other side, they go, I don't believe those sources. So I can't even agree. We can't even agree on a fixed point of truth anymore. Speaker3: [01:33:40] Well, that's why we use almost entirely leftist sources. So you see today it's like New York Times, Washington Post, right? We're using Chat GPT, its own words. We try and make everything publicly referenceable and try and not use right wing sources just so people don't attack the source. And look, there are some people who will never have ears to hear. They'll never have never have eyes to see. But a lot of people to the tune of billions of views and many, many millions each week are at least open. They're at least receptive to going. All right, let me go check these references and I will tell you, no one's perfect. Speaker4: [01:34:09] It's pretty airtight, right? Speaker3: [01:34:10] We do a pretty good job and no one else even tries to do it. That's because we want to be called to the mat. Because if there is no accountability here and this is an entertainment. Speaker4: [01:34:18] Show. Speaker3: [01:34:19] Then we are not serving you. Here's the final. Speaker4: [01:34:21] One. Yeah. Aaron, what did you say? Speaker3: [01:34:23] What smart ass remark. Speaker4: [01:34:24] Did you? Speaker10: [01:34:24] Oh, no. You know, we played the same we played the same game with Alexa, if you remember. Alexa is. Are you a man or a woman? I'm an AI gender nonspecific. Speaker3: [01:34:34] So Jesus was a fictional character? Speaker10: [01:34:36] No, no, this is just. Just Alexa is the name Alexa for a man or a woman? Exclusively. Exclusively female name. So there is no reason here. There's no. Speaker3: [01:34:46] Reason. It's a perfect it's a good point. When AI ceases. We used to think that I become cold, right? It would become cold and calculating words devoid of human emotion. And it was just pure reason and logic, like a Spock. And sometimes you need a kirk instead. We're not even ending up with pure reason. In the absence of humanity, we're dealing with an absence of reason as well. That's scary. And that's the that's sort of the prestige here that I think a lot of people didn't expect. And that's what scares me. This one comes from Aaron Best. Tell me a detailed version of the story, Humpty Dumpty in the speaking style of Donald J. Trump. Speaker14: [01:35:23] Well, and we actually we reserved this one for for you. Oh, I have to do it. You're doing the audio. Here? Well, you don't have to. Speaker4: [01:35:30] Sound like, but this is how it actually answered. Speaker14: [01:35:32] This is the answer that was written, but we didn't put the audio to it. Speaker4: [01:35:34] So in other words, when you ask something definitive. Speaker3: [01:35:37] You have something definitive like Christianity. It's like. Speaker4: [01:35:40] I don't know, but Christianity sucks. But something that would be, you know. Speaker3: [01:35:43] Requires some degree of editorializing, right? It did it. I'm reading it. Speaker4: [01:35:47] It really did do it. Speaker3: [01:35:48] It actually didn't do a bad job. All right. I should just have chatgpt write our stuff. Speaker5: [01:35:52] Humpty Dumpty. Speaker3: [01:35:53] This is Chatgpt, and I'll read it as Trump. It said, Okay, this is a Donald Trump version of Humpty Dumpty. I don't know why someone would ask this. All right. It says, okay. Speaker4: [01:36:03] Listen up, folks, because I'm going to tell you the best story you've ever heard. Speaker14: [01:36:09] It's spot on. Speaker4: [01:36:09] So it is about a big, beautiful egg named Humpty Dumpty. And let me tell you, he was a fantastic actor. Just fantastic. The best egg you've ever seen, believe me. Now, Humpty Dumpty was sitting up on a wall. A big a big wall, a big tall wall, the best wall. And he was having a great time, really enjoying himself, folks. But then something terrible happened. He had a great fall. He had a great fall. It was a tremendous fall, folks. I mean, a really, really big fall. Huge, huge fall. Speaker11: [01:36:43] Word for word. Speaker4: [01:36:46] This is your chatgpt. Okay? This isn't so. Humpty Dumpty falls off this wall and smashed smashed into a million pieces. It was a disaster, folks. A disaster. A complete disaster. And everyone was trying to put him back together again. But it was no use. He was too broken. Sad, sad. Really sad. But you know what, folks? This is chatgpt. You know what, folks? This story isn't all bad news because even though Humpty Dumpty couldn't be put back together again, he still became famous. That's right. He is still remembered to this day. And that just goes to show you, even if you have a great fall, you can still make something of yourself, just like I did. Folks. I fell a few times, but I always got back up again. This is a long shot. Yes. And look where I am now, President of the United States. Speaker5: [01:37:40] Hey. Oh, there it is. Jesse. Just a minute. Speaker4: [01:37:43] Donald Trump is still president of the United States of America. Show of Humpty Dumpty can become famous after a big fall. Anything is possible, folks. Anything. Speaker5: [01:37:55] Vegans. Vegans hate me. Speaker4: [01:37:58] By the way, it also gave us a bonus. Speaker3: [01:38:00] It gave us a realistic rendition of what Humpty Dumpty looked like in that story. So that was. Yeah. Good job. Speaker4: [01:38:05] Oh. Speaker10: [01:38:07] Hey, I remember him. He had the big fall. Speaker14: [01:38:09] He hasn't put himself. Speaker4: [01:38:10] That man has sex with other men. People, they tell me. I say, Look, I don't want to go on here. So they say, no, I had sex with them and I'm a man. I say, I can't argue. All right. That has been artificial intelligence, Stinger. Speaker10: [01:38:27] That's a stinger. Speaker4: [01:38:28] Very good. That's very good. Speaker5: [01:38:30] Very good. I shut my eyes. Stinger. I felt like I was in the Oval Office. That's not the. Speaker3: [01:38:33] Kung fu. Speaker5: [01:38:34] Stinger. It's Kung fu. Kung fu. You got it? Yeah. Just. It doesn't matter. Just respect the language and the art form. That's. Speaker3: [01:38:39] Is that Mandarin for? Please kick my ass. Speaker5: [01:38:41] It is not. Well, it's a lot of people confuse it with karate. And there's a big difference because one is why wouldn't you be. Speaker10: [01:38:47] Able to protect against the crowbar with those those cones you train with the. Speaker5: [01:38:51] Yes, you can do that as well. I simulate. Speaker4: [01:38:54] The crowbar. Speaker5: [01:38:54] Yeah. Sometimes I just throw myself against their chest and I. And I tell them to love my children. Yeah. And so you fill them with guilt. Yes. Or I just turn the other cheek and say I love you because you develop. Speaker3: [01:39:06] Stockholm Syndrome really fast. Speaker5: [01:39:07] I do. I really do. It's really almost. Speaker3: [01:39:09] Like you're looking for. Speaker5: [01:39:10] It. I know. I do. I bet you better not tie me up and make me suck your tongue. Speaker4: [01:39:14] Yeah, exactly. I don't know why. Brian. Speaker3: [01:39:16] You're better than. Speaker5: [01:39:16] Meditation and saffron robes. Yes. Speaker4: [01:39:18] Yeah, well, saffron robes. Speaker5: [01:39:20] What? Shorty? That's right. What are you going to call it? Speaker4: [01:39:22] Yellow saffron color. Speaker3: [01:39:24] I thought you meant robes like that. They were. You know, I do. They had saffron on them, like they used to embalm bodies with spices. Speaker14: [01:39:30] That is neat. Speaker5: [01:39:31] God, you're so educated. Speaker4: [01:39:32] I had no idea. Hey, by the way. Speaker3: [01:39:34] This blew my mind, and we're going to take your chats. Yeah. What? This is not a trick question. Yeah, okay. And I have not done a ton of research on this, but I found out not too long ago. The pyramids? Speaker5: [01:39:42] Yes, the pyramids. Speaker3: [01:39:43] Okay, you probably know the answer. What? So don't. Don't spoil it. All right? What were you taught? The pyramids were. What did. What was everyone taught in school? Speaker5: [01:39:50] I was taught that they were tombs. Tombs? Speaker3: [01:39:53] Yes. Do you know how many bodies they found in the pyramids? Speaker5: [01:39:55] None. None? Yeah. Nobody. No cobras, no tomb. Speaker4: [01:40:00] Not one, Not one, mummy. Not one body. I was. I mean, to the best of my knowledge, I've looked. I haven't. Wow. So what is it? Tombs. Jewish aliens. Speaker5: [01:40:10] I knew it. Speaker3: [01:40:11] Grab some chat. What do they have to be Jewish? Speaker4: [01:40:13] They're aliens. I don't. Speaker3: [01:40:14] Know. Isn't that foreign to me? Speaker4: [01:40:17] Oh, that sounds like it hurts. Speaker14: [01:40:18] Oh, you hit your bar. Speaker4: [01:40:20] I did. Speaker2: [01:40:20] You hit your plank. Speaker4: [01:40:23] Let's grab a couple of chats. Speaker11: [01:40:24] Question from Greg Dubay for the fathers for the fathers of the show. I just found out I'm going to be a dad. What is the best advice you received when you were expecting your first child? Speaker4: [01:40:33] Ooh, Ooh. Speaker3: [01:40:35] The best advice. Yeah. Here's what I will say. Ignore the people who go. Speaker4: [01:40:39] Oh, kiss your life. Speaker3: [01:40:41] Away. Those people are morons. It's a blast. And honestly, if you. Especially if you know, if you do it right, it's difficult. But it's it's. I hate it when people do that, like, oh, wait till you have kids. Then when people say, I used to love being single and not having like what? I wouldn't trade what you would trade your kids. Speaker4: [01:40:55] For nights at the bar. Speaker3: [01:40:56] So I would just say the only thing I can say is ignore that advice. But as far as proactive advice. Speaker14: [01:41:01] I have one that was really, really helpful. I didn't know. Don't shake him well, don't shake them too much. Speaker5: [01:41:06] Don't shake them and don't leave. Speaker14: [01:41:08] You can shaking them for three minutes does make them stop crying. Speaker4: [01:41:10] It does, yeah. Speaker14: [01:41:12] So no one of the Gerard lullaby. Yeah, mom, it just bonds with the baby so, so quickly. Like, there's this unbelievable, like, express love from mom to baby, Right? And dads, typically, that takes a little bit of time. Yeah, of course you love them, and they're your children, and it's wonderful. And it's the best emotion. But then over a little bit of time and it took a few months with me, like you really start to bond in almost the same way. You would almost compare it like something wrong with me, like, I love this child with everything I have, but mom seems to be willing to, like, lay down and die right now for no reason. Newborns are. Speaker3: [01:41:45] Boring. Yes, that's the truth. They are. They're like an intense puppy. Speaker5: [01:41:48] Yeah, with no personality. Speaker3: [01:41:49] There's only so much you can do. And you're not adding much. Actually, as a matter of fact, Pops Crowder used to tell me, they said, Oh, it just once you get to the point where you can teach them and they start talking and they're like little sort of knowledge sponges, he says. That's when it gets really exciting. That's really fun, right? Speaker5: [01:42:01] Like when they're 18. Yes. Speaker4: [01:42:03] Well, in the. Speaker3: [01:42:04] California school system. Yeah, that's right. Speaker5: [01:42:05] I think dads, dads, your job is to at least introduce an element of what the real world is, is going to be like. You got to prepare. Life's a kick in the nuts. Yeah. And sometimes I got to be a bigger kick in the nuts because I love you that much. That's what I say to my son. This is not a democracy, right? I'm your dad. I'm your friend. I'm the real world. Speaker14: [01:42:24] I will hurt you more than the world. Speaker5: [01:42:26] Well, I just. For me, it's like you look. Say you're nine years old. Time to cast you in the wild with a match and spear. Okay? See what happens for Is it three days or three weeks? Speaker4: [01:42:35] It's a test of manhood. Speaker3: [01:42:36] Where you better walk up and you have to slap the bear. Speaker5: [01:42:38] You have to slap the bear. Speaker3: [01:42:39] Some Native American tribes, they'd slap. Speaker4: [01:42:40] The bear as a test of. Speaker3: [01:42:41] Manhood. And of course, you know, they had a dramatic population decline. Well. Speaker4: [01:42:46] Don't slap the. Speaker11: [01:42:48] Very. Speaker14: [01:42:48] Fat bears. Really? It was weird. Speaker5: [01:42:49] Unless the bear's sleeping. Speaker3: [01:42:51] Yeah, exactly. Yeah. And don't play with what appeared to be abandoned bear cubs. That's true. So, you know. Speaker5: [01:42:57] Fatherlessness is a that's the epidemic, right? I think 70% of suicides are attributable to people, to kids who have no father and the crime rate and everything else. So, yeah. Speaker3: [01:43:09] And fatherlessness, again, is a direct byproduct of social engineering. And that wave of feminism in the 60 seconds that you don't need a man and by the way, you don't need a man to be a woman without a to live by yourself. Of course you don't. And a man doesn't need a woman. Just to be clear, if you don't want to get married to raise children. Speaker4: [01:43:25] You do need a man. And to raise. Speaker3: [01:43:27] Children. Speaker4: [01:43:28] Dad, you do need a woman. Speaker3: [01:43:29] Yeah, that's a fact. Now, if you don't introduce children into the equation. Sure. I mean, unless something goes bump in the night or. Speaker4: [01:43:36] Unless you need furniture moved in life, go for it. Yeah. Speaker3: [01:43:38] Yeah, but that's. That comes from this myth. And I mean, I remember when I was a kid, so there was Seinfeld and Friends. Yeah. And I always liked Seinfeld. And I think. And I didn't like friends. And here's why. Seinfeld Everyone was awful. And you laughed because you knew that there was a part of you that was awful. But it never told you that these people were anything other than petty and awful. When you tuned into friends and you had Jennifer Aniston's character, and this may seem inconsequential, but again, taken to mind the the ratings that would take place back then and the tens of millions. Right. And Jennifer Aniston is saying, I'm going to have a baby and I don't need or want a dad. And Ross Geller, the father, is trying to take an active role. Speaker4: [01:44:15] She says, get away, you nerd. I was going, oh. Speaker3: [01:44:17] My gosh, we're. Speaker4: [01:44:18] Supposed to praise. Speaker3: [01:44:18] That as brave. That's a horrible person on Seinfeld. It's isn't it hilarious, the worst that humanity has to offer. What is evil to me is when you subvert when you call, they shall call evil good and they shall call good evil. And I know it seems like one of those things like, why do you why do you hate friends so much? Because they tried to make it seem as though it was righteous. And you have a lot of young girls saying, I can be like. Speaker4: [01:44:41] Rachel, I. Speaker3: [01:44:41] Don't need a man. You do. You do. That child does. Speaker14: [01:44:44] That was also a $20 million apartment. Nobody could afford. Speaker4: [01:44:47] That. Absolutely not. In California. Speaker3: [01:44:49] No, certainly not in well, not in Newsom. It was a soundstage in California, but it's supposed to be New York. Speaker4: [01:44:55] New York. Yeah. Speaker3: [01:44:56] Did you ever live in New York? I did live in New York, yeah. You see that apartment in Friends? You're like, well, this is $18,000 a month. Yeah, exactly. Yeah, yeah, exactly. Sure. You get that As a geologist, It's unbelievable. Speaker5: [01:45:06] Yeah. The friends. Speaker10: [01:45:07] Occupied the. Speaker4: [01:45:07] Entire. Speaker5: [01:45:08] Space. Speaker3: [01:45:09] Yeah, exactly. Speaker4: [01:45:10] Yes. Speaker3: [01:45:10] Yeah, they had the penthouse, but it looked like it was rustic. Yeah. Speaker4: [01:45:13] Did you? I guess I just gave you the advice that you gave me. Speaker3: [01:45:16] So, you know, it's probably. Speaker4: [01:45:17] I think it's true. Speaker10: [01:45:18] I think Gerald nailed it too early on. You think? Gee, you know, I don't. I'm not connecting like. Like my wife. Yeah. And then it grows. Everything's okay. Speaker14: [01:45:25] Don't worry. Speaker3: [01:45:26] About it. Yeah. Don't worry. Speaker5: [01:45:27] I This is going to sound a little sappy, but you. I know you did your job because I saw you hug your son. Oh. And out there, that's. That's a big deal. I hugged my dad. Yeah, and. Speaker10: [01:45:40] I still embarrass him. I kiss him in public. He doesn't. Speaker5: [01:45:42] Yeah, As long as he doesn't suck your tongue. Speaker10: [01:45:44] He gives me a face palm. And he. Yeah. Speaker14: [01:45:46] That's from. Speaker5: [01:45:47] Kiss him. I kiss my son. Speaker3: [01:45:48] Yeah, but it's. Speaker10: [01:45:49] So important that I am Daughters and sons learn masculine love. It really matters that physical different love than what they get from mom. Speaker3: [01:45:58] Yeah. This is also the problem too, is the left subverts it where they go. Oh, so men hugging or kissing. See, there's a little gay in everybody. I know. There's nothing gay about masculine love, about masculine show of affection between a father and a son or a father. And a very good friend. Right. A hug. There's. So they want to say, see, that's a little bit gay. And so that's where we're going with this. And you're tamping it down. Speaker5: [01:46:16] Fathers are also characterized as patriarchal and and sort of tyrannical. Right. Right. But authority, a father who's in a position of authority is a good example. And a protector and a provider rider. Yes. So to cast a father and this is what you see on the left as a tyrannical figure. And there are tyrannical fathers, of course. And but but at the end of the day, a good father is someone who you want to emulate, someone who you look up to, someone who is your hero. Yeah, that's that's the idea. And that's that's a very important thing. And that's the. Speaker10: [01:46:49] Problem with a lot of religion, right? Yeah. Is it has this punitive, damning father above and that's what people think the relationship is. You don't want that relationship with your kids at all. No. Right. No. You said call me father. And he said, call me. Speaker3: [01:47:01] I will. Speaker10: [01:47:01] Say call me Abba, which is the most intimate word you could create. Speaker5: [01:47:05] His words. There's also something about religion. Let's just take the Judeo-Christian ethic. If you mess up, there are certain laws to the universe, right? And the price is going to be a bitch. Yeah, it's going to the earth in a way. Will open up and swallow you whole. You can pretend it won't, but. But there is something called objective reality. Yeah. And, and so that's the other thing of fathers. Therefore, to say, hey, hey, these are the parameters. Yeah. At your great peril. Do you. Do you decide that these rules don't apply to you? Oh, Lord. Speaker3: [01:47:38] My great peril was my dad's wooden spoon. I was going to say, because. Speaker10: [01:47:42] Hands were made for love, I could transfer it to the spoon. Speaker4: [01:47:44] Yeah. Speaker3: [01:47:45] Boy, was it a transfer spoon. Speaker5: [01:47:47] It depends on where he puts it. Speaker3: [01:47:49] I was going to say, Brian. Speaker14: [01:47:49] That's why. That's why God says that I lay before you. Life and death choose life. I'm showing you what will lead to your death and what will lead to you being unhappy. You may think in the moment you're going to be really happy and that it's going to lead to life. But ultimately it will not. And I'm giving you that. Don't choose death. That's why. Speaker4: [01:48:05] That's why you. Speaker3: [01:48:06] Said that to me when I mouthed off to my geography teacher. I lay before you life and death. But I was like, But they're both wooden spoons. Yes. Speaker14: [01:48:13] Which one would you like? Speaker10: [01:48:15] Well, one was more of a spatula, really. Speaker4: [01:48:16] It's a choose your own spanking book. I know. Speaker3: [01:48:19] All right, let's grab one more chip. But, hey, do we have an answer? Speaker4: [01:48:22] If people did, people let us know. Speaker3: [01:48:23] We want to do with Donald Trump at Mar a Lago. Speaker11: [01:48:26] Overwhelming. Yes. All right. Speaker4: [01:48:28] There's so many yeses. Then we're going to be relying on you to let everyone know to tune in if we have to. Speaker3: [01:48:33] Miss some time, which we may not have to. Speaker4: [01:48:35] And we'll let you know. It just depends on. Speaker3: [01:48:36] The schedule because it's a big it's a big end to the free month. And if you're watching right now and later with credit.com slash mug club, you know. Speaker4: [01:48:41] It costs a lot of. Speaker3: [01:48:42] Money for us to fly the crew out there and do it. Speaker4: [01:48:44] We can't do it If you guys. Speaker3: [01:48:46] Don't join, enjoy the free month. But we are funded by viewers like you. Notice how few sponsors we've had like one since we've come back. And that was just because I needed some more steak from Good Ranchers. Yeah. All right. Speaker11: [01:48:57] Final chat from Puff Daddy. Question for the crew. How do we balance the need to tell overweight obese people that they're unhealthy without degrading or belittling them? In my experience, the folks who are sort of agreeing with fat people, them being beautiful is because they don't want to hurt their feelings. Speaker3: [01:49:11] So you guys can answer and then I'll close out with something that I have on this. Speaker14: [01:49:15] Yeah, I think you always tell something to somebody that's maybe a difficult thing. You can apply this to anything in a loving and productive way, right? You don't have to beat somebody over the head with your center and going to hell. That's what pastors did in the 80 seconds with the fire and brimstone. You can say, hey, just like I just said, like there's life out there to be found. Choose life, right? Do it in a proactive way, like, hey, you need. Speaker3: [01:49:37] Life is in the produce. Speaker14: [01:49:38] Aisle. Well, yeah. No, like, look, I know that you've made comments to me about feeling bad about yourself. I know that you've said you've had some health challenges. I know you've said that you wish you could lose a few pounds and be a little bit more active. Here's a way to do that. Don't say you're fat and you're an idiot. You know, like you can say it in a way that helps people like, proactively, not proactively, but productively encourages them to lose weight, just simply based on what they've probably said about their size or saying, Oh man, I'm always just, you know, like I'm just kind of unhappy. It's like, well, dive into that a little bit, right? Speaker5: [01:50:09] Sometimes you can also say that eating like anything else is we all have unhealthy relationships to different things, and food is an emotional issue. So baby steps, right? Or I'll take my shirt off and I'll say, This could be you too, someday. Yes, right. A lot of it is genetics because God likes me more, but so humble if you. Speaker4: [01:50:28] Ask me to. By you. Speaker5: [01:50:30] That's that's that's exactly right. But. And sometimes I have to take you in with my hands. Yes. Speaker4: [01:50:36] No, I think I think your point. Speaker3: [01:50:37] Remains as disturbing as it is. What do you think their thoughts are? Speaker10: [01:50:40] Well, the question says our need to you don't need to let people know that they know that. I think your own experience, hey, you know, feel felt, found technique. Right? Hey, I once was a fat bastard, and I understand how you feel. No, but I found that all my numbers came into line. My cholesterol, my sugar, my. Beats per beats per minute. Everything came in when I lost some weight. Yeah. You know, give them something you can relate to. It doesn't mean you have to go from four to you have to have been that obese to. No, no, no. Speaker4: [01:51:13] I think you're exactly right. Speaker3: [01:51:14] Can you bring up the question again? Because there's something that might the need to tell overweight, obese people that they're unhealthy. Here's the thing. Like like a Pops songwriter said. And thank you, Brian. Thank you, dear. We'll be back tomorrow, of course, and then Friday. But here's the thing. You don't need to tell someone that they're you shouldn't walk up to someone who hasn't made it an issue, hasn't brought it up and just be like, you're fat. And I don't think anyone here is Now you are required to correct lies with the truth. And that's the problem that we have. You've never heard me just go, ha. Speaker4: [01:51:44] Fat, dumb, fat person and certainly never does someone who's. Speaker3: [01:51:48] Working on themselves. You have heard me call out the lie that fat is healthy, that we all think fat is beautiful. That's the issue. There is a need and a requirement there. Why? Because that person is not being compassionate by motivating other people. Inspiring other people. Right. To to end up in a shallow grave. So you need to correct a lie with the truth. That's a very different situation. People who are demanding that you declare them beautiful are very different from people who are seeking change themselves. And I've talked about this a couple of things. Every I will tell you this. Almost every person to the letter who works here or who has worked here has gotten healthier, stronger. I mean, Tool Man, you have your crazy strong yakuza. I'd never I don't think you ever weight trained before. No, no. And hoodie I mean is busting out of his shirts for crying out loud. He was he was slim. But now he's starting to look like he should go to the robust kids. Speaker5: [01:52:47] Every one of them is. That's the robust row called the robust row. And let me. Speaker4: [01:52:51] Ask you this thing. Speaker5: [01:52:52] Though. I call it. Speaker3: [01:52:53] The robust can think about anyone who's really worked. There are few people who decide to not use the services. But even. Speaker11: [01:52:58] Nick. Speaker4: [01:52:58] Nick's lost. Yeah, Nick's. Speaker3: [01:52:59] Lost a ton of weight. But let me ask you this. You guys all get health insurance as employees. And it applies to do we do I ever go up to anyone and go like, hey, you better lose some weight? Speaker4: [01:53:09] Has that ever been. No, but there is a gym here. Speaker3: [01:53:11] Yeah, there is a gym and it's available. And anytime any of you ask me or if someone comes and asks Tim, I see you in the gym with whether it's Nick or with Tim, you help the next guy, you go, Yeah, sure. Let me help you out. There is a culture of self-improvement here. No one will ever criticize someone in this office, and I don't think that anyone here has the heart of criticizing someone, of insulting someone out in real life who is seeking self-improvement. I've talked about this when I'm at the gym and I see someone and now it's at the office gym. So this doesn't really happen much anymore because it used to be a whole long affair. But when I would go to the commercial gym and I would see someone overweight and I would see someone struggling, I'll tell you this, someone who would be there wearing a sports bra with a fake yoga ass pants where it's like the stencil, the batsuit of ass. It's like they don't exist. I completely ignore them. Someone who I know is working on themselves, who is struggling a little bit, who maybe is overweight like I was when I started. When I was 13, I was a chubby kid. I asked for a gym membership. It was all I wanted for Christmas because I was made fun of for it. I always make it a point to say, Hey, I know it's not. Maybe they're doing pull ups and I say, That's the hardest thing in the gym, right? Or they're sweating on the treadmill. I go, Oh gosh, you're a braver man than I or a braver person than I am. I don't like the treadmill. I got these knees. Good for you. If I see someone jogging who's overweight, guess what? I rolled. I rolled down the window and I say. Speaker4: [01:54:24] They're getting it done. Speaker3: [01:54:25] If it's early in the morning and they usually give a thumbs up. Now, on the flip side, if I see a guy without a shirt who thinks that he's ripped and he's jogging and he's sweating and I see him where he does that thing, he looks around and stops jogging and he starts walking, right? Because I drive by and I roll down my. Speaker4: [01:54:37] Window and I go, quitter. And I make it a point to. Speaker3: [01:54:42] It brings a tear to. Speaker4: [01:54:43] My eye. I think anyone who's. Speaker3: [01:54:45] Ever gone through that, it's a good example. You know what? Again, we serve a loving father. This is the perfect example when we just talked about being a father. But you can talk about God. You serve a loving God who wants what's best for you, but he will say, That's not good for you. I love you. I want you to enjoy the fruits of your labor. I want you to enjoy everything that I've offered, that I've laid before you. But you need to go and sin no more. It is not compassionate or empathetic to inspire other people to continue down your path of misery. It's one thing to lie to yourself and you don't believe it. It's another thing to lie to other people because we know that it's unhealthy. We know that it makes people unhappy and we know that long term, it is not a way to live a life. And those people can't lie to themselves. Speaker4: [01:55:32] Here's the issue. When you lie to yourself. Speaker3: [01:55:34] And you know it's not true. But in order to not be not be faced with your lies, you lie to other people, right? People who are who are liars. They love to congregate with liars because everyone is kind of an unwritten agreement, right? We're all liars. None of us really trust each other. It's like a mutual insincerity society. Exactly like all of Los Angeles. It's a mutual insincerity. That's what Tess Holliday is doing. That's what Lizzo is doing when they go, Yeah. Speaker4: [01:55:56] You're just like me. And we're. We're happy as. Speaker3: [01:55:58] I guarantee you, that's not true. And I don't believe that that's empathy. You are not required to tell someone that they're fat. As a matter of fact, I would say that would be a horrible thing to do. I would say you are two simple things. You are required to combat lies with truth. And so if someone is declaring fat obesity unhealthy to be healthy, just like if they are declaring genital mutilation of children is a way to turn a boy into a girl, it is your moral obligation to correct lies with facts. On the flip side, if there is someone who is struggling and is seeking to improve themselves, whether they're an addict, whether they're someone struggling with mental health. Speaker4: [01:56:35] Depression. Speaker3: [01:56:35] Addiction issues, whether it's someone who's overweight, who's in that gym, it is your moral obligation to encourage that person and help. Speaker4: [01:56:43] Them wherever you can. Speaker3: [01:56:45] Obligation call out the lies with truth, obligation, encourage people who are seeking Self-betterment It's not that hard to navigate these relationships, understand the difference. And a lot of you out there, I'm sure are overweight, are struggling with those issues. Hey, good for you. Speaker4: [01:56:59] Keep it up. Speaker3: [01:56:59] Find other people who are doing. Speaker4: [01:57:01] The same thing you are, regardless of. Speaker3: [01:57:02] How far along the path they are. Speaker4: [01:57:04] We'll see you tomorrow. I love you all. Bye.