230413_23-019_LWC_Morning_MugClub.mp3 Speaker1: [00:00:00] Greetings Mug Club. Let's take a journey. [00:00:05] I know a place where the class divisions deeper. Crime is wild. There must be something in the water. Sippin gin and juice. Speaker2: [00:00:23] The. [00:00:23] On the I need the palm trees and fun. The boys never change. Speaker3: [00:00:30] And I was never suspected of them. [00:00:31] Mistresses from Beijing. She was. You can travel. And see the. Close to the golden and. Host Keep your politics from first, katy Perry. It for in your world, it's so unlivable. Smells like poop. Where are the cops? Inflation so hot. We'll melt your popsicle. California world, it's undeniable. Crazies loot the borders unlocked left coast represent. Now pull your mask up. Aims. Out of reach. Cause more than my trees to lay those. We're freaks into deep Power Outage Warning on the stereo. You can welcome the world without the. Close the whole nation's toast. When diversity comes first, you'll be falling apart. Vaginas on top. Taxation So hot. We'll take your testicle. Look, I live for your world. It's so untenable. Gangs rule Fentinol on your block. Left coast represent. Now put your hands up. Oh. Speaker4: [00:03:17] Ooh, delicious. Hey, glad to be with you today. You know, every now I'm just going. Hey, everyone, give a round of applause to the people here who work really hard. Hey, I never watch myself. But when it's. When it's Riley a in a video everyone here watches. Yes. Stop that. She's a married lady and she is fantastic. Hell of a talent. Her face sniffing the cocaine in that was way. Anyway, every now and then I get to sit back and enjoy this. And we're so grateful that all of you have supported us. This doesn't doesn't come we're not running this on a Disney budget. So again, it's the Free Mug Club month later with credit.com slash mug club. If you want to see more like that, hey, do consider joining. We try to give you more bang for your buck. All right. We have a lot to get to today. We're going to be talking about, you know, what code switching is. Are you aware of that? Code switching is when people with the left has created as a term, meaning people do voices. So it's like black face, but black voice is, you know, I've done some code switching, but the people who do it genuinely, we have it. We have AOC, we have, of course, this new representative who was ousted. And then back in we have Joe Biden, we have Kamala Harris. We'll be talking about that. The left does this only it's not a joke. Speaker4: [00:04:29] And we'll also be talking about, look, this is a big win. I don't believe necessarily the go woke go broke. Comment below if you think that's something that is true. My headphones are a little bit loud here today. It's been a long week, Gerald. It's been a long week. And we're scheduling going to Mar a Lago maybe to interview the some people say former president. Some people say sitting president. I say sitting president. Okay. So we have a lot going on behind the scenes. But the Bud Light thing, they've lost a lot of money. Okay. Now, it isn't about money for them. It's about mitigating their ESG risk so that they can really sort of attract investments. But these are two different worlds. And guess what? What you're doing is working. You need to celebrate the wins where you can get them. And I'd love to hear what it is that you guys are drinking and we'll offer some solutions for for people out there when these situations arise. This is what we try and do here. A lot of people say, hey, I feel kind of helpless, okay, this is happening, but it's so large, it starts locally. But there are things that $6 billion is not a mundane detail. Michael We'll be talking about that as well as Black Maternal Health Week because it's a thing, Gerald, a CEO, how are you? Speaker1: [00:05:35] I'm doing well. Speaker4: [00:05:36] How are you? I'm good. I'm just a little a little tired. Yeah. At the end of the week, it's that red tide. Well, it's not now. I also found out I was inadvertently exposed to cats. How does that happen? I'll explain later. They're everywhere. Someone's trying to poison me there. And then in third chair. Oh, that's right. You're the only one who does know the story in third chair. We have you know him. You love him. Actually, we have third and fourth chair. We have Bryan Callen and Pops Crowder. Bryan Callen is going to be in Portland April 20th through the 22nd. The rest of us. Come on. Those tickets are going so fast. Speaker5: [00:06:08] It's called the Crowder Effect. Kids All right, so if we want to add an extra show in Portland. Oh, so you. Speaker4: [00:06:14] Might add an extra show. Speaker5: [00:06:15] But you can catch me at the Varsity Theater in Port Charlotte, Florida. Speaker4: [00:06:19] Go to Bryan callen.com and see all the tour dates, too, because there are a lot of tours there. And same thing, by the way, Nick DiPaolo, show us here on Mug Club. Now, you can watch this show every day, Monday through Friday, actually on Mug Club, Monday through Thursday on Rumble or YouTube at 10 a.m. Eastern. Can we bring them up 10 a.m. Eastern? And then you can watch Nick DiPaolo, the soothing voices of Nick DiPaolo. So soothing. You know what we need to do? We need to do. I've been listening to bedtime stories lately like an audiobooks. What do you have, Nick DiPaolo Two bedtime stories. That's a good idea. Nightmares, guided meditation. All right. I don't know. Your arms probably getting tense. Loosen it. Go to bed. Nick DiPaolo, Humpty Dumpty. Speaker5: [00:06:58] Bang your head against a wall. Yes. Speaker4: [00:07:01] Get out of that bed. I swear. Get out of that bed. Oh, my gosh, please. Oh, you're whining about beds. Someone put it in his mouth so we can go to bed. Just go to sleep. Already on rubber sheets. Go to sleep. Yeah. I don't know. I don't know what you want. Visions of sugar chicks with dancing in your head. Okay. All right. What is it? The funny thing is, he's so sweet. All right, so we have a lot to get to, and I'm excited. It's a fun show. And by the way, we'll be testing today on mug club cases. Gag reflex. If you notice that Yakuza is really upset. He's a very, very slight gag. He's a very fragile gag reflex. Stop. I don't want to talk about it. We're not doing anything. Gross Just so you know, nothing, I'm not doing anything. Gross We are going to be participating that. Speaker5: [00:07:39] That whole row, that robust row, Tim, looks like a wood gypsy. He looks like he knows the difference between trees, right? I mean. Speaker4: [00:07:47] I'm not entirely sure what gypsy means. I don't. Speaker5: [00:07:49] Either. Speaker1: [00:07:49] But Tim is a connoisseur of wood. Speaker5: [00:07:51] He looks like he. Yeah, he looks like he just stepped out of the Civil War, and he knows how to. He knows how to work his hands. Yes, he does. Quarter us. He really is. Speaker4: [00:08:00] Handy, Tim. We hear he built his own pergola. His own smoker. Yes. He makes his own beer. The soap we have here is from Tool Man. He's like, Hey, I brought in soap. I'm like, why is this soap? Why is it so? Why is it is it so abrasive? I put coffee beans in there for more effective exfoliation. I'm like, How do you have time? Speaker5: [00:08:18] He does. He smells. He smells like. Like wood and moss and. Yes. And authority. Yes. Speaker4: [00:08:23] He knows how to soft a limb of an injured soldier. Right. How's the bite on this? Speaker5: [00:08:29] How's the gangrene, Tim, you have to lop off those toes. I don't know why I'm speaking like I'm from Ireland. Well, your codeswitching, that's what I'm doing. Code switching. But I wouldn't go to him for questions on literature. No. All right. No, I would not. Speaker1: [00:08:41] I'm saying. Speaker5: [00:08:43] Sorry. We're off topic. Wisdom. Wisdom. Get back to topic. We have a lot to cover. So before we get to. Speaker4: [00:08:47] That, Abercrombie is is back. I never knew that they went away. I thought Fitch was gone. Abercrombie Sir, did you remember that? Do you guys know this comment below? Abercrombie and Fitch started out as a homeowner gun catalog. Yeah, Long time. We did a story on it. Yep. And it's a far cry from that because now they're back in the spotlight with their new advertising campaign. And this one is definitely not a father teaching his son how to hunt. That looks like George Michael. That's. Oh, here's the irony. They just accidentally created the most heterosexual thing ever. Yeah. Yeah, that's right. They're both, like, weird, but then they're just two straight people. Speaker6: [00:09:33] Yeah, they could totally reproduce. Yes. Speaker5: [00:09:36] You guys say that. I just. That just makes me want to release doves and celebrate my virginity. Yeah. Speaker4: [00:09:41] It makes me want to kill the doves. Yeah. They used to compete with Orvis for the lesbian market. They were all plaid. Yeah, for years. Oh, yeah, that was plaid. It was guns. It was. Yeah, but that, that looked patch sleeves on the. On the blazer. That looks like George Michael is banging Jimmy Snuka. Jimmy Barefoot Snuka or Samoa Joe. One of those Samoans. I don't know. Snuka getting horny. The point is it is gross, but hey, whatever sells more shitty sweaters, it won't. That's the problem. Speaker5: [00:10:09] I know it won't. Yeah. I don't know. I don't. It doesn't make me want to run out and buy a halter top. Remember when they sleeveless halter? Speaker4: [00:10:15] Remember when they used to want to, like, market beautiful people? Yes. Yes. That was a thing. Remember? Like, models were supposed to. They were. Speaker5: [00:10:22] Beautiful. They were good. Speaker4: [00:10:23] The biggest compliment I ever received I was in I was in Simi Valley or Van Nuys at one of those outdoor malls. And this is I think I might have been 19 and I was on a date. This person came up and said, Hey, excuse me, I would like to know, would you like to work over there for us at Abercrombie? I said, Oh, no, but thank you. Speaker1: [00:10:39] Wow. Nope. Speaker5: [00:10:41] I got offered to be a barker once. Did you? Yeah. At a circus? Yes, sure. Wait, I don't have your. I don't have your. Speaker1: [00:10:47] Your promotion, Brian. Yeah, not at all. Speaker4: [00:10:49] I was actually a barker as well. Hey, let's move on to code switching here. It's a live show Monday through Friday, 10 a.m. Eastern if you're on YouTube right now. Also, please comment like because as you there Well yeah but comment like so people know that they can head on over to rumble Yeah because YouTube as you can see through the algorithms you can search this show you can search the title and you won't find it. So let's go to Martin Luther cringe. It's just a good the Tennessee representative, Justin Pearson and I have to read that because I don't care about him. He was reinstated to the state House after being expelled for being a dick. Now to celebrate his. These people are just I'm sorry, ad hominem. Sure. Scum. Yes. Also losers? Yes. Dweebs. Yes. So let's celebrate his return now and educate you on not just Mr. Pearson, but all of the Democrat politicians who engage in code switching with a then and now. It's so nice being Demonetized because it is. You can just have the you can just have the the what's I just want to say system of a down. La la la la la la la la la. Speaker1: [00:12:06] Dicks and say that yes. Speaker4: [00:12:11] All right. So here if you may not you may not know this here is Pearson. So I'm going to spoiler alert, okay? Because you can't get away with it. We can't get away with it. Hank Azaria can't get away with it doing the voice of Apu in a cartoon. But this man can get away with entirely faking a black accent. He's like the representative equivalent of Drake, a butter soft bitch from a white Jewish area of Toronto who sounds like he's from Memphis. Also, by the way, here's how I know you're a bitch, Drake. Your first lyrics are like a like a sprained ankle. Ain't nothing to play with. You couldn't think of anything more severe. Speaker1: [00:12:47] I used to be. Speaker4: [00:12:48] Shot like a sprained ankle boy. Speaker1: [00:12:51] Nothing to play with. Yeah, you play. You play you. Speaker5: [00:12:53] I got to elevate and ice that bitch. Speaker1: [00:12:58] It's inflammatory to be productive in the morning. Got to be well rested. Yeah. Motherfucker. You heard what I just said. Speaker4: [00:13:06] Shout out to John Lajoie. I went to high school with his brother. All right, so here is Pearson, Representative Pearson, running for class president in college in 2016. This is what he sounded like then. Hey, everybody. I'm Justin J. Pearson and I'm running for president of BSG. Speaker7: [00:13:22] There are a few reasons I loved him in Dead Poets Society. One has to do with representation. How can we represent all voices in a conversation? Speaker1: [00:13:29] I'm not going to fall for no banana in the tailpipe. Speaker7: [00:13:32] Organizations from the Democrats to the Biden Republicans. I want to bring together different voices. Dissenting voices. Voices? You mean the ones in your head. Speaker4: [00:13:40] Or more conservative? Speaker5: [00:13:41] My grandmother. He's such a nice color. Speaker7: [00:13:44] Drummer for conversation. Speaker5: [00:13:45] She's the color. I like rap. You can't say. Speaker7: [00:13:47] That. And group happens. Speaker4: [00:13:49] No. Yeah, you can. You can say people of color. And that brings us to now and this is like if you know in children's placemats you know, it's like, hey, spot the six differences also. It's also like it's also like navigate your way through the maze. Also, you might as well just tear up the placemat and throw a hot coffee in your lap and squirt your dick, because this is about what this segment is going to feel like. See if you can spot the difference. Here is Pearson now celebrating his triumphant return to the state house yesterday. [00:14:20] Into the well, I believe. I believe in a division. People being ostracized, coming to the well. Speaker4: [00:14:28] That is an uncoordinated man. What a. Speaker1: [00:14:30] Phony. Well. Speaker5: [00:14:32] He's been taken over by the spirit. You see, He looks. Speaker4: [00:14:35] Like Sam Kinison. Yeah, but. Speaker5: [00:14:36] Watch what he's doing here. If you don't, he's. If you don't say Jesus's name when you're talking this way, you're you're at risk of conjuring spirits. Yes, Right. So Beelzebub can come up through the ground. Speaker4: [00:14:49] Hopefully he conjures a spirit of a real black guy. Speaker5: [00:14:52] Well. Speaker1: [00:14:54] What do you mean, real black guy? What do you mean. Speaker4: [00:14:56] By real black guy? Shut up. He's doing the Sam Kinison thing, right? [00:14:59] And I'm in the state house, and I want to be. Speaker1: [00:15:07] I talk like this, even though I used to be a white guy. Speaker5: [00:15:11] Wasn't he a preacher? He was innocent. Speaker1: [00:15:13] And he told it was. It was. Speaker4: [00:15:14] Performance art. It's like professional wrestling. So here's the thing, Justin. Speaker1: [00:15:17] The license plate on his rolled Corvette said X rev. Speaker4: [00:15:22] Oh, yeah, that's right. Yeah. Sam Kinison. I thought you said. I bet you Pearson has a vanity license plate. Yeah, it says white. Speaker1: [00:15:29] You can't even read it. It's white on white there. Like this is a violation of the traffic codes. I'm sorry, officer. Did you pull me over because I'm black? You're black? We had no idea. Good. Sir, this is a violation of. Oh, you're schizophrenic. Speaker4: [00:15:42] We're going to take away. Speaker1: [00:15:43] Your license here. Yes, well, just. Speaker4: [00:15:44] You know what? Let's just list cataracts, okay? Justin Pearson. Speaker1: [00:15:48] Is not. Speaker4: [00:15:48] Unique. Here's the thing. Speaker1: [00:15:50] Democrats are master panderers. Speaker4: [00:15:51] Hey, black. Speaker1: [00:15:52] Americans, they hate you. Hey, Latino Americans, they hate you. Hey, women. Speaker4: [00:15:57] They actually hate. They want to see you physically beaten to a pulp by men who claim to be women, but they claim to be more relatable. Right. This is what and they engage in what is called code switching. And the left is a group that harped on code switching all the time. Right. That this is about like switching and your voice and you guys can check all the references at Loudmouth Credit.com. They did the same thing with fake news. A lot of you I know some of you are new viewers. You may not remember the left created the term fake news to try and get rid of alternative media, right? Like ourselves. And then Donald Trump switched it on them and said, you're fake news. You're like, wait, no, no. Speaker1: [00:16:27] And then all of. Speaker4: [00:16:28] A sudden they got mad and they didn't want the term fake news. Speaker1: [00:16:31] Our thing. That's our thing. Speaker4: [00:16:32] Turn it on us. So it's called code switching. It's about pandering and changing your identity. And if you don't fully grasp it yet, here's an explanation from the goat. Speaker1: [00:16:41] And I'll tell you something else you probably didn't know, and that is this. This is not my real speaking voice. Actually, this is my real speaking voice. Speaker8: [00:16:51] I talk like straight up gangster bitch, but hey, hey, Big Al, it's out in Salem. Speaker4: [00:17:00] I love I love Dave Chappelle. I think. Speaker5: [00:17:02] It's great. You know what's funny about this is when I did the show, I've always got to keep everything. Everything is always funny, but I keep this accent to myself because when I'm around you, common people, I'm afraid I have to speak. That's code switching. That's exactly code switching. I know, but you wouldn't understand me if I spoke the Queen's English. Brian. No, no, no. Sorry. Hey. Speaker4: [00:17:21] It's the king's English. Oh, yes, of course. There's a man with a penis. Speaker1: [00:17:24] That's right. I forgot. There's no more. Speaker5: [00:17:26] Queen, is there? More queen? She's now we. Have to forget that I waved like a. You know what I want to do just once As an Englishman? I just want to go like this. Release the hounds. Speaker4: [00:17:36] Right. And then you'd have to sleep with your sister. Speaker5: [00:17:39] Yes. You have a sister? Underbite. Yes. Oh, yes. Speaker1: [00:17:43] There's nothing wrong with sleeping with your sister. That's just an old wives tale. I have my father's eyes and my mother's also eyes. My blood's blue. You know, that's how they know you're royalty. Why? Speaker5: [00:17:56] Why such a high voice, my liege? I'm the queen. Of course. Oh, you're the queen. I assume there's been. Speaker1: [00:18:01] Some carbon degassing on the vocal cord. Speaker5: [00:18:06] But you've got a beard, my liege. Yes. Do you identify as the queen? Well, that's. Speaker1: [00:18:10] True. This is not accurate. I would have had my lasered off as a result of my horrible incestuous relations. Speaker5: [00:18:18] It's so queeny, and. Speaker4: [00:18:19] And Canada still puts it on their money. Yeah, let's be more like those people. All right, so code switching, as you just saw. Thank you for exemplifying it, Brian. This is the definition accent. The ways in which a member of an underrepresented group, consciously or unconsciously, adjusts their language, syntax, grammatical structure, behavior and appearance to fit into the dominant culture. So they often say it's what black people do to become white because it's all seen through identity politics as opposed to right and wrong. Look, I think doing voices for fun is fine. We've been doing it since the beginning of time. I think that faking like you are someone else is what's wrong. But the left switches it entirely. Comedy. It's inappropriate. We have to fire Hank Azaria. Who does? Apu? We can't have a white guy do a black guy voice in a cartoon, but we can have people act as though they are an entirely different race so long as it is conducive to gaining votes. Let me bring you through a few examples, not just Pearson here. He's the latest example. Hillary Clinton. Now, you all know Hillary Clinton. You know her? Yeah, the. Speaker1: [00:19:15] Bitch. Yes. And you know. Speaker4: [00:19:18] What? Comment below if you're watching. If you're watching live. Okay. And if you're not watching live, pause it. So there's no spoiler comment. Who you think are going to be showcased as examples here. Here's Hillary Clinton speaking, you know, as a normal demonic self. Speaker9: [00:19:33] Lessons that I've learned about getting back. Okay, that's enough. Speaker1: [00:19:36] That's enough. I don't want to watch anymore. Okay. Speaker4: [00:19:41] Short, short doses. Yeah, short doses. Yeah. But I don't really think it's I don't think the the poison is in the dose. I think any dose, it's. Speaker1: [00:19:48] It's all poison. Speaker4: [00:19:50] It's like GHB. It's just it's. You're immediately vomiting on the floor. Oh, come on. Testing my gag reflex. Yeah, yeah, yeah. He's clearly used GHB. Yeah. Speaker5: [00:19:59] It goes well with poppers. I love it. Speaker4: [00:20:01] It goes well with driving, if you ask John Stamos. Yes. Speaker1: [00:20:04] And Nick Nolte, Did he? Yeah, they got caught for GHB. Speaker4: [00:20:07] All right. Really? Speaker5: [00:20:07] Yes. Yes, I know. John. I didn't know you did Drugs. Oh, cares. Speaker4: [00:20:12] The name is there that you dropped. All right. Sorry, guys. Hey, as long as you. As long as you get free oikos for life. Speaker5: [00:20:18] Oh, I can't get a table at a restaurant. I know. John Stamos. Think again. Speaker4: [00:20:21] Like, Yeah, He tipped us in the box. Set DVD of Full House. Don't wait up. Speaker1: [00:20:26] Here. Is Hillary Rodham Clinton. Speaker4: [00:20:28] Pretending to be Southern? Speaker9: [00:20:31] You know, they've just been minding their own business and they got hit by me and. I'm not sitting here, some little woman standing by my man like Tammy Wynette. Stand by. My man called distraught, saying her life was going to be ruined, ruined, ruined. Whether they're living in rural Iowa or inner city New York or anywhere else anywhere else. Speaker5: [00:20:48] Wasn't she doing a Tammy Wynette impersonation? I'm playing devil's advocate. No, she wasn't there. Speaker4: [00:20:53] There are more clips of that, too. But here's another one for you. Here she. Speaker1: [00:20:55] Is. Wynette's a national treasure. Speaker4: [00:20:56] She's a here she is pretending to be, as your grandmother would say, colored. Speaker9: [00:21:02] I don't feel no ways tired. [00:21:05] I come too far, far from where I started from. Oh, boy. Nobody told me that the road would be easy. Speaker4: [00:21:15] And not to be outdone by Daniel Day-Lewis through method acting, here she is acting as an insufferable bitch. Speaker9: [00:21:20] What difference at this point does it make. Speaker1: [00:21:23] Now which one's genuine? Speaker4: [00:21:25] You be the judge. Speaker1: [00:21:26] None. She ended a sentence in a preposition, I think. Yeah, well, that's outrageous. Speaker5: [00:21:32] Yeah. Yeah. Hey, Tim, did you notice that. Speaker4: [00:21:35] Her husband is the master? Speaker1: [00:21:36] Unforgivable. Speaker4: [00:21:37] Propositioning. Speaker5: [00:21:38] Sorry, Tim. I'm coming down hard on you today. I don't know why. Okay. It's all about literature. Speaker4: [00:21:42] Let's go to AOC, who? I've said this repeatedly. I can't wait for father time to pull the rip cord so I can despise her. Speaker5: [00:21:49] I do find her attractive. Speaker4: [00:21:50] Exterior just as much as her insides. Right now. I only hate her insides, which is, you know, it's wrong to hate, but I do. Speaker5: [00:21:55] But I want to. I want to. I want to date her. And I want to argue politics and then have crazy makeup sex. Is that weird? Yeah. I hope your wife's not watching me delete that. Yeah. Oh, yeah. My wife. No, my wife understands. Yeah, she understands. Ryan, It's a live show. Speaker4: [00:22:06] Yeah, We can't. We can't delete anything that's live. Speaker5: [00:22:09] She's going to beat me. Speaker4: [00:22:10] Here's AOC. And it's funny. She does what you do as a kind of a joke. But she was born, by the way, in New York. Okay. She spent most of her childhood in wealthy Yorktown area of New York, and she is a code switching connoisseur here. She is trying to connect with black voters again with a fake accent. Speaker10: [00:22:30] I'm proud to be a bartender. Ain't nothing wrong with that. There's nothing wrong with working retail, folding clothes for other people to buy. No, Goodness, you ain't wrong with preparing the food that your neighbors will eat. Speaker1: [00:22:47] I had a nightmare today and it looked like AOC. It looked like a horse faced Puerto Rican. I was wrong, I tell you. And it was googly a dream. Repeat googly. How am I to be judged by the content of this bitch? Now my mind here she is trying to be authentic. Speaker4: [00:23:09] And I say trying because it's cute by saying Puerto Rico in the way that she thinks, you know, she should say it. Speaker10: [00:23:16] Today represents a historic moment. While Puerto Rico is not the United States's only colony, Puerto Rico. Puerto Rico is. Alexandra. Speaker5: [00:23:25] No, no, no. She only pronounced. Speaker1: [00:23:27] Rico like that. She said Puerto Rico. Let's play it again. Puerto, are you right? You're probably. Speaker4: [00:23:32] Right. Let's play it. Speaker10: [00:23:32] Again. Today represents a historic moment. While Puerto Rico is not. Oh, my gosh. Speaker1: [00:23:37] It's good, Candy. Like a West Side story. Well done. I'm saying wonderful time in America. Terrible time in America. Exactly. You forget I'm in America. Just stab him already. Sharks. Sorry. Jets. Exactly. Somebody pull out a gun. Next. Let's watch. Let's watch. Speaker4: [00:23:58] The Jets. Try and pretend to be straight. Speaker1: [00:24:02] She's awful. Speaker5: [00:24:04] I pull my switchblade on you. Speaker4: [00:24:05] See how many people got their asses kicked when they were being mugged because they thought, I'm not going to give. Speaker1: [00:24:10] You my wallet. I've seen how this gang. Speaker4: [00:24:12] Violence plays out. Speaker1: [00:24:13] What do you mean? You're just going to do a muscle up on that pipe? Can we break out in song? Speaker5: [00:24:20] Pirouette pirouetting? A leap? Yes. Speaker1: [00:24:22] Can I get some Officer Krupke in here? That's right. Speaker5: [00:24:24] Yeah. Yeah. All right, Jet, you're the swinging his thing, little boy. You're a man, Little man. You're a king. Yes. How about that? Speaker1: [00:24:31] And then Riff and. Speaker4: [00:24:32] Tony were getting it on at the convenience store. Exactly. Speaker5: [00:24:35] Only if you're smiling. Yes. Looking in the eye. What were you saying about Spanish accents? Here's the thing, though. Speaker4: [00:24:41] So, Brian, she does like you do like the karate thing. Okay. But she's serious. And here she is pronouncing Puerto Rico like the white person or I should say the homegrown American. Yeah, that she is. Speaker10: [00:24:52] Well, I think what happened in my family is what happened to thousands of Puerto Ricans. Speaker1: [00:24:58] But which one? Speaker5: [00:25:00] Which one? Make up your. Speaker1: [00:25:01] Mind. Pick Puerto Elaine, Seabiscuit, Puerto Rico. Speaker5: [00:25:05] Alexandria. Speaker1: [00:25:06] You know how they get her to her interviews? Speaker4: [00:25:08] What's that? They have a little rabbit run up to the camera. Speaker6: [00:25:11] Peanut butter. Speaker4: [00:25:17] It's one of those days. Kamala Harris is another example. So we got Hillary Clinton. We've got AOC code switching. Speaker1: [00:25:24] Yeah. Speaker4: [00:25:25] Just keep in mind, again, they'll attack you if you do a voice, right? You'll have more people upset that I did an impression of Martin Luther King Junior. Poorly. Yes. Here's Harris. That bad, though? Who she's from. She, you know, Jamaican heritage or Indian heritage. Speaker5: [00:25:39] Both grew up more Indian, I believe. Yeah. Yeah. Speaker4: [00:25:42] It depends on who who she's pandering to. Yeah, that's true. So let's just give her both. She went to Westmount. Speaker1: [00:25:47] High School in Montreal. Speaker4: [00:25:48] Kamala Harris? Speaker1: [00:25:49] Yes. Kamala Harris. Anyone? Are you sure about that? Positive. She went to Westmount? Yeah. Ooh, That's a high school in Montreal for sure. That's a Jewish hotbed. It is a it is a big. It's the Highland Park of Montreal. Speaker4: [00:26:02] Yeah, it's very, very wealthy. Is that right? Yeah. Westmount, Montreal. I didn't know she went to Westmount. Montreal. Let's fact check it. Otherwise I get to admonish my dad, which is fine. So here is Kamala Harris, the Jamaican part of Kamala Harris trying to relate to Southern blacks. Speaker11: [00:26:19] We will tell them we were hanging out in a parking lot this particular Saturday afternoon. We're Cumberland, all our friends. Speaker4: [00:26:28] Oh, I loved her in the Klumps. Speaker1: [00:26:29] She's just. Speaker12: [00:26:30] Terrible. Speaker1: [00:26:32] And here she is again. Speaker4: [00:26:33] Remember, we provide all the references. I always say, look, it's important to have contrasts. That's why you have clinical trials, right? You have a control group. So the contrast matters so that you can you can only verify that it's fake if you can verify what is real. And I understand what you're saying. It's tough to verify what's real with any of these people. But here she is switching between accents or affectations three times in under 20 seconds. Wow. Speaker11: [00:26:56] Because as we all know, elections matter. There you go. And when folks vote, they order what they want. And in this case, they got what they asked for. I went off script a little bit. I'm retarded. Speaker4: [00:27:14] And then she said, and. Speaker1: [00:27:15] Dedicate and dedicate a piece of fried chicken. Uh huh. Speaker4: [00:27:20] Chris She went into the difference between black men and N-words, and people were like, Is that Chris Rock? Speaker1: [00:27:23] No. Speaker13: [00:27:24] So we do have an update on Kamala Harris in Montreal. Harris and her sister moved to there with her with their mother there, too. Montreal, Quebec. Speaker4: [00:27:33] Is your throat still shut or is that just more there's more to that. It wasn't just. Speaker5: [00:27:37] Yeah, they. Speaker4: [00:27:37] Were in. Speaker6: [00:27:38] Marla had accepted. Speaker5: [00:27:39] Excuse me. Speaker13: [00:27:39] It's pronounced with McGill University affiliated Jewish General Hospital. Mhm. Speaker1: [00:27:43] Westmount And finally it's Westmount. It's right in there. Yeah. It says city not say Westmount pull it up. Speaker13: [00:27:48] Westmount and finally Westmount High. Speaker6: [00:27:49] School and Westmount High School. Speaker1: [00:27:50] That's the relevant part. The whole point admonish Hootie. Speaker5: [00:27:53] No it's pronounced, it's pronounced Moriah. Speaker4: [00:27:56] It's like, did she go to Westmount? Well, her hobbies are walking on the beach. You have it, says Westmount. Speaker1: [00:28:02] Michael. They didn't highlight it for him, though, so I'm admonishing the researchers. Yes, you're right there. Speaker4: [00:28:08] Pops Crowder, Highlight the Jamaican part. It works better. Yeah. Speaker5: [00:28:11] Mika Yeah, yeah. My roommates in college are Jamaican. Does that count? I was in Jamaica and a guy walked up, I swear to God, and said, You move like a Jamaican. And then I said, Thank you. And I said, I must move like a Jamaican. And then he gave me a joint. I paid him $20 and I smoked that joint. And then I had I, I called the emergency room. I was that high. I'm not I'm not. Well, you might want to see I'm not a smoker. And I was like, oh, I can't feel my feet. And I and I can't feel myself breathing. And then my girlfriend, well, I. Speaker4: [00:28:39] Take back the wisdom comment because you're not a smoker, but you bought a joint for $20 from a strange Jamaican in a bathroom. Speaker5: [00:28:44] I wanted him to like me just because he complimented. Plus, his hands were so strong and dark. Yeah. Sorry. Speaker4: [00:28:50] That's from years of playing Bonefish. Yeah, that's what that's. I went when I went to Guantanamo Bay. That was a big thing. Jamaicans there, they loved it. It was a bonefish thing. One of them stabbed a guy. Speaker5: [00:28:59] Cubans. What? Say bone again? No. Speaker4: [00:29:00] They were Jamaicans in Cuba. In Cuba? Oh, Jamaicans in Cuba. In Guantanamo Bay. A lot of them would work there. And he stabbed the guy who took us out fishing with a bone. No, he. He stabbed him. I mean, he could have. Okay. Speaker5: [00:29:11] If you sharpen a bone anyway, I'm sure you can. Speaker4: [00:29:13] Tim can do that. Now, here is Kamala Harris. Here is Kamala Harris. Even code switching. So we have. Speaker1: [00:29:22] We have three times. Speaker4: [00:29:22] In 20 seconds and now we have her code switching when she's in. Speaker1: [00:29:25] France. Speaker11: [00:29:26] With us in government, we campaign with the plan uppercase T uppercase P, the plan. Speaker4: [00:29:35] I don't know if that's code switching so much as just bombing. Yeah. Yeah. Speaker1: [00:29:39] I was just about to say, every time she does it, it makes her sound worse, which is a feat. Yeah. I'm not sure how you sound worse than you already sound, Kamala, but you did it. Speaker5: [00:29:46] She was wearing a mask. And sometimes you have to read someone's face for comedy. Speaker1: [00:29:50] But the the never goes before a consonant. Nor does an the plan go before anything. But. But a vowel. These people don't speak English either. Speaker6: [00:30:00] I think it's just the benzos. Speaker12: [00:30:01] Yeah, Benzos. Speaker4: [00:30:04] Well, that adrenochrome won't suck itself. I'm joking right now. There's some like. You knew it. Speaker1: [00:30:09] I was thinking it and he. Okay, stop it. Smash the rumble button. By the way, if you're watching right now, head. Speaker4: [00:30:15] On over to Rumble. What are you doing here? Watch on Rumble. I'm really excited to get to the Bud Light segment because that's fun. That's a win. And today, you know, we're all. Speaker1: [00:30:22] In a good mood because you. Speaker4: [00:30:23] Can see the fruits. Speaker1: [00:30:23] Of your labor. Speaker4: [00:30:24] But before we get to that, one more downer, I apologize. Speaker1: [00:30:28] Between the White House Easter egg hunt and. Speaker4: [00:30:31] His trip to Dublin, Ireland, or as Joe Biden pronounces it, Dublin. Speaker1: [00:30:34] Ireland. I'm so glad to be home. I would not Homeland Ireland Fine charms and then Kamala Harris. Speaker4: [00:30:44] Like a child who sees another kid gets a laugh, goes. Speaker1: [00:30:46] Yeah, yeah. I too went to Dublin, Ireland. I've always gone there as a child. What? I lie with you too. I like to lie. It makes me feel big. Any mayor as I can sleep with. Speaker4: [00:31:02] Oh, Willie. Which brings us to this week in Biden. Speaker14: [00:31:05] Did you have a problem figuring out whether you're for me or Trump? Then you ain't black. Speaker1: [00:31:09] Are you saying. Speaker15: [00:31:10] That you would be taking part in our upcoming election in 2020? Speaker14: [00:31:15] I'll either be rolling an egg or, you know, being the, you know, the guy who's pushing them out. Come on, help him. Speaker15: [00:31:21] Help a brother out. Make some news for me. I. Speaker14: [00:31:32] Jose. [00:31:33] Are you kidding me? Just coming out and looking. I guess I finally want to order some. Would you? Whatever you order, I got, I got. Speaker14: [00:31:41] Oh, there's there. Look at this. Air Force One. If you have a problem figuring out whether you're for me or Trump, then you ain't black. Speaker1: [00:31:50] Was that a space shuttle that he was holding up when he said Air Force One? I don't know. But I have a bunch of notes that don't make sense. Meant an old leprechaun. Speaker6: [00:31:56] He doesn't know where he is. He has. Speaker1: [00:31:58] No idea that. Speaker4: [00:31:58] First one I didn't I was listening to I do news briefings where I listen to them and I was even trying to decipher what's he trying to say? Speaker5: [00:32:06] It's worrisome because if he wins the next election, he'll be 86 in office, 86, they. Speaker1: [00:32:11] Won't let him. Well, you know what I think? Speaker4: [00:32:13] Yeah, I think we should. 86. That man's vice president. Speaker5: [00:32:15] Wait a. Speaker1: [00:32:16] Minute. Come on, now. Speaker4: [00:32:18] Come on. Now. Admonish me big. Speaker5: [00:32:22] Words. Hold on, Tim. Speaker6: [00:32:23] Admonish means you and Steven. All right, Monition. Speaker4: [00:32:28] You can admonish us, too, for this this view esque crosstalk today. It's my fault. It's been fun. It's been fun. It's a fun. Speaker1: [00:32:35] Show. Hey, hopefully you guys are okay. This is just this is a more relaxed show today because it's. Speaker4: [00:32:38] A good day as an ice cube or iced tea. I get them confused. I know. Kamala. So today was a good day. That's Ice Cube. Speaker1: [00:32:47] Ice Cube for sure it is. But I'm going with tea. Speaker4: [00:32:49] Ice tea is the one who does the ads for against domestic abuse and carshield. Yeah. Speaker6: [00:32:54] Shield. Yeah. Speaker4: [00:32:55] Which is perfect for him because he was a pimp, right? Speaker1: [00:32:57] So he is the only one who should be. Speaker4: [00:32:59] Able to beat his bitches from his pimp car. Speaker1: [00:33:02] That's right. And not fear an engine going out. Carshield is just. Is your car covered? You mean from. Speaker4: [00:33:07] Theft from people like you? Shut up. Speaker1: [00:33:11] So, Bud Light. Speaker4: [00:33:13] Okay, you guys know about this from earlier this week, but here's kind of the low down and we always want to offer some solutions here at this show because I understand that a lot of you feel helpless. That's so much of the chat that we get. The questions are, Hey, what can I do? There's a lot that you can do. And we are kind of at a good point, I would say, at this moment in history, because there are more local options than ever for almost all of these giant multi conglomerate alternatives. Now, that's not going to change the international markets and the ESG score, But as far as your day to day life, it can affect you zero and you can affect the bottom line of these companies. I will say this. I think that this Budweiser, this Bud Light is going to go down like New Coke and Schlitz for people who don't know. Let's bring that up. The researchers slits. They were the number one beer in the country at one point. A lot of you may not know this. I believe it was the 60 seconds and they changed their formulation to use hot pellets and they lost ground to Budweiser and they never gained it back. I wish Schlitz was available today. Actually, if I'm going to drink one of those, I like Schlitz. Speaker4: [00:34:06] It's not great, but it's passable. Bud Light tastes like Satan's piss. So yeah, I mean, I assume. But here's it shows that boycotts to some degree work. But it's not just about a boycott. There needs to be a cultural movement. Okay? So there needs to be a cultural backlash. And this is just a big swing and a miss from Bud Light. Them being so out of touch creates an opening for all of you. This is one thing that we do sometimes when we'll do, whether it's a change my mind or we'll plan for a segment, we plan an argument or we plan a premise and we go, okay, here's a counter argument, here's a counter argument, and it's sort of like a tree and then branches. And then you realize that there are certain people they're not even past the stump. And that's the executives at Bud Light. That's the executives at Abercrombie and Fitch. Right. They're so out of touch, they can't know that they're out of touch. So this is the theme of this week. Let's give you the then recap. So then last week, Dylan Mulvaney went viral. In case you've forgotten, receiving a Bud Light commemorative can. But then they confirmed that Dylan Mulvaney that he was an ambassador. Here's the clip. Speaker16: [00:35:13] This month I celebrated my day 365 of womanhood and Bud Light sent me possibly the best gift ever a can with my face on it. Speaker4: [00:35:22] Oh, I thought they sent you a gift of psychiatry. Speaker1: [00:35:25] Should have been a urinal cake. Speaker12: [00:35:26] Yes. Speaker6: [00:35:27] It was on April Fools, too. It's like people. Speaker1: [00:35:29] Didn't know if it was real. Yeah. Speaker4: [00:35:31] Alex Jones thinks that Dylan Mulvaney is a troll. So then the. Speaker5: [00:35:35] That's a good that's. That makes sense to me and. Speaker4: [00:35:38] Andy Kaufman. Speaker5: [00:35:38] Thing. Yes. I think Dylan Mulvaney has a great sense of humor. And my guess is this is a person just cashing in, going, let me see how far I can push this. I don't know. But here's the thing. If this was think about if you did this with race, when you're when you're playing at. Right. We don't have to think about it. Speaker1: [00:35:58] We have. Speaker5: [00:35:58] Examples. I mean and I'm and I'm outraged but I'm on the show to to push back But but if you were to do this he's playing womanhood. It's a it's kind of blackface. Yeah. It's kind of blackface for women. It's much. Speaker4: [00:36:15] More absurd. When people came down on Rachel Dolezal, I was saying, look, this is actually far more reasonable than claiming you can change your gender. There are far fewer differences biologically between a black woman and a white woman than a woman, black or white and a man. Correct. And here's the strategy. When you talk, it's relevant. Because the, the marketing executive, I guess VP of marketing, you know whatever made up title they can create so that a woman who's heading up a beer company she has no business heading up can feel important. Her name is Alyssa Hiner. Anyway, here is. Speaker1: [00:36:44] I tried to. Speaker4: [00:36:45] Stop with the code switching. We moved on. That sounds like. Speaker1: [00:36:48] A brew making family. Speaker4: [00:36:49] Yeah. This was the explanation for the Dylan Mulvaney decision. And it's relevant because that'll take us to now. Speaker17: [00:36:55] You've got to see people who reflect you in the work. And we have this hangover. I mean, Bud Light had been kind of a brand of shut up, bratty, kind of out-of-touch humor, and it was really important to touch You. Speaker5: [00:37:12] Had She Knows. Speaker1: [00:37:13] Human. Speaker17: [00:37:13] Beverage. So I had this super clear mandate. It's like we need to evolve and elevate this incredibly iconic brand. And my what I brought to that was a belief in, okay, what is what is evolve and elevate mean? It means inclusivity. It means shifting the tone. It means having a campaign that's truly inclusive and feels lighter and brighter and different and appeals to women and two men. Yeah. Speaker1: [00:37:41] Should include. Speaker4: [00:37:42] Fixing. Split ends out. Speaker12: [00:37:45] Of touch caddy cracks. Speaker1: [00:37:47] And lobsters. Speaker5: [00:37:47] I find. I find her. I find her strangely attractive. I do want to feed her a sugar cane. Speaker1: [00:37:52] You're disgusting. Yes. Salt. A nice salt lick. Speaker5: [00:37:55] What did I say? Speaker1: [00:37:56] Salt. Lick your palm. Because they bite your finger. That's for. Speaker4: [00:37:58] Deer. So I want to represent. Is it? I thought horses got salt. No. Speaker1: [00:38:01] Whatever. Eat your oats. Speaker4: [00:38:03] They do. She just. Speaker5: [00:38:04] Looks like she has a sweet. Speaker4: [00:38:05] Tooth. She looks like if Amanda Peet had welcomed an evil spirit into her. Speaker5: [00:38:10] I am not going to disparage. Speaker4: [00:38:11] Yeah. Yes, you will. We all will. Peer pressure. So there you go. That was the explanation. And then someone said, Yeah, what about beer? She said, beer. So this is what she does. She decides to represent women by putting a man on the can. And I know don't misconstrue what I'm saying. I mean, when I say man, I mean man. Speaker1: [00:38:31] With all the tackle. Speaker12: [00:38:32] I believe in. Speaker1: [00:38:33] You. So that brings us to now. And please, everyone. Speaker4: [00:38:38] Hit the like button right now and celebration, whether you're on YouTube, whether you're on Rumble. Anheuser-busch lost $6 billion in market cap. Wow. Wow. I know you're saying that's not a lot considering it's, what, 136,000 million. Speaker5: [00:38:53] Thank you. I understand that. Speaker4: [00:38:54] I was not actually I didn't do the math, but that is 6000 million. Speaker5: [00:38:58] Let me give you an example. Speaker1: [00:38:59] That makes it sound. Speaker4: [00:38:59] Less impressive. Speaker5: [00:39:00] No, no, no. My wife is dying right now. So 1,000,000 seconds, 1,000,000 seconds, 11 days, 1,000,000,000 seconds. Roughly 33 years. $6 billion. Yeah. So that's insane. Speaker1: [00:39:13] Can I have a gun? Speaker5: [00:39:14] Yes. Yeah, That's a lot for yourself. Speaker4: [00:39:16] Yes, for yourself. Just to be clear. And he means figuratively. Yeah. Speaker5: [00:39:20] I just code switched to a mathematician. Yeah. Speaker1: [00:39:22] To an Asian. That's what I was. Speaker5: [00:39:24] To an Asian. Oh, that's. This is where I draw the line, guys. No, it's not. All right, fine. Speaker4: [00:39:29] Look behind you. There's the line there it is. Speaker1: [00:39:32] So brave. Mind. Just you walked right into that. Speaker4: [00:39:38] I walked right into it. Speaker5: [00:39:40] Got to be on your feet. On your toes. Speaker1: [00:39:41] The distributors, by the way. Speaker4: [00:39:42] So not just the market cap, but here's part of the trend. Again, the trend line matters matters. You have the distributors in the South and the Midwest right now of Bud Light. They reported dramatically dwindling sales over Easter weekend. There was even a bar in Hell's Kitchen, which is very gay. They saw sales in New York dropped 58%. That's fantastic. Speaker1: [00:40:02] By the way, I love. Speaker4: [00:40:03] Hell's Kitchen is a gay area. Just to be clear, it used to be, you know, the village, then it moved to Chelsea. Then Hell's Kitchen is very largely, you know, practicing homosexual and they don't want your beard. Speaker1: [00:40:10] It's surprising that most people don't celebrate the risen. Speaker18: [00:40:13] Christ with a bud. Speaker12: [00:40:14] Yes. For Easter. Speaker1: [00:40:16] Weekend. Well, that's what they. Speaker4: [00:40:17] Put on the sponge just to mock him. Speaker12: [00:40:18] They did. Oh. Speaker1: [00:40:21] Screw your sins. I'm going home. I'm out. That is. That is it. That is it. Got the crown of thorns. You feeding me, bud? Light on a sponge. What is it? Let's get out of this. All right. Forgive them. They know not what? Not the Bud Light. Not forgive them. I can't forgive that. Yeah, he's just a thief. And the cross like. Well, I. Well, will I be there with you in heaven? What are you saying? I can't think straight. Who makes this? It's terrible. So, by the way, not to be outdone, running interference. This is after the $6 billion loss. Speaker4: [00:40:54] Cnn still ran a story defending the campaign, saying Bud Light's inclusive ad campaigns are good for business. Speaker1: [00:41:01] Experts say, wow, wow, we're the experts. Yeah. Speaker4: [00:41:04] If you don't go by things like sales. Speaker1: [00:41:10] Or market cap. Speaker12: [00:41:13] Yeah, I guess so. Speaker4: [00:41:14] All the investors. Speaker18: [00:41:15] Who just lost a bunch of money are like, Yeah, this is great. Yeah, this. Speaker4: [00:41:18] Is great for us. And here's, you know, this is a this is a smart move when you think about it. It's ignore at least 50% of the country to go after less than half of a percentage point. Because here's something that you need to understand about this. I think it's what they say. 1.6% of the population is transgender, but a huge portion of that huge portion of that, by the way, 1.6%. That's what they say. That's not true. No, it's all people who identify as gender queer and a huge portion that 1 in 5 in Gen Z identify that way. Speaker5: [00:41:44] So it's social contagion. Oh, of course it is. Speaker4: [00:41:46] But my point is, even if you take that number now, subtract the vast majority of whom are Gen Z, who aren't 21, how many transgender 21 year olds would even be interested in drinking Bud Light? It's about six. Speaker1: [00:42:00] Yeah, but you've turned off everyone who goes to NASCAR and bull riding. Speaker4: [00:42:04] And country music. So this will go down as one of the greatest blunders, I think. Oh, my. Speaker5: [00:42:08] God. It's unbelievable. Speaker1: [00:42:09] You wonder if a malcolm Gladwell would write a book about this tipping point for sure. You know, that social contagion idea that this is it would be just. Speaker4: [00:42:17] The tipping point. That's right. Speaker5: [00:42:18] That's right. But people who cut their own hair don't drink Budweiser. Well, it. Speaker18: [00:42:22] Would be cutting off the tipping point. Speaker4: [00:42:24] Yes, it would be cutting off. Speaker1: [00:42:25] But could he even make the case? Would he dare even make the case that this is a trend? Well, they teach Puma. They teach the Schlitz debacle. Speaker4: [00:42:31] They would teach that in business classes in college. So this is. Speaker18: [00:42:33] A major misstep. Like people don't understand something like this can really lead to the downfall because it gives somebody like Yingling an opportunity to kind of step into this space. Right. And say, okay, well, we'll take that market share and then it helps propel them. Speaker1: [00:42:44] Also, by the way, Yuengling. Speaker4: [00:42:45] Return, we've reached out to them for a sponsorship because like you guys wouldn't be able to keep it on the shelves. Speaker5: [00:42:50] The thing is, I worry that people forget. So so with Netflix, with Disney, it actually didn't know it did with Disney, it did for a second. It still is. Is that right? I thought they were back up to. No. Yeah, but that had that had that had to do with other factors I think. No, you're wrong. No, I think it's all you're wrong. Speaker1: [00:43:09] You're incorrect. You're incorrect. Brian, why are you trying to rain on their parade? No, it's. Speaker5: [00:43:12] Down. Where's the line? Speaker4: [00:43:13] It's down. It's down. It's down for Disney. But I do agree with your point because I once had someone in and this is something you've got to get out of the identity politics. People on the right. I was in Michigan. Michigan is one of the best beer states in the country. And I had a guy who well, you know, this this tavern where we would often go and he was kind of like a Trump voting sort of Republican. And I would have a local beer and he would say, I just drink Bud Light. And I said, Why is that? He said, Because that is made by Americans. And I said, in the brewery that's literally four miles down the road isn't because a lot of you have this. Speaker1: [00:43:42] I drive a Ford. Speaker4: [00:43:43] Truck that's actually less made in America than than a lot of Toyota cars, just to be clear. So what you have to stop doing is thinking, okay, identity politics on the right. Like, you know, I drink, I. Speaker1: [00:43:55] Put mustard on my fries. I'm country. Well, he's country. Harley Davidson. No, it's not an American institution. Speaker4: [00:44:01] It's crap, right? It's just it's a it's a rattle. Speaker1: [00:44:04] Box between your legs that you're. Speaker4: [00:44:05] Spending eight times the amount for Bud Light. Sure. They've marketed themselves as an all American company. It's a lie. It's a lie. Just like you see from the left when they try and fake like they're black or Indian or Jamaican or Puerto Rican, whatever it is. But here's the hypocrisy, too. Again, the rule of contrast, that's the theme of today's show then and now, a timeline that's valuable. By the way, call us to the madness. Check out the timeline here. Check out how long we've been doing this show. Check out me with the blue bed sheet. I my growth has been stunted for a very long time. So this executive was busted at frat parties, at frat style parties here. A leaked college photos right now, by the way. And she's even there downing some beers. Unfortunately, it's Rolling Rock. Speaker12: [00:44:49] Oh, God, look what college? Speaker1: [00:44:51] It's college. It's college. And here she is, blowing up condoms. Speaker18: [00:44:55] Well, that's. Speaker4: [00:44:56] Nothing like wishful thinking. Love. Speaker18: [00:44:58] I think they were drinking shots out of condoms. Yes, you would know. Speaker1: [00:45:01] No. Speaker4: [00:45:02] I don't. Speaker12: [00:45:03] I read this story because I. Speaker18: [00:45:05] Can read yakuza. I'm gay. Speaker1: [00:45:07] Yeah, let's go with that. So my question to you is, how many? So as your lips were moving, he hit that that button and it was perfectly. How many drinks. Speaker4: [00:45:15] Would you need to find Alyssa Heinerscheid. Speaker1: [00:45:20] Suitable? And it is free mug club. Speaker4: [00:45:23] Month for another week. A lot of the credit.com slash mug club do again consider joining up because there is no way that we can support ourselves through YouTube. Of course. And here's something though. The solutions here. Look, first, there are a few different layers to this, okay? It doesn't mean you're going to put Budweiser out of business. And by the way, for the record, go check out Anheuser-Busch and their entire catalog. It's not just Bud Light. And that's something like Brian's point. Some people be like, I don't drink Bud Light. And then they go and they drink Corona, whatever it is, they go and drink. I don't know if it's Beck's or all of these brands that they have under their house. You need to be aware of what it is that you are supporting. Look, you need to, okay, not purchase products actively, actively oppose companies who hate everything you stand for, but you need to contrast that by actively supporting companies who actually share your values. And here's the beauty of it. It's never been more easy than today. For example, you'll never see television ratings that use Johnny Carson. We've talked about that, right? The fracturing of viewership, which is why we're so grateful for you tuning in, because people have more choices. You have more choices. It's never been easier to both boycott and boycott if you don't want to drink Bud Light and you want to drink. A watered down macro urine lager. All you need to do is tilt your head slightly, or I guess I should say pan it slightly to the right and grab another case of crap. Or if you want. Speaker1: [00:46:41] To try something better, just go a little bit more to the right and you will have 50 choices. Speaker4: [00:46:47] From local. You have distillers, you have local brewers. And also understand local doesn't necessarily mean you're safe. There are plenty of local woke crap brewers. Just takes a little bit of research. We do this all the time. Even before I buy a. Speaker1: [00:47:00] Product, I'll just look. Speaker4: [00:47:01] Online at about. Speaker1: [00:47:01] Us. I go up Rainbow Flag, Let me go find their alternative. Speaker4: [00:47:05] Just do some research. You can and it starts with your community. It starts with supporting local businesses who aren't beholden to international influence, who aren't concerned about the ESG scores. These issues, these indexes. We should probably do a refresher course on that, maybe next week. It's not about you, the customer. It's about appealing to international investors. It's about mitigating this risk. Here's the thing. At a certain point, though, when they become so unprofitable or irrelevant, guess what? The market might have to correct itself to a degree. We're not going to get back where we were before. But the good news is we don't have to. You can have your own community. There are so many choices out there. I see people going, What. Speaker1: [00:47:44] Are we switching to Coors Light? It's not like it's just Bud Light or Coors Light or Miller Lite, Budweiser. So many options. Speaker18: [00:47:51] And it's not like you have to sacrifice a ton of quality either. In this case, it actually be better. Speaker1: [00:47:54] You can upgrade. Speaker18: [00:47:55] Quality. Exactly. I was about to say local breweries are everywhere. Yes. Speaker5: [00:47:59] And I think that these corporations there's this idea that these they're these powerful monoliths and they are. But they're not principled. Right. And they do respond to the bottom line. And you can have a huge effect. Yeah, you can. Yeah. And it can last. But you've got to like to your point, you better you've got to educate yourself. We are no longer at a point, in my opinion, where you can afford to be politically ignorant and, and politically non-committed because if you are, you're part of the problem. And that's just a fact. Speaker4: [00:48:30] No, I agree with you. It used to be like, you know what, I don't go into politics at all. And I don't know. There's a cock on my can, right? Speaker5: [00:48:35] Yeah. And how'd that work out in the 20th century, by the way, when you were like, I'm not into politics. It's every. Speaker4: [00:48:41] Inch. It's every single inch that you have to fight for. And that's why we're happy to have people like you. We're happy to have people like Nick DiPaolo here. We're happy to be bringing on other people who are actually risking something, not people who are just making money off of you as conservatives, but people who have been in this industry for a long time. Yeah, you will get blacklisted. Yes. Your career will suffer as a result and we want to be able to have your back. But you cannot afford to just ignore politics. It doesn't mean that you have to follow it every second of the day. That's why we try and offer you this show. What you do is you have an hour and a half to two hours where you can tune in every day, Monday through. Speaker1: [00:49:09] Friday, 10 a.m. Eastern. And then we make the references available. Speaker4: [00:49:12] So you can. Speaker1: [00:49:13] You can. Speaker4: [00:49:15] You can go as deep as you want in studying these issues. And I encourage you to and I encourage you, LeVar Burton, don't take my word for it. Take the word of this six year old with a pop up book. Speaker1: [00:49:24] But here's the thing. Speaker4: [00:49:27] Bud Light's marketing team is clearly struggling. And, you know, it does seem like some other competitors have picked up the ball. Yeah. Yeah. And they're doing a little bit of in-house production and advertising. It's an opportunity. Speaker5: [00:49:43] Stephen What would. Speaker1: [00:49:44] If your beer tastes like. Speaker5: [00:49:46] Water and has gone. Speaker1: [00:49:47] Completely flaccid, It's mug club time. When your idea of beer after a hard day's work doesn't involve you stealing women's luggage at the airport. It's mug club time when their marketing has hopped from funny frogs. Speaker6: [00:50:04] To disturbed. [00:50:05] Drag queens. Mug up time. Speaker8: [00:50:10] When they tell you with a straight face that Clydesdales are out and stubbled chicks with dicks are in. [00:50:17] Make up time. Speaker8: [00:50:23] If you're over the board. We've got the. Speaker19: [00:50:28] All of that. Speaker4: [00:50:34] Where's my commemorative? I think they hit the. They hit the dump button. Sorry if you're on YouTube, I don't know when we're back, but obviously here on Rumble, you can watch what I'm about to say there. Brian, I'm so. Speaker5: [00:50:42] Sorry I stepped on that. That's okay. Add what was spared, no expense. What would Bud Light have to do to get back into your good graces? Speaker18: [00:50:51] Seppuku, Make good beer? I don't know, Seppuku. Speaker4: [00:50:54] I didn't have to think about it. Speaker5: [00:50:55] All right, Well, that's. That's about it. Pronounced seppuku. They can't. That's the problem. I mean, if you were. But if you were a. Speaker4: [00:51:01] Some of their spokespeople. What? Yeah. Speaker5: [00:51:04] But there should be. There should be a path to Stephen. Speaker18: [00:51:07] The odds are in your favor on that one. Don't worry. Speaker1: [00:51:11] Help me, Brian. Wait. Speaker5: [00:51:13] I couldn't. I lost my train of thought. Speaker1: [00:51:14] Oh, well, so did I. The answer. Thank God we hit the YouTube dump. Nothing that they can do. Speaker18: [00:51:19] They pandered. They went the wrong direction. If they come back, it's only because it financially hurts, not because they actually changed their mind and saw the error of their ways. So. No, no, you're done. That's it. I was never a Bud Light guy. Speaker1: [00:51:29] That's it. You put a chick with a dick on your can, you lose, You get nothing. You lose, you lose nothing. No, no, no. Chicks with dicks on cans. No Dylan Mulvaney. Speaker18: [00:51:42] That's where your line is. Speaker5: [00:51:45] That's where your line is. Speaker1: [00:51:47] Let's go to black maternal health. Okay. Oh, boy. What could go wrong there? So yesterday. Speaker4: [00:51:58] The columnist, by the way, Carrie Sheffield, really took it to Joy Reid on Joy Reid's show. She still has one, surprisingly, and gave her a history lesson. And by the way, we've actually done a video on this on Margaret Sanger and written articles at Laterwith Credit.com. So we'll probably have the link somewhere where you can click it more in depth. I highly recommend that you learn about the roots of Planned Parenthood, but Carrie Sheffield actually educated Joy Reid, who you would think would know the roots of an intensely racist organization, considering how obsessed she is with, you know, fictional racism. So they discussed the roots of abortion. Speaker10: [00:52:33] I believe in human rights to me, abortion is as evil as slavery. It truly is. And when you look at the founding of Planned Parenthood and who Margaret Sanger was, you look at her research, she was a woman who believed in eugenics. She was a woman who believed in the purification of the race. And she didn't want certain women to reproduce. But I find that legacy to be deeply problematic and from a just a scientific standpoint. Speaker17: [00:52:56] But the vast majority. Speaker20: [00:52:56] Of women are not eugenicists. Most people don't even know who Margaret Sanger is. Most women just want control of their own bodies. Speaker4: [00:53:03] First off, why is she wearing a sea urchin. Speaker1: [00:53:05] On her head? Speaker4: [00:53:07] No, wait. Actually, who wore it better? Joy Reid or me as Thom Yorke, actually. But don't you love the little argument she makes? Most women are not eugenicists. Speaker1: [00:53:17] Sure. But you believe that people. Speaker4: [00:53:20] Who, by the way, are descendants from free non slave states who never had slaveholders in their past, owe reparations. We're only talking about a couple of generations removed where this was a proactive eugenics approach. Speaker1: [00:53:33] Yeah, but most women aren't that well, I'm not a slave owner bitch. Speaker18: [00:53:37] No, and I don't understand it. But the Democrats went from safe, legal and rare. That was the the rare part up front. You guys never thought this. Even you never thought that this should be as widespread as it is right now, especially when it was she said certain women not reproducing it was imbeciles, but mostly black people. That's why they put the clinics in black communities so that they could make sure that there were less black babies so that they would have less black people in the country because she was a racist. Yep. Speaker5: [00:54:01] There goes all those votes. Speaker4: [00:54:03] Well, it doesn't matter because they they're building the world in their image. Think about it. You control population, you destroy the family, and then you create you sow division. I mean, this is the playbook. This is this is the fascist playbook, by the way, fascism, a distinctly extreme left ideology, if you guys actually want to understand, because it's consolidated power to the government. Speaker5: [00:54:22] But Monday sorry to interrupt, but it's also important, a history lesson with the Communist revolution, the Bolshevik Revolution. The idea was that the state would raise your child, that, you know, it was a very bourgeois to have parents, a mother, raise her child. You can see your kids. But let the state because we have experts who know how to raise your child. So there was an attack on the nuclear family. Yep. And that was that was central to Marxist thinking. Speaker4: [00:54:45] And it's and it's it's also sort of exemplified by it takes a village. It's like, well, no, hang on a second. A village helps. Yes, village helps. It's good to have a community. The community is that you've proactively sought to destroy. But it takes a family and you don't want that to be a component. And it's incredibly important. That's why, by the way, that's why we have marriage laws. That's why we have tax incentives on the books, because our founding fathers said before there was any kind of federal governance, before state governance, before even municipal governance, there needs to be self-governance. And that can only take place with strong families. But not to understand this. On Monday, former Vice President Joe Biden said April 11th through April 17th is Black Maternal Health Week, whatever. Speaker5: [00:55:23] So the black maternal health that week is the week I celebrate white paternal wealth week. Speaker4: [00:55:32] I was going to say I celebrate white. Speaker1: [00:55:33] Barren womb. So I'm busy. Speaker18: [00:55:35] It's like a Wednesday to a Wednesday, Joe. Why? Yeah, it's like a Tuesday night idea. Speaker5: [00:55:40] Yeah, well, thank God he's on it. Well, black women must feel so safe. And they got a week. By the way, it's only six days. It's not even seven. Yeah, well. Speaker1: [00:55:48] What happened to Sunday? You gave them the leap year of weeks, Biden. I mean. Speaker18: [00:55:52] You're no math. Asian. That is seven days. Speaker5: [00:55:53] All right? Whatever. You and your Spanish accents and your math. Speaker1: [00:55:56] Hey, you started this crap with your grammar. So Biden called upon Americans. Speaker4: [00:56:00] To amplify the voices and experiences. Speaker1: [00:56:02] Of black women. Speaker4: [00:56:03] Families and communities and committing to building a world in which black women do not have to fear for their safety. Hey, how about the black babies who are more likely to be aborted in New York? Right? The most dangerous place for them to be is in their mothers womb. So there, by the way, about 20 million black people who won't be celebrating it, just to be clear or anything ever, because 20 million black lives have been ended through abortion, including women and girls, from 2019 to 2020. Abortion rates among black women rose from 386 to 426 per thousand live births, and experts say it would have been even higher if R Kelly wasn't convicted. Speaker5: [00:56:43] I need see that on that. I'm sorry. Yeah. Speaker1: [00:56:45] I don't have it. Speaker5: [00:56:46] Is where I draw the. Speaker1: [00:56:46] Line. Well, get a six year. Speaker4: [00:56:48] Old with a pop up. But you don't have to take my word for it. Okay. Speaker1: [00:56:50] Sorry. Reading Rainbow. Speaker4: [00:56:55] Planned Parenthood is the worst thing to happen to black babies since Madonna. Let's just be clear about that. And we all want to sit here and act like. Speaker1: [00:57:02] Oh, yeah, black women, they don't care about you understand it? They don't. They only use you when convenient. And people say, this is race. No, they fake your voice. And I mean, they fake black voice. They think you'll actually buy it. By maternal health, they mean killing your babies. Speaker4: [00:57:17] It's genocide. It was set up. Speaker1: [00:57:18] As a genocidal organization, to. Speaker4: [00:57:20] Be clear. Speaker1: [00:57:21] And it was done through subversive methods. Speaker4: [00:57:24] And by the way, this also brings us into something that a lot of you may have a tough time navigating. I don't want to spend too much time on this, but you've probably heard about the abortion pill, right? Being outlawed. And then is it outlawed or is it not? So last night there was a federal appeals court. They ruled that this abortion pill, mifepristone, could remain available. I believe it was a court that sort of blocked the block from Texas. To be clear, it just can't be sent in the mail. The decision overruled. Yeah. Northern District of Texas judge who last week said that the Food and Drug Administration's approval, Bill Preston in 2000 was not valid. In essence, he was saying that the drug should be pulled from the market. So it was about a safety issue, which we know the left doesn't care about as it relates to drugs. See the mRNA injection. But just to be clear, the abortion pill that we're talking about here is not the same as Plan B. I just want to be clear, because that's what the left tries to say, where it's like the morning after pill. And then they they try and extrapolate from that. They go, they want to ban all contraception. Speaker1: [00:58:16] They want to make it so you can't get a 25 cent rubber at a truck stop. No, there actually are safety issues. And again, the law of. Speaker4: [00:58:22] Contrast, the way that it. Speaker1: [00:58:23] Went through the process. Speaker4: [00:58:24] With the FDA. Well, here's a perfect example. In your lifetime. Okay. Have you witnessed and I would like for you to comment below an FDA process that resembled the mRNA injection. Right. Or was that abnormal? Okay. This is another example of an anomaly. If you do your research on it and we'll probably do more of a deep dive next week. But just don't be confused and let them conflate the two. They're not the same thing whether you agree with either or not. Speaker18: [00:58:48] Yeah, absolutely. I can't remember what state it was. Maybe the researchers can get it. For us. It was either it was one of the West Coast states, bought a bunch of it. Right. To make sure that it was going to be available for their citizens and people could come and get it from them. I'm like, Oh, that's that's what you should be spending your money on. By the way, no matter what state it was, Washington, Oregon or California, they have better things to do with the money. Trust me. We've we've seen what those states look like and what those policies lead to. So but they're making sure that that kind of stat that we showed from New York. That's heartbreaking. Speaker1: [00:59:17] Right? Oh, they're talking. Speaker4: [00:59:18] About it on CNN right now. Let's see if they conflate the two right now on CNN. Speaker1: [00:59:20] Nothing up our sleeve. That's 23 years. Speaker4: [00:59:23] And we should also. Speaker1: [00:59:24] Note that that's as a result of the FDA approval, the Federal Drug Administration, that is the entity that really examines whether or not something should be brought to market in making that assessment, they found the FDA did that it was perfectly fine and proper wrong. Now we have a district court judge, the lower court judge. But here's the thing. Not so explain. Speaker4: [00:59:42] As we just did, explain why some people may not agree with you and then address the argument. Instead, they just go, the FDA said it's fine. Sure. We've already heard that. There are some people saying the process wasn't as valid as other FDA processes. They don't even address it. They're going with talking point number one. Speaker18: [00:59:57] Of course they are. And by the way, you want to you want to just kind of appeal to the authority of the FDA. Right. That that argument. We'll pull some examples of some of the things that the FDA has approved that, you know, maybe they would want that one back. Speaker1: [01:00:08] Right. And by the. Speaker4: [01:00:08] Way, I also understand that the problem is some drugs that would help. You are not approved by the FDA. They're sitting on the shelf because they might cause tummy discomfort. I think that you should be able to use experimental medication if you understand the risks and you you make that decision for yourself. I don't think that there should be some bureaucratic organization that beyond the basic realms of safety, should prevent you from access to to some health care out there. This is not that when we're talking. About, especially something that in some instances is taxpayer funded. So you can't have it both ways when you have the left for years, remember, it was all it was all the patchouli wearing granola hippies saying. Speaker1: [01:00:43] Oh, man, big pharma, I wish that I loved. Speaker4: [01:00:46] Anything as much as the Democrat Party loves Big Pharma these days, anything. Speaker18: [01:00:50] Seems they have changed their ways. Speaker1: [01:00:51] Just so I can feel alive. Speaker18: [01:00:54] That's cutting. Speaker4: [01:00:55] They. Yes, yes, that's true. But the hot topic. Speaker1: [01:00:58] Let's see what else he's saying here. Speaker4: [01:00:59] And we're going to be continuing on Rumble. Speaker1: [01:01:00] Not on YouTube. Speaker4: [01:01:01] As we do some stuff. But I want to see what they're saying. Speaker1: [01:01:03] And you get that uniformity right. Everyone wants you need consistency in life. You need to know what the rules are, what the benchmarks are, what's happening next. And so I think when you have this level of consistency, like male. Speaker4: [01:01:14] Female, fifth. Speaker1: [01:01:15] Circuit Court, you need the Supreme Court to interpret that. It doesn't mean their interpretation is going to get any better. It's very conservative. Right. Six justices, conservative, do not. Did you hear what he just said? It doesn't get any better. It's still very. Speaker4: [01:01:27] Conservative. Speaker1: [01:01:28] That right there just showed you he fancies himself an objective journalist. Speaker4: [01:01:31] Right now, the Supreme Court. Here's what he just said. The Supreme Court is bad because it represents half the country that I disagree with. Speaker8: [01:01:38] The most trusted name in news. Speaker1: [01:01:41] Yes. Better is a is a qualitative term. Yes. Speaker18: [01:01:44] Right. Well, they're conservative, That's why. I'm sorry. Why would that matter? Because the other ones are liberal, by your definition. You're splitting it. So there is a liberal. So it's just who you agree with. Exactly. The actual law or the actual process. By the way, it's California to have secured because California doesn't have other problems. Yeah, they don't. Speaker4: [01:02:00] Have a $20 billion deficit. Speaker18: [01:02:02] They don't. They need. Speaker4: [01:02:02] To buy a bunch of pussy pills. Speaker18: [01:02:04] 250,000 pills. And they're negotiating for up to 2 million more because people need to be able to kill their babies. Speaker5: [01:02:11] Babies in California is there there's a difference between the abortion pill and Plan B? Speaker4: [01:02:16] Yeah, there's a morning after pill. And again, you do have some people who disagree with they say actually, it kind of it can disrupt the uterine, kind of like some people talk about IUDs. It can actually irritate the uterine wall post post fertilization. Yeah. But still, the plan B is not the same as actually like the abortion pill, which basically dissolves what is already existing there. And I just say it because it's not No. One. And I understand that there are arguments to be made on that on that topic. That's not what I'm doing right now. What I'm telling you is that is not even on the table. What we are talking about is the abortion pill, which can be taken a significantly later amount of time that no one disagrees. Right on the right or left is in fact, an abortion. Speaker1: [01:02:51] So they don't care anyway, right? They don't care. Anyway, here's if I am let me just leave you with this, okay? Speaker4: [01:02:57] And please do. We're going to go to to to mug club here. And we have cases gag reflex and chat Thursday and there's a lot of chat regarding perhaps sitting down with the some people say former president some people say sitting president Donald Trump. I say sitting president. Okay. We'll be talking about that in chat Thursday. But while we're discussing abortion here, you know, I don't know. I don't even know why I want to go into this. I don't even know if we have time. We've already gone over time. What do you think? Speaker1: [01:03:21] Piss off. Tell him to piss off. Yeah, You know what? I just. I'm so glad we have the YouTube. Speaker4: [01:03:26] Dump button, but it's free. Mug Club month. I'm going to continue this here right now on Rumble. If you're on YouTube, what the hell are you doing here? Just help the algorithm if you want. I don't care. Whatever. Head on over to rumble. We're going to continue for another 45 minutes here with stuff that we can never say on YouTube. Speaker18: [01:04:14] Jello. Okay. I am not gay. Yes, you. Speaker12: [01:04:25] Are. Now that I have the floor. Speaker18: [01:04:27] I'm absolutely not gay. All right. I think one of the one of the research people have brought in the overlay. One third, I think if you want to bring that up for us, hoodie, I think it was one third of the FDA approved drugs had complications or issues. Let's see, had safety problems after FDA approval. We'll get you the most egregious case. That's just one specific example, but a third that's a pretty high number to be pointing to them and saying, well, the FDA said it was just fine. It must be A-okay for everybody. I don't I don't think people have a hard time believing that we shouldn't be trusting of our institutions when they have records like that. Right. 33% of the time they're going to be absolutely wrong. And by the way, this is not some like little detail wrong. It's potentially having bad health outcomes for people, meaning death potentially as one of those side effects. As a side effect, you may no longer be able to breathe. Right. That's not a little side effect for these guys to have. They need to have either. Well, no, but look, when you talk about failure rates on critical infrastructure, airplanes, medicine, engineering, stuff like that, you're talking about like infinitesimally small numbers of failures per 1000 per million, however you want to do it, 33% have problems. Yeah. In no industry in the. Speaker1: [01:05:38] That's all you do. Speaker4: [01:05:39] Is bitch, bitch, bitch. Gerald needing all of his air. Speaker1: [01:05:42] No, listen, I'm just saying, weathermen. Speaker18: [01:05:44] Get it right. More than that. Speaker5: [01:05:45] I'm like, you guys talking about abortion again? No. Speaker4: [01:05:48] No. Weather. Speaker1: [01:05:49] Weather. Men, weathermen. People use your. You use your weatherman multi-tool. Oh, my. Speaker18: [01:05:55] Gosh. I'm not a boob guy. Speaker1: [01:05:59] What I love is when Brian. Speaker4: [01:06:00] Sits there, he has no idea what you're saying. Versus yakuza. What? The soundboard. Speaker1: [01:06:03] Did Gerald just say that? No, What I was going to say. And we're going to be. Speaker4: [01:06:07] Testing Yakuza gag reflex here in a minute, but with abortion, people will say, Oh, it's. And Brian and I were talking about this before. I don't want to spend too much time on it, but people will say, oh, it's a losing issue if Republicans and I do look politically okay, there's some truth to that where you, the left, can gain some ground because they can paint the right as extremist. But if I am Ron DeSantis or I am Donald Trump running for president, or if I'm advising them when they say. Speaker1: [01:06:30] Well, the Republican. Speaker4: [01:06:31] Party wants to take away women's rights and their extreme, here's what you do. You turn right to them and say, well, look, I understand that it's been tossed back to the states, and states have the right to make their own laws, regardless of where I line up on abortion on a federal level. But I certainly do think that something like a heartbeat or whatever their belief is, I can't speak for them. They can educate the audience. They can, of course, inform people as to what their position is. For me, let's say I say conception, I say fertilization. They can use whatever term heartbeat. That's what I believe after that, or certainly when the baby would be viable, certainly not third trimester. Let me ask you, since you say I'm an extremist and I've already made exceptions for rape and incest because both candidates have, where would you put a limit on abortion? Right. That's my position. I believe yours is more extreme than mine, Mr. Biden or Kamala Harris, whoever it is, probably former Vice President Biden. And then get into specifics. Would you limit it at the second trimester? Trimester? They're not going to give you an answer. I guarantee you this. I bet my life on it. Would you limit it at the third? Would you limit it after it has a central nervous system and can feel pain? How about eyes, fingers, toes? How about its own separate functioning organs at that point? Hey, hold on a second. How about eight and a half months? How about nine months? And what you do is you do a few good men where you don't let them off. At that point, you make them MODERATOR tell you that you're breaking the rules where you go, I. Speaker1: [01:07:49] Want to hear a limit, sir. I want to hear a limit. I want to hear eight and a half months. Nine months. Are you saying are you saying that they should be able to have an abortion up until and including birth? Do you agree with the governor of Virginia? Do you agree with the policy in Colorado and in California, nine months right now you can abort a baby that survived an abortion in Virginia. Do you agree with that, sir? I want to. And and then when they say enough, you say I'm going to take that as a yes. And you write down on your notepad like you just messed him up. Red. That's good. You wear the championship belt like you want it anyway, and everyone. Speaker4: [01:08:18] Goes, Holy shit. Speaker1: [01:08:18] That's pretty extreme. People are getting abortions up. Until nine months. Speaker4: [01:08:22] Yes, they are. Oh, it's a very small percentage of it. Still. Many, many. Speaker1: [01:08:25] Thousands per year. No one doubts that that's murder. I didn't. Speaker5: [01:08:28] Know that until you just said that clip that I send. Speaker18: [01:08:30] That to every Republican candidate for president. Speaker1: [01:08:32] Yes. Say for. Speaker5: [01:08:34] Real. I'm going to run. Speaker1: [01:08:37] You ordered a late term abortion because that's what Biden told you to do, isn't it? Speaker8: [01:08:42] You can't handle the morning after pill. All right? Speaker12: [01:08:46] It's your voice. Speaker5: [01:08:48] Your voice got very high. I want the back end of that. Speaker4: [01:08:51] No, that was that was it's the same cruise. And then it. Speaker5: [01:08:53] Was for the Nazi. Speaker1: [01:08:54] Guy. No, no, that was nuts. That was Tom Cruise. Speaker4: [01:08:57] You ordered the you ordered the code abortion because that's what Biden ordered you to do. Speaker1: [01:09:00] You can't. Speaker8: [01:09:01] Handle truth. I want Black Women's Health Month. You can't handle their womb. Speaker18: [01:09:07] Can I have it for a week then? Yeah. Speaker6: [01:09:09] Sure. A week? Speaker12: [01:09:11] Fine. We don't care about weeks. Speaker1: [01:09:12] All right. So that's what I would say. Speaker4: [01:09:15] They're going to try and paint you as extremist. The left is the extremist party. Speaker1: [01:09:17] And I mean, go through any. Okay. Speaker4: [01:09:19] We don't believe. Speaker1: [01:09:20] That. Let's just. We've done this before. What's the party of extremism? We did it on taxes. Right. When people say, oh, they've gone so far, actually, the right has gone somewhat left and the left has gone far left. Speaker4: [01:09:30] The extremist view is. Speaker1: [01:09:31] That I don't think that biological. Speaker4: [01:09:32] Men should be able to compete. Speaker1: [01:09:34] With the extremist view is that I don't believe. Speaker4: [01:09:36] That castrating. Speaker1: [01:09:37] Whether physically or. Speaker4: [01:09:38] Chemically, young boys as young as six years old is, I believe that that's the extremist view. Whereas you. Speaker1: [01:09:45] Believe that. Speaker4: [01:09:45] Children should. Speaker1: [01:09:47] Be able to. Speaker4: [01:09:47] Be removed. Speaker1: [01:09:48] From their household with their family if they don't put them on puberty blockers. I'm the extremist here. What happened to L.J.? Hold on a. Speaker4: [01:09:55] Second. I'm the extremist. Speaker1: [01:09:56] Because I don't believe in aborting up until and including birth period, taxpayer funded. I'm the extremist. I just want to be clear here. I'm the extremist. I'm the extremist because I believe we should put the money into our own, or at least not tax people and provide school choices for inner city children rather than committing over $100 billion to a war that will bear. Speaker4: [01:10:17] No fruits for the United States halfway. Speaker1: [01:10:19] Across the world in Ukraine, I'm the extremist. Hey, where's CodePink? Where's the antiwar CodePink? Anyone here? Why are they not protesting you? I just want to make sure that I'm. That I understand. I'm the extremist. I'm the extremist because I believe that taxes should be reasonable. And I believe that. Speaker4: [01:10:32] Children should be kept safe. And I believe children can't make decisions regarding. Speaker1: [01:10:36] Their own. Speaker4: [01:10:36] Sexual. Well, I shouldn't say sexual orientation because you've changed that term. Right. You now say it's a choice. I should be able to choose their gender. I don't believe that children who cannot drive, who cannot drink alcohol, who cannot join the military. Speaker1: [01:10:45] Should be. Speaker4: [01:10:46] Able to change their gender. Speaker1: [01:10:49] I'm I just want to make sure that I understand where we're here. I'm the extremist. Speaker4: [01:10:52] I don't. Speaker1: [01:10:52] Just mean being bombastic. Speaker4: [01:10:54] Which. Speaker1: [01:10:54] I know Donald Trump can do. He was the. Speaker4: [01:10:56] Closest to this. I mean. Speaker1: [01:10:57] If Donald Trump. Speaker4: [01:10:59] Or if Ron DeSantis, whoever it is, and I like both guys, if they could combine balls with lasering in on a. Speaker1: [01:11:06] Point and I know I'm Monday morning. Speaker4: [01:11:07] Quarterbacking this but guess. Speaker1: [01:11:08] What I've been I've been in similar. Speaker4: [01:11:11] Arenas quite a bit so I'm not just totally. Speaker1: [01:11:13] Speaking out of turn sitting. Speaker4: [01:11:15] Down where it's anyone who's willing to to yell, scream, throw shit at you for a change my mind for four hours at a time. I certainly think that qualifies. Speaker1: [01:11:22] Charles I just wonder. And we've been around Pops Crowder. You know this. How many times have we had politicians in here and we say, okay. Speaker4: [01:11:28] Look, just be yourself or Hey, I want to. And then there are people going, No, no, no, they can't. They can't do that. They can't talk about this. Speaker1: [01:11:33] We can't let them talk about this. Speaker4: [01:11:34] You wonder. Speaker1: [01:11:35] Why. Speaker4: [01:11:36] The Republican Party doesn't represent you. Think about it for us. Lindsey Graham, Mitch McConnell, these are always your choices. Speaker1: [01:11:43] Don't you sit and watch these debates? Am I the only one? Am I the only one who sits and watches these debates and I go, why don't you bring up the abortion up to nine months that he supports? Right. Why don't you bring up the cutting off young boys penises? How do you do you think the do you think the guy who would say, I don't think six year olds should be able to have their cock cut. Speaker4: [01:12:03] Off by a. Speaker1: [01:12:03] Doctor? You think that torpedoes a campaign? That's an extreme example. I think that would give him a boost. That's just my opinion. Maybe for you because you're taking control. I think you use the word cock. Speaker5: [01:12:12] Yes. You're using the word you're using you're taking control of the narrative the way you're speaking right now. You're telling a story. First of all, it's a true story. And second of all, there's passion behind it. And I think the left has done a really good job of taking control of the narrative and appealing to with emotion, with humor, with satire. And as far as I can tell, you're the only person on the right doing that, man. You just are. As far as using humor and action, you're doing it. You're doing doing the best I can. Speaker4: [01:12:42] No, you are doing it. You are doing it. But I appreciate the comment, but you are doing it. That's what I love about you, about Nick Gerard. Speaker1: [01:12:48] Look, I'm surrounded. Speaker4: [01:12:49] By people who I trust. And you know what? Speaker1: [01:12:51] Every single person running for office. Speaker4: [01:12:52] Should have this kind of a surrounding. Yes. Just to be clear. Speaker1: [01:12:55] Do you think genuine question. You think someone would get in trouble if they're running for office and, you. Speaker4: [01:13:00] Know, you here's what you do is it's you pattern disrupt. I talk about this. It's just like infighting, right? Speaker1: [01:13:05] Boom. You lay it on fast and then they go, wait a. Speaker4: [01:13:06] Second, there's a lull. He's slow. They don't know how to gauge you. You let them, okay? You lull them into. Okay, so we're talking about children and gender affirming care. And you go back and forth, you provide your facts. Does anyone actually think that if someone at one of these national debates turned to the camera and said this, that they would get in trouble if they said, well, okay, we can go back and forth on that all you want. But I'll tell you this. We've seen some stories with CPS actually looking to aggressively remove children from their parents households. And of course, that's a matter of policy from your platform. If we don't put them on puberty blockers or sex changes as young as six years old, your own assistant health secretary said that you supported Joe Biden. And as a parent of young children, if someone comes to my house and tries to remove my children because I am not chemically or physically castrating them, I will bury you where you stand. That's right. Yep. You don't think America at. Speaker1: [01:13:54] Home would go, Hey, high five, What are you trying to market to the 1% trannies like the Bud Light bitch? Speaker5: [01:14:00] Less than 1%? Yes, much less 0.01%. It's slim to vanishing. Is he calling for violence? Speaker4: [01:14:06] Well, it depends. Are you showing up at my house trying to take my kids, then castrate. Yeah, yeah, yeah, yeah. Speaker5: [01:14:12] Give my eighth grader a double mastectomy. Yeah. And by the way, these operations, it's very important when you say gender affirming care, you're talking about an operation that will stop that child from ever being able to have an orgasm again. Many of them are adults, okay? Which means you can never share anything intimate with another person. Speaker1: [01:14:28] It's why I. Speaker4: [01:14:29] Guarantee you pedophilia is an X movement because they can't consent to sex, but they can consent to sexual. Speaker5: [01:14:33] Decisions. It's a gender. But let's be honest. You're saying pedophilia. That's a little aggressive. No, no. I'm saying that's the next step. A minor attracted person. Speaker12: [01:14:41] Oh, God. Speaker1: [01:14:42] You walked me right into it. Called a. Speaker4: [01:14:43] Map. Hold on. Speaker5: [01:14:45] Stephen. This is where I draw the line myself. Speaker1: [01:14:48] This is this is the net that he drew. And I. Speaker12: [01:14:52] See that. You see that? Speaker1: [01:14:54] It's. It's Brian's box. Speaker4: [01:14:56] By the way. Speaker5: [01:14:56] That's a good that's a good mind. I'm pretty good with the mine, said Maaso. Speaker1: [01:15:00] You should see me climb a horizontal rope. Speaker5: [01:15:03] I've lived it. Speaker1: [01:15:05] What do you say? They're so good with language, though. You and I talked about gender. Speaker5: [01:15:08] I mean, thanks a lot. That's French. I'm losing my English guys. Speaker12: [01:15:11] That's amazing. Speaker4: [01:15:12] Sorry. No, it's true, though. The language, gender affirming care, women. Speaker1: [01:15:14] Health care act, pro-choice. But to your minor attracted person. Speaker5: [01:15:18] Don't let them soften this. The problem is you can use language to make it seem like it's not as destructive. And before you know it, you are pushed off center and you're living in crazy land. Yep. No. And a big. Speaker4: [01:15:30] Part, Gerald, and I've talked about this is the failure of the church. The failure of the church. Because you can't have one side saying gender affirming care, saying women's health care, saying LGBTQ rights, and then pastors, because we'll get so many pastors. Speaker1: [01:15:43] High profile mental health. Speaker4: [01:15:44] Come up. Yeah. Black Maternal Health Week, you know, come up to us and say, yeah, we watch your show, but you know, I can't share it on my I go, Why not? Because they say a couple of nights, Hey, how about when you were up there on the pew. Speaker1: [01:15:54] You use. Speaker4: [01:15:55] The real language. The only thing that buries the lie effectively is the truth. I'm not asking you to lie. I'm not asking you to. Speaker1: [01:16:02] Use a political. Speaker4: [01:16:03] Hit job. I'm asking you to bury the lies, bury the liar with the truth. It doesn't need to be that hard. Let your freak flag fly. That's what all of us are waiting for. Speaker1: [01:16:13] That's what all of us are waiting for. Speaker4: [01:16:15] You know what else we're waiting for? Go ahead. Speaker18: [01:16:17] Very much so. Waiting for this. Oh, is that what you're. Speaker4: [01:16:19] About to transition to? Speaker6: [01:16:20] Okay. Yeah, because he's telling me I'm. Speaker4: [01:16:21] Going over time. Speaker12: [01:16:22] I'll talk. I'll talk. Speaker5: [01:16:23] Truth all day long. Speaker4: [01:16:24] Guys. So. Yeah, but this is more fun right now. Oh, sorry, Yakuza. Speaker5: [01:16:27] Just rip the Band-Aid pronounced yakuza, but keep going. Speaker4: [01:16:29] Someone corrected me when I said yakuza. They said it was yakuza. Speaker5: [01:16:32] Yakuza? It's yakuza. Samurai and bushido. Yeah. And bullshit. And karate. Speaker4: [01:16:40] How do you pronounce that? Don't you sleep. Speaker8: [01:16:42] With my wife? Speaker1: [01:16:43] That means fake martial arts. Speaker5: [01:16:44] Is that right? Yeah. No, karate. Karate means empty sack of cash. Speaker8: [01:16:49] Empty. Speaker5: [01:16:50] Handed. Yeah. So if you guys know, if I. If my hands are here, we're playing. If I open my hands. Yes, we go. And we just turned it up. Speaker4: [01:16:57] Yeah. Speaker5: [01:16:57] We're about to sizzle. Yeah. Yeah. What are we going sizzle? Speaker1: [01:17:00] This is going business. Gonna pick up shortly. Speaker4: [01:17:03] That's code switching. That's good. Code switch. Oh, you did switch the hands. Just. Speaker5: [01:17:07] And I'm not going to open my hands with any of you guys. No, I like you guys. No, no, I'll keep my hands closed. Hands are for loving. I'm going to work your body. Speaker4: [01:17:13] So Yakuza has. We've noticed this in the office. He has the most fragile gag reflex that we have ever seen in our lives. And I mean basic things, like people here drinking, like milk. Speaker5: [01:17:27] Milk, or he's. Speaker1: [01:17:28] Anticipating the segment and hitting people. Speaker4: [01:17:30] Eating people here, eating bananas. Speaker1: [01:17:34] Stuff eating bananas. Speaker5: [01:17:37] I think it's pronounced bananas. Speaker4: [01:17:38] It could be I don't know. But either way. Speaker5: [01:17:40] Really, you. Speaker1: [01:17:42] Want to. Speaker4: [01:17:43] Go home? Speaker5: [01:17:43] So if I were sorry. Speaker1: [01:17:44] This is very real, Brian. This is very real. Yeah, I know You guys are going to run a stinger. Okay. All right, All right. So I'll explain. So it's time to test. Speaker4: [01:17:52] Casey Yakuza's gag reflex. Speaker12: [01:18:00] That stinger is so much better than yours. Oh, that is so good. Speaker1: [01:18:03] All right, so, yeah, before we get to. Speaker4: [01:18:06] This, explain. When did you realize. Speaker12: [01:18:08] Hold on. Speaker18: [01:18:08] I need to know. Speaker4: [01:18:09] Yes. Do we have a bucket? I have a bucket. All Yes. Right here. It's a When did you realize. When did you realize that Little Mermaid you couldn't stomach? You know, like basic produce? I really. Speaker12: [01:18:19] Don't know. Like, honestly, like, it kind of started here. Like, Johnny boy has just been kind of screwing with me because it just of us as he does kind of happens. He started talking about bananas. I hate bananas because they got hair on them. Like hair on hair on them. What kind of fiber. Speaker5: [01:18:39] Are you talking about? The bananas you find in bath houses. Speaker1: [01:18:41] It's not a it's not a transient. Darwin Fish? Speaker12: [01:18:45] No. On the floor. Speaker1: [01:18:46] In the men's. Speaker12: [01:18:46] Room. Speaker5: [01:18:46] Not not the gloryhole banana. I'm talking about real bananas. Speaker12: [01:18:50] Like an actual banana, like, like when you peel it. Speaker4: [01:18:52] So they've always made you bananas. Speaker12: [01:18:54] Bananas are gross, man. So just to. Speaker4: [01:18:55] Be clear, and we want you to send in your suggestions, we we're not going to be doing anything. Gross This isn't like Fear factor. No, these are common household foodstuffs. Speaker1: [01:19:07] Foodstuffs. Speaker4: [01:19:08] That's yakuza. Speaker1: [01:19:10] Can't handle. Don't you have a weird thing with hot dogs? Speaker12: [01:19:13] Oh. Speaker1: [01:19:16] So we're going to say wiener for Costco does it so well, though? They do. They do. Speaker18: [01:19:21] That. Fantastic. Speaker1: [01:19:22] I love those. Speaker12: [01:19:23] I'm sorry, Keith. Speaker1: [01:19:25] The CEO of Costco. Speaker4: [01:19:26] Is going to change his hot dogs to market to yakuza. Yeah. Speaker12: [01:19:30] Breaking a fever, right? Like I'm going in. Speaker5: [01:19:32] So if you were to nibble, if somebody were to nibble a banana. I'm not saying eating a banana with, like, two bites, which I can do. Speaker12: [01:19:39] I just. We're about to test it. Speaker4: [01:19:41] So, do you have some music? Do we have. Speaker12: [01:19:42] Some? I'll play a little something. Let's do a little elevator music. Put it on low. Speaker4: [01:19:46] So people you can watch. So, Tool Man. Okay, let's. You brought yourself a snack here today? Speaker6: [01:19:50] Yeah. I'm going to do this. Speaker5: [01:19:51] Yeah. Okay. I'm going to get my hand down my pants here. Yeah. Speaker12: [01:19:55] Okay. So we got here. What are you doing? What are you doing? I got this. I got this. All right. Okay. Speaker6: [01:19:59] All right. Speaker4: [01:20:00] So we have. Speaker12: [01:20:01] Instead. Is that a banana? It's a yes, it is. Speaker1: [01:20:03] I believe that it is a banana. Speaker4: [01:20:05] And by the way, none of this I'm just just none of this is rehearsed it. Speaker5: [01:20:08] He looks like he's just he's looking at a guy. He looks like he's looking at a snake. You know, people are afraid of snakes. He's already afraid. Yes. A whole body is rigid. Speaker12: [01:20:17] He's going to peel it. All right. Speaker6: [01:20:18] I got to peel for the other end. Speaker12: [01:20:20] Oh. Speaker4: [01:20:20] You peel it from the bottom. Well, that's weird. That is. Speaker12: [01:20:22] Weird. Speaker4: [01:20:23] From the. That's how you do it. Speaker1: [01:20:24] Yeah. Speaker12: [01:20:24] Okay. Speaker18: [01:20:25] Hey, do you want to. Speaker12: [01:20:27] Look at the tip? Look at the tip. It's got the little fucking. Speaker1: [01:20:32] Is there any hair on it, Kim? Oh, that's a pretty hairy. Speaker6: [01:20:38] Yeah. Oh. Speaker12: [01:20:40] There's a little Red Bull, right? Just. Speaker5: [01:20:41] Oh, did you just. Speaker12: [01:20:42] Throw up a little? Yeah, I just throw up a little bit. Speaker4: [01:20:44] Wow. You actually. Speaker1: [01:20:44] Already did. Yeah, it was. Speaker12: [01:20:45] A little bit. Oh, Jesus. Oh, my God. He put hair on the bun. Speaker1: [01:20:55] He put a strand of banana on organic. Genius. Speaker4: [01:20:59] Genius. Speaker1: [01:21:00] Graham It's called fiber. Speaker8: [01:21:03] That's how we do it in the woods. Oh, God. Speaker1: [01:21:07] All right. We haven't even opened the banana. We haven't even opened this. He's a prepper, Too fucking crying. Speaker6: [01:21:16] Oh. Speaker12: [01:21:17] No. He's going to take the whole thing. He put it in his hands. You're freaking hands, man. Are you going to. Speaker1: [01:21:25] Yeah. Hey, Kim, you know what I think? Let me lick it. I think we have to do some. We have to do some yakuza gang. Speaker4: [01:21:31] Fusion cuisine and put. Speaker1: [01:21:33] I would like to see that banana. Speaker4: [01:21:35] In that bun. I would like you to eat a hot dog. Banana? Oh, God. Speaker6: [01:21:39] I think another shrink for me. Yeah. Speaker1: [01:21:41] Yeah. Well, that's like, you know, it's like. Speaker4: [01:21:42] It's like, could you, John. Speaker5: [01:21:43] Could you take a bite of that? If it was in a bun. Speaker12: [01:21:47] Give me a raise and I'll take a bite of the banana. No, I'm. Speaker1: [01:21:49] Not going to give. I'll give you. I'll give you 50 bucks. I'm thinking about. Speaker4: [01:21:52] Changing the locks on you. Speaker1: [01:21:54] All right? It's making me crazy. His eyes are watering. His eyes are watering. My hands. Speaker12: [01:21:59] Are shaking. Let's go. All right. Speaker1: [01:22:01] Banana, Banana. Speaker12: [01:22:03] Bun. Take a bite. Here we go. Here we go. Fun here. Oh, my. Speaker18: [01:22:06] God. Put a little hair on there, please. Speaker12: [01:22:09] I want a hair. Speaker6: [01:22:11] Which. Which should I take? I don't know which one. Speaker1: [01:22:13] Yakuza. Speaker4: [01:22:14] Whichever one Yakuza doesn't like. Speaker6: [01:22:16] I think it's this one. Yeah. Speaker5: [01:22:17] Take that side. Speaker18: [01:22:18] Face him. Speaker12: [01:22:19] I keep throwing up. Do it. Do it. Speaker1: [01:22:25] All right. Okay. Oh, my God. All right. Okay. He did just. Okay. This has been testing yakuza's gag reflex. Speaker12: [01:22:32] You, Tim. Speaker5: [01:22:33] That's a funny shit I've ever seen in my life. Speaker8: [01:22:43] Do you remember. Speaker1: [01:22:43] Alex Jones with the. Speaker4: [01:22:44] Bumps? Yeah. Speaker1: [01:22:47] He has the same reaction. Man, that wasn't that bad. It was just banana in a bun. But you can eat. Speaker4: [01:22:51] Your real snack. Speaker6: [01:22:52] It's fine. It's fine. It's your. Speaker4: [01:22:53] Real snack. You have a real snack, don't you? Yeah. Let's clear the palette. What do you got there? Speaker12: [01:22:57] Oh, my God. What is that? No, it's just. Speaker4: [01:22:58] It's just. Speaker6: [01:22:59] It's just oatmeal. It's oatmeal. Yeah. Speaker12: [01:23:00] Okay, That's okay. Speaker1: [01:23:01] Yeah. There you go. Take a. Speaker6: [01:23:03] Bite. Sure. Speaker1: [01:23:03] Take a bite. Take a bite. I'm sure he's fine. Yeah, he did it. Speaker4: [01:23:06] Just open. Do you eat oatmeal? Yeah. Speaker1: [01:23:08] Casey Oatmeal? Speaker12: [01:23:09] No, I don't eat oatmeal. Speaker1: [01:23:10] Oh, but it doesn't. It doesn't make you gag. No, not at all. Especially not that that's a ringing endorsement. Speaker4: [01:23:14] Because that. Speaker1: [01:23:15] Oatmeal. Speaker4: [01:23:16] From my patriot supply.com. Speaker1: [01:23:18] So right now. Speaker4: [01:23:18] You you get $200 off a three month bucket of my patriot supply right now if you go to my patriot Supply.com. Is it patriot supply or prep with Crowder. My patriot supply. My patriot. Speaker1: [01:23:27] Supply.com. Speaker4: [01:23:27] I actually eat their oatmeal when I eat oatmeal. It's better than it's fantastic. So look, it doesn't make a yakuza gag. Speaker1: [01:23:33] Nope. It's really good. Speaker4: [01:23:33] And it's really good for 25 years, everyone should have just. It's not about some kind of crazy post-apocalyptic world. I just have food a little less, and I have some water, and I have some kind of a way to generate light and heat. And look, he's totally fine with it. Yeah. Speaker12: [01:23:46] By the way, is loves it. Speaker5: [01:23:48] Three months. That's a three month supply, right? Right there. Yeah. What is it? Dehydrated. And you just add. Speaker4: [01:23:52] Water to it. Yeah. There's like there's a, you know, you have like you have like soup. You have like, you know, pasta. You have oatmeal. Their pudding is really good, actually. Speaker1: [01:23:59] Probably three months for you. Speaker5: [01:24:00] So yeah, the first thing I say when I'm in the wilderness is where's my pudding? Speaker4: [01:24:04] Yes, exactly. Look, in Texas. What's the the little niceties. Speaker18: [01:24:07] They had the ice storm. You had the Montreal ice storm. They had blackouts in different places. So my wife and I actually got this to make sure that if something happened, we have kids. We want to make sure everybody's got some food. And if it goes on. Speaker1: [01:24:17] For and they're actually great. Speaker4: [01:24:17] They showed up to one of my shows in Spokane, Washington, and they were like, Hey, they brought. But they brought me way too much oatmeal. Yeah, like I don't eat that much. Yeah, but they're very nice people. They are nice people. They've had this company for a long time. It stays fresh up for 20 up to 25 years and everyone should have some water. And you know what else is good? Everclear? Nice. I buy Everclear. When people had the whole shortage, I just went straight to the liquor store. I bought as many bottles of Everclear because. Speaker5: [01:24:38] It's a disinfectant. Speaker4: [01:24:39] Well, you actually have to dilute it to be a decent because it's 180, 180 proof, really. So you have to dilute it. But the good thing about Everclear is if you really do get a, you know, crap hits the fan scenario, not only is it something that you can use to turn into hand sanitizer, to turn into disinfectant, to turn into a cleaner, but it's also tradable with the drunks, the marauding drunks. So it's a very tradable. Speaker5: [01:24:58] You're right. You know what's actually, in all seriousness, a great kindling Cheetos. Speaker12: [01:25:02] Yes. Really? Speaker5: [01:25:04] Cheetahs. Are we back? No. Fritos. Speaker4: [01:25:06] Frito Fritos. Well, careful. We don't want because someone out. Speaker1: [01:25:09] Someone out there is in the wilderness are going to bring a bag of Cheetos like Brian. Speaker12: [01:25:12] Freedom. Speaker8: [01:25:14] I almost died because. Speaker5: [01:25:15] Of you, Frito. I'm not sorry. I don't need junk food, guys. I'm so sorry. We can tell. I know your reptilian. It's crazy, right? So see that ribs on me. Speaker18: [01:25:23] Before we go to chat Thursday really quickly. So Vioxx drug was a superior painkiller that the FDA approved. 88,000 Americans had heart attacks. 38,000 died. Geez. Make sure you trust the FDA. I want to make sure we at least got that one good example in there. Yeah, There you go. Speaker4: [01:25:37] We'll do a whole segment about a future segment. We also have a segment next week about PETA. I don't know if you know this. Peta is the single biggest executor of animals in Virginia. Really? Yeah. They actually take animals from people's yards and kill them. That and I know what you're saying. Other shelters do it. No, they do it at like 5 to 10 times the rate. Speaker18: [01:25:52] Oh, hold on. Are they killing the ground owl. Speaker4: [01:25:54] Or if they were killing the ground owl, I would be their spokesperson. You would? Speaker18: [01:25:57] Yes, indeed. Okay. Speaker6: [01:25:59] I thought you were talking about the DEA. Speaker1: [01:26:02] I don't know if people. Speaker4: [01:26:03] Could use a ground for smuggling. Speaker5: [01:26:04] No, science does get it wrong. And it's a process. Lobotomies were something that were done in this country. I'm sorry. Speaker1: [01:26:11] Oh, I thought you were about to say should make a comeback. Speaker4: [01:26:12] Yeah, well. Speaker5: [01:26:13] You meant that as a bad thing. My bad. It scrambles the emotional side of your brain. Yeah, I know a lot of Gen zers. I could use that. You know what I'm saying? They could use a little shock therapy. Yeah, I. Speaker4: [01:26:22] Would like to see half of Gen Z dipped back into water like Shutter Island. Speaker1: [01:26:28] Let's grab. By the way, you're going to be in. Speaker4: [01:26:30] Portland, Portland. Speaker1: [01:26:31] April 20th or 21st. Speaker5: [01:26:33] Brian Cowan. Cowan cowan.com. All my dates. I'm going to watch him one of. Speaker4: [01:26:36] The best out there to go watch a live show. It's a lot of fun and it is time to go now too. And by the way, tomorrow we still have a show right. Speaker1: [01:26:42] Here, but only. Speaker4: [01:26:43] On Mudd Club. A lot of credit.com/mudd Club. You know what? You can explain it through the chat but let's go to chat Thursday Chat. Speaker1: [01:26:52] This. Just so you know, every. Speaker4: [01:26:54] Contract we've ever had, this show is supposed to be an hour and a half. We have never done it once. Speaker12: [01:26:57] No? Nope. Speaker18: [01:26:58] We're supposed to be here a long time ago. In fact, let me let me just take advantage of that really quickly. We have had a bunch of chats. We don't have an overlay for this one, but people asking how to set up a mug club account. So it's very easy. Just follow me. Go to louder with crowder.com/mug club click sign up or sign in. Sorry. It'll take you to a page where you can create a free mug club account. Now once we go off of free Mug club, you won't have access to any premium content. You can still log in there and see a handful of random things, but you're not going to have any access to the shows behind the paywall or anything like that. So if you've had a problem finding out how to get a free mug club account, you don't want to pay right now because you're cheap for another week, it's okay, It's frugal. Speaker4: [01:27:33] Crowd.com/milgrom what you get when you join mug club. Look, it's what supports everything that you've seen here today. The free content doesn't happen without the premium. It doesn't happen without people who support the content. If only 5% of you join up, guess what? It's a walk off. Done. You get the mug. This wonderful girthy hand-etched hand-painted mug. You get this show, you get the Friday show that you don't get anywhere else. You get you get basically twice the amount of this show, at least every single week you get Nick Dipaolo's full show. Speaker1: [01:27:57] In the evenings. Speaker4: [01:27:58] We're producing working on Brian Cowan special. He's going to be bringing a show over. Speaker5: [01:28:01] You see me in the raw. Sometimes you'll see me in the raw. Speaker4: [01:28:04] Is that like Monday night? Speaker5: [01:28:05] It depends. I'll do whatever for attention. I'm a Thursday smackdown guy. Speaker18: [01:28:09] Well, tomorrow's show is Gerald knows geopolitics. Speaker4: [01:28:11] That's right. Speaker18: [01:28:12] We're talking about I talk about that. We talk about kind of international stuff. We won't do it all the time, but when it makes sense, we'll. Speaker1: [01:28:17] Yeah. And you guys can let. Speaker4: [01:28:17] Us know because we've done Gerald. Gerald apologizes. Apologetics. We're we're experimenting with the Friday show, so you figure out exactly what it is that you like most. And yeah, there's a lot of behind the scenes. Yes. Okay. Speaker12: [01:28:31] How could a guy. Speaker1: [01:28:31] That you recovered yakuza, how could a guy that played football at such a high level love soccer, isn't it? Speaker18: [01:28:36] I don't really love it anymore. I just love guys. Speaker4: [01:28:38] I'm irritating us. Hey, can you do me a favor? I'm just so curious. Can you check Yakuza's bucket? Did he actually throw up? Did you actually see him throw up? Speaker6: [01:28:45] Oh, he did. Oh, yeah. Yes, he did. Speaker1: [01:28:49] Julius Green. He really did. Speaker18: [01:28:51] Can we get somebody to come in and get the bucket? It smells. Speaker4: [01:28:53] Yeah, that's not a bad idea. Speaker1: [01:28:55] Yeah. Somebody without a gag reflex come in. Right. Speaker18: [01:28:58] Yes, right. It smells like. Speaker5: [01:28:59] Red Bull and vitriol. The very. Speaker1: [01:29:00] Fetching Riley comes into it smells like it sounds like. Speaker4: [01:29:03] Someone's dad never hugged them enough. Speaker1: [01:29:05] That's throwing off at a banana. Speaker4: [01:29:08] At a banana. Speaker18: [01:29:09] The worst smelling thing in the world. At a banana. Somebody came and literally walking through the parking lot back to the campus, leaned over the bed of my truck and just threw up in the back of my bed. Three days later, I'm assuming because it was like Tuesday when I went out to my car, the worst smelling thing in history. Speaker4: [01:29:25] The worst thing I ever smelled. Remember when I was a kid? You told me that's a dead that's a rotting body. That house in Prattville. Oh, no. Remember they showed us the house? It was this Asian lady realtor who didn't speak English very well. And I was like, I was going, What's that smell? No smell. Speaker1: [01:29:38] No smell. Speaker4: [01:29:38] Just like that just cut me off. I'm like, What's that smell? No smell. Speaker18: [01:29:42] Definitely a smell. Speaker4: [01:29:43] After I was like, Dad, what? He's like, that was a rotting body. Speaker1: [01:29:45] There was clearly a great, great grandma upstairs. And then I. Speaker4: [01:29:48] Only I had never smelled a rat that was rotting flesh. Someone. Don't forget it. No, you don't forget. You don't forget that this. Speaker12: [01:29:53] Is making me gag. Speaker4: [01:29:53] And that was okay. Speaker1: [01:29:54] I'm sorry. Sorry. Let's grab your chats. Go get. Speaker12: [01:29:56] The bucket. Speaker13: [01:29:57] All right. From Crank 218. Question for Stephen. Help me settle a bet. If you had joined the armed forces, which one would you choose? I'd guess Space Force? Speaker4: [01:30:06] Well, you know, I definitely I would be disqualified from ever even trying because of because of my genetic this weird condition that I have where they'd put a pack on me and my spine retardation. Yeah, that too. Speaker5: [01:30:16] Can you not carry a pack? Because I figure you're. I can. It's just a piece on you. Speaker4: [01:30:20] I get joints that just dislocate. So I've had 26 joints pop out, so if I had two, it would be whatever involves the least amount of asymmetrical movement that could separate a joint from the socket. So let's go. My grandfather was in the Air Force. Speaker5: [01:30:34] I don't know. I pegged you as intel with all your accents. What? With all your accents and people skills. I would be. Speaker4: [01:30:41] A great switching. Speaker12: [01:30:42] Right? Yeah. Is he. Speaker1: [01:30:44] From a place for. Speaker5: [01:30:45] That? From blackest. Speaker4: [01:30:46] I take off my Mission Impossible mask while straddling Swalwell. He's like, Ah. Speaker5: [01:30:51] It's incredible. Speaker4: [01:30:52] I thought it was. Speaker1: [01:30:52] An Asian lady. No smell. Speaker8: [01:30:55] The weirdest J-Lo booty. Speaker5: [01:30:57] Too. So I do. If he wore a wig and a penis. Speaker4: [01:31:00] That would have been the weirdest. Speaker1: [01:31:02] Brian But he can talk. Speaker5: [01:31:03] He talks hard. Speaker8: [01:31:04] Yeah. Speaker5: [01:31:05] He can talk. The man can talk. One thing about Stephen when it comes to the mission, he can talk. Yeah, I commit. If he's got to play a lady, he'll talk. I'll talk. Speaker4: [01:31:12] I'll talk. I'll talk. What we about to say there? Speaker1: [01:31:13] I had to talk once. I played Caitlyn Jenner right here in that. Yeah, he. Speaker4: [01:31:16] Did. Is that true? And I didn't really know until I was on air. And I really felt like I had failed my father. Speaker1: [01:31:22] Well, I'm a female. You don't have to. Daniel Day-Lewis. This thing, just. Just get out of character. Speaker18: [01:31:27] You went with the basic instinct instead. Speaker4: [01:31:29] Yeah, exactly. It's crossed his legs. Was it? It was it Halloween? No, it was Dad. Speaker1: [01:31:35] I could see your balls. Speaker4: [01:31:37] I could see. Speaker5: [01:31:37] That baby bird. Speaker8: [01:31:38] Tim, what was the. Speaker12: [01:31:39] Theme of that show? Speaker6: [01:31:40] Cultural appropriation. I think that's right. California again. So he was Jenner. Speaker1: [01:31:43] On the Wheaties box as Bruce Oh, that's right. And I. Speaker4: [01:31:46] Was. Caitlyn Yeah. So we had the different iterations then and now. Yeah, Yeah. What would you what would you have been there? And Gerald, as far as. Speaker1: [01:31:53] I guess the question was just to me, let's grab. Speaker4: [01:31:54] Another chat chat Thursday. We're supposed to rattle through them quickly. What were you going to say? Marines, Air Force. Air Force. Yeah. Yeah. And I get it. I know the requirement is like, get on a recumbent bike, but it's not that. Speaker18: [01:32:03] It's just that being able to cover troops, being able to, like, get there quickly and help and just I've always loved fighter jets. Like it was just I know. Speaker5: [01:32:09] You're a big guy. You play D1 football, you're getting your first through the door. That's it. Yes. You're the guy who breaks the Gerald. Speaker1: [01:32:15] You're actually too tall for fighter jet. Speaker5: [01:32:17] I know. Yeah, I'd say, too Gerald would be the guy. New generations. No, you would be the guy. This isn't Star. Speaker4: [01:32:22] Trek. Speaker12: [01:32:23] No, that's next generation. Speaker18: [01:32:25] No, this is a new generation. Speaker5: [01:32:26] You're a guy who I'd be like, We don't even need any detonation or any Semtex. We just have Gerald run through the door. Call up the battering ram. Speaker4: [01:32:34] I would send you in. Covered in Tannerite. Speaker1: [01:32:36] Oh, let's craft. Speaker12: [01:32:38] One thing. I think. Speaker5: [01:32:41] I'd be covered in oil. Speaker1: [01:32:43] From ivory if we were invading Turkey. Be like he's a wrestler like us. Okay. Peace. All right. Speaker4: [01:32:48] Next. Speaker6: [01:32:49] Check for. Speaker13: [01:32:50] My money question for Yakuza. How picky of an eater were you as a child? Speaker1: [01:32:54] That's a good. Speaker12: [01:32:54] Question. I was. And I ate nothing but crap. I ate pop Tarts and Hot Pockets bananas. I never ate bananas. I didn't start eating fruit until, like my mid 20 seconds. And even then, it's like watermelon, strawberries and grapes. Okay. All right. Speaker1: [01:33:05] Really? Wouldn't you love to see his labs? Speaker4: [01:33:07] Oh, man. Yeah, I know. Speaker1: [01:33:08] They'd just be very disturbed. Speaker4: [01:33:10] Yeah, they would. They would be. Really? Speaker1: [01:33:11] Yeah, It wouldn't be great. Like your blood. Speaker4: [01:33:14] Your blood alcohol content reads more alcohol than blood. Speaker12: [01:33:16] Thank you. It's weird. Yeah. Speaker1: [01:33:19] Literally no solids in this blood. I don't know. Centrifuge it out because you're clearly Caucasian, but you have three varieties. Speaker4: [01:33:25] Of sickle cell, two of which haven't been identified yet. So you weren't a picky eater? No, no, no. That's funny, because I was. It happens when I was little. I always just wanted to meet. Remember, I used to go to McDonald's. Speaker1: [01:33:35] I was like, hey, can I just I was like, Mom. Speaker4: [01:33:37] Do I have to eat the fries? Can I just get more like burger patties? What's your blood test? Oh, wow. That's weird. Speaker5: [01:33:42] Are you. Oh, I don't know. I'm. Oh, apparently they were the original hunters. Really? Yeah. So if you're. Oh, typically red meat does well for you. Oh, isn't that funny? Speaker4: [01:33:50] I don't really understand blood types. I don't know how. Oh, negative works, but what anyone here. Speaker1: [01:33:54] Were you picky eater? I don't think so. No? No. Were you a picky eater? Speaker4: [01:33:57] Yes, you. Speaker5: [01:33:58] Were. I'm still. I'm a finicky eater. Well, you're a. Speaker4: [01:34:00] Finicky eater because. Speaker5: [01:34:01] I'm like a cat. I'm a I'm like a cat person on a wall and just among a bunch of dogs. I don't like getting really gay today. Like, I'm touching my thighs. You guys just. There's so male. You're all so male and dominant. Well, we've already. Speaker1: [01:34:14] We're past. Speaker4: [01:34:15] The code switching, but we're. Speaker1: [01:34:16] Talking in all. Speaker4: [01:34:16] Seriousness, lest we lose fans. Sorry, you don't like cats? Speaker5: [01:34:19] I don't like cats. I do a man cat impersonation, though. Yes. And it's spot on. Oh, see, that's fun. Yeah, because I have a flexible spine. Spine? But cats are not. No, I'm. Speaker4: [01:34:28] Not straight from the pit of hell. Speaker5: [01:34:30] Yeah, they are. I'm not a cat guy. Speaker1: [01:34:32] Were you picky? I think so for a time. But you just weren't. Speaker4: [01:34:36] Exposed to a lot? Probably. No. Speaker1: [01:34:37] It was just, you know, meat and potatoes. Speaker5: [01:34:39] Pop stays in shape. Yeah, he does. I'm very happy with his. His back with and his shoulders. He's gay. Speaker1: [01:34:45] You're happy with that? Very strong. Speaker5: [01:34:47] Thank you. It's gay. Thursday, everybody. Needle dick. Speaker4: [01:34:49] I don't think that's a thing. Speaker1: [01:34:51] Hey. Speaker4: [01:34:52] Black maternity Thursday it this week Or is it next week? It's this week. Nobody cares. Speaker5: [01:34:57] I don't care why. Fraternal wealth Next. Speaker6: [01:35:00] Chat from. Speaker13: [01:35:01] Osama Bon Jovi nine question for the WC crew I am my college Republicans are having a debate against the college communists about limited government versus unlimited government. What are some good arguing points? Hold on. Speaker18: [01:35:12] He said it wrong. You're in college. What's some good argument points? That is not correct. English. Speaker4: [01:35:16] Yeah, exactly. Let's start with that. Honestly, they're actually. They're self-avowed communists. Well, then that's pretty. I wouldn't say easy, but that's relatively straightforward to prepare for. I mean, what you want to do is always combine the empirical with the anecdotal. So what I would say is combine the empirical as far as the track record of communism, right? You can point to anywhere that communism has existed. They can't point to any example that is successful. What they might try and point to communists, what they try and sort of appeal is socialism. And eventually, I don't know if we did a segment on this. I have it written. It's been a long time. They'll try and point to Catalonia right in the mid 30s and they say it's anarcho syndicate socialism. I only bring that up because that's the one thing they may try and point to, which, by the way, was a total, complete, abysmal failure three years before you crumbled under the weight of the Soviets who invaded you like the bitches that you were. So try and find their strongest argument. Point to the empirical. And then of course, anecdotally or I guess I should say, you can substantiate it with the moral reprehensibility of communism. They'll probably try and say, What about roads, right? They'll probably try and say, What about the fire department and understanding the difference between rights and commodities versus goods, you know, non-rivalrous things that are non-excludable those are very important and we've discussed that here on the show. So I would prepare for those because that's going to be their strongest argument. They're probably going to go to. What about roads? What about the fire department? And maybe if you find someone who's kind of at that upper echelon, they'll probably try and point to Catalonia in the 1930s because Orwell wrote about it before. He basically also wrote. Speaker1: [01:36:47] And then find somebody who's smaller than you at the other table, walk over and take their phone. No. And say, What is your concept of personal property? Bring it down. I'm bigger than you and I can hurt you. Your phone now belongs to me. Well, they argue fair that you have a nicer phone. Speaker5: [01:36:59] So I think what you do is you say, look, government, whether you're a communist or you're a Republican, communism, communists will talk about freedom, fairness and things like that. But I think you bring it down to the idea that government, if you believe in government and if you believe in communism, what you need is a government that can socially engineer equality. You've got to socially engineer it. You cannot do that without some kind of enforcement. You have to create this collective mindset. So I think what's important to say is that government does two things typically, and they're both coercive. One is raise taxes. The other is pass laws. For the most part right now, you need laws and you need to raise taxes to an extent. But do you believe government, this large governing, powerful centralized body should engineer equality? Should it be To what degree should it be coercive? Speaker4: [01:37:53] Well, I would say it can only be, by its nature, coercive. Speaker5: [01:37:56] Of course it can. But that's that to me is where you start to argue with, I think, like, how much control do you want an anonymous body to have over you? How much say right do you want in? Who governs you and who governs the governor? Speaker4: [01:38:10] And we've done we've done some change my minds. We've done the socialism one but one that's probably good that would apply here just because of how these transpired sort of organically would be. America is the greatest country ever changed my mind. The Supreme Court one was pretty good because you talked I spoke with people who talked about expanding the court. Right. And when you turn it on them, that okay, so should Donald Trump. If Donald Trump were to win the next election, would you be okay with him expanding the court? The only thing I would say, Pops Crowder, is they now pull this trick where they say they believe in in personal property but not private property. So they draw it at in other words, they don't believe in in being able to in land rights, in in in actual private property rights. They would say that they believe in personal property. But again, what does that mean? Well, what they believe is, for example, this is my notepad or that's my phone. But you don't own that land because that's a common good. But the thing is, if you don't actually have the right to purchase own land, guess what? You don't have the means to create any of these goods and services which would result in personal property. So it's a back door in to get rid of all private and personal property, but just be ready for that kind of wordplay. So I'd reference the America's The Greatest Country Ever changed my mind. The Supreme Court judges one and they're not going to be arguing true communism. Right. But you can bring it back to that. And Marx, they'll probably try and argue sort of some form of socialism, be ready for them to bring up the argument of the Nordic models. Speaker1: [01:39:26] And I would read the book a little, little book, get through it in the day. The Law by Frederic Bastiat Frenchman, written in 1850. What is the law? It's the collective use of force. It's Gulliver's Travels. The little ones collectively get together and tie down the bully. Well, that's that's a great prep book for that. Speaker4: [01:39:43] And it was Jack Black's finest work. Yeah. Speaker18: [01:39:45] One of the one of the great things, if you take the argument that you made just a minute ago where you don't let them off the point and just rattle off the experiments apparently is what they were experiments in communism, not actually pure communism or communism done. Right. Right. Just rattle off the record. Right. How many people how many millions of people died? How the economy. Speaker4: [01:40:03] Define your terms and make them defend their argument and then cut it apart piece by piece. That's kind of the method. That's the template. Define your terms first so that they are talking about communism or are we talking are you now trying to point to any example of communism and socialism? Because then we can expand the term of free enterprise more broadly as well. So we need to define what it is and they will not have the ability to substantiate it. They'll try and get by on word play, so be prepared for that. And we make all those reference and ask. Speaker5: [01:40:28] Them who's in control. Ask them who's in control. There's you're going to replace one hierarchy, a hierarchy of meritocracy and competence with another hierarchy. And that hierarchy is going to be a hierarchy of influence. Somebody has to enforce the the the engineering of equality. Somebody's got to keep somebody down. Somebody's got to keep ambition, or at least somebody's going to be better at the game of capitalism or making wealth. Somebody is going to come up with ideas and you're going to want to buy those ideas or use those ideas. Yeah, I. Speaker4: [01:40:58] Mean, if you buy the idea of putting a trainee on a Bud Light, can you, you know, lose a company $6 billion? Yeah. So, yeah, but we've. Speaker1: [01:41:05] We've got a Judeo-Christian founding that believes man is flawed, that his greed needs to be bridled in power, needs to be bridled in. I think Gerald the communists would believe man is basically good. Right. Except for the point. Well also that you. Speaker5: [01:41:17] You're perfect man. And you can perfect society, right? And when you start talking about purification, purifying society, you start talking about creating a utopia on earth. You'd better be very, very careful, because that always means there's a group of people that are beyond corruption and they need to be removed. Like bad meat. Yeah. See? Stalin, Pol Pot. Mao Zedong. Mao Zedong. Yeah. See that? See you the way I got it right? Did he know? And. And Joseph Stalin. Yep. And he has that. Speaker1: [01:41:43] I mean. Speaker4: [01:41:44] Any example of companies can also go you can go to you can go to Castro, you can go to Guevara, you can go to Castro anywhere that it has been tried. That's why they'll go to Catalonia or by the way, they'll try and point to the Nordic models. And what's so interesting, they'll say, oh, they have a longer life expectancy. Oh, they have a higher standard of living. And this is an argument that I brought I brought up a long time ago, and I'm glad to see other people using it. That is true. But you're talking about countries that have the population of Rhode Island and are entirely homogeneous. Also, they actually created their wealth under a free market economy. Finally, the references that I've made available to you is Danish Americans have a standard of living and life expectancy. That is, I don't have the numbers in front of me. I believe it's 54% higher than the Danish living in Denmark. Swedish Americans have a standard of living that is higher than Swedes and Sweden, because if you take the culture, if you take these people who come from a background where there was a work ethic and you transplant them into a place of opportunity, they do better than Sweden by itself. The problem is we're a country of 350 million people. Whatever the number is right now, that is not a race of people. That is not one people, one identity. So it's not really fair. That's why it's better to compare state to state. We compare Texas to California or Florida. It's a little bit more of a fair example than, for example, comparing Iceland with the population of Vermont, the United States. And by the way, half of their population are top ten world's strongest men. Next chat. Speaker1: [01:42:55] Wait, wait. On this point. That's a very good point. The 50 sovereign states is the perfect test tube for all these ideas. Make them defend their contribution. What have what have they contributed? Diseases cured patents, contributions to the world. Speaker5: [01:43:09] Was the last time you bought a Russian? Yeah. Good. Speaker12: [01:43:12] I like your indoor. Speaker1: [01:43:12] Always. Always make them defend their contribution. That is the measurement I think of an ism. Yep. Speaker4: [01:43:17] All right. So another chat. What are you looking at to g? No, no, no. Speaker18: [01:43:20] It was big G just telling him to go. Speaker13: [01:43:21] All right. Yeah. Tying into the trend light segment. Ray Ray 76. Question Out of all the beverages in the market, what is your drink of choice? Speaker4: [01:43:29] Do you mean alcoholic? I assume. Speaker13: [01:43:31] I would assume the alcoholic wine. Speaker12: [01:43:33] Tequila. Speaker4: [01:43:34] You mean what is my drink of choice or what is my brand of choice? Is that what they mean? Drink, I guess. Probably. I mean, I was a beer guy. I like cider. And then probably outside of that would be would be bourbon or rye or gin. That's about it. I don't really drink anything else. Speaker5: [01:43:47] You don't drink Bordeaux? Speaker4: [01:43:49] I don't really. I don't like wine. Gives me. Speaker5: [01:43:51] A headache. Wine with protein powder, guys. Seriously. Right. And a banana wine with protein powder and a banana. The fiber part. I remove the hairs. Speaker6: [01:44:00] Are you getting them? Speaker4: [01:44:01] But, Gerald, you prefer beer to wine? Personally, sometimes. Speaker18: [01:44:04] Sometimes I do. Like when we started drinking beer. When I did, when we started kind of helping me understand a little bit more about it, I started kind of at the high alcohol and like really great, like Belgian triples. Speaker4: [01:44:15] Belgian triples, quads. Speaker18: [01:44:16] Really, really good stuff. So I never started out with crap like Bud Light, thank God. But that stuff has a lot of flavor and it's fantastic. As a wine guy, I'm looking for like depth of flavor. Speaker4: [01:44:26] And by the way, people use the term craft beer. It doesn't in America. It's been sort of bastardized where it's like, you know, this ultra hoppy IPA. I like hops and beer, but when people it's like a white wine was in the 80 seconds, it was like dry. Speaker1: [01:44:38] White, let's make it as dry as shit. And then it just, well, now there's no balance. Speaker4: [01:44:43] And so there are plenty of beers out there like, suck. Yeah, yeah. But, but I like the Belgian styles a lot. They really know how to make beer. Speaker18: [01:44:48] It's German, like some of my favorites. Leffe was one of my favorites over there. Speaker5: [01:44:53] No. Speaker18: [01:44:53] It's not nearly as good over there. It was fantastic. Speaker4: [01:44:56] But Anheuser-Busch is. Speaker18: [01:44:57] I know, but they don't do it. It's not Anheuser-Busch. Speaker4: [01:44:58] Well, yeah, it is. It is. And it gives me nightmares. Left and blonde, remember? Speaker18: [01:45:01] I do. I remember that tremens. That was fantastic. Gave you nightmares as well. Speaker4: [01:45:05] So I drink beer, typically. Belgian styles. What about what about you there? Pop squad. Or is it usually. Speaker1: [01:45:09] You know, I'm not really a drinker, but Gerald would say I drink bad wine with dinner, but I love to go out with Gerald because he he runs the good stuff bias all night long. Speaker5: [01:45:17] My favorite beer is Peroni. I don't know why Peroni and Sapporo. For real. Really? Yeah. I don't know why. Speaker18: [01:45:23] Maybe they just sold, that's why. Speaker5: [01:45:25] Well, you know. Speaker4: [01:45:25] That beer skunks, right? If it's in a green bottle, it is. It is skunked. Really? Speaker8: [01:45:29] That is. Speaker4: [01:45:30] Neat. The one thing that can. So temperature doesn't affect beer nearly as much like you can have it in the trunk of your car and it's fine light. This was one time at I think it was Thanksgiving. I was at a high rise apartment. One of my family members got a growler filled from a local brewery. They knew that they they had it. It was actually a local Belgian, like a farmhouse ale that I loved. But it was a clear growler. They put on the balcony for 40 minutes and it tasted like a skunk's asshole, really? Because of the light. Because of the light. U.v. light because I think that's why Heineken tastes like skunk. It's not how it's supposed to taste. Speaker5: [01:45:58] I think light with milk, if that's why you have milk in a carton because the ultraviolet rays kill the vitamin D and milk or something like that. Is it? Speaker4: [01:46:05] Yeah. I don't know if that's true, but I know with beer, it'll skunk it. Speaker5: [01:46:07] Beer and wine. Yeah. If you leave milk out for a long time, guys. Speaker4: [01:46:10] Try Heineken on draught and then in a green bottle, you'll see the difference. Really big difference. Wow. Is that right? Speaker1: [01:46:15] Is that true, Gerald? Wine gets skunked. Same. Yeah. Yeah. From light. Yeah. Speaker18: [01:46:19] Oh, that's why. That's why bottles are dark. Speaker5: [01:46:21] That's why we keep it in a cellar, guys. So what? Speaker1: [01:46:23] So what's barefoot's excuse? Speaker12: [01:46:25] Well, you put your wine in a clear bottle sealing it. Speaker18: [01:46:30] They know. You won't know the difference. That's the excuse, Gerald. Speaker1: [01:46:32] I remember you telling me the story about the guy in the mega mansion. Yeah. Building his wine cellar. And he wanted the. The glass door so everyone could see his collection. He said, Well, you've wasted your time. Yes, All of this is for naught. Speaker18: [01:46:45] So tell me again, you have a West facing house and it is completely glass. Yes. And the cellar faces out. Hold on a second. Speaker4: [01:46:54] Let me check the. Speaker1: [01:46:56] You're an asshole. Yeah, but it's temperature controlled. Gerald, Isn't that enough? Speaker18: [01:47:00] That's not going to help you say. Speaker5: [01:47:01] Something, Brian. I had I. You should have rich friends, because then you can drink really expensive wines. Yeah, and that's. That makes a big difference. But that's very expensive. I have a friend who made all the money. Whatever you think is a lot. He's got two private jets, and we're. We're drinking the wine. He opened that. Robert Parker, the great wine critic, called the Wine of the century. He opens the bottle, we drink it. It's a 1982 Lafite Rothschild, something like that. And I don't know what it was. It was, like, crazy. It's like. It's like, you know. And so we drink. It's your house payments. And. And I go, That was amazing. He goes, You want to open another bottle? And I go, No, no, no, dude, come on, Let's just open one of your $1,000 bottles. Let's, let's slum it. And he goes, he looks at me and he goes, This is why he's a billionaire. He goes, We're getting paid to drink this wine. And I go, What? What do you mean? And he goes, I only only six bottles in existence. We'll drink five of them and I'll sell the last one back and get all my money. We educated you on scarcity. I went, Oh, I'm such a pauper. I know nothing about. I have no financial literacy. See, that's. Speaker4: [01:47:58] What I do when I go to Sprouts and I just start eating their pears. Yes, well. And like, you can't do that. I go, you can now charge an extra penny for each of these pears. You're welcome. You're welcome. Speaker5: [01:48:08] Creating scarcity. Speaker4: [01:48:10] Actually, here's a good example. One thing. So, you know, like, I'm not. You know what's kind of funny is this is, you know, I don't like money, and I know what you're thinking. Like, in other words, I don't like the idea. I've said that money is a moral, just like guns are amoral, but I've seen money corrupt people far more quickly than someone having a nightstand gun. And I don't really have a lot of expensive things that I like. But if I get something that requires, you know, quality, I'll buy one thing and try and make sure that it's better quality. But you don't always just have to go for the most expensive thing. So this is a good example. We actually had Jimmy Eddie Russell on the show a long time ago, the distillers at Wild Turkey. This is a Russell's reserve ten year. Okay. It's a bourbon. It's aged ten years. They also have a Russell's reserve single barrel, Wild Turkey, rare breed. This is I don't know what it is now. It's maybe a 30 something dollar bottle of bourbon that drinks like 100 plus dollars a bottle of bourbon. So you don't always have to spend the most amount. I always look into what is the best value as far as a national brand where you can support if you're talking about beer. Well, Yuengling is if they're in your area, we know that they they are actively conservative. Speaker1: [01:49:08] Final chat. Let's go somebody clip that for us because that went out to 3 million people. A nice plug for Yuengling No Russell's reserve. Speaker4: [01:49:16] They're owned by Campari group right now. So I'm sure there are a few fruitcakes and that and that old lineage tree. Yeah. Speaker1: [01:49:22] That's research. Okay. Speaker18: [01:49:23] Research wanted me to tell you really quickly because people asked for it and I forgot to mention what we covered. Tomorrow we're talking about the the dollar tomorrow. Remember, we talked about the reserve currency thing and asked if people wanted us to do a little bit more of a deep dive. Well, we did that. That's going to be on the show tomorrow for Friday. So that's going to be on the the dollar losing its status as a reserve currency and whether you should be worried about that. Speaker4: [01:49:40] Yeah, there's a lot of fear porn going out there. Speaker18: [01:49:42] We talked about it for about 30 or 40 minutes just to make sure that you were okay. So make sure you tune in. Speaker4: [01:49:45] I'm not a porn guy, but if if there's going to be porn, like, you know, like Clockwork Orange in front of me, I'd rather it be naked ladies than than news media. Speaker18: [01:49:54] Well, and followed by a G. Gordon Liddy commercial, right? Yes, exactly. Speaker4: [01:49:57] No, Bill Devane. Oh, Bill, I'm a Devane man. Okay, let's grab a final chat for the. Speaker5: [01:50:01] I'll watch porn and smell your breath after that whiskey. Speaker4: [01:50:03] I don't even know what that means. Speaker1: [01:50:05] Who said that. Speaker4: [01:50:05] Wrong? I don't know what that means, but I. I'm strangely comfortable. Let's get a final check. Speaker13: [01:50:10] From Joseph McBride at Stephen. Can you be conservative without being religious, or are the two inseparable? Sure. Speaker4: [01:50:17] Of course you can be conservative. There are a lot of people who are conservative fiscally when it comes to taxes, but you can't actually understand what conservative means. Certainly, as we recognize it here in the Western world, without understanding the Judeo-Christian founding. When people say religions are the cause of all wars, first off, that's not true. But there have been wars fought over religion. So let's agree that religion is sometimes the basis of systems of government. And of course, you can have like a religious oligarchy, which is something that we obviously should abhor here in the United States. Or you can have what is effectively a definitively Protestant reformed Christian worldview here in the United States, right? That is the basis of laws where there is a recognition of free will, but there also is recognition of the importance of a moral backbone. For a free society to thrive, you need to understand the founding of this country and understand that you are afforded the same rights as everyone else here in this country. And I do mean, I shouldn't say afforded your rights are recognized. In other words, the people who with whom you disagree religiously. Christians here don't even believe that they grant you rights, right? Our founding fathers believed that they only recognize rights. In other words, God gave you rights. And they said, okay, we will ensure as a system of governance. That your rights are protected. Now, the flip side of that is when atheism is the basis of religion, you've removed. Speaker4: [01:51:34] Right. Inalienable rights, you've removed being endowed by your creator, you've removed a higher power. And so the rights are now and can only be granted by the God of government. So of course you can be personally maybe someone who's a non-believer, maybe you're struggling with doubt and still share the same values that we do, but you'll never fully appreciate the depth. And I think it's important for you to recognize where you come from, recognize your history, recognize the roots and why they are very different. The why often matters just as much as the how and the who and what this country, when you actually look not only at our founding documents, but if you look at the supporting documents, like if you look at Jefferson's letter to the Danbury Baptists or the letter of marque and reprisal to the to the private ships, I think it was from I don't know if it was Mason The why is incredibly interesting. It's actually I went through Canadian history because I went through Canadian schools when I was being raised. And boy, does that suck. You can only spend so many semesters on how you burn down the White House because you don't expect your friends to burn down your shit. But American history. The why is not only just as important as the Who, but it really is incredibly interesting and doesn't take a lot of time to learn. So we're glad to have you in our ranks. Maybe dive a little deeper tomorrow, 10 a.m.. Speaker1: [01:52:45] Only on mug club. Speaker4: [01:52:46] Though, not on Rumble on YouTube. See you then.