
The Leadership Crisis Nobody's Talking About - a raw, unfiltered discussion exposing the uncomfortable truths about modern leadership and society's shifting dynamics. 🎯 Join us as we dive into the real challenges facing today's leaders and explore...
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The Fall Line is a deep dive true crime podcast focused on cold cases that could be resolved if the public knew about them. You'll hear about missing people whose families have been searching for decades. John and Jane Doe cases from across the country in desperate need of public attention. Unsolved serial homicides like the Atlanta Lovers Lane murders that never made the national news. The Fall Line digs deep, interviewing the families, law enforcement, and experts closest to the crimes to bring you cases you've never heard of and explore what can be done today to solve them. Find the Fall Line. Wherever you listen to podcasts, all the the worst sides of masculinity, so they just simply get it. Where their disconnect comes a lot of times is some of them are. It's like, I would say 50, 50. Some of them understand that more than likely they'll probably never be able to get a family in a relationship with a guy that they truly want to be with. But then the other part of them is like, delusional, thinking that I deserve a guy that makes $100,000 a month like me. And it's like, no, that's not going to happen.
B
Right?
A
Like, you're literally a.
B
All right, guys, got Myon from Fresh and Fit here today. Thanks for coming on, man.
A
Hey, what's up, man? I'm happy to be here, man.
B
A lot's been going on today.
A
Yes, yes.
B
Holy crap. We got Brett Cooper announcing she's leaving Daily Wire.
A
Yes.
B
That's a big story, right?
A
Yeah, it is a big story. It's funny, cuz she made a video talking about me.
B
Really?
A
Yeah, dude. See, the thing is, is like when you have very. How to say this? Polarizing views, everyone tries to come at you and kind of use you as a pinata to make their stupid ass. The reality is that she's a commentator, right? So none of her takes are really hers. She's kind of fed it by the Daily Wire. So she went ahead and made this video talking, you know, toxic alpha males, which is hilarious because I've never once called myself an alpha male. Like, I can't help if you see me that way, but I'm just a guy that stands on my beliefs and I'm not willing to, you know, bend or fold unless, like, there's conflict or information that shows that I was wrong about it then. I'm willing to admit that. But a lot of the things I tend to be pretty damn accurate on, or I call it, right, The COVID situation. It was a fucking bullshit. What? You know, we come find Out. It was. So feminism being a lie. Right. We're seeing that right now. I've been calling this for years that feminism and the over sexualization of females was going to lead to some problems. And we see it right now. Right. Like it's getting the worst that it's ever been. But yeah, with her, she called me like a toxic alpha male or whatever. And then obviously now she's leaving Daily Wire and it makes sense because I'm like, okay, maybe it was her handlers over at the Daily Wire told her, like, you should do this, you know, because Ben Shapiro had made an identical video to that like a year prior.
B
Really?
A
Yeah. So I'll give her the benefit of doubt. Right. That she was under Daily Wire control because obviously a lot of the takes that they have, they can't really be fully themselves because it's got to be within the paradigm, as Bench would say, or the Overton window, whatever the fuck him and Jeremy Buring want to call it nowadays. I call it control, especially when you talk about a certain topic. But that's a whole other situation. But yeah, I wish the best to her. Even though she talks shit, hopefully she's going to have her own takes now and it's not going to be, you know, controlled and cultivated by the Daily Wire staff.
B
Do you predict it being a Candace Owens situation where she blows up even more, or do you think she'll kind of.
A
Yeah, yeah, I think she'll. I think she'll. I think she'll definitely be very popular. I don't think she'll blow up as much as Candace Owens because the thing that Candace Owens makes Candace Owens, like, unique is that Candace Owens is willing to talk about topics that other people wouldn't dare touch on the Right. Right. Whether it's Israel or them boys, Candace Owens is willing to talk about that. And that's what many people on the right wing will never do. And I don't foresee Brett Cooper ever talking about that because right wing media is run by those people.
B
And you've made the choice to talk about these topics, right?
A
Yeah.
B
It's probably lost you a lot of guests a lot of money.
A
Absolutely, absolutely. It's, it's, it's made a lot of people scared to talk to me. It's made a lot of people scared to sponsor. But, you know, we kind of already knew this since we got on YouTube because we already kind of came in with kind of. How do I say this? I don't want to. I don't even think they're extreme Takes like men and women are different. Men are supposed to be leaders, women are supposed to be follow. You know, women are subordinates to men. Like this is all considered extreme in today's day and age. But the reality is if you picked up a, you know, a Bible, a Quran, a Torah, whatever, like men have always been in leadership roles. Right? It's just that it sounds far fetched now where we live in this feminized world where women are supposed to be equals when they're really not, they're inferior in almost every way.
B
Right?
A
Yeah.
B
What about in the workplace setting though?
A
What do you mean? As in like them working? Yeah, I don't think they should be working. I think they should be focusing on having kids and families, not necessarily being in the workforce. Now I understand, right? Being in modern society with the way things are and how much they cost, you know, they might have to work in the beginning, but I, you know, wholeheartedly believe once she gets with a man, that man should be able to support her, take care of her. And if she wants to work collectively, that's fine. But as soon as the kids come in, fuck your job, right? Your job is the kids now, not your stupid ass career. Because the reality is no one cares about a woman's career. No one cares about her career, her title, her education. We don't give a fuck about any of that stuff. And the reason why is because no one gives a shit about female opinions. Let's just be very candid here, right? Women are inferior to men in almost every regard. Right. Of human endeavor. Men are better, almost everything. We create everything. And that's just how it is now. You know, obviously I think a man, his job is to create a legacy and a last name. And a woman's job is to create children with that man's legacy and last name and have a family together. And there are some things that women do better and they tend to be rearing children, you know, dealing with people and these types of thing, not being in a workforce.
B
Right. You know, now I know you're dating someone right now, but have you ever dated a woman in the past that made more money than you?
A
Never. Never.
B
That was by choice.
A
It just never worked out that way. Hi there, podcast lover. If you have a dark sense of.
B
Humor and like your true crime stories.
A
Paired with a glass of wine, then you need to check out our true crime comedy podcast, Wine and Crime, hosted by two Minnesotan childhood besties, me Amanda and me Lucy.
B
Each week we dive into a bizarre true crime topic. Pair that topic with a whine and.
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Get into all the dirty details. Wine and Crime is dark, fun, feminist, and perfect for satisfying your morbid curiosities with a healthy dose of humor. Join us as we chug wine, chat true crime, and unleash our worst Minnesotan accents. Check us out@wineandcrimepodcast.com and listen now, wherever you get your podcast tests, right, because women that tend to make money and be successful, they tend to be hoes, you know, because a lot of times they went to college, they're educated, etc, and when girls go to college, we all know what they do. A lot of times they be right, especially if they were in a sorority or they went to higher education. Because feminism and leftist agenda in general tells women to, you know, kind of pursue career, pursue education, have fun in your twenties, be a experiment with life. All these stupid ass terms that they want to say, find yourself, travel, live your life like that's all you know. Any guy that has like, you know, half a brain understands this is just telling women to be promiscuous until they find a guy. And I don't think a guy should ever accept a woman that used to have a promiscuous past. That's a problem, right? Girls that used to be hoes typically don't make good girlfriends and they don't make good wives.
B
You know, there's a lot of studies on that, right? Girls with high body counts dating later in life, Absolutely.
A
They're. They're fucked. They're. The analogy I always use is like, women are kind of like glass. If you take a glass cup, right, and you drop it on the floor and it smashes everywhere, you could repair that glass. But guess what? If you pour water into it, it's going to leak every single time. And that's what it's like trying to build a foundation with a promiscuous woman. That's why all these girls that used to be porn stars, whatever, none of them can ever last in a relationship because all this trauma of them like being hoes and being objectified, they're never able to actually respect or be with a man long term because their, their purity is gone, their innocence is gone. And that's a woman's main commodity. Men are designed to create value. Women are designed to preserve value. Women are born with value.
B
Right?
A
Right. And I think, you know, as much as people want to say, Myron, you're an angry massages, no, I just understand that men and women are different. And I'm big on women protecting their value and preserving it, right? And if you want to be a good, good job, you've lost your value now and you deserve to be treated as such. Like, all these thoughts and you got.
B
Lily Phillips out here, 100 dudes in a day. Yeah.
A
You know what I mean? And look at like her face. Like she did that interview and you can see it. Like her face is like. She's just like, oh, man. And she knows in the back of her mind she lost her soul. She knows that she'll probably never be able to have family. She knows that she's not going to be able to have children and it's not going to hit her really until she hits her 30s and her 40s. The thing is, like, women are able to kind of like cope and say, oh, I'm okay, I'm happy single Hot girl Summer. Woo. There's a reason why it's called Hot Girl Summer and Hot Girl Life because women are not designed to be sluts. Long term. They can't fucking do it. As much as they think they can do it or want to do it, they can't be men, right? Again, they suck at everything they do. So they can't even be whores properly. You know what I mean? So it's just like, no, dude, like you, you cannot do what you. What we do. You guys want to be men so bad, but you fucking can't do it. We can run around, fuck a bunch of girls and decide, you know what? I want a family and be able to have that family and probably be okay, right? More than likely. But with women, it doesn't work that way. There were horrors in their best years. They're not going to be able to like, let go of that when they decide to have a family, if they even get lucky to have one.
B
She's trying to do a thousand a day. I don't know if you saw that.
A
Yeah, I did see that.
B
That's crazy cooked, man.
A
Absolutely cooked. You know, God bless her because I'll tell you this, her darkest days aren't now. It's going to be later on when she realizes the consequences of her actions. But what she's. What I'm realizing with a lot of these, of girls, like, they're trying to like say, oh, I'm, you know, religious now. I'm turning to Jesus. Like, I think it's a huge grift. I don't believe a lot of them are genuine about them trying to find God. Like one of these girls, Nala, whatever she was like trying to argue with.
B
Like, was that the Red hair girl on the whatever show. Yeah, yeah.
A
She was trying to argue Andrew Wilson about, like, I forget exactly what it was, but they were arguing something. And obviously Andrew's like, a devout orthodox Christian, knows the Bible in and out, and she's over here trying to argue him. And I think he called her, like, a heretic, whatever. And I was like, yeah, like, what do you expect? Like, this girl, like, she's a thought. She didn't convert for the real. She didn't convert for real. Like, she didn't really find Jesus. It was all, like, a marketing ploy to make money.
B
Yeah. Do you think porn and Onlyfans should be banned?
A
Yeah, bro, it's a problem. It's. At least it needs to be regulated significantly. Right. Like, I find it incredible that, like, platforms will not ban or regulate pornography, but they'll absolutely ban or regulate, like, speech. Like, the things that I talk about. They'll go ahead and ban that right, which is supposed to be protected under the First Amendment, but then, like, pornography and all this other degeneracy is running around all over the place. Like, it's. It's a problem, dude. It's a huge problem. And, you know, I get criticized a lot. Oh, will you bring only fans girls on your show? Yeah, I bring them on. Right. They're number one. They're a fraction of the women that we bring on. Right. They're not the majority. It's just that everyone remembers them because they tend to be the loudest and the stupidest. But it's to show men that regardless of whether it goes a sex worker or a lawyer, which we brought all the women in between, a lot of them have the same, you know, mindset, which is, you know, feminism and, you know, prioritizing themselves, prioritizing education and income over a family. And I think guys need to wake up to this and realize, like, most of these women, simply put, are not cut out to be your girlfriend or your wife. Or if you do get with one of these girls, you need to come in with such strong frame that she bends to your will and changes, because you're going to have to come in and deprogram the. That these women are on.
B
Yeah. Do you think some of the blame should be on the guys, though? Because some of these girls are making tens of millions. You got Sophie Rain making 43 million. I'm assuming most of her clients are guys.
A
Are you a lover of all things dark and creepy, of graveyards and monsters, haunted houses and spooky legends, then welcome to lore. I'm Aaron Manke. For close to 10 years now, I've been sharing history's darkest stories with millions of listeners around the world. Tune in each week as we explore the folklore, ghost tales, and local legends that deliver the chills you're looking for. Learn more and subscribe today over@lorepodcast.com yeah, no, absolutely. The simps are a big problem. Simps are a huge problem in, in the United States. And. And the problem too is that, you know, there's like a porn addiction. Like, a lot of these guys are literally addicted to porn. And there's a multitude of reasons for this. I've explained it kind of like why I think we're where we're at with this situation, but without going into crazy details. Yes, it's on the simps. They're a big problem in society. Absolutely.
B
It's mind blowing that they can make millions. Like, yeah, I don't personally know anyone that does only fit, like, buys only fan stuff.
A
Yeah. But the thing is, a lot of guys do it secretly.
B
That's crazy.
A
That's like, that's. And a lot of guys could watch my show just to like, subscribe to the girl. Girls only fans. Like, there's a lot of simps, man. Like, like a lot of these guys, like, because, like, here's the thing, right? We'll do our regular show, right, where we teach guys how to make money, be attractive, geopolitics, whatever, right? And they will do a nighttime show and they'll be like a bunch of people watching the nighttime show. But a lot of these guys that watch the nighttime show are just like guys looking for mindless entertainment simps, you know, degenerates, whatever. So, you know, the smart guys are able to watch the show and see the female nature and be like, damn, like, this is how women think. I need to set my game up. But there's a lot of idiots that also watch and say, oh, I'm gonna whack off this girl later, unfortunately.
B
That's so wild.
A
It's crazy, dude.
B
I mean, it makes sense though, because they go on shows like yours, right? Some of them pay to come on and then they get subscribers.
A
Well, here's the thing. We. We never charge the girls.
B
Oh, you don't?
A
We don't. As, as much as people have told us, like, you guys are dumb. For now, we never pay the girls, but we never charge them either because some of these girls make quite a bit of money. I know one girl made like 60k from coming on the show and I was like, holy. But you know, I'm not going to take a dime because I don't want to contribute to that. Like, because my, the way I look at it is like I bring these girls on so that you guys can see the. And then also so that we can show the stupidity. Right? But obviously, right, like they're not just going to come on, right? So like a lot of times you have to put, you have to do some cross promotion. It's like kind of a way to, to, to deal with the evil. But, but nah, like I, I won't take a dollar from that dude. I've been offered, I've been offered a lot of money. Like bring this girl on, we'll pay. And I'm like, no dude, like if she wants to come on, she come on. But I'm not going to change my rhetoric. Like I'm going to cook like if she's on some ho shit. Like I'm. It is what it is.
B
Have you ever agreed with any of them?
A
Was that the only fans girls?
B
Yeah.
A
Yeah. So here's the thing about Onlyfans girls, which is actually very interesting in porn stars. They, they get it. They understand a lot of the times that men don't want hoes. They understand a lot of times that men want more than one woman. They understand a lot of times that men are only as faithful as their options. They get it a lot of times because they're exposed to like the sexuality of men. So they see all the, the worst sides of masculinity. So they just simply get it. Where their disconnect comes a lot of times is some of them are, it's like I would say 50, 50. Some of them understand that more than likely they'll probably never be able to get a family in a relationship with a guy that they truly want to be with. But then the other part of them is like delusional thinking that I deserve a guy that makes $100,000 a month like me. And it's like no, that's not going to happen.
B
Right?
A
Like you're literally a. Yeah.
B
Their options are so limited cuz they're making so much super limited, dude.
A
And that's, that's where the disconnect comes because like they'll hook up with like a rapper and think, oh I, I can get this kind of guy, like a rapper, athlete, top tier guy. But what they don't understand is like dude, you're just recreational use only.
B
Yeah.
A
And that's the biggest thing I've noticed with women is like they're not Able to distinguish sexual attention from men versus, like, real relationship attention. Like, it's very difficult for them to do that because, like, a girl will come on the show, right? And she'll be annoying as. And I'll be like, you're gonna have a hard time finding a guy. Like, not really. Look at my DMs. I have all these guys and I'm like, you stupid. These guys just want to sleep with you, dude. You're literally insufferable. Like, and I've had to tell them this and they still think like, well, I still have all these options. And that's what them up. They have all these options. They think that they're viable. They're not. They just want to. You man, just want sex. Yeah, but it's. They don't. They don't catch on to it until they're like in their 30s. I don't really. My phrase is women don't mature until they start buying their own drinks at the bar. That's what I've realized.
B
That's a good quote.
A
Yeah. They really don't get it until they're buying their own drinks. Because at that point, that's when they realize that their sexual market value is perishable. And they realize, holy, like, I actually have to bring something to the table. One of the things I do on the show, a lot of times girls say, oh, literally this happened last week. Girl comes on, okay, well, what do you. I ask her, what do you think you want? What do you want in a man? Guys got to make quarter million dollars a year. Be attractive, charming, all this. Cool. Well, why do you deserve that guy? Oh, because I'm one of one. Really? You're one of one? Mind you, I got like seven other girls there, right? So I'm like, all right, cool. All of you put your two hands up like this, right? Ten fingers, okay? I want your name, one thing that makes you redeemable or attractive to a man for a long term relationship. Oh, I'm loyal, okay. Oh, I'm funny, whatever. Good cook, right? So each girl goes through, I'm loyal, finger down. And when you mention a trait that another girl has, all of you have to put your fingers down. So I'm loyal. Cool. Every girl puts everything down. I'm nice. Every girl puts her finger down. I'm, you know, trustworthy, I can cook, whatever, blah, Right? Next thing you know, by the time I get through the table, all their fingers are down, right? And I'm like. And I look at that girl and I say, look, you and every other girl here brings the same thing to the table. There's a mic drop moment because she had to see it right then and there. Through this experiment, you aren't special. Like, the things that women bring to the table that men look for can be found easily. And I have to do this experiment a lot of times to let women know that the things that men look for really aren't hard to find. But the things you're looking for are hard to find.
B
Yeah.
A
So you need to make yourself bend to the whim of the man. And quite frankly, a lot of you women don't qualify for the man that you think you deserve. And it's not until I do experiments like this or I tell them, you know, you don't qualify, that they get it, but they still are. You know, they might get it for, like, 10 seconds, and then they still go back out into the world and think, I deserve this guy. But this is why so many women stay chronically single, because they don't have the sexual market value for what they think they deserve. That's the issue. There's a big disconnect with what they want versus what they actually qualify for.
B
Right. So when you're giving advice to guys, when. When they're looking for dating advice, do you recommend they ask about the girl's past when it comes to, like, partners and everything?
A
No, because she's gonna lie every single time. It's a waste of time to ask for body counts. What you need to do is look at her behavior. So there's just certain things guys got to look for, red flags, like, what type of work does she do? What type of boyfriends has she had in the past? Does she have a father in her life? Does she respect male authority in general? Is she combative, like, all of these things? You know her Instagram. Right. What kind of pictures does she have up before when you meet her? Does she like to club a lot? Does she like to drink? Does she do drugs? Does she. Did she do drugs? Like, all these things are huge red flags. You know, I think if guys, like, paid attention to that. Because the thing is, girls that are sluts have certain behaviors in certain traits that. If you see one, is it a deal breaker? Not necessarily. Right. But if you have a bunch of them, well, the likelihood of her being a three or four goes up.
B
Right.
A
So I think guys need to, you know, watch her behavior and see what she does. Because what men need to understand is that when you meet a girl, if she likes you, she's going to Sell purity. Right? Men sell success, women sell purity. So she's going to sit there and tell you, oh, I'm a good girl, I do xyz, blah, blah, all that. You need to watch her behavior and see what she does. And then I always tell guys too, you need to date her for at least six months to a year to vet her. Right. Where you're not doing. She's literally like on probation. Right. Because you need to hang out with her and like see where she really stands. Because everyone could put a, put a good front up in the beginning.
B
100.
A
Yeah.
B
You mentioned drugs earlier. You have an interesting take on marijuana. So you believe that you like, you can't be successful if you smoke every day, right?
A
Yeah. So my thing is, look, are there anomalies out there that can smoke weed every day and be successful like an eight dog, right? Sure. But the reality is, most guys, it's going to hurt you. Smoking weed every day, it makes you lethargic, makes you lazy, kills your drive, kills your ambition, makes you more prone to eat a bunch of, you know, and these are all things that you don't need. Now, like I said, can you be successful smoking weed every day? For sure. But like, imagine if you remove that obstacle, how much more productive you would be. So in general, I don't think marijuana is conducive to success. Especially in the beginning when you're trying to get ahead. Like, you need as little distractions as possible. Yeah, as a man trying to come up. But yeah, I used to be. And the other reason too, like, you know, I used to be a federal agent. I used to literally arrest people for this. So I'm anti drug, anti alcohol, anti porn, anti gambling. Like, I'm very straight edge with a lot of my stuff. I think as a man you need to have a clear head and be sober as much as you can be to truly like get out there. Because it's already tough enough. So it's like, you know, you want to add in alcohol is other fucking bullshit to fuck your life up for. What? Dude? Like, the only people that can get ahead like that and smoke weed every day are really women if they're attractive. Like, as a guy you got to be productive. Yeah.
B
It's going to hold most people back.
A
Yeah.
B
As a former federal agent, I got to ask about the Luigi case.
A
Sure, let's do it.
B
You posted on X, I think that you, you thought, you thought he was guilty, right?
A
Oh, yeah, they got him. That's right.
B
There's a lot of people saying he he was set up. Have you seen those?
A
Yeah, yeah, yeah. Look, what I've noticed is, like, a lot of people love to run with conspiracy theories. And trust me, I like to put my tinfoil hat on as well. I mean, people that aren't strangers to my content know that I talk a lot about JFK. Who killed him, RFK, who killed him, 911, who was really behind it. But my thing is, you also need tangible facts with this guy. Dude, they literally caught him with a gun, silencer and the same ID that he used at the hostel. They. People want to go ahead because one of the biggest points that they have is, oh, well, the surveillance footage showed that he didn't have a unibrow, but now he does, bro. Those photos, like, he was in New York for 10 days prior to getting arrested by the cops, right? And doing this thing. And then on top of that, it took him another week to get him. Dude, I grow unibrow. You can grow your unibrow literally in a few days, Right? So that's nothing. But there's an overwhelming amount of physical evidence that links him to the crime. And then I think they. They caught him with a manifesto.
B
Wow.
A
Like, yeah, dude, when they called him at the McDonald's, he had a bunch of US currency, cash. We know that he was in New York paying with everything in cash. The silencer, 3D gun. He had the same new fake New Jersey license that he passed at the hostel when he was there. Similar facial structure, obviously had the masks on and everything else like that, but the same bushy eyebrows. What else? I'm trying to think. The manifesto. And then there was. Oh, he had tweets talking about, you know, elitists and issues with the insurance companies and everything else like that. Obviously, social media paid, played a picture in that. So, dude, they got the right guy, bro. They got the right thing.
B
It was a hit. It looked pretty planned out, right?
A
Oh, yeah, yeah, yeah, yeah. He was 100%. He's going to get hit with murder one for the state of New York. And then if he. If there are other people that were involved, they could potentially come after him federally for murder for hire. But if. If that's not it, what they could go after him for? They could go after him for firearms offenses federally. Because, like, so there's always different charges. You could get hit federal or state on different crimes. Murder 9 out of 10 times almost always falls under the state unless there's, like, circumstances that gives it a federal nexus. In this case, him using the silencer, which probably I'm willing to bet was probably unregistered. And then it looks like it was a ghost gun. There's probably some federal regulations there that he violated so they could potentially go after him federally. Big cases like this, the feds love to hit their charges as well, especially since they do way more time at the feds. And then also when you got out of the jail. Not the jail, when they're bringing him to the jail or to his court thing, he made some comments about the American people are American people aren't stupid or whatever. But I'm pretty confident they got the right guy.
B
The interesting part to me is the media blew up this thing.
A
Yeah.
B
Like, I wonder why.
A
Because the way that he killed him. Right. Like me putting on my former agent hat on. Like, you know, you got a guy coming in shooting someone with a silencer. Broad daylight in the morning, early mornings in New York City. Manhattan, you know, obviously a city that's very sensitive to any type of crazy crime like that. You kill a CEO of a big insurance company on surveillance footage and then you leave Monopoly money behind. You know, you're on some Riddler type. Yeah. The media is going to eat it up because you know serial killers, that he's not a serial killer. But anytime a murderer does something where they're sending letters to the media or the cops are taunting them, it's going to hit the news. You know, you look at someone like a btk, Dennis Raider or a zodiac killer, who to this day, they still haven't formally identified him.
B
Crazy.
A
They have two main suspects, which is a whole other conversation. But you know, anyone that sends notes or whatever to the police or leaves anything that's taunting like that, it's going to be front page news.
B
Yeah, I feel like murder these days with all the cameras everywhere, it's almost impossible, right?
A
Yeah. If you're going to commit a murder nowadays, man, you there, you have to really be on point. It's. It's going to be a lot harder. It's not the 1970s where, you know, serial killers running wild. Like all the top serial killers operate in the 70s, whether it's Ted Bundy, Zodiac Killer, late 60s, Torso Killer, John Wayne Gacy, the killer clown. All of them operate in the 70s, man. Samuel Little, who actually has the most confirmed kills, all of them operate in 70s. And the big reason for that, interstate highways. And then before police departments, like we're sharing information through databases, like serial killers like Ted Bundy, who traveled interstate, and Sammy Little, who killing women all over the place. They Kind of created this need for law enforcement to have like one centralized database and be able to share information through something called ncic. So that actually prompted a lot of the. The interstate databases was these serial killers and an interstate highway made it where you could travel from, you know, one major city to another in another state immediately, and then you've left that jurisdiction. We know that murder typically follow falls under the state. So it's going to be a lot more difficult for them to track you down and build a case against you then. This is before the invention of refined forensics and DNA, you know, so it made it a lot easier for them to be able to commit these crimes and be able to escape.
B
Yeah, you don't really see mass murders these days.
A
Yeah, Dennis Raider, the BTK killer, they caught him in the. Later in the 2000s, but he had been committing murders since the 70s.
B
Wow.
A
And they caught him with the Golden State Killer. The same thing with. Through DNA later on.
B
Really?
A
Yeah. So.
B
So it was on whatever weapon they found.
A
Yeah. So. So two interesting stories. So Dennis Raider, AKA this, the btk, buying torture kill. What happened with him was he had committed a murder in the 70s, one of his, like first murders where he cut the power lines and he killed the family and he like assaulted one of the little girls in the basement. He left DNA at the scene. They took that DNA and they preserved it. Fast forward to the early 2000s. You know, he had stopped killing for a while. He had a family, had kids and stuff like that. He was going to church or whatever. And what ends up happening is he decides he wants to make a comeback. So he writes a taunting letter to the police saying that he's going to come back and everything. And he like sends them a, I think a Barbie doll, like tied up with a cereal box. Right. Cereal killer, terrible joke. But anyway, they end up finding him through. He said, hey, if I give you guys a floppy disk, will you guys be able to trace in the cops? Like, no. And he says it's floppy, the skin, like a dumbass or whatever. And they're able to find it back trace it back to. To him. Right. That, that he worked, I think a church or something like that. And they were like, okay, well how do we know that he's the actual guy? So what they did was they had this DNA from back in the 70s and they needed to get a DNA sample from him. So they knew that his daughter, well, I think was at the University of Kansas or whatever, and she had went to go to a doctor's Appointment. So they had DNA from her. So they went and got her DNA from the school.
B
What you could serve up.
A
Yeah, they went. Yeah, they served them with a subpoena.
B
Oh.
A
And we're able to. Or search warrant, whatever. Some legal document, I'm assuming. Probably. Probably. It will probably be a search worm, potentially, because that's pretty invasive.
B
Yeah. Especially daughters. Not even him.
A
Yeah. So. Yeah, so they went ahead, they got her DNA, compared it to the DNA at the scene from the 70s match. And they're like, oh. And when they arrested him, another guy, the Golden State Killer, they ended up catching him later on. He also would, you know, commit crimes where he was like, raping women and stuff, stuff like that. So they had his DNA from a crime scene as well. He had this unique thing where he would like, make the. He'd break into the house and assault the women and then the guys in the house. What he would do is he would tell them because he'd rob them. He'd break in with a gun, right?
B
Yeah.
A
And he would tell them, okay, you gotta stay. Sit on all fours and I'm gonna put like, he put dishes on their back. So if they moved, he would hear the dishes crash and he would kill the woman or he would threaten, like, hey, you better stay like this. And if you move, I'm gonna hear the dishes crash. I'm gonna shoot her. So they would sit there and they can't do anything, and obviously the woman's being assaulted. So they had the. The DNA for him. Right. And they couldn't catch this guy for years. He did. He was doing this in the 70s. They caught him like in 2020. Wow. Yeah. And he was an old man at this point, and they caught him through one of these ancestry websites, like 3 23andMe or whatever.
B
Yeah.
A
Someone in his family had done a DNA test. Right. So what they did was they took his DNA and put it into this website and they found that there was a. A match. Like. Like not an exact match, but someone is family. So someone that put the DNA from his family or his family line, they looked at when that person was born, they're like, okay, he's not. He's. This guy's too young. He wasn't alive in the 70s. But then they were trace it back and they found out that he. A relative, like an uncle or something like that, that was like seven years old. They're like, that might be our guy. So they went to the house and they did a DNA scrub of like the car door.
B
Yeah.
A
They compared it to the DNA at one of the crime scenes. Matched it.
B
No.
A
When it arrested him. Yeah. Dude.
B
What?
A
Crazy.
B
That is nuts. Yeah, the mob guys got away with a lot of killings, too.
A
Yeah, the. The mob. Yeah, Mob guys. Sammy the Bull Y. Yeah, they got. Yeah. With them. What them up was rico. Yeah, yeah. You know, Rudy Giuliani, he really went after that. So the RICO laws were made in the 70s, you know, to combat organized crime, because prior to RICO, they couldn't really, like, penetrate these organizations because the lower level guys would commit all the violent crime. Like, yeah, you pinch him and them. And. But like, they were never able to get the guys at the top. They were ordering it. So what they did was they came up with these laws where they would charge the organization as a criminal enterprise. And that way you can effectively charge the top guy with crimes from the lower guys. And that's how they were able to top the Mafia, because at that point, they're looking at full football numbers and they want to cooperate. So that's how they're able to kind of topple the Mafia. And they started with the first indictments, I want to say, like in the mid-1980s. Giuliani indicted like a lot of the top bosses from the New York crime families.
B
Yeah.
A
And that actually led to. Was it one of the most. John Gotti rose to power because one of them got indicted and they didn't like him anyway. Who was it was again, the head of the Gambino family. Well, either way, they famously killed him in this whole. Right in front of this steakhouse.
B
Yeah, Sammy the Bull killed him.
A
Right. I think he was involved in the planning. I don't know if he actually pulled the trigger and killed him. But John Gotti was there, right?
B
Yeah, I know what you're talking about. I forget that you know what I'm.
A
Talking about, right, dude?
B
Right.
A
Yeah.
B
Super old Paul. Paul Castellano.
A
Yes. They. They killed Castellano. Yep.
B
Yeah, that was a big deal.
A
And they killed him in. In like when he was at the steakhouse. And this was, I think, after they got. After he got indicted in the. In the mid-80s. But yeah, the Mafia, you know, and they now those RICO laws that they use, they use it against 6, 9ine, they use against Casanova, they use it against all these gangs. So, like, the worst thing you could do nowadays is be a part of a gang because not only going to come after you, they're also going to come after the whole organization. And then also the other good thing about RICO is they're able to kind of evade statute limitations. So people look at the Diddy case and they see like all these assaults happened in the early 2000s. They're like, how the. Are they able to do the statute of limitations? Well, when you bring RICO in, guess what? If you can establish that they had been committing these crimes as a pattern. Racketeering. Excuse me, pattern of racketeering over a prolonged period of time and the crimes are continuing, you could bring in all those crimes even though it's past the statute of limitations because you're showing that it's a continuing criminal enterprise.
B
That's crazy.
A
And that's how they're able to have to go after R. Kelly. So they're able to go after Diddy on these most recent human trafficking charges.
B
You think, did he has any chance of getting out of this?
A
He's fucked, man. He's really bad. He's cooked like it was. It's actually our HSI New York office that did the case and HSI New York, because I worked for HSI when I was on the job out of Miami. That's a very good office. And then the United States Attorney's office there is very aggressive. So they. And the prosecutors that are working on that case were similar to the. They're basically using the same charges against R. Kelly. And R. Kelly ended up getting 30 years.
B
Damn.
A
So with Diddy. Yeah, man. He would have to give someone else up, which, you know, we know Jay Z recently got accused.
B
I saw that by the 13. Weird timing, right?
A
Yeah, crazy timing. I will say this. If. And this actually ended up being the best thing for Diddy. If Diddy has footage of what went down that's being alleged of him assaulting his 13 year old or whatever, or some kind of strong physical evidence that could show that this person isn't lying or whatever, then that would probably help him a lot with his case. He would do something called the 5k proffer. He'd meet with the agents and the prosecutors tell, you know, give the information. He wouldn't be. It would. It's basically like you can give the information without being used against you. And that would probably knock off a good amount of time if, if Jay Z were to be indicted and at least the rest of the other conspirators. Yeah. So yeah, he's definitely going to cooperate. You know, if he has information on others. I just think he hasn't done it yet because the government probably looking at it like you're the top guy. So, like there's no one else you can give at this point, you think.
B
He'S the top of the total?
A
Oh, yeah, he's the top of the tonal.
B
Some people said he was just a pawn.
A
We'll see. I mean, we know Clive Davis's manager was, you know, you know, grooming him for this, so.
B
Right.
A
We'll see. We'll. We'll really see. I mean, this whole trafficking thing is wild between him and Epstein and all these other idiots.
B
I hope they dropped the Epstein list.
A
Yeah, well, here's the thing. It's. It's out. Like, people have exposed it, but the government hasn't, like, confirmed or did.
B
Oh, it's out.
A
Yeah. Like, we. I've talked about on my show with a bunch of people that are on that list.
B
Oh, yeah. I didn't know that.
A
A lot of them are powerful.
B
Oh, really?
A
That's why they want it out.
B
Yeah, they're censoring that for sure.
A
For obvious reasons.
B
Man, you picked. You picked some powerful enemies.
A
Yeah, like, that's it. That's. That's why they don't want that. That's why the list has been out forever. But they suppress it. You know what I mean? The Wexner's, the foundation, all these guys.
B
I don't even know who those are. Wexner's.
A
That's why they want it.
B
Oh, yeah, they don't.
A
They don't want you to know, man.
B
Do you believe in, like, secret societies, Illuminati type stuff?
A
To a degree. You know, I definitely think that there's people out there doing. Doing and using their power for, you know, nefarious reasons for sure. But no, it's.
B
It's definitely real, like a shadow government type thing, though.
A
I believe, obviously there's a deep state, and I think that the deep state works with other elites to make happen. Right. Our government is absolutely occupied by certain individuals that have their. Have their intentions. And, you know, their goal is to make as much money as possible and not necessarily care about the. The people, which. You know, why a lot of people love this Luigi guy. Right. He kind of exposed an issue with their insurance world. You know, I've said this forever. Their insurance business is a very dirty business, very evil business. It's the only business where they do everything in their power to not render the service that they're paid for. Like, you are paid to help people in times of need, and a lot of times when they come to you, it's like during one of the worst times. And then their job is to kind of deny you the, The. The. The aid.
B
Right.
A
Because it's not profitable for them to pay out for your surgery. Right. And keep you alive. It's more profitable for them to just let you die a lot of times. So it's an evil business. And I mean, you know, I. I think killing a CEO wasn't really the way to do it, because at the end of the day, someone else is just going to step up and continue that, you know, evil enterprise. But it did bring light to an issue that we have in America where it's not a left wing or right wing issue. I know Ben Shapiro did a whole video saying that, oh, the loony left us with the blah, blah. Like, bro, this is an issue that doesn't. It's not a political issue. This is a real problem in America, where we are one of the most powerful countries in the world, yet people are dying from not having insurance. Like, what? That's crazy.
B
We're one of the wealthiest, but one of the unhealthiest.
A
Yeah.
B
Which is crazy.
A
Yeah. You know, and this is why I think, like, RFK got like so much support, is because we have so many problems. We, like, obesity is a huge problem. Like, I went viral, I went on Jubilee and I said, we need to have concentration camps for fat people where they concentrate on health and diet and exercising. And they looked at me like I was crazy. And I was like, well, hold on one second. Did we not just hold people in their houses for two to three years because of some pandemic? Right. Because of COVID for health. So you're telling me we can tell people to be locked in their house for years, can't work, destroy the economy, destroy the world. But I tell people, let's put them in a fucking concentration camp where they can concentrate on exercise and diet and not being a fat piece of. And that's looked at as controversial. Whatever. Yeah.
B
You're trying to help them.
A
Yeah, man. Like, obesity is a serious problem in America. Like, I think we need to mercilessly ridicule and bully fat people because it's issue. Like, you want to look at all the health problems that we have. It all stems from obesity. Heart disease, the number one killer in America. It's all for people being fat as diabetes. Like, if we reign that in, we wouldn't have all the issues we have with health, and then hopefully that wouldn't necessarily have the same implications where we need to rely on these predatory pieces of in the insurance world. Because the thing is this. They don't want you healthy, they want you fat. They want you stupid. They want you Eating the. Because that allows the insurance companies to pay out what they need to pay. And then the pharmaceutical companies go ahead and make a bunch of money on medicine. Like, it's not. There's no incentive. There's no money to be made when you're actually healthy and don't need to use the healthcare system.
B
Yeah.
A
Right. So they need you to use a healthcare system, but not too much, though. Not too expensive, because we want to be able to still make some money on the insurance world. Then we're going to go ahead and give you expensive ass medicine that's not good for you, that's going to make you even sicker because we don't want you healthy.
B
Yep.
A
And the way to avoid that is by not being a fucking fat piece of shit and not using. Like, I think most medicine is toxic and poisonous.
B
100%. Anything made out of the lob is.
A
Yeah.
B
I remember when I was a kid, you got bullied for being fat.
A
Yeah.
B
But now with the body positivity movement, you probably get canceled.
A
Ridiculous, man. This. And this is all liberal fudgeing bullshit. Like, I see all these fucking fat Shaniquas dancing around as cheerleaders. What the fuck? Why do we have fat cheerleaders? This is unacceptable. Like, completely unacceptable. Get these fucking hippopotamus the fuck out of here. Right? And that's the issue with the black community, too. Like, they. They just promote degeneracy. And. And this is something that I get. Oh, my. You're racist. Look, here's the facts. Black women weigh about 187 pounds on average. That's more than a man. That's unacceptable. They wear fake hair a lot of the times. They have attitudes. They have issues when pulled with public service. Right. When it comes to, like, the service industry, they're the least requested when it comes to being the customer service rep that you deal with. And then also they're the least requested whenever you have a customer base. Like, they don't want to wait on black people. Like, bro, got to do better. Right? So there's a lot of issues here with. And that's just one group of people that promote the whole fat. Right. Like, black women promote it all day. Oh, yeah, Lizzo and all this other. Which she's losing weight now. I'm glad. But there's multiple groups of people. That's just one example. But we promote people being fat way too much. And it's an issue. And then at least all these other problems.
B
Yeah, the black people are coming at you. But at the end of the day you actually mean well. You're trying to help them.
A
I'm trying because, like, the thing is this, in the black mini, they don't like the truth. If I say something like systemic racism and critical race theory is all designed to keep you a slave, to make you feel like there's white supremacy that's holding you back from success. It's all a lie, right? Police brutality there. It's not like. Yes. Does police brutality exist? Of course, but the reality is they kill way more white guys than. Than they do black guys. Way more. It's just that it doesn't go on the news, right? If this Marine Penny had choked out some random white guy in the train station, no one would give a bro. No one would care. So the reality is, is that these, you know, race bait people, whether it's the BLM or some other influencer like a Trigny that sits there, makes all their money off race grifting. Like, they need that shock, they need that sensation. They need this, you know, thing of white supremacy to, you know, to make money. Because they know that it's easier to be a victim than to take accountability. They know that being a victim is extremely profitable because people always want to feel like victims so they can go ahead and have something to cry and complain about, like feminism. The minority communities, etc, they need a boogeyman. Who is that boogeyman? The man. Who is the man? Caucasian man. Let's just call it what it is. We live in a world now where racism is okay towards white people, right? It's okay to shit on white people. And when we say shit on white people, who do we mean? Mostly white men. Because they're the privileged classes, they would say so. I look at it like I'm one of the few people that calls out this fucking ridiculousness. Look, the white man ain't holding you back. The Chinese man ain't holding you back. The Indian guy ain't holding you back. You can become successful regardless of what your skin color is or the way that you look, right? If I want to go ahead and play race politics, I'm Muslim, Arab, black, whatever the fuck you want to do. I can sit here and be a victim all day. Oh, Islamophobia, oh, white supremacy, whatever. But I refuse to fucking use that shit. So if someone like me, who can use every excuse in the book to say I'm a victim, refuses to do it, I don't want to hear nothing from these motherfuckers that were born here, raised here, hold an American passport, one of the best passports in the fucking world, speak English, live in a first world fucking country, we're running water and electricity, talking about, oh, white supremacy. It's so hard for me. Shut the up. There's kids in Gaza right now that haven't eaten in a week. And then your dumbass wants to sit here and say, oh, I can't get a job. Get the out of here, man. We live in the best country in the world. And a lot of these that cry about white supremacy, whatever, they've never left the country, they've never went anywhere else and seen how bad people have it, right? Do we have our problems in America? Of course. But it pales in comparison to other places. So I refuse to let people have this fucking victim mindset that a lot of people in the black community have where it's like, oh yeah, white supremacy, blah, blah. The reality, you motherfuckers commit a majority of the violent crime. Black men commit a disproportionate amount of violent crime in relation to their population. What, 6% of the population committing 50 to 60% of the violent crime in America. That's a problem. Let's deal with the real issue. We don't have fathers. It's not white supremacy, it's no dads. That's the issue. But they don't want you to. But these like, you know, BLM aren't going to talk about that. They're more concerned with BLM stands for Buying Lavish Mansions. They're going to buy these lavish mansions by fucking scamming you and telling you that you're a fucking victim.
B
And I fell for that. I fucking donated. That was the last time I donated to a charity.
A
Oh, shit.
B
Yeah. You posted on X. BLM is a domestic terrorist organization.
A
They are, they are because they use violence and intimidation to push their political agenda. That is the definition of terrorism. And they're, and obviously they're found in the United States, so it's domestic. I mean, look at the George Floyd riots you're over here, right? Making a fucking criminal career. Criminal, by the way, George Floyd, AKA George Fentanyl. A martyr. A martyr. Give him a golden casket. What? This guy's a scumbag, committing crimes all over the place. He died of a fentanyl overdose, right? Chauvin didn't fucking kill him. We should fucking give Chauvin a goddamn.
B
He's still in prison, right?
A
He's still in prison getting stabbed and everything else like that.
B
Crazy, right?
A
And he, and he, he didn't get a fair trial at all because there was an enormous amount of pressure to indict him. And then the FBI followed up and hit him with federal charges because, again. Right. We live in a world of social justice and public. Public appeal. So I think he needs to be pardoned because at the end of the day, we know Chauvin didn't really kill him. It was the fentanyl that killed him.
B
Yeah. And someone that worked for the government. Do you think these agencies have been weaponized in a certain degree?
A
Yeah. No, they. They. They. They definitely have. And then the other thing, too, I want people to realize, is that we. We live in a world. So what the George Floyd riots did was they basically made every D. A. In America Terrified of having BLM rights in their city. So what ended up happening, I noticed, is anytime a police officer has a use of force or something happens, the. The status quo now is the da's indict, no matter what. Okay. Use of our situation against a minority. Okay. We don't want our cities going on fire. Let's indict it. Let's charge the guy. Let the jury deal with it. Daniel penny, same example. They knew they had a weak case. Let's indict it. Let's prosecute them. Because. Let the jury figure it out. Because here's the thing. If they actually go to trial, right, and the guy is found innocent by his own peers, guess what? You can't blame the. The city, or you can't light the city on fire as much. It's not going to cause as much outrage. Of course, there's still going to be outrage. But it was the people that found him innocent. It wasn't us. Like, we arrested him. We did our job. You know, it's not our fault. So now we're seeing state governments, local governments, for fear of their city burning down, like Minneapolis, which was terrible, by the way. They destroyed that city. Right. Did you know, by the way, I did a shout out to my guy, Stu peters. I had a Twitter space with him. He said that when they deployed the national guard out there to help, they couldn't even have ammunition in their guns.
B
What?
A
Dude. Because he was there in Minneapolis when all this happened, the cops couldn't use any real force against them, against the riders, when they were, like, throwing molotov cocktails at the police station, and it was craziness.
B
Wow. Because they were scared of another George Floyd.
A
They were. They were that scared. Yep.
B
Damn.
A
Yep. And. And Walt's the. The governor at the time who tried to be our vice president. That loser. He literally sent The National Guard. And they didn't have ammunition in their guns.
B
That's crazy.
A
At least on the first or second day when they came in. It was ridiculous, man. So. And the riders caught on to this. That's why they were so brazen doing the. That they were doing. So. Yeah, man. Like everyone is scared of another George Floyd riot. So that's why in a lot of these cities they're just charging the police officers no matter what. And that's created a chilling effect where now the police officers don't even really want to do their jobs. They're resigning. Etc. And I find it incredible how. Let's just call a spade a spade. The most violent and dangerous cities in America, what are they? They're all blue cities, liberal. And what huge population of black people. I said it. I don't care. It is what it is. Why is it that all of the most crime ridden cities have a huge black population?
B
And it goes back to what you said earlier. No problem.
A
If the truth is racism, then call me a racist. Whatever.
B
Well, you can't even be racist against your own right?
A
I guess not. Right. But they wouldn't consider me black. That's how they get me out. They're like, well, you ain't one of us idiots.
B
You're only half. It doesn't.
A
Yeah, yeah. My family's from Sudan. Literally the land of the blacks. And they want to sit there. Focus on your country. I was born and raised here. I carry an American passport. I've served this country. I have more allegiance to the nation than you because I actually call like it is. I'm not going to sit here and lie because, oh, race politics. And I don't want to feel bad about it. But talking about black people, the truth is the truth. Black people commit a disproportionate amount of the violent crime in the United States. And it's a problem because we have fatherless households. Yeah, that's the issue. And everyone else is too scared to say this because they don't want to be labeled a racist or kicked off the Internet. Whatever. It's a fucking black problem. It needs to get fixed with the father in households. These women need to stop having sex with fudgeing, you know, Pookie and Ray Ray without a condom and having these kids out of fudgeing wedlock and creating all these fucking issues. That's the problem. But no one wants to address that because that's racist.
B
And a lot of people have victim mentality.
A
Huge victim mentality.
B
Know about it.
A
Everything is the Fucking white man's fault, right? Fucking retarded.
B
Yeah.
A
Low IQ shit.
B
That's a dangerous mindset.
A
It is, dude. And that's why the perpetual victimhood. And they never really, you know, do better.
B
Yeah.
A
Because they always want to point the finger and blame everybody else, and it's ridiculous.
B
You got to bring this up when you debate Dean Withers.
A
Yeah. If he actually does it, that.
B
What'd you agree on?
A
Yeah. I told him, like, let's. Let's set the debate. Tell me what. What platform you want to do it on. Whether it's me or we go on Tim Pool and do a culture war or whatever. We could pick up the. Pick the topics, but we haven't even got there. I literally showed the dm. We're saying, like, hey, when are we going to do is I'm going to event be in Vegas. But he didn't respond. The thing is, what I've realized about liberals, whether it's Hassan Piker or him or whatever, they're all cowards because they know that they argue on feelings and not facts. And that's the thing that I always have to my advantage is I am telling the truth and I got the truth on my side. So if I don't care if you want to debate me on systemic racism or you want to debate me on Israel, you want to debate me on, you know, masculinity, whatever. Like, I got the truth on my side because I rely on biology and facts, not my feelings. Right. So. But it's very difficult for people to do that. And then on the left, they can't do that because everything is victim, victim, victim. Disparity, disparity. Like, they'll lose.
B
To be fair, they'll probably lose sponsors if they had you on, too.
A
Yeah, that too.
B
They'll lose money. So I get it from a business point of view, but it does suck.
A
Yeah. Because they never want to actually debate. Like, they'll sit there and say that conservatives are idiots. Right. Or whatever. But then I'll be, all right, cool, let's have a discussion. They don't want to do it. Yeah, they don't want to do it. This is why I respect Destiny. I like Destiny a lot because me and him, even though we disagree on virtually everything, he will at least sit across from me and we'll have a debate. And we've done it many times. These other liberals, they won't do it. They're pussies.
B
Yeah, cowards.
A
Hasan Abi, this Dean Withers dude, they're. They're cowards. Bro.
B
Yeah. You see all this Twitch stuff going on right now?
A
Yeah, dude, Twitch. Fuck Twitch, man. Twitch is literally the pussiest, lamest, wackest platform. Like, they. They will ban you for, like, off platform activity. Like, they banned me, like, for off platform shit. Because when I was on there, I was like, I was cool. Like, I was adhering to their guidelines, whatever, but they can ban you for off platform shit. And in my head I'm like, wait, hold on one second. So ban me for off platform shit. I know what that means. Because I'm critical of a certain state. And then I look and like, someone like Hasan is like, every day spending eight hours talking shit about Israel. And I'm like, dude, I don't even talk shit about Israel. That, like, I criticize Israel, whatever. But that's not all my content. All he does all day is like, because he's a political commentator, so he's always talking about what's going on in the Middle east, whatever. I do that as well. But not all my content is political commentary. So I'm like, so let me get this straight. This guy is over here crying about Israel all day. I criticize Israel and I'm getting banned for that. But he's what? He's still around and the ADL is coming after him hard. And here's the thing, too, that's very important. I don't advocate for anyone to ever be censored. I don't want Hasan to get censored. I don't want even my worst enemy, even H3, who advocates all the time for me to be censored, saying I'm an anti Semite or I'm a sexist, or I'm a racist, whatever stupid ass is term they want to use against me. I don't advocate any of them be censored because I truly do believe that we need a market, the free market of ideas to be able to get the best idea. People need to be able to digest different ideologies and figure out what works best and then just let that. Let the. The marketplace work itself out.
B
Right?
A
But the left never wants that. They want you censored because they know that their ideas don't stand up to reality. Right. If you look at censorship in general, it overwhelmingly comes from the left. Now, are there some guys on the right to advocate for censorship? Of course. But what I've noticed is censorship almost always comes from the fucking left.
B
Yeah.
A
Because Hassan has advocated for me to be censored. H3, same. But I would never advocate for them. Like, I Don't want anything to happen to his platform because his stupid ass ideas need to be out there so that people can compare them to mine. I don't want their ideas going. I want them to be in the marketplace. But they, they versus they will sit there and advocate for people to be censored. He said. Oh, he was talking about getting Sneako banned off Twitch. He probably met a put, had a word in for us getting banned like a dumbass. Ethan Klein has talked about us that we're anti Semitic and we shouldn't be wherever or, or we're racist or sexist, whatever they want to term they want to use. And it's like that's what these liberals do. They advocate for you to be banned instead of debating you.
B
Yeah, it's nuts. When you went on Ethan's show, did he edit any of it out? Was it pretty civil? He edited a lot out.
A
We went live and we streamed on both platforms. What I noticed was they were just clip farming the whole time. Like he didn't actually debate anything. Like he just was like getting our answers on things. To be like, wow, that's like such a crazy take, man. Wow. Like do you even get girls? Like, like I'll say something like, men and women are different, right? Men are supposed to be leaders. Well, like do you say that's your mom? Like, bro, like, and that's the issue with these guys. They can never actually attack your arguments. They have to attack you. Do you even get girls loud? You do even get like, do you have a girlfriend? Like they'll never be able to actually attack your, your viewpoints ever, bro. Yeah, ever. Like him and his ugly ass wife like just sitting there like you know, trying to virtue signal. This is why their views of like this is why their support has like dropped off so much is like because now they don't. They're not based at all. Like they're just super woke and left and like woke people. Like, people are tired of the censorship. People are tired of the political correctness. People are tired of it, dude. Like they're literally tired of it. Like this, this last election proved it, right? I mean you're a guy that used to be former left, right? Now you're waking up like, this is annoying because you can never be liberal enough, right? If you have some viewpoints, but then you have some other. Like, if you're like what I would consider like a sensible Democrat, they'll look at you as a bigot or a Nazi, right? So you can't win with these people. So you might as well just have your viewpoints, which a lot of people, right. That tend to be more factually based, tend to be more conservative and just let them cry because you can never win with these people. And that's why I think H3 is dealing with now like they're getting eaten alive by their own audience. Because Ethan wants to keep going more and more left and be more and more woke and everything else. And they're put in a weird place because the left is overwhelmingly pro Palestine. They're anti Israel.
B
Oh, I didn't know that.
A
Yeah, the left is overwhelmingly pro Palestine.
B
Wow.
A
Right versus. Versus Him. He's like, in a weird spot because, like, obviously he's like, I think he's an Israeli as well. So, like, he's in a weird place where he's got to kind of have to, you know, use a stupid ass anti Semitism term for criticism of Israel. But they're killing kids every single day, which is antithetical to the whole liberal mindset and viewpoint. Right. Like, Israel, when you look at it, is like in a very. It's. It's ethno, it's echo trimmer, it's a. It's a religious ethno state. Right. So it is, like antithetical to like Democrat leftist ideals. So. And it's an apartheid. So it's very difficult for him as a left wing creator to be able to have left wing ideologies, but then sit there and also defend Israel's like, current genocide.
B
Yeah.
A
So he's in a really weird spot right now with his viewer base.
B
That's a tough spot. I feel like authenticity these days is winning. You saw with the election, no one gave a shit about the celebrity endorsements.
A
No, no one gave a fuck, bro. And people are tired of, like, the fakeness. They are like, you know, even though there's like, some things about Trump that I dislike, I like, I dislike the, the super Israel support and then Operation Warps people with the vaccine. Those are really my only two criticisms. Everything else, I mean, I wish he was a little bit harder on immigration, but look, I can make concessions on certain things. And then also, like, he was just a way better candidate than Kamala. Every single way. It wasn't even. Yeah, and the, the voter turnout and people voting for Trump shows that people are overwhelmingly tired of, like, the right. You know, thanks to platforms like Rumble and X as well, people were able to, like, hear other sides.
B
Yeah, those platforms were game changers.
A
They were huge, dude. They're huge. Because we know YouTube was like, fucking censoring Trump, big time.
B
I almost got banned. Anytime I mentioned the vaccine word, I got the video.
A
Oh, yeah, yeah. Anything. Vaccine, election fraud, whatever. Like, YouTube was banning people for a very fucking long time for that shit. And you talk about being critical of Israel. Now they're trying to pass legislation where that's going to be considered like, anti Semitism.
B
What? They're trying to speak out on it. On Twitter, they can charge you.
A
They're trying. They're trying to pass a bill right now for it that it's. That it's anti Semitism.
B
And that's so crazy.
A
Well, they already. I think they already got it through. They're. Well, it's. It's getting passed for the college campuses soon.
B
Oh, my gosh.
A
Yeah. Because of all the protests that they had in Harvard and like that.
B
Wow.
A
So that's where we're going, man. Like, you know, freedom of speech is something that we need to fight really hard to protect. And, you know, I'm a free speech absolutist. Like, there's people that I disagree with. Like, you know, there's white supremacists out there that say dumb that I don't agree with, but I defend their right to say it all the time. People sit there and say, myron, well, you're a white supremacist. You sit there and align with white supremacists. Well, where I land white supremacists is I believe in free speech. And I agree with, like, you know, over representation of a foreign nation in our government. They're right about that. And there are other things, too. But the point is, is that I stand for free speech. So even if people say things that I dislike, I'll still defend their right to say it. Like Ethan Dumbass Client, Hassan Abi. These leftists that say dumb, I don't think they should ever be censored, but they don't reciprocate that. They call for censorship all the time. They've made multiple videos saying that fresh if it needs to be banned.
B
That's wild. I agree, though. People were racist to me growing up, but I would never want to silence them. Yeah, you know, I got bullied for being Asian or whatever. Dumb. But I would never be like, let me take your voice away.
A
Yeah, yeah. You know, like, free speech means speech that you might not like. Yeah, right. Like people say all the time, martin, you're dumb black Sandiga. Okay, cool. Well, you should be able to say that.
B
Yeah. And we share the same views on bullying, actually, which is a hot take. Because I got bullied, but it was actually good for me.
A
Yeah.
B
You know what I mean?
A
It makes you. Bullying is a very natural way for society to correct degeneracy, stupidity, or inadequacy. Like, inadequacies. Like, if you're a weirdo, like, you have, like, a weird way that you speak, you'll say, bro, you're weird, or you talk weird. Well, that's going to motivate you to, like, get out there and get a speech coach and fix that. Or someone says, you're a fat ass, it's going to motivate you to go to the gym. I went to the gym because I got bullied and I'm glad I did. Like, bullying is a very healthy response to being inadequate.
B
Right, Agreed. Some people think it's, like, it shouldn't be allowed, but I think it should be.
A
If we had more bullying, we wouldn't have all these slots. Like. Like, shame used to be a very viable way to deal with female promiscuity and degeneracy. Like, it used to curb that, but now we sit here and say, yeah, own your sexuality. Be a woo. Like, now what do we got? We got a bunch of women that are miserable and sad. Like, I find it interesting that, like, since the 70s, women have become more and more powerful with making more money, being more successful, more educated, but they're the saddest and most depressed they've ever been. Something like one. One in three women is on antidepressant medication.
B
That's terrible.
A
So how is it they become more free and made more money and have more liberty than ever before, but they're the most depressed?
B
It's nuts. I remember when I was in high school, it's like a big deal to lose your virginity as a girl.
A
Yeah.
B
And now it's like, people are losing it in middle school and, like, seventh grade, sixth grade.
A
Dude, the Taliban was right about some man. Like, like, yo, I'm serious, man. Like, yo, some dudes in caves, like, we think that they're backwards or whatever, but they're like, nah, women can't assemble together and they'll go to school and cover their hair and, you know, promote modesty and they can't vote. And then I'm like, damn. Like, these things was spin. They was onto something because, like, we've, like, you know, because if you look at, like, the west, right? You look at America, you look at Scandinavian countries, like, we're the biggest experiment in, like, allowing feminism to just flourish. Right. But what do we got? We got, like, one of the worst situations we've ever had in society. Like, we've. Women are more liberated now than ever before, but we have the most societal problems that we ever had before. We have the lowest birth rates, fam, nuclear families, declining high divorce rates, etc. It's caused a lot of problems. So, you know, like this newscaster lady goes out to, you know, meet with the Taliban and she asked them about, like, you know, what is your thoughts on democracy and women voting? And they start laughing. Like, it kind of makes sense why they're laughing because they had the $4 to know, like, yo, if you put women in power, it's going to create some problems. And then like, this is biblical. Like, you go back to ancient times. Why is it that women were never in positions of power? Like, back then they kind of figured it out that, yo, if women have positions of power or you make them equal to men, your society is going to collapse. And look at what we got going on now.
B
Wow. Would you ever vote for a woman for a political position?
A
No. They should never have power. Like, with that said, are there women out there that are anomalies that have the capability of leading? Of course there's always going to be anomalies. There's always going to be exceptions to the rule. But in general, most women are not equipped or have the ability to lead, and I'll tell you why. So one thing that I've noticed and I, I find this interesting that, like, none of these, like, people like David Buss or Jordan Peterson could talk about this. Like, these academics, when it comes to female nature, none of them could talk about this because no one has talked to more women than I have. One of the most profound things that I found out from talking to 3, 200 or 3,300 women at this point is regardless of education, background, culture, profession, one thing that stands out, if I say something that's generally true, they will make a point to interrupt what I'm saying, to say, well, not all women or that doesn't apply to me. This is something that's a phenomenon that I've only noticed with women. Me and you have a conversation or there's a group of guys here and we say, yeah, most men are men. Yeah, you're right. All the guys are going to. Yeah, well, yeah, no one's going to stand up, be like, I'm not a retard. Like, we just understand that. Like, yeah, most people, Most guys are fucking adequate losers. Right? We're okay with like, criticizing men as a whole and understanding that whether it Applies to us or not. It's a general statement and it's, it's true. But with women, for some odd reason, they need to make a fucking point and disrupt what you're saying or try to say, well, that's just your opinion or whatever. And this is something that I've noticed only with women. And then I. And then like, I always ask myself, like, why is it that they have this need to like, you know, make a. Make an argument for the exception to the rule or say that I'm not a part of that? And it comes back to women's inherent need for inherent solipsism or, or the inability to. What's the word I wanted to use here? We'll just say solipsism, right? Which basically the world revolves around them, right? And they're unable to exercise empathy, right? One of my controversial takes, I say women lack empathy, really, right? And people say, well, that's not true. I'm like, well, don't get it twisted. They have sympathy. They can feel sorry for you, or they can feel pain towards your situation, but they don't have empathy. And what I mean by this is they don't understand, like, the male experience and they don't understand men in general, right? And the reason why they don't understand men is because they don't have to just exist. Be pretty. Men come to you. But men, on the other hand, we have to understand empathy with women if we want to attract them, right? You take a girl on a date, what do you do? You dress well, smell good, right? You set up your apartment in a way where it's clean and the vibe is there so that she doesn't feel weird and freaked out when you come in. You clean your streak marks off the toilet, right? You stains everywhere. You hide any embarrassing medication, right? You do that because you understand that for you to get laid, you need a woman to feel comfortable. You need to create a mood, right? You need to be romantic, right? Women say the vibe. What does the vibe mean? The vibe means you creating an environment where she feels comfortable with potentially engaging in sexual relations with you, right? Men need to understand this to get laid. Women, on the other hand, don't need to understand men. So that solipsism that I mentioned, they don't really need to understand anything except for themselves, and that's all that matters. And people say, well, that's kind of up. Well, it's actually natural. And the reason why is because since women are distasked with having children and caring for children, they need to care for themselves because they understand that they're the incubators of the next generation. So that's where that need comes from. Like, there's a. I think it's called bruffles law, if I'm not mistaken, where woman understands that I need to use a man to get a child, and then once I have a child, get resources from that man to take care of the child. This is why if you ask a woman, hey, your husband or your child, they're always going to pick their child every single time. And that's fine. But for them to be able to come to that conclusion, they need to be inherently selfish. Women are inherently selfish. They have to be men. On the other hand, we can't be. Because men make excess resources. For what? For women.
B
Right.
A
And for kids versus women, when they make excess resources, what do they say? I'm independent. There's a difference. Man makes a bunch of money and becomes successful, he's like, damn, I could share. I can have a family now. Women makes a bunch of money, successful. I'm independent. Independent of whom? Oh, men. So when women make money versus men make money, it's not the same. Men are okay with sharing their resources. Women are not.
B
Wow.
A
This is why women make money. What do they do if they make more money than their man, that divorce is coming. Get rid of your dumbass. So women kind of look at men as a. As a. As a means to an end, to achieve the agenda of security, resources, and most importantly, resources for their kid. So to bring this all back full circle, the solipsism exists because they. They're the ones that hold the kids. They're the ones that burn that. That have the burden of. Of taking care of the kids. So they need those excess resources. So they have to be a selfish. So I've accepted this and I've understood this, but it's something that I've noticed during the course of doing the podcast that it's an astounding thing that I've noticed where I say something that's generally true and they almost always have to still make an argument for the exception or whatever because their solipsism doesn't allow them to kind of see beyond that.
B
Yeah, that's fascinating. Yeah, I love how you tie in the biology to it.
A
Yeah, it's just like a female thing. And I've like. Because I kept, like, trying to figure out why the. Are these so retarded? Like, why can they not understand general things? But then it comes back to, like, they just have this inability to empathize with facts and the way they feel. Right. Like, men are more concerned with empirical correctness versus women are more concerned with, like, moral superiority. Like, they did a poll. Right. And it's funny, I got to call out Chris. Chris Williamson for this. He has this podcast, and he brings these into people in, Right. And he. He doesn't. I think he's scared to have me on which I get it.
B
I'm controversial, by the way.
A
Yeah, Right.
B
I think he's modern wisdom. Right.
A
Yeah. And. And it's funny because he did a tweet the other day where he talked about how, like, you know, men overwhelmingly, like, you know, stand for free speech versus women think that free speech should be curbed if it hurts feelings. And, you know, all this other stuff, and it confirms a lot of things that I've said, which is basically right. People. Because people. The thing is, people don't like the way I deliver the information, but the things I say are almost always statistically true as well.
B
It's like how Andrew Tate was.
A
Yeah. Shout out to my guy, Andrew Tate. And we say things that are biologically true. It's just that people don't like the way they say it's because we're so controversial. But when you do stat, when you do studies or whatever it comes. It comes true. Women are communitarian by nature. Men are meritocracy based by nature. Men understand hierarchies. Men understand being successful. 1, 2, 3, 4, 5. Women don't understand that. They don't understand hierarchies, Right? If a rich man walks into a room and there's a bunch of guys there, we understand the pecking order, and we're going to respect that guy because he's a millionaire, successful, etc. Women don't give a. About that. Oprah walks into a room, they don't really care because, like, is she pretty? No. The prettiest girl gets the most acknowledgment. Right? So women don't have the same concept of meritocracy that. That men do. Right. So with that said, they're more concerned with, like, political correctness and being socially acceptable than the truth. So, like, men. Right. Seven. So something like. I can pull up the. You know, let me show you, because I think this will be very important, Right? Because I've talked about this before, and everyone thinks that I'm crazy.
B
Facts to back it up.
A
Yeah. And. And it's funny because this. This. This tweet that he made backs up what I've been Saying forever. And I tell him all the time, I'm like, bro, look, I get it, I'm controversial, whatever. But people have been saying, because he brings on all these people that like, criticize the red pill and they criticize me, and I'm like, why can't I defend myself? Brings these like pseudo intellectuals on that like, don't know anything about, like dealing with women in modern society. 71 of men reported that protecting, and this is between male and female professors in America. 71% of men reported that protecting free speech is more important than promoting an inclusive society. 59 of women said promoting an inclusive society is more important than protecting free speech.
B
Wow.
A
So a majority of women said that promoting an inclusive society is more important than protecting free speech. Now there's more stuff like this, but what, this basically proves what I've always said about women. Because he goes into more stats that show that women prioritize being politically correct and like social values versus, like what's, you know, empirically correct or what's factual. And, and when you look at censorship most of the time, what is censorship? Censorship is like leftists ideologies being challenged. So they say, this is hate speech, we're gonna go ahead and ban it. Right. And we look at a lot of these tech companies, right? And we look at who's in the trust and safety teams. Who is it? Women, bro. It's women. Right? So that's, that's, that's, that's what it is. What going back with this whole situation is like morality and being accepted and inclusivity is far more important to women than it is to men.
B
Makes sense. Men are way more logical, right?
A
Way more. Way more. And this is why, this is why women can't be in positions of leadership. Because that, that need to like, be socially superior. A lot of the times will clout their judgment on what needs to actually be done. Now there are cutthroat women out there that will understand, hey, we got to do what's right, regardless of how, how we feel about it. Of course. But again, that is the minority.
B
Yeah. I think it's a good balance though. Like some days you'll come home after a long day and want some advice from your girl, you know?
A
Yeah, I mean, I would never take advice from my.
B
Not business advice, I'm saying just like emotional advice.
A
Yeah, I mean, you want to talk with her or some shit, but I, I don't think women are ever in a position to really advise men of anything. And the reason why is because they don't so take women, live life on easy mode. So why the fuck am I going to sit here and talk to someone that lives life on easy mode when I play the game on hard mode? Like, you ever play goldeneye?
B
No.
A
Okay. Okay. Well, you ever play, you play video games, right? Yeah.
B
Yeah.
A
Okay, so like women, right, they get something called the game shark, right? They can just like get the cheat codes for the game without even playing the game. And they get all the golden guns and all the power ups and all this other. Right. Versus the guys. We actually got to play the game on hard mode. No power. It's just a shitty little pistol. We got to fight our way to the main boss. So if you had to play the game on super hard mode and you beat the game, well, guess what? You're going to be a lot more skilled than the person that had the cheat codes. Right?
B
Right.
A
So I look at it like, why as a man, when you play the game in hard mode, are you going to go and sit there and talk to someone who plays the game on easy mode and get their advice? They're not even in a position. They don't even understand what the game is like on, on your level. So they're not really in a position to, to give. They're not really in a position to give you viable advice because women have privileges that they're not even aware of sometimes, right? They're able to get in certain rooms that me and you would have to fight tooth and nail to get into.
B
Right?
A
They're able to network with individuals that we would never get a chance to network with unless we were on that individuals level. So for, for me, well, not even for me. I, I, for most men, I tell them like, yo, most women are not in a position to tell you. They're just not. And most, and most importantly, they don't want to be in a position to tell you because if they're in a position to tell you anything, that means that they're equal to you, which you already lost at that point. Right? You need to be superior to your girl in every single way. That's the only way that she'll respect you. Women don't want to equal. They'll sit there and like, I just want to equal. No they don't. Because if you go 5050 on the bills, she's going to start complaining and bitching that you're not man enough to pay the bills. So you might as well just be the that guy from the beginning. Your opinion doesn't matter. We're going to do what I say. I'll listen to what you got to say, but at the end of the day, I make the final decision, right? And the woman's got to earn that ability to be even your consiglier if we're going to use mafia terms where she can even tell you what she thinks as your adviser. But at the end of the day, you make the final decision. And if you want to tell her to shut up at any time, you tell her shut up. This is how it's going to go. And women want that. They want a guy that can, you know, put their foot down and say, we're going to do this. You just focus on being pretty. They want that. They just don't want to admit it. Because, you know, they fall so hard through feminism to be equal, but the reality is they never want to be equal in the first place.
B
Right?
A
So I think if guys have this mindset where it's like, I'm the leader, the buck starts and falls, stops with me, you're going to be in a way better position and you're going to be more attractive to your girl. Cuz she's going to. What she's going to be able to do, she's going to be able to be more feminine, she's going to be more relaxed. She's like, oh, I can calm down. This guy got it. He just, he just, he's just competent, like he doesn't need me. And that's what makes her say, I want this guy. Because it's so rare to find a guy that can like, literally, like, doesn't need them, you know, like so many guys are. I took one of the biggest things I tell guys, never cry in front of your girl. Ever do that. Because the thing is, is that when you cry in front of your girl, what you're doing is you're triggering, you're triggering this, this like carnal feeling in them where you're displaying that you are not an adequate mate. Right, right. Joe Rogan famously had this girl on Forget her name, but who cares? She's a female. Yeah. And yeah, some random female, but she was dating a UFC fighter. Okay. See how women acquire status through men. So she, she was dating this UFC fighter and she said that, yeah, I was seeing him get beat up in a cage and I just like, I don't know. It was over for me at that point. And the reason why is because she saw another man beating up her man, dominating her man. Even though this guy's a top 1% fighter, could beat up 99% of men. But it's another thing for women to see you getting beat up, right? And then they're like, oh, my safety. It's like jeopardized now. Like, this guy can get beat up. Oh, my God. Like, you need to be that superhero for her, right? I would equate that right to. To give guys an example. Like, that's like, you see your girl get. You would never have the same respect for you. Like, what the. This is disgusting. Yeah, this. That's like her seeing you get beat up by a dude. Same thing crying in front of her. Whatever. Like, it triggers this. This. This carnal, cerebral thing in her head where she's like, this guy can't protect me. I need to leave. Right? Because women always look at men from a strength perspective. You're supposed to be the leader, right? No matter how much of a feminist she is, it's all a lie. She still expects you. When the push comes to shove, some breaks in the house, you need to be the man and handle it. This is why women are attracted to criminals, murderers, violent individuals. Why is Luigi so attractive right now to all these? Because he committed an act of murder. Want to look at serial killers? Why is Ted Bundy being fawned upon by women? Jeffrey Dahmer, etc. Why did show up at their trials in droves, right? Richard Ramirez. Because women love dangerous men that have the capability of violence. They love it because that shows that they can protect. So as a guy, when you cry in front of your girl or you get beat up or anything else like that, what you're showing is weakness. And weakness is the worst thing that you could show your girl. So that's why I tell guys, you make the decisions. You don't need her advice. Don't get beat up in front of her. Don't cry in front of her. You want to cry? Cool. Go cry in front of your friends because they can actually probably help you. She can't. She's going to lose attraction for you. And what question why she's with you. She won't obviously openly say this, but she's going to feel in her mind. Because some women will sit there and say, well, I want my guy to open up to me. Don't do it.
B
It's a trap.
A
It's a trap. It's a trap. Don't do it, man. Because women are fantastic at telling you one thing, but responding to something else favorably. I want a nice guy. You be a nice guy. Guess what? She loses attraction for you. I want a gentleman. You Bring flowers on a first date, Lose your traction for you. Like, don't listen to anything they say. They don't. The thing with women is what they say they're attracted to a lot of times is not what they're aroused by. What they're aroused by is a guy like me that tells them, shut up, you're wrong, we're gonna do this. Doesn't take their. Right. Doesn't tolerate them, talking back to them. Right. Like, I look at women as inferiors. If I'm going to be all the way honest, you guys need to look at women as inferiors. Because if you look at them as inferiors, it's a lot easier. You can go up and talk to them without an issue. You can be confident. You could be the masculine leader that you need to be. And I know some people are like, well, that's up, Myron. But men need to have this mindset because it's going to take them off the pedestal. The worst thing you could do is pedestalize women, because when you pedestalize her, she inevitably has to look down on you. When she has to look down on you, she loses respect for you. You need to be looking down on her. Because when men are in the position of power, when men are the ones that are being admired by a woman and treated like a king, we know how to act, right? Right. The problem is this chivalry used to exist in a time when women were actually ladies, right? When they weren't getting all this attention from randoms on the Internet, when they weren't being sluts, when they actually deserve to be treated like a lady. But now with feminism and women think that they're equal, etcetera, you have to do everything in your power to establish the hierarchy, that you're actually the. The prize here and that you are the man, you're the leader. So with us, right, a guy might not get a gift from a woman ever in his life. He might not get a kiss until his twenties. He might not get a date until his twenties. He might not get a girl to say, oh, you're really cute, ever. Right? Men rarely, if ever, get compliments or attention from women. So when we do get it, guess what happens? We appreciate it. We act good. We say we're really happy, right? We will keep that gift and treasure it. When women get attention, they don't. They get it all the time. They don't value it. So for you as a man, the reason why you need to be in the position of power and why she needs to be looking up to you is because you know how to act. When you get that admiration, you know how to appreciate it. Women don't know how to appreciate male attention and respect anymore because they're sluts and they get it all the time now. So now we the shoes on other foot. We have to be the ones where they admire us. They need to be the adorer. That's the only way they're going to stay in the relationship. Because the other thing men need to understand is that women are far more likely to leave relationships. Since they're far more likely to leave relationships, they need to be entertained more. The only way that they're going to be entertained more is that you need to be the one that they're chasing. Women are like cats throw a ball of yarn at a cat, cat plays with it for a bit. If you keep moving the ball of yarn, the cat keeps playing with and chasing it. But if you let the ball yarn stay it, plays with it, eventually gets bored, walks away. That's women. Women don't want consistency. They don't want monotony. They need to be constantly excited. And the only way they feel that is that you need to be the guy that they're chasing. So they need to feel as though they're inferior to at all times so they can stay in the relationship. Because the example I give is this, and I give this example to women all the time to understand. I need the guys in here to understand this too, because I got to get it through their head when they say stupid, like, happy wife, happy life. No, you dumbass, it's happy king, happy king dumb. This how it goes. If you go to a store and you get a deal, right? You get a fantastic deal. Let's say you got it for 50% off. Are you going to go back and return the car or whatever you bought? Probably not. You got a great deal. But if you bought the car and you overpaid for it, and then a friend comes in later and says, yo, dude, I got that car for like 75% off, you're going to go back to that deal and be like, hey, what the. Yeah, that's how women are. They're always looking for the best deal. So if they know that they got the best deal, they're not going back to a dealership. And you need to establish you're the best deal all the time as the guy, but as the woman, right? For the women, right, they need to feel like they got the best deal at all times so they don't take your Ass store back and think they can do better. Because women always. Look, when women deal with men, they're doing it from a. How do I say this? They're doing it from a doubt lens. Like, do I have the best guy that I can get? Right. And if the answer is yes, like, this is the best that I can do, they're not going nowhere. This is the best deal. They're not going back to that dealership. But I feel like they can get a better deal. They feel like they got gypped, they overpaid for the car. They're going back to get a better deal.
B
Right.
A
So you need to always be that best deal. And that's why I tell guys all the time, stay in the gym. Don't, you know, be a. And start following her lead. Work more hours, make more money, become more successful. The problem is that most guys get a girlfriend, they start getting soft. We'll have ice cream with you. And like that. Like, no, that don't change from the guy that originally got her. Stay the same. If not become a bigger. So she realizes, holy, I got the best deal. The reason why he treats me like this is because he can find another girl and have other women. Oh, you're Marin. That's controversial. Fine. You. You're a religious guy. You don't want to have multiple women, fine. You don't have to do that. But she needs to know that your dumbass can be replaced at any time. And that stays with you being in the gym, being attractive, other women looking at you. That is the most honest signal to her that she got the best deal. So women need to always be the adore. They need to be the one that's always being in being chasing you, and they need to be following you. But when it's the other way around and you're like, you know, groveling for her and she's on the pedestal, she's going to lose attraction for you and leave you, man. Because women need that sense of, oh, my God, I got the best deal.
B
Yeah. So what's your approach with disagreements and conflict with your woman then?
A
I. I don't even look at them as equal to disagree with them. Like, I don't argue with women. Like, that's how guys need to be. I don't negotiate with terrorists, and I don't negotiate with women either. Like, it's my way or the highway. You're not even equal for me to argue with you guys. If you're sitting here arguing with your girl, you already up. You already up me and My girl, don't argue. This is what we're doing.
B
You never argued once before.
A
No, no, because I tell her, this is what it is.
B
That's impressive.
A
We need to do this. Okay, but that. But again, that's not easy to do because I pay all the bills. I take care of her. She don't got to worry about, like, I'm the boss. This is how it goes. Right. And she loves that.
B
So you laid out clear expectations from the start. Yeah, I think that's the important part.
A
Yeah, you have to. Yeah. You know what I mean? But. But, yeah, I genuinely believe, like, this. This is why I tell guys it's so important that you're superior to your girl in every single way. Right. Because you can't do this because the pro. The other thing, too. Let's put some onus on the guys. Guys want a submissive woman that's going to follow their leader. Whatever. They're bum. They don't got a job. They live with your mom and don't got a car. The. Do you think this is, like, if you want authority over your girl, you also need to be responsible for your girl. You also need to be that guy. Right. You can't have all this authority and be a loser. You have to have your in order. You got to be in the gym. You got to be that guy. She should be looking up to you as, like, a role model. Damn near.
B
Yeah.
A
So. But yeah, no, I don't argue with my girl. And I truly believe if anybody is here in a relationship and you're arguing with your woman, you lost, bro.
B
Damn.
A
Because to argue with someone implies that you're equal. That's.
B
That's true, man. Well, man, what's planned for next year?
A
Next year, man, Keep doing a pod, Wake more guys up. That's really, like, my biggest thing, man, is like, helping guys with, like, getting a credit score on point, buying real estate, making money, being in relationships where they're happy with their girl, their girl respects them. Because there's nothing worse than a guy that, like, is in a relationship with a woman that, like, doesn't respect them, bro. That's a miserable existence, you know? Or when the woman has a leverage in a relationship, she treats that guy like dude versus, like, if a guy has the leverage, like, nine out of ten times, you're gonna treat her well, you know, I mean, like, we. You know, like, if you got the. Like, unless you're like, a scumbag. Like, I don't teach. Tell you guys this stuff so that you treat a woman poorly. I'm telling you guys this so you can be in a position to provide everything for your girl so she don't got to worry about.
B
Right.
A
I'm a firm believer in a nuclear family. I'm a firm believer that men should be the ones working, and women should work electively. And if you have kids, they don't work. So that. That's how it's got to be, man. Your girl should be able to chill and be happy. Women are the happiest when they don't have to worry about, like, stuff like work and.
B
Yeah, we'll link your stuff, and we'll link Castle Club below.
A
Oh, yeah. Yeah. Appreciate that.
B
Thanks for coming on, dude.
A
Absolutely, man.
B
Y. Thanks for watching, guys. Peace.
Digital Social Hour: The Leadership Crisis Nobody's Talking About | Myron Gaines Part 1 Uncensored DSH #1024
Release Date: January 2, 2025
Host: Sean Kelly
Guest: Myron Gaines
Introduction
In this compelling episode of Digital Social Hour, host Sean Kelly engages in an unfiltered and candid conversation with Myron Gaines. The discussion delves deep into the current leadership crisis, societal dynamics, gender roles, and the pervasive influence of modern media and cultural movements. Throughout the episode, Gaines shares his perspectives on masculinity, feminism, relationships, and systemic issues affecting various communities.
1. Media Influence and Personal Branding
Brett Cooper's Departure from Daily Wire
Gaines begins by addressing Brett Cooper's recent announcement of leaving Daily Wire, highlighting the often manipulative nature of media outlets in shaping personalities and narratives.
Notable Quote:
“Myron Gaines: [01:12] 'It's funny, cuz she made a video talking about me... Toxic alpha males, which is hilarious because I've never once called myself an alpha male.'"
Control within Media Platforms
He emphasizes how media companies, like Daily Wire, exert control over their commentators, limiting authentic expression and encouraging narratives that align with corporate agendas.
Notable Quote:
“Myron Gaines: [02:37] 'I'll give her the benefit of doubt. Right. That she was under Daily Wire control...'"
2. Gender Dynamics and Relationships
Views on Masculinity and Femininity
Gaines articulates his belief in traditional gender roles, asserting that men are naturally predisposed to leadership and resource generation, while women are inherently suited for nurturing and maintaining societal value.
Notable Quote:
“Myron Gaines: [04:24] 'Men are supposed to be leaders, women are supposed to be follow... they're inferior in almost every way.'"
Critique of Modern Feminism
He critiques modern feminism, arguing that the movement has led to a disconnect in relationships, where women prioritize personal advancement over familial and relational stability.
Notable Quote:
“Myron Gaines: [07:07] 'Girls that make money tend to be hoes... they don’t make good girlfriends and they don’t make good wives.'"
3. The Impact of Pornography and Platforms Like OnlyFans
Regulation of Adult Content
Gaines discusses the adverse effects of pornography and platforms like OnlyFans on societal morals and personal relationships, advocating for stricter regulation to curb its influence.
Notable Quote:
“Myron Gaines: [10:02] 'Yeah, bro, it's a problem... It’s a huge problem.'"
Behavioral Consequences
He links the availability of adult content to negative behavioral changes in men, such as addiction and diminished ambition, while also criticizing women who engage in these platforms for compromising their long-term relationship prospects.
Notable Quote:
“Myron Gaines: [14:38] 'Their options are so limited cuz they're making so much super limited, dude.'"
4. Systemic Issues: Racism and Crime
Racism and Its Effects
Gaines offers a controversial take on racism, attributing higher crime rates in black communities to factors like fatherlessness rather than systemic racism, and condemns movements like Black Lives Matter as exacerbating victim mentality.
Notable Quote:
“Myron Gaines: [41:44] 'BLM is a domestic terrorist organization... they use violence and intimidation to push their political agenda.'"
Crime and Law Enforcement
He critiques law enforcement practices and discusses high-profile cases, arguing that modern surveillance and forensic techniques have made serial killings nearly impossible today compared to the past.
Notable Quote:
“Myron Gaines: [23:06] 'The media blew up this thing... the surveillance footage showed that he didn't have a unibrow, but now he does, bro.'"
5. Free Speech and Censorship
Defense of Free Speech
Gaines staunchly defends free speech, criticizing platforms like YouTube and Twitch for censoring conservative voices while allowing the proliferation of harmful content like pornography.
Notable Quote:
“Myron Gaines: [49:34] 'I don't advocate for anyone to ever be censored... We need a market, the free market of ideas.'"
Double Standards in Censorship
He points out the double standards in how censorship is applied, arguing that the left predominantly drives the push for censorship while the right favors free expression.
Notable Quote:
“Myron Gaines: [56:17] 'Free speech means speech that you might not like... The left never wants that.'"
6. Leadership and Personal Responsibility
Establishing Hierarchy in Relationships
Gaines emphasizes the importance of men maintaining authority and leadership within relationships to ensure respect and stability, discouraging men from showing vulnerability.
Notable Quote:
“Myron Gaines: [67:16] 'Men need to look at women as inferiors... because if you look at them as inferiors, it's a lot easier.'"
Self-Improvement for Men
He advises men to focus on personal development—such as maintaining physical fitness and financial stability—to remain attractive and authoritative partners.
Notable Quote:
“Myron Gaines: [77:01] 'Stay in the gym... become more successful. If you have some viewpoints, let them cry because you can never win with these people.'"
7. Controversial Perspectives on Gender and Society
Empathy and Solipsism
Gaines controversially claims that women lack empathy towards men’s experiences due to inherent solipsism, making it difficult for them to understand or relate to male perspectives.
Notable Quote:
“Myron Gaines: [63:08] 'They have this inability to exercise empathy... they don't have to understand anything except for themselves.'"
Critique of Modern Social Movements
He argues that modern social movements, like body positivity and inclusivity initiatives, have led to societal degradation, advocating for traditional values and stricter social norms.
Notable Quote:
“Myron Gaines: [36:00] 'We need to mercilessly ridicule and bully fat people because it's an issue.'"
Conclusion
Throughout the episode, Myron Gaines presents a series of provocative and often contentious viewpoints on leadership, gender roles, societal norms, and systemic issues. His perspectives challenge mainstream narratives, advocating for a return to traditional structures and emphasizing personal responsibility and authority, especially among men. The conversation underscores the deep divisions and ongoing debates surrounding these critical societal topics.
Final Notable Quote:
“Myron Gaines: [80:41] 'Women are the happiest when they don't have to worry about stuff like work and...'"
Key Takeaways
Recommended Listeners:
Disclaimer:
The views expressed by Myron Gaines in this episode are highly controversial and may not reflect accepted societal norms or values. Listener discretion is advised.