
Democrat CAUGHT ON TAPE ADMITTING To Corruption, CHEATING ON WIFE Says Nick Sortor
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Tim Pool
Democrat Eric Swalwell reportedly caught on tape admitting to corruption, abusing power in Congress, targeting the Trump family for. Well, I'm just, I don't want to get too much into it, but for inappropriate reasons and talking about cheating on his wife and going after teenagers. Yeah, this is wild. Reporter Nick Sorter was. I don't want to go too much into just yet because we want to have him break the story down, but published a video where he confronted Eric Swalwell and said there's, there's, I believe, what is an hour and a half. He said an hour and a half of audio recording in public, in public of Swalwell gloating, laughing and admitting to how he abuses power, wanted to abuse power and how he was involved in. Let me pause. Madison Cawthorn was right. If you know what that means, you know what that means. But we're really early in the show. We try to keep it family friendly. Madison Cawthorn warned about how in Congress, in, in, in D.C. there's a lot of, a lot of adults that get together and take their clothes off, if you know what I mean. And Swalwell basically is admitting to this. So this is going to get pretty wild. We're going to get into the nitty gritty with Nick, who was there, witnessed it, recorded it and hear about exactly what went down. What I can say is I've seen photos, I've seen recordings. I'm not, I don't know what's on the recordings, but I know that he's got this stuff and it looks like this is going to be a massive story exposing deep Democrat corruption. So, I mean, we got a lot of stuff to talk about. Seriously, they're calling it a hacker. I don't know if it's a hacker, but at the Housing and Urban Development meeting, somebody blasted all the TV's AI video of Trump licking Elon Musk his feet. It's very weird, I got to admit. Kind of funny, but we'll talk about that and then the story from the other day, but I think it's very relevant now. CNN wrote a story saying that high level officials at the CIA are concerned that the layoffs are going to result in people betraying the United States and selling American secrets, as if to imply that there are traders working at the CIA and they have been for some time, which is really weird for them to admit. So we'll get into all of that, plus Trump cheering for the Gulf of America. Also, don't forget, go to cast brew.com Ian sold all of his coffee, it's gone. I'm going to beg him to go to school with the money these earned from the sales. You know he needs it. But we do have Appalachian Nights, still our all time bestseller, despite the fact that Ian's graphene dream is overtaken in the past month. Support Cast Brew Coffee. It is. It is our coffee company. We sponsor ourselves. It's the best coffee. Everyone agrees. At least that's what I've been told. And as always, check out the green room show. Today was, was pretty wild actually. And I think it's going to be over an hour long. We were largely just hanging out backstage talking about TV shows and then Nick comes in and you guys got to watch this green reputation when it comes up tonight. Okay, this is Rumble Premium. Go to rumble.com timcast IRL. Sign up for Premium. Watch it when it goes live because you're going to see the raw reaction to all of us learning about the story that Nick is going to tell us right now, which is absolutely insane. But the behind the scenes is really interesting as he's basically breaking this down. And it's fun behind the scenes stuff. We got a bunch of behind the scenes content. Check that out. Don't forget to smash the like button. Share the show with everyone you know and join our discord server. Over 20,000 individuals@timcast.com to hang out with all these people, build shows, build podcasts, build culture, shout out to Roman nation and quite hard podcast who, who launched from our Discord server. As I already mentioned, joining us tonight to talk about this and let's just say this story is Nick Sorter. What is up?
Nick Sorter
Appreciate you having me, Tim. It's good timing to be, to be here, be able to talk about this stuff. There's a lot of stuff that I haven't posted about yet that we talked about a little bit earlier when I first came in. And because this is a juicy story, we're talking about an hour and a half of sitting there with Eric Swalwell, the a drunk Eric Swalwell, listening to him spill everything to people that he doesn't even know. But, but they keep buying him drinks and everything. I mean, it was just. There's so much to digest. That tweet that I made was six paragraphs long and I still couldn't fit everything into it.
Tim Pool
And we're gonna get into it. But just quick, real quick. He was actually talking about using his powers in Congress. Corruptly.
Nick Sorter
Corruptly, absolutely.
Tim Pool
To testify. Trump family bragging about it and laughing while drinking.
Nick Sorter
Right? Absolutely. With people that he had just met yesterday.
Tim Pool
And then cheating on his wife.
Nick Sorter
And then cheating on his wife openly. It seemed like the entire restaurant could hear it. It was crazy.
Tim Pool
All right, all right. This is going to be wild. But we also have another guest, the man who gave birth to the Gulf of America himself, Kevin Sobic.
Kevin Sorbo
Indeed. Thanks for having me on, Tim. Kevin, so big. Co host of Human Events Daily. Great to be.
Tim Pool
So people may not know this, but you had that post like, what is like a year, a year ago where you were like, you're on a jet Ski or something and you were like, gulf of America, baby.
Kevin Sorbo
That's right. That's right. It was April. April 20th. Go figure. But, yeah, me and my buddy. My buddy Johnny. Yep. From Tampa, we were out there just ripping along.
Tim Pool
Did somebody see and say, hey, Trump, check this out?
Kevin Sorbo
That's what they're saying. Somebody retweeted it. You know, who also comes on this show quite often. But, yeah, somebody retweeted it. And then on down the line, I'm.
Nick Sorter
Hearing that Trump is gonna declare May 15th. Now, I think that was the date. I think that's gonna be Sir Kevin Posobic Day, February 9th. Discoverer of the Gulf of America.
Kevin Sorbo
That's right. That's right. I want a statue. I'm up there with Christopher Columb.
Tim Pool
Well, thanks for hanging out. We got Libby hanging out as well.
Libby Emmons
I'm Libby Evans. I'm hanging out. I'm with the Post, Millennial and Human Events. Really glad to be here with you guys tonight. Bill's here.
Tim Pool
Hello, everybody.
Phil Labonte
My name is Phil labonte. I'm the lead singer of the heavy metal band all that Remains. I'm an anti communist and a counter revolutionary. Let's go.
Tim Pool
Before we get into this, I'm going to take this time to give a message to the people who work here. Can someone get the AC turned on? Because it's. It's like it got really hot out and the heat was on and it's. It's ridiculously hot in this building. So I don't know, maybe comfy?
Libby Emmons
I got to say.
Tim Pool
Yeah, no way. We're going to. We're going to drop it down to 30 degrees in here. Yeah. Phil, would you text message somebody? I don't. I don't know how to work the AC in this building. Who am I? Let's jump into this story. Dude, this tweet is nuts. Okay, so at 1:00, Nick Sorter, who's sitting right here, tweets, exclusive. Eric Swalwell panics When I ask about his Chinese spy girlfriend, it's Fung Fong. In fact, it's fun. That's a pronoun.
Nick Sorter
Oh, no, not Fang Fang. Not Bang Bang Fang Fang. Okay, no, no.
Tim Pool
And whether that's a bigger national security threat than Elon Musk. I sat next to a drunk Swalwell at dinner for 90 minutes. He was immediately compromised by a group of lobbyists he just met, spilling intimate details about his job and asking for help cheating on his wife. Massive national security threat. This guy should have his clearances revoked. Swalwell spent his dinner bragging about orgies on Capitol Hill, telling them he's bored of his wife and only wants to teens. Oh, ten. Sorry, tens. Did I say teens in the intro? I meant tens. Worse, he spoke about abusing his power on the House Intel Committee, which he's since been booted off of, saying he pushed to subpoena Ivanka Trump because she's hot af. This guy must be removed from the Homeland Security Committee. He cannot keep his freaking mouth shut. After I began questioning him, Swell jumped back into the group of lobbyists to hide from me. But I pressed on. Dude looked absolutely terrified. 100% guilty. He knows he's been caught. So here's actually some of the video. Now, this video, it's got 30,000 retweets already, 10 million views. Well, this is just a video of Swello being questioned. So as I understand it, as we are getting ready for the show, you've got recordings and you've got photos of him in this public event. And my understanding is you were sitting in a public place, minding your own business when he sits down again in a public place and then just starts bloviating.
Nick Sorter
Correct? I mean, yeah, I went to. I just took my girlfriend to dinner. That's it. I was going there. I was tired. I just wanted to go somewhere close to where I was staying at the time. Let's just say I'm gonna move from where that location was because, you know, after you do something like this, you know, they're like, watching to see where I'm going and stuff. And it was just. It was a little bit weird. I really don't trust these people, let's just say that much. But, you know, we're sitting there, I'm eating. I just ordered my food, and there's tables open. I mean, we're talking ten o'clock at night. So it wasn't exactly crowded at this restaurant. And for whatever reason, with all the tables, open it in the restaurant. He sits right next to me. I mean, directly within. I could hear every word coming out of his mouth. And so could, you know, my. My phone, you know, I was talking to my girlfriend. We were talking about the German elections, and. And, you know, we were gonna do a video. And so I sit here, and all I did. I have my phone recording, and it's directly in front of me, but my phone was able to hear literally everything that was going on in the. In the direct vicinity. And the guy was screaming. It's like everybody in the restaurant was able to hear what he was saying, and he didn't care. I don't know. You know, I don't know if he was drunk before he got there or they got him drunk once he got there. I mean, he only had. You know, he had. He had a few wines, but he started just. Just going off, just spouting off immediately as he got there.
Tim Pool
Let's start this like, I'm aware of who Swalwell is. I know a lot of people are. He's the guy who famously, I believe he broke wind while on msnbc. Is that. Was that the story?
Phil Labonte
That's the story.
Nick Sorter
It was loud. It almost looks. Sounds fake. But we will.
Tim Pool
We will pull this up. And then msnbc, I believe. I believe claimed that it was a mug moving across a desk, which is just literally not true. And he got roasted by everybody. But anyway, I digress. This is five years ago. He was on the House Intelligence Committee. And can you give us a little background of, like, what this guy's involved with and why this. This is so important? Like, this story is so big.
Nick Sorter
Yeah. And so years ago, one of the most. The things that Eric Swalwell was most famous for was dating a chick named Fang Fang or Fong. Fong, whatever you want to say, who ended up being a Chinese spy. He dated her for a long time, and it was finally outed. It got. The only good thing that Kevin McCarthy ever did was kick Swalwell off of the Intelligence Committee. But the problem is now he's still on the Homeland Security Committee, which is a problem. Which means he's got a clearance. That means he's getting confidential information. And all it takes for him to start spouting off to random people that he just met. He didn't know these lobbyists names. They had to tell him their names when he first met them. And it took maybe 10 minutes for him to start divulging information about him trying to cheat on his wife.
Tim Pool
So just. Just real quick, for some irreverent context, this is Eric Swalwell, can we pull this one up?
Nick Sorter
Taxpayer dollars to ask the Ukrainians to help him cheat an election. And the complaint that I've heard from.
Phil Labonte
Republicans heard him pause.
Tim Pool
He moved this back.
Nick Sorter
He sat back and paused.
Tim Pool
A big story. Because he was on the Intelligence Committee talking about Trump, the Ukraine scandal and Trump's impeachment. This was. I'm pulling this up because, look, with all due respect, this was one of his most notable moments. I'm not. But it's true. It is funny and people make fun of him for it, but most people don't know who this guy is or why it matters. He. Here he is an MSNBC accusing Donald Trump of cheating or trying to, by soliciting support from the Ukrainians that resulted in his impeachment.
Nick Sorter
Taxpayer dollars to ask the Ukrainians to help him cheat an election. And the complaint that I've heard from taxpayer dollars to ask the Ukrainians to help him cheat an election.
Tim Pool
Okay, that guy fought on tv.
Nick Sorter
I mean, look, he paused and sat back.
Tim Pool
So give us some examples of, like, what was he. What was he saying he wanted to do, had done? He's admitting to. To. To abusing power.
Nick Sorter
Well, yeah, admitting to abusing power. But, you know, one of the first things he said to this. This guy, this lobbyist that he had just met was talking about how he was bored of his wife and how he wants somebody more ambitious and he only wants to fuck. Sorry. That's what he said. He only wants to F10s. And, you know, I don't know if I don't know what you think is Fang Fang A10. I mean, would you, Would you go that far with that?
Tim Pool
I've never actually. I don't know what she looks like. But I got to correct you. It's Fung Fong Fong Fong. I believe it's.
Libby Emmons
She did die in a plane crash a couple years ago.
Tim Pool
Did she really?
Libby Emmons
What?
Tim Pool
No. Yeah, you made that up.
Libby Emmons
No, no. She died in 2022 on a China Eastern plane crash. And it said, the idea, you know, this is. I'm looking at Twitter from November 9, 2023, where it says a year ago that she died in a plane crash. And then it emerged that Fang Fang, the chief financial officer of Ding Long Culture, died in the plane crash in March 2022. She died in that plane crash.
Nick Sorter
You know, but, but, but my entire point behind talking about this and why I think that it's such a big deal is because if he is willing to say these things to people he just met, doesn't know. Didn't even know their names.
Tim Pool
What does he tell.
Nick Sorter
What did he tell to somebody like Fang Feng?
Phil Labonte
Speaker Johnson needs to do something.
Tim Pool
Right, right, right.
Phil Labonte
The House needs to do something.
Tim Pool
Okay. But let's. Let's get some of the meat here. Sure. Right. Because I understand, you know, we're all concerned about. He's a Democrat. He's doing bad things. He talked about orgies on Capitol Hill.
Nick Sorter
Right.
Tim Pool
What did he say?
Nick Sorter
Bragging about orgies on Capitol Hill. You know, talks about. It's almost like he was talking about it like it's an open secret and that.
Tim Pool
Oh, well, everybody.
Nick Sorter
Yeah, right.
Tim Pool
Madison Cawthorn warned everybody, and they called him a liar.
Nick Sorter
Right. And they. What did they do to him? You know, they found a way to.
Tim Pool
Get rid of him.
Nick Sorter
Yeah, yeah. And, you know, but one of the biggest concerns that I had, you know, listening to that conversation and was. Was him talking about his time on the Intelligence Committee and how he wanted to literally subpoena Ivanka Trump because she was, you know, hot.
Tim Pool
Hot as af.
Nick Sorter
Yeah, Hot af. But actually saying the words and then going on and on about it. This wasn't just a passing comment he was saying. He was talking about how. Well, you know, we originally subpoena Jared Kushner. But, you know, I pushed to try to get Ivanka Trump in there, too, because, man, she's just hot as. Wow. And it's all on recording. I'm like, I looked at my girlfriend, and she looks back at me, and I'm like, you know, we couldn't believe what we were hearing that this guy is saying this loudly in a public restaurant.
Kevin Sorbo
Yeah. Keep in mind, this is a Monday night, too. Not even like a Friday.
Nick Sorter
Five tables away could have heard this.
Tim Pool
So this is yesterday.
Nick Sorter
This is last night.
Tim Pool
Last night you're just sitting there having dinner, and dude sits down. Again, I'm stressing the public because we're talking about the risks to national security. A guy with security clearance and the Intelligence Committee in a public place blowing as loudly as possible to the point where people all around him can hear it. And you can actually. You're able to pick it up on a recording.
Nick Sorter
Right.
Tim Pool
He's. He's just spilling the beans and everything.
Nick Sorter
Not with the device, just with my phone just sitting in front of me. I mean, I didn't need to. I didn't need to bug the table or anything. It just. The phone right in front of me was enough to capture the. I probably could have had the. The phone a few tables away and still got the Conversation. It was absolutely crazy, you know, but I've already had members of Congress reach out to me about this. He's not gonna have a good week after.
Tim Pool
Yeah.
Nick Sorter
You know, just, just to say that it's.
Tim Pool
That right off the bat, I mean, this, this is what you've told us so far. And again, you're gonna go through the recordings and we'll, we'll see what happens. But the stuff we know already, I'll put it like this. I'm sure I speak for a lot of people who are like, I wanna, I wanna see the recording. Like, I want. I want to know that it actually happened. What was said was said. That being said, like, you obviously have photos and recordings. You do. And you obviously were there. You have videos of the guy.
Nick Sorter
So if you watch the video of me confronting him, I actually mentioned some of the stuff that I'm mentioning right now. I confront. I asked him for comment. Like, you want to comment on the fact that you don't want to bang your wife anymore because you want to bang tens in dc? I asked him that as he was walking.
Tim Pool
No, he's famous. So weird.
Nick Sorter
Yeah. And so, but. And then he looks at me like a deer in the headlights, like, oh, my God. You know how this guy has been sitting next to me for an hour and a half?
Tim Pool
This warrants expulsion.
Nick Sorter
Yeah, absolutely. Warrants expulsion. Absolutely.
Tim Pool
But they're never going to do it.
Libby Emmons
I mean, he should at least, like Phil was saying, be pulled off those committees.
Tim Pool
Yeah, well, he's, he's off intel already, right?
Phil Labonte
I'm not sure. But, but at the end of the day, the, this kind of behavior should mean that he can't be on any committees. He should lose all appointments.
Tim Pool
Right.
Phil Labonte
He can, you know, he can, obviously, if the, if his constituents want him to stay, then he can stay. But there is no reason for the speaker to the speaker or any, any committee to allow him to stay considering this type of behavior.
Nick Sorter
Right.
Libby Emmons
He's on Judiciary.
Tim Pool
Yeah.
Nick Sorter
He's on Homeland Security.
Libby Emmons
Homeland Security, which is really dangerous. Cybersecurity.
Nick Sorter
And clearly his clearance after Fong Fong, like, why is he on Homeland Security? I mean, it seems like a big oversight.
Tim Pool
That was.
Phil Labonte
So how would that.
Tim Pool
Fongland. That was a very long time ago.
Phil Labonte
Yeah.
Tim Pool
And he got into things after the fact.
Phil Labonte
Yeah.
Nick Sorter
Who's right?
Phil Labonte
Yeah.
Nick Sorter
Two and a half years ago, this whole thing came out. And so you have Speaker Johnson. He's the one that has the power to decide who's on what committee, who issues his clearance.
Phil Labonte
Like, who would. Who could revoke his clearance. Obviously, the president could revoke his clearance, but who else, like, what other authorities could. Would be involved in repealing or revoking his clearance? Because he shouldn't have a clearance.
Nick Sorter
No. He cannot be trusted. I don't care. Republican or Democrat. You know, people are like, oh, well, you're attacking this guy because he's a Democrat or whatever. No. So spent all day yesterday attacking Dan Crenshaw for saying that he wanted to murder Tucker Carlson.
Tim Pool
That was crazy.
Nick Sorter
Yeah.
Tim Pool
What is going on? Right. It's like, what is up with these people?
Libby Emmons
You know, congressmen are just losing.
Nick Sorter
You've got Reb Garcia, who we've. We're going to censure this week for saying that he wants people to bring actual weapons against Elon Musk.
Phil Labonte
I really love.
Libby Emmons
That was crazy.
Nick Sorter
These people are increasingly brazen. You have these Democrats out there protesting, saying that this is war now we need to fight in the streets.
Libby Emmons
Crockett, she's out of control.
Phil Labonte
Particularly in a, In a. In a climate where we had two attempts on the sitting president's life.
Libby Emmons
There are a big difference.
Phil Labonte
Yes, absolutely. There was, There was an attack at. There was a Tesla dealership that was shot out. Now that's symbolic. Yeah, but. But, you know, they didn't expect to hit Musk. But the point is, it was a violent attack on something that was representative of Elon Musk. There was the whole. The. I don't know what the deal surrounding the bomb in Las Vegas. Vegas or the Tesla truck. But in this environment, in this climate, having people in positions of authority. And again, it being in Congress does make a difference as to what you say. We do have the freedom of speech, but if you're in a position of authority, you have to be careful what you're saying when it comes to things like violent rhetoric. If it's a. If it's a Republican that says these kind of things, people are doing. People on the left are doing all they can to have as. As damaging repercussions happen as possible. And I think that it should be. The same standard should be held to the Democrats.
Nick Sorter
Yeah, absolutely. And I mean, you go to these protests now because I'm in D.C. a lot, and I go to these protests on Capitol Hill. You see every single time at this point, you see somebody. There's this one woman that goes every time wearing a Luigi hat with an anti Elon Musk sign. You know exactly what she's calling for. She's openly doing it. And nothing is. Nothing is done about it because you.
Tim Pool
Know you well, there's no, there's no imminent threat created.
Nick Sorter
I know. And so. But these people are being emboldened. They're going, I don't know if you saw this yesterday, where luckily we have Eagle Ed Martin, the new U.S. attorney, Trump's new U.S. attorney up there that is investigating this chick on TikTok that's coming out and literally saying, somebody please assassinate Elon Musk. And saying that she hasn't filed taxes for eight years, which is a really stupid admission. Maybe she should call your sponsor. I don't know.
Tim Pool
But there's another woman that's going viral right now where she was saying something to the effect of, you know, we all know what needs to be done. And then like there's tons of these videos where they try to use innuendo to call for violence. But it does look like we got Dan and Cash and they're going to be taking these things more seriously. This administration, of course, can take things much more seriously. And I think you mentioned in response that went on TikTok calling for harm to Elon Musk, your attorney directly responded saying, we're going to get, we'll be in contact.
Nick Sorter
Talk soon.
Libby Emmons
Yeah.
Tim Pool
And she's like, hahaha, don't make this go viral. Oh no, I'm going to get in trouble. But they want to go viral, right? I mean, what people need to understand is that while certainly there are a lot of extremists and they're crazy, when you remember these videos where people would dress up like killer clowns and. Yeah, anything to go viral. Remember the Knockout game?
Phil Labonte
Yep.
Tim Pool
Anything to go viral. People want to film these videos. They, they do videos where they pull up the drive thrus and then throw food at the workers and do horrible things. Or how about the milk videos? The videos where they go to Walmart. Oh, jump up the counter and then they, they slam the milk on the ground and then dump it all over themselves while screaming because it gets views. These people on TikTok and other platforms calling for violence are doing it for many of them, not all of them, but many of them for that reason because they know it'll get them attention.
Nick Sorter
Right.
Libby Emmons
But it also, it also should get them legal attention, you know, it should get them law enforcement attention.
Tim Pool
And I believe that's what's happening. Very happy to see how come Tick.
Nick Sorter
Tock leaves that stuff up.
Libby Emmons
That's what's going to happen.
Tim Pool
TikTok banned us.
Nick Sorter
Yeah, that's what I was going to say.
Tim Pool
Literally just yesterday night.
Nick Sorter
Yeah. And I can't post the. So I was down at the border investigating, you know, down there and showing how easy it was for to go back and forth between Mexico and the United States. You know, just walk around the fences during the Biden administration. And they suspended me for that.
Tim Pool
Yes.
Nick Sorter
I'm like, okay, so you know, why can you post things calling for the assassination of a government official but I can't show.
Tim Pool
Well, that I'm going to assume I did delete that video she posted because if it's still up, that'd be surprising.
Nick Sorter
She actually, she removed her own account.
Tim Pool
So there you go. So. But I will say this. I think it's highly likely that first it's been reported Kellyanne Conway is lobbying for TikTok and that's probably why Trump supports it. Trump is just sitting there being like, wow, I do well on TikTok. He doesn't. And it's funny because with all due respect to Riley Gaines, when everyone started jumping out and defending TikTok, she did as well. And she said something like, you know, I've got 600,000 followers on TikTok. There's an audience there for this. And I'm like, Dylan Mulvaney has 13 million. Yeah, okay, so if you want to entertain a website or a mobile app, whatever that is going to make sure 13 million people are, they're going to keep being fed gender ideology and wokeness and then 600,000 are allowed to get anti woke stuff. Okay, you are losing. You are losing. And this is an app. We have no, there's no rules. We don't know what we're allowed to do. So we, we recently launched new account kind of to prove the point because Trump said, no, it's gonna say, okay, we talked to the social team, said launch a TikTok. And then we got a warning within a week and we got banned again. And what do we say on this show that in any way ever is. Is. Is beyond the boundaries of what is acceptable in public discourse? You've got people on TikTok who post way crazier things. You've got people sharing the Osama bin Laden letter. You've got people pushing innuendo hint into Luigi Mangione. And everyone knows it means TikTok has no problem with it. We never go anywhere near that stuff. They take us down. The first video that got flagged was a clip from IRL which I wasn't even on. It was Sam Tripoli and he was talking about energy vampires. And they said that breaks the rules and gave us a warn. Do it again in your band, we're like, what? It was a joke. It was a joke about that's crazy psychic energy. Vampires. Yeah, it's just a joke about how people drain your energy. Sometimes that happens.
Nick Sorter
And that's their concern.
Tim Pool
And they, and then just the other day, I don't know why, but they said, we are permanently banned once again from TikTok.
Libby Emmons
They have an algorithm that, that feeds based on location and they were feeding this teenager in Long island train suicide videos and then he stepped in front of a train. And his parents are trying to sue TikTok, but like, this is what happened. This is what they saw fit to.
Tim Pool
And Trump's defending it.
Libby Emmons
Yeah, I think that Congress was right to ban TikTok. I think it's a. You know, I understand all your slippery slope arguments, but like, get it off our phones, get it out of our kids hands, get it out of our brains. We don't need it.
Nick Sorter
Right. And you know, one of the arguments that people say is, oh, well, you know, we'll just, just, you know, if they, if they give you a violation to take down your video, just appeal it and it'll go back. Okay, well, you've already killed the, the. They'll wait 24 hours, 48 hours, and maybe they'll put it back up, but that distribution is already killed, so it's not going to go anywhere anymore. But they, they will silence you and make sure that whatever you post is out of the news cycle by the time that they even let you put it up there.
Tim Pool
I mean, it's Trump's got financial interests around him that are defending TikTok for, for no legitimate reason, as far as I can tell. So Charlie, Kirk and Trump have done a hard 180 on, on TikTok with no explanation. I like Charlie. He does amazing work, some of the best work in politics. He, along with Scott Pressler, did tremendous to help Trump win. I think the Trump administration has been fantastic. That being said, I still have been. Never been given a legitimate reason from Charlie or Trump or anyone defending TikTok as to why they did a 180. Nothing's changed. The data. The data fears are still there. The algorithm fears are still there. Just all of a sudden they're like, no, we're good with it now. I'm not.
Nick Sorter
Well, you would, you would think that rather than face the total shutdown of your app, you know, if there was actually, if we're talking about a legitimate business here, why not go through and sell it for $100 billion to a U.S. company. Why? @ the end of the day, what are they going to do? They're going to shut it down. They're going to say, oh, well, we don't want it anymore.
Kevin Sorbo
It's shut it down for one day. Was it one day?
Nick Sorter
One. One day.
Libby Emmons
It was like, hardly.
Tim Pool
And that was at all. Yeah, that was not shut down. That was TikTok. TikTok shows to. To disable their. Their servers for users and then chose to turn them back on because the. The bill just removed it from the play stores and from US Servers, which didn't affect them. They. They pulled a stunt to be like, we're taking down. Sorry. Hey, Trump did this. And maybe for that reason, Trump was like, I'll take the boost among young people or something.
Libby Emmons
Well, it's still not available on Apple and Google.
Tim Pool
It is.
Libby Emmons
Just put it back.
Tim Pool
Well, it's been back for like a week or two.
Nick Sorter
Yeah.
Libby Emmons
Okay, well, let's jump to the last time I checked.
Tim Pool
We. I'm sure that we will get into more about what's going on with, you know, the Democrats. We've got another story in the deep state, but for now, let's get into this other very big story from the New York Post. Oh, boy. You guys aren't going to want to look at the screen Fed's ID hacker who played a video of Trump kissing Musk's feet and warned that legal ramifications are being explored. How many of you think we should scroll down and everyone can see Trump sucking on Elon's toes? We're gonna say no. I'm gonna enable the blur function.
Nick Sorter
This is a cool feature. I didn't even know this existed.
Tim Pool
So it's an extension you can download. And let's just adjust the blur amount to. Let's put it at 5%. No, five's a little too much. Let's go to six. So you can kind of see that there is Elon Musk sitting there. Says, long live the real king, and. Oh, that wasn't enough blur. It wasn't enough. Oh, no. All right, there we go. There we go.
Libby Emmons
Oh, my goodness. That looks. That doesn't.
Tim Pool
It's AI. It's AI There. The feds have ID the cyberpunk who broadcast an AI powered video of Trump kissing. They say kissing, but I'm sorry, that's not kissing. That's.
Libby Emmons
No, it was. It was a little more involved in the mouth. Yes.
Tim Pool
You know what I mean?
Libby Emmons
And the kissing officials.
Tim Pool
The Department of Housing and Urban Development said the individual's been identified, although they didn't name them or reveal how the hacker managed to infiltrate the government television system in the cafeteria at the agency's headquarters. So I'm going to go and assume the person worked there. It's usually that simple. I don't think anyone broke into the building and then stuck a USB in a computer. I think they worked there. And how to do it.
Nick Sorter
Well, I mean, this is. You got to think about it. If it was a hacker of some sort, that is a high level felony to hack into government computer systems. So, you know, if they're saying they've identified the hacker, but there haven't been any charges, you know, they just kicked him out. They just kicked them out.
Tim Pool
So it was an employee.
Nick Sorter
It had to be an employee at that point. I don't think this DOJ is going to be like, you know, we're just. We'll cut them loose. Don't do it again. Slap on the wrist.
Tim Pool
But y'all gotta admit, it is funny.
Phil Labonte
It's definitely funny.
Nick Sorter
Not laughing.
Phil Labonte
It's. It's.
Tim Pool
It's inappropriate.
Kevin Sorbo
Was it posted? Where was it posted?
Tim Pool
On all the TVs. Housing, urban development. They all just turned on. Showing Trump with Elon's toes in his mouth. No, no, no.
Nick Sorter
I mean, it really shows you how deranged these people are. I mean, how much you want to bet this person didn't respond to that email? Look, I mean, they.
Phil Labonte
Yeah, okay, fair enough. Look, feet.
Nick Sorter
Feet.
Phil Labonte
People are deranged in, like, right off the bat, just if you're in defeat, you're kind of weird.
Nick Sorter
I think you're weird generating that. To be honest, if you're gonna AI Generate that, it's pretty weird.
Tim Pool
Phil, I'd like to agree with you, but the standard of what qualifies as weird these days has gone so far away from feet that you would beg for feet to be the weirdest thing about.
Nick Sorter
You can thank TikTok without that.
Phil Labonte
You're right.
Nick Sorter
But you're right.
Tim Pool
You go to. You go to. You go to a liberal bar and you're like, please let feet be the only.
Phil Labonte
I mean, I.
Tim Pool
Listen.
Phil Labonte
Yeah, we're. I don't know. I think we're taught we're not. I don't know if we talked about it yesterday. We're going to talk about it tonight. The. The CIA. And they're like.
Nick Sorter
They're.
Phil Labonte
They're. Sex. It was last night. Yeah. This. What? It's just so freaky.
Tim Pool
The nsa, CIA, secret chat rooms, they were having.
Libby Emmons
Those were so creepy.
Tim Pool
Yeah, well, as I stated, you don't even want to know. Like I, I, I cannot. On this show, we, okay, when I say we're family friendly, I'm not saying it's a kids show where we're going to be like ABC 1, 2, 3. I'm saying that we try to use innuendo, innuendo, innuendo on, on issues that get a little too heavy. We try to refrain from swearing the best of our abilities. But this is a news culture and commentary show which sometimes maybe your kids should be listening to. That being said, these things in this chat a man should not say before a woman. I mean, these are horrifying things. They were talking about doing to their bodies some border on self harm. So they think it's health care. Some of it. They think it's health care, yes, but the stuff they were talking about was not health care at all. Well, they, not at all.
Libby Emmons
They were talking about the relative benefits of sex changes and some of it.
Tim Pool
Yes, but some of it was about the things they do that makes them feel good. And this is not health care. It was damaging to the body.
Phil Labonte
And it's weird and all just disgusting.
Tim Pool
And they, and, and the problem is they, you normalize these things and it's damaging to the body. Like you are hurting yourself and causing very serious health issues. Self harm, not okay. But anyway, how did these people get.
Nick Sorter
So deeply embedded in the intelligence? Because yes, how many of these people are there that we don't know?
Tim Pool
Good men did nothing. Right?
Kevin Sorbo
That's why good men did nothing.
Tim Pool
They were mentioned not through afraid.
Nick Sorter
I mean, didn't want to speak out.
Tim Pool
But not at first. I mean, I would say largely, yes, but it's not about fear. I think it started with you have a Christian moral ethic, dominant government and culture. And then along comes some somewhat deviant of an individual and they say, I'm just gonna mind my own business because I want to go home to my kids and I don't care to deal with this weird stuff. Another person comes in and they say the same thing. Look, I just don't want to deal with it. It's nothing, it's not a big deal. And then 10, 20 years later, half the office has these kind of functions, these behaviors, and now they're the ones setting the rules. And now you're going, if I say anything, I'll get fired, Right? It's when good men do nothing. How about when someone comes in advocating for self harm for the purpose of self gratification, which is paradoxical. You say, don't bring that around. Here, you will be fired. But they didn't.
Nick Sorter
Yeah, well, apparently, apparently you're not allowed to fire anybody. If that's, you know, what all these judges are saying. You're not allowed to fire people. And. And, you know, you had. Finally, today they were given, or yesterday given the green light to go ahead and start firing these USAID people. So that workforce is going to be cut. I don't know if you've been by anybody here. Ben.
Tim Pool
You were.
Nick Sorter
You were in D.C. you go by that building. Now it is a ghost town with all taped up. Well, they have to keep taping it over because people get. The activists keep going back.
Tim Pool
Now we're going to reopen it.
Nick Sorter
And they rip the tape off me.
Tim Pool
Just. I'm sorry. I live in the real world where we got little. Little restaurants down the street, you know, little. Little small, little family grills and diners. Ain't not a single person in that building cares about what USAID is. No, because, look, a lot of people on the right are going to be like, people like that. We're getting rid of this stuff. I'm like, oh, technically, the truth is they have no idea what you're talking about. Who are these people cheering for usaid?
Libby Emmons
It is kind of bizarre, the. The people cheering for usaid. And it's also true in terms of these government employees and their weird chat rooms and whatever else they're doing. Like, what's one of the biggest reasons someone takes a government job? It's because of stability. It's because of good benefits. So, I mean, if you take government job, you can expect to have it for, you know, a decade at least. You can expect to not get fired. So, I mean, already you. You have this.
Kevin Sorbo
That's the temptation, though, if you expect to not get fired, you could also expect to not, you know, get in trouble for anything.
Libby Emmons
Right.
Kevin Sorbo
More temptation to get away with things like weird chat rooms. Right. I think there should be an ethics investigation on these people. I was in the confirmation hearing for Cash Patel for five hours, and they were grilling them on both sides for the entire day. But, you know, thank God he's in now as a new FBI director. And, I mean, we kicked out George Santos from Congress. You know, we. People like Swalwell, get him out. You know, ethics investigation, put in on all them, talking about revoking the clearance. You know, we gotta do at least something here to prevent this from continuing.
Tim Pool
Right.
Nick Sorter
I mean, you can see it's very, very clear, especially with the Swalwell situation, why people don't Trust Congress. They don't trust. What are they at? Are they what? I had a 9% approval rating at this point, you know, because it's. You have a bunch of sleaze bags in there.
Phil Labonte
I mean, there's nothing you said that's wrong.
Nick Sorter
He's probably in one of the chat rooms, too. I mean, Swalwell's in there, right? He's a weird dude talking.
Phil Labonte
Nothing that you said is wrong. But, I mean, no, it is.
Tim Pool
Sorry, it's 29%. I mean, I really. Fine.
Nick Sorter
But the 29% must be Congress. Look, it's Congress and the staff.
Phil Labonte
But the point is that it's not just that Congress is full of scumbags. That's something that's been kind of apparent to everybody in. For a long, long time. The fact, the reason that there is such record distrust of government is because of COVID It's because of the way that the government treated the American people during.
Libby Emmons
Well, that's when it really. That's when it really got. That's when people.
Tim Pool
Yes, yes.
Libby Emmons
Because it was. Became so obvious.
Tim Pool
But I agree, and I do kind of feel like just, I don't know, maybe I shouldn't say it, but I feel like it's beating a dead horse at this point. It's, you know, we're several years on now. Trump won a popular mandate. People are very pissed off about all that. Trump is going to go in, and we hope, despite these blanket pardons, Cash and Dan start digging up more information and exposing that we're on the next level of these things. What I'm, what I'm. What I'm really curious about right now is how are there people marching around D.C. cheering for an agency no one's ever heard of? There was a segment on Fox where they were pointing out these Democrats are doing these protests. And there's a bunch of photos popping up where a couple Democrat senators and members of Congress are at a podium with no activists, no protesters. And the argument being made on X, and I believe Fox made this argument, is when you cut USAID funding, which was not just usaid, but some of these other government programs funneling to nonprofits. The paid organization of protests doesn't happen anymore. So now when we see Democrats protest, there's no people. Right.
Libby Emmons
There's two things to consider getting paid out for it.
Tim Pool
Well, people never got. People don't. 99% of the time, people are not paid to protest. And this is a mistake a lot of conservatives consistently have made over the past 15, 20 years is they say that George Soros is funding paid protesters? No. George Soros Open Society foundation provides grants to various nonprofits of certain political persuasions. Those nonprofits will dispatch two organizers, maybe more, into a college area to flyer and pamphlet to generate real protesters. Now, in actuality, these kids have no idea what they're talking about. Right. But they just say show up. Famously, at Occupy Wall street, there was a group of organizers that told everyone Radiohead was going to be playing a free show at Occupy Wall street, which was an obvious lie. Two or three thousand people showed up. Those people weren't paid to be there. They were tricked into being there.
Nick Sorter
Right.
Tim Pool
So what we end up seeing now with Democrats coming out and protesting Republicans and saying all this stuff and there's no, there's no people behind them, two things happened. The signs that they have, you'll notice these, there are these rallies and everybody seems to have the same sign. They're printed from a print shop. Yeah. That's paid for by nonprofits and by activist organizations. But when you cut funding to these D.C. based activist organizations, you're not going to get those signs and the organizers will get laid off and they won't be able to go and flyer to create these protests.
Libby Emmons
So that's what community organizers are.
Tim Pool
That's right.
Libby Emmons
They're people that show up at college campuses to flyer and generate aggregate aggravated protesters. Yeah. What about the buses?
Kevin Sorbo
So it's got to be a large expense, so.
Tim Pool
Absolutely. And there, there are Astroturf events. They exist, they're just very rare because it's very expensive and it's easy to expose and it's bad PR. So there are organizations that will say, we'll pay 20 bucks to come to a park event and stand in a crowd and they'll give you some excuse as to what it is. We're filming a music video or you know, it's, it's a rally and we're filming a promo spot. So we need crowd fillers. And people will go and be like, hey, 20 bucks for free and I get free food and you know. Right. On a bus. The bus thing, however, in its all sincerity is same thing. These organizers will say, if you come to the protest meet at this place and we've got buses to drive in, they pay, I think it's a couple thousand dollars per bus for the day. And then you'll get five, six buses pull up, unload, and people all come out with pre made signs. Those people aren't paid to be there. Typically they're like, I'm part of the Cause and they have no idea what they're protesting. They don't know whether they're. And if you ask them any intense question about the politics, they'd be like.
Nick Sorter
Oh, well, I mean, look, one of the things that you'll notice is obviously, you go to these things, it's the me somebody that's covered several of these protests over the past few weeks. It's the same people almost every time that you go to. You'll recognize faces. You'll start, you know, it's like the chick in the Luigi hat, she's at every single one of them. And then they have the. That Elon Musk is a Nazi sign. And I actually confronted one of them the other day saying, you know, what do you mean? What does that mean? That Elon Musk is a Nazi? They can't answer the question. They called the police to tell the police to come get me away.
Tim Pool
It's a signal to other cult members that this is the bad man and I'm with you.
Nick Sorter
And that's the thing. It's like, you don't necessarily have to pay these people to come out because it gives them this feeling of, oh, I'm doing good, I'm doing something for the world. I'm part of something. Because other than that, they're useless. They're not particularly intelligent people, obviously, and they trying to fit in somewhere. That's why you have the, you know, all the. The weird trans stuff now. It's like, oh, I'm just. I can fit into this group now. That's that. That's the entire point of, of a lot of these people showing up. They feel like they're part of something and they're. They're value. They have value at some point.
Tim Pool
Yeah, yeah. So if you're a bored college kid and you hear that there's going to be a big protest, you're like, I ain't got nothing else to do. But now here's the best part. We're starting to see all these photos pop up where Democrats are standing behind podiums. They ain't got no protesters anymore. And people are saying, that's weird.
Phil Labonte
Weird.
Tim Pool
Why is that?
Kevin Sorbo
Right? All the funding's here.
Nick Sorter
But there is one more thing. Before these layoffs happened, Right. And before these people were all put on leave, you had. In the middle of the day, in the middle of the business day, you had federal employees out there protesting in the middle. And that just proves everybody's point, Everybody's point. You know, you can't. And then I think it was Yesterday I saw on CNN some chick I don't want. I watch CNN because I love. It's comedy at this point to watch these people. And she spends 10 minutes on CNN, a federal employee in the middle of the business day whining about how much time it was gonna take her to respond to this email and think about everything she had to do last week. I'm like, in the time you spent whining on CNN in the middle of the business day, you could have responded to that email five times.
Phil Labonte
Oh, yeah, it's ridiculous.
Tim Pool
It is pretty wild.
Libby Emmons
Yeah. That was one of the things that I was wondering about too, is people kept going on news shows to complain about having to respond to an email. And I'm like, if my boss came to me and said, you know, tell me five things you did last week, I'd be like, I could, I could give you 100, like in five minutes.
Nick Sorter
I can tell you five things I did in the last hour.
Libby Emmons
Right? Here's the huge amount of stuff.
Tim Pool
Every single time Ian is on this show, when the guests walk in, Ian goes, so what are you working on? Imagine a Democrat. And they're going, next time that I'm.
Nick Sorter
Going to protest here, I'll be like, no, this is not fair.
Tim Pool
I go, ian, save it for the show. Like, we want to explain the stuff they're working on, like live. And he's okay, but it, it is, it is not strange. Like, if I went to any office, like my friend, if I. If my friend said, hey, you want to come, just stop by my office and see what's going on. Sure. And I go to the office and he works in marketing and there's like, this is my team, this on. So I'm like, cool, cool. So what do you guys work on? Could you imagine? I can't have time to answer that. Are you, are you joking?
Phil Labonte
What?
Tim Pool
You're sitting at your computer.
Libby Emmons
I think a lot of these people felt really insulted too. I think that they, like, didn't like being called out. They didn't like being told to, you know, disrupt the chain of command. I think that Pride was insulted in a lot of cases because.
Tim Pool
Absolutely.
Libby Emmons
I mean, sure, stupid. But like, I think that, I think.
Tim Pool
The truth is just don't do anything.
Nick Sorter
How much pride can you have by being a sit at home mouse wiggler? You know, for the federal government, every two hours or so, just wiggle the mouse, you'll be fine.
Tim Pool
You know, otherwise it'll notify. Right? I think Elon's play here. Look, man, you know it's funny, these, these liberals and leftists, I love reading their subreddits. I love reading, watching their shows. It is, it is crazy how low, like low IQ they are. I don't understand they, or I think it's unfair to say low IQ because maybe they have great spatial reasoning, but they can't comprehend the basic social function. When you play a game of chess, I'm sitting there looking at the board and I say, okay, I'm going to move my knight here. When I do, my opponent has seven options to try and counter me that I'm expecting. And I base my problem. If he moves here, I'll make move A. If he moves here, I'll make move B. If he moves here, I'll make move C. That's called multi layered thinking and that's called planning ahead. Democrats can't understand that. So when Elon Musk says, answer the email and then Cash, Patel and Tulsa say to their, to their departments, don't they go, oh, Elon got burned, his plan didn't work. And I'm like, elon moved a piece, waited to see the response. He will then move the piece again. The plan isn't over. He's not given up. And I think what these people don't realize because they lack the cognitive capabilities is that this, this email test does a bunch of things. It tests whether emails exist. If you don't answer, maybe there's no email. The first thing that's going to happen is going to put an email and he's going to say, respond. People don't respond. They're told by Trump, Tulsi and Keshe. It's, you don't have to just ignore it. Red flag to all those accounts not to fire them, but it's a red flag why anybody who is deeply passionate and really cared about their job is going to be like, oh boy, like, yo, Elon, hey man, I'm working on this project, man. I need help. I've been trying to get my boss to look at this thing we're doing and he won't listen. Lazy people are gonna be okay. Whatever. Anybody doesn't respond gets a red flag. You know, it doesn't mean you fire them, but now the magnifying glass is on them. Let it be. And the people who deeply care are gonna respond being like, finally, please, I've been working so hard on this project.
Libby Emmons
Or even the people who feel like they don't want to tell you what they're doing because it's classified or whatever, would reply with Like, I'm working on a whole bunch of things. I can tell you very vaguely, you know, I'm CCing my manager, who can tell you more in depth if that's what's needed, you know, but it's just an, it's just an email. It shouldn't be that hard.
Tim Pool
No.
Phil Labonte
And just in the people that, that, you know, Tim. Tim is, is, you know, pointing the finger at her or talking about. Why would they assume that Musk would be hostile to the people that, that their boss, that he is working in conjunction with in the administration? Why would they assume that? It's a fight. Like, it's like, oh, they just smacked Elon down. It's like, no, if you told Elon Musk, hey, the people that have security clearances probably shouldn't send emails to you in unsecured fashion talking about the projects they're working on, Musk would say, oh, yeah, that makes perfect sense. Like, it's ridiculous to think that it would be antagonistic.
Libby Emmons
Kevin could, like, you do contracting and stuff. Could you imagine like one of your clients or something being like, hey, I was out of town. What were you working on last week? And just being like, no, I'm not going to tell you, absolutely not to.
Nick Sorter
Go on CNN and call him a threat to democracy.
Kevin Sorbo
I would go through every day of what I did. I was like, oh, I sanded the cabinets this day, I put the paint on this day. And honestly, I was just thinking if. Why wouldn't you want, like, a response from somebody like Elon Musk to like, literally help you be more efficient in your project?
Libby Emmons
Yeah, that's a really good point.
Nick Sorter
He mentioned at one point that you might get a promotion.
Kevin Sorbo
You might get a promotion or a promotion, right?
Nick Sorter
Yeah.
Phil Labonte
If you answer, they're not adverse. They're not going to be adversarial. These people that are extremely online and they're ideologically opposed to Trump and Musk just because of their ideology, they're not going to be like, oh, man, Musk isn't going to be like, man, this is such a blow to Doge and now we should just stop doing what we're doing and blah, blah, blah. It's like, it's such a ridiculous thing to even think would. Would come up. They're not gonna be adversarial. It's just stupid.
Nick Sorter
Well, you gotta think about this part as well. This is the biggest takeaway that I have from it is obviously Democrats lost the plot a long time ago, but you have to think of the Americans sitting at home Right now. And Democrats making this massive fuss about federal workers having to respond to this, this 5.2 minute email. What do you think people sitting at home are thinking about this? Do you think they're siding with the Democrats and be like, oh, that's such a shame. These people that I'm paying with this, that, what an injustice. That's not what they're thinking. That's why Doge's approval rating is so high.
Phil Labonte
Yeah. And, you know, and the argument that it's not high, I think that that's, I think that's, that's, I don't buy it at all.
Nick Sorter
There's not a single poll that shows them underwater. Yeah.
Libby Emmons
And I also think that, you know, you have the pundits and the Democrats freaking out about Doge, but you don't have, like you guys are saying, you don't have the voters freaking out. And I think the voters aren't freaking out, you know, both Republican voters, independent voters, and Democrat voters. Because we all are out here with jobs. We all know what it is to have a job. We know what it is to pay taxes. And most of us are really, you know, those of us who have withholding tax are really sick of seeing all that money just get extracted from our paychecks so that we can continue to have bad roads, trans operas in Peru and all of these workers who can't even respond to a damn email. Come on.
Tim Pool
Let's jump to this story from the New York Post. Jon Stewart cuts open his hand while smashing mug in anger at ex President Biden. I'll be going to the hospital soon. The first thing I want to say is he did cut his hand in an obvious pre scripted bit where he'd break a mug. And that's fine.
Libby Emmons
You can tell he moved the lamp out of the way. Right.
Tim Pool
And he wasn't angry. It was a bit. He was making a joke by smashing the mug. The important point of the story is not that he cut his hand open. I hope he's okay. It's that he was playing this game of yes. He calls himself Doge, curious and says, we want to cut waste, fraud and abuse. And then he does what he's always done best, obfuscates the issue to confuse lower cognitive functioning individuals, to pull them away from the obvious truth. What's happening right now with Doge is that they're going where people are. They're going to departments that are giving away money that are paying people who aren't working, and they're cutting wasteful spending and abuse. Right away, because that is a threat to the establishment machine. Jon Stewart has to be in opposition to what Trump is. But how can he, when Doge is a popular concept, cutting wasteful spending? Who's going to disagree with that? Especially if they say, we will give you a $5,000 check once we pull 2 trillion in funding. So Jon Stewart says, I'm doge curious. I like the idea, but they're in the wrong place. We gotta cut tax subsidies for big corporations. And then he says, excuse me, because they're. They're. They're. They're screwing you over to Diddy Party and making you pay for the baby oil. The simple point is this. Jon Stewart's whole bit is that the answer to wasteful spending is to increase taxes on corporations and not at all to fire people, wasting money, stealing money or defrauding the government or not at all to lower your taxes. His whole segment is, no, Trump is bad. Trump is. Is. Is firing people. But it's doesn't. It doesn't do anything. We need to raise taxes on corporations. And my response just is, there's gonna be people who fall for it. They're like, yeah, well, who cares about gender studies?
Phil Labonte
Why.
Tim Pool
Why is Walmart getting a tax subsidy? And it's like, okay, tax subsidy means a discount on their taxes, Right? They're not being given money, so we're not paying them. You're basically saying you want to raise their taxes. Okay, fine, I guess. But what does that have to do with what Doge is doing?
Nick Sorter
Sure. Absolutely. And, you know, another big point of this is, you know, we're not just talking about big businesses and everything. You know, we're talking about, okay, you'll see people on X and pretty much every other platform at this point whining about the fact that, oh, well, he just cut. Elon just cut $500,000. Like, that's. That's nothing for the federal government. It's like somebody worked their entire Life to pay 500,000. I mean, think about somebody 75 years old. How much would they pay in taxes their entire lives? Does it get to the point where it's $500,000 that's working an entire lifetime to pay off this measly $500,000 bill to fund gender studies and transgender operas in Cambodia?
Libby Emmons
I mean, there should be, like, if you're in a certain tax bracket, there should be a cap on how much money you spend in taxes in your lifetime. Somehow that should work out.
Phil Labonte
Holy cow. That is, like, the exact opposite of what a lot was talking About Right.
Tim Pool
You're saying like the most tax you could ever pay would be like $10 million, something.
Libby Emmons
Whatever it is. Yeah, I don't know. I just mostly I think that I should be done paying tax or just.
Nick Sorter
Not pay any taxes.
Tim Pool
I'd imagine that would be a good amount, but not like I feel like I'm done.
Libby Emmons
Like, I have paid so much in taxes. I look at it, I'm like, damn, you guys took my money.
Tim Pool
Well, so the difficult thing is the bleeding. The difficult thing now is to ass the rate by which we tax people. I'd have to know how much you've paid.
Libby Emmons
Oh, I can't reveal that.
Tim Pool
Right. So that's the issue if we're. But if we're talking about. If we're talking about a low number, like after you pay 200, 000 in taxes, you're done.
Libby Emmons
Yeah.
Tim Pool
And most people are done. Most people are done in their 20s.
Nick Sorter
Probably a lot of people don't realize how much they spend in income taxes.
Libby Emmons
It's so much money. And when I lived in New York, it was. You had New York City taxes and state.
Tim Pool
I said taxes.
Nick Sorter
Oh, okay. Even better.
Libby Emmons
I like that. Even better. Yeah, but I was thinking income taxes specifically. Like, but in New York City you pay city taxes and you pay state taxes and then you pay federal taxes. Plus you pay, you know what, like 8.75 sales taxes. That's crazy.
Phil Labonte
Yeah, I can't.
Libby Emmons
There's a lot of that.
Phil Labonte
I can't believe there are people that still live in New York City.
Libby Emmons
I can't believe it's the greatest city on earth. It just, you know, it's what? It's the greatest city on earth.
Tim Pool
That is not correct.
Nick Sorter
According to who?
Libby Emmons
According to me, obviously. I'm the one talking.
Tim Pool
I disagree.
Libby Emmons
It's better than Philadelphia.
Tim Pool
You put your garbage on the. On right in front of your buildings. Just out.
Libby Emmons
Better than D.C. sure. It's better than LA.
Nick Sorter
No, no, I don't even. I can't even go there with that.
Kevin Sorbo
They don't have a trash.
Tim Pool
They. They have trash.
Phil Labonte
San Diego's absolutely great year round.
Tim Pool
Yeah. I'm sorry. San Diego is better than New York. I'm not saying San Diego is the best.
Nick Sorter
Why would you want to.
Phil Labonte
Honolulu's pretty great too.
Libby Emmons
I've never been there.
Phil Labonte
It's pretty awesome.
Tim Pool
Libby. New York smells like sour milk.
Libby Emmons
Not all the time. Sometimes it smells like maple syrup.
Nick Sorter
The sun comes out and that sour milk is strong through the air.
Libby Emmons
Maple syrup.
Tim Pool
It's true, man. Yo, New York stabbed in the subway.
Libby Emmons
And I never got stabbed.
Phil Labonte
Thankfully.
Libby Emmons
My mom's boyfriend got stabbed when I was a kid.
Phil Labonte
I didn't. I know someone that did. I never got stabbed, but I know people.
Nick Sorter
Do you know that have been stabbed around here? I mean, I don't know.
Libby Emmons
I don't know. There's a homeless person slept in my car the other night.
Tim Pool
What?
Phil Labonte
Greatest city on earth?
Libby Emmons
Yeah.
Tim Pool
Wait, wait, wait. Someone opened your car and went into your car?
Libby Emmons
And I got out of my. I went to my car in the morning and it reeked of cigarettes and I don't smoke cigarettes. And no one's been in my car who smokes.
Tim Pool
Door locked?
Libby Emmons
No, I didn't lock the car. I forgot to lock the car. I live in a rural area.
Tim Pool
Well, I don't think anyone slept in it. Someone smoking may have rifled through your car.
Libby Emmons
Someone went in my car.
Nick Sorter
So wait, you don't live in New York City, but you're saying that it's the greatest city in the world. Why don't live there?
Libby Emmons
Yeah, I used to live there and now I bought a house around here.
Nick Sorter
I'd probably flee too, because. No, everybody. You know, it's like at this point you go that, look, I mean, I know this is. I'm beating a dead horse here, but you go to New York you can't even afford unless you have a decent income. You can't even afford to go visit New York at this point.
Libby Emmons
Well, no visiting New York. Expensive.
Tim Pool
Let's talk about railroad apartments. That should be illegal.
Libby Emmons
Yes, those should be legal. But isn't that expensive than living?
Tim Pool
So they'll call it a three bedroom.
Libby Emmons
But like a shotgun shack.
Tim Pool
Okay. It'll say three bedroom apartment. And what it is is there's a living room and then there's a door in the middle of, on each, each wall and you walk into the next one and there's another room and that's bedroom one. And then you walk through bedroom one to get to bedroom two. And then you walk through bedroom two to get to bedroom three. So when you live in a railroad apartment with roommates, your. The middle of your room is the hallway. And this is how people in New York live.
Nick Sorter
And I was like, it's a third world country. Is that even legal? I didn't think that was.
Tim Pool
And, and yeah, and, and the crazier still is the, the bachelor apartments, which are becoming more and more popular, which is terrifying. I lived in LA and I knew some people, they were skateboarders and they rented bachelor apartments. Why? Well, they don't care. They're scuzzy skateboarders who make minimum wage working at a burger shop. And they were like, bro, it's 300 bucks a month and I get a place to sleep. Bachelor apartments, you know, that is. It is a single room. That's probably like five by ten. Yes, super. Well, no, maybe it's like maybe eight. Eight by. No, not. Not by 20.
Libby Emmons
Are these, like little Peter Terre type of things.
Tim Pool
You walk in a building and you basically have a closet with a window and you have a bed.
Nick Sorter
No wonder you're a bachelor.
Tim Pool
You have a bed in it. It's a bachelor. They're called bachelor apartments. The bathrooms are all shared, and it's a couple hundred bucks a month. That used to be a. Wow, you must be broke. Like, it was for temporary workers and people who are, you know, just otherwise not able to afford something. They're common now among Gen Z in New York. Gen Zers post videos where they're like, this one costs, you know, eighteen hundred dollars and there's no bathroom. There's a sink. It's one room with a sink in it. And they're like, can't afford it. That's what New York has become. And the sour milk smell, like, everybody.
Libby Emmons
Knows, should live on the, you know, on the Gulf of America. We've got like five states. Five states bordering the Gulf of America.
Tim Pool
We went to New York, we did a big Times Square campaign and got a bunch of billboards up, and we were like, we're going to bring all the crew and we're going to go and take pictures at the billboards because, you know, like, we're doing a big marketing thing. That morning as we were arriving in New York, a man took a machete, walked to an old lady, and just slashed her in the back.
Libby Emmons
Just listen. They're watching it for sure. But it was really good. I mean, when we had.
Nick Sorter
Oh, you're backtracking now.
Libby Emmons
I still think it's the best city on earth.
Tim Pool
Yes. But then all of that being said, they also filmed the Daily show there. It's filmed in New York.
Libby Emmons
The Trevor. Isn't that Trevor Noah?
Tim Pool
No, it's John Stewart. Literally.
Libby Emmons
Yeah, I don't watch that show.
Tim Pool
It's really funny how Trevor Noah became alt, right? Did you know, do you see that video?
Libby Emmons
Oh, the one where it turns out he's really pro segregation?
Tim Pool
No, no, he's all right. He literally said, Finn. Finn, Finland for the fins. Like, I'm not trying to be cute by saying he's all right. Trevor Noah, formerly Of the Daily show had a viral podcast video at Tim Cast News follow. At Tim Cast News, we were tweeted, we posted this, where he literally says, do you ever notice that things are going really well in Finland? Why? Because they're all Finnish. He then says, trevor knows. As if a black person shouts, he knows what they're saying because they're black.
Libby Emmons
Yeah, that's right.
Tim Pool
It's like.
Libby Emmons
And he was talking about segregation, and.
Tim Pool
I was just like, in favor of it. But he's not talking about it's. It's.
Libby Emmons
That's in favor of separate, like race based society.
Tim Pool
Yes, but it goes more than that. It's, it's. I, I would agree he's arguing for segregation, but at the national level, when he argued that Finland should be for the Finns, I was like, yo, it's.
Nick Sorter
The most basic thing he's ever said.
Tim Pool
This guy should have a conversation with some white nationalists because they're going to completely agree with him.
Nick Sorter
Did he realize what he was saying?
Tim Pool
Yes. And he said, segregate. He said, the end. He said the problem with segregation was that certain black folks couldn't get bank loans. And obviously that's all bad oppression. But his argument was black people should be. And this is what Trevor Noah argued, separate. And he argued that Finland works because they're all Finnish. And they. And then he says, he's like, like, if you shot at me, I know what you're saying because you're black. And it's like, I gotta be honest, guys, I'm need your help on this one. See, I come from a mixed background, so maybe I'm lacking the ability to understand the guttural grunts from individual races, but do you, as pure blooded white people, understand each other's grunts like Trevor Noah does?
Nick Sorter
I don't know how many grunts.
Tim Pool
Yes.
Nick Sorter
Do you, do you grunt? I mean, he's from Philadelphia. They got their own dialect.
Kevin Sorbo
We whistle.
Nick Sorter
We whistle, grunt.
Libby Emmons
When I. When I'm in the grocery store and I lose my kid or whatever, if I just go, yo, it's. I'm the only one. He knows where I am. He finds me.
Tim Pool
But. But Trevor Noah said, if you shout at me, I know what you are saying because you're black. And it's like, is there, Is there race language that I don't know.
Libby Emmons
I thought that was weird too. I was like, I understand cultural cues. Like, you know, when you move around regionally in the United States, like, sometimes you won't understand cultural cues that are going on. But I don't really think that their race to me, like, they're regional based. They're regionally based. When I moved out here, I didn't always understand what people were saying. You know, like if it took me a while to understand that when somebody says, bless your heart, they don't really mean a nice thing to you.
Tim Pool
Yeah. They're saying you're naive.
Libby Emmons
Right. Which apparently, you know. Right. But like there's cultural cues all over the place.
Tim Pool
Sure. And everyone I think agrees with that. Trevor Noah's point was that it's like, like his argument was literally if you take two black people and put them in a forest and they're from two parts of the planet and they walk up to each other, they're going to make grunting sounds and understand each other.
Libby Emmons
That's pretty weird.
Tim Pool
That's very weird.
Libby Emmons
Yeah.
Tim Pool
What is he, he's.
Libby Emmons
Is that not true with Asians?
Tim Pool
Well, I'm saying I must, I must lack this ability because I certainly have never understood any guttural sounds.
Kevin Sorbo
Right.
Tim Pool
Asians.
Libby Emmons
Yeah.
Nick Sorter
You know, so how do you keep white with it in your greatest city on earth over there when you have, you know, everybody from.
Libby Emmons
You're never going to get me to say New York.
Nick Sorter
But, you know, but you go there and the.
Tim Pool
Was great in the late 80s.
Libby Emmons
Well, that's when my mom's boyfriend got stabbed.
Tim Pool
Right.
Libby Emmons
But it was getting clean also. It was also good in the 90s and the early 2000s.
Tim Pool
You know, Trump came in. Right. Cleaned up that town. Yeah. And he made it the number one city.
Libby Emmons
Yeah. He did a great job. Giuliani. And then Bloomberg came in and injected just like millions and millions of dollars of his own cash. You know, there'd be like a budget shortfall for the Met and he'd be like, oh, here's a little Anonymous. It's Anonymous, you guys. And be like, yeah, that's right.
Nick Sorter
But it is insane to see how much they are fighting against what. Yeah, I don't see Eric Adams as a. I don't think he's been red pilled. I don't think he's a Republican. He's definitely not maga. But they have totally turned against him. And you know, they were trying to push for this literal socialist that. I mean, radical. I mean, he might even be communist.
Libby Emmons
Well, there was Maya Wiley too. I mean, she's the one who literally went into the house and was like a woman is anyone who says she is. And it's like, oh, okay, what is.
Nick Sorter
In the water in New York that's making these People think this way.
Tim Pool
How can you.
Libby Emmons
Water comes from upstate.
Nick Sorter
Upstate. Okay.
Tim Pool
Natural pressure, right? Yeah. From the aqueducts. Yeah, but you know there's a secret stream in New York. Yeah, they built a building over it, but you can look over a wall and see the original stream is still there.
Libby Emmons
That's very cool.
Tim Pool
As a guy made a video 10 years ago about it. Went viral. Yeah, and it smells like sour milk.
Kevin Sorbo
So let's drinking out of that.
Tim Pool
Let's jump to this next story. This one is very spicy, so let's just make sure we keep this one. As this story gets increasingly terrifying. We'll keep this one family friendly. Guys, we gotta be careful. Texas rancher killed by suspected cartel IED on Mexican border as authorities warn of growing threat. Yeah, Trump's been warning of this threat. A Texas border rancher was killed near the border by suspected cartel IED earlier this month. The Texas Department of Agriculture told the Post Tuesday as officials issued an urgent safety warning for the Rio Grande Valley. Rancher Antonio says. How do you pronounce it? Suspend 74 who works on both sides of the border along with Horatio Lopez Pena were killed in the blast in Tamaulipas, Mexico, which is just south of Brownsville, Texas. Lopez's wife, Nimfa Griselda Ortega was hospitalized with injuries. Man, take a look at this. The blast occurred to south of Brownsville. So look. Texas Agricultural Commissioner Sid Miller. So the daily explosion is part of a growing threat posed by cartel activity and encourages ranchers to exercise extreme caution. I encourage everyone in the agricultural industry to stay vigilant, remain aware of their surroundings and report any suspicious activity to law enforcement. Additionally, you can avoid dirt roads and remote areas, refrain from touching unfamiliar objects that could be explosive devices. Limit travel to daylight hours, stay on main roads and avoid cartel controlled regions. This is just.
Nick Sorter
Avoid Mexico is what?
Tim Pool
Well, this. This is important. This is presumably an American man. Two American men, presumably. I don't know. Texas rancher Donald Trump has. Has. Has named many of these cartels as terrorist organizations. Yeah, which opens the door to drone strikes.
Nick Sorter
Exactly.
Tim Pool
What action would Donald Trump take knowing that Americans are now being killed, suspected killed by individuals suspected to be cartels planting bombs?
Phil Labonte
The United States has had. Has used our military to go after cartels in the past and it's not. So there is precedent for this. I don't think that it's outside of the realm of possibility to think that the US will just put drones in the air over Mexico. Mexico does not have the ability to say no. They don't have the ability to stop us. I don't think they have a significant air force. I'm not. I mean, I don't know about Mexico's military, but if they can't keep the cartels from taking over significant portions of the country, I'm confident they don't have the ability to stop the. Stop the United States. And if the Mexicans. I mean, it was 36 people were murdered. 36 people that were trying to become the Mexican president until Sheinbaum finally they allowed her to become the President. 36 people. The Mexican government is not in control of Mexico. It's the cartels. So the United. So the United States has legitimate reason to say, look, if you can't control this territory and these people are actually killing Americans on American soil, then we're going to do something.
Nick Sorter
I mean, the trafficking alone has killed millions and millions and millions upon Americans. I would like to see. What do we do? We sent. Let's send in a Predator drone to Mexico. You know, take these guys out. What's Mexico going to do about it?
Libby Emmons
How are they going to. They can't even keep this.
Tim Pool
This is arguably a declaration of water, a declaration of war on Mexico.
Libby Emmons
What's what.
Nick Sorter
Roadside bombs, right at the. Right at the border.
Phil Labonte
And me, where was it? So I know that it's on the border, but there. The border is a very, very thin line. Where was it? Was it in the United States or was it in Mexico?
Libby Emmons
A lot of these ranches, like, they sort of span.
Phil Labonte
Where was the bomb? Right.
Libby Emmons
That's the question.
Nick Sorter
Because the wall is not the marker of the border.
Tim Pool
It was in Mexico.
Phil Labonte
It was in Mexico, Yeah.
Kevin Sorbo
All right, it was a drone then. IED or.
Tim Pool
No, it was an id and they're saying that it was in Mexico, south of Brownsville, Texas. But was it an American man working on both sides? If Americans are being killed at, near, or south of the border, we've got a problem. So I don't. I don't. I don't know that we could drone strike because Congress would need to make a declaration. Mexico would have to be involved. You could theoretically issue mark and reprisal letters, but now you're basically saying we're gonna allow privateers to go into the border to deal with the cartels, and that's opening up the door to more cast than there already is. To be fair, though, I'm not saying we do nothing. Something has to be done to deal with this. Maybe the heavy troop presence will be enough. I don't know.
Nick Sorter
We also know you have to figure out when the IAD was placed, too? When was it placed? Was it recent? Are they further militarizing themselves at this point, you know, against a possible incursion by American troops? I mean, what's going on there? Why was this IED placed in that location? And I don't know if you've been. I just got back from this. This. This area south of Brownsville, Texas, Matamoros, which is Tamio, whatever it is. It's. That's the. That's the Mexican state where Matamoros is. And you have this wall, and you see these big gates in the wall because Americans own farms that are on both sides of the wall. So it's very. It's. It's a good chance that this guy owned the farm that straddles the border and just went directly over and they placed it in his farm. Right. So that's.
Tim Pool
And you had the story of the. Was the guy in Arizona who got criminally charged with shooting an illegal immigrant passing over his property, and he said, I. I can't remember exactly what he said, but there were gunshots and he fired back. And then they didn't care. And the Biden administration wanted to make sure that he went to prison. I mean, the Biden administration was abject evil.
Phil Labonte
Yeah.
Tim Pool
In the targeting of just regular Americans over insane things.
Phil Labonte
I'm not sure that the. I'm not positive about this, but if they, if the cartels are designated as terrorists, it might still. The. The authorization to use a military force might still cover that.
Nick Sorter
I believe it does.
Tim Pool
The AUMF that they gave to Bush was for the Middle East.
Phil Labonte
Was it only. Was it region specific?
Tim Pool
The authorization for use of military force, I believe, was specifically targeting the Middle.
Phil Labonte
East, because I thought that it was. It was the authorization to. To go after international terror rings because they were all over the country, are all over the world.
Tim Pool
It was The AUMF in 2001 for Bush was specifically to go after those who planned, authorized, committed, or aided the September 11th attacks.
Phil Labonte
Okay, so then what was.
Tim Pool
There was a 2003 AUMF that was the.
Phil Labonte
That was to go into Iraq because Congress didn't want to vote on war.
Tim Pool
I believe. Yeah.
Kevin Sorbo
This.
Tim Pool
I believe that was.03 Authorization for Use of Military Force. Oh, three. Okay. Maybe not. That was 2002. Okay. And it was specifically for Iraq.
Phil Labonte
Okay.
Nick Sorter
But does anybody really believe that Trump is going to base his decision as to whether or not he'll drone strike cartels based on what the Mexican president has to say about.
Phil Labonte
Again, the Mexican president is a Puppet like, there's no question she wouldn't have gotten in there.
Nick Sorter
There's no way for her to get.
Phil Labonte
In there with exactly 30, 36 people died. And then she was the one that got elected. And why did they let her in? Because, you know, because they. She's a puppet.
Nick Sorter
If you are, if you genuinely wanted to get rid of the cartels in Mexico, if you're the Mexican president, you genuinely, why would you work so hard to block the greatest, the strongest, most capable military in the world from going in there and eradicating the cartels? I mean, remember how. Unless you.
Kevin Sorbo
How many candidates were assassinated though, before they, before they elected the like, this.
Nick Sorter
One can go, this one can go.
Phil Labonte
I mean, the United States literally should just say, listen, you don't have the ability to stop this. Americans are dying, so we're going to stop it.
Nick Sorter
Any, any action that Mexico takes. I've seen it myself. Even under. I know Trump has put more pressure on them now and they might be doing something a little bit different, but I was down there, right? I was standing next to the Mexican National Guard. They saw people being trafficked over the border. They chose to do nothing about it. I was, they were like, oh well, they're too far gone. We can't locate them. So I went on foot myself and went and tracked down these people that were being trafficked over the border by the cartels. They're not interested in stopping it. It's all a farce. They're just acting like it. They, in their mind, they don't have any incentive to do so. They can't be trusted. It has to be our troops at the end of the day.
Phil Labonte
Okay, so I'm.
Libby Emmons
What did you guys think of this proposal for, for like a privateer type?
Tim Pool
Yeah. Market reprisal.
Libby Emmons
Yeah. What did you guys think about that?
Tim Pool
I think it's a bad idea. I don't know. Look, you're basically telling Mexico we're authorizing PMCs, private groups to go in there and start dealing with cartels. There's going to be war on their seems war.
Libby Emmons
Ish.
Tim Pool
Yeah, well, it's not that we're declaring war, but basically like you've, we'd basically be saying you've got cartels. We're going to be sending in our violent guys with guns to go stop them and it's going to be chaos in Mexico.
Libby Emmons
Right.
Tim Pool
They're going to be like, nah, Mexico.
Libby Emmons
Has already been trying to like sue American gun manufacturer.
Phil Labonte
I mean, that's the best.
Tim Pool
Market reprisal may be the only Answer. That would just be no good answer.
Phil Labonte
The idea that the response to the United States declaring the cartels terrorists, the response by the Mexican government, by the President, President Sheinbaum, is that we're going to expand legal action against gun manufacturers in the United States, that's absolutely ridiculous. Because they're blaming people that make guns in the US for sale in the US for the problems of the cartels. You don't have the ability to police your own damn country, and you're blaming arms manufacturers in the United States. Unacceptable. Unacceptable.
Nick Sorter
They don't even attempt to try to stop the flow into the. Into Mexico, I mean, because they'll die. I went into Mexico without a passport. I just walked across the border because they don't ask for it. You just walked in. Okay. You could, you know, they have no idea what I like.
Tim Pool
You went. You went to a non. Port of entry. You're saying, no, no, no, I went.
Nick Sorter
To a port of entry and I just. I just walked. I just walked through. I mean, not just walk, you know, across, around the wall.
Tim Pool
When you drive in, they just wave you through. They don't. You don't stop you. From the United States into Mexico, from San Diego to Tijuana, you're driving and you slow down to like five miles an hour and they just go, nope, just fan you in. When you're coming back, however, the Americans stop and check your passports, right?
Phil Labonte
Yeah.
Kevin Sorbo
That's why I think it's a bad idea to do the privateering because it could. It could just open the door to what we've seen in Ukraine, where people just are selling arms, like on the black market.
Libby Emmons
Is that what's going on in Ukraine?
Kevin Sorbo
I mean, I've. I've.
Libby Emmons
Because you've been there before.
Kevin Sorbo
Yeah, we reported on that a few years ago when Jack and I went over. But, yeah, they will offer donations to mercenaries, and then you send your money over there and it just gets spent on totally different things as what you sent the money for.
Nick Sorter
So is that actually one of the. And you may or may not know this, but, you know, there's like, we don't know where a lot of the stuff went that we sent over there. These billions and billions and billions. So is that what's happening? It's being sent over there and then it's being sold off, being auctioned off, being given to mercenaries? Like, what's the.
Kevin Sorbo
Well, that's. That's what I witnessed when I was over there. I can't say that's the case for 100% of the money.
Nick Sorter
Well, nobody knows where 100% of the money. Nobody knows where 50% of the money is at this point. So. No.
Kevin Sorbo
Well, apparently, as we saw in Tucker, a lot of the. A lot of the arms that went over there ended up getting into the hands of the cartels.
Nick Sorter
Yeah.
Kevin Sorbo
Coming back for us, we got breaking.
Tim Pool
News, ladies and gentlemen. This just from Jesse Waters. Tulsi Gabbard says that 100 plus intelligence officials involved in the Deep State sex chat will have their security clearances revoked. Let's. Let's play the clip now. Apparently, this just aired.
F
Well, Jesse, what we're going to do has already been done. There are over 100 people from across the intelligence community that contributed to and participated in this. What is really just an egregious violation of trust. What to speak of, like basic rules and standards around professionalism. I put out a directive today that they all will be terminated and their security clearances will be revoked. But the thing here, Jesse, is we got to take a step back because this is just barely scratching the surface when you see what these people were saying. And thanks to Chris Ruffo for putting it all out online. They were brazen in using an NSA platform intended for professional use to conduct this kind of really, really horrific behavior. And they were brazen in doing this because when was the last time anyone was really held accountable? Certainly not over the last four years. Certainly not over the last 10, maybe 20 years, when we look at some of the biggest violations of the American people's trust in the intelligence community. So today's action in holding these individuals accountable is just the beginning of what we're seeing across the Trump administration, which is carrying out the mandate the American people gave him, Clean house, root out that rot and corruption and weaponization and politicization. So we can start to rebuild that trust in these institutions that are charged with an important mission of serving the American people, ensuring our safety, security, and freedom.
Tim Pool
That's. That's amazing.
Nick Sorter
It's got to go further.
Tim Pool
We got. We got action from the government. This is something we never would have seen under the Biden administration.
Phil Labonte
Absolutely.
Tim Pool
These individuals who are clearly. Look, look, I just want to make sure this is understood by everybody. The same people who demand we get these workplace sexual harassment seminars where they tell you you can't do this, were literally doing it. And they're the same one, and let me just say somewhat figuratively. What I mean is, it is these left liberal types who are screaming at inequality, oppression, and intersectional whatever. And what's it. Which would. Which would Their policies would ban the behaviors they're engaged in and they do it anyway. And now they're all fired and they should be. And they've got their clearances revoked. They're never going to work intelligence again.
Libby Emmons
Yeah, yeah, go ahead.
Nick Sorter
Well, it needs to go further than this because now we have to look at who did they target? These people had these security clearances, these top level security clearances. Who were they going after? Who were they pulling dirt on? I mean, you see, like Libs of TikTok, Kaya Raichik was specifically mentioned in one of these weird sex chats.
Tim Pool
Really?
Nick Sorter
Yeah. And so they have this pretty much unfettered access to. I mean, you've seen what the intelligence community is capable of and tapping people's cell phones, digging into their emails and going after parents. Right. That needs to be investigated. Who did they. If they're calling Kaya Raichik a terror and they, if they believe that, what did they do to her? Were they reading her emails? Were they reading her text messages? They had the ability to. That needs to be investigated. And if they did, jail.
Libby Emmons
It's, it's sort of, it's been true across the board and it's been such a short period of time that the Trump administration has been clearing house, clearing house over here in this, in this area. They're dealing with the FBI. People have already been reassigned. The IRS agents are looking at being reassigned. You know, today you have this wild thing in the White House where the press secretary said that the White House Correspondents association basically like the press pool would be taken over by the White House and they wouldn't let the rot in that organization keep seeping in, you know, and that's, that's actually all because of Kevin over here, who's, who's coined Gulf of America. And then the next thing you know, all hell breaks loose. The AP gets banned and the White House Correspondents association doesn't even have any standing in the White House anymore.
Tim Pool
Amazing.
Libby Emmons
It's amazing. But they're just, they're clearing everything out.
Tim Pool
Well, it's.
Libby Emmons
How did you feel about that, Kevin, when you found, when you found out that not only did the AP get banned, but the entire way that the press organization is working at the White House has changed all because of the Gulf of America.
Kevin Sorbo
It feels incredible, honestly. Yeah, I mean, it sits just the domino meme, you know, me on a waverunner. And all of a sudden everybody has to put an application in to get in the White House press briefing.
Nick Sorter
All of. Well, at this point, you know, you see the signs? And so the White House Correspondents association went all. We stand with the. The ap. They were putting up signs in the briefing room saying that it's like, okay, yeah, go stand with AP on the sidewalk. You can report from outside.
Kevin Sorbo
Two weeks. It's been 14 days. I looked it up. Yeah. Since they've been allowed in.
Nick Sorter
But people don't understand this. They're like, oh, well, you know, why doesn't somebody like Nick Sorter, why doesn't Tim Pool have a spot in the White House briefing room? Well, that's because up until now it was controlled by the cartel known as the White House Correspondents association. And the. Controlled by the left wing, I think the chair, I believe, is like a. I think she's a reporter for NBC.
Phil Labonte
And the argument that. The argument that you always hear is, oh, well, this is a. This is an attack on free speech, which is the same argument they make when they. When you talk about getting rid of books that are sexually explicit in schools. But just like that argument, curation and deciding who is and is not allowed in is not a limit on free speech. It is just a limit on the space inside of the room. If. If the, if the administration decides that they don't want to let this particular organization in, they have every right to do that because they exclude hundreds, probably thousands of press organizations from actually being able to access the White House.
Libby Emmons
Well, the Biden administration, you remember them. Like, we'd never see any of this stuff if it was Joe Biden.
Phil Labonte
They sue Joe Biden either.
Libby Emmons
Did they sue Joe Biden either? But, like, do you remember Joe Biden would stand there and when he did take questions, how many times did he take questions from the press? Like four or five times in his entire four years.
Kevin Sorbo
Maybe a train wrecked into the house or off the helicopter.
Libby Emmons
But when he did actually take questions, he had a list of people that he would read from and he'd be like, oh, you with the ap, pre selected questions. Pre. Selected reporters.
Nick Sorter
And then if he'd go off that and, like, choose somebody, I'm gonna get in trouble. I'm gonna get.
Kevin Sorbo
And it's not a law. It's not a law. It's policy in the.
Nick Sorter
So AP is suing, obviously, the Trump administration over lack of transparency or whatever, but they never took any legal action against Joe Biden for banning everybody from Biden.
Libby Emmons
Bang. 440 people.
Kevin Sorbo
He was quick to follow on policy when they changed the name from Kiev to Kiev.
Nick Sorter
Right, right, right.
Kevin Sorbo
They're quick to make policy changes on that.
Nick Sorter
But not a mom to inseminated person. I mean if that's fake news, if.
Libby Emmons
I've ever heard about it, that's trash.
Nick Sorter
Yeah.
Libby Emmons
Natural parent instead of father.
Nick Sorter
But they have an entire, there's a, it's like called the AP style book and it's like cancer. You can go and read it and.
Libby Emmons
It is just capitalized black.
Nick Sorter
Right. But no black Intelligence, lowercase white.
Libby Emmons
Exactly.
Tim Pool
Which I don't, I don't know how that segue happened. We're talking about Tulsi Gabriel firing a bunch of people and I'm curious with, with her as Director of National Intelligence saying she's going to fire 100 plus people. I'm wondering if the move that Elon Trump, Cash, Dan and many others may make next is going to be targeting the most minute of reasonable cause firings. That is anything anybody, anybody has done that, that is cause you're fired, hopefully.
Phil Labonte
I mean look, if you're going to actually make significant cuts, you have to fire people and you have to have cause to fire people. So they're probably going to say, look, these, you have broken this rule. This rule, this rule. I mean it's just like when, when a company starts like having a pattern of behavior, they'll start looking for any. If they want to get rid of you, they're going to look for little things to, to say that you've done. When they get enough that they feel they can actually bring you in front of hr, they bring you into HR said, look, these things you've done and those things might get overlooked with anyone else for they might be no reason or no big deal, but if they decided that they want to fire you for whatever reason, they come up with as many reasons as they can. So that way they have.
Libby Emmons
It's pretty egregious though. Absolutely. If I discovered something like this happening at my organization, I'd be like, hey, you're 100.
Phil Labonte
But that's not the point. The point is like Tim said, if they're going to be looking for all of the little reasons, that's exactly how they're going to have to come up with justification. Because right now you end up with, with lawsuits and you end up with, with unions trying to defend people. So you have to have as many reasons, as many small reasons as possible. So that way you don't have, so you don't have to answer for every individual person that, that gets fired or to, to a, to a court which I think eventually it's going to end up in front of the Supreme Court. Anyways, and the question at hand, which we've talked about in the show multiple times, does the executive have the authority to fire people or not? And According to Article 2 in the Constitution, the executive does, because the agencies all come under.
Libby Emmons
Right.
Tim Pool
You see that viral post from that woman where she claimed the DOJ was a judicial. Was the legislate under legislative.
Libby Emmons
What was up with that?
Tim Pool
Judicial control? Yeah, totally. So ridiculous. Mike Cernovich tweeted, where in the Constitution does it say that the Executive doesn't have control of the DOJ? And this PhD woman responds, oh, my God, they're so dumb. I can't believe they'd repost this. It's right here. And then posts about judicial controls, making the argument that the Department of Justice is under the judiciary, which it is not. It's an executive branch. And then insults Mike Cernovich, saying, you're getting your news from a juice salesman. And I'm like, see, this is where we. This is where liberals are. They're like, I have been given a piece of paper, so I'm smarter than you. And it's like, okay, well, you're not. You were wrong. And this is terrifying that you live in this world, but these are. These are communists. Not all of them, but these are the people who live in rigid, hierarchical authority structures where if a person has a degree, they're better than you. That's the way it works. It's like, could you imagine what it must be like to be a liberal? Where you, like, sit down and you go, I have a bachelor's in mechanical engineering, so I propose we do it this way. And it goes. I have a master's. And they go, oh, I'm sorry. It's like, listen, we're gonna go over the proposals. Just because you have a degree doesn't immediately just give you the authority to say it, because otherwise, you know, these people with PhDs are some dumb MFers.
Phil Labonte
Yeah. And it's frustrating because there's. There's so many people that are looking to, like we were talking about earlier, just, like, be able to say, oh, look, we. We gotta dunk on Musk or dunk on any other person in the administration. It's all for ideological reasons. They have no desire to actually do something that benefits people. They think, oh, if we can just keep people in these positions, it's good for everybody, when clearly it's not. It's only good for people with a certain ideological disposition. So I don't think that. I don't. I don't think that that there's anything that we're going to be able to do about it other than do as much firing as possible. Kevin O'Leary was on, on CNN the other day and they were apoplectically apoplectic that he was saying this, but he was saying, cut, cut, cut, cut, cut. And it's okay if you cut too much because you can always rehire people, you can always find people to fill those positions, but cut as much as you can while you're cutting.
Tim Pool
Let's jump to this story formally from Fox News Trump Admin. Guts White House Correspondent association in bid to end monopoly of DC Journalists the White House Correspondent association has been determined, has been determined, has determined access to, to the White House for decades. Eugene Daniels, who is the politic politico chief playbook correspondent and the WHCA president has issued a statement. I'm not okay, I'm going to read it. But it's so cringe. He says this move tears the independence of a free press in the United States. It suggests the government will choose the journalists who cover the president. In a free country, leaders must not be able to choose their own press corps. For generations, the working journalists elected to lead the White House Correspondent association board have consistently expanded the WHCA's membership and its pool, blah, blah, blah since its founding in 1914. Don't care. Blah, blah. To be clear, the White House did not give the WHCA board a heads up or have any discussion about today's announcements, but the WHCA will never stop advocating for comprehensive access. Blah, blah, don't care. These are elitist, credentialist individuals who keep out anybody who doesn't tow their political line. It is a corrupt institution that should be disbanded in disgrace. And the Trump administration did the right thing by saying, anyone can apply now. And they're making excuses by saying, so the government chooses. Well, yeah, the president doesn't need to give you the space in front of him to hear what he has to say. He chooses. This all got started because the AP thought they had the right to be in the Oval Office whenever they wanted. Think about how insane this is. Trump says, we're going to be doing this, we're going to be signing this executive order. Why don't we invite the press in to watch, not uap. And they said, well, you have to because we're entitled to be in there. Sued. And a judge blocked it. Not on the grounds that they are. They, they are not entitled. The judge blocked it because they couldn't demonstrate harm. And they said the Information coming out is available to everybody. You get out of here. What's crazy to me is that there's actually an argument that these people are making and judges may entertain, that Trump is obligated to have the press staring in his face 100% of the time. That's insanity. So the AP said we should be allowed to be in your office when we decide, not you. So Trump says, okay, whca, you're gone. Now we're going to decide when people can come in and we invite them in, as it should be.
Libby Emmons
Well, and there's not. There's limited space. Right. The Oval Office only holds a certain number of people. On Air Force one, there's only 13 seats for reporters. And I read the brief that the White House submitted in response to the AP suit that they gave to the judge. And in that brief, they. They laid out very clearly that the AP has not actually been harmed in any way because they still have access to all the pool reporting. That's the videos, the questions, the audio, photographs, anything else. And if you go to their website and you look at their stories, since they've been banned from the Oval Office and the other locations, they still have the same exact kind of reporting that they did before. They still have the videos. They still have everything. And I thought it was pretty interesting that Caroline Leave it today said in the White House that they would open up that seat to other journalists. Like, could you imagine, like, Tim Cast has a seat in the Oval Office or on Air Force One getting to travel around, what, like that?
Nick Sorter
You're not gonna dead name the Gulf of America. We know that for sure.
Tim Pool
I wouldn't do that. I was calling it Gulf of America before. It was cool. Right?
Nick Sorter
But, you know, you have to. You really think about it. It's like, there's only one condition. They can get their creds back tomorrow. All they have to do is just stop publishing fake news of whatever the Gulf of Mexico is. I don't even know what that is anymore.
Tim Pool
It's funny that.
Nick Sorter
It was like, america, you'll get in.
Tim Pool
That's it.
Nick Sorter
You get your creds back.
Tim Pool
Carol Levitt is like, the Secretary of the Interior has updated records to display this as the Gulf of America. And you've decided you will not report that. AP is like, yeah. And they're like. And then we can choose not to invite you in because these are private events. And they were like, we'll sue you. It is. It is just. Okay, I'm going to pause. Democrats. Can I sue the next Democrat? Administration because they won't let me in the Oval Office.
Nick Sorter
Yeah. What makes them better than you?
Tim Pool
I'm a reporter, right? We got a big show. Got a big show. We, we got a big show. Some say the biggest. And I'm going to sue the next time a Democrat's in office because they have to let me in. Those are their rules. Right. And then I'm going to sit there just staring at the President with my mouth hanging open.
Libby Emmons
I know that under the Biden administration, when the Post Millennial tried to just get questions answered, not even get into the White House, which we also tried to get press passes and nobody would ever get back to us. But I know that they wouldn't even answer questions. They'd answer questions like two, three weeks later and it would be like, oh, you have to talk to somebody else. It's totally useless.
Nick Sorter
You probably.
Libby Emmons
And now we've had like one of our reporters got in for a press briefing and it was no problem. We have a hard pass. You know, that's cool. They're just much more receptive and open.
Nick Sorter
I mean, you probably know this as, you know, somebody that works in, I don't know how long you've been in the industry, but, you know, Post Millennial is a great publication. Pretty big publication. Thanks. But the Biden regime was revoking hard passes from people. If they didn't like your question, they would revoke your hard pass to the press briefing room.
Libby Emmons
Or if they just didn't like your outlet, they didn't. They raked oan over the coals. They were like, you're not legitimate. You know, they were really cruel to conservative news outlets and calling them illegitimate just because those outlets weren't, you know, toeing the party line.
Nick Sorter
The AP condemn that?
Libby Emmons
No, the AP didn't say anything. As a matter of fact, I was just looking at that when Tim brought up the, the Eugene Daniels and the press secretary for. Or one of Josh Hawley's assistants said, or assistant press secretary. I'm not sure. She said, can someone re up the statement from the WHCA when Biden's press team was pre screening Press question. I can't seem to find it.
Kevin Sorbo
And who was this? Katrina Pearson or Jen Psaki, Right?
Libby Emmons
Yeah, Jen Psaki. And then it was Karine Jean Pierre. Yeah, neither.
Tim Pool
Let's talk about corporate journalists. There's an organization. I love them. You guys ever hear free press.net Yep, they've been around for a long time. Free Press, they call it. Here's their page from 2019 advocating for the total banning of Alex Jones. Right.
Nick Sorter
Free press.
Tim Pool
Free Press called on Facebook to ban Alex Jones. And they said, hate speech is not free speech. These people do not believe in a free press. They are lying to you. The White House Correspondent association is only angry because their ability to control the narrative has just been ripped away from them. You know how much you want to bet they sold access?
Nick Sorter
Whca? Yeah, absolutely. It's an oligarchy.
Tim Pool
That's all it is.
Phil Labonte
It's a.
Nick Sorter
It's an.
Libby Emmons
You have to pay dues. Probably. You have to.
Tim Pool
Probably. But remember when Twitter was Twitter and verification was only for special people?
Libby Emmons
Yeah. And then we learned verification.
Tim Pool
They were selling it under the table. People worked at Twitter would be like, I can get you verified. Just give me ten grand. And then you slide in the money. And then they'd go in the computers and verify you. Because it was.
Libby Emmons
And it turns out it's really easy. Just like, snip, snap, snip snap.
Tim Pool
I got verified for the first time on Twitter when I got hired by Vice and I said, can you guys get me verified? They went, yep, made a phone call and said, verify our guy. And they said, you got it. Boom. I was verified.
Nick Sorter
Well, so the blue check thing on X, you know, or it was Twitter at the time when Elon opened it up and let anybody do it. The reaction that you're seeing from the WHCA right now is exactly the same reaction that these people had when anybody had the ability to buy blue check marks. It's the same thing.
Tim Pool
So all status, you hear from like the fresh and fit guys about how having an. Having Instagram verification, you could slide into any girl's dm. Cause the verification means you're special. That's what it was for journalists. So if you're an influencer on Instagram and you like drive cars or whatever, you can get verified. But journalists don't really work on Instagram. So all these snot nosed journalists earned their. Their, or I should say that verification badge was a status symbol for them that they used. I guarantee it. I heard stories of these people. Like when you're verified, if they had a complaint with a company, they tweet, the company would freak out and be like, whoa, a verified person is. Is.
Libby Emmons
I had that experience. Yeah.
Tim Pool
And then Trump, I'm sorry, Elon took it all away from him. Yeah, took it all the way. He said, anyone can have it for five bucks or eight dollars. Sorry.
Libby Emmons
Yeah, great equalizer.
Phil Labonte
Eight dollar meme was great.
Nick Sorter
Now you have people in their bios now that are people like, I didn't pay for this blue check mark.
Tim Pool
Yeah.
Nick Sorter
Just. They're mad. They don't want to be a part of that. It's so, so ridiculous.
Phil Labonte
It's, it's been totally ridiculous. But I mean, it's always been a status symbol and a symbol of, you know, you're one of the cool people. And the fact that that was changed really bothered the people that like the status and it. On the left, there's a lot of that, the, the. We're one of the good people. We're one of the, you know, we have the correct. I mean, that's the whole point of like political correctness. Right. It's, it doesn't matter if you believe it. It's. I have the correct opinions. I'm one of the good guys. I'm one of the special people. And that, that's exactly what goes on in Washington. If you work in D.C. it's, I'm special. I work in the government. I have power. It's all this, this, this, you know, ego stroking that goes on. And it has, has very little to do with whether or not you're actually valuable, whether or not what your contribution to the government is matters or not. That's all irrelevant.
Nick Sorter
So I was actually, I was, I really realized this when I was covering the speaker situation when McCarthy was ousted and I was really pushing for Jim Jordan. I wanted Jim Jordan in there. And, and so, yeah, I mean, it was like the best, the best option that we had at the time that was like, reasonably possible. And I went there and I was going around with Jordan and, and just, you know, documenting the play by play. And there was a group, and he was talking to a group of reporters and this person came up to me and like pulled me back and said, you're not allowed to be here. And because I wasn't credentialed and I'm thinking this is somebody that works at the Capitol that is, that is like controlling access. No, it was some random reporter that had the hard press credentials trying to police whether or not I was allowed to be in the area. And I was with one of Matt Gates's guys at the time. He said, now go tell her to go F herself. She can't do anything to you.
Phil Labonte
I mean, that's, that's something that, that you see a lot in, like, in, in authoritarian kind of communities and you saw or situations. And you saw it with COVID right? Like there were people that were very, very anxious to police the behavior of other people that were not carrying out the proper Covid procedures. They want to be able to use that small, little bit of power, that little bit of authority they think they have, and they want to be able to lord it over people. You have these little fiefdoms in the, in D.C. and they have this, this particular area they're the king of. And I'm in charge and I get to decide this and that.
Tim Pool
That.
Phil Labonte
It's all about ego and all about. It's all about inflated ego. And abuse is literally being able to abuse people because you're in a position that put. That you think you have authority over.
Tim Pool
Yep.
Nick Sorter
And which is actually makes the situation with all these federal employees that are saying, oh, it's such a travesty. Well, you know, we're getting fired for cause or whatever. The same people that were saying, oh, we should have fired everybody for not taking the COVID vaccine. And so there's a lot of, you know, there's a lot of satisfaction in that, Kevin, you know, seeing these same people that were saying that all of us, us plebs should have been outed, you know, outcasted from society and such for not taking the vaccine.
Phil Labonte
Yeah. And there was a lot of people that were very quick to do that.
Tim Pool
Yep. And they lost. And Trump won the popular vote and the popular mandate and his approval rating is the best of his career. And they can cope and they conceive. And we are now seeing Tulsi Gabbard, Cash Patel, Dan Bongino, RFK Jr. And it's been fantastic.
Nick Sorter
I mean, did you see today talking about Cash and Dan Boccino going and opening an investigation into James Comey now for Spygate. Oh, so satisfying. This is, this is what we voted for right here. Wow. The gloves are off, Floodgates are open. And Bongino doesn't. If you listen, if you used to listen to him at all every once in a while. He doesn't mess around. This is a guy that's gonna go in there. And I would argue that the deputy director of the FBI after being appointed by the director is, I mean, that's the guy that runs day to day operations at the FBI. He's the one that's actually calling a lot of the shots. And Cash Patel ends up being the figurehead. So Dan Bongino being appointed was such a massive win, people. They'll soon find out. You know, Dan is somebody that moves quickly and breaks things. And thank God the FBI needs that. There's probably no other organization in the federal government that needs to be broken. Into small pieces in the FBI and.
Tim Pool
Splintered into the wind. Thank you. Well, but I think with Dan and Cash getting in, I am much more optimistic as to what the FBI will be doing. And I think, I think Cash is going to get them back to fighting crime and going after actual hard criminals. It's going to be great. I think, I think Cash, if you've ever listened to him, he's more like the, let's get him back to fighting crime. Dan is the, we're going to weigh out the corruption and destroy the deep state.
Kevin Sorbo
I think they should have done that earlier instead of just firing everybody just now from that chat. I think they should have, should have held them and investigated them so we could put them in jail. And honestly.
Tim Pool
Well, you still can. Yeah, they can still investigate these people.
Kevin Sorbo
Okay.
Tim Pool
You know, that's what Nick was saying. Like, look into what they've been doing, because how much you want to bet these people with extreme weird fetishes and left aligned proclivities, likely we're doing untoward things for political reasons and you probably will find criminal actions.
Nick Sorter
You know, you think about the FBI talking about how they're actually doing things now. I think FBI Houston has now busted two mass shootings in the past, like two weeks. And one of them today, we found out, was a radical look back at the J6 situation and how many of those agents, thousands of them, dedicated every single day to tracking down grandma's walking through the Capitol. And now they're actually doing, now they're stopping mass shootings. You know, they're not.
Phil Labonte
That's, that's totally like, that's something that it deserves, you know, a little attention. There have been multiple mass shootings that the FBI has actually stopped before they happened. Right. There's been at least two that I know of. And you never heard about a mass shooting that was stopped before this change in the administration.
Nick Sorter
Right. And it almost became a meme where it was like, okay, well how long until we hear the FBI say, oh, well, they were on our radar.
Phil Labonte
It wasn't almost it. Absolutely. Every time you took the Bart meme, say the line, bart. They were on our radar. You know, like everyone knows that meme. So. Yeah. And that's something that worth, worth, worth noting. The fact that the FBI actually has the capacity to do things that actually save lives as opposed to chasing down people that were legitimately not doing things wrong. They were in the, they went into the Capitol, but they didn't break anything. They didn't, you know, didn't steal anything. They weren't violent. There were, there were some people in January 6th that maybe you can say that they, they, they caused a problem, that they were violent, that that should have been put in jail but, but that wasn't the vast majority of them. 1600 people were not fighting with the cops. There were a few hundred people that were fighting with the cops and that they were, they completely and totally were overdoing the, the prosecution and investigations.
Tim Pool
We're gonna go to Super Chat. So if you haven't already, would you kindly smash that like button and join us on Rumble Premium. Go to Timcast premium.com and it will direct you to sign up for Rumble Premium. Use promo code TIM10 and you'll get 10 bucks off. And we're gonna have that uncensored call in show which is not so family friendly but always fun and funny for those that are watching on Rumble Premium. That will be in about 22 minutes and it's gonna be good fun. We bring in our members in the Discord Chat to talk to us and then we, we have a good laugh and we hope to see you there. By Casper Coffee. Let's read some, let's read some Super Chats and some Rumble rants. The common neighbor says I am the Walrus. Glad to hear it. Kyle says, I have great respect for Thomas Massey. Tim, now that Matt Gaetz out of Congress, who has replaced him as your favorite member of Congress? I said this to Thomas Massie. It was him, Matt Gates I said was my favorite member because he ripped apart the IOU machine, the deep state neocon machine that was propping up McCarthy. I loved it. Massey was against that. But Massie is still one of the best. Now that Matt Gaetz has left. Well, it's a no brainer. I mean Thomas Massie is the best and I disagree with him a lot of things. I often tweet disagreements with him. But he is one of the only like real people actually in Congress. And he's a good dude. He's a great dude. Actually. He's my favorite member. Everybody agree? What else do you think?
Nick Sorter
No, Well, I think he came out today and called out this. The budget.
Tim Pool
Yeah.
Nick Sorter
Being like, you know, I'm a hard no. 1. He's like, I went into the meeting with an open mind and they convinced me to vote no. Like, I mean that was a quote from Massie today.
Tim Pool
Right.
Nick Sorter
And. But he's the only one with the balls to do that. Everybody just wants to go along to get along. That's the opposite of what Massey is going to do. And he takes so much heat for it.
Phil Labonte
Well, he takes heat because he doesn't go and do what the party wants him to do. He really does look at it as what is. What does the Constitution say and what's actually good for the budget. He's the guy walking around with the national debt pin that is constantly being updated. So, I mean, he's my favorite member of Congress.
Nick Sorter
Well, I mean, what'll go down in history was that moment where he walked onto the House floor during COVID and said, I will not let the republic die by unanimous consent. And at the time, I mean, pretty much every Republican, every Democrat, it was like one of the most least popular moves he could have made in the country. But he did it anyway, and he ended up being very, very right. He's got the COVID spending bill. Yeah. Wild.
Phil Labonte
He's cut from the same cloth as Ron Paul. You know, Tom Colburn was like that. Tom Colburn was senator from Oklahoma back before he passed away. But yeah, like, there have been a handful of dudes, I think. I think Rand Paul is probably like that too. We're very close. Rand is, because he's a senator, he's a little more go along and. And work with other senators, but he's still, you know, cut from the same cloth as dad. And I think that, that it's good to have those kind of people in the government, if only to set an example for the rest of Congress, you.
Tim Pool
Know, quantum strange cork says.
Kevin Sorbo
Tim.
Tim Pool
Congrats to you and Allison for your new baby girl. You should. You two should record a private video for her right now to tell her how you feel about her becoming new parents and show it to her when she gets old enough to appreciate it. I really do appreciate the sentiment, and I will stress it is going to be a very strange generation when they can watch their parents entire lives recorded on social media. For me, particularly so because I have done a video, an episode of Tim Cast IRL and the morning show every day, except for some weekends. So you know how they do those things where it's like I took a picture of myself every day for 20 years. It's like, well, I recorded a video of myself for four hours every day for eight years. No, it's going to be wild. It's going to be like really funny. You're gonna already the a. So this. You want to, you know, it's really creepy. AI watches podcasts and so these large language models have already mapped out literally everything I've ever said publicly. It's all in their training models, so you can tell them to write something like, do an episode of Tim Cast irl. And it'll. It will. It will. It will get Phil, it will get me, it'll get Libby. No, no joke. But the crazy thing is, when my kid is old enough, she's going to be able to watch 20 years of my life in news and commentary. That weird. Yeah, she's going to watch this episode. Yeah.
Kevin Sorbo
Like, type in tweets and breaking news and it'll give, like, a whole AI show of just you and your voice, everything.
Tim Pool
Well, they're going to be able to. They can already do this. Facebook has this technology. They've had it for a very long time, where they can take all the data from your profile and then create a chat bot.
Kevin Sorbo
Right, right, right.
Tim Pool
And so there was a story about a guy whose dad died, and then they were testing out the stack and he was talking to his dad and it knew everything his dad had ever said.
Nick Sorter
Don't like it.
Tim Pool
Yeah. Dude, you are being. Your brain is being copied by the machine and uploaded in real time and it's too late. You're on the show. They got you, bro.
Nick Sorter
There's no going back.
Kevin Sorbo
That's obviously why I haven't been involved so long, because you take that and then you take, like, Neuralink. Right. And then you got cyborgs. Like, pretty soon, man, like, there'll just be robots. Like, you just upload me.
Nick Sorter
So, robot, if I go to Grok now and ask who. Who Kevin Posobic is, is it going to tell me the. The founder of the Gulf of America discovery.
Tim Pool
What I think is going to be pretty crazy is that. No, not just for me, but I. For obviously for me personally, it makes the subject easy. My kid is going to be able to watch the moment I announced my wife was going to have a kid. And it's like, here's the world before you were born and literally the period of time in which you were being created. It's. It's crazy to think because the only thing I have of my parents is like, here's a photo album. Here's a photo from this year. Here's a photo from two years later. And it's like, how about that? They're literally going to be like, I pulled up my dad. My dad's Instagram, and I saw his entire life for 15, 20 years. That's crazy.
Nick Sorter
Yeah, I don't. I don't really like the idea. So it's. It's a weird concern. Like, go to. Go to X Right now or any. Any social media platform. And look up Tim Pool. Like, how many Tim Pools are there? I mean, they're. They're 5,000 of them impersonating you. And. And they. And there are people all the time constantly messaging me like, I was in. I was in western North Carolina when I was out there delivering starlings out there. And they, they. People were asking, like, why did you block me, bro? It's, you know, because they message and act like you to people that. That follow you. And they were trying to solicit money under my name, trying to act like me, trying to talk like me. And now you're talking about the potential for AI emulating the way that you speak, the way that you type. That's. That. That's gonna be a big problem here.
Phil Labonte
Yep.
Tim Pool
Oh, man.
Kevin Sorbo
The fraud has been around for a while. We've had that in my church, and a lot of churches get that. Actually, you get. Get emails from priests saying, hey, we need you to donate for so and so for the church, this and that.
Nick Sorter
Yeah.
Kevin Sorbo
But then they have to come out and say, no, like, listen, like priests, first off, they only. They don't even have phones, let alone emails.
Tim Pool
You know what's funny is that because people are making comments, the one thing liberals always like to do is accuse conservatives of being short. And I'm like, it's kind of weird because liberals tend to be shorter. I'm actually 7 foot 3. People don't know this. Right.
Phil Labonte
But.
Tim Pool
But it's a weird line of attack that they like to use. I thought I'd bring up for no reason, just because people were chatting.
Nick Sorter
Never heard that. I've never heard that.
Kevin Sorbo
We're political giants.
Tim Pool
Like, Ben Shapiro is not short, is he? Not sure. He's five'eight five'nine Yeah. I mean, he's average.
Nick Sorter
When I think of short dudes, I'm thinking like Adam Kinzinger and Dan Crenshaw, neither of which are the like, five'four five'five Dan Crenshaw is apparently tiny. That's what I heard the other day yesterday.
Tim Pool
And Crenshaw, I don't know.
Nick Sorter
I just. I know Adam Kinzinger is tiny.
Tim Pool
A line of attack frequently used by the. By liberals in the left is that people are short. And it's like a weird thing because they tend to be shorter compared to conservatives, tend to be taller. Or I should say people who are taller tend to skew more conservative.
Kevin Sorbo
That's a. That's a Noam Chomsky thing. Yeah, he did a whole documentary on that.
Tim Pool
Calling People short.
Kevin Sorbo
No, no. Is he. Who, Tall? Happy hold. Noam Chomsky.
Tim Pool
Well, have you ever seen a tall old person?
Nick Sorter
So. So if you ask Grog.
Tim Pool
Right?
Nick Sorter
If you ask Grok, it says he's 5 foot 7, but, you know. Yeah.
Phil Labonte
Wow.
Tim Pool
I mean, that's below average.
Nick Sorter
Yeah, it's definitely below average.
Tim Pool
There's a thing like they, they, they, they. They constantly try and claim that Ben Shapiro is short. And he's not like, I gotta.
Nick Sorter
I was under the impression that he was just based on that.
Tim Pool
And then the first time I met him, I was like, oh, he's like. He's like normal height. He's like the average guy. It's like average height.
Kevin Sorbo
What does that equate to, though? If you're short, then you're dumb.
Tim Pool
No, they do it because the left uses a couple of attacks. They call prominent personalities short, and they attack things that they perceive to be talented in. The goal is they want young men not to want to associate with our political ideas because we're not charismatic or. Or like strong men. Right, okay. So you'll notice they do this with Andrew Tate. By all means, criticize Andrew Tate. I don't care. But there was this thing Andrew Tate did where he was making fun of leftists and he tilted his head back and started going, like, making fun of him. They screenshotted it and said, this is what Andrew Tate looks like. They. And. And he walked into that one. The intention is to be like, okay, obviously Andrew Tate's insanely ripped. He's a champion kickboxer. You can criticize him for all the things he said. I don't know, work here. My point is, the dude has a massive following of young men for a reason, and he makes insane amounts of money off this following. So that what they do is they try to attack masculinity. They'll say, men are weak, short, or they're not good. One of the things they do to me all the time is it's the weirdest thing ever. It catches by surprise. They go on forums and claim, I once saw Tim Pool, a skate park, and he couldn't do a pop. Shove it. And it's like. It's a really weird. I know, right? But the goal is we have a skateboard company. In fact, it's probably, at this point, one of the most successful skateboard companies in the world because we sell thousands of skateboards, boonies, hq.com, the best skateboard, best skateboards. And you can see the board behind me, the right to arm bears. It's A bear with a shotgun. And we, we sell, we sell a lot.
Kevin Sorbo
Yeah.
Tim Pool
So I have, I have a pro model board. I'm not the best skateboarder in the world or anything, but I'm fairly decent and I've sold thousands of personal boards. That's more than many pro skaters ever have. So if you go to a young kid and you're like, what Tim Pool does, he is successful, he has a show that is bad for the left. The left needs to be cool. So what they do is they attack the right in ways to try and make it seem like they're short, weak, flabby, what incels. That's why they call bench prone. Insults. Like, the dude is average height, married with children and he's multi millionaire, sleeps on a pile of cash. Like, but this is the attack vector they use, right?
Kevin Sorbo
They did that to Napoleon too. Wasn't Napoleon actually like normal height?
Tim Pool
Yeah, he had. The reason they say he was short is because he had imperial guards who were like very large men.
Kevin Sorbo
I see.
Phil Labonte
They constantly tell me, they're constantly like, oh, your band's terrible. It's like, man, I mean, I got platinum and gold records. What are you talking about?
Tim Pool
This doesn't work.
Phil Labonte
Like your band sucks. No, no, it objectively doesn't. You know, I mean, but that's, but like you said, it's just if they can discredit you somehow, like, oh, you know that you're bad at what you do.
Tim Pool
And it's like, well, but, but that's interesting things. It's not really discrediting, it's. They want, when, when a, when a 16 year old guy goes onto a forum, they want to make sure every message is, oh, Phil's band is actually not that good. They've never succeeded. What if Hassan called you the failed musician guy? And then when he found out that Phil's got a platinum and gold records or got platinum gold records, he was like, I met Ian and it's like, Ian is not a failed musician guy. Ian is like a mid level successful actor. And I mean that people may not realize that most people think if you're a successful actor, you're in Hollywood movies. Ian was in a Super bowl commercial. He did commercial acting and he did plays and stuff like this. And that's normal for an average actor. Ian plays music, but he was never like pursuing being a rock star, like in the way that Phil put out an album. Hassan Piker was trying to insult Phil as a failed musician guy, which he's objectively not, but he's Doing it without knowing who Phil is because he wants his younger viewers to think that Phil is just, like, some guy who never made it until they realize that Phil's played stadiums for 90,000 people and has platinum and gold records. And they're like, oh, I meant Ian. Yeah. No, he's just lying because this is the attack vector they use.
Phil Labonte
Yeah.
Nick Sorter
I don't really know what's up with these people, too. Like the left. I experienced this when I confronted Elizabeth Warren there in D.C. after one of the protests. And this leftist chick runs up to me, and she's like, you have a double chin, and you're an incel. And you're like. I'm like, well, I'm going for the triple chin. So, I mean, we're getting there. But, you know, and it's like, this lady's 75 years old and smells like cat pits.
Tim Pool
This.
Nick Sorter
It's like, why are you. Why do you think it's a good attack vector?
Tim Pool
Why do they always attack masculinity? Right.
Libby Emmons
Because they're literally very threatened by it.
Tim Pool
Well. Well, I think it's because they know that it's valued and it's deeply valued. The only reason they want to say that you are not manly or masculine, whatever that translates to, is so that young men stay away from you. Because young men are looking for people to look up to, and they want the mentality to be for a young kid. If I act like him, I'll be made fun of. And then what ends up happening is these kids grow up and they think actually strong guys don't care what people think. I want to be like that guy and be rich and successful.
Nick Sorter
Right.
Tim Pool
Let's grab some more super chats. All right, what we got? Tt he says, I used to work for the federal government. People don't realize, since these people can't be fired, the government promotes problematic, stupid people. When they create problems, then they become your boss. Oh, yeah.
Libby Emmons
True.
Tim Pool
Yep. RIP Jason Dixon says, shout out to the Discord. Shout out to Serge. He says, wheeze my held surge anz het mere surge. Indie Discord. No dig.
Libby Emmons
Whoa.
Tim Pool
Serge apparently knows what that means. If you want to join a community of over 20, 000 people, maybe you're bored at home and you watch the show and you're like, I don't know. I got some free time. I don't know what to do. Go to timcast.com, click. Join us. Get in the Discord server, because we've had people who started podcasts together. Maybe you're a musician. And then you go in there and someone else is like, hey, let's write a song together. Boom. Now you got songs. Maybe some, maybe, maybe you're like, I'm really good at drawing pictures, but I'm not really funny. And someone else is like, I'm a comedian. Bang. You got a comedy, a comedy comic together. This, this networking opportunity is the first step. Next we're doing this coffee shop franchises with Casper. We want to make it so that all of you who watch at home and watch on this show, wherever you do, you don't just watch and then leave. You watch and then connect with people and build those networking lines because that stuff builds community and it takes over the world. Let's grab some more. There was a funny super chat. Where was it? I don't know. All right, Coral Ag says, Phil, what are your thoughts on the saying making the rounds for a while? People don't get black or red pilled voluntarily. It is done against their will as a suppository.
Phil Labonte
I mean, it's funny. I do think that generally, like, people don't, A lot of times people don't intend to get like red pilled by things. Something will, they'll see something and they'll be like, that strikes me as off, that strikes me as wrong. And that kind of puts a crack in the veneer and then it tends to expand. And that's part of the reason why I think Covid did, did such a, a job on the way people kind of interpret what the government does is because there was such, there were so many ridiculous things that the government did that. So there were too many people that were just like, this doesn't seem right. This seems off. And then they start, you know, questioning things and start digging around to see what they can, you know, what else they feel like they've been wrong about. Another thing that did it was the, the Very Fine people hoax. You listen to people like, and this is really smart people too. Like people like the guys that, that do the all in podcast, right? Like one of the guys name is Jamath and he was fairly anti Trump and he was believing everything the, the liberal media said. And then when he was exposed to the Very Fine people hoax and he actually watched the video of Trump saying, you know, not the neo Nazis, not the, you know, not the racist, blah, blah, blah, they should be condemned. Totally. He was, he was, he was like, I have to rethink everything that I thought prior to this about politics that I thought prior to this moment. So.
Tim Pool
All right, we got this one from David Airman who says show idea for about some sleazy men in Congress. Femcast, Adrian, Lisa, Libby, Mary and a guest like Sydney Watson or shoe on Head. Hosted by Phil to be the mansplainer. I like it. I got a better idea. Those women sit and, and Phil just explains the news to them.
Kevin Sorbo
Hey, that's manly.
Phil Labonte
Look, I can't.
Tim Pool
If they try to butt in with your Wrong.
Phil Labonte
Yeah. Excuse me.
Tim Pool
Men are speaking.
Phil Labonte
I, I like those women in particular. I don't think would be good candidates. No, I think if we're very smart. I, I don't, I don't. I wouldn't feel comfortable doing that.
Tim Pool
If it was like an actual attempt at a show. They'd be like, I'm not interested. If it was a bit, they'd be laughing their ass off.
Phil Labonte
We could do that.
Libby Emmons
Be a good bit.
Phil Labonte
We could definitely do that as a bit.
Libby Emmons
Yeah.
Tim Pool
Anytime they try to correct you, whoop, whoop.
Phil Labonte
And I have to say ridiculous wrong things about women.
Tim Pool
Yeah.
Phil Labonte
Women don't poop. I don't want to. I don't want to hear.
Tim Pool
There's a lot of jokes I can make. I'm not going to. It's family friendly. Maybe on the uncensored portion. Five minutes. Okay, let's grab some more. Corbin says the Liberals in Canada just copied the Dems. They kicked three contenders for party leadership out of the race to make sure. Make sure wef globalist Kami wins. Trump's win has galvanized the Liberals. The commies in Canada pray for us. I'm not going to pray for you because I don't want you to have any advantages, be it from your own merit or from God above. When we come to take your country from you.
Phil Labonte
We're going to take your country, but we're not going to give you the right to vote.
Tim Pool
I'm kidding. But man, do they get really mad when you say that. That's why I love saying the least.
Libby Emmons
Freeland.
Tim Pool
The least threat. Oh yeah. The least threatening country ever. I'm sorry. You know, like there are some groups of people where I actually have my, my security being like be careful about doing certain things that could rile up extremists. And I'm like, no, we get it. Canada. Ain't nobody scared, you guys.
Nick Sorter
Well, that's why Trump is continuously trolling Governor Trudeau. I mean, every day he's doing these, these really official speeches and stuff. You know, like with, with Macron the other day and, and just casually calling him Governor McCrea or Governor Trudeau. In these speeches and all of these.
Phil Labonte
Yesterday when he was with Macron. That's great.
Nick Sorter
On live tv. It's not.
Libby Emmons
You had Christia Freeland, who's running to be the Liberal Prime Minister. You know, that's what she wants to be. She said that she's running because a four year old girl asked her if she could stop Trump from invading Canada.
Nick Sorter
It reminds me of the Kamala thing.
Tim Pool
It's funny because the answer is no.
Libby Emmons
Well, first of all, no, you can't stop it. Second of all, like, we don't really want you.
Nick Sorter
I don't want Canada. I don't want to become a state that's.
Libby Emmons
Hey, but Canada is.
Tim Pool
We don't got the. They got Putin up there.
Libby Emmons
Yeah, it's good.
Tim Pool
And we will take it from them.
Libby Emmons
It's, it's.
Tim Pool
And they have, they have deponair. Come on.
Libby Emmons
Well, the air is superior to the bodega.
Tim Pool
It is 100 times and it will be ours.
Libby Emmons
Yeah, I would love to have a deponair.
Tim Pool
There's someone in Chicago being like, I don't know what those, I don't know those, those words are. It's a, it's a bodega.
Libby Emmons
You know what it is?
Tim Pool
Corner store.
Libby Emmons
It's a bit like. It's a serious corner store. Like, it's got good cheese, it's got nice wine, good flowers, fresh fruit. Those are the best.
Tim Pool
Okay, I'll be honest. Montreal's fun.
Libby Emmons
Montreal is a great city.
Tim Pool
Yeah.
Libby Emmons
When we used to have, when the post Millennial used to be based in Montreal, I would go up there sometimes, you know, it's like an excuse to go hang out in Montreal. Be like coming into the office.
Tim Pool
That's the one thing that I get bummed about with Canada's government, is that Montreal is pretty great.
Libby Emmons
It's great. And I'd. Oh, look at this. I could just get everything I need at the dinner.
Tim Pool
And it's pronounced mongrel. But see, that's the thing, or whatever, I can't do French. Mongrel. That's what I say.
Libby Emmons
Cannot do French. But I like the wine and the cheese.
Nick Sorter
You saying that this four year old or whatever saying, I mean, at what point is that child abuse? You get your four year old thinking that President Trump is going to invade your country.
Libby Emmons
And four year olds, that they're not really the sex, they are, you know.
Tim Pool
The meme of the guy shaking the kid like, like, Billy, what have you done? The kid says something reasonable. The parents said something unreasonable. It's like they're Gonna invade and take our country. Dad, stop, okay?
Libby Emmons
It's not happening.
Tim Pool
Yo. Also, I gotta be honest. Like, you get poutine in New York and it's, It's. It's not food. It's just not food. They like, take a slice of mozzarella and melt it on top of a French fries, and you're like, what is this little gravy?
Libby Emmons
It's not.
Tim Pool
No. It's disgusting.
Libby Emmons
Yeah.
Tim Pool
And then you go to like, the fancy. I. I don't get it. It. Why. Why can't people make pizza? Not in New York. And why can't people make poutine? Not in. In Montreal?
Libby Emmons
There's no good answers to anything everyone says.
Nick Sorter
Everybody says it's the water, but I don't know.
Libby Emmons
I don't believe that.
Nick Sorter
Anyway, it's like, oh, it's dirty water. It's like, okay, well, you're not making me want your pizza by saying dirty. But I was always told my dad, bagels.
Libby Emmons
Like, I had to figure out how to make bagels. And I've made decent ones.
Tim Pool
I went to a pizza place in Grand Rapids, Michigan, and I am going to disparage Grand Rapids, Michigan right now. It was like bakery bread, which is fine, flat, and maybe like 2 inches thick with tomato sauce and cheese on top. They called pizza. And my buddy said it was like a well known pizza place. We went there and I was like, what are you feeding me now? First of all, I'm from Chicago, okay? You know what I'm saying? And deep dish. The thing about our pizzas in Chicago is that they. Lots of cheese and they're deep. And then in New York, you have real pizza.
Nick Sorter
Yeah.
Tim Pool
Takech. It's not pizza. New York is the real pizza. And you can get good pizza in Chicago too. But I was deeply offended. I would like to send Dave Portnoy to that place just to have him review that pizza.
Libby Emmons
Just to have him destroy it.
Nick Sorter
You should look up Altoona style pizza. You'll be really outraged.
Libby Emmons
Altoona.
Nick Sorter
Altoona style pizza.
Tim Pool
Is that when it's cut into strips?
Nick Sorter
No, no, no. It's a. It's a. The cheese is American cheese overlaid on top of the. Yeah, it's real. Look.
Tim Pool
What?
Nick Sorter
Look up Altoona style pizza. That's what it looks like.
Libby Emmons
He pulls it up.
Tim Pool
Is that like American cheese on ketchup on bread?
Nick Sorter
Yes, that's Altoona style pizza.
Tim Pool
I actually like that. That's pretty. You make a grilled cheese, put ketchup on it.
Nick Sorter
What's wrong with you?
Tim Pool
You've Never put ketchup on a grilled cheese.
Nick Sorter
No. I mean, no.
Tim Pool
No.
Nick Sorter
What's wrong with it? It's like we're sitting here arguing about New York versus Chicago style pizza.
Tim Pool
Have you ever put butter on a pop Tart?
Nick Sorter
No.
Tim Pool
It's so freaking good.
Libby Emmons
Yeah, I've put butter.
Tim Pool
All right everybody, we're gonna go to the uncensored call in show.
Libby Emmons
I've put butter on everything.
Tim Pool
It's so good. Smash the live. Put butter on stick. Smash the like button. Share the show with everyone you know. Tell everybody how great the show is. It's the best show. Everyone agrees. At least that's what I've been told. You can follow me on X and Instagram at Tim Cast join Rumble Premium that uncensored calling shows coming up@rumble.com Timcast IRL right now. Nick, do you want to shout anything out?
Nick Sorter
Sure. I mean if you want to follow me. I'm on X at Nick Sorter N I C K S O R T O R Not really on any of the platform because they just banned me. Like we were talking about TikTok earlier. I don't even try anymore.
Kevin Sorbo
Oh yeah, you can follow me on X and Instagram. Kevin Pasobic Kevpobic Check out Human Events Daily. I'm co hosting there and yeah, might be seeing more of me in D.C. right on condolences.
Libby Emmons
I'm Libby Emmons. You can find everything we're doing at thepostmillennial.com and human events.com you can find me on Xibby Emmons. And if you want to sign up for my newsletter, I send it every day. You can do that at the post. Millennial.com libby I am Phil that remains.
Phil Labonte
On X I am Phil that remains official on Instagram. The band is all that remains. Our new record dropped on January 31st. It's called anti fragile. You can check it out on YouTube, Apple Music, Amazon Music, Pandora, Spotify and Deezer. Don't forget the left lane is for crime.
Tim Pool
We will see you all in the uncensored call in show starting about 30 seconds. Rumble.com Timcast IRL thanks for hanging out.
Timcast IRL Podcast Summary
Title: Democrat CAUGHT ON TAPE ADMITTING To Corruption, CHEATING ON WIFE
Host: Tim Pool (Timcast Media)
Release Date: February 26, 2025
Overview
In this intense episode of Timcast IRL, host Tim Pool delves deep into allegations of Democratic corruption, focusing primarily on Congressman Eric Swalwell. Joined by reporter Nick Sorter, Kevin Sorbo, Libby Emmons, and Phil Labonte, the show navigates through a series of explosive revelations, government overreach, tech censorship issues, and the ongoing political turmoil within Congress. The episode provides uncensored discussions and sharp insights into some of today's most controversial issues from an independent perspective.
1. Eric Swalwell Caught on Tape
[00:05]
The episode kicks off with Tim Pool introducing a bombshell claim: Democratic Congressman Eric Swalwell was captured on an hour-and-a-half-long audio recording where he allegedly admits to corruption, abusing his power, targeting the Trump family, and discussing personal misconduct, including cheating on his wife.
[03:25] Nick Sorter:
Reporter Nick Sorter explains his firsthand experience, detailing how Swalwell was "a drunk" during a dinner, openly discussing his intentions to abuse his position and making derogatory remarks about Ivanka Trump. Nick highlights the gravity of the situation, emphasizing the potential national security threats posed by such behavior from a member of the Intelligence and Homeland Security Committees.
Notable Quotes:
2. Confronting Swalwell
[07:29] Tim Pool:
Tim Pool showcases video evidence where Nick Sorter confronts Swalwell about his inappropriate statements. Nick describes how Swalwell’s reckless behavior was evident to everyone in the restaurant, leading to immediate concerns about his reliability and integrity.
[15:03] Nick Sorter:
Nick elaborates on the public nature of Swalwell's admissions, noting that even without additional recording devices, his phone captured everything he was saying, highlighting the blatant disregard Swalwell had for confidentiality and propriety.
3. Other Democratic Corruption Allegations
Housing and Urban Development Hacking Incident [25:38]
Tim Pool discusses a bizarre incident where an AI-generated video surfaced showing Trump in an absurd scenario with Elon Musk. The Department of Housing and Urban Development identified the individual responsible, suggesting an insider threat rather than an external hack.
[26:43] Nick Sorter:
Nick speculates that the perpetrator was likely an employee within the agency, criticizing the Department of Justice for not imposing stricter penalties on such breaches.
4. Tech Censorship and TikTok Controversies
[20:25] Libby Emmons:
The conversation shifts to tech censorship, specifically TikTok’s removal of Timcast IRL from its platform. Nick Sorter recounts his experiences attempting to expose border issues and how his content was swiftly suppressed, drawing parallels to broader censorship trends.
[24:13] Libby Emmons:
Libby emphasizes the dangers of allowing platforms like TikTok to control public discourse, advocating for stricter regulations to prevent the spread of harmful content and misinformation.
5. Political Division and Congressional Dysfunction
[16:12] Phil Labonte:
Phil Labonte discusses the alarming behavior within Congress, pointing out that despite Swalwell being removed from the Intelligence Committee, he remains on Homeland Security, posing potential risks due to his access to confidential information.
[17:13] Libby Emmons:
Libby highlights the increasing brazenness of Democratic lawmakers, citing incidents where members openly threaten or incite violence against political figures like Elon Musk and Tucker Carlson, underscoring the growing instability and extremism within government bodies.
Notable Quotes:
6. Gulf of America and International Relations
[04:25] Kevin Sorbo:
Kevin Sorbo introduces the concept of the "Gulf of America," an initiative aimed at addressing regional issues along America's coastlines. The segment explores Tim Pool's and Sorbo's efforts to promote this initiative, including their marketing strategies and the challenges faced, such as misinformation and governmental pushback.
[53:39] Libby Emmons:
Libby expresses enthusiasm for the "Gulf of America" concept, which aims to consolidate efforts across five states bordering the Gulf to enhance security and economic stability.
7. FBI and Intelligence Community Reforms
[70:30] Jesse Waters Clip:
A clip from Tulsi Gabbard is played, where she announces that over 100 intelligence officials involved in inappropriate online behavior will have their security clearances revoked. She underscores this move as part of the Trump administration's efforts to "clean house" within intelligence agencies.
[72:05] Tim Pool:
Tim Pool praises this action, contrasting it with the alleged inaction of the Biden administration regarding intelligence community misconduct.
[77:53] Phil Labonte:
Phil discusses the necessity of firings and the challenges of holding intelligence personnel accountable, suggesting that relentless scrutiny and justified terminations are essential for restoring public trust.
8. Press Freedom and White House Correspondents Association
[83:50] Phil Labonte:
Phil addresses the Trump administration's decision to dismantle the White House Correspondents Association's monopoly on press access. He critiques the existing elitist structures that favor certain media outlets over others, advocating for a more inclusive approach to press interactions.
Notable Quotes:
9. Social Media and AI Concerns
[101:03] Tim Pool:
Tim discusses the burgeoning issues surrounding AI-generated content and deepfake technologies, expressing concerns about the permanence and authenticity of digital footprints for future generations.
[103:25] Tim Pool:
He further elaborates on the dangers of AI impersonations on social media platforms, warning of the increasing difficulty in discerning genuine content from fabricated personas.
10. Community Building and Future Directions
[95:58] Tim Pool:
The episode emphasizes the importance of community building through platforms like Discord, encouraging listeners to engage, network, and collaborate on various projects, from podcasts to creative endeavors.
[99:00] Phil Labonte:
Phil advocates for proactive measures within government organizations to identify and address misconduct, drawing parallels to corporate practices where continuous scrutiny ensures accountability.
Conclusion
This episode of Timcast IRL offers a comprehensive look into the alleged misconduct within Democratic ranks, the challenges of maintaining press freedom, and the pressing issues of tech censorship and intelligence community reforms. Through engaging discussions and firsthand accounts, Tim Pool and his guests shed light on the intricate web of corruption and systemic failures, urging for immediate and decisive action to restore integrity and transparency in American politics.
Join the Conversation
For those interested in more uncensored discussions and exclusive content, join Timcast's Discord server with over 20,000 members or subscribe to Rumble Premium at TimcastPremium.com. Engage with a community committed to building shows, podcasts, and a culture of free speech and accountability.
Notable Quotes with Timestamps:
Nick Sorter [03:55]: "He's admitting to abusing power. He was bragging about orgies on Capitol Hill... pushing to subpoena Ivanka Trump because she's hot af."
Libby Emmons [11:45]: "She did die in a plane crash a couple years ago."
Phil Labonte [15:43]: "He should lose all appointments. He can obviously stay if his constituents want him, but there's no reason for him to remain on any committee considering his behavior."
Libby Emmons [17:13]: "There are a big difference. They didn’t expect to hit Musk... but the point is, it was a violent attack on something that was representative of Elon Musk."
Eugene Daniels [70:30]: "These individuals were brazen in using an NSA platform intended for professional use to conduct this kind of really, really horrific behavior... Today's action is just the beginning of what we're seeing across the Trump administration."
Disclaimer: This summary is based on the provided transcript and may contain subjective interpretations of the discussions. For full context and detailed information, listeners are encouraged to tune into the original Timcast IRL episode.