
Dudley Brown & Ronnie Adkins Uncensored: Rural Areas Try To SECEDE From Illinois And CA, LETS TALK GUNS
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Tim Pool
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Ian Crossland
So I don't know.
Tim Pool
What do you, what do you guys think? Should we have the states secede and form free states? Give the, give the liberals their city state districts?
Luke Rudkowski
Yeah. Problem with that is then they're going to want U.S. senators. Then you're adding two U.S. senators per state.
Tim Pool
Yeah, we're adding. We're adding two conservative ones, the cities. These states are basically ruled by their cities and they get too far left lunatics.
Luke Rudkowski
I mean it's interesting, theoretical, but we all know it's not going to happen, right?
Dudley Brown
I mean, well, so you know, I.
Luke Rudkowski
Know the state of Washington, the eastern side of Washington, wants to and Oregon be the West. West Idaho.
Dudley Brown
Yeah, but so what's your, what's your reasoning? Why not?
Luke Rudkowski
I just don't think it's not realistic. It's fun to talk about. In Colorado 10 years ago, people talked about seceding and going into all up into Wyoming and great idea. Not going to happen if they're successful.
Ian Crossland
Why, why not though?
Luke Rudkowski
Like, yeah, they're just not going to be successful.
Ian Crossland
But that's what, but that's what I mean is if there's a path to be successful on it, you know, the.
Luke Rudkowski
Bar is so high, it just wouldn't happen.
Phil Labonte
Talk about secession.
Dudley Brown
Yeah.
Tim Pool
Yeah. Illinois, small Illinois counties are voting to. From Cook County.
Phil Labonte
And then what? Join a different state?
Tim Pool
No, make their own.
Phil Labonte
That's.
Tim Pool
I don't see an argument against it. I can certainly see the argument for it's just not going to happen. That I get.
Ian Crossland
Yeah. I don't disagree that it's difficult.
Tim Pool
I think people are generally cowards. I think cowardice is rampant. Well, so what ends up happening is you'll get a Supreme Court justice. Alito and Thomas seem to be based af, but overwhelmingly people are just like, but we don't know what would happen. And I'm scared.
Phil Labonte
I think the last time we had it was West Virginia, a state split like that, and it was post Civil war. So there's already visceral chaos. There was a lot of military states. A lot of the military power was in the states and the federal government was still very weak. It was just starting its grip on the nation.
Tim Pool
So this was it. And West Virginia, basically, as a part of Virginia, Virginia calls up young men to go fight. So all the young voting age men from West Virginia, which at the time was just Virginia, were like, let's go fight. They did. As soon as they left, the scumbags who were still there were like, we vote to secede. And then they did. And then the federal government was like, we like what you're doing. We're going to accept it. Then after the war ended, Virginia was like, you can't do that. The war's over. That's, That's Virginia. And they said, go fuck yourself. West Virginia now exists.
Luke Rudkowski
What?
Dudley Brown
Okay, so if, if, if a whole new state is outside of the realm of reality? What about re defining the borders so that way there's no change? So like we talk about, you know, Idaho want, you know, western or eastern. Washington wants to become part of Idaho or, you know, or Oregon wants to become. I forget what.
Luke Rudkowski
Actually, same requirements exist, though.
Dudley Brown
But it doesn't change. But there's less, I imagine there would be less resistance because it doesn't change the makeup of the Senate. It will change the makeup of the House, I think, but I'm not sure exactly how much.
Tim Pool
Well, it can be done in A way that it wouldn't so long as everything's apportioned similarly. So depending on how many people leave Oregon in the rural areas and join Idaho, it might not change anything. I do think the greater Idaho movement would take away one vote from Oregon and give one vote to Idaho though.
Phil Labonte
And then I think then it would be like Oregon National Guard get pulled up and then it'd be the federal government's job to be like, stand down. Or to be like, listen, we are, we are a nation Guard, you're not doing this.
Tim Pool
We are a nation that asserts in our founding documents we have a right to self governance. And so if there is a portion of say Illinois that's like, we do not want to be ruled by those fucking lunatics, I don't see any argument for this country to deny that right within itself. So if, if a large portions of a state or whatever says we want to form our own governing body, I don't see how the. It's not like they're leaving the country. It's one thing to say we're going to leave this union altogether and take with it. Take with it the blood and treasure and sacrifice. No, they're saying just within it. We are not going to have those people telling us what the fuck to do.
Phil Labonte
If it happened, it would set off a chain reaction of new states popping up. We'd go from 50 to 60 real fast.
Dudley Brown
But we're talking about. Well, mean we had, I thought we had just started talking about just changing the borders so that way this was b.
Phil Labonte
If they popped a new state up. That was the last point that Tim was making. But I think that it would be much more likely for borders to change than for a new state to appear.
Tim Pool
Yeah, and there should be, there should be no restricting it. The federal government should have no say. Well, they're just only the states.
Phil Labonte
They're the only federal government's really only job is to make sure chaos doesn't break out.
Tim Pool
I don't even, I don't even see justification for why any state has a say over jurisdiction. If there's. Let's say you're in a specific county of Illinois. If that county votes to sever itself from Illinois, I don't see why not. What right does Illinois have to assert itself over this county?
Phil Labonte
It'd be like, listen, you sucked off the tit of our government finance to help fund your roads for the last 120 years. You're not just taking it. Sorry, it's our state. We are in charge of that.
Dudley Brown
We own it.
Tim Pool
They're going to say that. But that's not an argument.
Phil Labonte
That would be the read.
Luke Rudkowski
That would be the argument, to be honest.
Tim Pool
The argument for the. The crown to not let the colonists declare independence.
Luke Rudkowski
Yeah. I don't really know all the legal side. I just know the political side. As somebody who literally has been paid for 35 years to work in professional politics and give assessments and I don't see how you can get politicians in a state legislature to agree to it. Could they just do it in.
Tim Pool
That's what I'm saying. You shouldn't.
Luke Rudkowski
I mean, like eastern Colorado and northeastern Colorado was talking about seceding post 2013 with all the gun control laws and craziness in Colorado and going up and going up into Wyoming and, And reattaching them to Wyoming. And I don't remember the specific requirements, but it was just silly. It was not even what kind of requirements. I don't remember them. I remember them being unattainable, like requirements.
Phil Labonte
Put on them by the state of.
Luke Rudkowski
Yeah, yeah. By the Constitution. Because you can't. The state constitution is what created, you know, essentially chartered the state. And, and it doesn't. It's very difficult. It's like now amending the US Constitution is an enormous task and who knows if we'll ever see it again, right?
Tim Pool
Yeah, I don't think so.
Luke Rudkowski
So I had a friend in Congress for many years and she was a state legislator in Colorado who got elected to Congress. Her name was Marilyn Musgrave and her claim to fame when she was a state legislator was she ran a bill to make a marriage between a man and a woman in the law. And which was back then was not that controversial and a little controversial, but year was this. Well, she was in the legislature from 94, and I think she got elected Congress in 2002. And, and then Maryland came to Congress and proposed a federal marriage amendment. And you have to have two thirds of the states legislatures agree. Really good luck with that. Who's got that $40 billion, and I'm not sure that would even do it on, you know, getting them to agree to even a popular amendment to the U.S. constitution.
Phil Labonte
So when you're talking 40 billion, what's that money for?
Luke Rudkowski
I just run a campaign. Okay. So anybody who thinks that you just in politics that you just propose an idea and then it magically happens, it's just not the way it works. You got to have money to push things or to stop things.
Phil Labonte
Is it like campaign, like convince them or bribe them?
Luke Rudkowski
No. Well, the, the bribery thing happens. But in all my years, I've never witnessed it once.
Phil Labonte
So technically you could convince them through mass. If you had enough mass media power.
Luke Rudkowski
Well, politicians don't respect mass media. They, they respect voters.
Phil Labonte
They come on this show, they're creaming their pants to come on this show.
Luke Rudkowski
Well, so, so the, the, they were, they were. A politician is afraid of one thing and that's not being reelected, period. That's the only thing you've got on a politician. That's why I don't like term limits. Because once they're limited and they can't run again, guess what? You got no power over them. So the next two years, or if they're in the US Senate six years, they can do whatever they want. They don't care what the voters think. So, but the. So why I'm saying that is that, is that you gotta put pressure on politicians to get them to vote on guns. That's true. I don't care what they think. I'm not gonna support people who don't think the second amendment is sacrosanct. But we have a federal PAC and we have a super PAC as well, which we have the only gun rights super PAC that's ever been existed in America. But, but we ran. When we run and put pressure on politicians, we're trying to make them fear for their political lives that they might lose that reelection, which to a politician is life itself. They don't want to lose.
Phil Labonte
So you'll use the money to like go out and canvas and get people to sign petitions being like, I won't vote for the guy if he doesn't vote for this.
Dudley Brown
Yeah.
Ian Crossland
And then you deliver those. Then you deliver those.
Luke Rudkowski
Like if you look on our, our site, you'll see a picture of me with Congressman Thomas Massie of Kentucky and stacks of boxes. And that's the delivering. One point, I think was 1.4 million petitions against federal gun control, mostly Red Flag, which was interesting because it was at a time in which Trump endorsed Red Flag. Thankfully he dropped that because it's a disaster. Well, it ended up passing anyway when Republicans colluded with Dems. But, but we put a halt to that largely by individual pressure. Now that's the weird thing is you go to D.C. and you physically deliver pieces of paper with individuals names and saying they oppose something and you do it. Large numbers politicians don't know what to do. They just crap themselves because they don't see that. Whenever you sign a petition for a group, figure out if they ever delivered it because they didn't Deliver it. They're freaking liars.
Phil Labonte
So we could have a website with a demand and then get a hundred thousand one million people to sign it and then get them printed and send them to.
Tim Pool
You know it works really well. Postcarding. You get pre printed postcards that say what you want. You go outside and ask people to sign it. They sign that and when you're done, you just jump them in the mailbox. And then what happens is this guy in Congress gets the mail delivery and they bring in a whole bunch of boxes.
Ian Crossland
Dump box of.
Phil Labonte
Yeah, we could automate a website.
Luke Rudkowski
You sound like you went through a school that we teach.
Tim Pool
No, I worked for the perk groups and other leftist and liberal and when.
Luke Rudkowski
You were occupied organization.
Tim Pool
No, this is well before that.
Phil Labonte
Realistically we could have a website that is auto programmed to deliver postcards with the name, sign the name and then it goes out that. That minute that within 24 hours of you.
Tim Pool
It's a lot harder to do.
Phil Labonte
We could do it. It's not cheap either and it is, it is kind of the basis of mob rule. Because we could really put a lot of individual pressure, focus individual pressure at Congress. I don't know, I'm always kind of.
Tim Pool
Happy giving people a printout so they can print out themselves and decentralize it and they can print as many as they want. And they go out and ask people in their, in their, you know, boardwalk or whatever to sign the thing and say, hey, you know, we're for gun rights. Do you want to sign this petition? Here's what it says. It's real simple. It says we want a repeal of infringements restrictions. The NFA violates our rights. Then they sign it, they put their name on it. That's all they gotta do. And then if one person does 10 and then you get a thousand people, 10,000 postcards show up on the desk of some member of Congress and you don't need to send it to Thomas Massie, you need to send it to these squishy middle of the road report.
Luke Rudkowski
Yeah, so Tim's absolutely spot on. We actually teach the class. In fact we actually sent Phil a video on this teaching some of these parameters. And but if you. The important part about that is that if you deliver postcards and we do it in traditional mail, we actually send pieces of mail in the postal service. Which I know people think wow, that's old world. And with pre printed postcards and sometimes they'll have six or eight pre printed postcards, one will go to your member of Congress, one goes to two to your US Senators and and then some to give to your friends. And yeah they're pre printed and with a, a full message saying and we always say specific, don't go generic. Always go specific. If you're putting pressure on politicians tell them to vote against either this bill or this concept Red flag laws, assault weapons bans and if you do that think about it. This politician gets a large number of those from voters in his district and what he's thinking of is going through his brain. He's thinking if they can do this during the legislative season organize and get all this mail out and get a bunch of people sending me postcards and put pressure on me. What could they do during election season.
Dudley Brown
And this is why we were talking about Donald Trump only has 18 months. That's the legislative season. That's the amount of time that you have to actually get things done because after the first 18 months then it becomes the election season and that's what Dudley's articulating like what can they if they can do this when we're, when we're not running right. When people Congress. Well yeah when they're not running for the to re to be reelected when they're not thinking about that, when the population isn't thinking about that. What are they going to do when they can when it's actually their ads being run and everyone knows there's an election coming and then they can actually drum up people that really care about this in the time when they're thinking about.
Luke Rudkowski
That's partially true but remember politicians always care about reelecting reelected it's the difference is if you is the election legislative season is when politicians get a screw you their power is over you then.
Tim Pool
And people are demanding we talk about.
Luke Rudkowski
Guns now and, and, and Paul and okay and then on the election season is when you get to do things to them.
Tim Pool
What kind of gun do you need if you live in like a three bedroom house with your family and you're you want practical home defense.
Ian Crossland
They are sorry.
Tim Pool
Yep.
Luke Rudkowski
Well there's two theories and how he's not a shotgun guy. Used to be shotguns was a great idea because shotguns were cheap, you know 18 inch barrels fine and they're cheap, they're easy to operate and the trouble is if you, if you get weapons that are not easy to operate people who aren't going to train a lot you want pretty simple. Now shotguns are not area weapons. There's a lot of generic silliness about it but ars are cheaper than than they've ever been in the history of the world.
Tim Pool
Speaking practically for like some dude breaks into your house and he's dumb as a box of rocks. Maybe has like a Glock or something is do you need to AR and just mow the guy down or like shotgun might blast like you. You like. Practically speaking, isn't AR really just.
Luke Rudkowski
Shotgun is way more lethal.
Ian Crossland
Yeah.
Dudley Brown
There's this guy that.
Tim Pool
Blow it. Blow.
Phil Labonte
You get some slugs?
Luke Rudkowski
No. No. What I'm. No. Even with, Even with buckshot. Buckshot, it's, it's. The reason it's lethal is because you know, if you hit their shoulder with a, with a 12 gauge with buckshot, the trauma that caused is massive, even though it was bad shot placement.
Tim Pool
With an AR, I've got, I've got the. I got a governor and I've got 410. They're like personal defense slugs, but it's buckshot and a slug.
Dudley Brown
Yeah, a shotgun. There's this guy Clint from Thunder Ranch that says a shotgun with the right load and will take pieces of your body off like you can literally.
Tim Pool
That shot's going to blow a hole in his chest.
Ian Crossland
So I look at, I look at things across the baseline, right. So I think I established that earlier is baselines matter to me. So when I'm, when I'm providing a response like this, I look across a populace. Across a populace. The use of like a 12 gauge, you know, whether it be pump action or semi automatic, the necessary skill for that, especially with a semi auto with a pump.
Luke Rudkowski
Right.
Ian Crossland
So you can do something called short stroking on a pump action where you don't fully cycle the gun itself. I made a funny video about, you know, the fuds that talk about. I just rack it once and the sound will scare them away. And in the process of me basically jerking off my shotgun to make that sound, I short stroked the gun. But I left it in on purpose because I have thousands of shells through a shotgun and I still short stroke it. So imag engine, if you will.
Tim Pool
What does that mean?
Ian Crossland
Sure. So again, so you've got a pump action action shotgun and you need to, you know, pull it all the way down and then all the way back up. When you short stroke it, you don't complete that entire cycle. Right.
Luke Rudkowski
You might eject around, but you might eject the case, but it's not putting a new round in.
Ian Crossland
It's not fully cycling the gun. This is a very common problem and it's talked about quite a bit. So when you, when you put yourself into the Situation of like a home defense scenario and this is a logic based argument. There's going to be external factors like tunnel vision, you're going to be worried, you're going to have fine motor skills. There are so many factors that you can't really account for from a usability perspective. The AR is going to provide you a, an easier platform to operate. It's going to provide you the long sight radius, right? So that long distance between the sites where minuscule changes aren't going to impact things in the same way that they would on a handgun. So if I handgun is hard, like hard, hard, hard, if I make a very small adjustment to my grip or just a minuscule change to how I'm holding it, the impact downrange, my point of impact could be off by feet. Those same minuscule changes with a longer sight radius gun aren't going to have the same impact. So usability is higher, magazine capacity is ultimately going to be higher, recoil impulse is going to be lower. And ultimately what you're doing is you're there to ensure the maximum capability to stop, stop the threat, not necessarily remove parts of a shoulder. Right. So all respect to, to the shotgun, they are absolutely devastating. Across a baseline. This is an opinion and I own it. Across a baseline, the AR is the premier home defense gun. And what Dudley was just about to get at is at one point in time it was much more difficult to acquire an AR from a, from a price point entry perspective, so much higher. My first AR was like 1400 bucks.
Phil Labonte
What are they now?
Ian Crossland
So this, you get an ar for about $399.
Tim Pool
So I went to the first gun, I went to buy, I, I bought a couple and it, they delayed me so I didn't get them for like five days. I was in Jersey and I was asking Guy what I should get and he was like well you should get a, you get a rifle. You know, if he's like, especially if you have limited experience, you should get trained, go to the range, blah blah, blah. And then they had limited choices for handguns. So he was like the governor's good because you've got ammo options, you can do 45 long. Empower your business or digital agency with Bluehost trusted by over 5 million WordPress users globally. Bluehost features top to bottom hosting optimizations designed specifically for WordPress, giving you 24. 7 access to a team of experts for support, plus thousands of WordPress help articles. So if you want to streamline WordPress website creation with intuitive controls and premium support, choose bluehost Powering over 2 million websites worldwide or with the this episode.
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Tim Pool
Okay, thank you.
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How did you.
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Oh yeah, oh yeah.
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Tim Pool
It was a moon clip. You can do ACP. And then he's like, but you can put 410 in it. And I was like, sure. Brought it to the range. And they're like, that's what you bought. And I was like, well, I've only fired a 9 millimeter. I did a police training where they brought us from 22 up to.45. And so we used a hand. It was like a police training in Jersey where they let us fire. It was pretty, pretty awesome. And so these are the ones that I got the critical defense on the left. It's got two bucks shot in a slug. And they were like, yeah, that's a heck of a thing to shoot somebody with.
Luke Rudkowski
But, but realistically, it's fun. Look, I believe, I believe in diversity, okay? So I mean a diverse weapon matters.
Ian Crossland
What matters more importantly, I think for, you know, again, across that baseline is that people do take an active stance in their personal protection and taking that a step further and exercising their second amendment right. So first of all, whether you're trying to choose a shotgun, a pistol, you know, and I say ar, but I really mean an intermediate caliber rifle, a semi automatic intermediate caliber rifle, which is that, you know, space between a pistol caliber 9 millimeter, 45, 40, 10 and a full power cartridge which is going to be like 308, you know, 762x50.
Tim Pool
Like in your house. What kind of, what kind of rounds do you want? Like nine millimeter hollow point or something.
Luke Rudkowski
But no, no, nine millimeters is a joke.
Ian Crossland
So hollow, that's actually a misconception with, with hollow points, what you have is unless they have some kind of an artificial cavity plug, what'll happen when they hit, you know, a drywall, for example, that cavity that is supposed to expand will get filled and it just turns into an FMJ and carries forward. So you'll see a lot of. You'll see some personal defense rounds now that have like a little red plug in the cavity. What that is there for is to allow expansion when met with a barrier of some kind. Right.
Tim Pool
I think I have deer slugs that have that.
Luke Rudkowski
Right.
Ian Crossland
Sure.
Luke Rudkowski
That's a sabo probably.
Ian Crossland
Oh yeah, yeah. If it's a shotgun then you're probably looking.
Tim Pool
Right?
Luke Rudkowski
Yeah. But the great part I say put in hollow point boat tails AR223 556.
Ian Crossland
And it was that like 230 grain.
Luke Rudkowski
Kind of Ranger SXT is that I, I can't quite tell but like hang.
Phil Labonte
Out with wizards, dude. This is all teach me magic.
Ian Crossland
Long, long before I, long before I was even a member of funker530 I I guns have been like my. That is my strongest issue. Like that is what matters to me. I wake up and it's not that. Maybe you could call me an amosexual. I don't care. I mean I quite honestly don't because I think that, I think that the second amendment is ultimately the hub of the wheel of rights. Because that is that, that is the teeth that if ultimately somebody is trying to.
Luke Rudkowski
But, but remember we're talking guns.
Tim Pool
Back to the question though is like what do you think is the best then if you have an AR15 in your house, are you saying I'll tell you mine?
Ian Crossland
So all I can do is give you my personal. I run an 115 pistol. It's got a pistol brace on it with 77 grain from actually just changed to running PSAs AAC 77s.
Dudley Brown
I got a 70, I got a 105 Daniel Defense run 77 grains.
Luke Rudkowski
Just remember it's a noise weapon too. Those little short ars is just ridiculous.
Dudley Brown
I got a can on it.
Ian Crossland
I got about the 70s.
Tim Pool
So here's a question too for. So you wake up in the middle of the night and you hear a window break, something you put on ear protection, eye protection or just no, no.
Luke Rudkowski
You'D have a can. Or, or frankly it's okay to lose some hearing when you're. When you're gonna save someone's life. Make sure you have a light on your gun. Yeah, you're for a home defense gun. It must have a light.
Dudley Brown
Absolutely.
Luke Rudkowski
Now I told you earlier, I said 9 millimeter. Look, handguns have a couple of good qualities. They're portable and concealable. But other than that they suck.
Tim Pool
I have pretty bad aim. So we had A, we had a, we had a home range for a while, 30 yards. I hit 2 of 7.
Luke Rudkowski
We can fix that.
Tim Pool
But with, with all my rifles, it was, it was so again a 10, 15 to 15.
Ian Crossland
Those minuscule differences in how you hold it, your trigger squeeze imperfection, your breathing, it's going to be different from handgun to rifle, right? But they're also going to be more impactful because again you, you have this smaller machine that's going to be more susceptible to small changes and a larger effect.
Tim Pool
I watch these guys on Instagram like 100 yards with a handgun. They don't miss. And I'm just like, wow.
Luke Rudkowski
So one of the guys, a good friend of mine who won Top Shot, do you remember that History Channel had a, it's. Oh, maybe it's worth watching. Awesome. His name is Dustin Ellerman. He won, I think it was season three of Top Shot and he beat Navy seals and all his competitors and he's never been trained. He was all self taught and he's one of the best, just natural shooters I've been around in my life. And Dustin, we were at our range shooting a bunch of different weapons, shooting a lot of long range. But then we gave him a handgun, he'd never shot it before, somebody else's. And we were making him shoot through a barrier through different color holes and we'd yell yellow. And he was shooting at know 35 yards and 70 yards and then, and that was the standard. And then I'm like yellow 300. And he goes, first shot, bam. Hits it at 300. And then he goes how many? And I go five.
Tim Pool
He got him five in a row. That's crazy.
Ian Crossland
What does he do? Some people, some people are just natural shooters. And I think, I think it goes back to like a fundamental understanding though. I, when I say natural shooters, it's an aptitude for understanding ultimately what a firearm is, which is really just a delivery mechanism. And you need to find a way.
Luke Rudkowski
Lead aspirins.
Ian Crossland
Yes. Actually you need to find a way to let the firearm do what it's supposed to do, the less, the less damage that you can do in the cycles of operation for a firearm. That is steady position, proper breathing, good trigger squeeze. The better you're going to shoot and once people understand that your job is ultimately to allow that tool to perform its function at its, at, I mean a very fundamental level, people just start, start banging targets. You know, 100 yard, I didn't gong shot.
Luke Rudkowski
I didn't think that I'd be able.
Dudley Brown
To do a hundred Yard shot. But after, with some practice and stuff, I, I can do a 100 yard shot.
Tim Pool
Let's grab callers and we'll start with Nomad. What is up? You are on the show.
Luke Rudkowski
No.
Tim Pool
Oh, there we go.
Caller 1
Hello.
Luke Rudkowski
Hi, guys.
Caller 1
Doing today?
Tim Pool
Doing well. Good.
Dudley Brown
Well.
Ian Crossland
What's up?
Luke Rudkowski
Where are you from? No, man.
Caller 1
Oh, I'm from California.
Luke Rudkowski
Oh, we're really going hardcore here.
Phil Labonte
Yikes. What's happening?
Luke Rudkowski
Your head low, dude.
Caller 1
I know. I. I do every day, so. All right, so question for tonight. This is for everybody. It's, you know, more positive question, let's put it that way. So escalation in Ukraine seems to be continuing with the US Affirming ATACMS missiles.
Tim Pool
Yep.
Caller 1
And Russia using a new mid range hypersonic weapon the US has no known countermeasure for. So will there be a nuclear weapon launched prior to Trump taking office? If so, who launches? Does it escalate further past a first nuclear strike or not?
Tim Pool
No, it. There will not be nuclear weapons launched. I do not believe it's. Wait, it's way too soon. You know, the UK and France are talking about deploying troops into Ukraine and actively and joining the war.
Dudley Brown
Oh, Jesus. I know that.
Ian Crossland
Yeah.
Tim Pool
Let's look it up. That's Le Mans, they reported that earlier. So I don't think we see nuclear strikes. And again, we're talking it's probably like low yield nuclear artillery. I don't see. I don't think we see that yet. But who the fuck am I? You know what I mean?
Phil Labonte
I don't think so.
Tim Pool
I mean, but if it does happen, Putin's going to use low yield nuclear weapons for strategic purposes.
Phil Labonte
If he does, that whole country is going up in flames. I don't think he's going to.
Tim Pool
That's not true.
Phil Labonte
Oh, dude. If Russia unlocked the Nuka box, Russia would be gone.
Tim Pool
If they use a.
Phil Labonte
Every country on earth would have cast this belly at that point.
Tim Pool
No, you are completely wrong. If Russia used a 20 ton bomb, that's. That's not going to happen.
Phil Labonte
I think knows that. It's like Pandora's box.
Tim Pool
I think, I think you need to understand the scale of nuclear weapons.
Phil Labonte
Again, depleted uranium is a nuclear weapon.
Tim Pool
I. And they've already been using that.
Phil Labonte
But they want to, they want annihilate the Putin regime. They want it.
Tim Pool
And China's already working with them and supplying weapons. And North Korea is involved. Now Russia's recruiting the Yemenis to fight on his side. This is not. This is never going to be. Oh, no. Russia has been crushed by the great powers of the world that they're aligning against each other.
Phil Labonte
You mean they are aligning.
Tim Pool
China has already been supplying Russia with weapons.
Luke Rudkowski
Yeah.
Tim Pool
North Korea has deployed 10,000 and up to 100,000. And now Russia is recruiting from Yemen. They're bringing in global forces. Iran is going to line up with Russia. If Russia uses nuclear artillery on the battlefield, the US Is not going to retaliate with an ICBM or long range strikes. They may deploy troops into Ukraine. But this escalation. Okay, let's entertain your scenario. Russia launches a low grade, low yield nuke on the battlefield to wipe out the attack. Comes launch points.
Phil Labonte
It's attack ATAC M is what they're called. Attack, not attack. But someone corrected me today. That's why I brought it up.
Tim Pool
They call them attack ems.
Ian Crossland
So let's say that Russia says ATACMS is okay. You know, let's say they're like, we're.
Tim Pool
Going to use nuclear artillery and we're going to flatten this part of Ukraine where they're attacking Bryansk and Kursk. If they do that, as already stated by European Parliament, no one in the west will sacrifice New York for fucking, I don't know, Kiev, I can't remember what city he said it was a Polish city. He's like, if Putin attacked Poland, no one's going to launch nukes against Russia because they're not going to sacrifice New York City or Paris for Poland. It's not going to happen.
Dudley Brown
And I mean, think about it. If the Russians actually launch a nuclear weapon, right? They're, they're, they're basically losing the opportunity to negotiate with Trump. Like if they, if it happens before Trump gets into office. Because the consensus is Donald Trump wants to actually negotiate and end as opposed to the current administration if they do anything too provocative or if the, and there's people that are arguing that the US Is going to try and try and do it. But even still, if the, if Russia does anything too provocative, then they put it, they make it a position, a situation where Donald Trump can't.
Phil Labonte
That's why I said they're not going to do it.
Ian Crossland
So when you say, when you say launch points of atacms, what do you mean by that?
Tim Pool
So the regions of Ukraine where they're attacking Russia from.
Ian Crossland
Okay, so the, the launch platform for ATACMS is called the high Mars. It is the high mobility. Right. High mobility artillery system. And you can't, there is no launch point for that. There, there are the locations that that artillery piece moves to fires and Then displaces from.
Tim Pool
Could Russia use nuclear artillery to decimate?
Ian Crossland
What is, what is nuclear artillery?
Tim Pool
Are you talking low yield nuclear weapons?
Ian Crossland
Yeah. So those, those, the delivery mechanism for those would be things like the ATACMS is analog, which would be the Iskander. Right. So, so Russia's been using the Iskander, which, which has the ability to deliver nuclear payload since more or less day one. Right. So they've been firing that into Ukraine for all of this time. I believe that there is an absolute escalation. I don't believe the use of atacms specifically itself was the escalation, rather the timing and the purposeful public announcement of it.
Tim Pool
From, from.
Ian Crossland
Correct.
Tim Pool
Right.
Ian Crossland
That to me is the ultimate escalation. The capability of atacms is par. Largely because the high Mars itself has been used to strike into Kursk for months now. Right. So there was even this argument that the US has to be the ones to fire it. That's absolutely not the case. Right. You can, you can load a 10 digit grid onto that system from that system and fire from that system. It's a self contained firing mechanism. So even, even the argument that it is, you know, GPS guided, it ultimately doesn't have enough trajectory to truly be guided. You load the grid onto it, it fires and it lands on that grid with extreme accuracy. So just to make sure that I kind of finish this thought. My opinion doesn't matter though. The opinion that does matter is Russia's. Right? So the enemy always gets a vote. Their perception of the use of atacms, or at least their public perception of the use of atacms is ultimately what we're, what we're conversing about here. Again, I think the escalation is actually the public announcement. It's timing, in my opinion, probably purposefully to throw a wrench.
Tim Pool
Do you think the sabotage of the undersea cables was China's involvement? Do you think it was intentional communication sabotage?
Ian Crossland
You know, I'm not, I'm not really certain on that. It's not.
Tim Pool
So I kind of feel like it leans towards sabotage because how do you accidentally have a Chinese ship go in the Baltic and damage.
Ian Crossland
I will tell you that my time, you know, working, you know, within the intelligence community, I've got 12 years worth of my career that was as a part of the intelligence community, as a contractor, not even as military. I'm a career reservist. Right. So I will tell you that undersea cables is something that's always, that's always being talked about from my perspective. The lenses that I look at war are going to be from like the funker530 side of the house, which is very, very video oriented. It's what is truly happening from the lens that we do have, which is itself imperfect, which is video. So I could show you the video of the scanders being used, which is ultimately the rough equivalent of the atacms. I can show you the HIMARS system, which is the delivery mechanism for atacms firing gimlers gmlrs, which itself is a guided munition, just a smaller one with less range, albeit into Kursk. Right. So I see these things from a capability perspective as being less of the escalation. And I think it's an important distinction. What the escalation is in my opinion is the announcement, the way it was done purposefully and publicly because it force, it forces Putin's, Putin's hand.
Tim Pool
Right, right. The question that's been for a while is that Putin's statements of red lines are meaningless because every time he states them, nothing happens.
Ian Crossland
Well, every time he has said something, nothing, nothing has happened. Right. So, so there is, there is a basis at least to that argument.
Tim Pool
So now the issue is will there actually come a point where Putin feels an existential threat like the attack on Bryansk and Kursk and then say, okay, we're going to load up some nuclear, you know, weapons, we're gonna just.
Ian Crossland
The enemy gets a vote. You know, like I said, you don't know what you don't know. And I think that's the, the million dollar question. The, the hope is always that there is somebody operating inside of the highest levels of government that is the best of us that truly understands the nuance and complexity of this situation. As I get older, this is something I talked to Dudley a lot about and I better understand, you know, and I'm exposed to those, those people in those positions. I become less and less confident that that is always going to be the case, that I do firmly believe that there are some extremely smart people that are actively working towards the betterment of society. I don't think that they are always put on the pedestal necessary to enact change.
Tim Pool
We. No. Matt, did you want to add anything or shout anything out? Because we do got to grab other callers.
Caller 1
I would say that the idea of there be no red lines, I think that the arrest Nick missile, which was what was launched the other day, I would say that was a response to the atacms being used. And also it's, it is a new weapon. And I think that There are people talking about how it's a, it's a kinetic MIRV weapon. So the MIRV deploys at hypersonic speed and it actually bursts into kinetic rods. So.
Luke Rudkowski
Wow, really?
Caller 1
That's what some people are talking. I know, it's like Call of Duty ghosts. Years ago, there's a sci fi concept talked about that. But that's what they're, what they're talking. Because it's coming at hypersonic speeds. No Patriot system, no, no air defense can stop it right now.
Ian Crossland
I know where he's going with that. Yes, yes, it. So you don't have to be faster than, you don't have to be faster than what you're intercepting. You intercept by trajectory. So there's a, there's a, I have a lot of good friends that work in air defense. Right. And I, I'm no expert, I'm a generalist when it comes to this stuff. Right. So I understand a lot, a little about a lot across a broad scale of military topics as a function of what we do. And you don't have to be faster than what you're trying to intercept. You need to be, you need to be better from a trajectory perspective. And the Reshnik as far as is based off of the Rs26. So from a true hypersonic vehicle perspective, wherein it would have true in flight guidance, really being able to avoid, you know, trajectory based intercept, that's not a capability that's known to have. That's not to say it's not an advanced weapon. Again, it's a multiple reentry vehicle. We don't yet know if it's a multiple independently targetable reentry vehicle, a MERV mirv. Because the way the video so again goes all the way back to video, the way the video looks is they're all landing in a general same area. A multiple independently targetable split. Well, you could, you could send that stuff, you know, wherever you want, but you would, you would intercept that, you know, hopefully before it reaches that point of releasing the MIRV and all of those rods. Right.
Tim Pool
So we, we, we definitely got to jump to other callers. Do you want to shout anything out?
Luke Rudkowski
Nope.
Caller 1
You guys have a great night. Thanks for having me on.
Tim Pool
Thanks for calling in. All right, let's grab snow.
Luke Rudkowski
Fire.
Tim Pool
Welcome to show.
Phil Labonte
We can't hear you if you're talking.
Tim Pool
We hear nothing.
Caller 2
Unmute yourself.
Tim Pool
There you go.
Caller 2
Okay, so. Hey guys, it's been a long time. Thanks for having me.
Phil Labonte
Yes, absolutely.
Caller 2
My question for you guys is like, what do you guys think about Trump's pick compared to his first term, which is almost similar to it. And like his controversial picks of some of his members like Pam Bonney, Pete Hegseth, John Ratcliffe and Michael Waltz, like all of these people have constantly been attacking the Constitution or like blatantly showing that they are against a lot of what the Constitution actually stands for.
Luke Rudkowski
Pam Bondi, I'll just speak to that right away because we came out pretty loudly in opposition to her and largely as the Florida ag she was very instrumental in pushing Donald Trump into embracing Red Flag laws. After the Parkland shooting. She was in the US Capitol. There's a lot or in the White House she was lobbying the President along with a number of other people including senior White House officials to, to support Red Flag. And he did and followed that down the road pretty far until he either lost interest or felt a little bit of heat. But and so we think she's a horrible pick even though I think many people think she's going to win the nomination, win the secure it probably. By the way, I was somebody who called. I think Phil remembers it because I called the Matt Gaetz was not.
Tim Pool
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Luke Rudkowski
Was I, I said that was a.
Ian Crossland
Lure for heat distraction tactic.
Luke Rudkowski
Yeah. And everybody was, everybody was paying attention to that. That was not a serious one.
Tim Pool
But that means that he planned to win an election and then ditch Congress.
Luke Rudkowski
He's got other problems. I think so.
Tim Pool
But I, I do think that's that there, there was a plan there in that there's no way they did not know this was coming. And so him coming out and saying well I couldn't get the vote. It's like. But you knew you wouldn't get the votes.
Luke Rudkowski
Yeah.
Tim Pool
That's why everyone said Reese's appointments if it's going to happen.
Luke Rudkowski
7D chess.
Tim Pool
Oh yeah.
Luke Rudkowski
I'm so tired of that crap. I, I think this was plan. I think this was just, he, he was going to leave anyway. He was, this was a way to draw attention. But what's in the mind of Matt Gates? I don't really know. Matt so know a lot of members of Congress. He's not one of them. And so I mean from a actual perspective of public policy, he would have been entertaining and I think he would have been kind of good. Not agree.
Tim Pool
But our favorite.
Luke Rudkowski
But yeah, he's not going to be at, you know, I think there's some, there's certainly some controversial choices like Secretary treasury is. That's an interesting one. A former soros employee like 20 something years.
Tim Pool
30 years ago.
Luke Rudkowski
Yeah. And I read reports said he hasn't talked to these people for some time. I don't know.
Tim Pool
I, you know, my prediction was Trump would give us a marginally good presidency. But everybody, anybody thinking that it was going to be super insane and above like that he's going to give you everything you want is not going to be the case.
Dudley Brown
Yeah.
Luke Rudkowski
Well, from just a Second Amendment perspective, he was the worst Republican president in American history. On guns.
Tim Pool
He is not a report. He's conservative.
Luke Rudkowski
Exactly. Even given. Even given. Oh yes. He was worse than Barack Obama in effect. On guns. Just saying guns, you guys, this is all I pay attention to. I mean, yeah, I know I follow other stuff, but this is what I have to pay very close attention. Every time they speak, every time they say something, it's a signal. And he was, he looked at banning suppressors completely. That's not a great look just because of one particular incident.
Tim Pool
But he gave a Supreme Court that's going to give us our rights back.
Luke Rudkowski
He gave, he didn't give us Supreme Court. He gave us, he gave us nominees. And I agree he gets the credit. But he didn't decide who that he got three nominees. Right, Right. One of them was you got to give one guy credit. You got to have the turtle credit for the first one.
Dudley Brown
Oh yeah.
Luke Rudkowski
I mean it was the chad move of U.S. senate history. Now I have two people who work for me who, who literally are some of the world's experts on U.S. senate procedure. And they, and when they saw it, they were like, that was absolutely art was the way he delayed that out for Trump. But yes, that's a. He gets the credit for, for those three snowfire.
Tim Pool
Did you want to add anything?
Caller 2
Yeah, just one quick thing. Let's See, like, do you think like he's going to learn from his mistake from like last time, considering the current picks he's doing right now is basically the same thing.
Phil Labonte
I think that's, I don't think, I.
Tim Pool
Mean, Tulsi Gabbert is dni, his VP.
Phil Labonte
Compared to Mike Pence. Yeah. He's got Tulsi Robert Kennedy. The ability for him to cross the aisle for RFK is really, is stark. And Vivek, I mean Vivek Sapow is like a steamroller.
Luke Rudkowski
I worked in politics too long to have faith in politicians and I, I agree with that. I'll be very pleasantly pleased if, if we can even call him a successful moderate Republican when he's done. Because I just don't think as a person he has, he's connected with the principles that he espouses at all. But, but I hope to be wrong. I'd love to be wrong about this. Well, but I, I'm not a Trump supporter. Never have been, never will be.
Tim Pool
I think we're going to get like two points out of, you know, what you'd hope for is 100 and Kamala would have been minus 57 points. And so it's like, well, you know, what are you going to do?
Luke Rudkowski
Although remember this, Republicans would fight like mad in the US Senate and in Congress if Kamala Harris was doing was president and she was proposing leftist moves.
Tim Pool
Nah, they'd pretend to fight.
Luke Rudkowski
No, no, they would fight it like their life depended on him. Most of them would. And, and because that's a different party on the exact same policies proposed by Donald Trump. They will not fight one iota.
Tim Pool
Snowfire, did you want to shout anything out?
Caller 2
No, that was it. Thanks for answering my question, guys.
Tim Pool
Thanks for calling in. Yeah. Next up we've got. We'll go with Cleric. Welcome to the program, Cleric.
Luke Rudkowski
Bless us, please.
Dudley Brown
Hello.
Phil Labonte
Hello, sir, what is up?
Ian Crossland
Hi, first time caller, longtime listener. Tim, my first encounter with you was in 2013 when you were still on Vice covering the year of my damn protest.
Tim Pool
Yeah, I was there a long time ago. I was there. That was crazy.
Ian Crossland
So, so my question, I have two questions. First question is who would the panel like to see appointed to ATF director and why?
Tim Pool
Is it Brandon Herrera? Is it true that he can do a 90 day machine gun amnesty?
Dudley Brown
I don't know.
Luke Rudkowski
Yeah, actually an amnesty can be done by an ATF director, I believe.
Tim Pool
Yeah, he was saying that 90 days go buy machine guns amnesty sounds, that sounds fine.
Luke Rudkowski
Landon, push it through.
Tim Pool
What I would buy.
Luke Rudkowski
Brandon's a pretty Close personal friend. And Brandon, when. When Kyle Rittenhouse got acquitted, and we were the only gun group that gave Kyle Rittenhouse's defense any money. No other gun group gave him a red cent. And. And then Kyle flew out after he was acquitted, flew out to Colorado, and we brought him to the range. But before he came out, I said, just come out and shoot some machine guns, have some fun, blow off some steam. And I said, who's your favorite gun tuber? And he's like, brandon Herrera. And I go, cool. And I call up Brandon, I said, hey, you want to show up? And so Brandon surprised him at the range. Literally, he's at the range, and Brandon walks around the corner, and Kyle just about drops his drawers. We put them both in a helicopter and let them shoot machine guns out of the side of a helicopter.
Dudley Brown
That's awesome.
Ian Crossland
So put me in a helicopter.
Luke Rudkowski
Yeah, we don't have that, Ella. Well, our friend doesn't have that helicopter anymore, but you can watch it on YouTube. It was kind of a fun. You've probably seen clips of Brandon shooting the saw out of the side of it. But. But yeah, talk to him about it. He has an actual. We think there's a shot at it, maybe long shot at it, but why not try.
Phil Labonte
Is that another position that is a. Not Requires nomination and then Senate information?
Luke Rudkowski
That's the tough part.
Dudley Brown
Oh, they have to. I didn't know that there's a.
Ian Crossland
There's a. I think there's a. Oh, yeah. Actually a whole host of people, though, that'll. That'll, you know, respond by saying things like, no, we should abolish the atf. And it's like, well, you have to. You have to have somebody oversee the work to actually tear that. Tear that down.
Luke Rudkowski
I mean, I wanted Thomas because Thomas actually knows machine guns, too. He. I don't know if you guys knew this. Massey paid his way through MIT by buying and selling transferable Uzis. I'm not kidding.
Phil Labonte
Would he fix them?
Luke Rudkowski
He's a no. He just. He just bought the parts and bought them cheap and. And resold them. When Thomas first got elected, and it was the first time we went to lunch right after he got sworn in, and we were with like a whole staff, about 12 people and all his brand new staff, these young folks. And Thomas and I had done a lot of work in politics together at that point, but we didn't really know talk guns, per se. And Thomas and I sat down and started talking guns one night while we're drinking beer and about an Hour and a half later, we notice that all the. All his staffers eyes were just glazed over and they didn't know. Absolutely. In another state of mind. And Thomas looks over at me in his. In his Kentucky accent and says, hell, Dudley, I thought I was going to be the only gun queer in Washington.
Tim Pool
What do you think about gun.
Luke Rudkowski
Like, how do I take that?
Tim Pool
What do you think about Gun Owners of America?
Luke Rudkowski
Good guys. I'm a life member.
Tim Pool
I give them 100 bucks a month and I have for like.
Luke Rudkowski
We should be a member of ours. We're bigger than that.
Tim Pool
I should.
Luke Rudkowski
And. But we have some GOA staff members who work for us. First they work for goa, then they work for us. We're a great guy there.
Tim Pool
What's a life member?
Luke Rudkowski
A thousand bucks, easy. I'm good friends with them. There's very little difference between our groups is we're better marketers and I think we're better at state legislatures for sure. And we're pretty good at bringing heat. But they're just good people.
Phil Labonte
You know, I think Massey belongs.
Tim Pool
Is it tax deductibles? Are you guys tax deductible?
Luke Rudkowski
RC, our C3 is National foundation for Gun Rights.
Tim Pool
Well, I became a life member of. Let's see. Oh, wait. Well, I am becoming a member. My credit card's like, whoa, what is this?
Luke Rudkowski
Yeah, who are those guys?
Tim Pool
No, the website said it worked, but my credit card said it didn't.
Phil Labonte
How do you sign up?
Luke Rudkowski
What?
Tim Pool
I don't know how to deal with that.
Luke Rudkowski
Gun rights.org is the website, but I.
Phil Labonte
Kind of feel like Massie belongs in the White House for sure. Like he. He's not partisan. Was what I like about him. He's just a scientist. He's like a logical, independent thinker.
Dudley Brown
People on the left would feel significantly.
Luke Rudkowski
No, no, Thomas, he's pretty.
Phil Labonte
You could.
Ian Crossland
I don't know.
Phil Labonte
Well, he doesn't. He doesn't side with party. He sides with what makes sense.
Luke Rudkowski
Was principal.
Phil Labonte
Yeah, exactly.
Luke Rudkowski
If you.
Dudley Brown
Look, if you're. If you're a constitutionalist, then the left is going to say that you're partisan. If you're like, they might call the Constitution says and they're gonna. You're gonna say that you're partisan.
Phil Labonte
Yeah, he gets labeled. But the guy is just like, might.
Luke Rudkowski
Not be big enough, but we can always send more.
Phil Labonte
He's focused on principal.
Dudley Brown
I mean, I don't think. I love Thomas Massie.
Tim Pool
The.
Ian Crossland
We still have our caller on the line. Or we're still kind of like, you.
Luke Rudkowski
Know, just hell no Joe, we got to get rid of those, right?
Ian Crossland
Sorry.
Luke Rudkowski
Did you have so much time? You have what?
Phil Labonte
Did you. What'd you think about that, homie?
Luke Rudkowski
That was pretty good.
Ian Crossland
My second question was. Hey, Eric Bolling here inviting you to.
Luke Rudkowski
Check out my new podcast, Bowling, where.
Ian Crossland
We deliver a daily dose of uncensored, unfiltered truth.
Luke Rudkowski
My new show is based on the bedrock of democracy, free speech.
Ian Crossland
Every day.
Luke Rudkowski
I promise to expose those who misinform, edit, and push outright lies for their.
Ian Crossland
Own agenda on bowling.
Luke Rudkowski
The truth is always our top priority. So don't wait, listen, and subscribe to Bowling right now, wherever you get your favorite podcasts.
Ian Crossland
So pronounced the 50 state concealed carry reciprocity. Do we believe that there will be a national constitutional legislation?
Luke Rudkowski
Yeah, you, you. You kind of cut out there.
Ian Crossland
I think he's talking about concealed carry reciprocity.
Luke Rudkowski
Okay, so here's a problem. There's reciprocity, which is the half measure the NRA has been trying to foist on us forever. Okay? And all that means is you still have to get a permit and. And you still have to get a permit and. Big Brother, may I? And then you can carry all around the country, which I'm not opposed to. But that's a half measure. Thomas has HR 9534, which is national constitutional carry. It says basically if you can own the gun, carry it, no state can stop you.
Tim Pool
Agreed.
Luke Rudkowski
And Californians, then you don't have to get the permit and you carry cleric.
Tim Pool
We do have one more caller. Did you want to shout anything out?
Ian Crossland
Yeah, Phil, my son really enjoys all that remains. Could you give Andrew a. Let's go, Andrew, let's go.
Dudley Brown
Cheers, man. I appreciate it.
Tim Pool
Awesome. Appreciate it.
Ian Crossland
Cheers, guys.
Tim Pool
Thanks for calling in. All right, next up, we've got CO 777. You are last but not least.
Caller 3
Okay, so my question is this was a while ago, so I don't know if you'd even really remember it, but Trump talked about how they happened to open the assassin's phone today, which supposed to be Apple phones. By opening J6's phone, but not Trump's assassins, is Apple choosing the side or is it implying that they've been invitated by intel agencies similar to Twitter before X?
Tim Pool
I think there's just another piece of evidence and a long line of evidence that the feds are playing a dirty game with the J6ers and if you're the little guy, you're going to get, you're going to get fucked over.
Dudley Brown
Yeah.
Tim Pool
And yeah, I don't know. It's just again, more evidence in a long line of evidence.
Caller 3
I am. I'm happy that I thought we did one video. Well, one. Well, one co. J6 was what's free from jail.
Dudley Brown
I think there's multiple J Sixers that have been let that.
Luke Rudkowski
Yeah, yeah, yeah.
Tim Pool
I mean tons. I mean like Adam Johnson, right?
Dudley Brown
Yeah.
Caller 3
That's just the video of the video I saw with one guy. So I know there's been more.
Tim Pool
Yeah. But it's an interesting point.
Caller 3
I have another question too. I think. Yeah. 25 or 27 in super chats. I can. I can get you those receipts if you need them, but. But I wondered if there was any way to get that money back because they were. They were mid super chat because they were what they were meant super chat.
Tim Pool
Well, I'm not sure what you.
Phil Labonte
They were missed. No, the super chats.
Caller 3
Oh yeah. They were myth.
Luke Rudkowski
They're basically.
Phil Labonte
No, they're just you pay once and then it's done. There's no. There's no guarantee that they ever get ready. There's a lot that get okay.
Tim Pool
But. But that's the thing. Super Chats, like most people don't read them at all. And so we try to read as many as we can, but we can't read all of them. And so I try to. I try to find ones that are meaningful the conversation and try the best ones that I can.
Ian Crossland
But yeah, I actually tried keeping up.
Tim Pool
With them a little bit. It's. There's too many. You know, even on.
Ian Crossland
Even on our much smaller show, it's difficult to keep up with them. So like.
Tim Pool
Yeah, when we first started, we tried. We would. We would try and read as many as we could because there was like 15.
Dudley Brown
Yeah.
Tim Pool
And now we get, you know, like, what do we get, like 3, 400 per show or something?
Luke Rudkowski
Really?
Tim Pool
Yeah.
Luke Rudkowski
Geez. Yeah.
Caller 3
And I get it. I would just. I was just wondering. We'll have a. Have a great night, guys.
Tim Pool
Cheers and happy Thanksgiving to all you guys. Appreciate calling in, but hey, we got you on the call in show, so you're here. Appreciate it, man. I really do. Thank you so much. All right, man. Have a good one. Thanks. After.
Caller 3
Thank you. Merry Christmas.
Dudley Brown
Absolutely.
Tim Pool
And I would just say no one. You know, there should be a law. Trump needs to sign an executive order making it illegal to celebrate Christmas before Thanksgiving is over.
Phil Labonte
Oh, what a Christmas light.
Ian Crossland
November one lights on November 1st in my house. Every. Every other decoration went down and I'm like, babe, you got kids though. I get.
Tim Pool
I. Dude, no Thanksgiving. And there's a really good tweet. It said y'all are complaining about Christmas songs happening before Thanksgiving is over. You need to write some Thanksgiving bangers.
Luke Rudkowski
Yep.
Tim Pool
I mean, and we talked about this last year.
Phil Labonte
That's true.
Tim Pool
What was the song we were working on Thanksgiving Jack or something.
Luke Rudkowski
Yeah.
Tim Pool
And it was a good one. It was a guy who like rides a moose and he like travels around giving turkeys to holler Thanksgiving.
Phil Labonte
Jack is back.
Luke Rudkowski
There you go.
Tim Pool
No, that's Holla's too.
Phil Labonte
It's like holler's like gobble. You'll be able to change it into the gobble gobble.
Tim Pool
It's got to be very Chris. It's got to be similar to that family holiday Christmas music but for Thanksgiving, you know, so you got something going there.
Phil Labonte
Guys like that like a rocking sound.
Ian Crossland
So try doing it.
Phil Labonte
Boats coming in from the Atlantic.
Ian Crossland
Doing it. Do it to like a melody or something. Just so I can get my brain wrapped.
Phil Labonte
Hobble, hobble, hobble, gobble, gobble, gobble. Jack, Jack is back.
Ian Crossland
Yeah. Why are we not having Phil like.
Luke Rudkowski
Yeah. Let the rock star go.
Tim Pool
Think about like dashing through the snow in a one horse open sleigh.
Ian Crossland
Hobble.
Tim Pool
Gotta be like driving through the leaves.
Phil Labonte
Gobble gobble Jack, Jack.
Tim Pool
The suburban America.
Ian Crossland
Smashing mashed potatoes along the way or something.
Tim Pool
Yeah. Carrying casserole that I made for grandma along the way.
Luke Rudkowski
Wow.
Tim Pool
Gentlemen, it's been, it's been, it's been a blast. Thank you so much for hanging out.
Ian Crossland
Thanks for having us.
Tim Pool
We have a good Thanksgiving. Everybody else, we've got one more show this week. Just tomorrow. Tomorrow we'll be back in the morning and then we're off Wednesday, Thursday, Friday because we are going to. And you should all be celebrating with friends and family. So thanks so much for hanging out and we will see you all tomorrow.
Ian Crossland
It can get lonely climbing Mount McKinley. So to entertain myself, I go to chumbacasino.com at Chumba Casino. I can play hundreds of online casino style games for free. Like online slots, bingo, Slingo and more. Plus I get a daily login bonus. It's just too bad that up here I don't have anyone to share my excitement with.
Tim Pool
Woo hoo. Woo hoo.
Ian Crossland
Ch.
Tim Pool
Chumba Live the Chumba Life anytime, anywhere. Play for free now@chumbacino.com BMW Group no purchase NECESSARY Void web prohibited by law. See terms and conditions 18.
Timcast IRL – December 1, 2024 Episode: Dudley Brown & Ronnie Adkins Uncensored: Rural Areas Try To SECEDE From Illinois And CA, LETS TALK GUNS
In this compelling episode of Timcast IRL, host Tim Pool delves into the heated topics of state secession movements and gun rights, featuring insightful discussions with panelists Dudley Brown and Ronnie Adkins. The conversation navigates the complexities of rural areas in Illinois and California attempting to break away from their states, explores the practicality of such movements, and transitions into an in-depth dialogue on gun ownership and defense strategies.
Tim Pool kicks off the episode by highlighting a recent Wall Street Journal report about secession efforts in Illinois and California. He states, "Illinois and California are trying to secede from their states. This movement is going wild because a bunch of other states have already done this." [00:01].
Dudley Brown emphasizes the grassroots nature of these movements, particularly in predominantly rural counties like Iroquois County, where a significant 73% voted in favor of separation [00:20]. The idea of forming new states from every Illinois county except Cook County is presented as "crazy," sparking debate among the panelists.
The panelists engage in a rigorous examination of the practicality of state secession. Luke Rudkowski points out, "I just don't think it's realistic. It's fun to talk about. In Colorado 10 years ago, people talked about seceding and going into all up into Wyoming and great idea. Not going to happen if they're successful." [01:55].
Phil Labonte brings historical context by referencing the formation of West Virginia during the Civil War, noting the chaos and eventual acceptance by the federal government: "West Virginia now exists." [03:35]. However, he also contemplates the potential domino effect of new states emerging, stating, "It would set off a chain reaction of new states popping up. We'd go from 50 to 60 real fast." [06:02].
Tim Pool counters by advocating for self-governance, asserting, "We have a right to self-governance. If a large portion of a state says we want to form our own governing body, I don't see how the country can deny that right within itself." [06:29].
Despite passionate arguments, the consensus among the panel is that secession remains largely theoretical and faces insurmountable legal and political hurdles.
Shifting gears, the discussion moves to gun rights and strategies for effective advocacy. Ian Crossland shares actionable insights: "You need to find a way to let the firearm do what it's supposed to do... the AR is the premier home defense gun." [18:33].
The panel delves into the merits of different firearms for home defense. Luke Rudkowski argues against handguns, particularly the nine-millimeter, describing them as "a joke" for practical defense scenarios [24:06]. Instead, he promotes AR-15s and shotguns for their lethality and ease of use under stress.
Dudley Brown emphasizes the importance of training and proper equipment: "Make sure you have a light on your gun. It's a must for a home defense gun." [26:23]. The conversation highlights the balance between firearm choice, ammunition selection, and user proficiency to maximize defensive capabilities.
A significant portion of the episode is dedicated to the ongoing Ukraine conflict and the potential for nuclear escalation. A caller raises concerns about Russia deploying mid-range hypersonic weapons and the lack of U.S. countermeasures: "Will there be a nuclear weapon launched prior to Trump taking office?" [29:24].
Tim Pool responds with skepticism about the immediate use of nuclear weapons, suggesting that even if Russia were to use low-yield nukes, the western response would likely avoid catastrophic retaliation: "I don't think we see nuclear strikes... Watched these, like low yield nuclear artillery... I don't see that yet." [30:02].
Phil Labonte warns of the devastating consequences should Russia proceed with nuclear strikes: "If they do, that whole country is going up in flames." [30:49]. However, Tim Pool counters by downplaying the likelihood, suggesting Russia is more strategic than reckless: "Russia has been crushed by the great powers of the world that they're aligning against each other." [31:26].
The discussion underscores the fragile balance of power and the dire implications of nuclear weapon use in modern conflicts, emphasizing prudence and diplomatic efforts to prevent escalation.
The conversation then pivots to the political arena, specifically addressing President Trump's controversial appointments. Callers express concerns about nominees like Pam Bondi and their stance on constitutional rights.
Luke Rudkowski criticizes Pam Bondi, highlighting her role in pushing for Red Flag laws: "She was lobbying the President along with senior White House officials to support Red Flag." [42:27]. The panel debates whether these appointments align with conservative values, with Dudley Brown expressing distrust in the administration's commitment to Second Amendment rights: "From just a Second Amendment perspective, he was the worst Republican president in American history on guns." [45:04].
The discussion also touches on the strategic maneuvers within the Senate, particularly regarding judicial appointments, with insights into how legislative tactics can influence long-term policy outcomes: "He gave us nominees... But he didn't decide who that he got three nominees." [46:28].
Throughout the episode, listeners engage with the panel, posing questions about national security and internal political dynamics.
One caller inquires about the potential sabotage of undersea cables by China, reflecting broader concerns about cyber warfare: "Do you think it was sabotage because how do you accidentally have a Chinese ship go in the Baltic and damage?" [35:58]. Ian Crossland responds by expressing uncertainty but highlights the strategic importance of such infrastructure: "Undersea cables are something that's always being talked about from my perspective." [36:01].
Another caller debates the implications of super chats and their effectiveness, with Phil Labonte providing a candid take on the challenges of engaging with a high volume of viewer donations: "They pay once and then it's done. There's no guarantee that they ever get read." [57:48].
This episode of Timcast IRL offers a robust exploration of state secession movements and the intricate landscape of gun rights advocacy. Through spirited dialogues and expert insights, Tim Pool and his panelists provide listeners with a nuanced understanding of these pressing issues. The episode underscores the tension between grassroots political movements and established legal frameworks, while also emphasizing the importance of strategic advocacy in protecting constitutional rights.
Notable Quotes:
This comprehensive summary captures the essence of the episode, providing readers with a clear and detailed overview of the discussions and insights shared by the panelists and participants.