
Helicopter CRASHES In NYC, Liberals Are BLAMING Trump For Tragic Accident w/ Danny Polishchuk
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Tim Pool
A tragic accident in New York City. A helicopter has crashed into the Hudson. Six people have lost their lives. It was a tourism flight, and so it's particularly sad. We've also got another story of a minor collision at Reagan Airport. But of course, people are quite worried about the consistency of these accidents. Though I do think the minor collisions at the airport probably wouldn't make the news if it weren't for, you know, the other aviation accident news that's been in the press. Now, how do you think prominent liberals are reacting to the news that a helicopter crashed and it was a terrifying tragedy? They're blaming Trump. They're blaming Trump and the Transportation Secretary, and it's entirely predictable. So we're going to talk about that. Of course. We've also got a bunch of other news. The GOP has passed the SAVE act, requiring proof of citizenship to vote, which is massive. Doge has uncovered babies getting unemployment insurance. That one's. That one's pretty great. Very interesting. And we've got a report now that Tesla sales are down. Yeah, Cybertruck sales are down. And the narrative is that people don't want to be involved with Tesla because of his Elon's politics. I'm wondering if the reason they're not buying Teslas or selling them off is because they're scared of the terrorists. But we'll talk about all that, my friends, before we do. Have over to Jackedup Brands dot com. Yo, check this out. Jacked. What is it jacked up brands.com or is it go get jacked up.com? there's two different websites, I guess.
Phil Labonte
Jackedup brands.com.
Tim Pool
Jackedup brands.com is one we got. So, my friends, this is exciting. Look at this. Look at this at home gym. This is amazing.
Phil Labonte
For 2,500 bucks.
Tim Pool
Yeah, we're actually going to get one of these. And they take Bitcoin too. Super cool.
Danny Polishchuk
Oh, that's awesome.
Tim Pool
Yeah. My friend's Maha is here to stay. It's inspiring Americans everywhere to make fitness a priority again. That's why I'm excited to be working with Don and the team at Jacked Up Fitness, an amazing American company. In fact, they're just in D.C. delivering their flagship product, indeed, the Jacked Up Power Rack Pro. None other than. No other. No, for none other than RFK Jr. Himself and his team to use at the HHS building. That's amazing. They were honored to make this donation. We're getting our very own Power Rack Pro. We're excited to have this.
Danny Polishchuk
Awesome.
Tim Pool
All in one gym. That we can use here in the studio. Indeed. We have like a really weak power power cage upstairs. No, no disrespect to it, but it's. It's very rudimentary. So when they told me like, hey, they're going to send you this, I was like, shut up. Because we're actually getting a bigger one. We're getting a different one from this. I don't know. They're giving us a crazier one. So if you're new to strength training, you want to get their Jacked up program. It's a full body video workouts led by celebrity trainers Kim Lyons and Clark Bartram. You literally just plus play, press play and follow along. So listen, we're going to be doing this. You should too. Let's do it together, my friends. We've got the Maha movement, man, and we've got Fitcast irl. We are all about getting in shape. So this is particularly awesome. Go to Jacked up.
Danny Polishchuk
Go.
Tim Pool
Go to getjackedup.com and sign up to access the program right now for free. And when you're ready to order your power rack pro, save 10% using promo code pool P O L. P O O L. No more excuses, guys. The. The journey of a thousand miles begins with but a single step and you are going to get ripped and Danny is going to get ripped.
Ian Crossland
Lightweight, baby.
Tim Pool
All right. Also, we got coffee. Coffee's good for you. Go to cast brew.com buy some coffee because it's delicious. You can get your two weeks till Christmas gingerbread. And actually we got the Sheamus's coffees back in stock, so get it while you can. These. These bags are not going to be on forever. Luck of the Sheamus. I think we got a bunch. I think the art's the best part, to be completely honest. If you buy coffee, we appreciate you really supporting our work, but we know that there are many places you can get coffee. We think we do it better. But we make these really great bags with really cool pictures. So how about that? Don't forget to join our Discord server. Go to timcast.com click join us for that uncensored call in show, which I fully expect to be as spicy as spicy can be. Oh, boy. On slow news days, apparently I'm the news. So everyone's yelling at me today and it's. It's a lot of fun. I matter. I matter when nothing else matters. It's like the. The tide of news goes down and all that stuff is me standing there and everyone's like, let's yell at Tim Pool. He's stupid. And I'm like, well, here I am. So go to timcats.com sign up smash the like button. Share the show with everyone you know. Joining us tonight to talk about this and so much more is Danny Polish.
Phil Labonte
Chuck.
Ian Crossland
Yo, what's up? How's it going?
Tim Pool
Well, who we are?
Ian Crossland
I'm a comedian. I'm a podcaster, host of the Boys, co host of the Boys cast and host of the greatest calling show on the Internet. Low value mail every Monday night.
Tim Pool
Right on.
Danny Polishchuk
Glad you're here, man. I'm amped for this make America healthy thing. I'm actually doing an intestinal cleanse right now. I want to bring it and show you.
Ian Crossland
It smells like you.
Danny Polishchuk
It's made of clothes. Can you tell? No, I'm sorry. You know what? It's a parasite cleanse. I think they might be in the intestines.
Phil Labonte
That's great.
Danny Polishchuk
Cloves, black walnut hall wormwood leaves and stem. Milk thistle.
Ian Crossland
How you feeling?
Danny Polishchuk
Like I had a little bit of coffee, but without the body. Buzz like the mental clarity from the coffee without the body. But it's this. It's dosing hard and I feel loose, weak. It's crazy, dude. But it's know you put in the work now, you reap the rewards later. So get to it. Get your gut healthy, get your arms, get your physiology in, in good health. Because we need clear minds for what's coming.
Ian Crossland
What is coming.
Danny Polishchuk
A lot of change really fast. A lot of artificial intelligence obation making.
Ian Crossland
People think that AI video of you guys is crazy.
Danny Polishchuk
Yeah, there's a third one just came out today.
Ian Crossland
Yeah, it's really, really incredibly.
Tim Pool
Well, we'll play that on the uncensored portion.
Danny Polishchuk
Excellent. So sharper minds, sharper minds, healthy bodies.
Phil Labonte
Hello everybody. 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
Here's the story. This is a. A tragic story. We got this from the post millennial. Six dead after helicopter crashes in the Hudson river near Manhattan. Due to a helicopter crash in the Hudson river, the vicinity of the west side highway and Spring Street. Expect emergency vehicles to traffic delays in the surrounding area. So there, there is video. Two adults and five children were aboard the helicopter. That's very sad. That crashed into the Hudson in New York. And that's that. And that's what this is. They believe that all people are dead. So it looks like six. I believe six are dead. But There are seven there, which is. Which is horrifying. Donald Trump has issued a statement saying, terrible helicopter crash in the Hudson River. Looks like six people. The pilot, two adults and three children are no longer with us. The footage of the accident is horrendous. God bless the families and friends of the victims. Secretary of Transportation Sean Duffy and his talented staff are on it. Announcements as to exactly what took place and how will be made shortly. So there are some images that have come out. You can see here. This is the. The. The principal. I don't know what you'd call that portion of the helicopter, the main body of the helicopter.
Ian Crossland
Yeah, the rotor came clean off, too.
Tim Pool
There's like a tail's gone.
Ian Crossland
Yeah, the thing just, like, disintegrated in midair because, like, the road there's. After it crashed, you see the rotor just kind of floating down, man.
Tim Pool
You were on your way here when the news broke, though.
Ian Crossland
I was on my way here, yeah. From New York. I was not. I was not. It was interesting.
Danny Polishchuk
You said before the show that this. There's, like, a lot of helicopter tourism, or is it not just.
Ian Crossland
Yeah, it's a big thing in Manhattan for tourists, where basically there's all these helicopter companies where you can just. You go up in the helicopter and they just kind of fly you around Manhattan. You get this bird's eye view of the city. But then there's also these helicopter transportation. Like, sometimes you can take a helicopter, like, in crazy traffic to JFK airport, and it's cheaper. I think it's called Blade. And it, like, it might be like, the same price as an Uber.
Phil Labonte
Really?
Ian Crossland
Yeah. Or like, maybe like a little more. But, like, people, you know. You know, if you're like some hedge fund guy and you work in Greenwich, Connecticut, you're like, yeah, I could drive an hour and a half or I can just drop a G and take the helicopter.
Phil Labonte
Yeah, I mean, if, if. If you were like, did you. But I thought you said that it was like, the same price as, like, an Uber. Like.
Ian Crossland
Well, if to go to the airport.
Phil Labonte
It'S like, sometimes, like, when it's 100 bucks.
Ian Crossland
Yeah, it's like, yeah, sometimes, like, it's.
Phil Labonte
Totally worth it if it's like 300 bucks and you're just like, oh, man, I can go ahead.
Ian Crossland
That's blazing with all the stuff. Yeah, it's on the east side, like, 34th street area, essentially. PAD.
Tim Pool
I do think, however, most people would just spend the $5 for the train. Yes.
Ian Crossland
Although, you know what, though? Oddly, in New York City, the, the airports are pretty inaccessible. Train. It's not like. It's not just like a train straight there. It's. You take a train, like a bus.
Tim Pool
Train, jfk, can't you.
Ian Crossland
I don't think there's a direct one. It's like you get. There's a train to near jfk and then there's a bus.
Phil Labonte
Anybody?
Tim Pool
Oh, you're right. You're right. Yep. Anybody close to jfk?
Ian Crossland
It gets you close.
Phil Labonte
But anyone see the news thing today where there was a man arrested for having sex with a corpse on the subway?
Ian Crossland
Oh, I saw. In New York.
Phil Labonte
That's a good reason to not take.
Tim Pool
The train if you can afford the 200 Uber.
Ian Crossland
I mean, I take the train almost every day. I've yet to see. I've seen a lot of stuff. No sex to sex with courtesy.
Danny Polishchuk
I guess it's different, but I've seen.
Ian Crossland
What I can presume to be a deceased person. But the problem is everybody in New York City is just so cold and where nobody checks to see, like, you just assume, yeah, the guy's probably passed out or something.
Tim Pool
But I, I do, I, I do think we're like, socially dissolving.
Ian Crossland
Yeah.
Tim Pool
Because people are absorbing information from. It's. It's increasingly decentralizing. So even now, I mean, if you, if you go back 10 years on YouTube, when YouTube was newish in the podcasting space, YouTube hated it. People got way more views than they get these days. I'm like, talking about, like, young turks, for instance. Like, their views are. Are way low relative to where they used to be. Everybody has been decentralizing, even, you know, with all due respect, Joe Rogan's views appear to be lower than they were four or five years ago because more and more channels keep emerging and people are seeking out their hangouts. You know what I mean? Yeah. I feel like we're five years away from podcasts having, you know, like 300 viewers. And it's just people basically hanging out with their buddies. Yeah, that's about it.
Danny Polishchuk
If you could monetize, like, residual monetizations.
Ian Crossland
So, like, monetize the monetization.
Danny Polishchuk
Yeah. So whereas one pod, you might get like 5% of that podcast revenue, and then that guy gets 2% of your revenue. So there's these webs, because it won't be about one guy gets all the.
Ian Crossland
Views in the future doing, like, subprime mortgages for podcast.
Danny Polishchuk
I got an idea for you, Danny. You're going to make a lot of money.
Ian Crossland
We're going to collateralize the Loans.
Tim Pool
So imagine this. You mentioned, like, you've been going on about this AI stuff because that dude made those comedy videos about us.
Danny Polishchuk
Yeah.
Tim Pool
And you saw that, too.
Ian Crossland
I mean, I make. I make tons of AI videos.
Tim Pool
I was talking to a media personality a few months ago who said, and it's not my business to, you know, but he was talking about how he's already preparing to do fully AI produced news videos.
Ian Crossland
Yeah.
Tim Pool
So you will think you're watching him talk, and it's not going to be him.
Danny Polishchuk
Yeah.
Ian Crossland
I mean, I can tell you just even seeing that video today. Like, I've been making AI videos for maybe six months now. And the way it's changed just in the last six months, like, how much better it's gotten. Like, the video that that guy made today. You couldn't make that six months ago.
Tim Pool
Right.
Danny Polishchuk
We should so play, like, 20 seconds for reference so people can. Crazy.
Tim Pool
Yeah. Well, I mean, we'll get into a full thing.
Ian Crossland
Oh, we'll play it in the after show.
Tim Pool
Well, just because it's. It's extremely graphic and not family.
Ian Crossland
Yeah.
Danny Polishchuk
It is. Like, it looks like almost.
Tim Pool
It's clearly AI. But here's the thing. You can go into ChatGPT right now and say, I bet I could do this right now. Write me a comedy bit in the style of Ryan Long.
Ian Crossland
Yeah.
Tim Pool
And it'll do it.
Ian Crossland
Yeah.
Tim Pool
And then all you got to do is write that and then plug it into the video and say, make Ryan Long say this.
Ian Crossland
Yeah. It won't be as good for sure, because it's. At the end of the day, it's still derivative.
Tim Pool
It'll be better.
Danny Polishchuk
But you.
Ian Crossland
But you say. You're like, hey, you know, you say it's obviously AI to you. It is. It's obviously. I pop that thing up on Facebook and tell me. People think it's obvious.
Tim Pool
I mean, but we're a year away from it being perfect.
Ian Crossland
Yeah.
Tim Pool
So I. I played for Allison the AI video, and she was like, oh, I thought you recorded that as a joke.
Danny Polishchuk
Yeah, I told my.
Ian Crossland
Well, no, no, for sure. Like, I made. I had this one a. I made this AI USID, USAID 60 Minutes interview, and I put that on Facebook. Not. It went viral on Facebook. Not one person knew it was a joke. And then one person was like, this can't be real. This is so crazy. And then this woman would go in the comments, be like, this is real. This is what they're doing.
Phil Labonte
Wow.
Tim Pool
And I just realized something crazy. So YouTube has this feature where you can upload alternate Language tracks.
Ian Crossland
Yeah.
Tim Pool
Have you ever seen this?
Ian Crossland
Yeah. Yeah.
Tim Pool
What's stopping somebody from. From saying, okay, here let's take a political issue, for instance. Let's talk about homeschooling or something. And then looking at the data on the home opinion on homeschooling from. From Spanish speakers, let's say, I don't know if this is true, but let's just say 80 of people who speak Spanish hate homeschooling and they think people should be in school. Actually, let's invert it. 80% of Spanish speakers like homeschooling and want to be with the family. And then 80% of English speakers don't agree with homeschooling. What's to stop someone from making a video that's them saying in English? You could actually, here's the crazy thing, you could just show facts on homeschooling. And the English track says, homeschooling is not good. You shouldn't have your kids there. But if you play in Spanish, it says homeschooling is good.
Ian Crossland
Yeah. Oh, easily. Yeah.
Tim Pool
One video with two different messages and it's different demographics.
Ian Crossland
The crazy thing is it's so cheap to make these videos. Like, the compute required. Like, you like that video today, like 10 bucks, maybe 5 bucks of compute, depending on how many times you need to render it. Like, it's not even, like, prohibitive in any way. You don't need a special computer. Nothing.
Danny Polishchuk
People were saying it's. People want to watch it while we're talking. It's the real Dylan Danger on Twitter. You can find his stuff. He's great.
Tim Pool
I don't know how we got into this, considering we were talking about.
Danny Polishchuk
Because, well, what I was to keep going. We'll probably realize why this came up as we keep going that people keep saying, learn how to use AI. Learn how to use AI. The future is learning because you're not going to have to do a show, dude. You just make your AI do it.
Tim Pool
We were talking about decentralization. Yeah. And how it's going to become super isolated and we're going to get to the point where, like, I swear, we're already seeing this now. It starts with edited videos. Donald Trump and the very fine people hoax. Now with AI, we're there. Like you were saying, go on Facebook and see if someone believes it's fake or not. They're going to believe it's absolutely real. You can make whatever.
Ian Crossland
You ever seen that Alfred Hitchcock interview from, like, probably, I don't know, the 50s or something. And he's. He's talking about the future of movies and he's like, yeah, you know, he's like, in the future there's going to be a movie where you go to a theater and you're the main character. Right. Like, and for every person they're the main character and you watch this movie and you're the man. And like you said this in like the 50s.
Danny Polishchuk
Those exist with VR. I've seen a movie where you like are being, going through the movie. You can 360 watch the movie.
Ian Crossland
No, no, no, no, no, no, no. You're not outside of it. You're watching it and you're, you're the.
Danny Polishchuk
Lead or you can talk to them and.
Ian Crossland
No, no, no. You're just watching a movie. It's a written movie. Just you're the lead. Like you.
Danny Polishchuk
I'll one up Hitchcock. I think we're to the point where it's going to be like a VR world video game movie where they're reacting to you in. Yeah, but your version, Hitchcock's version may happen first.
Ian Crossland
But I'm saying he said that in the 50s and, and now I'm like, yeah, cuz he done five years.
Tim Pool
So right now if I, if I go to chat GPT there's a, there's a certain degree of like notoriety you have to have.
Ian Crossland
Yeah.
Tim Pool
So if I wrote, write a, write it here. I'm gonna do, I'm, I'm say write a script about homeschooling in the style of Tim Pool. It. It, it actually does and it's gotten better. Sure. Here's a Tim Pool style script about homeschooling. Mixing his signature tone of skepticism, cultural commentary and populist edge.
Danny Polishchuk
Hey, it.
Tim Pool
So here's the deal, guys. The public education system is collapsing. Really? Test scores are plummeting, schools are pushing insane ideological garbage, and parents are fed up. And you know what? They're pulling their kids out in record numbers. Since 2020, homeschooling has nearly doubled. This is what it's claiming. Sounds like me.
Ian Crossland
Yeah.
Danny Polishchuk
I could see you saying this stuff and I could.
Tim Pool
If I, if I did all of my videos without me on camera, I could just have an AI voice.
Ian Crossland
Sure.
Tim Pool
Do it.
Ian Crossland
Yeah. The problem is it's not going to make quite like the points that you want to make. It'll be, it'll still be like a water. Like I made this video. Do you see Elon Musk did that Tesla event recently and it looked like he was doing standup. Do you see that? Like re. Anyways, I made an AI because I was like, he looks like he's doing stand up. So then I made an AI video of him doing stand up. But then I went into. I wanted to be, like, kind of hacky. So then I went into chat GPT and I was like, write me a script of Elon, a hacky script of Elon Musk doing stand up. And it still wasn't good. Like, in Grock, it was like. It still was like, I'm like, this is even too bad.
Danny Polishchuk
Can you be like, make it better? Not good enough.
Ian Crossland
It's just like comedy. It has. I know some comedians do use Grok and like, AI for, like, ideas, but actually, like, the punch lines, all you're going to get is, like, pretty generic stuff.
Tim Pool
Indeed. Well, let's. Let's get back to the helicopter thing, because the. The main point here was, believe it or not, my friends, as we're dealing with a very tragic incident, prominent liberal activists are blaming Trump.
Ian Crossland
Yeah.
Tim Pool
So you got Brooklyn.
Ian Crossland
You know, there was no helicopter crashes during the Biden administration.
Phil Labonte
The Orange man is bad.
Tim Pool
That's right. You got Brooklyn, Dad. Defiant. Is this actually his account? Because this looks like. Yeah, 1.3 million followers. And he says yet another deadly aviation incident under the Trump administration. It's only been 80 days. Feel like years. You've got call to activism. Why the f. Is this happening so much after Trump became president? You got JoJo from jurors. Maybe we'd have fewer aviation accidents of the secretary of hot hot tub sexportation. What was.
Ian Crossland
I don't know what that's a reference to.
Tim Pool
I don't know, but she's crazy.
Danny Polishchuk
Yeah.
Ian Crossland
Also, aviation accidents are not up. We. Because the. When. When those. That plane flipped in Toronto in my. I have a group chat and we were like, our aviation's up. And then accidents. And then we started looking into it and they're not.
Tim Pool
I do. I can't remember one of the data. I think fatalities are up.
Ian Crossland
Yeah, but the.
Tim Pool
The number of accidents is not. It's like.
Ian Crossland
I mean, a commercial airliner crashing is. In the United States is incredibly rare.
Phil Labonte
Yeah, right.
Ian Crossland
Like, I think before the one in D.C. where the helicopter collided with it or whatever. Before that, the last one was the one in New York with, like, Sully. And then it was like.
Phil Labonte
Yeah.
Ian Crossland
And then it was 9, 11 before that. Like, these aren't frequent occurrences.
Danny Polishchuk
You got to keep in mind, too, that if Boeing has been. Remember that Boeing whistleblower came out and then, like, died. He was going to testify in front of Congress and was dead within a week. Accidents happen, accidental suicide, I guess. But basically that could be 10 years later. Like you see Boeing messing with their equipment or any, any airplane company, if they've been. There's malfeasance, you're not going to see it the same like if, if the, the administration overseeing that. That company.
Ian Crossland
Yeah. I mean, I have a guy, he's an airline mechanic, commercial airline mechanic that calls into my call in show sometimes and he told me, he's like, if for the commercial stuff, the regulations are so crazy. Like they don't. There's no corners being cut. Like nothing. Like it's, it's so strict. Most of the accidents are if someone owns like a Cessna and there's no requirements. You can maintain that however you want. And those are generally like.
Danny Polishchuk
Is that what happened with this helicopter? Is it private?
Ian Crossland
Yeah, it's just like, it's just like a tourism company, bro.
Tim Pool
Ever go to Jersey City? I went to Jersey City with Allison and they got helicopter tour there and it was scary.
Ian Crossland
Yeah.
Tim Pool
Because it was like the helicopter is just a tin can.
Phil Labonte
Oh yeah.
Tim Pool
Like we were sitting in it and I'm just like, this is a, like a millimeter. Two millimeters of steel or something.
Danny Polishchuk
My dad told me once that the Vietnam helicopter, call it the Jesus bolt or the Jesus nut. That nut that holds the rotor in and if that thing comes out, you're like, you're praying to God that that doesn't.
Phil Labonte
You've been in a helicopter?
Danny Polishchuk
Negative.
Ian Crossland
No.
Phil Labonte
So just me and Tim.
Ian Crossland
Yeah.
Tim Pool
Yeah. They got helicopter tours that fly over Jersey City and it's. It's pretty unnerving.
Ian Crossland
Yeah.
Tim Pool
Being. It's like a small helicopter.
Ian Crossland
Have the doors open and search.
Tim Pool
No, no, I don't.
Ian Crossland
Some of the New York ones, Manhattan, like you can open the door and really like you strapped in, like. Yeah, strapped in. And you feel like you're just like above Manhattan kind of thing. Jeez. Yeah.
Tim Pool
Well, we all know this is purely political and that Donald Trump and Doge somehow caused the aircraft to not.
Danny Polishchuk
I thought the same thing about Biden when that other plane crash happened. I'm just kidding. I don't joke a lot. Sounds really weird.
Ian Crossland
We can tell on tv anyway.
Tim Pool
Yeah. I think, I think we're entrenched in decentralized media.
Ian Crossland
Yeah.
Tim Pool
As well as extreme tribalism.
Ian Crossland
Yeah. I mean, look, if a water main birth, someone's gonna be like Trump.
Tim Pool
Do you guys remember when. What was that. Was that thing Jackson Hinkle is his name, I think. Yeah, yeah.
Danny Polishchuk
He came on a show, he.
Tim Pool
Right. We had him on before, but there's some tweet he had about GTA where he said it was woke because of Israel or something.
Ian Crossland
Okay.
Tim Pool
It was something like that. And I'm just like, to a hammer, everything looks like a nail.
Ian Crossland
Correct. Yeah.
Tim Pool
Brooklyn dad, defiant. Jojo from jurors. These other activists, the other liberals, they don't have anything else to talk about.
Danny Polishchuk
Yeah.
Tim Pool
So if something's big in the news, it has to be Donald Trump related.
Ian Crossland
Sure.
Tim Pool
Which is fortunate for us because as we're politically minded and something's the news, they made it Donald Trump related for us.
Ian Crossland
Sure.
Tim Pool
I mean, that's somewhat facetiously, but it's kind of true.
Ian Crossland
I mean, when you're, you know, your Approval rating is 20%. Democrats right now, I mean, they're, they're, they're just grasping at straws right now. They go, I don't know, is this something?
Phil Labonte
Yeah.
Tim Pool
Helicopter crash, an earthquake's going to happen. It's like today was a particularly slow news day, man.
Phil Labonte
Bad earthquake.
Tim Pool
Yeah. They're going to be like, the earthquake happened because Donald Trump is fracking.
Ian Crossland
Yeah.
Tim Pool
Like they're going to find a way to make it, make it their thing.
Danny Polishchuk
You make a good point that it makes it easy for shows like this to, to persist because they, people, outside influences, like, make it political. So you make money off of it. People want to. We already know what we're talking about with politics a lot of times. I mean, you particularly know a lot about it.
Ian Crossland
Yeah.
Danny Polishchuk
So.
Ian Crossland
And look, there's people on the right who do the same thing.
Danny Polishchuk
What's that?
Ian Crossland
There's people on the right when Biden was in office and that happens to go all, Biden did this. You know, it's just like, so it's.
Danny Polishchuk
Profitable and it's like, yeah, I'm gonna ride this cow. But at the same time, it's not healthy for the psyche, the human psyche to constantly be refocusing on politics.
Ian Crossland
Family of five died. And you're like, yeah, Trump. You're like, all right, yeah.
Danny Polishchuk
They were playing catch down there. Did you guys see that? You guys were down there playing catch. They just are playing wiffle ball. Wiffle ball, baseball, foam ball.
Tim Pool
And it reminded me, grand slam.
Danny Polishchuk
Just throwing a ball back and forth. Like, how many kids. We're talking about kids with social anxiety and problems. How many kids play throw catch these days? That's a big problem. Because that is the most ancient human evolutionary thing we have, is throwing. It separated us from the rest of the animal kingdom.
Tim Pool
That's why I'm like with everything Trump's doing, I'm just like, bring it on. Yeah, this, this country needs a cultural hard reset or something. So me and, me and the boys were in Chicago, this is over Christmas and we were walking around downtown. We came across this building that had ledges and stuff. And I was like, wow, you could skate here. And I'm like, where are all the kids at? And my buddies from Chicago were like, kids don't go outside anymore.
Ian Crossland
Yeah. And I was just like, they're skating in Roblox.
Tim Pool
They're not, they're not doing anything at all. They're, they're literally sitting indoors doing nothing.
Danny Polishchuk
Just riding on a computer somewhere.
Tim Pool
Dude, it's going to be really weird in 20 years. Like people don't understand the, the scrolling, the, the, the tick tock generation. Look, it's one thing when we are like the podcast generation, where the media we consume is long form conversations, two hours long. And we all bragged about it for years. We were like, we don't watch these sound bites on Fox News and MSNBC and cnn. We get hours long, deep conversation from prominent individuals. And now it's right back to people are swiping through YouTube shorts, Instagram, TikTok, and they're getting their news in 30 second clips that are often completely out of context.
Danny Polishchuk
The movie industry too apparently is evolving to one minute shorts. Like it'll be a 90 minute movie, there'll be 90 one minute shorts.
Ian Crossland
And that's awful.
Phil Labonte
You know, you were, you were saying that the things have devolved back into swiping. There's a reason why, you know, network news became what it was, right? Like there used to be 60 minutes that had like longer form interviews and stuff like that. But the reason is because people don't want to pay attention to law. Not, not there isn't an audience because obviously Joe Rogan's still out there and there are still podcasts that do. But the majority of people find it easiest to consume news like that. Yeah, small bits. What do I need to know? And so that way I can, I.
Ian Crossland
Can get through my little dopamine hits. And you go, here's some sports highlights.
Phil Labonte
Here'S a. Yeah, and, and I'm not saying that again, I'm not saying that there aren't people that are looking for long form stuff because obviously there are, there are tons of people, but young people, people that aren't interested in the, the getting into, into in depth stuff they're going to be looking for. Give me the little bit of news as fast as I possibly can. And that's why again, it went from that kind of format on the news with three minute hits on, on your, your hour long or half hour long news program. Now then it went, people went to the big long form and now it's back to, you know, you know what's.
Tim Pool
Interesting is I was just thinking about like the actual physical tribalism. You get a big continent like the United States and get a bunch of tribes and what happens? Well, depending on the density of the population, one person conquers all those other tribes, right?
Ian Crossland
Yeah.
Tim Pool
So I was thinking like, is there a reality, is there a possibility where with all of the media spaces decentralizing and people getting their news and information from smaller and smaller channels, will there be a point at which one person comes and dominates every platform? No, it's not possible in the media.
Ian Crossland
Landscape, like to try, you got Daily.
Danny Polishchuk
Wire tries to like bring big talents in and create an umbrella. Rumble is sort of, but it's an, it's a platform, so it's not really claiming ownership platform. But this is a distribution network.
Tim Pool
So Rumble is, this is different. I'm saying, will it come to a point where everybody turns to one person?
Ian Crossland
No. There's just so many options. Like, you know, everybody has such varied tastes and, you know, everybody likes different things.
Tim Pool
And I think the reality is that people are just going to choose to listen to what makes them feel good.
Ian Crossland
Yeah, I mean, some people like still like to watch MSNBC, you know, all 30. All 30,000 of them.
Danny Polishchuk
I heard today people don't follow. This is from Chase Hughes. He's great, brilliant, like ex military, behavioral scientist. And he's saying that people don't. I think it was chasing this. People don't follow the best person. They follow the one that's giving them.
Tim Pool
The clearest.
Danny Polishchuk
Command direction.
Ian Crossland
And that can, I mean, for me, like I'll follow somebody and then the moment I catch them and where I'm like, this is a trusted source and then I catch them in something that's obviously a lie and I go, okay, I can't trust you anymore.
Tim Pool
But I think we. MSNBC still has viewers, of course. So even when you can. And people talk about this all the time with their parents, like, I can show my aunt the video and she doesn't care. So there will be factions of people who are interested in nuanced conversation, but I think it's substantially less than most people realize.
Ian Crossland
Yeah. And if you look at MSNBC's ratings, like probably the 25 to 49 demo is not looking Good. Like it's only a matter of time.
Tim Pool
Nothing.
Ian Crossland
Yeah, it's probably like 10,000.
Danny Polishchuk
I'm fascinated with the other segment of people. Like, you got the people that are Falling into the 1 minute short, 30 second sound bite reality, and then these other people are going like 2 times speed, 2.5 times speed, or like 1.75, whatever. You watch long form faster.
Ian Crossland
Yeah.
Danny Polishchuk
And that's an interesting evolution. And it's like soon we're just gonna.
Ian Crossland
Be able to upload the whole thing to your brain and just soon it's just gonna be like a full Rogan episode, four hour talk. It just goes.
Danny Polishchuk
That's true. I mean, if you can just bend the pathways to.
Ian Crossland
Yeah, you just like brute force it into your brain.
Phil Labonte
It's the read, write thing that I.
Danny Polishchuk
Had it like times 9 million. And it's just in there.
Tim Pool
I've been. I've been looking at a bunch of different, like, American subcultures. And it's not just media. Media is obviously the space we're in right now. And so I can say, like, people are getting their views from a bunch of different people every single day. New channels emerge, new audiences emerge. And over a long enough period of time, more channels means less market share for everybody else. But it's affecting literally everything. Right. Somebody was super chatting about Frisbee golf having like no audience and having no money. There are. There's no American pastime anymore. No, like, obviously it was baseball for a while.
Ian Crossland
Baseball still doing okay?
Tim Pool
It's doing okay. But I don't know how many people. I mean, it's literally. I'm not saying nobody does. I'm saying I don't how many people are actually going to these events anymore?
Ian Crossland
I mean, actually, you know what? The MLB just canceled their deal with ESPN because the. The ratings were abysmal.
Tim Pool
Wow.
Ian Crossland
They were like charging them, you know, money based off of like 10 years ago viewership.
Tim Pool
But that's what I'm saying, because. Yo, dude, we've been talking about maybe going to a baseball game for a long time. We should never do it.
Danny Polishchuk
Dude, watching AI AI is going to make you plenty of baseball games.
Ian Crossland
Oh, man, I have. I have the Oculus and they have this thing where you. I can't remember what it's called, but it's an app. And there's the NHL and the NBA. There's like an MMA one where, like, for the NHL one, it's. You're literally on the glass, like first row on the glass. And then when the puck goes down the ice Puts you, it just like a camera switches and you're at center ice. And then you're, when the puck gets to the other end of the ice, now you're back on the glass, like first row. It's incredible. Like, when you see it and you go like, man, this is borderline preferable to going to a game.
Tim Pool
The AI stuff is going to be crazy.
Phil Labonte
Yeah.
Tim Pool
Like I've been saying for a while, we are, it's closer than we realize where you're going to, you're going to have Disney. Disney. It's gonna be called like procedural Disney or something. There may be a better word than that for marketing.
Danny Polishchuk
What they call Disney World.
Tim Pool
Yep. Disney Life. And you're gonna, you're gonna open up your app on the TV and you're gonna click the microphone button and say, Spider man and Hulk Hogan are best friends. It's a rom com.
Ian Crossland
Yeah.
Tim Pool
And then it's gonna be like processing and it's gonna take a few minutes and it's gonna make the movie.
Danny Polishchuk
You imagine you go to VR theme park and it's the, it's a complete world that you. It's not. Oh yeah, there's no borders. Like at the theme park.
Tim Pool
AI generated virtual realities.
Ian Crossland
Oh, for sure. There was a, a video I saw this week actually of some guy, he made like Tom and Jerry videos. Do you see Those? Someone made A.I. tom and Jerry videos. Now the prompts for them, like the future of dominating stuff, dominating this stuff is gonna be able, is gonna be for the people who can like, figure out how to prompt it properly. Because the prompts were like insane. Like literally pages of prompts to get these like two minute videos. But the videos were amazing.
Danny Polishchuk
So do they use AI to write prompts?
Ian Crossland
No, no, no, no, no.
Phil Labonte
Yeah, yeah, eventually.
Ian Crossland
Yeah, for sure. Absolutely.
Tim Pool
No, no, I, I, that's how I make. So I've been posting comics to my Instagram and all. Like, the, the, the purists are angry. They're like, this is AI garbage. Don't do it. But they convey the idea that I want. And so what I do is, I'll go into, I'll go in chat GPT and I'll say, I'll, I'll, I'll, I'll write a short paragraph about the idea. But I never tell to make the comic. It wastes your time. What I tell to do is write a script like this. And so for the, the, the comic I made yesterday, where it's the guy who walks up to X the headquarters, he's like, what's this. Then he goes inside, everyone's screaming out their lungs. Then he's like, what the hell? And then he runs out and he's like collapsing. I wrote a man goes to X hq when he goes inside, everyone's screaming. Ah. He then freaks out as everyone's yelling at him. And then the next panel is him on the ground with his hands on his head. Write the script. It writes it out. And then you have to go in and say, okay, change this and change this and change this because it gets it wrong.
Ian Crossland
Yeah.
Tim Pool
Then you tell the. Generate the comic and then 15 iterations later it makes. When it's viable, right?
Ian Crossland
You got to put in the camera. Like the, like the, the stuff like you have to put in the prompts. Like camera moves like this way, like tracks this person. Like it's got to be incredibly specific.
Danny Polishchuk
So you'd probably build an AI that is like a center mode AI that you could be like, all right, I write me a script for Suno and you, you designate what other AI program it's going to be writing.
Ian Crossland
Oh yeah.
Tim Pool
And then it'll be able to.
Phil Labonte
It's called agentic AI. So it's going to be an AI that's split specifically for making videos. Right? Like that's what they're, that's one of the things that they're working on now is not. There's not likely going to be a AGI in the very near future, but some kind of agentic AI. An agent. Something that does something for you. That kind of stuff is getting really, really good. And so you'll have an AI that knows how to make videos. So you'll be able to give it basic prompts. And then it'll do a lot of the behind the scenes work for you because it's designed specifically to videos. And then you'll have a, you're going to eventually have AI in your phone that knows how to operate your phone. So you'll say, it'll be like, you know, the whole, like, hey, I'm not going to say it. I don't want to turn everyone's machines on. But you tell your phone I want to go to New York this weekend, I need a flight, I need a hotel, I need a ride to and from the airport and I want to eat sushi when I get there. And it'll do all that.
Ian Crossland
That probably already.
Phil Labonte
Well, the thing is it can't pay for it yet.
Ian Crossland
Okay.
Phil Labonte
It can do the itinerary.
Ian Crossland
Right.
Phil Labonte
But when you. That's why you have to have the cross Availability in the phone. So that way it can use all the apps in your phone to do all of the things.
Tim Pool
Yeah, we're not far from that.
Phil Labonte
That stuff is very, very close. And so, like, agentic AI will do all the stuff that, that, you know, Tim's talking about how he has to be really detailed or that Danny was talking about. You have to be really detailed. That detail will become something that AI handles for you.
Ian Crossland
It almost start prompting you.
Danny Polishchuk
Yes.
Ian Crossland
It'll say, like, what do you. Like what do you want this? Do you want this? So it'll. You won't even need to know the prompts because it'll essentially say, what about this? What about this? And you'll just have a conversation and then it'll be like, how about this?
Danny Polishchuk
And the same thing for script writing. Every bounce back at you and be like, well, what do you think if you tried?
Ian Crossland
Yeah, for sure. For everything.
Tim Pool
Let's get to this next story from the New Republic. Oh, this is my favorite headline. 4 Democrats pass bill making it harder for married women to vote. Would anyone like to take a crack at what the story actually is?
Phil Labonte
Oh, it's about voter id, because the last name. If you change your last name, they say that it makes it more difficult to vote.
Tim Pool
This is how Democrats convey information to people.
Ian Crossland
Yeah.
Tim Pool
And this is. So we were. So this is about the Save act, that you need proof of citizenship to vote. That's it. If you want to vote, and you're right trying to vote, you got to prove your citizen. You can do that in a variety of ways.
Ian Crossland
Sucks for me.
Tim Pool
Good.
Ian Crossland
Well, because I'm not a citizen, I look forward to voting in every election.
Tim Pool
This is the problem we have in this country with the decentralization of media. There is an audience for this, and they are now sitting there going, but what? They don't want women to vote and they're going to believe it.
Ian Crossland
Yeah.
Phil Labonte
Yep.
Danny Polishchuk
This is like, makes the Democrats don't.
Ian Crossland
Want women to vote.
Tim Pool
Yep.
Ian Crossland
Like, because this is like, actually kind of skewering the Democrats here.
Phil Labonte
That's because they step. That's because the Democrats allowed the bill to pass.
Tim Pool
Yeah, they stepped out of line.
Phil Labonte
Stepped out of line.
Ian Crossland
So then there's all these Democrats who are like, yeah, again, Democrats don't want women to vote.
Phil Labonte
This topic in the United States is One of those 80, 20 topics Americans by vast majority say we want to have. We want to make sure that only American citizens are voting, but yet totally reasonable. The media. And not only is it reasonable, it's something that's basically ubiquitous worldwide except for in the United States. But basically the media is twisting it so that you can't even say that this is trying to inform people. This is pure propaganda and it's counter to what the American people want. Every single poll they do, it turns out 75%, 80%, 70%, they all say, we want to have. Have voter ID. You voted some kind of voter ID.
Ian Crossland
So is it a lock, the voter. You need voter ID ID to vote now?
Phil Labonte
Not yet. I don't know if this is the.
Tim Pool
I'm trying to find anywhere in the article where, like, where it actually says women can't vote, but it doesn't. It literally does not.
Phil Labonte
The argument is because if you're a woman and you're married, you change your last name, there's. There'll be a discrepancy on your birth certificate compared to your. What your. Your ID says, and that might disappear.
Ian Crossland
Do you need two forms of id? Like, your ID is not enough?
Phil Labonte
No.
Tim Pool
I guess it says some claim that requiring proof of citizenship is too onerous a burden or that it will disenfranchise those whose names have changed for reasons like marriage. Have you ever tried to enter into a contract and they go, ma'am, that's not your real name. Yeah, sorry, I can see that.
Danny Polishchuk
If also with, like, mail in voting, if they're like, we're going to make you vote in person, they're making it more difficult for people to vote.
Ian Crossland
That's exactly some, like, infirm people who, like, probably cannot physically vote, who should be allowed to. But yeah, obviously if you can vote.
Tim Pool
Like, you should infirm.
Danny Polishchuk
I guess if there's a medical reason that they can't get to the, like.
Ian Crossland
Imagine you're like an elderly person and you're like, yeah, I don't know. It's really.
Danny Polishchuk
I'm open to that. Yeah.
Ian Crossland
But this is nonsense. And here's the thing. I say this is nonsense. I'm actually not in favor of women voting, period.
Phil Labonte
There you go.
Ian Crossland
And I'm still not. This is nonsense.
Phil Labonte
If we could get rid of. If we could, we could find some way to disenfranchise women, it would be a good start.
Danny Polishchuk
All right.
Phil Labonte
We need more than just women.
Danny Polishchuk
I'm the woman in here, I guess. No, I'm just kidding. I'm gonna be the woman for this conversation.
Tim Pool
I think that there should be a lawsuit. It is absurd to me that women have the right to vote, but I can't be conscripted. Yeah, agree. Equal rights, equal responsibilities. Conscription doesn't Mean, we want women on the front line. It means they can be working in offices or doing something. But the idea what this, the scenario this creates is that women can vote for war knowing they have no responsibility for it.
Danny Polishchuk
What about women with no kids could be drafted.
Tim Pool
Nope. And have kids too.
Danny Polishchuk
Yeah, but men don't have to do.
Phil Labonte
What the reasons, the reason that the draft exists.
Ian Crossland
I mean, honestly, the women with kids are probably a little hardened compared to the ones. Right. You know, the ones with no kids, you're like, what are you going to do?
Phil Labonte
Draft exists.
Ian Crossland
Right.
Phil Labonte
The reason the draft, draft exists is because they need infantrymen. That's the vast majority of people that get drafted. They just, they're just rifled. They get into the, they get put in the position of rifle stand in front the world.
Danny Polishchuk
World War II. I, I'm pretty sure there was very.
Phil Labonte
Little draft in World War II because dudes were signing.
Ian Crossland
Everybody was like, gear.
Tim Pool
Yeah.
Phil Labonte
They were like, let's go.
Ian Crossland
It was like 12 year olds were like lying and saying they were 18.
Phil Labonte
No women stayed home because they went to, they went into, into the, the, the jobs that the men left.
Danny Polishchuk
Right. The industrial sector. Like Rosie the Riveter is a famous picture of that woman making a pump in her, her arm and because, because it was all factory workers. But they weren't, you're saying they weren't drafted into the factory, they just filled.
Ian Crossland
Yeah, it was the wartime effort, you know. Have you ever seen that video of the Vietnam draft that was on tv? They like televised it like a game show. It's one of the craziest things I've ever seen.
Tim Pool
Really?
Ian Crossland
Literally you can look at, it's on YouTube. Literally it looks like a game show. It's from like the 60s and they have. And they, oh yeah, they call everybody's number everybody number based on birth draft lottery. And if you were first, you were going. Right.
Tim Pool
Picking of the birth dates for the draft. Here at Selective Service headquarters in Washington is CBS News correspondent Roger Mudd.
Phil Labonte
Roger Mudd, good evening.
Tim Pool
Let's just jump ahead.
Ian Crossland
29:18 Maureen performance.
Tim Pool
The next birthday in order, April 24th and so on down the line this evening. So wait, how did it work?
Ian Crossland
Oh, if you were the first birthday you were like, you're going like right away.
Tim Pool
But like everybody with that birthday they pulled.
Danny Polishchuk
Yeah, all the 18 year olds first and then they did all the 19 year olds with the birthday and then all the 20 year olds with the birthday.
Ian Crossland
But like if you were the 365th bir birthday. Yeah. Like obviously if you're in college. But.
Tim Pool
But what? I mean like when you went to basic training on the draft, everybody the same birthday.
Ian Crossland
I guess your group probably. I could be wrong about this, but crazy. I don't, I don't know if it was by age. I think it was just if you're that birthday, you're the first up.
Danny Polishchuk
I'd love to have. It was so basically saying imagine the.
Ian Crossland
Dread if you're watching this and you.
Danny Polishchuk
Don'T want to go Canada. They were joining the. All your birthday people were saying they were gay to get out of the military back then.
Ian Crossland
That works.
Phil Labonte
That's the thing. The reason, the reason that people were doing things like joining the navy or, or trying to flee is because they knew that you get drafted and you go into the infantry.
Ian Crossland
Yeah.
Danny Polishchuk
You go in the meat grind grinder jungle into Cambodia.
Tim Pool
Yeah, here we go.
Danny Polishchuk
Until they come.
Tim Pool
24 some dudes.
Phil Labonte
Yeah, but they were secret.
Ian Crossland
Anybody's birthday called yet?
Tim Pool
April 24th you get drafted?
Ian Crossland
Anybody here's birthday called yet?
Tim Pool
Nope.
Ian Crossland
April 24th is 002 and like if.
Danny Polishchuk
You know somebody with that.
Tim Pool
So these are, are, these are individual people.
Danny Polishchuk
What will happen is they told you.
Ian Crossland
That if you're eligible to be drafted, which was I guess what all American.
Danny Polishchuk
Men 18 to 25 of a certain.
Ian Crossland
Age and then they, if you were number slot number one, you guys are like the next up.
Danny Polishchuk
It was all the 18 year old slot number 1. Then they go to slot number 2 and it was all the 18 year olds from slot number 2 birthday. Then all the 18 year olds from slot Number 3 birthday. Then when they're all done, they'd go back and be all the 19 year olds from slot number one. All the 19 year olds, yeah, they.
Tim Pool
Would repick a birthday for slot number one. Again they just keep as far as.
Danny Polishchuk
I know is the same order and then it would be. They'd go down the list again for all the 19.
Ian Crossland
I mean that's the case if you're an 18 year old you're like, oh my God, we'll be drafting br. I mean I guess they had to televise it back then but you know I could. Yeah, I, I didn't know if it was, if it was by 18.
Danny Polishchuk
December, I think they took the 18 year olds first. July 13th, December 9th, they took August.
Ian Crossland
Look at that. Is that crazy though? Family August.
Tim Pool
Would you guys if, if, if you got drafted, would you go to Nam?
Danny Polishchuk
I would have fled if I knew what they knew, what we know now. I never would have went to that Gym. I mean, I would have tried to avoid it.
Tim Pool
I mean, you know what, you know why the draft.
Danny Polishchuk
You knew by like67 why they got.
Tim Pool
Rid of the draft. It doesn't work. Oh, when they. It might work for something like your home homeland is under attack. But one of the reasons, I can't remember we actually had someone on the show was telling us about this. When they sent the troops, the conscripts to Vietnam, they would fire above the tree line and intentionally miss the, the, the Vietnamese because they didn't want to kill people. Yeah, because it was like a bunch of scared young men who never weren't trained and didn't know how to fight. So they had to change the way they were training people. And they realized, like, you need people to choose. And so I was talking to. I can't remember what's a long time ago politician that they decided economics would be the vector by which they, they bolster the, the military by money.
Ian Crossland
Yeah.
Tim Pool
They were like, bad economic conditions are good for wartime efforts. So they control the Fed, they control the interest rates, put people in a bind, crank up unemployment, offer them good jobs, and you will fill up your military.
Ian Crossland
Like, what's going on in Canada right now?
Tim Pool
Is that what they're doing?
Ian Crossland
Well, the unemployment rate's pretty high 7% in Canada right now.
Tim Pool
Drafted people.
Ian Crossland
I mean, there are, There is like. Like, it's not a lot, but there is some Canadians who are like, yeah, if Trump tries to come in here, like, and you go with what, guns?
Phil Labonte
Yeah.
Tim Pool
But like, the view of Canadians is like, in America, you've got SEAL Team 6. You know, like a helicopter flies in the middle of night, a bunch of dudes in night vision goggles jump down, and then Canadians are like, sitting there riding a moose around, drinking maple syrup.
Ian Crossland
I mean, the Canadians actually did. Did do pretty well in Afghanistan and.
Danny Polishchuk
In World War II.
Ian Crossland
In World War II. But I'm saying three largest.
Tim Pool
Is it true you guys carry a hip flask of maple syrup?
Ian Crossland
I'm not a big maple.
Phil Labonte
Yeah, you get. That was the IVs. If you get shot, they put the IV and you put it. Maple syrup.
Ian Crossland
You put it on topically on the wound.
Danny Polishchuk
Yeah, like, honey topic.
Ian Crossland
Yeah, just kind of. Just kind of.
Tim Pool
It might actually work.
Ian Crossland
Like the stuff that they put in on a boxer.
Phil Labonte
Like, if you're, if you're in the military, you know that the solution is Motrin and fresh socks no matter what happens. Whereas in. In Canada, the. The solution is rub some.
Ian Crossland
You want to know how bad the, the military Situation is in Canada.
Phil Labonte
Sure.
Ian Crossland
So they're okay in the United States. The United States has what, like 350 to 400 million people, depending on. There's 90,000 IRS agents in the United States for 300. Let's say 350 million people in Canada, the Canada Revenue Agency, which is the equivalent. There are 60,000 Canada Revenue Agent agents for 40 million people. And there are 60,000 people in the military.
Tim Pool
How. Looks like the bigger threat is tax fraud.
Ian Crossland
Yeah, but like, we have. Proportionally, we have 60,000. The US has 90,000 and a population of almost 10x.
Tim Pool
I just want to stress. Don't. It says not to put maple syrup on a wound.
Danny Polishchuk
There's a lot of sugar in it.
Ian Crossland
I don't appreciate this.
Tim Pool
Anti Canadian water. Sugar and water. So it will feed and grow bacteria. Whereas, honey, there's no water in it and it's just glucose. Oh, so it suffocates and dehydrates.
Ian Crossland
Okay.
Tim Pool
Yep. It says medical grade Manuka honey has methyl glyoxyl B pro. Which kills bacteria.
Phil Labonte
Yes.
Ian Crossland
Probie Prophet OB propaganda right here. Anti Canadian Pro B.
Tim Pool
Well, the Canadians have a strategic maple reserve. That's true.
Ian Crossland
I mean, there is a crazy. Like, there was a crazy maple heist. Maple heist? Yeah.
Danny Polishchuk
What happened?
Phil Labonte
Like.
Ian Crossland
Like something. I don't know, $30 million worth of maple syrup was stolen.
Tim Pool
Oh, what are you. What are you doing with all that maple syrup on the black market, baby? To who? Pancake?
Ian Crossland
Probably Americans, probably breakfast joints comes down in, like, a tanker and they go, oh, it's just a oil.
Phil Labonte
We got Vermont, Maine, and New Hampshire.
Danny Polishchuk
Do you think that the Canadian military is just small? Because the United States has been.
Tim Pool
Basically.
Ian Crossland
That's a part of it. They. They don't fund it. They're very demoralized. Like, for my call in show, I've had. Because I talk about the whole Canada thing a lot, like, what's going on? And I've had at least six active members of the Canadian military who are like, yeah, we already have our white flags ready if anything goes down, because we're not, like, we're not fighting for this.
Danny Polishchuk
Yeah, it sounds like they don't. There's not much.
Ian Crossland
Very demoralized. I mean, they were like, their priorities the last 10 years under Trudeau was, like, making sure that the Canadian military had tampons in the men's bathroom.
Danny Polishchuk
Dude, what is.
Ian Crossland
They have, like, three rusted. They have, like, three rusted out submarines. Like, they don't. They have no infrastructure.
Danny Polishchuk
And then Pulleyev comes in and he's like, I'll give you hope. And people are like, yeah, but we're scared of Trump, so we're gonna vote for the other guy.
Ian Crossland
Yeah. I mean, he's done, like, right now in the betting markets. Mark Carney is close to 80%, I.
Danny Polishchuk
Hear he's like a. We're looking on a form dude I don't know a lot about.
Ian Crossland
Well, he was the. He was the head of the bank of England and the bank of Canada. He did a pretty bad job with the bank of England. He did an okay job in the bank of Canada.
Phil Labonte
You know, in bed with the Chinese, too, I hear.
Ian Crossland
World Economic Forum guy.
Phil Labonte
Yeah.
Tim Pool
You know what's, what's actually pretty fascinating is that as insane as everything is right now, politically, people are totally numb.
Ian Crossland
Yeah.
Tim Pool
Completely numb to a war. Let me, let me pull up this story right here. This is from Mediaite. Supreme Court orders Trump administration to retrieve man who was mistakenly deported. This is the man that was determined by a judge to be part of the MS.13 gang. They say Abrego Garcia. The government had alleged that he was in MS.13. He did have an order for removal, but also had an order of protection. The Trump admin said that, well, he had the order for removal. That's why he got removed. But we made a mistake because we didn't realize he had this protective order stopping the deportation. Supreme Court is now saying Trump has to bring the guy back.
Ian Crossland
Yeah.
Tim Pool
Let me just stress what they're basically saying is if I was the judge, I'd be going, danny, I hereby order you to have ian give me $10.
Ian Crossland
Yeah.
Tim Pool
It's like, what? How do I do that?
Danny Polishchuk
Because he's already in an El Salvadorian prison that you're.
Tim Pool
He's an El Salvadorian in El Salvador?
Ian Crossland
Oh, yeah, yeah, he's from El Salvador.
Tim Pool
I'm pretty sure he's in El Salvador.
Ian Crossland
Or he's like, yeah, he's from.
Tim Pool
He's from El Salvador. Okay. Garcia is an El Salvadoran who was sent to El Salvador.
Ian Crossland
And so what? He had a valid asylum claim because he had an order of deportation.
Tim Pool
Order of deportation. And then they filed something and a judge put a stay on it for like five years or whatever.
Ian Crossland
Gotcha.
Tim Pool
He got deported and now they're saying, no, no, you got to bring him back. How is Trump supposed to go to a foreign country and say, give me one of your citizens? And they're going to say, why? And he's going to say, because our courts ordered him back.
Ian Crossland
He's not allowed to Be in the United States. But we're going to bring him back.
Tim Pool
Well, the courts want him back even though he's subject to deportation later on. They're going to be like, what? So hold on, are you extraditing him as per an extradition treaty? No, he's not actually accused of any crimes in the country.
Ian Crossland
Yeah.
Tim Pool
Entering illegally. For which the penalty is what? Deportation.
Ian Crossland
I'd have to do him a favor and send him to Gitmo.
Tim Pool
Well, El Salvador is not going to do it.
Ian Crossland
Yeah, Yeah. I don't know. This is again, you know, this is unchartered territory for a lot of this stuff. So they probably don't have anything in place, any mechanism in place. It's never happened before.
Tim Pool
So we're getting stories like this endlessly that are unprecedented and still news wise based on media trends, advertising. It is a typical post election year with nothing special about it.
Ian Crossland
Yeah.
Tim Pool
So the terrifying thing is people adapt to their circumstances, which is not the terrifying thing. But from this insane things happen and it's normal to people.
Ian Crossland
Yeah. Well, they made us believe that it was normal for like men to play with women's sports. So this is just the other side of that coin.
Phil Labonte
You try, you know.
Ian Crossland
Do you see the pool thing in England?
Tim Pool
Oh yeah.
Ian Crossland
Two men are championships and it's two men.
Tim Pool
Yeah. The women's pool to pool championships is two guys.
Ian Crossland
Yeah.
Tim Pool
So, you know, my point is like this is unprecedented that a president is being ordered to instruct a foreign country to give one of their citizens to us who's not committed of a crime, who's not accused of a crime in this country except for illegal entry to the country for which the penalty is deportation. So they'd send them here, we'd send them back. It makes no sense. The general media trends are as if nothing is happening.
Ian Crossland
Yeah. I mean Canada will take this guy. I know that for a fact.
Danny Polishchuk
I tell you, dude.
Ian Crossland
And it will gladly take this. Who's your Mark Carney.
Tim Pool
Oh. And he's going to win.
Ian Crossland
He's the current prime minister. He's the interim prime minister for Justin Trudeau. But he's like got a huge lead in the betting markets which.
Danny Polishchuk
Wow.
Ian Crossland
Which called the last election to a T. So I'm going to go ahead and say that he's pretty much a lock.
Tim Pool
Wow.
Ian Crossland
Yeah.
Danny Polishchuk
It was supposed to be this other.
Ian Crossland
Guy, but apparently Pierre POV Marconi was like 10% on polymarket two months ago.
Danny Polishchuk
And then pulley talk crap about Trump when he was like I'll, I'll, I'll stand up to him. And opposed to being like, yeah, work together with him. Because all these Canadians love Trump.
Ian Crossland
Gave it to him. Like, Trump gave it to Carney with this whole trade war thing, because one Poliev was doing, like, the stuff with the nicknames, you know, like, he kept making nicknames for people, and then really, like, you're just like, trump. We don't want that. We hate this guy now.
Tim Pool
Oh, wow. So Polyev was trying to do like a Trump kind of person, calling Mark.
Ian Crossland
Carney Carbon tax Carney.
Tim Pool
Well, yeah. You know, Trump would have.
Ian Crossland
I didn't say it was good.
Tim Pool
Yeah.
Ian Crossland
I just said he was doing it.
Tim Pool
Trump would have called him, like. Like Carney or a little Mark.
Danny Polishchuk
Yeah, Circus Carney.
Tim Pool
Yeah, yeah.
Danny Polishchuk
Circus Carney.
Tim Pool
Clown. Circus cloud. Cardi.
Danny Polishchuk
Speaking of being desensitized, I'm. My mind goes to the most extreme, you know, example, just for reference, but, like, the. Not the. The germans in the 30s were just decent. They did not know a lot of what was going on. They were just along for the ride. Maybe they were making a little more money because Hitler had improved the economy because of the incredible.
Ian Crossland
Were the Jews in this situation? The Canadians?
Danny Polishchuk
The Jews are the Canadians, Yeah.
Tim Pool
In this situation?
Danny Polishchuk
No, there are no. There are no Jews in this situation. In this situation. Well, I guess in this situation, maybe this El Salvadorian guy could be an example of someone that got just roped up. He got whisked.
Phil Labonte
I mean.
Ian Crossland
But also, if you were a Jew in. During German, you know, during the World War II, and they go, we're deporting you. You're probably, like, sick, right?
Tim Pool
The argument you're making is that during Germany, the Jews were trying to break into.
Ian Crossland
Jazzy Jews trying to leave. They were doing problems. They couldn't leave.
Danny Polishchuk
They were.
Tim Pool
They.
Danny Polishchuk
I don't know if they were kicking them out before in the twenties. If the third.
Ian Crossland
I think the thing is they wanted to kick him out. They couldn't. And then they were like, all right, well, then we.
Danny Polishchuk
Yeah, repopulate.
Tim Pool
That was the. That was the meme with AOC when she was like, trump's building concentration camps. And then someone made a comic where it's Auschwitz and the guard is yelling and stay out, and people are running away.
Danny Polishchuk
So, like, psycho. What do you call potential reality that won't happen because we're going to nip it in the bud right now is that we try to deport all these illegal aliens, whatever, but we can't. And then domestic violence erupts with all these illegal protester Immigrants protesting violence and then obvious.
Ian Crossland
I mean, you're asking to get deported if you're going to public protest, but.
Danny Polishchuk
Then it's like, look, we can't even get these guys out of the country. What are we going to do with them? Same with what the Nazis did with the Jews. Like, you cannot. That's some reality. I don't want to go to.
Ian Crossland
Yeah, I know. That's not going to happen.
Phil Labonte
That's not going to happen.
Ian Crossland
They're going to start gassing the legals. They're going to send.
Danny Polishchuk
Or sending them to camp.
Ian Crossland
But Trump, I mean, they're sending them to El Salvador in prison, if they're even not. I mean, that is crazy that they're like, yeah, Trump said. To a different country's prison.
Tim Pool
Trump said he would like to send the worst Americans to the El Salvador in prison as well.
Ian Crossland
Yeah, that would be crazy.
Tim Pool
Crossing the line. Yeah, no, nice.
Ian Crossland
That would be crazy.
Phil Labonte
But there's not going to be like, there's no, there's no desire.
Ian Crossland
Trump also said he wants to turn the Gaza Strip into a maragaza. Yeah, I think he says a lot of things. Really shoots from the hip.
Phil Labonte
This guy really does.
Tim Pool
Yeah.
Danny Polishchuk
What are you saying?
Phil Labonte
There's just. They're not going to like, make camps for the illegal aliens because the goal.
Ian Crossland
Right now I get like Japanese internment camps.
Phil Labonte
But the government right now is trying to institute. Because of how many people there are here that are illegal. Right. We talked about it the other night. You are not going to be able to actually deport all of them. So the goal is to make, to make it uncomfortable for them to live in the United States. And that's why you hear the phrase self deportation. That application that they, that the Biden.
Ian Crossland
Fining them $1,000 a day. Like, yeah, some luck collecting that.
Phil Labonte
Well, that's the point is. The point is they don't want to risk actually getting picked up.
Tim Pool
Right.
Phil Labonte
So if you're an illegal and they're like, oh, man, they're going to find us $1,000 a day. If I get pulled over and they pop me, they're going to take my property. Because that's what, that's one of the things that they said is we'll take your property just like the IRS would. So they'll just empty your bank account or take whatever you have. If you got, you know, you got money under your, your, your plan under your.
Ian Crossland
I mean, illegals who own property.
Phil Labonte
Yeah, absolutely. So, like, that kind of stuff will get taken away. And the point of that isn't that they're trying to collect a bunch of money. The point is to get people to self deport. Yeah, I thought that, like, I used to think that term was, was silly when I first heard of it, but then after you see what they're talking about, it's like, oh, okay. Make it uncomfortable for them to be here.
Ian Crossland
You know, I mean, there's one, there's 1.4. Like I did the math. There's 1.4. Like when Trump came in office, 1.4 million people in the United States with active deportation orders. Like, those are people who have gone through the whole system and have been ordered to leave. That's a thousand people a day for four for the entire term. Just to get those, those. Yeah, right. Like to get rid of all the illegals here. Like, the only way you can really do it is like this.
Phil Labonte
Yeah.
Ian Crossland
That kind of essentially instills this fear in them where they kind of take care of it on their own.
Phil Labonte
And the federal government should start punishing business owners that hire people that are illegal. If you're here illegally and, or if you, if you hire people that are, that are here illegally and you knowing and you know it, you should lose your, you should lose your business. Like, the, the punishment should be extremely steep. So that way they get rid of them. So it's not worth it because right now they're looking at, you know, if you can save, you know, 20, $30,000 a year on each person or even on like, you know, say you got a car wash and there's 10 dudes that work there. Right. And you can save 50 grand a year by hiring illegals to, you know, do the, to do the wipe down afterwards. Make it so it's not worth the risk. Make it, you know, take their business and it wouldn't take, I mean, their business.
Ian Crossland
In a lot of instances, their business is set up so that it would just take it anyways. But that's their problem.
Phil Labonte
Fair enough. But that, but again, that like it.
Ian Crossland
I mean, everybody in New York is like, well, if we get rid of all these illegals, who's going to wash the dishes? And you're like, okay, well, I don't know. Charge more money for food. I don't know. Yeah, competitive.
Phil Labonte
The point, like, hey, look man, if we, if we, if we, you know, you can't say we're not going to make something illegal or punish crime because there'll be problems punishing the crime. You still punish the crime in a way.
Danny Polishchuk
The illegal immigration people that are here illegally, not all of them by any stretch. But there's a segment of like low income, kind of lower class, I want to say employees, like what you're talking about, guys that wipe down the car. You don't have a lot of skills. It's kind of like the Roman Empire when they had all this slave class. And if the slaves had just been deported from Rome, the entire civilization would have fallen.
Ian Crossland
I mean, that is an argument that's, that's made is for sure. Like again, in New York City, everybody's like, you know, every restaurant, like there must be 100,000 workers. But the thing is, a lot of people who do this, like, they're only here temporarily.
Phil Labonte
Yeah.
Ian Crossland
Anyways, because their whole plan, I've like spoken to people about this who have family members who do stuff like that. Essentially their thing is they come here, the United States, they sleep like, you know, eight to a one bedroom, two bedroom apartment, they save up all this money for like seven years and then they go back to wherever they're from and they never have to work and.
Danny Polishchuk
They'Ll actually send money back in real time.
Ian Crossland
They send back they one, they send back money which is not good for the American economy to have the money just like leave. But then they take all the money they made with them, they go back to wherever they're from, and they just don't have have to work and they just work like, you know, construction or dishwashing, which is crazy to think that you could be a dishwasher in New York City for seven years and wherever you're from, you could retire on that. Whereas, like, if you're actually an American, you're like, you can't even live.
Tim Pool
Millennials can't retire. No. They have an average of 15 to 20,000 in their savings. But I guess when you compare that to the rest of the world, the, the strategy of the elite global cabal, or whatever you want to call it, played out pretty well.
Ian Crossland
Yeah.
Tim Pool
I think they, that you normalize the economy of every country and that's how you create globalism. And so the idea that you would make every country as wealthy as the US Is absurd. But it is easy to make America as poor as the rest of the countries. Yep. So after the boomers are gone, millennials, their retirement account has 15, $20,000 in it. That's not, that's not a retirement account. No, that's a, that's a rainy day fund for when your car breaks down.
Ian Crossland
Sure.
Tim Pool
Especially with inflation.
Danny Polishchuk
I, one of my, my, the main, the main quest line for me is to make sure millennials can retire. I think in this reality build a space elevator and make sure millennials can retire.
Tim Pool
Because if we can be done right.
Danny Polishchuk
Now for a tenth of the cost.
Ian Crossland
Well, I mean again all these like what Trump's doing with tariffs, like the like you know, everybody's. It's weird to see people on the left complain about the stock market go down because he's literally transferring money like 8% of Americans own, you know, whatever, 90% of all the stocks and he's transferring the money from them to the middle class. All right, what are you complaining about?
Tim Pool
Yeah, let's try this. You want how much should feel cost?
Danny Polishchuk
Oh, oh, it's a commodity. Right now I'd love to see like.
Ian Crossland
The price of it.
Danny Polishchuk
30 cents a gallon.
Phil Labonte
What do you, what do you want.
Ian Crossland
To be in Venezuela?
Danny Polishchuk
No, I'm talking about. Okay, so 30 relative of high 30 cents a gallon to petroleum.
Tim Pool
Yeah. So how much does the gas company make?
Danny Polishchuk
Well, it doesn't have to be profitable. We don't.
Tim Pool
How do they pay their staff to refine the gasoline?
Danny Polishchuk
I'm talking about hydrogen. I'm talking about hydrogen. You actually make money to produce.
Ian Crossland
We're not doing hydrogen. We have electric cars.
Tim Pool
You said 30 gallons.
Ian Crossland
Ship is.
Danny Polishchuk
I'm saying the comparate millennials of hydrogen to petroleum.
Tim Pool
We are not going to change a 120 year oil infrastructure in a matter of years for millennials to retire.
Danny Polishchuk
No, no, no.
Tim Pool
That's why this again retire.
Danny Polishchuk
I'm not talking about trillion talking about 30 cents a gallon of relative cost to hydrogen fuel. It just says make fuel cheaper. I didn't say make.
Ian Crossland
Well, there's electric cars which are.
Tim Pool
How do millennials retire? You said make fuel cheaper.
Danny Polishchuk
Yes.
Tim Pool
Okay. But hydrogen fuel, which is not a principal commodity.
Danny Polishchuk
It's. Yeah, that's my goal in life right now.
Ian Crossland
I mean I'll tell you how to make. I'll tell you how to do it is these tariffs work and then they eliminate the income tax and then a lot of people have a lot more money and drives wages up.
Tim Pool
Right. But then imported and so as long as they this would this fundamentally you'd end up with food being a lot cheaper. American property and rent should be theoretically cheaper or less. At least less buying power. But imported goods would be more expensive. So the question for all use that all you that are listening is would you mind spending $30,000 for a cell phone if your bread costs 50 cents?
Ian Crossland
I mean, no, I mean. Yeah, sorry. Yeah, yeah. Obviously most people would not want to spend $30,000 on a cell phone. But there'll be ways around that. I, I feel like, you know, the, the, a lot of the tariffs will be short term and then I, like a lot of this is punitive to China. So Apple will move there just like they move their facilities to India and Vietnam, they'll go to some low tariff country because a lot of the point of the tariffs is just to kind of ding China.
Tim Pool
So this is A report from CNN says iPhone could triple in price to 3,500 if they're made in the USA. Now theoretically, if Trump does get costs down, it would not be 3,500. If the tariffs work and the income tax works, there's competition and there's people who actually have jobs. It shouldn't be that high. But theoretically, right now, in terms of buying power, what the idea is in this new system that Trump is, building rent will be way cheaper, buying a house will be way cheaper.
Ian Crossland
Yeah.
Tim Pool
But high end electronics will be way more expensive.
Ian Crossland
Here's the thing. It's like, what's the new iPhone, the 18 or something? What are we on 16?
Tim Pool
I have no idea.
Ian Crossland
I have a 13. It's the same thing. It's barely any difference in it. New ones are on this cycle where they're like, yeah, I need a new iPhone. You like, you don't need a new iPhone every year. So if people have to not get a new iPhone every year.
Danny Polishchuk
I don't know, dude, because you were saying earlier how in six months. How AI is advanced in six months. Well, that's thing's wicked. This is the 24 Android 24.
Tim Pool
The.
Ian Crossland
What does it do?
Danny Polishchuk
It's got crazy. I haven't even investigated. You can.
Ian Crossland
So you don't do anything with it.
Danny Polishchuk
It'll find it on the Internet for you.
Tim Pool
The, the AI on the, on the, on the Galaxy Ultra. I can take a picture. I hold the stylus down. It will take the person and I can move them and then AI generate images behind them.
Danny Polishchuk
It's so powerful.
Ian Crossland
That's pretty.
Tim Pool
Like, I can take a picture of you right now and I can remove you from that chair.
Ian Crossland
Why would you take a picture of me then?
Tim Pool
To remove you from the chair.
Ian Crossland
Picture of the goddamn chair.
Danny Polishchuk
I could throw you out of here right now.
Ian Crossland
Block me.
Tim Pool
But you can. If you take a picture and there's a sign in the background.
Ian Crossland
Yeah.
Tim Pool
You can hold it down and grab the sign and remove it and it will put like bricks over it.
Ian Crossland
And I know like the whole thing with Trump is he goes, look there's going to be some short term pain for, you know, long, long term gain. So some of the short term pain is you're not going to get the phone that removes the person from the photo for a little bit. You're going to have to use the phone that doesn't remove the person.
Danny Polishchuk
It could have dramatic consequences on the domestic populations falling behind technologically in the, in the. Just the psychic race or the psychological race.
Ian Crossland
Yeah.
Danny Polishchuk
Against the Chinese citizens that have the advanced tech AI phones.
Ian Crossland
I mean, China's in a lot of trouble. They're like, their debt to GDP is like 330%. Like Trump. Trump is trying to cripple them. They have an aging population.
Danny Polishchuk
Serge just said before the show there's possible chance that they've been inflating their population numbers.
Ian Crossland
You know, lie about everything else.
Danny Polishchuk
Billion.
Ian Crossland
Yeah.
Danny Polishchuk
They've been lying about so much.
Ian Crossland
I mean, they said Covid came from a goddamn wet market.
Tim Pool
They manipulated their economy so their. The housing is worth more money so they can claim a higher net worth of citizens and leverage. Leverage that for credit and a bunch of other.
Ian Crossland
I mean, they may. They literally manipulate their currency.
Tim Pool
Right.
Ian Crossland
Everything.
Tim Pool
Well, so. So let's go back to that, that question. The reason why I brought the iPhone tripling in price is because the general idea of the shift in the economy is, fine, import things, but they'll be expensive.
Ian Crossland
Yeah.
Tim Pool
Unless they can be made here. So a lot of things may become more expensive. The government, what Trump is doing, he's gutting the government. He's dramatically reducing the budgetary requirements. At the same time, he's launching these tariffs. It looks like his strategy is eliminate the income tax, make the government very small so it can operate just off tariffs. The question I have now is if that is the play or if not, or whatever, what can be done either in. I suppose my question is, is that what is going to make it so millennials can retire or is there something else that we can do so that millennials. So that we can change this? We're talking about 20 years.
Ian Crossland
Yeah. I mean, there is an element too with the iPhone stuff where robotics will come in and just. They're not going to be people assembling iPhones, period. Like, it'll just be robots in five years.
Tim Pool
Oh, dude.
Phil Labonte
Especially five years.
Tim Pool
Optimus.
Ian Crossland
Right.
Tim Pool
Atlas.
Ian Crossland
So it like the robo people. This might be kind of moot point regardless because we know we won't need Chinese or American people to assemble.
Tim Pool
Has anyone stopped to consider what Elon Musk is doing?
Danny Polishchuk
He's sending Robots to Mars next year.
Tim Pool
I think that's incorrect.
Danny Polishchuk
Sending Optimus.
Tim Pool
I'm going to clarify this. Oh, good. Thanks, Elon Musk is inventing neural link so that you can upload your brain to the robot and you can go to Mars.
Danny Polishchuk
Oh, dude, you're speaking my language now.
Tim Pool
Elon buys X for access to the data stream. We call it the fire hose. He has the best, best stream of human consciousness for programming.
Ian Crossland
And the worst. And the absolute worst.
Tim Pool
Well, it's every.
Ian Crossland
It's all of it. I know.
Tim Pool
It's all of us.
Danny Polishchuk
Everybody needs a sewage system.
Tim Pool
This is the best training model. Training data for a large language model to create these AI programs he's working on Optimus, Space travel and Neuralink. All of this aligns with uploading your brain to the machine and you going to other.
Danny Polishchuk
Or it'll be like a surrogate machine that people can like, timeshare and we'll all be able to. I'll get it from 6 to 7 tomorrow. You'll get it from 7 to 8, and then we'll port my consciousness into it and I'll be on Mars and then I'll be back and you can go in and be. Use the same robot.
Tim Pool
It's going to be like.
Danny Polishchuk
Be able to use the same robot at the same time.
Tim Pool
What's that? What's that? Altered Carbon. Was that the name of the show?
Ian Crossland
Yeah.
Tim Pool
Where you can download your brain into, like a chip in your neck and then take it out and upload it to a different body. Because at first, that's where they're going with Neuralink.
Danny Polishchuk
At first it's just going to be. You'll be in the robots. You'll just be like in a movie where you turn and the robot will turn. Maybe, but. But then eventually, yes, of course, you'll be. You'll. I don't know. Will it have sensors on it where you can actually feel touch?
Tim Pool
Yes.
Danny Polishchuk
Things like that.
Ian Crossland
Yeah.
Tim Pool
And they're gonna put. They're gonna put. They're gonna look like people. They're not gonna be these weird robot drone things. They're gonna put skins and stuff on them.
Danny Polishchuk
They'll be able to walk on the surface.
Tim Pool
Dude, it's. Yep. And they're. And. And the argument is Mars is minus 44. How do humans operate there? I do think there's a lot of things they're gonna do with AI. They can literally drop a bunch of robots on Mars and say, figure it out.
Phil Labonte
Yeah, that's the goal.
Tim Pool
And then the robots are going to be like, you got a boss and.
Danny Polishchuk
A bunch of Nikon.
Tim Pool
Yeah, there's nothing.
Ian Crossland
Start building.
Danny Polishchuk
Yeah, they're going to start. You got to plant a bunch of radishes first. I call. I keep thinking daikon. They're like, what do we call the first city on Mars?
Tim Pool
You got to build giant biospheres.
Danny Polishchuk
Yeah, I think we can. If we plant.
Ian Crossland
We don't. We don't want all the icon radishes.
Danny Polishchuk
Only at first because it breaks up the soil and it'll aerate the soil. And then we can talk about Soviet.
Ian Crossland
Destruction dystopia where all we eat is radishes.
Tim Pool
But. But the soil is not organic matter. So there's going to be things missing from it.
Danny Polishchuk
Yeah. Introduce stuff slowly.
Ian Crossland
Right.
Tim Pool
You need organic compounds so that you.
Ian Crossland
Can grow the plants need a landfill.
Danny Polishchuk
You're going to need. It eats itself and can grow new daikon.
Tim Pool
We're going to need. We're going to need a bacteria that consumes iron and can and can survive at cold temperatures to spam blast that plant with bacteria. Because you're going to need to create an organic layer for. For higher life forms like plants to grow out of. They're have to build biospheres so that life can exist as it. As it grows and expands. But I don't know how this helps millennials retire. I'm going to tell you this.
Danny Polishchuk
They have more space to move.
Tim Pool
Millennials are going to retire by property's cheap on Mars. You're going to live in the pod. Plug your brain into the VR and you're going to live in a fake world where you're Spider Man.
Ian Crossland
There's a. Sucks.
Danny Polishchuk
Maybe there's a board game called Terraforming Mars that actually we have it. It's great. It's. It's a bunch of corporations that are in a race to terraform the planet first. And you're one of those corporations.
Tim Pool
Elon's going to climb it. He's going to land there. He's going to put a flag on the Tesla flag.
Ian Crossland
That'll.
Tim Pool
How does that work?
Ian Crossland
Trigger some people, trigger some protesters.
Tim Pool
I actually, I own Mars now. And, you know, it's. It's mine.
Danny Polishchuk
Like, it's a corporation. It's his corporation. So does a corporation now? Is it become a country? Is he going to build his own country on the planet?
Tim Pool
It's like the East India Trading Company. It's an organization with a hierarchical government.
Danny Polishchuk
Yeah, it really was. It was like a government. It was a corporation that was like the most powerful government on Earth.
Tim Pool
Yeah.
Danny Polishchuk
Relative One of them.
Tim Pool
They killed 50,000 people for black pepper.
Danny Polishchuk
They colonized India.
Ian Crossland
Black pepper.
Tim Pool
That's. You can't do it.
Ian Crossland
Inedible.
Tim Pool
So I totally understand why the East India Trading Company had to kill all those people.
Danny Polishchuk
So we'll start with. I don't like the idea of starting with a corporation as our government, but, you know, maybe that's just the only.
Ian Crossland
I mean, maybe there'll be some US government tie in.
Tim Pool
Can we just mention how good it is in this world that there was a period where men would board a massive warship and be. And the captain would be like men. Today we set sail on a 12, you know, like a 16 month journey. And we will come back with pepper.
Ian Crossland
Yeah. Having like a dysentery and dying.
Tim Pool
Dying. And they're like encountering wild animals and there's storms and they barely make it back. And the king is like, you have done great things for our nation. And today it's on every table at every diner and nobody touches it.
Danny Polishchuk
I was, I just made a video about deconstruction versus destruction of government and how if you destroy a government when chaos ensues. The thing that I think that people don't consider that should be is the how the supply chain just completely evaporates when. When chaos erupts. This episode is brought to you by Lifelock. It's tax season and we're all a bit tired of numbers, but here's one you need to hear. $16.5 billion. That's how much the IRS flagged for possible identity fraud last year. Now here's a good number. 100 million. That's how many data points LifeLock monitors every second. If your identity is stolen, they'll fix it, guaranteed. Save up to 40% your first year@lifelock.com podcast terms apply. Like you think all that food, all that stuff that, that is so delicate to maintain the ability to access black pepper.
Ian Crossland
Yeah.
Danny Polishchuk
So it's super important that we don't destroy our government, that we do deconstruct it and reconstruct it.
Tim Pool
I agree.
Ian Crossland
Let's not destroy our government.
Tim Pool
You know what? You know where I think we're going? I think we're going the way of ancient Rome, as I'm not the first to speculate, but when Rome collapsed, we got the Dark Ages. People forgot how to, how to take a dump in a toilet.
Ian Crossland
Yeah.
Tim Pool
They just started throwing it out the window. They were like, well, you know, how do you forget this stuff? How do you lose technology like that?
Danny Polishchuk
I guess they. It was written down and on paper. And they got invaded, and the paper got destroyed. Maybe the. Maybe the historical records were destroyed.
Ian Crossland
You pass that along just verbally.
Tim Pool
You know what's even crazier is that the language morphed into a bunch of different languages.
Danny Polishchuk
Yeah, from Latin. Latin was the original. When Rome collapsed, French and Spanish.
Tim Pool
Everybody started speaking something else.
Ian Crossland
Yeah, maybe.
Danny Polishchuk
I think about data storage. You can store data in glass, in orbit. We could store our data in orbit. So if something were to happen on the surface, like a nuclear.
Ian Crossland
But we're not going to know how to get it back.
Tim Pool
Have you seen the movie?
Danny Polishchuk
They don't have to figure that out.
Ian Crossland
They'd be like, yo, it's up. There you go. Yeah, good.
Tim Pool
Have you seen the movie Moonfall?
Ian Crossland
No.
Danny Polishchuk
No.
Tim Pool
The movie starts as being about the moon is falling, and then you're like, okay. And then they're like, the moon's gonna crash into Earth and everyone's gonna die. Then it turns out way later in the movie that the moon was a terraforming base that created the Earth as a colony for humans. And then I think it was something like the humans from the space station had come down to Earth, and their ship got damaged, and they couldn't get back. And so that was just the end of all of human civilization at that moment. Something like that.
Ian Crossland
Yeah.
Tim Pool
So, like, apparently in the movie, they had this great civilization that built a bunch of these. These terraforming machines that would go out and build planets that humans could colonize. But the humans created an AI that thought humans were a threat and wiped them all out. One group of humans escaped on one of the terraforming machines and hid the. The AI went and destroyed all of the other bases, and then this one created the Earth. And then somehow they got detached from the space station, landed on Earth, and they're looking up at it being like, there's all of the knowledge of everything. Our race is created. We have no way to get to it. So they tell stories to their kids, but after 100 years, they're cavemen with fires and sticks.
Ian Crossland
It's like the mud flood.
Phil Labonte
It's possible.
Danny Polishchuk
All right.
Ian Crossland
That's like the mud flood. They had all this technology and then. Only takes 100 years or something.
Danny Polishchuk
Oh, man. I think that's what happened with Atlantis. When that flood covered, they were storing it in the capital, and they were hoarding it in the capital. When it got flooded, it was all.
Ian Crossland
I mean, if you had a hard drive with all the information in the world and 100 years, that thing would.
Tim Pool
Literally disintegrate yeah, well, I mean, buried underground.
Ian Crossland
But even if it wasn't buried, it's just like the elements, right? Destroy it.
Tim Pool
What if Noah's ark is real and the actual story was there was a great civilization, there was Atlantis, and a flood wiped it out and destroyed all of civilization. A massive flood. And the reason why I think it's mud is because after floods, the sediment sets and it leaves behind thick mud. And then. And that was like 12,000 years ago or something.
Danny Polishchuk
Yeah, you know, Yeah, I think that is what. That's the evidence from the young.
Ian Crossland
And there was a podcast 12, 000 years ago and they were talking about the same stuff.
Tim Pool
And there was this dude named Noah and he was like, guys, the flood is gonna happen. I'm building a boat. And they're like, you're crazy.
Danny Polishchuk
I believe it was two floods too, which is interesting. There was 800 years apart because we're in this torrid meteor stream. And if something happened to the Earth's magnetic field, these meteors, I don't know if it did or not, but some meteors fell. So we're in the meteor stream right now and people are concerned like, you know, of the potential of another cataclysm like that every.
Ian Crossland
I mean, it's only a matter of time before something happens.
Danny Polishchuk
My question is, how long do you think would take to terraform Mars? Do you guys think about it much? I think about it a lot.
Phil Labonte
I just would take. Well, I mean, you'd have thousand years. Yeah, I mean, it doesn't have the same kind of mass as the, as the Earth does.
Tim Pool
Right.
Phil Labonte
Like you have significantly less gravity. And that's part of why Mars doesn't have a thing.
Ian Crossland
I mean, what's the capacity of the largest rocket that could get to Mars? And doesn't it take nine starshipers?
Phil Labonte
Starship, which is like, like, like two or something like that. Two years or something.
Ian Crossland
Okay, so it takes two years to get to Mars. Like, you know, assuming you need cement to build stuff. How much cement can you get in one go?
Phil Labonte
If I understand correctly, like the musk is planning on sending at the end of next year. He's planning on sending Starship. Hopefully he's hoping for Starship and a bunch of Optimus robots that have AI So that way they're, they're not reliant on commands from Earth because it's like a four minute delay between the Earth and Mars. So he's gonna. And one of the other things that he said is he, there's got to be Processes that can be utilized on Mars. Because moving things, like moving machinery and stuff to make machinery is one thing, but like moving materials.
Ian Crossland
Yeah, like, how do you get the materials?
Phil Labonte
Well, moving it from Earth to there is a real pain in the.
Ian Crossland
Yeah, that's what I'm saying.
Phil Labonte
He was talking about. I think he was talking about. Actually, I'm not, I don't know, like.
Danny Polishchuk
Mining, Setting up a mining facility or something.
Phil Labonte
I don't know. I don't know Exactly. He was saying that. No, he was saying the processes have to be on Mars.
Ian Crossland
Yeah.
Phil Labonte
So I don't know if he was talking about using nuclear or what the deal was.
Ian Crossland
I mean, that's the thing. We use all the resources that are on Earth. So if they have limited resources there, that means we need to get them from here. Or you have to. Assuming it's even possible to plant trees on Mars, you're like, how long?
Phil Labonte
Well, no, I mean, they're gonna. When it comes to like, food and stuff like that will obviously bring it. And you, you'll, you'll be doing stuff first in like, biodomes. So like the biodome they did here on, on Earth, that's the first thing. It'd be bio domes and underground and.
Danny Polishchuk
Then seed bombing, which is where they'll retrofit planes or drones or something to drop like literally billions of seeds per day.
Phil Labonte
Thousands of years. It'll be a thousand years before you could do that on the surface.
Danny Polishchuk
The thing about time is it, it's motion. So if you, if you do things, if you do things faster, it takes less time.
Phil Labonte
If you look at like, yes.
Danny Polishchuk
Like it might take you, if you have an hour of work. If you, if you think, if you read it twice as fast, it only takes you a half hour.
Phil Labonte
It's.
Ian Crossland
You can. It takes two years to get the same with erosion.
Tim Pool
Right. And this is the advice I usually give people when they say, hey, I'm coming over. I'm an hour away. I say if you go 100 miles an hour, you'll be in a half an hour.
Danny Polishchuk
And if you have two drones instead of one, it's going to take 50% of the time.
Phil Labonte
You're not going to be doing any kind of planting on Mars for a long time. But the, the reason that he bought the.
Ian Crossland
That is even possible.
Phil Labonte
Yeah, exactly. But like, well, right now it's not at all. Nothing, like, nothing's going to grow on the Martian soil.
Ian Crossland
Nothing grows there.
Phil Labonte
But the reason that he bought Boring, the Boring Company and started the Boring Company is because he wants to be able to build things underground.
Tim Pool
Right.
Phil Labonte
The point is, because there is radiation that you have to worry about on Mars. They don't. It doesn't have the same magnetosphere. So it doesn't. It gets way more cosmic radiation.
Ian Crossland
I do not. After this conversation. I do not want to live on Mars.
Phil Labonte
I don't want to live on Mars.
Danny Polishchuk
Maybe we'll be planting fungus then underground.
Ian Crossland
I really do not want to live.
Danny Polishchuk
On Mars because they always say mushrooms will save the world. Lot of people think that. And do they say that you can like feed bees mushroom tea? Paul Stamets, the leading mycologist on the planet, you can feed bees mushroom tea and help them heal from like neonicotinoid pesticide poisoning and stuff. So like, maybe that's. That will be our first crop is fungus underground in the tunnels.
Tim Pool
But I me. But let's jump to this next story from the Daily Mail, which is worse. AI powered shoplifting, crackdown. Minority Report is real. Do you guys remember in Minority Report when he, he steals the eyeball and then he goes into the mall and it's like, hello, Mr. Chen. And it shows a picture of like an Asian guy.
Ian Crossland
Yeah.
Tim Pool
It scanned his eye.
Ian Crossland
Remember Demolition man where he takes out the guy's eyeball?
Phil Labonte
Yeah.
Ian Crossland
Pulls it out so you can get in the room.
Tim Pool
Yeah. Right.
Phil Labonte
So new eyes in.
Tim Pool
In already in Britain, you're using AI technologies to scan your face, determine your age, and to stop you from shoplifting and doing all these other things. Now, I know for a lot of people they're going to be like, good, don't shoplift. But I don't know if people are going to be too happy to live in a world. You know, actually, I take this back. Everyone will be very, very happy to live in this world. They will accept it in two seconds. Right now we can sit here and be like, dude, I don't know, man. Cameras scanning your face everywhere you go. Sounds like a night whole food.
Phil Labonte
Sounds like you're the phone.
Ian Crossland
Hey. With your palm.
Tim Pool
Except right now, I don't know about what you guys do up in Canada, but here you live in Canada here. Yes. But you're a Canadian.
Ian Crossland
True.
Tim Pool
Right now, in the United States, every single person listening was. Well, maybe not every single person listening. The overwhelming amount of people listening were born and given a government serial number. And if you went back 100 years and said they are going to require everyone to register with a number with the government, they'd say, you're nuts. We would never do. That's insane. And then now it's normal. You have to do it. So when they, they start rolling out these.
Ian Crossland
Put all our numbers in a book.
Tim Pool
Remember when Amazon rolled out that store where you didn't have to do anything? You just grab whatever you want and leave?
Ian Crossland
Yeah.
Tim Pool
That's the, that's the trial balloon. We're gonna live in a society where you will never escape. There will be no cash. It will be credits. And if you want things, you have to get approval. And people talk about how when we go digital with like, with the central bank, digital currency, you're gonna go into the store and you're gonna try and boop. Your phone and it's gonna say denied. You're banned for hate speech. It's gonna be worse than that. You're not gonna be able to walk into the store. You're gonna walk up to the store. It's gonna be like, I'm sorry, Mr. Polishchuk, your comedy was deemed offensive. You have a 24 hour suspension. From the grocery store.
Ian Crossland
From the grocery store. Yeah. You shouldn't talk smack about us.
Tim Pool
That's right.
Ian Crossland
Yeah. Yeah. I mean, that's, that's pretty crazy that technology exists now.
Tim Pool
I mean, that's the thing.
Ian Crossland
When they, when they went to self checkout and then the first thing they did was everybody did was self checkout is like. Everybody's like, oh, so just. Everybody just steals. They're like, okay. They're like, that's not good.
Danny Polishchuk
And they were like, the money they saved on employees, they just covered the cost of the thing.
Tim Pool
And now here's where it gets dystopian. There was a story where a lady was leaving with her groceries and she had like 100 and something dollars, the groceries. And someone stopped her and found that there was one small item that she didn't pay for.
Ian Crossland
She was Canadian. She got deported, I believe.
Tim Pool
Is that what happened?
Ian Crossland
I think, I think, I think she was like this wrestling coach or something.
Tim Pool
But this is where she was like, oh, I, I was an accident, I guess.
Ian Crossland
Yeah. She goes, it was an accident. I don't know if it was or was not an accident. I can't believe that. But she literally, like they were saying she was going to get her visa revoked.
Tim Pool
Yeah.
Ian Crossland
And have to go back to Canada because she got like, she had a, you know, took something from Walmart.
Tim Pool
So doesn't say to me, I don't. So they've charged people with shoplifting because they'll go to the self checkout and intentionally not scan something. But people are so dumb. They'll take like, like a $10 item and a $3 item, and they'll put them together and scan the cheap one and put them both in. It's like, bro, we can watch you do that.
Ian Crossland
Sure.
Tim Pool
Apparently, like, but I mean, like, when.
Ian Crossland
You go to somewhere that actually, like, they, you know, do it the old way and they do your groceries, like, there's some times when they miss a thing or they charge you.
Tim Pool
What I'm saying, hailing. Take an item. If you take an item and you run it over the scanner and it doesn't beep and you don't notice, how can you charge them with shoplifting for that? But they are. And my attitude is like, dude, I'm. I. I wasn't trained or paid to work. I don't know what's going on.
Ian Crossland
Yeah, bring back the.
Tim Pool
But they will arrest you. And they're going to say, we don't care. That's where it gets dystopian.
Ian Crossland
They'll send you to El Salvador.
Tim Pool
Well, I don't know about Sal.
Ian Crossland
Well, that's up next.
Tim Pool
Oh, yeah, wait.
Ian Crossland
Wait till someone's like, what are you in for? It's like, I'm Ms. 13, I took a banana.
Tim Pool
I'm a gay hairdresser with. You know.
Ian Crossland
Yeah.
Tim Pool
But people are getting arrested and many of them are saying, like, I don't know why I didn't scan. Yeah, I didn't realize. Sorry.
Ian Crossland
I'm not trained on this.
Tim Pool
Right.
Danny Polishchuk
In regards to this crap. I. I am vehemently against scanning your eyeballs to get access to things and giving your DNA to corporations and things.
Ian Crossland
I mean, if you walk through. If you walk through an airport in America right now, like, I know a lot of this stuff right now. Going through an airport is a lot of. It is show with, like, them scanning your passport because they've already scanned your face. Like, if you think you're getting through.
Danny Polishchuk
Scan my face for the first time at the airport. Well, I'd scanned it recently more than. More times than I'd like. Got the real id. I'm like, what?
Ian Crossland
But I'm tracking. Like, when they take your photo at tsa, like, they go, oh, we delete your photo. And you don't have to do this. But, like, they're scanning your face. And so regardless, when you're in the.
Danny Polishchuk
Airport, I. I'm just. I've got a. A repulsion to this. This in integrating society.
Ian Crossland
That's the option.
Danny Polishchuk
It makes me think of people turning into the boar again. It makes me. But I won't check out. I'm going to Stick with it. But the thing is, like you were saying, kids, little people, young people, that whatever is the real technology of the day, that's. They're used to it. That's what is real and that's what is accepted. Like my Social Security number, I never questioned it.
Tim Pool
These kids are going to grow up. So you said you shouldn't scan your eyes. You don't have a choice. You don't have a choice to scan your eyeballs. When you walk in, it scans your eyeballs.
Ian Crossland
Yeah.
Tim Pool
When, when you walk up to the cash register, it scans your face. When, now when you go to the airport, they, they take a picture of your face. You don't, you don't use plane tickets anymore.
Ian Crossland
Yeah.
Tim Pool
You walk up and they say, stand right there and they take a picture of you.
Ian Crossland
Yeah. And then. Yeah.
Tim Pool
And you, like, stick your ID in a machine and then it scans your face.
Phil Labonte
Yeah.
Ian Crossland
And then their IDs probably a formality now. They're not going to need that.
Tim Pool
They're going to say, wouldn't you rather just. Wouldn't you rather have no security? You can just walk into the airport, walk with the plane, board your plane and go. You'll always be safe with these cameras scanning your face everywhere you go. We can keep the bad guys out, man.
Danny Polishchuk
Someone made that thing.
Ian Crossland
This is my smoke on planes again.
Danny Polishchuk
And I'm, I'm like, I've just, just. Law and chaos is not the same thing as good and evil. If you have evil law, you need corruption to stop that evil system.
Tim Pool
It's not corruption.
Danny Polishchuk
Neo was corruption in the Matrix, and that was a good thing because that Matrix was a lawful evil system.
Tim Pool
I got to, I got to stop you there. Neo was not the corruption in the Matrix. He was the purpose of the Matrix.
Danny Polishchuk
Well, he became it.
Tim Pool
No, he didn't.
Danny Polishchuk
And the good people agreed with you, but the Matrix itself saw him as a virus.
Tim Pool
That's not true.
Danny Polishchuk
Yeah, he was.
Tim Pool
Have you seen the movies? They explained that there's been multiple iterations of Neo. He's a needed machine to help cleanse the system every, Every few generations.
Danny Polishchuk
I saw the first one, and in the first one, he was. He was corrupting that system. So corruption is not bad. Always. Sometimes.
Tim Pool
Usually it is, but he wasn't. As they explain in the later movies, there's a cycle of generations of humans that reject the Matrix and they have to routinely purge them. And so the One is born every, like, seven generations to lead the humans to their demise in the war so that it resets and then people are put back in the Matrix and then people start getting purged from the Matrix.
Danny Polishchuk
Yeah, Sounds like retconning the thing. Well, they're all interrupted.
Ian Crossland
It's an allegory for trans people. Apparently it was actual what they said after the fact.
Phil Labonte
Remember they did the first one. They made a boatload of money. Then they did all the ketamine they could for a long time. And then they did the second and.
Tim Pool
Third and they did a fourth one which was actually very patriarchal and weird. So the first movie they said was about being trans. And that's why at the end it says system failure. And it comes past the camera and it said see the M and the F? And you go between it. And I'm like, whatever, dude.
Phil Labonte
I don't believe it.
Tim Pool
So. But whatever, dude. Oh, the movie doesn't end. There's no end of the first movie. He doesn't. Nobody breaks out of the Matrix. The Matrix isn't solved. He just flies away.
Danny Polishchuk
Just becomes like superhero.
Tim Pool
So the point of the story was that Neo was every seven. Like every seven generations. The one was an intentional creation genetically to basically lead humans to war, which they would get destroyed in and wipe them out. However, the fourth movie they made 20 years later with Keanu Reeves was actually much more based. What's the. What's the name of the female actress? Karen Moss. Gary and Moss and. And Keanu are in these pods in the Matrix because the Matrix needs. Needs a matriarch and a patriarch to function properly. And if at any point there is no Matrix, they said the Matrix was failing after a certain number of tries because they realized you need a mother and a father. And I'm like, that was kind of based. Yeah, that was the opposite of their original.
Danny Polishchuk
You know, more than. I never saw the franchise. I only saw the first movie. So you obviously know more about it. So I'll make a bit different metaphor. It's just certain systems. So if you have a system that's on total lockdown, it's completely impregnable. And it's very evil system. You need to corrupt that system to break that evil cycle. And so it's the same thing with totalitarian security.
Ian Crossland
That's why people steal from these self checkouts. It's like a form of protest.
Danny Polishchuk
Subconscious.
Ian Crossland
I don't think it's subconscious. There's a lot of people who are not doing it subconsciously. I think it's wrong you for making me do this.
Tim Pool
I think they want free stuff.
Ian Crossland
That too.
Tim Pool
I mean, that's probably not. They tell themselves when the Amazon store first opened in Seattle, I knew right away. I was like, I can easily take whatever I want from the store.
Ian Crossland
Yeah.
Tim Pool
So I flew there and I did. And. And I called them up and explained. We made. I made a video breaking it down. They reached out to me and they were like, how did you do this? And I talked to them and I explained how I did it, and they went, oh, that's all you did? And I don't know if I ever explained exactly what I did. I may have, but I was like, I probably shouldn't explain because these things are popping up in airports now where you walk and grab stuff and walk out. Yeah.
Ian Crossland
They haven't met Madison Square Garden. I was just there.
Tim Pool
And it's actually insanely easy to steal from and get away with it.
Ian Crossland
Yeah.
Tim Pool
I'm not gonna explain how, but you'll.
Ian Crossland
Do it on the. You'll do it on the after show. Sign up, everybody.
Tim Pool
Yeah, I'll do it on the after show. I don't know. I guess I'll do on the after show and we'll explain. It's not complicated at all. And it's like magic. When you do a magic trick, people are all impressed, but the moment you tell them how it's done, they go, oh, it's like. That was actually pretty dumb. It's like, yeah, it's never as fun as you think. So taking whatever you want out of these places is insanely easy. And you'll get away with it.
Ian Crossland
I mean, stealing from. Like, I live in New York City, where every Walgreens, like, you know, every shampoo is locked up because you can just walk again if you are so inclined. You could just walk into a CVS and just grab whatever you want. Walk out.
Tim Pool
They told me the amount of money they save by not having staff. Yeah, they don't care about.
Ian Crossland
Exactly. They. They balance it out and they go, yeah, we'd rather.
Tim Pool
But this. The crime we're seeing now in all these cities. They're going out of business.
Ian Crossland
Yeah.
Tim Pool
Yeah.
Ian Crossland
Well, I don't know about the CBS.
Tim Pool
And stuff, but I think the plan of the Democrats. So. So here. Here's a hypothesis that I have. I don't know that it's true or whatever. Trump was not supposed to win in 2016. There was supposed to be an economic downturn that was going to lead to angry people with low incomes, but it was normalizing US Standard of living with other parts of the world. Because they want you in order to globalize, you need everybody to be sort of on A level playing field. Not necessarily completely, but to a certain degree, Trump wins and he holds back that effort. So then we got Covid where they said shut the whole thing down.
Danny Polishchuk
Yeah.
Tim Pool
And they forced the collapse like it was four years that was supposed to be slowly going downward was stopped by Trump. And then right when 2020, they went boom.
Ian Crossland
Sure.
Tim Pool
They just dropped.
Ian Crossland
Well, you know, the last time. Well, not the last time because there's only been one Covid, but. But it followed a crazy trade tariff dispute with China and not saying anything's going to come up.
Tim Pool
And then, so, and then what happens now is Trump again is not supposed to win this time around. I think that the plan of those in power has long been to drop the US Economy way down for a couple of reasons. One, there's the Thucydides trap argument that whenever there's a rising economic power about to supplant the dominant power, war tends to break out. So to avoid this, they say kneecap the United States so that it can't wage war against China when China takes over, because it's going to in like 10 years or whatever. The other idea is that drop the standard of living down in America so that it normalizes with other nations and we can have one world governance separating off basically the US Military apparatus as an independent international arm which can globally police or whatever. Whatever's happening now, Trump is reversing course at a million miles an hour.
Danny Polishchuk
Yeah, I think it started in Roughly, well, maybe 9, 11, but way before the transfer. It has been around for a long time.
Tim Pool
Liberal economic order's plan was normalizing global economics, controlling the finances of other nations to prevent war, as they described it, just world domination.
Danny Polishchuk
And then this whatever thing happened, it was like they were on like a 20 year plan. This is what I was listening to earlier. It's like Chase Hughes again was doing this great interview and they were saying he thinks that they were doing a 20 year plan to really get the global governance in place. And then Trump appears this, this deep nationalist fervor in the United States to protect our way of life. And they just rushed the plan in five years through the COVID thing. And I didn't even call it, I didn't even want to call it a pandemic because it was just so disgross the way that thing was handled. And they, everyone, people saw it in plain sight what they were trying to do, make people say words like compelled speech. They were trying to make people take medicine, like to keep their job. And they're like, what are we being forced into this isn't right. It doesn't feel right. It's definitely not our American way of life. And then the people revolted. And that's where we're at right now.
Ian Crossland
I mean, you say the people revolted, but most people were pretty happy to go along with it.
Danny Polishchuk
Trump not enough to make it.
Tim Pool
Trump needs a media play. I don't know how he does it, and I don't know if they're paying attention to it, but the decentralization of media is very, very bad. So maybe Truth Social was that play didn't really work. Maybe Elon with X is that play because X actually is a pretty dominant space. But even with an X, everybody's following their own spheres of influence. This means that there's going to be people who think dinosaurs are alive and are super intelligent. There's going to be people who think that we should support Ukraine, we shouldn't support Ukraine. There's not going to be a unified, cohesive American message and culture. That was accomplished through mass media. Everybody got their news from one of three channels and they trusted it. I'm not saying it's a good thing, but it created. Right. And so then people were largely unified. And so in. It's much easier to run a country when people largely agree politically with each other. Now you're gonna have a flat Earther show up and debate a donut Earther who debates, you know, around hollow Earth. A geocentrist toroid Earther, too. There are hollow Earthers?
Danny Polishchuk
Yeah.
Ian Crossland
Hollow Earthers.
Tim Pool
Yeah.
Ian Crossland
Yeah.
Tim Pool
I think Earth is flat and hollow.
Ian Crossland
It's a donut donut.
Danny Polishchuk
There's so many kids.
Ian Crossland
Sounds delicious.
Tim Pool
I. They're actually done at Earthers.
Ian Crossland
Really?
Tim Pool
Yeah. Probably not really, though. But there's an image that someone made about it.
Ian Crossland
They have to, like, separate themselves from the kooky flat Earthers.
Tim Pool
They're like, y'all are dumb, apparently. Yep.
Phil Labonte
Like, according to, like, the laws of physics.
Tim Pool
Here you go.
Phil Labonte
There could be a donut plant shaped planet.
Ian Crossland
Oh, there we go.
Danny Polishchuk
So awesome.
Tim Pool
Apparently, some people believe the Earth is shaped like a donut. If that were true, when you stood in Africa, you'd look, you'd look straight and you'd see, or you'd look up and you would see.
Danny Polishchuk
I think that's the shape of the universe. And it's a Taurus wrapping around on itself. Like the Big Bang is when it goes through the middle and then. Or a big crunch and then it comes out the other side as a bang and then wraps around, crunches again. This is what Douglas Murray and Dave Smith were talking about, the decentralization of media and how you'll get. One guy will get a platform and say, the Earth is a donut, and then he'll have 10 million views of people. And all of a sudden you want to talk about power, like the power to change people's minds.
Tim Pool
Let's talk about that. You guys see the Dave Smith, Douglas Murray debate?
Ian Crossland
The first half. I watched the first.
Tim Pool
I think. I think Dave Smith handily trounced Douglas Murray. What say you, gents?
Danny Polishchuk
Man, I only caught 15 or 20 minutes of it. The first 20 minutes of it. And it was basically Douglas Murray saying, look, I'm. I don't. What I don't like is people coming in saying the most ridiculous stuff. The Earth is a donut. He didn't say that. I'm saying that. But ridiculous stuff. And then when people call him on it, and I'm going to call out Bill Burr for this, because he went on the View and was talking about, like, yay, Luigi. And then when they ask him about, he's like, I'm just a comedian. Don't look at me. I'm just, dude, you went on national. I don't care. You can hide behind your credentials, bro. You said it. Get behind it now. It's the same with this. You can't just say crap and then plead like, I'm. No, no, leave me alone. Look at my badge. It says comedian on it.
Tim Pool
David going, I'm just a comedian, man.
Danny Polishchuk
Yeah, and Dave does do that. Dave, you're one of my best friends. I fucking love you, man. But I don't like that tactic. I don't like that tactic. You're a human first, and the things you say are responsible for that.
Tim Pool
But the reason I disagree with that is that Dave is not deflecting. Oh, no, I'm wrong. Now I better say I'm a comedian. Now I'm going to claim to be. Right. He's saying, like, the point is, I am a regular person who is concerned about the things that I have seen, and you're asking me to get into the intricacies of something that is not. Not pertinent to what the principle.
Ian Crossland
Yeah. I mean, Douglas, words is essentially like, you know, you don't need to have an opinion about everything kind of if you're not an expert and you're like, we're literally all in the opinion business. Like, that is the business world.
Tim Pool
Like, with all due respect to Douglas Murray, because, you know, I met him.
Ian Crossland
Recently, I like Douglas Murray? Yeah, I like both. I mean, I know both of them.
Tim Pool
He said, he's like, have you ever been to the, the checkpoints or whatever at Gaza? And he's like, no. And he's like, really? When was the last time you were in Israel? And Dave's like, I've never gone. He goes, really? You, You've never been? Never? And Dave's like, no. Am I not allowed to talk about it now? Like, have you ever been to Nazi Germany? And then Douglas Murray, I think, makes a very, very awful point when he says, well, I mean, I make it a point not to talk about a country lest I've been there. And I'm like, come on, dude, you're convincing nobody.
Ian Crossland
He's British. He doesn't understand the ethos of American.
Tim Pool
I've never been to Afghanistan and I'm going to complain about what the US did in Afghanistan. I've never been to Iraq. And I'm going to complain like it's silly that he's like, you should go. Dave is entirely allowed to talk about Israel, Palestine, what's happening to the Palestinians without having been there. That's silly.
Ian Crossland
Yeah.
Tim Pool
So the issue I largely take with Douglas Murray's position in the debate was it was very much. It was very dry, overt talking point. We hear of, like, appeal to authority. Like, if you've not been there, you can't talk and you're not the experts. It's anybody saying whatever they want and you know, like, you don't know what you're talking about here. Whereas Dave is like, I'm a regular guy who lives in this country and is upset at what is happening in this country pertaining to our taxes, our involvement to the Middle East. We should not be involved in these things. I happen to agree with Dave in this regard, and I don't. I think this, this endless multi decade, generational, constantly being in a state of warfare is insane. And I think it's unfair to say to me or to anybody, because you've not traveled to these places, you shouldn't speak of them as if an average American plumber whose taxes are taken by force to fund war in the Middle east, be it or Ukraine, Israel or otherwise, has to travel there, ask the general or any of the experts what's going on before he's allowed to say, stop taking my money to fund your wars. So I'm with Dave on this one.
Ian Crossland
Yeah. And I mean, I do it like, yeah, I agree with that and I agree with Douglas Murray. Essentially. He's like, you know, you bring on these people and to Joe Rogan and you're like, you know, they're not experts. You know, like, I agree, maybe bring on the person with an expert. But again, like, like these people will go on and talk about 500 different things. And this is one episode. You're like, how can you bring in an expert? That person's like, I don't want to talk about that for the whole show. I want to talk about that for five minutes and then move on to something else.
Danny Polishchuk
It's an interesting like conundrum for Joe Rogan as a podcast host, because what do you do? He just wants to have people on that he's interested in or that's cool. And then if they start talking about one side of a view, is he now beholden to have the other guy in that he has no interest in talking to just because he's got.
Ian Crossland
And again, like another thing with Douglas Murray is, you know, talking about like, like, like the Israel, Palestine stuff or like he was talking about Ukraine a lot and he goes, yeah, you bring people in and they're talking like favorably about Russia. You're like, the whole mainstream media gives you the other side of that argument about like the pro Ukraine thing.
Tim Pool
I think, I think this episode shows us why in the long term, I think Israel, I don't know what happens to Israel, but I know that US Will not be supported.
Ian Crossland
He didn't tell you who maybe.
Tim Pool
Yeah, we sat down and he was like, I'm worried that America is not going to give us any money anymore. The Israelis did express great gratitude for the $3.8 billion the US gives them. But one of the things I explicitly said was in 10 years, support for Israel's in question. In 20 years, the US is not a part of the Middle Eastern equation. Dave Smith represents much more of the populist right as. And Donald Trump is pro Israel. But the populist right is. It's not even about whether you like Israel or don't. Don't. It's that on the right you have very anti Israel and very I don't care about Israel. On the left you have I hate Israel. So what does that mean in 10 years as the, the older folks are the ones who defend Israel.
Ian Crossland
Yeah.
Tim Pool
When they die and they're not voting anymore. And I mean, I don't mean to be crude, you're going to have a bunch of Trump like libertarian esque, right leaning individuals anti woke saying, yeah, I don't want to give money to Israel. You're going to have these Israel doesn't.
Ian Crossland
Even need the money. Money. That's the crazy part.
Danny Polishchuk
I don't even know why.
Ian Crossland
I don't even know why they give it or take it. Because they don't need it. It's just goes a fraction of their gdp.
Tim Pool
It buys US Weapons, basically. Basically, the US Is giving weapons.
Ian Crossland
But I mean, like, Israel has the money to buy the weapons. Like $3.8 billion is not there.
Phil Labonte
There's, There's. There could be an argument that, like, it's an excuse for not saying that it's a good idea. Good idea. But the US Giving the money to, or giving weapons to Israel is an excuse for the United States to dump more money into weapons development.
Ian Crossland
Sure, sure.
Tim Pool
I've not heard a single good argument from the pro Israel side. And I'm not saying this to rag on people who are pro Israel because they're allowed to be. I have not heard a good argument as to why Americans should be using their weapons development tax dollars, whatever you want to call it, for Israel's military.
Ian Crossland
Unless, like, America's worried, though, if we don't sell it to them, then Russia will.
Danny Polishchuk
I think that's our bulwark against the holding the Suez. And if Israel wasn't there, we'd have no.
Ian Crossland
I mean, but all the, all the ships, literally. Right.
Tim Pool
Actually really great.
Ian Crossland
Yeah. But all the ships right now are going around the Suez Canal anyway.
Tim Pool
Because of the Houthis.
Ian Crossland
Yeah, because of the Houthis. So they can do it. It's inconvenient.
Tim Pool
But this explains a lot, actually. So Trump wants to control the Northwest Passage with Greenland. He just struck a deal on Panama, and this is why he's pro Israel. They want all of the trade canals to control global trade. Yeah, that makes sense. I would say that's the best reason I've heard, but I still don't know. It's the best argument.
Ian Crossland
But, like, that's. The Suez Canal is the reason why America has been backing Israel for.
Tim Pool
Well, actually, I'll put this 70 years. Right. That's an argument indeed. I don't know if it's good enough reason for us to be entangled in Middle Eastern conflict. Yeah.
Danny Polishchuk
What would happen if the power just, like, ebbed back and then that block. Because I heard that Iran is about, I don't know, one piece away from developing, concluding their nuclear program.
Tim Pool
Trump this Saturday, I believe, is going to be having the nuclear talks with Iran. And I don't think people understand just how close to war with Iran we actually are. I think one of the reasons they had this meeting of. So there was a press meeting, a press conference. So Trump meets with Netanyahu. They have your traditional press gaggle. And then they had the Chatham House with influencers and I, and the, and the two principal topics were the tariffs. That was the number one issue. What's the trade deal with Israel and us going to look like? And war with Iran. And largely what was talked about was war with Iran. And I think the intention of the Israelis was to try and play this game, which I don't believe works of. Once they come for us, they come for you next. And this is really funny because I can't remember. I, I, I, I, I think I know who said this, but I'm not gonna reveal to their business. They just straight up said to, said to Netanyahu, no, they're not. Yeah, like, I was, I just thought that was really cool because the, the.
Ian Crossland
Oh, yeah, that was a whole ocean.
Tim Pool
Exactly.
Ian Crossland
Like there's a geographical component.
Tim Pool
There was a bit of pushback where they were just like your backyard. We're 20,000 miles away. I probably shouldn't, you know. Okay, look, it was Dave Rubin.
Danny Polishchuk
No need.
Tim Pool
No, no, no, no, no, no. It's because it's up to that person. I respect, I respect sources. If they, if. I'm not going to reveal what they said, but I will say this. The Israelis conveyed that if Iran gets a nuclear weapon, the US Is in danger. And then it was a couple of people who just said, no, we're not. And like, that's ridiculous. We don't need to be involved in your war. And I think the general idea, it doesn't work. This game doesn't work. You can't be like, I'm warning you, Phil's gonna get you. You're like, I'll deal with Phil if Phil tries to get me. But just because I'll deal with you, Phil, you're having problems. We're getting involved.
Danny Polishchuk
Speaking of the Israeli war, that, that country has been at war since day one of inception. It is a war. That country is war. It has been put there in the middle of a conflict right after a conference. It's just, that's, that's all I told you guys before the show yesterday. I like Ben. Not, you know, he seems pretty cool, intelligent, charismatic, but he's a born in a war, a wartime culture, and he's a warrior. So all Ben, he fought Ben. Yeah, Benny. Benny. And then. So he knows how to fight and kill. That's his job. That's what he's done his whole Life.
Tim Pool
What I can tell you is the, you know the annoying thing about the Israel derangement syndrome, people who are one, they're showing a fake clip of us on the show where I was saying that it doesn't matter who fired the shot in the false flag in the context of they won as soon as they engage in the false flag, because their supporters are never going to believe it. Like, you could say the Gulf of Tonkin for a long time was believed to be a false flag, but they said it was a conspiracy theory and people were pro America, were like, get out of here with that nonsense. And then in like 2013 or whatever, they're like, oh, actually, yeah, we faked that whole thing.
Ian Crossland
Thing, yeah.
Tim Pool
So the people who perpetrate it are going to use it and they're going to. They're going to get away with it. But the frustrating thing is the. The meeting that happens is largely about tariffs and war with Iran. I end up bringing up the gist of the story is this. Israel seems to be ignorant of the shifting landscape in the United States among young people towards sentiment. Israel, which is, as I mentioned, on the right, either we don't want to be involved in Israel or we don't like Israel, and on the left, we don't like Israel. So this idea that the. The Israelis wanted to communicate to prominent individuals, Iran's going to get a nuclear weapon and you're all in danger. Was meaningless.
Ian Crossland
Sure.
Tim Pool
Because in 10 years, we're not involved, and in 20 years, who cares about Iran, we're not going to be a part.
Ian Crossland
So America can deal with Iran if need be.
Tim Pool
Well, certainly there are war hawks that want to go to war with Iran.
Ian Crossland
Yeah.
Tim Pool
There were people in Trump's fear that want this.
Danny Polishchuk
Oh, it's been since the 79 overthrow of the Shah, they've been. They overthrew a democratically elected Iranian president. Was he the. He was the Shah of Iran. And then they installed the Ayatollah, this religious zealot, and now they're like, hey, it's a bad guy. We have to attack them. Now. You're like, we set it up.
Tim Pool
The annoying thing is that in trying to understand what the intentions of the Israelis are and what's going to happen, you have people online who just like, they're. This is why I was saying it's funny because they're saying, I claimed Nick Fundes was an op by the Israelis when I said or. The idea is it's more likely. And I'm being somewhat tongue in cheek, because when people like this. Go online and just say something like, they tweet you're a Jew, so you don't count, or I won't listen to you. I'm like, okay, you're helping Israel. You're making regular Americans be like, I don't want to be a party to whatever that is. But Dave Smith, I praise all the time because he is the. He's funny, charismatic, calm, and collected, and explains from a rational American point of view why we don't want to be involved in funding these things.
Danny Polishchuk
I have mixed feelings about this now. Okay. I am very much into global peace, but at the same time, I understand that if you just sit defensively and wait, things can come at you from. That's what ballistics are. Okay, so, well, that's where we're gonna.
Ian Crossland
Have a beautiful iron dome.
Danny Polishchuk
That's true. And that's why we have our fingers away from our homeland, so that we're not letting anyone near us. So we have this area protected, essentially. If we just let it go and Israel were to fall and then that whole. The Suez is shut down and controlled by China, potentially Chinese, Russian, Iranian coalition or whatever. Yeah, that would. Might not.
Tim Pool
I don't.
Ian Crossland
But again, you just have to go around. You just have to go around Africa.
Tim Pool
It's not easy to do, but it's.
Ian Crossland
That what they're doing right now.
Tim Pool
Because of the Houthis.
Ian Crossland
Because of the Houthis.
Tim Pool
Like, the Houthis, yeah, give us back our canal.
Ian Crossland
But. But he's bombing. Even with bombing the Houthis, like, they're still going, like I saw Graph or whatever, the best today. And they all are currently just going around.
Tim Pool
We got to go to chats over here. But Cam Higby was on the show the other day, and he's very pro Israel. He says he's a raging Zionist, and he was arguing that we should fund Israel's military because they. They test our weapons or whatever. And I'm like, that's not a good argument. We can test our weapons. And he's like, yeah, but they're not battle tested. And I'm like, okay. I just. I just don't see that as a good argument.
Ian Crossland
Yeah, that's not a good argument.
Tim Pool
Suez Canal is interesting because losing control of that seeds control to the BRICS nations, and that's going to create a multipolar world. That being said, although that is an argument, I don't think it's a strong enough argument to justify the US Getting involved in more ground wars in the Middle East. Oh, God.
Danny Polishchuk
You Know, the Russians, they want, they want that. The Bosphorus Strait, they want to go through Turkey and from the, you know, and now they want this. I'm sure for them to think of the.
Ian Crossland
Sure, everybody wants it.
Danny Polishchuk
And it's not like we can't share the Suez Canal with the Russia. Of course we can. I don't know, this obsessive military control thing, I just, just a big game of risk.
Tim Pool
God, yeah. Trump's not going to back down from this. And that's, I think that's exactly why Trump is pro Israel, because he wants.
Ian Crossland
I mean, every president's pro Israel.
Tim Pool
Exactly. But I think the Suez is principally why. I think that's why Greenland and Panama are so important to Trump.
Ian Crossland
Canada, who wants the Arctic.
Tim Pool
Sure.
Ian Crossland
Well, no, he wants the Arctic to defend against China and Russia.
Tim Pool
So this is going to be interesting because Trump is not going to back down and let the BRICS nations take over. He is strangling China right now, which everybody likes. But should the US back. This is, this is the challenge. We have one. Cutting off funding to Israel overnight creates Afghanistan times 100. So whatever we do when we're backing away from funding, it should be a tapering off of.
Ian Crossland
I mean, maybe if they, I don't even know if I agree with, like, maybe if, if America backs off, people are like, oh, well, they don't have the Americans to defend them against our aggression and maybe. But like, they don't need the money. Like, they're, I believe their economy is like 600 billion. Like, what's $4 billion?
Phil Labonte
Look, Israel has the capability to take out Iran's nuclear program if they want.
Ian Crossland
Sure.
Phil Labonte
Like they did it. They did.
Ian Crossland
I mean, I guess the issue for Israel is you're like, there's all these hostile countries surrounding, in that sense.
Phil Labonte
I mean, not only that, but like, look, the people, in the context of Iran, the conversation is almost always Israel. And people forget the fact that Iran is Shia and Saudi Arabia is Sunni and Saudi Arabia doesn't want Iran to have a nuclear weapon anymore than Israel. The whole of the Middle east doesn't want Iran to have nuclear weapons, but that's a different conversation.
Tim Pool
Final thoughts on this is. I think people should listen to Dave. We are, we are really, we are dangerously close to war with Iran on the precipice, as he described it. And the real takeaway, this is why these people are scumbags. Kim Iverson, you're a scumbag. The, the. She is, she's lying.
Ian Crossland
Flip it.
Tim Pool
Do it.
Ian Crossland
Yeah.
Tim Pool
I mean, I made a 40 minute video breaking out, how she just made a bunch of shit. That's a lie.
Ian Crossland
I saw that.
Tim Pool
And the problem is the Israelis called a bunch of, a meeting of a bunch of prominent influencers. Many of them were very pro Israel. A lot of people were pushing back and the intent was to be like war with Iran is coming and you have to be on our side. And it was, it was, some people were very die hard. They were like, yes, the bond between our nations. Some people were like, that's, that's ludicrous. The American people do not want to be entangled in these wars. But the important takeaway from this is the Israelis are trying to push a narrative right now of America get prepared for war. Which means our reaction needs to be start calling your members of Congress and being like, we will not be party to war with Iran. This is not a desert country like Afghanistan and it is not some, it's not a desert country like Iraq either. It is a mountainous, highly developed nation with surface to air missiles that will make our air superiority very difficult. This will be a substantial modern war campaign which we cannot and should not be involved in. It is not going to be like, oh, we're at war with Afghanistan. You never think twice about it. It is going to be something you see on the news every day. It is going to be probably unwinnable.
Ian Crossland
It's probably one of those things where they can kind of outlast us over.
Tim Pool
Time and ignite fights a war with the rest of the BRICS nations.
Ian Crossland
Yeah.
Danny Polishchuk
So imagine the blowback for 30, 40, 50 years what the people from Iran would want to do back to the United States. That is not good. You don't. Do not.
Tim Pool
Yeah, it's.
Danny Polishchuk
The US is finished.
Tim Pool
It, the US wins conflict through air superiority and we don't have this in Iran. There was this period in Trump's first term where he called off an airstrike on Iran and he said it was because he didn't think, think that it was worth the loss of life. I think the issue may actually be that the US may have been incapable of carrying out these strikes because Iran is known for their anti aircraft capabilities. Going to war with Iran, it's mountainous. It's not going to be this greedy liberator's nonsense and sending troops in. It's not going to be a 20 year quagmire. It's going to be insane. Bloodshed on the scale hitherto unthinkable.
Phil Labonte
You think that it's your sense that the war with Iran would be not just about nuclear weapons, but would be about actually regime change.
Tim Pool
So the, The. So the nuclear weapons is attached to the regime change. There's the general idea conveyed by the Israelis is that Iran is a fundamentalist state that will not stop. They're going to keep trying to expand their influence and they want control. I felt like largely what I was being told about, like, oh, Iran is like, yeah, yeah, I get it, dude. I am not concerned about Iran. I don't care if Iran is taking Afghanistan during this thing. Things. I care about our weapons being handed off the Taliban and to. To terrorists and things like this, but if we are not involved in the Middle east, then we don't have to worry about it.
Ian Crossland
Yeah, I feel like Iran's been a.
Danny Polishchuk
Bogeyman for, like, 30 years since the coup in 79.
Ian Crossland
Yeah.
Tim Pool
It defied the liberal economic order. And so they want control of that region. They want to crush out Iran. Iran is. Is capable of rejecting US Liberal economic order supremacy because they have oil. It's not just about oil. The liberal economic order was established after World War II under this premise of stopping World War 3. The general idea is through the International Monetary Fund, the Bank of International Settlements, the Swift Payment System, you prevent war by controlling the finances of a nation. Iran told us to screw ourselves. It was 79 with the revolution, and since then, it's been a thorn in the side of the liberal economic order. That's why they wanted war the whole time. That's why they want war now. Trump is Trump, I don't think wants war. I think Trump is going to engage in nuclear talks because the concern is if they get a nuclear weapon, then they're going to be. It's going to be impossible to deal with because now they've got extreme leverage.
Ian Crossland
Yeah.
Tim Pool
And it makes it very hard to deal with militaristically, which is why the US and Israel launched Stuxnet some, I think, 13 years ago to blow up Iranian nuclear centrifuges, which is an act of war, mind you. So when we. When. When. When Dave is mentioning we're at the precipice of war, people need to understand that we've already engaged in a cyber attack which blew up a bunch of their facilities. We. We. Look, man, I will stress this. A war with. With Iran is not going to be like Afghanistan and Iraq, where you hear about it in the news and there's videos happening, and it's like the average person goes on with their day.
Ian Crossland
No.
Danny Polishchuk
And it wouldn't be one country. It wouldn't be Iran.
Tim Pool
By itself, it's going to be more.
Danny Polishchuk
Like China and Russia and Iran would be defending against it. It'd be crazy. You do not do that.
Tim Pool
And there's likely going to language. There's likely going to have to be conscription. And the buying power of the American person is a drop dramatically as resources are shifted into a wartime economy.
Danny Polishchuk
Imagine the coastal cities getting bombarded. Are you kidding me? No. Nuclear submarines all over the ocean from every country.
Phil Labonte
Slow, slow down, slow down, slow down. Do you. Are you under the impression that Iran has those things?
Danny Polishchuk
No.
Tim Pool
No.
Danny Polishchuk
China and Russia.
Phil Labonte
Okay, so you're saying that it would expand?
Ian Crossland
Yeah, they would.
Danny Polishchuk
They would all kind of end up in the Iranian. I don't know.
Phil Labonte
It's not.
Tim Pool
I don't.
Phil Labonte
I understand. I'm not saying that I'm, I'm looking for a war, but we. When Trump was in office before he struck Soleimani, and it didn't lead to a wider war, if they strike the nuclear. Nuclear facilities, it doesn't necessitate a global world war.
Danny Polishchuk
I could actually see the fear.
Tim Pool
China and Iran tinderbox.
Ian Crossland
Yeah.
Danny Polishchuk
And Russia stays neutral. And then Russia's like, we do. We do.
Tim Pool
This is a great conversation. So I apologize. We got to grab chats. But I just want to say one thing. I don't think nukes on the coastline. I do think, however, if we engage in war with Iran, you will have subterfuge. There will be bombings, there will be attacks on US Soil. These people may have already come through the southern border under the Biden administration.
Ian Crossland
Yeah, they're just waiting.
Tim Pool
So let's grab some of your chats, guys. Thanks.
Ian Crossland
Biden.
Tim Pool
Yeah, no joke. Super pooper says gonna watch this whole. This while pooping the whole time.
Danny Polishchuk
Oh, what a release.
Ian Crossland
A two hour poop.
Tim Pool
Oh, he says gonna watch this while pooping the whole time on God. I don't know what that means.
Phil Labonte
Does he mean like on God, like for real, or does he mean like on God, like pooping on God, like.
Ian Crossland
No, I'm God for real.
Phil Labonte
You know, insulting things about God.
Ian Crossland
Full two hours.
Tim Pool
All right, Pinochet says helicopter tourism is going to take a hit now.
Danny Polishchuk
Oh, that's too soon.
Ian Crossland
Pinochet.
Danny Polishchuk
You know, I spoke kind of briefly about the Chilean revolution when Pinochet came into power, and I think I may have butchered it. I apologize ahead of time. We don't have time to get into it right now, but Ian's into another retraction.
Tim Pool
All right, here we go. Shane H. Wilder says, I find it funny that quote Journalists ignore Tim's post when it doesn't fit their narrative of him while focusing on his posts when he is trolling. Guess that's what's happening when their IQ is putting. Indeed this is. I mean look guys, you know, what are you going to do? I know that you can't convey complex thought on X. So I tweeted on, I posted on X the second amendment never int. Was never intended to protect it. To protect or I forgot what I said. But it's basically knives, swords and bayonets were never considered arms by anyone ever. Only 18th century muzzle loaded muskets were considered arms. And someone actually tried doing a community note saying I was wrong. And someone responded being like dude, the saying only 18th century muzzle loading muskets his arms clearly identifies this as a joke making fun of gun control. Yeah, my favorite thing about it is it was a commentary on gun free zones and gun control only tangentially related to the Texas story. But my point was largely that the right to keep in bear arms encompasses everything. And I got a mixture of. I can't believe Tim is anti 2A. Tim is wrong. Muzzleloaded muskets aren't the only thing protected. And screw you Tim, you were defending a murderer. It's just like not allowed to have fun on X. You're not allowed to.
Danny Polishchuk
It's like fishing.
Ian Crossland
No fun zone.
Danny Polishchuk
Every once in a while you fish up a boot and you're like, it's like when it's an AI.
Tim Pool
Well, I mean to be honest, I do it because it's trolling. It's funny.
Ian Crossland
Yeah, you caught a boot.
Danny Polishchuk
That's what they call fishing. I don't know. It's trawling, trolling.
Tim Pool
Right. Right now we have this story with Carmelo Anthony that is extremely contentious and everybody's very angry. They conservatives called for the death penalty on a 17 year old kid, Carmelo Anthony over this. Uh, they've called for boycotting Give, Send, Go for allowing a fundraiser. Sorry, that's nuts. I don't care. By all means, Carmel Anthony is likely going to get convicted. He'll probably plea take a plea bargain because he did not have justification for the use of force escalation that he did. We'll, we'll probably figure out what happened with the story, but it's crazy to me that there are people who are like boycott Give Send Go because they're allowing him to raise money. I'm like, what is a legal defense? He's gonna, he's gonna hire a lawyer. Yeah, they tried taking away this is why we don't like gofundme and the people calling for the death penalty on this. That's crazy. Yeah, they're arguing that. So these people are all wrong. Even. Even who is it? Branca? I'm not getting his name wrong.
Danny Polishchuk
Oh, Andrew Branca.
Tim Pool
Yeah. Yeah. I think he was saying this. I watched some of it. That it's not justified self defense because the escalation of forces is not commensurate. However, they will make the argument because Carmelo was like five seven, five six, £130 and there were four or five guys around him. He's going to argue he was scared of the group, not just the single individual.
Ian Crossland
Isn't he a track athlete?
Tim Pool
I don't know.
Ian Crossland
I was like run away.
Tim Pool
But it's crazy how hyper tribal this is where there are people actually arguing. It's a. It's first degree murder because the school banned weapons. And I'm like, bro, come on. Yeah, the right to keep it bear arms includes all weapons and gun and weapon free zones are nuts. If you want to argue you can't escalate force. I agree. If you want to argue that Democrats can vote weapon bans wherever they want and you're for them now I'm like, that's nuts.
Ian Crossland
I mean they have gun free zones all over Times Square.
Tim Pool
That's stupid.
Ian Crossland
Yeah, they don't work.
Tim Pool
That's dumb. Yeah, right there. Was that trend or was it trend Aragua guy who was shooting people in Times Square. Yeah, stupid.
Ian Crossland
He didn't see the sign though.
Tim Pool
But that's the point about this. This case too.
Ian Crossland
It's like signs are in English.
Tim Pool
The guy brought a knife to a school where knives were banned. Send.
Ian Crossland
Yeah.
Tim Pool
Why did the sign work?
Ian Crossland
Yeah, I know.
Tim Pool
That's why. I'm like, this is dumb. I don't care. And. And I just think it's insane that people are saying he shouldn't be able to have a give send go. But also.
Ian Crossland
Well, they're going to turn it around for, you know, the conservatives similar pet cause and they're gonna. I think people are gonna be like if Gibson go acquiesces here, then they're.
Tim Pool
Gonna do it for something else back down. Yeah, yeah. So the other thing too is it there are a lot of people intentionally lying about what happens. There are a lot of prominent people who are telling the truth, but there are a lot of people that are lying. For one thing, people keep saying it was a tent, it was a gazebo and I saw some prominent conservatives talking about it. And I like, typically the principal actors, like the larger, with larger followings have been honest about this. There was a thunderstorm. It was not a thunderstorm. There was a tent gazebo. It's not a enclosed space. It was those pop up gazebos.
Ian Crossland
Yeah.
Tim Pool
He sat underneath it. The guys approached him and told him to get out. He refused. He then put his hand in his bag and says, touch me and, and touch me. And he says what? He said, touch me and see what happens. The dude then grabbed him and then he responded with punch me and see what happens. The guy then grabbed him to move him and that's when he stabbed him.
Danny Polishchuk
Was it like raining out?
Tim Pool
It wasn't, it wasn't yet raining.
Danny Polishchuk
Okay.
Tim Pool
It began raining after the stabbing. But the, the, the police report the, the general indication is that he went under the gazebo because it was about to rain. So the argument is he escalated lethal force in a situation that did not require.
Ian Crossland
Yeah. Like he didn't have a threat of getting killed.
Tim Pool
The argument from the other side was they put a bunch of fake news up and claimed they were bullies or something. Which is also stupid. Yeah.
Ian Crossland
And you're not allowed to murder your bully. That's not.
Tim Pool
But, but there is a self defense claim that they're going to make.
Ian Crossland
Yeah.
Tim Pool
And they're going to tell the jury this. The fact that there are people saying it's first degree murder only because the school banned the weapons. I. Okay, I disagree. Like, like second degree. Maybe grabbing a knife shows that he had an intent to use lethal force at that moment.
Danny Polishchuk
Right.
Tim Pool
You could argue second degree murder.
Danny Polishchuk
Violating a weapon free zone doesn't mean you have the intent to kill.
Tim Pool
It does.
Danny Polishchuk
I don't think it does.
Tim Pool
Not philosophically, but legally it does.
Danny Polishchuk
Oh, okay.
Tim Pool
Right. So they're going to argue that because you, you are, it's felony murder. You are committing a felony bringing a weapon to a school. First degree murder. Whereas in any normal circumstance if you are like a park where weapons aren't banned, they might argue second degree. Which I still think you're not going to get. This is the other thing too, that conservatives do not. Are not, not all conservatives. A lot. It's like it's kind of split actually. There's a lot of people arguing, saying he's going to argue self defense. Five guys walked up to him and threatened and told.
Ian Crossland
He walked up to them though.
Tim Pool
He sat down under. So the general idea is it's about to rain. He goes under a tent. They're sitting there, they say, hey, you can't be here. You need to go. He refuses. They get up, he put. They tell him to leave again. He puts his hand in his bag and says, touch me and see what happens. The guy touches him, he doesn't react. They keep arguing. He then says, punch me and see what happens. That's when the dude grabs him to remove him and he stabs him with the knife. So the argument is that was. That was not a justifiable use of force. What's going to be argued by the defense is that this dude is 130 pounds and like five, six or five seven or something.
Ian Crossland
Yeah.
Tim Pool
So he's a small, scrawny kid. Five guys or whatever approach him. I think it might have been four. And start arguing with them and yelling at him. He's under the tent because it's going to rain. His argument is they have no authority to remove him from bleachers just because.
Ian Crossland
And they were all white.
Tim Pool
Yes, they're all white.
Ian Crossland
This is gonna be a big component.
Tim Pool
Of this, which it already is.
Ian Crossland
Yeah.
Tim Pool
So the. The art like this is what's going to get argued in court. They're going to show him and say, he's small, he's frail, he was trying to stay out of the rain when they approached him. The reason he grabbed his knife is because he was surrounded by four. Four larger boys who are. Were telling him that they actually had already grabbed him, had touched him at one point. He didn't react to that initially and then said, punch me. Now, the question I have for all the conservatives is the police report says the witnesses conveyed this. So it's here. It's the police report. The witnesses conveyed that Carmelo said, punch me and see what happens. Where in the rest of that story is the context of the punch. Why did he say that?
Danny Polishchuk
I don't know. Maybe a guy was.
Ian Crossland
Think we might get another Rodney King riot if he gets to the death penalty.
Tim Pool
He's not gonna do the death penalty. They've already said no, he's too.
Ian Crossland
Or if he gets any sort of.
Tim Pool
Serious charges to riot. For sure.
Ian Crossland
Yeah.
Tim Pool
But what I. What I think's going to come up in trial is the defense is going to argue they threatened to punch him, to which he responded, punch me and see what happens. So you need to ask yourself in the police report, why did the witnesses. These are the. These are the. The Memorial school kids. The brother of the victim. Not the brother. He didn't give a statement because he was, you know, crying and everything. The friend said, Carmelo said, punch me and see what Happens in trial, the defense is going to say, why did he say that? And they're going to say, because someone made a fist or because someone was going to hit him or something like that. I don't see a scenario where a dude under a gazebo just randomly says, punch me and see what happens. Maybe, maybe. Either way, they're going to make the arguments, and I think it won't go to trial. I think they're going to take a plea bargain, granted, because they've raised like 300 grand. They might end up seeing, like, Ben Crump or whatever get involved and it might go BLM versus Anti BLM and get nuts.
Ian Crossland
Oh, that's going to be a big part of it.
Tim Pool
Yeah, that. But anyway, people are tribalists and tribalism is dumb, and I don't care what tribalists think. So be mad if you. If you can't withstand disagreements, then. I don't know what. You were watching my show from the first place, but I do appreciate y'all watching the show. Much respect to those who do disagree and do continue to watch, because you know, that's what we're trying to do.
Danny Polishchuk
Because I'm going to disagree anyway. Sorry to interrupt. That was not even a good thing to say. I've just been enjoying this, man, and I wish we had more super chats.
Tim Pool
Yeah, yeah. Well, we do.
Danny Polishchuk
I'm letting you know ahead of time, I'm going to disagree. You just don't know when.
Tim Pool
All right, all right. Kate C. AKA Snake Plush Kitten says the Vietnam draft put one out of eight draftees into the Marine Corps. Interesting. Jason Diaz says During World War II, voluntary enlistment for the U.S. army was banned on December 5, 1942, by Executive Order 9279.
Phil Labonte
Whoa.
Tim Pool
Too many people.
Danny Polishchuk
What?
Tim Pool
You know, I'll say this too. We gotta go to uncensored show. But I'll say one last thing. The US had an Office of Censorship during World War II. And people like to say never in history have have those who have enforced censorship been the good guys. And it's like the US had an Office of Censorship in World War II. Were we the good guys or the bad guys? We were the good guys. And we had Tiffany Cianci on before. And with all due respect, because she's great, but she was wrong when she said the First Amendment was made the first explicitly because it's the most important one. That is not correct. The First Amendment originally was, and I said this on the show, was salaries of Congress, I think, or apportionment. And the first actually was the third of the 17. They whittled it down to 10. She then said when they chose the first, it was explicitly stated. It was not stated.
Danny Polishchuk
This.
Tim Pool
This was never stated. The founding Fathers did not say they chose the first because it was most important. Important. The founding fathers banned blasphemy.
Ian Crossland
Yeah.
Tim Pool
We're gonna go to the uncensored call and show my friends over@rumble.com timcast. So make sure you smash the like button. Share the show with everyone you know. And what we've been doing and I think we're gonna keep doing is the uncensored show is going to have a little bit of a preview, actually. We're gonna do a few minutes so we can be naughty and you can watch. And we want to encourage you guys to sign up using promo code TIM10. Go to Timcast premium.com. make sure you smash that like button. Follow me on X and Instagram at Tim Cast. Danny, do you want to shout anything else?
Ian Crossland
Ah, Danny jokes everywhere. And I'm gonna be in video Vancouver and Edmonton coming up on the road. You can get tickets Danny comedy.com next week.
Tim Pool
Right on.
Danny Polishchuk
Holler, dude.
Ian Crossland
Back to Canada, baby.
Danny Polishchuk
Oh, Going to the.
Ian Crossland
The motherland.
Danny Polishchuk
All right. Hey, I come over to Rumble because I think we're gonna play maybe this AI crazy video or something gross. It is. It tends towards toilet humor, and I'd like to see it.
Ian Crossland
I hate toilet humor.
Phil Labonte
Yeah.
Danny Polishchuk
But anyway, it's great stuff. And I'm Ian Crossland. Follow me on the Internet at Ian Crossland. I'll see you.
Ian Crossland
You.
Phil Labonte
I am Phil that remains on Twix. I'm 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 all the streaming platforms and YouTube. Don't forget, the left lane is for crime.
Tim Pool
All right, everybody, we'll see you all in about 30 seconds@rumble.com Timcast IRL. Thanks for hanging out.
Ian Crossland
Saint.
Timcast IRL Podcast Summary: "Helicopter CRASHES In NYC, Liberals Are BLAMING Trump For Tragic Accident w/ Danny Polishchuk"
Release Date: April 11, 2025
Hosted by Tim Pool, Timcast IRL delivers incisive analysis on current events from an independent perspective. In this episode, Pool discusses a recent helicopter crash in New York City, the politicization of the tragedy, advancements in artificial intelligence, societal shifts towards media decentralization and tribalism, and contentious topics like voter ID laws and military policies.
Overview: The episode opens with Tim Pool addressing a heartbreaking incident where a helicopter crashed into the Hudson River near Manhattan, resulting in six fatalities. The crash involved a tourism flight, amplifying the tragedy.
Key Points:
Details of the Crash: The helicopter, carrying two adults and five children, disintegrated mid-air before colliding with the Hudson River. Emergency responders are currently managing the aftermath, including traffic delays in the vicinity.
Political Reactions: Prominent liberals swiftly attributed the accident to former President Donald Trump and the Transportation Secretary, Sean Duffy. Pool criticizes this predictable blame game, suggesting it reflects broader political tribalism.
Notable Quotes:
Overview: The conversation shifts to the rapid advancements in artificial intelligence and its implications for media and information dissemination. The guests explore how AI-generated content is becoming increasingly indistinguishable from human-produced media, posing challenges for information integrity.
Key Points:
AI-Generated Videos: Pool and guests discuss the creation of AI videos that mimic real individuals, highlighting both the technological prowess and ethical concerns surrounding deepfakes.
Impact on Media Consumption: The decentralization of media platforms has fragmented audiences, making it harder for any single voice to dominate public discourse. This fragmentation contributes to the rise of niche beliefs and the spread of misinformation.
Future of Content Creation: The panel speculates on the future where AI could automate entire aspects of content creation, potentially diminishing the need for human hosts and altering the landscape of podcasting and broadcasting.
Notable Quotes:
Overview: The discussion delves into how the evolution of media platforms and consumption habits has fostered extreme tribalism, undermining societal cohesion and shared narratives.
Key Points:
Decline of Shared Narratives: With the rise of platforms like YouTube shorts, TikTok, and decentralized media channels, audiences are increasingly consuming fragmented, bite-sized information. This shift diminishes the influence of traditional long-form media and fosters echo chambers.
Impact on Political Discourse: The fragmentation of media has led to heightened political division, where individuals rapidly shift allegiances and beliefs based on niche channels, reducing the collective ability to engage in nuanced discussions.
Future of Social Interaction: The guests express concerns that as media continues to decentralize, societal interactions will become more fragmented, making it difficult to achieve consensus on important issues.
Notable Quotes:
Overview: A significant portion of the episode is dedicated to discussing the GOP's passage of the SAVE Act, which mandates proof of citizenship for voting. Pool critiques how Democrats have misrepresented the act, leading to public misconceptions.
Key Points:
Legislative Details: The SAVE Act requires voters to present identification proving citizenship. Proponents argue it ensures election integrity, while opponents claim it disenfranchises certain groups.
Media Misrepresentation: Democrats have been accused of distorting the Act's purpose, with misleading headlines suggesting it targets married women’s voting rights, despite no such provisions in the legislation.
Public Perception: Pool emphasizes that the Act is widely supported across various demographics but suffers from misinformation campaigns that obscure its intent.
Notable Quotes:
Overview: The conversation transitions to U.S. military policies, focusing on the Supreme Court's order for the Trump administration to retrieve a man mistakenly deported to El Salvador. This case serves as a springboard for broader discussions on military readiness and foreign interventions.
Key Points:
Supreme Court Ruling: The Court mandated the retrieval of Abrego Garcia, an El Salvadorian deemed part of the MS-13 gang, despite having a protective order against his deportation. This unprecedented ruling raises questions about legal procedures and executive actions.
U.S. Military Readiness: The panel debates the U.S.'s capability to engage in potential conflicts, particularly with nations like Iran. Concerns are raised about Iran's anti-aircraft capabilities and the implications of a direct military confrontation.
Canadian Military Strength: Comparisons are drawn between U.S. and Canadian military structures, highlighting perceived deficiencies and morale issues within the Canadian forces.
Notable Quotes:
Overview: A contentious discussion arises around a recent incident involving Carmelo Anthony, where a 17-year-old was involved in a deadly altercation. The episode explores the complexities of gun control, self-defense laws, and societal reactions.
Key Points:
Incident Details: Carmelo Anthony, a 17-year-old, engaged in a confrontation under a gazebo where he ultimately stabbed another individual after multiple provocations. The severity of the incident sparks debates on appropriate legal responses.
Legal Implications: Pool and guests analyze potential charges, debating whether the act constitutes first-degree murder, self-defense, or other classifications. The role of weapon-free zones and their efficacy in preventing such incidents is scrutinized.
Public and Political Reactions: The episode highlights polarized opinions, with conservatives calling for harsh penalties and questioning the actions taken by platforms like GoFundMe to support defendants.
Notable Quotes:
Overview: In the latter part of the episode, the focus shifts to futuristic technologies, including AI advancements, virtual reality, and space exploration. The guests speculate on how these technologies might reshape society and individual lifestyles.
Key Points:
AI Integration: Discussions explore how AI is becoming integral in daily operations, from personal assistants to content creation, raising concerns about privacy and autonomy.
Virtual Reality and Space Colonization: The panel envisions scenarios where AI and VR facilitate space exploration and colonization efforts, such as building biospheres on Mars. The feasibility and ethical implications of such endeavors are debated.
Technological Dystopia: Concerns are raised about potential dystopian outcomes, including increased surveillance, loss of privacy, and the blurring of reality and virtual experiences.
Notable Quotes:
Overview: As the episode wraps up, Tim Pool emphasizes the dangers of media decentralization, tribalism, and the erosion of unified societal narratives. He urges listeners to critically evaluate information sources and remain vigilant against misinformation.
Key Points:
Unified Messaging Loss: The fragmentation of media has led to a lack of cohesive national dialogue, making it difficult to address critical issues collectively.
Call to Action: Pool encourages listeners to engage in informed discussions, support independent media, and resist falling into echo chambers that perpetuate misinformation and division.
Notable Quotes:
Final Remarks: In this episode of Timcast IRL, Tim Pool and his guests navigate through a labyrinth of pressing issues, from a tragic helicopter crash politicized by liberal factions to the unsettling rise of AI in media and society. The discussions underscore the complexities of modern challenges, highlighting the intersection of technology, politics, and societal behavior. Pool's critical analysis urges listeners to remain discerning in an age of information overload and fragmented media landscapes.
Note: This summary captures the essence of the discussed topics, incorporating direct quotes with corresponding timestamps to provide clarity and context for readers unfamiliar with the full episode.