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Tim Pool
This episode is brought to you by Shopify. Upgrade your business with Shopify, home of the number one checkout on the planet. Shop pay boosts conversions up to 50%, meaning fewer carts going abandoned and more sales going Cha ching. So if you're into growing your business, get a commerce platform that's ready to sell wherever your customers are. Visit shopify.com to upgrade your selling today. We got. You want to hit. You want to hit that? Put on one. You want to put it on one. Yeah, we'll do with that. This is hilarious story. A bunch of these college kids who are not citizens are freaking out because they are Hamas sympathizers and Trump is going to deport them. Did you guys see that Asian woman who was leading those protests? She got her visa revoked.
Ian Crossland
Deport them all.
Tim Pool
Yep. Later.
Ian Crossland
See ya.
Tim Pool
So here you go. Daily Mail. Panicked college students deleting online info after Trump promised to deport Hamas sympathizers. Get him. Trump 78, signed. Signed an executive order to cancel the student visas of anyone who's shown support for the Palestinian terror group. There we go. Just go to Portamall, bro. This is great. How you guys. I'm. I'm enjoying this first two weeks. I don't know, man. Could. Can it get even. Can it get any crazier?
Ian Crossland
I mean, yeah, I imagine that it can get crazy. I think that the response can escalate. Right now, the left is completely in disarray. They don't know how to react. Eventually they're going to get their feet under themselves and they're going to have coordinated responses. Like I've said before, there's going to be attempts at lawfare. They're going to try and put people in jail for doing things they don't like. This is the standard procedure on the left right now. And I don't. I don't see. I mean, I don't see why they would stop.
Luke Rudkowski
No. But I also think that there's going to be indictments and arrests in general. The people that committed sedition and treason in 2016 forward, that had 12 criminal referrals against them with Nunes and Cash, I believe will be held accountable, especially I think John Brennan will be held accountable. I wouldn't be surprised also if this goes all the way to the Clintons. So, I mean, I really do believe we're going to see accountability at some point soon. I mean, I know people don't want to believe it, but I do believe that it will happen to some extent.
Ian Crossland
I'd love to see it. I know that there are people that are going to be like, they're going to get cold feet. They're going to say that it's a retribution, blah, blah, blah. I don't care what people say. If they actually broke the law, then I want to use the full force of the federal government to investigate, prosecute, and jail those people if they're found guilty.
Tim Pool
Want to play this video for you guys, totally unrelated. You going to pay for that stuff there, buddy?
Ian Crossland
Call the cops.
Tim Pool
Call the cop.
Ian Crossland
Took his back.
Tim Pool
What are you going to do?
Ian Crossland
He's a little guy too, compared to the other dude.
Tim Pool
What are you going to do?
Ian Crossland
Get your legs around his waist.
Tim Pool
Relax.
Elijah Schaffer
Go ahead.
Tim Pool
Relax, Relax. Can't do that. Yeah, you can't steal. You and your buddies, buddy. You can't touch me, bro.
Luke Rudkowski
I ain't touching you.
Tim Pool
I ain't touching you. Can't touch me. You have been touched.
Ian Crossland
You can't touch me.
Tim Pool
You can't touch me. I'm calling the cops on this. I'm on the se. Stop, bro. Yeah, you're going to sue me? Yes, bro.
Luke Rudkowski
You're putting hands on me.
Elijah Schaffer
Stop.
Tim Pool
You know what? I want to see more of that. I just, I, I, I, I am appalled by this video. I am, I am angered by this video. I want to see the dude shoplifting peacefully, walking towards the door, when someone goes boom. And just fucking punches him right in the face and knocks him clean. Clean out. Just falls back on the ground and that's the end of it. Fuck these motherfuckers. This video was cathartic. That's why I played it.
Ian Crossland
I would like to see, I would like to see that.
Tim Pool
I would like to see that those.
Ian Crossland
Kind of things happen and then no repercussions to the person.
Tim Pool
Well, but, but I will also stress, this is a sentiment I feel, but if you literally do that, you'll probably get in trouble. This guy, this is the problem. He's gonna get sued or some shit, but fuck it, who cares, man? Like, I would always recommend that you take actions for yourself. Don't take advice from me on any of this stuff. I'm just saying I would like to see the shoplifters get their comeuppance.
Ian Crossland
Yeah.
Tim Pool
And then to tie it in with the segment we're doing, those pro Hamas non American students get deported.
Ian Crossland
Get them out of here.
Benny Johnson
The worst.
Tim Pool
Get them out of here.
Ian Crossland
I don't know about, like, this is a big chain store and stuff like that. So it's, there's going to be certain things that are going to happen. If that happens to a mom and pop shop, I would love to see the dude smoke them. Like, honestly, that will fix the problem there. If a couple videos of dudes getting, getting shot because they were stealing.
Tim Pool
Ah, that's.
Ian Crossland
And no repercussions happening to the store owner, that will fix the problem.
Tim Pool
Yeah, you're not wrong, but the death penalty for shoplifting is a little rough.
Ian Crossland
No, no, no, not death penalty. That's something, that's, that's something that the state carries.
Tim Pool
No, no, no. What I'm saying is if you're, if you're, if you, if you are. That's true. There's a lot of, there's a lot of states that actually I think Texas allows it, don't they? There are states that allow defensive, allow you to shoot to kill for defensive property. So with that regard, then yeah, you're right.
Ian Crossland
You know, it's about going.
Benny Johnson
The worst part about stuff like this is when all of the, because you said it was a big chain store, was that, is that a cvs? Cvs? Okay, so when Target, when Target then starts locking up their merchandise in low income neighborhoods, then you have to deal with the people online who claim that it's because of racism that they're locking up their merchandise in these stores because they believe that the store doesn't want to make money, that they secretly want to close the store and move it. So they pretend as if they're closing up, that they're locking up the merchandise just so that people won't go there and make it more difficult, even though everyone understands that they just can't afford to leave the merchandise out anymore.
Ian Crossland
I've made this point on IRL a couple of times especially and a couple times recently even property rights are the foundation our society is built on. And the ownership of all the stuff in that store, that's all the property of the owner of the store. Now I understand if you're a big chain, you're not going to be able to do this. And if you work for a big chain, don't do that. Don't, don't shoot someone over someone else's property, especially a big chain. But if you're a mom and pop shop and the, and the guy, like if you're, if you're, you know, a convenience store and there are people that are stealing from you, that is your property. And the government has a responsibility to protect your rights and your property. And if the government refuses to do it, you have the right to defend your property.
Tim Pool
Only in Texas are you allowed to Defend property with lethal force.
Ian Crossland
Only in Texas.
Tim Pool
Texas is the only state. Hmm. Yep. In any other state with Castle doctrine, there has to be an immediate threat to your safety.
Ian Crossland
Hmm.
Tim Pool
So punching a guy square in the face is not lethal force. Some might. Might argue. But, you know, look, let me tell you this. You know, you live in a good state if you can fucking punch a in the face when they're shoplifting.
Ian Crossland
Yeah. I mean, that. That should be fine.
Luke Rudkowski
Yeah.
Ian Crossland
Like, if you.
Tim Pool
If you steal stuff, I'm mad. This dude's not. Not getting his ass kicked.
Ian Crossland
Yeah.
Tim Pool
Like, he's getting held down. And the guy saying, relax, relax. He's just subduing him. And that's the responsible thing to do. We live in this world now where they're like, the security guards won't do anything, employees won't do anything because they're like, we have insurance and you're going to get sued. And I'm like, dude, fucking one kick to that guy's ACL and he ain't ever going to steal again. But I'm not telling you to do that. I'm just saying I wouldn't. I. You know those videos out of Brazil where the guy comes in to rob the store and then someone just pulls out a gun and fucking smokes him?
Ian Crossland
Yep.
Tim Pool
I love watching those videos.
Jack Posobiec
I don't where this video was, but remember, those kids should have robbed like a gun store. And then the dude. Or I was like, I forgot what store was. The guy had a knife, so he jumped over the counter and the guy like, the guy run the store, like, stabbed him like three or four times. The guy's dies ago. I don't know if he died, but he's like, oh, I'm dead. I'm dead.
Tim Pool
Yeah, yeah.
Jack Posobiec
Hey, died. Yeah, I think he did die, that one. Dropped crime in the area by like 10 folds are like, wow. People in this door will stab us for this. Yeah, people will stab you, bro.
Ian Crossland
They.
Tim Pool
There's this video out of Brazil where two guys come to rob a guy's store. And he's got his hands up. They walk in the back with bags, start robbing, robbing it. And then he runs to the front of the store, jumps and grabs the metal grate, spins around, drops it, and locks him in. Yeah, dude, I love this. See, here's the thing. In these. In these videos in Brazil, the guy walks up and points a gun at the head of all these people, and then somebody just goes bang and kills him. I don't want anybody to die, but if you Point a gun at somebody else intending to kill them, you die. You are the bad guy. You die. No, I'm not gonna. It's not incumbent upon the victim to sit there and wait to find out whether or not you're gonna be violent. Same thing is true for the shoplifter. He's actively committing a crime. It is not gonna be my response. And look, check this out. When the video starts in the beginning, who's falling on the ground? It's the dude. The shoplifter drops them. See that?
Luke Rudkowski
Yeah.
Ian Crossland
Boom.
Tim Pool
And then they fight. So the guy in gray, as far as I know, he got attacked first.
Luke Rudkowski
It's not even clear if the guy even works there. I think he's just a civilian.
Tim Pool
Yeah, he appears to be just a guy.
Benny Johnson
They know that if enough stuff gets stolen, then the store goes out of business. And if you live in that area and you don't have a car and suddenly the place where you go to get your medications or to get your food, you need those places to remain in business.
Tim Pool
And lock the ice cream up.
Luke Rudkowski
All over Manhattan, everything's locked up. It's ridiculous.
Benny Johnson
And then they complain and say that it's, you know, why is. Why are they doing this to us? It's like, no, no, your neighborhood is doing this. That you've imbibed. That's what's happening. That's why you're suffering through this.
Luke Rudkowski
Right?
Ian Crossland
And the.
Tim Pool
The here's the reality. If you go back 150 years, this.
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Tim Pool
They just kill you and nothing would be done about it. Yes, you would be dead. And people would be like, what happened to Jim? He's dead.
Luke Rudkowski
People would agree with it, too, that if you went after somebody's property, you know that, you know, they have the right.
Benny Johnson
Well, now, you know, there's the people who say, like, you know, if you kill somebody because they come into your house to steal your tv, it means that you valued your TV more than that person's life. And people like, yes, I value everything in my home more than an intruder's life. Are you insane?
Ian Crossland
You don't know what an intruder in your home is going to do. There is. I can't read minds. I don't know why you're in my home. And if I tell you to get out and you don't get out, I'm going to put them in you. I'm going to shoot you.
Benny Johnson
Those people that complain about that are the same ones who tell cops to shoot limbs rather than.
Ian Crossland
Yeah, they're more.
Luke Rudkowski
Right.
Tim Pool
Why don't you shoot the knife out of his hand?
Luke Rudkowski
Right, exactly.
Ian Crossland
If you shoot someone in the thigh, they're probably going to bleed out anyway. It's probably to rip through their femoral and they're probably going to bleed out.
Jack Posobiec
Dude, it's crazy. Is like in South Africa like they have an duty to retreat laws. You know, my grandfather, at age, I think it was like early 80s, fought some dude off that was that broke into the house and he almost got kicked out of town. But he's been living in that town since like before the place was even like incorporated. But yeah, like the story is nuts. Like the dude broke into the house, was trying to stab him and he like by the grace of God, luckily got a shot off, got another shot off on him. I don't know if he hit him or something like that, but he ran away. And these guys like 80 something years old. But yeah, like the idea of duty to retreat and the fact they almost lost their house and got everything taken from them by the government and all this stuff because they said, oh well, you, how could you prove you're trying to kill. He's like the loaded gun entering the house, three in the morning. All this stuff. Those laws are fucking nonsense.
Ian Crossland
Such nonsense. The, the fact that he's in your home and you can't read minds is enough to say I am in danger. It's not like you're, I mean if you want to make a. And I, I don't agree with this but this. If you wanted to make the argument you're walking around on the street and someone comes up to you with a knife and they're like, give me all your money, right? You could make an argument, you don't know if he'd have killed you, you could have given the money, right? You, I, I disagree with that again. I don't, I don't ascribe to that. But you could make that argument inside your own home, right? You're in your home, someone comes in you have no reason to believe that they want anything other than to cause you great bodily harm. You can't read their mind. You do what you need to defend. To defend your life and your family.
Benny Johnson
And the worst person you know that would tell you to just call the cops hates the cops anyways because they have no logical consistency.
Ian Crossland
Yes, that's 100% true. They're going to tell you, oh, you should just call the cops, because then the cops will come and they'll take care of it for you. But Acaba.
Benny Johnson
Yes.
Ian Crossland
Stupid idiots. Yeah, stupid idiots.
Benny Johnson
So that's kind of. It's kind of a litmus test for people to see how far along they are to understand just how messed up society is, that they are empowering criminals and taking every conceivable method of protection for you and on a citizen away from you.
Luke Rudkowski
It's by design. If we look at the, you know, especially the Soros, DA's all over, they don't want. They want us to moralize, to humanize, you know, to feel helpless and hopeless.
Benny Johnson
And you see the. The who were like, I feel a little less safe on a train today because Daniel Penny was acquitted.
Tim Pool
I'm like, are you kidding me?
Benny Johnson
Unless you were nuts, you should feel way safer, right?
Ian Crossland
Yeah, a lot safer.
Benny Johnson
He got like a big job. You see that? He got like a big job, thankfully.
Ian Crossland
Good.
Benny Johnson
Daniel Penny.
Tim Pool
Oh, yeah, yeah. It was like Andreessen Horowitz. Yeah.
Luke Rudkowski
Yeah.
Tim Pool
Look at that. Well, good for him. Man, I like this. There was another video I saw. I can't remember what it was, but I like watching these videos where it's like people just saying, no more. Yeah, no more.
Benny Johnson
Like when I, I like. One of my first jobs was I worked at a Target and they just. They wouldn't stop. The shoplifters. They're like, look, for as much money as they steal. It makes the suburban moms feel unsafe. If we're constantly stopping people from.
Luke Rudkowski
Wow.
Benny Johnson
Yeah. From, you know, if we have to have violent interactions or prevent people forcibly in front of a bunch of soccer moms, it looks bad on the company, so they just write it off and put the guy's face in the. In the black.
Tim Pool
It's men's fault. Yeah. If it's. It's. It's. Men have become weak. Yeah, that's it. Men have become weak. There, there. There are certain guys out there that'll do this. And then he's like, I'm gonna sue. It's like, oh, yeah. And then he does like, I don't give A fuck, sue me. Fuck you. But you know, we were talking about movies and culture and stuff. The issue is that there used to be a more unified culture. Everybody would go to see the same movies, everybody would watch the same TV shows. Now they don't. So now it's I don't know you, right. Someone comes in, rob a cvs, like I don't know you, I don't care.
Benny Johnson
By, I mean that's, I mean just with the sheer size of the country, right. The population. It's like they talk about why cops don't feel a particular devotion to the area. They're they police because they don't live there.
Ian Crossland
Yeah.
Benny Johnson
Most of the time police lives in another city. Right. So they don't feel any type of devotion to protecting the people in that area. It's just a job.
Luke Rudkowski
Yeah, I mean that, that's a big part of it. But I think it's also again, demoralization. And why would they put their lives on the line for people that hate them?
Ian Crossland
Yeah, the demoralization part is important. Like, you know, people that have hope for the future, that have, have a positive outlook on their life and, and believe that things are going to get better in their life, they don't engage in revolutionary activities. And I've said this a million times on the show, but it's the truth. If you, one of the things that the, the, the thinkers in, leftist thinkers that you know, came after Marx, people like Herbert Marcus, right. They said was like they, they didn't think that the revolutionary energy was in the, was in the working class anymore because, and he wrote this in, in one dimensional hand, he said that the, the revolutionary energy is no longer in the working class because capitalism delivers the goods. It provides a good life for the worker. And so if you lose the worker, if you don't have a worker that's destitute, that's suffering, that's miserable. So that way you can focus that pain and suffering and blame the property owner. If they're not miserable anymore, then what you need to do is find a new person that's miserable. So what he said was you're going to find the revolutionary energy in the ghettos and in the black population. And in the, in the song, essentially he was saying we're going to use minorities to turn them against white people.
Benny Johnson
They've even done it in a, in a fashion with feminism, in the way that women don't feel fulfilled with working the 9 to 5, $60,000 a year laptop job so they have to take on pet causes. Because it fulfills a certain instinct that they're not getting. Yes, exactly.
Ian Crossland
Yeah. And furthermore, the, the, the feminism thing, like the idea, like they tell women that it's men that have done this to them. And really what they're doing is telling women that the conditions of reality are actually men's fault. Like, you hear women talk about their periods and they're like, oh, you know, women have their, have. Have their period. And that's something. That's men. It's men's fault. Even though men. It was a man that came up with the tampon. It was a man that came up with the sanitary napkin. Helping, doing their best to help women to make their, to make their suffering from the period less. To doing what they can to help them. But it's still the man's. It's still the patriarchy and man's fault.
Tim Pool
Fake.
Luke Rudkowski
It's so phony.
Benny Johnson
We watched a video for Cringe of the Day yesterday where this, we do a segment called Cringe of the Day where it's this woman talking about all of the reasons why she doesn't have kids. Right? And so when you see that on its face, I'm like, most of those time you see it as anti natalist, which I'm like, look, if you don't want to have kids, that's your own business. I don't really care. But she actually breaks it down to saying it's because of late stage capitalism and men that I don't want to have a family, therefore I have all of the. These indulgences where she's living in like a penthouse in a city. And I'm like, well, you're living in a penthouse in clearly a very, very nice area. You are late stage capitalism in every respect of the word. But there's a certain level of delusion to thinking that way. Whereas, like, I would have had more respect if you were just like, I don't want to have kids because I don't want to have kids. Not this fake critical theorist version of why.
Luke Rudkowski
Well, that's also somebody that regrets their choices if they need to make statements like that, even, even justify it.
Benny Johnson
Yeah.
Tim Pool
So you're saying Repeal the 19th.
Benny Johnson
Yeah, that's exactly, that's what I thought.
Tim Pool
So you're saying you want to repeal the 19th Amendment to start. And what.
Benny Johnson
Look, you said it, not me.
Ian Crossland
I think, I think that someone was talking about, I think it was when we did the culture war when you were out, one of the guys was saying he thinks that you should be incentivized to not vote, to pay people to not vote, and in the hopes that people that don't actually care about politics that would not vote.
Tim Pool
That kind of means that you have to pay to vote. If you're getting paid not to vote, that means by default everybody would get like 100 bucks. And then that means you would go to the voting booth and be. And by voting, you would be foregoing.
Benny Johnson
It's like the, it's like the episode of House where he just doesn't want to deal with the clinic patients, so he pays patients to leave. He's like, well, if they're, he's like, well, if they take the money, they can't be that sick.
Ian Crossland
That show is awesome. But the, but I do think that the, the idea of disincentivizing people that are only marginally informed or uninformed, I think that that's, that's a great idea. Maybe, maybe paying them isn't the way to do it, but I don't think, like, we have this, we've had this idea that get everybody out to vote and you're going to get the best results. No, that is, that is, if you look at how bad people are at driving, which is very simple, that should give you all the evidence that you need to say, you know what? Maybe voting isn't for everybody. When people are listening to Beyonce and Jay Z or even listening to me about who to vote for. Like, go find out for yourself.
Tim Pool
Women should be allowed to vote until.
Ian Crossland
They get drafted or until they have kids.
Tim Pool
Right now, women can vote to send men to their deaths.
Benny Johnson
Wait, I thought that they repeal. I thought that women were now supposed to be added to the draft. Was that, was that right?
Tim Pool
Now a woman can vote for war and then the men have to go die? No.
Benny Johnson
Well, remember, Tim, they will tell you that women are the more emotional but also logical, and they would never do that. There's no such thing as a warmongering woman. You know, not. You know, I think that, I think it's. That is a thing.
Tim Pool
I think it's historically that women have started more wars than men over the past 600 years have.
Ian Crossland
Yes.
Tim Pool
Yeah.
Ian Crossland
Yeah. Another thing is Hillary Clinton tried to sell. Pass off the idea that women suffer most because of war, because they lose their husbands and their sons, which is absolutely mind boggling that someone would articulate that and think that it's actually true. Like, she literally believes that it's like men are dying.
Tim Pool
No, she's right, though. She's completely right. A woman will suffer when her husband dies. The man won't because he's dead.
Ian Crossland
That I know. I believe that. I believe that men are the primary victim of war because they die.
Tim Pool
Yeah, but there's no suffering.
Ian Crossland
No, no, she said, she said that the primary victim of victims political.
Luke Rudkowski
No, no, no. Yeah, yeah, whatever she says whatever.
Ian Crossland
Which is. I mean it just goes to show the. It speaks to the way that society looks at men. Men are disposable. And honestly, I know that there are people out there that might get a little miffed about this. It's okay that men are looked at as a little disposable because it only takes one man to impregnate multiple women. If a woman, like it takes a woman nine months to make a baby. You can have like one dude and 50 women and repopulate the earth. You're not going to do that if you have one woman and 50 dudes.
Tim Pool
Yeah, but then they're all banging their half brothers and half sisters.
Ian Crossland
I didn't say it was a great idea.
Luke Rudkowski
And now they have all the, all the fake wombs and the, you know, the transhumanism thing kind of coming down the pike.
Tim Pool
Have you seen that? There's a movie about this. I forgot. It's called. Did you see it?
Benny Johnson
The one with have pot.
Tim Pool
Little eggs?
Benny Johnson
We did.
Luke Rudkowski
They really have that already in China.
Tim Pool
They have. They have them now here. It's just. They're not using it for human surrogacy.
Benny Johnson
Is even a huge.
Tim Pool
There's a movie where they have little eggs and you can ra baby in it and you put a food pack on it that like then dissolves into it to feed the placenta or whatever. And so women are wearing them. They go to work and put them in a closet and close it and then go to work.
Luke Rudkowski
That's.
Tim Pool
And it grows the baby. Yeah.
Benny Johnson
It's a very big part of Hollywood right now is making movies about that humanism about. Yeah. Transhumanism.
Tim Pool
They ruin the movie though, because there's a scene in it where they mention that kids born in the pods don't have dreams. And then I'm like, oh shit, this is going to get dark, isn't it? No. Never comes up again.
Luke Rudkowski
They have souls.
Tim Pool
The movie just ends with them celebrating the birth of their baby and it's over. And I was like, I thought they were going to be like, the babies don't dream and their brains are fried or some shit.
Benny Johnson
Those movies and movies that are now discussing artificial intelligence are both the ones that are getting like a lot of the half baked ideas from some of.
Luke Rudkowski
Them for their predictive programming, getting us used to accepting whatever they throw at.
Benny Johnson
I mean, that's true, but there's also. There are a lot of, like, the avant garde filmmakers who do want to experience topics.
Tim Pool
I got something for you. You're big into this globalism shit right now. I am super pissed off about the. They're called the Uber laws. You know about them?
Luke Rudkowski
No. Tell me about them.
Tim Pool
34 states have banned independent contracting. So what happens is when Uber comes out, right, people stop working jobs at McDonald's and they pick up an app, they become a contractor for Uber, and then they make money. So California starts us off by passing SB5, where they said, you cannot contract more than 30 times for one company. West Virginia, in 2000, in 2021, banned independent contracting. So you, as an individual are no longer allowed to work for someone.
Luke Rudkowski
Why? What is the rationale? But what. I know it's crazy, but what.
Tim Pool
You will live in the pot and you will eat the bugs? That's the ratio, supposedly.
Benny Johnson
It was supposed to encourage them to hire them on full time at these companies, right?
Luke Rudkowski
So ubi, like the end game would be that.
Tim Pool
No, it's that you as an individual have no rights to generate revenue. You must either work for an approved corporation or you don't work at all. That is just so right now in West Virginia, the thing that. So we, we've lost three people already because we got audited. And they said, what are these contractors? And we were like, talent? And they were like, nope, not allowed in West Virginia. We banned that. So look at it this way. You're. You're an individual in West Virginia and you have a lawn mowing business or something, right?
Luke Rudkowski
Right.
Tim Pool
No, let's do something more specific. You, you, you, you write articles. This is a better way to do it. Because freelance news writing is a common thing, right? You deliver. You write five articles for a news website and two articles for a sports website. You have two different clients. The sports stuff gets you a little bit extra every week. That allows you to pay your bills and go out and have fun. The way West Virginia's law works, you would have to become an employee of the news company. As an employee, you can't work for anybody else. So your other clients are fired.
Luke Rudkowski
And what does this also include? You have to get like, them insurance and all that other stuff.
Tim Pool
So we were required to have anybody here was a contractor form their own company, which they can work for, get their own bank account, get a license in West Virginia in order for them to Actually contract. And even then it's still murky because the rule is the contracted position can't be something that is a core function of the business. So if you're a news website, you are no longer allowed to hire freelance writers. This Trend is in 34 states. And this means if you as an individual want to go to any business and say, hey, I need some income right now, can I do some. Let, let, let me, let me clean your place up for 100 bucks. I'll clean, I'll clean your bar. They'll go, we can't do that. Cleaning the bar is an essential function. We have to hire a W2 employee. And you go, yeah, but I'm only here for a weekend and I just need a job tonight. They'll say, yeah, that's illegal. Yep.
Luke Rudkowski
34 states are people fighting back.
Tim Pool
Nobody's paying attention. Nobody knows it's happening.
Benny Johnson
The first time that you talked about it about the, especially related to the freelance writers, I remember telling a friend who just didn't pay, he didn't listen to anything other than mainstream press. And I told him about this, he goes, no, that's, that's wrong. I'm like, it's not wrong. It's right there in the news. They're talking about it on mainstream sites and they just couldn't believe that that was a real thing.
Luke Rudkowski
It really does sound 34 states America.
Tim Pool
So in West Virginia, it is effectively illegal for a 16 year old kid to knock on your door and say, can I mow your lawn for 10 bucks?
Luke Rudkowski
Wow, that's awful. Yeah, I had no idea.
Tim Pool
And so this, what is the end result of this? When every state adopts this law, an individual who needs money is either going to have to ask the government or Walmart.
Benny Johnson
It's like when you see the, the kids who start the lemonade stands and you hear the stories with the cops. Shut down the lemonade stand.
Tim Pool
Yeah.
Luke Rudkowski
Is this a push towards universal basic income? The Ready Player world? Ready player One World? No, no.
Tim Pool
It is a push towards 1984 where you will work for the machine. I want food. The machine applications are over there. So it's like during COVID the mom and pop shops got shut down and Walmart was open, right? Yep.
Luke Rudkowski
So only them to survive, Walmart was.
Tim Pool
Allowed to stay open. And the mom and pops were shut down in New Jersey, In North Jersey, during COVID a woman went live on Facebook filming the products in her store. And she said, you can, you can hit me up online and we'll have them shipped to you and the police showed up and said, ma'am, you need to close your store down because we are closed. And they go, no, you're selling stuff. She goes, what do you mean? And they're like, you've got to stop selling things. And she goes, no, my store is closed. And they were like, that's not what we mean. They didn't. They. When they said close your store because of COVID they weren't saying because of sickness. They were saying stop doing business. Right. What we're seeing right now that nobody's noticing is in 2021 is fudgeing nuts. West Virginia passed this law where they basically said individuals cannot contract for companies. That's it. It's over.
Luke Rudkowski
That's so crazy.
Tim Pool
We'll live in the pod and you will eat the bugs, right?
Luke Rudkowski
I mean, it's crazy.
Tim Pool
So we had. We had three people so far where we said they audited us and told us contracting is illegal and we may have penalties for it. If you want to keep working here, you have to create an llc. You have to file for a permit to operate in West Virginia. And they said, no, it's 800 bucks. I'm not doing it.
Luke Rudkowski
So they're just trying to get rid of all small businesses, too, because they.
Tim Pool
Well, I think that's the next step. But right now, this basically means individual sole proprietorship, individual contract labor is done.
Luke Rudkowski
You can't do freelance work.
Tim Pool
If you want to go to a farm and say, hey, I'm looking to make some extra money, do you have any farmhand work? Sorry, can't hire you.
Luke Rudkowski
Oh, my.
Tim Pool
Illegal. Yep. Yeah.
Luke Rudkowski
Because they have that reporting thing, which you probably have to deal with too, now that they want to put through, where you have to report everyone that has any kind of stake in your business to the. To FINRA or whatever. And it's just. It's an attack on small businesses because then they have to hire people and do more just to keep up.
Tim Pool
This is. I feel like this is a big component of the you will live in the pod and eat the bug story that nobody's noticing.
Luke Rudkowski
That's interesting. I got to really look into that because that is also. I believe that that's happening overseas as well. But it really is about being completely dependent on the government because Internet of body, Internet of things, you're not going.
Tim Pool
To be able to not do that in 50 years. There is going to be a handful of corporations that have state sanction and you want to make money. It's going to be like Google and Walmart.
Luke Rudkowski
Like idiocracy.
Tim Pool
Yep. And you're going to go there and say, I like to apply for income. And they're going to be like, here are the jobs we have available. And it's like, can I just. Maybe I'll go to my friend and say, can I give you money for food? No, that's illegal.
Ian Crossland
Every restaurant's Taco Bell.
Tim Pool
Yep. All right, everybody. We're go to callers. Let's get it. Let's start with El Mirachi. What up? Hey.
Caller 1
How's it going?
Tim Pool
It's going well.
Caller 1
Thank you for pronouncing my name right.
Tim Pool
Oh, I did. Well, good.
Caller 1
Well, my question is actually about what you were just talking about, the ABC test laws going on in the country. I actually looked into the laws in my state, and we're a common state law. I'm in North Carolina.
Tim Pool
Yeah.
Caller 1
Probably already have your mind made up, but what are the possibilities of moving to North Carolina and what kind of cons and pros can you see in.
Tim Pool
That proximity to urban centers is the problem. D.C. is a major, like in New York, and like, New York and D.C. are the best politically, and New York's, like, distant second. Like, where we are is the best for the style of show that we have.
Benny Johnson
You get a lot of people come in who are also doing work in D.C. right.
Tim Pool
So it's all the political people, the pundits.
Benny Johnson
You're close to three, like a bunch of airports, right?
Tim Pool
There's three major airports. Yeah. Two in D.C. and one in Baltimore. So that's the problem. Maryland has the same law, but they don't enforce it the same way. Western is the worst. There is a strong possibility the, the, the politicians in West Virginia are saying they want to get rid of it, and so that's good. And Morrissey, the governor said, we're a young, we're. Our administration had just got in. Give us a chance to fix this. And so I, I, you know, Virginia is probably a bad idea because that's where the deep state is. And so you don't want to be under the boot. Maryland is really bad on gun laws. And it's kind of scary. It really is. Like, you can't have a gun. You can't have a gun. I get death threats all the time in West Virginia. I'm strapped. But when I go out strapped, I'm like, we can't leave. We're in the state and we can state, we can't go anywhere. So if we're, if we go out and I have a, or, or more gun on me. I'm like, there's no going to Maryland. You want to go to the sushi place over there? Nope, we can't. We got to go home. Drop the guns off first. So I'm hoping that West Virginia abolishes this.
Ian Crossland
Yep, Yep.
Luke Rudkowski
It's so the opposite. Obviously, it's what you're saying, but they should do be doing everything they can to get people to get work, no matter what it is.
Tim Pool
Yep.
Benny Johnson
It's the worst. I told.
Tim Pool
I think. Sorry. The. The pretext is that they. West Virginia can't enforce tax law against a million people because of critical mass. They just don't have the capability. So instead they made it illegal to hire people.
Benny Johnson
When did it come in? When did they pass that law?
Tim Pool
2021? June. June 7th, I think.
Luke Rudkowski
What if Trump abolishes the IRS? Does that law stay in place?
Tim Pool
Yeah, it's state law.
Caller 1
I think he's going to add a few more things of information for you guys, too.
Tim Pool
Yeah.
Caller 1
If it helps. When it comes to North Carolina, it is a purple state, so it's got Democrat governors, but it's been a Republican super majority for like, the past, like, six or seven elections. Election cycles. And they recently introduced a bill to make North Carolina the next constitutional carry state. So that's some positives going on in North Carolina right now. And I think with your influence, if you, you know, theoretically did move to North Carolina, it would probably help make it a. A red state. What do you think?
Tim Pool
I just think there's. There's not a good hub for doing the show. That's why North Carolina wouldn't work. We wouldn't. We wouldn't be able to get guests. Yeah. When we have people drop off or cancel on us, which happens a lot, there's like 3,000 people in D.C. that will come on the show.
Ian Crossland
Yep.
Tim Pool
And it's very easy to, like, look at our guest list and then see when we had a cancellation. You'll be like, oh, it's a regular joining at him again. Yeah, but. But I appreciate. You want to shout anything out? No.
Caller 1
Well, right next box. Same, same. Same gamer tag, but.
Tim Pool
All right.
Caller 1
I don't do any social media.
Tim Pool
Well, thanks for calling in, buddy.
Ian Crossland
Cheers, man.
Caller 1
Thank you.
Tim Pool
All right, next up, we've got Panda.
Ian Crossland
Ish.
Tim Pool
What's up?
Caller 2
Good evening, everybody.
Ian Crossland
Good evening.
Caller 2
I have a question for anybody who wants to answer it, but Cuomo was on PBD today, and he was saying that the Department of Education is funded by Congress so that the executive branch wouldn't be able to Defund the Department of Education. So how would you, what would be your solution of what to do with the Department Education?
Ian Crossland
You can put an administrator in, which is what the President is, I believe, is looking to do, and is going to restrict its activities and minimize its impact. To actually get rid of any cabinet level bureaucracy, you would need an act of Congress because they have been, they're created by Congress, I believe. And so you, you have to have something, a law passed to actually do it. But the executive does have a lot of leeway in how the functioning of that bureaucracy carries out its duties. And so really what the goal would be is to limit its actual impact and what it does in order to prove that not only is the Department of Education unnecessary, that you actually have better results when the states are left to decide how the, the, the funding would be spent, because the funding would still go from the federal government to the, the states, but it just wouldn't go through the Department of Education. It wouldn't go to the centralized department.
Luke Rudkowski
So what I also understood too was that they were going to be filing lawsuits using the 10th Amendment saying that some of these agencies are unconstitutional and therefore go back to the states. Yeah, that was, that was an idea that was thrown around, I know, by a bunch of people in the Trump world.
Ian Crossland
Yeah, if I understand correctly, that's the goal with a lot of things. So the, the, the executive order about the 14th Amendment and birthright citizenship. That the reason he did that was because he wants to get that issue in front of the Supreme Court. So the Supreme Court can actually make a decision saying, you know, are anchor babies intended or are anchor babies not intended? Is that someone getting around the intent of it? And there's, there's a couple other things I think that they're looking to do. One of the things is, does the executive have the authority to fire people in the executive branch? Because right now it's a big pain in the nuts for the President to fire anyone, right. The, as the executive, he should be able to say, right, this person's gone, this person's gone. Now they have all kinds of recourse. They can sue. There's unions and all that bullshit. And so what the goal, if I understand correctly, is the goal is to get these kind of questions in front of the Supreme Court. So the Supreme Court and say, hey, no, the executive actually is the one that is carrying out the will of the people, because the people elect the executive. The people do not elect the bureaucrats. So if the President says, hey, you got to go, then you got to go.
Tim Pool
That's really, it's really easy. Trump right now can just instruct his administrators to start one by one firing people as individuals for individual reasons, requiring each and every one of them to file an individual lawsuit to question the legality of it. If Trump does a blanket termination and says you're all fired, it'll be one lawsuit and a judge will block it.
Ian Crossland
Yep.
Tim Pool
If administrators go, Jim, we're letting you go for X reason. Hey, you can't fire me. Well, take it up with your union and you can sue us. You do that 20,000 times. How many of them actually are able to file lawsuits?
Luke Rudkowski
Right. How to have fun anytime, anywhere.
Tim Pool
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Luke Rudkowski
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Tim Pool
Come to papa. Welcome bonus. Step three, play hundreds of casino style games for free. That's a lot of games all for free. Step four, unleash your excitement.
Luke Rudkowski
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Tim Pool
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Luke Rudkowski
Terms and conditions 18/ well the unions blocked it today. It looks like this thing but then then the unions also told the 60,000 people that took the deal that they they 60 now. Yeah, they can't take it. Yeah, that but the union pushed back against the members saying that want to take it threatening them.
Tim Pool
I despise unions.
Luke Rudkowski
Yeah, me too.
Ian Crossland
Particular I like I'm not a fan of unions in general but particularly public sector unions.
Luke Rudkowski
What if you want to get out? They're threatening them these people. They should be able to have that choice. They probably to this union and whether they liked it or not.
Ian Crossland
Absolutely. Unions are public sector unions are literally arguing against the American people. It is totally wrong. There should be no public sector unions. I don't like unions in general. But you can make an argument for private sector public sector. Those should be illegal.
Luke Rudkowski
Totally.
Tim Pool
All right Pandas, did you want to add anything or shout anything out?
Caller 2
I just want to add. Well my quick solution would be just to literally put one agent per state figure out what schools are efficient and the ones that are deficient should literally take those 17,000 IRS people and that they added and just have them go through those budgets of all the failing schools and then basically trash those schools in the union for having these failing schools depending on their budgets.
Tim Pool
Yeah, right on.
Caller 2
But also Tim, congratulations on coming baby. And you guys have a good night.
Ian Crossland
Cheers man.
Tim Pool
Thanks for calling In. All right, next up, we've got slick boss man. What is up?
Caller 3
Hey, what's up? So I got a question for panel. A few gun tubers came out with information. I currently can't verify it, but that US Aid sent large sums of money of gun control groups such as Mom Demand Action, every town and Giffords. If it's. If this is proven true, and especially since those groups donate to Democrats, is that like a rico? And should the DOJ investigate and possibly prosecute this regardless?
Tim Pool
Yes, they should investigate and prosecute. We don't. We don't need the underlying story about moms for liberty or, I'm sorry, moms for gun control or whatever. None of that. Literally. Just start with the DOJ should investigate USAID and prosecute. Right. Thank you and have a nice day. Well, that was an easy call. Thanks for calling in. Is there anything you want to add or elaborate on?
Caller 3
I just thought about, couldn't the three people that you let go because of that law, couldn't they file a lawsuit with the state of Virginia, West Virginia, and get. And then set precedent so that maybe just. Just wipes away those laws altogether, get rid of them.
Ian Crossland
Repeat that.
Benny Johnson
The law. He means the people.
Luke Rudkowski
People that.
Benny Johnson
Contractors, right?
Caller 3
Yeah. The three people that were contractors, couldn't they file a lawsuit as plaintiffs to get. Basically set precedent to kind of get rid of those laws altogether across the.
Luke Rudkowski
Across the United States, suing the government is. It's a big undertaking. Cost a lot of money, but I don't know.
Caller 3
Something to think about. Congratulations, Tim, on the marriage and child.
Tim Pool
Appreciate it, man.
Ian Crossland
Cheers, man.
Tim Pool
Thanks for calling in.
Caller 3
You're welcome.
Tim Pool
All right, and last up, we got. I can't tell you Chinese. Well, it's. It's pillbilly, holler, crawler, but your name is too long to read otherwise. So.
Elijah Schaffer
Working. Is it working?
Tim Pool
It is. We can hear you.
Elijah Schaffer
Hello, Tim. I am a long time. First time since the stargard of a cod.
Ian Crossland
What up, yo?
Elijah Schaffer
So I have a question mostly for you and Brit, since you're both nerds, but can you hear me?
Tim Pool
Yep. What's the question?
Elijah Schaffer
Okay, so Dragon age origins. There was in the stone prisoner dlc, a female dwarf that had been turned into a golem 1000 years ago. Basically a trans. They could have use that as a story, but they did. It was like 15 years ago.
Tim Pool
But it was not like you're trans. And my pronouns, after I was turned to a golem, my pronouns are now he, him.
Benny Johnson
Modernity is its own problem within these types. It has to do with the. With the modern take on language that ends up in a lot of these things that doesn't seem to add up to stories, especially anything of any age like that. When it's supposed to be, like something from a different time period.
Elijah Schaffer
Yeah, basically, it was like they didn't have that in their mind at all. There's the same thing. Feel. Feels there. Right?
Benny Johnson
Phil's here.
Ian Crossland
Hi.
Elijah Schaffer
Has Phil seen Bad Batch?
Benny Johnson
Bad Batch, Bad Batch. Star Wars.
Elijah Schaffer
In the first season of Bad Batch, they give everyone a chain code, which is a. What's it called? Social Security number. They tell them. They. They. You're not allowed to use local currency. You have to use a central currency. You have to use the federal currency.
Ian Crossland
Use Empire credits. Yeah, that makes perfect sense.
Elijah Schaffer
They confiscate guns.
Tim Pool
Austin says she's not trans.
Elijah Schaffer
You're not allowed to leave.
Tim Pool
She's a dwarf. Willingly trapped in a golem's body by Caridin.
Elijah Schaffer
It's crazy. It's leftists. They seem to make stories, and they don't realize that they're.
Ian Crossland
They're.
Elijah Schaffer
They're rightist. But.
Benny Johnson
Well, the. The sad thing about that type of storytelling is there was a time, like, where there was, like, a feeling of exploration, especially, like a network tv. Like, there were old episodes of the X Files that you could absolutely not make today. There's an episode in season one called Gender Bender, which if they tried to make today, would be hilarious. It would blow the skulls off of everybody watching it because it would be considered so politically incorrect. But the point was, was, like, back then, whether it was video games, movies, or television is that writers.
Ian Crossland
Let me introduce you to all in the family.
Benny Johnson
Right, Exactly. The point is, like, if it's a show. Jefferson. Yeah. If it's a show of any length of time, they had to come up with a certain number of ideas, and that allowed them to explore different things that might be seen as politically incorrect. But at that time, because there wasn't really a centralized way for everybody to complain about it, writers got to take chances and take risks on things that either ended up really great or really awful. And what sucks today is that you're not allowed to take those. I shouldn't say you're not allowed. You're disincentivized to take those risks because all of the companies, not just movies and television, but also video games, don't want to take the risks to offend people.
Tim Pool
I wanted to do a show. I pitched this to Shane Cashman, and I was like, we should make a TV show. Tales from the Inverted world. And the premise is there's a news company and the owner hires this reporter who is super conspiratorial and into crazy ass stories. The editorial team doesn't like it because they're straight laced liberal journalist types who are like, I don't know why you work here. And the owner is like, you know, he's flippant and he's an, he's an investor owner, so he doesn't really pay a lot of attention. But he was like, you're not firing the guy. He, he's, he's, he's, he's reaching into an audience and into a space that we want someone to be active in. And it's one guy. I'm not giving you a whole department. I'm giving you one guy. And then the story would basically be like X Files, but it, but a journalist. So then you've got like Mothman and other weird shit.
Benny Johnson
That's great.
Tim Pool
Yeah. And so it was like premised off of Tales from the Inverted World and the story Shane was doing. And I was like, we just need like $200,000 to make an episode and then maybe we could make a series, but probably too hard for us to do right now.
Benny Johnson
There's a great meme that came out.
Luke Rudkowski
It said that would be an idea going forward. We could use a new like, Twilight Zone type.
Tim Pool
Like X Files.
Benny Johnson
Oh, yeah. I'll say. Not, not like an anthology series, but like Xbox.
Luke Rudkowski
Yeah.
Tim Pool
Yeah. So it's like he's hanging out in the office and it's kind of like Mulder. They, they, they don't like Mulder. He's the weird guy in the FBI, but he ends up finding crazy ass shit.
Benny Johnson
Literally the first thing he says. Nothing. Nobody down here but the FBI's most unwanted. Yeah, like the first thing he says in the show. There's a great meme from about Doge the other day. It says, Doge has uncovered two FBI agents still getting paid. And it's. Nobody has seen them since 2018.
Tim Pool
Word. Chinese cartoon collector. Do you want to shout anything out? Nope.
Benny Johnson
Well, all right then.
Tim Pool
Can't hear you, buddy.
Benny Johnson
We're muted.
Tim Pool
He's not muted. There's no sound coming through.
Elijah Schaffer
Oh, it's my thing.
Tim Pool
Oh, there you go.
Ian Crossland
Hi.
Elijah Schaffer
Follow Bert on MenOfBird on X dot com.
Tim Pool
All right.
Elijah Schaffer
On the Final Fantasy 14 channel. Go in there. That's good.
Ian Crossland
Cheers, man.
Tim Pool
Right on. Thanks for calling in later.
Elijah Schaffer
Thank you, Base. Thanks, phil. I played six on Guitar Hero 2 so many times.
Ian Crossland
Thank you so much, man. I appreciate it.
Tim Pool
Right on, man.
Elijah Schaffer
All right, Based.
Ian Crossland
Take care.
Elijah Schaffer
Goodbye. Thanks.
Tim Pool
All right, Mel, it's been great. Thanks for hanging out.
Luke Rudkowski
Thank you so much. I appreciate it all. You are awesome.
Tim Pool
Really, I appreciate it.
Luke Rudkowski
Thank you so much.
Tim Pool
And for everybody else, thanks for being members. We have a treat for all of you. You're gonna be very excited. There's big stuff coming. We're working on crazy, crazy stuff. Working on some documentaries and other shit. You're gonna love it. Thanks for hanging out. Tomorrow morning, the expose on usaid. Tim cast on culture war. We'll see you there.
Timcast IRL: Mel K Uncensored – Panicked College Students PURGE Socials Fearing Trump Will Deport Them Over Hamas Support
Release Date: February 9, 2025
Introduction: Panicked Immigration Fears Among College Students
The episode begins with host Tim Pool addressing a significant concern among non-citizen college students who sympathize with Hamas. Following President Trump's executive order aimed at canceling student visas for individuals supporting Palestinian terrorist organizations, these students have resorted to deleting their online presence to avoid deportation.
Tim Pool (00:56): "Daily Mail. Panicked college students deleting online info after Trump promised to deport Hamas sympathizers. Get him."
Ian Crossland (00:53): "Deport them all."
This sets the stage for a broader discussion on government overreach and its impact on academic communities.
Government Overreach and Lawfare: Potential Consequences
The panel delves into the implications of Trump's actions, discussing the likelihood of escalated responses from the political left. They explore the concept of lawfare, where legal systems are used to target and undermine political opponents.
Ian Crossland (01:23): "The left is completely in disarray. They don't know how to react. Eventually, they're going to get their feet under themselves and have coordinated responses."
Luke Rudkowski (01:52): "There are going to be indictments and arrests... especially... John Brennan... maybe even the Clintons."
The conversation highlights concerns about accountability and the potential for high-profile prosecutions against influential figures.
Reactions to Shoplifting: Security and Physical Responses
A significant portion of the discussion shifts to the issue of shoplifting and the defensive measures taken by store owners. Tim Pool shares a video depicting an altercation between a shoplifter and a store patron, sparking debates on appropriate responses to theft.
Tim Pool (03:03): "You can't touch me. I'm calling the cops on this."
Ian Crossland (05:00): "You're trying to defend your property. The government has a responsibility to protect your rights."
The panel debates the balance between self-defense and legal repercussions, with opinions varying on the severity of responses to shoplifting.
Independent Contracting Laws: Impact on Small Businesses
Tim Pool raises concerns about recent legislation in West Virginia and 34 other states that bans independent contracting. This law severely restricts freelance work, compelling individuals to become employees of approved corporations or face unemployment.
Tim Pool (23:40): "34 states have banned independent contracting. In West Virginia, it’s effectively illegal for a 16-year-old to mow your lawn for $10."
Ian Crossland (24:35): "It's an attack on small businesses because they have to hire people and do more just to keep up."
The discussion underscores the detrimental effects of such laws on the gig economy and entrepreneurial efforts, highlighting challenges faced by freelancers and small business owners.
Cultural and Political Commentary: Feminism and Modern Media
The panel transitions to broader cultural critiques, focusing on feminism and its portrayal in media. They argue that modern narratives often misattribute systemic issues to individual misfortunes, thereby diluting the impact of real challenges.
Benny Johnson (17:12): "They tell women that the conditions of reality are actually men's fault... it's the patriarchy and man's fault."
Benny Johnson (18:40): "If you don’t want to have kids, that's your own business... but she’s living in a penthouse, so there’s delusion in thinking it’s about late-stage capitalism."
This segment criticizes contemporary feminist discourse for oversimplifying complex social dynamics and promoting unrealistic expectations.
Audience Engagement: Callers Pose Questions on Legislation and Safety
The episode features multiple audience call-ins addressing diverse topics:
Independent Contracting in North Carolina:
Department of Education Funding:
USAID Funding to Gun Control Groups:
These interactions provide real-time insights into listeners' concerns, reinforcing the episode's themes of government overreach and individual rights.
Concluding Remarks: Future Content Teasers
As the episode wraps up, Tim Pool hints at upcoming content, including an exposé on USAID and discussions on the culture war, aiming to keep the audience engaged and informed on pressing issues.
This serves as a promotional segue, encouraging continued listener participation and anticipation for future episodes.
Key Takeaways:
Government Overreach: The episode underscores fears of increased deportations targeting non-citizen students with pro-Hamas sentiments, highlighting broader anxieties about executive power and immigration policies.
Lawfare and Accountability: There's a strong belief in potential legal actions against high-profile leftist figures, emphasizing a call for justice and accountability.
Impact of Legislation on Freelancers: New independent contracting laws threaten the gig economy, limiting opportunities for freelancers and small business operators.
Cultural Critiques: The panel voices skepticism towards modern feminist narratives and media portrayals, arguing they sometimes distort the underlying societal issues.
Listener Engagement: Audience interactions reveal widespread concerns about legislative changes, government transparency, and personal safety, reinforcing the show's focus on advocating for individual rights and freedoms.
Notable Quotes:
Tim Pool (00:56): "Panicked college students deleting online info after Trump promised to deport Hamas sympathizers. Get him."
Ian Crossland (01:23): "The left is completely in disarray. They don't know how to react."
Luke Rudkowski (01:52): "There are going to be indictments and arrests... maybe even the Clintons."
Tim Pool (03:03): "You can't touch me. I'm calling the cops on this."
Tim Pool (23:40): "34 states have banned independent contracting. In West Virginia, it’s effectively illegal for a 16-year-old to mow your lawn for $10."
Benny Johnson (17:12): "It's the patriarchy and man's fault."
Tim Pool (40:29): "DOJ should investigate USAID and prosecute."
This detailed summary encapsulates the core discussions and sentiments expressed during the episode, providing a comprehensive overview for listeners seeking to understand the key issues tackled by Tim Pool and his panel.