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Libby Emmons
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Ian Crossland
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Libby Emmons
Switch upfront payment of $45 for 3 month plan equivalent to $15 per month. Required intro rate first 3 months only then full price plan options available. Taxes and fees extra. See full terms at Mintmobile do. Hey everyone. Welcome to libcast. Tonight I'm filling in for Tim Pool. Really glad to be here. We have a terrific show for you. We have a great guest, we have a terrific panel. We are going to talk about how they got caught. It's a big story. Minnesota fraud shut down the DOJ charged 15 people in a 90 million dollar scheme. Todd Blanche was out there laying down the law. It's all very exciting. Guy even jumped off a balcony. So we'll get into that. But tonight we have with us Terry Schilling.
Terry Schilling
Thanks so much Libby. I was very happy to see that you're in the host chair. It's going to be a great show. We just had number eight by the way. Last time I was on we were waiting for little Charlie's arrival but he's here safe and sound.
Libby Emmons
Congratulations.
Terry Schilling
Seven older siblings and they're all. Everyone's doing great so I'm happy to be back.
Libby Emmons
So tell everyone where you are.
Terry Schilling
I work at American Principles Project. We are the NRA for families. We don't do guns but we protect the American family in campaigns, elections and we help pass laws to protect them.
Libby Emmons
Awesome. Shane Cashman is here.
Carter Banks
It's good to be here. Congrats man.
Terry Schilling
Hey, thanks Shane.
Carter Banks
That's incredible. I am a third generation space lawyer and protecting your rights Right now there's a startup trying to create daylight anytime you want even at night around the country. We need to put an end to that is it's not good especially if you're a vampire.
Ian Crossland
That I saw the there they did a big light show in la. We didn't.
Terry Schilling
Yeah.
Carter Banks
We're going to put an end to this.
Ian Crossland
I'm with you. Dude. That is light pollution.
Carter Banks
I'm also the host of Inverted World. Thanks for having me. What's up Ian?
Ian Crossland
Very happy to be here with Octodad. The man, the myth, the legend brother. Welcome with number eight. Dude, I had no idea. I'm so glad to hear it.
Terry Schilling
Like four years since I've seen you
Ian Crossland
and it feels like it ages. So you're in the house. I'm happy to be here. Ian Crossland back at it again. And we got the wonderful Carter Banks here. What's up everyone?
Carter Banks
I'm Carter banks.
Ian Crossland
And yeah, I'm pumped to be producing the show today.
Carter Banks
Before we get into it, I do
Ian Crossland
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Libby Emmons
Yeah, yeah. So let's get into it. Carter, can you pull up that first? I have got and we will talk about it. This is from the Post Millennial Department of Justice charges 15 defendants in a $90 million Minnesota Medicaid fraud Takedown this is from Katie Davis Court, one of my favorites. The United States Department of Justice announced criminal charges against 15 individuals on Thursday as part of a major crackdown on fraud in Minnesota resulting in $90 million. The defendants, owners of child care centers and various Medicaid providers, allegedly stole from the country's most vulnerable, including autistic children, the disabled and the homeless. According to the doj, Minnesota will no longer serve as a safe haven for fraud, nor will any state in this country, said Acting U.S. attorney General Todd Blanch, asserting that the DOJ will hunt down fraudsters wherever they are and systematically dismantle their predatory schemes. There are seven state managed Medicaid programs that were systemically pilfered by fraudsters who treated taxpayer funds as their personal piggy bank, According to Colin McDonald, assistant attorney general for the DOJ's National Fraud Enforcement Division, who announced the indictments. One of the most notable instances is MC Minnesota's Housing Stabilization Services Program, which was created to assist homeless and disabled people in finding and maintaining housing. Initially projected in 2020 to cost roughly 2.6 million, the program's annual cost skyrocketed to over 104 million by 2024. Blamed on fraud and we even had an incident. Do we have the other one? Yes, the guy. Well, we can talk about that. Do we have the guy though? The guy who jumped off a balcony?
Ian Crossland
I saw that and I wasn't sure.
Libby Emmons
Yeah, we have that. We have that around somewhere real quick. But guys, why do we have all of this fraud happening in Minnesota? What is up with this? I don't.
Ian Crossland
I. That's why I was A question I was gonna ask. I don't understand why Minnesota? Do you guys have any beat on that?
Carter Banks
I don't know. I think we just need to build a wall around that state.
Libby Emmons
Just build a wall around Minnesota.
Carter Banks
And like they're saying this is the biggest autism fraud scheme.
Libby Emmons
Well, there have been a number of fraud schemes over the past few years. This all started with an indictment against a not for profit called Feeding Our Future, which was run by Somali immigrants and descendants, as well as a woman named Amy Brock, who I think today was sentenced to former 42 years in prison for her wrangling of this scheme. And they took a bunch of money from the state of Minnesota that was part of the federal Covid relief and said that they were going to be using it to feed hungry children. And instead they pocketed the money. They bought expensive cars, they lived a nice lifestyle. And then according to later reporting from Christopher Rufo, you even had people who were taking money from the state fraudulently and then sending it back to Somalia where it funded terrorist organizations. So we have a situation where it's. I mean, it's not just immigrants in Somalia, it's in Minnesota, it's descendants of immigrants. And it's also Americans who are getting involved in these fraud schemes. And we saw also like all of this stuff about how part of the issue was that the people who were doing the oversight in Minnesota were afraid to be called racist if they looked into it too deeply. So, I mean, we have a number of factors here.
Terry Schilling
You know, the, the, the fear of being called a racist is obviously got to be a factor. But I, I think that this is happening, I think it appears primarily in blue states where they turn a blind eye to this. And it's, it's. I think it's related to the tribe theory. You know, you're either on my. In my tribe or you're not. I don't. This is all great. I love that they're arresting these people and getting some serious justice, but it's never going to stop until people like Tim Walls feel the pain. You have to go after the people that are in charge, not the People that are the underlings that are just doing it. They had bosses and, and, and people that were in charge of. Of oversight there. And until the people that are in charge of the oversight are held accountable for their gross negligence and their dereliction of duty, you're going to keep having this. The bosses have to start getting in trouble. The people in charge have to start getting in trouble. You're always going to have underlings and, and goons trying to steal and commit crimes. But it's when the people at the top, the people that have the authority, don't enforce it or turn blind eyes and allow it to grow. This is a level we've never seen before in the United States. And I don't know if it's just reached critical mass, where we reached it, or if this just exploded at the arrival of all of the Somali immigrants. I don't know.
Ian Crossland
Some. Oregon.
Carter Banks
I should say Minnesota has been in the news a lot in the past year. I mean, six years. Really. George Floyd, of course.
Libby Emmons
Yeah.
Carter Banks
That church shooting that happened last summer,
Libby Emmons
I think it was the Annunciation and
Carter Banks
the political assassinations that happened there. Vance or Bolter, whatever his name was. It's just weird. You know, sometimes I think when I read these stories out of Haiti, it makes me think of like out of. Out of Minnesota. Makes me think of Haiti because.
Libby Emmons
Interesting.
Ian Crossland
Yeah.
Carter Banks
You like that? Well, that's how it is. But because Haiti's like a petri dish for America and for the government to test on people. Woodrow Wilson started it, the Clintons did it and destroyed Haiti. And sometimes, like we have these states where fraud is happening and all this weird political violence. And I'm like, I think there's a broader thing happening behind the scenes here where they allow this stuff and people are enriching themselves while funding destruction and death.
Ian Crossland
I think they probably like, allow it and then the next level manager allows it. Allows it, lies about it. And then the next guy doesn't know what's happening. I would imagine up the scale. It's generally how it's a border state. So it's basically like, I don't know if they're sneaking across, if they can escape. Like, did the guy jump off the balcony and run to Canada? I don't know if he tried to get. Actually, I do have that story for.
Libby Emmons
Yeah, we can. Do you want to take a look at that? I think we have. Yeah. So this man jumped from a fourth floor balcony to flee detention and was then. He was then captured. But this is what Cash Patel said after today's Interagency press conference announcing 15 public health care fraud indictments below suspect who was on the run Muhammad Omar has now been arrested. So he apparently jumped off this balcony.
Ian Crossland
It's a lot of floors to jump.
Libby Emmons
It's a lot of floors to jump. I thought I saw a.
Ian Crossland
Did he at least hang down and like drop?
Carter Banks
I mean, even if you did, that's what gets you.
Ian Crossland
I used to do that on my second floor of my parents house. I'd hang out the window and then drop. You only drop one story at that point. Six, eight feet.
Libby Emmons
I. Yeah, I never jumped out of window. I've climbed in windows.
Ian Crossland
I've climbed up three floors.
Libby Emmons
Yeah, but I've never.
Ian Crossland
Like Spiderman. Yeah. Oh, hard. It was a weird night.
Libby Emmons
Do you ever like lock yourself out and then you have to.
Ian Crossland
Yes, that was the reason.
Libby Emmons
The one window that's.
Ian Crossland
I also lost my phone and found it the next day by retracing the steps, so.
Libby Emmons
Oh, well, very good. Yeah. So one of the things about this Minnesota fraud, like you were saying about Tim Waltz needing to be held accountable or the people just not knowing what's going on. I wonder what holding Tim Waltz accountable looks like. Especially when we have a Democrat party that is so insistent on making Tim Waltz and people like him the face of their movement. We recently had Barack Obama talking about how Mamdani is the face of the Democratic Party going forward. And it's not just. I fear it's not just Minnesota. You know, J.D. vance is out there trying to uncover the fraud in other places. But I know Ari Hoffman with the Post Millennial has been tracking this down in Washington state. And it's more daycare fraud. There's like a lot of this daycare fraud. Why do you think? Like, why is it so. Is that an industry? These social services industries seem really ripe for fraud.
Terry Schilling
Look, I. It's. I don't think it's rocket science. I mean, they're. They're going to the programs that are most defensible. Right. That are most sacred. And that's where the fraud is. Which makes sense because anyone that scrutinizes those programs or points out the fraud, you then get to accuse your opponents, who are trying to cut back on your fraud of taking money away from working families and struggling families. And it's. It's a tearjerker. It's a heartstring puller. That's what it is. And so I think that these programs that are ultra sacred, you know, Social Security, I bet there's obviously a lot of fraud. There Anything where the money is going to actual vulnerable people as like the main thrust of the, of the program. Those are going to be ripe with fraud. They're going to be very likely to have huge amounts of fraud just because they're sacred and no one wants to touch them.
Carter Banks
That's a good point. It's a good cover. And we're bringing hundreds of fraudulent hospices also going under in California. So it's like kind of the same thing. It's like the sacred very, you know, thing. You want to help these people who are dying and die, you know, as easily and pain free as possible. But then it's like hundreds of fraudulent ones throughout California.
Ian Crossland
Did Nick Shirley, is he the guy that ripped the top off of this whole fraud conversation?
Libby Emmons
It had been bubbling up for a while. I mean, there had been extensive reporting on it, but his videos going viral really, really made the exposure that much more national.
Ian Crossland
Had there been exposure on this stuff before they knocked down usaid?
Libby Emmons
Yeah, well, that's the thing. This feeding our future thing has been going on for years and there were indictments going on for years. We were reporting on it at Post Millennial. Other people were reporting on it. I remember distinctly Charlie Kirk talking about it because it was really so egregious. But it wasn't making the kinds of national headlines that it did once. Once I think it sort of got to the leering center and all of that. And once those videos went out, I think that did really make a difference. It shows you how important independent media is.
Ian Crossland
Oh my gosh, it's so powerful, dude. Some random guy get Internet video camera and show 100 million people something tonight. It's so powerful. Yeah, mind twistingly powerful, this technology. I wonder if USAID was covering for this stuff or opting to stifle or not run these stories on purpose. Not USAID specifically, but that whole deep net web that was kind of dark money getting pushed around through NGOs and stuff. I wonder if they were participating in covering this kind of thing up or if it's just more emergent.
Terry Schilling
Well, Libby, you said earlier that you thought people were afraid of calling this out out of fear of racism. The class in America that is most worried about claims of racism, it's journalists. Right?
Libby Emmons
Like, right. That's interesting.
Terry Schilling
The mainstream journal, this, this story should be on the front page of every major news station, newspaper and every news station, but it's getting ignored. There's this new dynamic where the legacy media outlets and the, the newspapers we have really don't cover the things that need to get covered. I mean, maybe that's just how it's always been and that's how we got here. But they ignore this stuff. If it hurts their tribe, if it hurts their team, they don't cover it because they don't. I do think that they actually believe that Trump and the Republicans are Hitler. It's very low iq, but I think they do believe that and they're scared to death.
Libby Emmons
And they keep saying it. Even after everything that's, that's gone on, they keep saying Trump is Hitler. We recently saw, what was it? Justin Pearson in Tennessee. He is, I think he's a state level legislator. He's running for Congress, I think. And he was calling Trump all kinds of things, you know, calling it like, I think it was like white supremacist and all of this, saying that the Supreme Court decision in Louisiana V. Saying that race based redistricting is patently unconstitutional. They're calling that decision racist. And now that we have all of these changes in the maps all over the south, it's been kind of crazy to see how that's all worked out. When you had like Hakeem Jeffries yesterday and everybody saying that they should, you had the NAACP and Democrats, including Hakeem Jeffries come out and say that black students should. Instacart makes grocery shopping easier. And just because you're not doing the shopping yourself doesn't mean you don't care how it's done. With Instacart Shopper notes, you can get particular about what you want right in the app, like rotisserie chicken that's extra crispy steak with marbling the Romans would have loved. And lettuce you'd actually pick yourself. Just leave a note for your shopper so they can get it right for you without having to ask. That way you can get groceries just how you like. Download the Instacart app and shop today. My name is Mackenzie and I started a GoFundMe for the adoptive mother of a nonverbal autistic child. The mother had lost her job because she wasn't able to find adequate care for this autistic child.
Ian Crossland
So she really needed some help with living expenses, paying some back bills.
Libby Emmons
So I launched a GoFundMe to help support them during this crisis. And we raised about $10,000 within just a couple of months. I think that the surprising thing was by telling a clear story and just like really being very clear about what we needed, we had some really generous donations from people who were really moved by the situation that this family was struggling with. GoFundMe is the world's number one fundraising platform, trusted by over 200 million people. Start your GoFundMe today at gofundme.com that's gofundme.com gofundme.com this podcast is supported by GoFundMe. Boycott Southern Schools. They're calling for segregation because now they're saying segregation is how you fight racism, instead of segregation being just racist.
Carter Banks
And that's not new to them because the universities have been trying that for a decade now.
Libby Emmons
Right.
Carter Banks
Like in New York, they've been working on it. How many colleges are like, we just need segregated dorms and all stuff? Like, wait, I thought you were the right anti segregation people.
Libby Emmons
And they have the segregated graduations as well, which I think is so wild. And we saw recently, I think there was a segregated graduation at Columbia. There's ones at Harvard. And you have all these schools being brought up by Harmeet Dylan, who's such a superhero rock star, who's saying, you know, hey, med schools, you can't decide to discriminate against white students and Asian students who have better test scores than minority students, who you're bumping up to the top. And every time you hear about problems in American health care, I start to think, well, we've got this massive fraud that's fleecing everybody, that's taking all the money out of the system. And then we've got a situation where we're not promoting the people who are likely to be the best doctors because we care more about these other things.
Terry Schilling
If they go back to only letting students at Harvard in who are have the highest test scores, they're going to have to get rid of their entire remedial courses.
Libby Emmons
Oh, my God.
Terry Schilling
I mean, do you know how many people will lose their jobs and livelihood? You need to start thinking about these people. They need jobs too. And if you're a remedial professor at Harvard, you have every right to be there too.
Libby Emmons
Not. Not to mention the DEI programs. You know, we need the DEI programs.
Carter Banks
Robots are gonna take those jobs here anyway, though.
Libby Emmons
Also the hr, don't you think we're gonna have like robot hr?
Carter Banks
Oh, yeah, yeah, yeah. That's what those were. A conversation recently, I forget which AI CEO was saying this, but he was like, managerial class will be gone. Another AI CEO is like, the white collar jobs will be gone. Another one was saying, the middle class jobs will be gone. So it's good, good stuff.
Libby Emmons
Just get rid of all the jobs.
Carter Banks
Yeah, just. Yeah, that's what they want.
Libby Emmons
Just get rid of all the jobs.
Carter Banks
It'll be a paradise.
Libby Emmons
Right.
Ian Crossland
I do.
Libby Emmons
Who?
Carter Banks
Not us.
Ian Crossland
I do think that moving away from the jobs based economy might be a good step forward. Although it could be painful in the media in the interim because like the Federal Reserve's job system, I don't know if it's just the Federal Reserve system, but they'll say like you dig a hole and then you fill up the hole and we're going to pay you both with our funny money and then you have to pay us back at interest. So they loan the money to the government. The government has to pay them back with interest so the bankers may make the money. They keep us as debt slaves and then we're, we're paid for like useless jobs. There's a lot of like crap, crap just to keep people busy so they don't revolt. Yeah, not saying they take away all the jobs at once.
Carter Banks
I don't want to take away purpose from people too, you know, that's what is going to happen if they take all the jobs away.
Ian Crossland
That's true.
Carter Banks
Because digging the hole has purpose and like purpose. All jobs are important. I mean, not, I mean, you could argue some jobs aren't as important, but I think there's a lot of jobs a lot of people won't take that are really important.
Ian Crossland
I think their argument is that if they take away jobs that'll give people time to do things that are their purpose, but I don't think it works.
Carter Banks
But that sounds like communism. Like that's a paradise of a. It's a false utopia.
Libby Emmons
I don't know how you find your purpose without putting yourself to a useful application. Yeah, you know, that's the thing that I worry about. It's like when you, when you're a kid you have stuff that you're supposed to do. I remember distinctly like my parents made me do, you know, chores, which at the time I thought like being, you know, tortured. But it, I'm sure looking back, it was totally fine. But they, I always would have to like rake the yard and we had this like corner house and you have to rake the yard. And it took a long time. And I would stand out there raking the yard like composing poems and vignettes in my head and then I would memorize them and then I would know them. So if I hadn't had to rake the yard, I never would have spent the time to compose poems and put them to memory. I just would have watched more Cosby show, which was good.
Ian Crossland
I Had a similar experience with weighted tables at Dusty's in LA on 3200 West Sunset. It's not there anymore, but a great area. And I would just hate it. I'd be there at 7:30 in the morning. I hate this job. Getting the pepper and the salt on the table, getting the napkins folded. And all I want to do is go make videos on YouTube and just make YouTube videos. And I would just hate all day, but I'd make the best of it. I'd get stoned out back and then I would come home like a fireball and make videos. And I think if I didn't have that job to like, yearn for something greater, right. That I would never have done the greater thing. I mean, maybe I could have pulled it off. I can totally relate to what you're saying, Libby, though, because, like, I had a job where I was standing at the podium at Cinemark just taking ticket stubs for like six hours. And like, there were times where I was just standing there writing songs in my head.
Libby Emmons
I think, you guys, I think what we have to show here is that you guys had cool jobs maybe. You know, sometimes I think these are
Carter Banks
cool jobs mucking horse stalls. But, you know, our medical field is already a mess and the fraud doesn't help. And then thinking about Harvard and people who want to become doctors, like, it's hard to find a good doctor.
Libby Emmons
Yeah.
Carter Banks
Post Covid, you know, everything's been. The good doctors are disincentivized. You know, most I go to a doctor and I was looking at a computer the whole time.
Ian Crossland
We just talked about that last night. So hardcore. Since the insurance agencies based in the, in the 90s, I think they started billing dog. They're like, hey, doctors, we're going to give you all of our patients. You don't have to like publicize your, your, your doctor office anymore. And so. But the thing is, you're gonna have a lot more patients. Doctors, like, all right, so we don't have to, we don't have to promote or look for people, but we have to see 10 times more people. We see four people an hour.
Carter Banks
Now you might get paid for giving this pill out.
Ian Crossland
Yeah, like that.
Carter Banks
It's like, not good.
Libby Emmons
Let's jump to this next story. Trump urges the Supreme Court to do what's right and uphold his executive order ending birthright citizenship. I'm really interested to know what you guys think the court will do. Be a disgrace if the Supreme Court rules against his order ending birthright citizenship. He told reporters that birthright citizenship was not meant for Chinese billionaires who have their children become citizens of our country. This was meant for the babies of slaves. This was signed right after the Civil War. You look at the dates, the dates alone immediately after this was having to do with the babies of slaves, and people have used it. And if this is allowed to stand, it will be a disaster economically for our country.
Terry Schilling
And.
Libby Emmons
And you'll have 25 people of the people coming into our country coming in through birthright citizenship, and we won't have any control. We can take a little look at this clip now.
Ian Crossland
We have another one coming up, which is birthright citizenship, and we're the only country in the world that has it. You step into our country and you're
Libby Emmons
all of a sudden a citizen.
Ian Crossland
You come in a certain way. This was not meant for Chinese billionaires to have their children become citizens of our country. This was meant. Or other rich people, poor people. This was meant for the babies of slaves. This was signed during. Right after the Civil War. You look at the dates, the dates alone immediately after this was having to do with the babies of slaves, and people have used it. And if this is allowed to understand, it will be a disaster economically for our country. And you'll have 25% of the people coming into our country coming in through birthright citizenship, and we won't have any control. This decision by the Supreme Court is a very big one. They'll probably rule against me because they seem to like doing that. You know, frankly, I'm not happy with some of the decisions. Look at Nil.
Libby Emmons
So what do you guys think? I just want to point something out. I don't know if you guys have noticed this. Me and Beth Beich, who does social media at the Post Millennial, we were looking at these clips today, and we could not get over this man's outie belly button in the background.
Carter Banks
It is distracting.
Libby Emmons
What's going on?
Terry Schilling
It was very distracting.
Libby Emmons
This is a situation where I think, you know, like, you wear a blazer, bro. This is why you get a blazer.
Ian Crossland
Yeah.
Libby Emmons
You know, even a button down with
Carter Banks
it shouldn't have been allowed. He should have been allowed in there.
Libby Emmons
He shouldn't have. Listen. Be allowed in a fat shame. No, no, no, I. I don't. It's really the Audi shaming I have no problem with.
Terry Schilling
Well, first of all, this is.
Libby Emmons
It's just a little, you know, this guy.
Terry Schilling
We all know this guy. He's at our local VFW every Friday, and he had just finished up 18 holes earlier in the day.
Libby Emmons
Totally fine.
Terry Schilling
This is just. He just found himself at the White House today.
Libby Emmons
That's why I'm just saying throw a blazer in the car, you just keep it there.
Ian Crossland
I think Trump's highway button protruding.
Terry Schilling
My policy. You go to the White House.
Libby Emmons
I found it so distracting because he said the belly is in every clip. If his face was there, you'd focus on the face.
Carter Banks
People are. There's a video circulating that's AI, I think of Trump kissing that man. No, I think it's AI. You can't tell these days.
Ian Crossland
I don't know.
Terry Schilling
Yeah, it might be.
Ian Crossland
It might be real.
Carter Banks
Yeah, I didn't watch the full thing is real.
Ian Crossland
American babies, I think.
Libby Emmons
What do you guys. What do you guys think?
Ian Crossland
Well, he's.
Libby Emmons
Supreme Court is going to rule against Trump and he's probably right.
Ian Crossland
No, actually, I mean, it's. I don't know if executive order is the way to get this done. So maybe they'll rule against it just because it's an executive order on procedure. Yeah, but he's hitting the talking points that are correct. Like airports, before airplanes existed, you couldn't just take some random Indian guy that spoke no English, fly into the United States without even like a visa, and then just have a kid crate and then that kid's an American. What the. Like, that makes no sense.
Terry Schilling
And it was also before welfare. It was before the welfare state, before we started giving out money to anyone and everyone that has a kid. And even more if you don't have a husband or a father involved. There's a lot of perverse incentives now that. He's exactly right. This would destroy the country if we don't get rid of it.
Libby Emmons
Yeah. And we also have the situation. There's something Tim talks about all the time where there's like 1.15 million American citizen babies being raised in China to Chinese parents who had their children in, like, the Northern Mariana Islands or wherever else in America and then got the American passport and took the kids back home. And now they're raising American citizens who will be eligible to run for president at a certain point. And after I had this recent conversation with Chloe Chung, who is a Chinese dissident, she was part of the Hong Kong Umbrella Revolution and then she left with her family. She was a young lady, she was just in high school and she left and went to the uk and now there's a million dollar bounty on her head from the ccp and she's just this nice kid, you know, who was trying to do what was Right. For. For. For Hong Kong. But she was saying that. She was saying that if you're a student in China, then you want to study in the US you essentially have to go through the ranks and get approval from the ccp. So, to a certain extent, any of these American citizens being raised in China will have the thumbprint of the CCP on them when they eventually come here.
Carter Banks
Why do you think we have all these spies? Yeah, Bang Fang, the one who's a mayor in California, only got nine years, by the way.
Libby Emmons
She only got nine years for being a Chinese asset and running the town of Arcadia, California.
Carter Banks
And on top of that, we have all these secret Chinese police stations around the country. They keep finding. You see the one that happened in the Bronx, they uncovered, like, a week ago. There was one in Colorado, there was one in California. And also secret Chinese bio labs that they keep breaking into.
Libby Emmons
What's that? What do you mean?
Carter Banks
They're just. They've got, like, bio labs or they're working on viruses they shouldn't have. I think two in California, I think, this year.
Libby Emmons
Not just in Wuhan.
Carter Banks
Not just in Wuhan.
Ian Crossland
Yeah.
Carter Banks
Wuhan satellites.
Ian Crossland
I think Trump just said he wanted China to buy more farmland in the U.S. yeah.
Carter Banks
It's also not.
Ian Crossland
Open that up.
Libby Emmons
That's not good.
Ian Crossland
That seemed crazy.
Libby Emmons
That seems like a really bad idea.
Terry Schilling
It's a really bad.
Ian Crossland
That was a strange thing for. I'm pretty sure that's the way he was saying.
Carter Banks
I'm not sure the details, but there was something being said about him bringing Chinese people, bringing more business to the farms. And I'm like, what farms do we have left?
Libby Emmons
Shouldn't they be American? I mean, our food supply should be entirely American. Handled. I feel like.
Terry Schilling
Can I share a thought I've had about this immigration crisis that made me think broader about America and our society? I think we make this mistake, and I know this familiar. I'm very familiar with it because I'm in the culture war primarily. But we make this mistake of separating the economy and the culture, when the reality is, I think, that your culture really has a huge impact on the direction of your economy. They both feed off of each other. I. You know, you can make the two wings of the same bird analogy, but there was this video early on in this Trump administration last year, where there was a video that was released where ice was cracking down on one of these big farms in California, and these illegal immigrants are fleeing, and you find out it's a pot farm.
Libby Emmons
Mm.
Terry Schilling
It's. We. We're importing illegal immigrants not to pick our strawberries and our potatoes and lower the price of our scissor Chavez anymore necessities? No, they're. They're picking our pot plants. They're helping us get high. When you make these types, I don't think people. When they. When they go to legalize something like marijuana, they don't think about how we're now going to be using human manpower to make drugs. That's a whole diversion where you could have those people using their skills and talents and labor to do other things that are more useful and beneficial to society. And I don't know. I just. I've had that thought. I want to share. I thought Tim cast deep, deep thinkers on this.
Libby Emmons
Yeah.
Terry Schilling
And I just want to. I don't know, Ian, what's your reaction
Ian Crossland
to bringing in illegal immigrants to do nefarious things?
Libby Emmons
Let's work on pot farms.
Ian Crossland
Well, pop farms. I've never been to a pot farm. I hear.
Carter Banks
I hear, like the most surprising thing I've ever heard you say.
Ian Crossland
Yeah, I know. You think I'd own one at this point?
Carter Banks
You look like you own.
Ian Crossland
I'm about to buy one. Um, it's dirty, man. It's like slave labor because they'll bring people in. The people then can't complain if they're being abused by their employer because they have no paperwork. And so you do get a lot of like, like bad, poorly treated people out of it, too, which is another kind of almost arguably a human rights. Potential human rights violation. It's like if you can't guarantee human rights, you're essentially betraying them. You have to guarantee their human rights. It's. That's a messy.
Carter Banks
So weren't there kids working there, too?
Libby Emmons
There's kids, yeah.
Carter Banks
That was also crazy.
Ian Crossland
Not good children that can't say anything because they'll get a lot of them.
Carter Banks
Like, how many children were lost over the southern border? They were saying 300,000 children went missing over that border. By probably. I think that's probably a conservative number.
Libby Emmons
Yeah. Those are just the people that are known about. Right, right. Those aren't like the, The. The gotaways.
Carter Banks
Right.
Libby Emmons
You know, for example, they used to
Ian Crossland
come in with families, and then all of a sudden, I think it was four years ago, they started just seeing kids dumped at the border with that. I mean, Jorgenshura come. Comes on the show. He came on the show a couple years ago with bracelets that they would find these kids with bracelets on means delivered. And that's essentially they. They got the car the, the meat to the, to the butcher wherever the kid's going. I don't know. I mean if you haven't seen sin Frontera that 6, 7 Kevin made.
Carter Banks
Oh yeah.
Ian Crossland
All the, all the worst parts of what's actually going on there.
Libby Emmons
Well, the. What would you do if your online store converted 36% more shoppers? You could take 36% more vacation.
Carter Banks
Another pina colada.
Libby Emmons
Yes, please. Open a new retail location with 36% more square feet. Fantastic. Hire 36% more help.
Ian Crossland
You're hired and you're hired.
Libby Emmons
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Ian Crossland
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Terry Schilling
But that's weird.
Ian Crossland
Okay, one judgment anyway. Give it a try. @mintmobile.com Switch upfront payment of $45 for
Libby Emmons
three month plan equivalent to $15 per month required. Intro rate first three months only, then full price plan options available, taxes and fees extra. See full terms@mintmobile.com Biden administration, when they first came into office, changed the rules about immigration and said that if you are an unaccompanied minor and you show up at the border, you are automatically given entry into the United States. And then you have an additionally you have what's called the Flores settlement, which has been in and out of courts since I think the late 80s or maybe 92. But it's a, it's a ruling that says children cannot be held in detention for more than a certain period of time. I think it's 20 days. And as that ruling has shifted over the years and it's always the same judge who's been ruling on that case. I think it's, I don't remember her name exactly, but she's in Southern California. And as that ruling has gone in and out of courts, she eventually said, well, if you can't hold children in detention for more than 20 days, then if those children are accompanied by a grown up, then you can't hold their grown up in detention for more than 20 days either. So eventually it became a situation where if you come across the border with a kid, it's a free Entry. And if a kid just goes across by themselves, they don't have any trouble getting in. So under the guise of humanitarian aid and compassion, we have done so many things that have hurt so many more people. Like you're talking about with the bracelets, because you have the coyotes just tagging people, little kids, sending them across the border. Over the Biden years, we saw people just dropping toddlers across that border wall, you know, and so this is what we're doing. And I think it's interesting what you were talking about in terms of culture, because by allowing so many people into the country who have no connection to our founding, who have no, you know, who have no belief in. One of the things I think that is essential about the United States and about United States American culture is that we have. We identify as the greatest ever and the most powerful. And whether we are the greatest ever or the most powerful, I think we are. But, you know, that's part of my belief. Whether we are or not is sort of irrelevant. That's what we believe, and it's part of the zeitgeist of our country. It's part of who we are. When we wander around the world in our white sneakers and we talk English loud, like that's part of who we are. And I. Something I love about us is we're just like, what? We're the greatest. You could be the greatest, too. Like, we're all, you know, let's do it. But we, you know. Yeah, we're like. We, like, undermine our culture when we have people come in who are here for the benefits or here to take advantage of things. What were you going to say at
Terry Schilling
the heart, at the root of believing that this is the greatest country ever? And this was reinforced by my great grandparents and my grandparents and my parents. It's gratitude, right? My grandparents and parents told me this is the greatest country in the world. Your great grandfather was in World War II. He sacrificed for our country. He fought for our country. You need to do your job. You have a duty. You have to show that you're grateful. It was saying, yes, Americans do believe, and it is true that we are the greatest nation in the world. But that's not braggadocious. It is more of a call to arms and a call to duty and ultimately gratitude. And that's the big difference with the people that we're importing here. Ilhan Omar, right, we saved her from one of the worst nations of all time. We where it has the highest levels of rape and murder, corruption, arson.
Carter Banks
It's like Corruption.
Libby Emmons
Huge on corruption.
Terry Schilling
It's terrible. And she has the gall to come here and lecture us about our problems. You should be kissing the ground you walked on. But because she doesn't have any ancestors who fought in any of our wars or have made any sacrifices for America, she thinks it's a right, and so she is entitled. That is the disastrous spirit that we need to be on guard against.
Ian Crossland
You know, Memorial Day is Monday. That's important. My grandfather, Both my grandfathers fought in World War II in tanks in North Africa. My Grandpa Blaine was a tank sergeant. Probably ran over his own men trying to command. These guys came back a shell of a human being to protect us and to make the world what it is today. These guys. My dad is. He gets pissed off at Trump a lot because Trump sometimes he went to Arlington and I think he talked shit about the troops. Sorry, I watched my language. He was saying, like, oh, well, did they even die for. Trump avoided the Vietnam draft because he had bone spurs. He's a rich kid with bone spurs. Didn't have to get his legs blown off in the jungle or face, you know, face Charlie or whatever they're doing over there. But these guys, what they've gone through, we live in this, like, post Cold War era where we are living off the backs of the. Of the working man. And we have no. Lived in this, like, fantasy land where there's no fear of retribution from anyone on the planet. It's not like that is. That's a breeding ground for what we see now. People that don't give a. Like, don't. Don't understand. I don't care. They haven't had to. Haven't had to fight for anything, like, literally fight. When I see. When I see people like, like flaunting, like, talking, like, getting in. I don't know. There's so many things that people do that I just. I don't want to wish war on. On anybody, on anyone. I know I don't want to wish combat on these guys. But it. There's something about what. What these people went through that makes this country really important.
Carter Banks
Did you know your grandfather?
Ian Crossland
Yeah, man. But when I met him, he worked for the. He worked for the city when he got back from the army. And he was like a pole guy. He would climb up telephone poles and he fell off and broke his back. So when I knew him, he was bedridden, basically.
Carter Banks
But.
Ian Crossland
And he was. He was a mess. He was a mess of a man because he was in a tin can for, like, eight months in the hot 108 degree Libyan desert, blowing guys apart, seeing his friends get shredded. God knows.
Carter Banks
You ever see the movie Fury? That's for everyone out there watching. And you're into tanks. Go watch Fury. That's the craziest tank movie. Yeah, it's a really good movie, dude.
Ian Crossland
Those.
Carter Banks
You'll get a better idea of what you're talking about.
Ian Crossland
Claustrophobia, man. Being in one of those metal things and like the friendly fire that doesn't get talked about enough. The amount of friendly guys that get killed in combat just because you don't see them, it's awful. You don't know who's pointing where.
Terry Schilling
Like,
Ian Crossland
I don't know how to instill that into people.
Terry Schilling
I don't think you can.
Ian Crossland
You.
Terry Schilling
That gets instilled in you by external forces. I mean, that those generations, they all sacrifice. They all went through absolute hell. And if it wasn't war, it was the depression. It was having to be thrifty and save and not indulge. Ian, we are soft. I mean, that's what you're really getting at, is that because the last, what, three generations of Americans really haven't sacrificed much. We're. We're starting to see our generation get chewed up and spit out in the workforce and treated like garbage. But that's not the same type of oppression as what you're talking about in Libya. Being in a tin can.
Carter Banks
Sometimes Twitter goes down and that's pretty tough.
Terry Schilling
Or I'm on a plane, I don't have the right wifi.
Ian Crossland
The dudes that served in Iraq in the mid 2000s, you know, and in, in Afghanistan, I know some people are like, bro, we. We kicked doors open and killed kids. Like, they, they talk about Fallujah, the Battle of Fallujah.
Libby Emmons
That seems so terrible.
Ian Crossland
And it like, where's the media coverage? It's like, we want to cut. People want to cover it up and be like, no, no, no candy canes and rainbows. Let them all come. Let's everybody say hi. Dance. Let's dance, bro. You know how many people were killed to create this environment we have? And if we don't protect it, it's going to do that. It's going to become that again. We cannot allow that.
Terry Schilling
Yeah.
Libby Emmons
And then it turns out that one of the people who came here, who was invited because he'd worked with US troops in Afghanistan, an Afghani man, came to the US and lived in Washington State and then like, tried to murder two West Virginia National Guard in Washington, D.C. and did kill, kill the woman.
Carter Banks
And we Trained that guy, and we
Libby Emmons
trained that guy, and he came here and hated us. And so when you look at this and then you hear about, you know, in. In Pakistan, a bunch of Afghans went to Pakistan waiting to get basically a lift to the US after they had been supposedly vetted by the United States, by the Biden administration, because they. And their. They had worked with the US and so their families get to come to and everything. And Pakistan was tired of waiting, and they were like, you all have to go back because you're doing too much terrorism in Pakistan, and we can't have this. So when, you know, we're supposed to be wide open, our arms are supposed to be wide open. And I think that we are, but I think we do have to be a lot more careful about why people want to come to the United States. Do they want to come to the United States because they want to cast off where they're from? They want to say goodbye to their homeland? They want to come be American? Or do they just want to, you know, live somewhere else for a while? We've seen situations in the UK where people from Afghanistan go and become refugees in the uk but then on their holidays, they go home to Afghanistan. What's your refugee status like? What do you mean?
Carter Banks
That guy that you're talking about who shot up the National Guard? I mean, we created him when he was a teen. It was like, I think we had to bring him here. I don't think we should have. But they were saying, we have to bring him here because he's a liability out there. He was part of a death troop for us. And then he came out here, and I think he had some severe ptsd. Like, he was a mess.
Libby Emmons
Sure.
Carter Banks
And he should not have been here. And there's more instances like that, too, of people we've created, and then they come here and just do the kind of the same bad thing that they did over there.
Ian Crossland
Sometimes we talk about a service to get citizenship, some sort of national service.
Libby Emmons
Well, that used to be a thing, too. Right. Is if you were in the country, like, people who had been enslaved could gain citizenship by fighting for the Union. That was like a known way to become a citizen. And that was Revolutionary War. Revolutionary War. You could. Yeah, you could get your freedom that way. And also that was true of people who were not Americans. You could come here if you fought. And I think we still have programs where if you're an immigrant and you're not a citizen, you can fight and earn citizenship that way.
Ian Crossland
You just can't Screw around, you said earlier, arms wide open. I don't think, you know, it's a fire hose. Immigration, you need it when. You need it when you're building a country. And then when you have a porous border, you got to close off and wait and get to know what's going on. Because we cannot allow this country to fall to chaos again. It can't. We can allow it, and we shouldn't.
Libby Emmons
Yeah, I think you're right. And I think that. I think that what you're saying in terms of falling to chaos is a. I think that's a big concern. And you're right, too, about putting a big pause on immigration. And that's something that we previously did in the 20th century. We were like, okay, we're good for now. We're going to put a pause on it. You know, put a pin in it. We'll come back to it later. And it does make sense, I think, to have, like, a very full pause. Let everyone who's here, you know, trying to assimilate those people, and if you don't like it, go home. Like, clearly you could go home.
Carter Banks
Our former border czar was very successful at the controlled collapse through immigration. Like, well, Kamala, you know, like, I went down to Yuma, went down to the border wall, and, like, it's like soft. Tsa. It's easier than tsa. They're coming across the border and they're given water bottles and tags for their luggage and a ride and a phone call. And they gave me more of a problem for just being down there and checking it out, just driving around the wall. I gave them.
Libby Emmons
Yeah. So speaking of things, we've created problems we've created. We have Stephen Colbert. Tonight is his last episode of the Late Show. He has been officially canceled by cbs. Tonight says last night we have this from Business Insider, who says that Stephen Colbert's Late show exit marks the death of the good celebrity interview. So, yeah, this is very exciting for all, for all of us. I know also that Jimmy Kimmel, I think, went dark tonight, as did the other Jimmy. What's his name? Jimmy Fallon. Jimmy Fallon went dark tonight in solidarity and I guess so that Stephen Colbert gets all the ratings. Jimmy Kimmel was on Colbert the other night and said, everyone watch Colbert's last show and then never watch CBS again. We've seen, you know, CBS has had its own ins and outs. They've had. They brought Barry Weiss in to try and mellow things out and make everything a little less crazy. I don't know how that Is going. But yeah. So the Business Insider says that the. This is the death of the last interview. Colbert was hired in CB to CBS in 2015 to fill the shoes of legendary comedian David Letterman, who retired after hosting the Late show for more than two decades. When Letterman was on the air. I will say I watched it almost every night. The guests. Wasn't always a big fan of the guests, but I always watch the monologue though. Colbert's most recent role had been a satirical news anchor. That's 2015. A self described poorly informed, high status idiot on Comedy Central. So the Colbert Report. He quickly established himself as a worthy successor, blending humor and charm with thoughtful, studied lines of inquiry that coaxed his famous guests to open up. What do you guys think? I mean this is a guy who Media Research Council, Media Research center says that he has had like zero conservative guests on. He's really just pushing leftist idea.
Carter Banks
What do you guys should have kept Craig Ferguson. He was one of the greatest hosts for late night. I love, I used to love late night. Not what it turned into. I love like Letterman. He might have terrible politics, but I also watched him and Conan o' Brien a lot growing up.
Ian Crossland
A lot.
Carter Banks
Yeah, Conan had Slipknot on. It was a great show. But Colbert is awful. Like I don't think he ever had a good interview. Actually there was one interview with Joe Biden of all people. Pre being a deep fake and a corpse all the time. There was like a corpse all the time. Well, you know how it was very recently, but there was. There was a pretty like strong interview with him. It's weird to say, but when Biden was sad about the loss of Beau Biden, which was terrible, you know, I totally understand that. That was actually, I thought a good interview. That Biden is long gone, but I didn't see anything. I mean this is the guy who danced with anthropomorphic syringes during lockdowns. Like I don't think anything seriously from this guy.
Ian Crossland
You watch the Colbert Report?
Carter Banks
I did, I did.
Ian Crossland
I made. I've just looked it up. If you look on YouTube after the show or whenever. Ian search Ian Crossland. Stephen Colbert. I made a video to Stephen Colbert 19 years ago to subvert this guy because I thought he was a phony piece of crap that would make this fake. He was a fake far right warmonger. But he was saying things like we need to go to war. And it was a joke, but he was saying it seriously to people. And I was like, why are you doing this to the. So I want to like be like, hey, man, you could be a good person, Steve, you still can. I think he's really smart, really intelligent, not necessarily wise, but really. I don't know about your wisdom levels, but your intelligence is high. You're a great actor. You can be very funny, but that doesn't mean you, you know everything or that you're right. I just remember girls used to send me like Stephen Colbert videos as news
Carter Banks
and I'd be like, but this is
Ian Crossland
a Comedy Central show. You do realize that, right? Yeah, exactly. People didn't know it was fake. I could tell there were people that weren't getting it, that they were just being war propagandized by the guy and he thought was probably getting his jollies off. Like, oh, I'm so funny. I'm so funny. I'm the anti Jon Stewart. And it was like, I don't know.
Libby Emmons
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Ian Crossland
With Instacart, I never liked his patterns. Never, never.
Terry Schilling
What I didn't like about the Colbert Report was, and keep in mind, I was like a political activist in college. I was a college Republican. The interviews he would do with the Republican members and senators, they would always be like humiliating, making them actually look stupid. But then the ones with the Democrats, like my hometown Congressman Phil Hare was on and it was just more of a silly interview. He, he actually made himself look dumb and made Phil Hare look like the smart, mature guy. And it's all just subversive. And you said it best about the anamorphic anthropomorphic syringes. It's a propaganda show. Even that headline. These are the best interviews. These Are great interviews. No, they're, they're puff interviews. There's no tough questions. There's nothing interesting being said.
Ian Crossland
David Letterman, who we brought up, the great and wonderful one and only David Letterman. One of the greatest talk show hosts of all time, maybe the best. Johnny Carson. They'd stayed out of politics intentionally and they would talk about staying out of politics. That's late.
Carter Banks
They would joke on everyone. Yeah, if they did mention politics, it would be jokes on everyone. No one was safe.
Ian Crossland
And Johnny Carson, maybe it was extreme explicit that this is not the show for politics. This is a comedy show. This is a show to lighten the mood at the end of the night so people can have fun and go
Terry Schilling
bring us all together. Right. Getting Democrats and Republicans in the same room watching the same shows, laughing at each other. It brought us closer. Whereas when you just target one side for humiliation, that's when the divide starts to happen.
Libby Emmons
Yeah.
Ian Crossland
And he has been doing that for 19 years. You're right.
Terry Schilling
These are major shows with billions of dollars behind them, promoting them and putting them on the airwaves. It's all deliberate. Like I'm, I'm so black pill. I go back and forth between being white pilled and black pill.
Ian Crossland
I am gray pill.
Terry Schilling
I'm a Christian. Yeah, maybe, yes, most of the time it's just a gray pill. But these are all propaganda outlets at this point. Like there's no real news. They don't, they don't cover the Somalian fraud. They don't cover real news stories that are actually impacting people's lives. And they definitely don't ever call out the real bad guys. They make the good guys the bad.
Ian Crossland
It's funny that you're even referring to it as I like a news show that's not a news show. But because it's not even supposed to be remotely near a news show. It's a comedy. I mean, it's supposed to be a comedy. Well, I don't know what it's supposed to be, but it has always been a comedy monologue. And then you interview celebrities. That's the show. Yeah. I don't think Conan got political.
Carter Banks
Like, I don't remember anything except for
Ian Crossland
like weird humor that I thought was hilarious.
Carter Banks
I don't know, just jokes.
Libby Emmons
They had jokes too, that what, what happens is you, if you're political and you have guests on and you're a political host, then the guest wants to have a good interview and so they'll agree with what you say. You know, because they're promoting their book or Their movie or whatever it is, their album. And so they'll, they'll go along with what you're saying because they want a good react reaction from your audience and you're guiding them as to how to do that with your political views. So I think that's a big part of it too. What do you think about the announcement that he's going to be directing or writing a Lord of the Rings trilogy piece?
Ian Crossland
I like it. I mean, I think he's a great actor and a brilliant dude. Like, it's Colbert. He's hilarious in the right environment.
Carter Banks
He knows that world very well. I'm not, I don't think it's a great idea for him to write that stuff.
Libby Emmons
I'm not a huge fan of his writing.
Carter Banks
He loves that stuff. Yeah, no, it's weird.
Libby Emmons
A lot of people love it though and they could be really good at it.
Ian Crossland
I don't even, I don't hate Stephen Colbert. I like, I want him to succeed. I always have. It's why I made a video response to him 20, 19 years ago.
Libby Emmons
What do you want him to succeed doing though?
Ian Crossland
To be a better communicator to, to really be real. To be real. Not to be a, a, a, a position or a facade of a guy that thinks a thing and wants a thing. You don't even understand. Like just break down on camera once in a while. For real, man.
Carter Banks
But he, he did like, he cried on camera once, but it was so like fake. Mr. Rogers.
Libby Emmons
Was it about.
Carter Banks
I think it was about the election. Oh, oh, it was the election or Covid, I forget which. But it was so put on, it's fake. He was successful as like a, as a character, but he failed as himself.
Terry Schilling
Do you guys remember Jimmy Kimmel crying over Cecil the Lion?
Carter Banks
He cried a lot.
Terry Schilling
Dentists went on a safari and they shot some line in South Africa. Yeah, he was like literally bawling on tv.
Ian Crossland
I mean like a breakdown. Like he's like, I don't know if I can do this anymore. I don't know if I can be a mouthpiece for the corporations anymore. Like that kind of like a full on news. What's that, what's that movie from the
Carter Banks
80s where he's like network?
Ian Crossland
Yeah, network.
Carter Banks
Or I'm mad as hell and I'm
Ian Crossland
not going to take it anymore.
Carter Banks
One of the greatest movies ever.
Ian Crossland
I want to see that from Colbert. I want to see something like that
Libby Emmons
from one of these guys on the mainstream, from anybody. I mean we don't see, we don't see Any of that. We see so much going along to get along. We see so much propagandizing and just re emphasizing the. Essentially the globalist progressive party line, which is something that I'm so sick of seeing because it's all about just controlling everybody. And Colbert dancing around with the syringes was all about controlling everybody, you know, and the thing too, with you, with Kimmel's support right now for Colbert, like, I find it really hard to look at Jimmy Kimmel without, you know, bile rising in my throat after what he said about Charlie Kirk. I just find it really difficult to not just take him seriously, but, like, feel anything other. Feel anything from him other. Other than like just discuss, you know.
Carter Banks
And a lot of their jokes are based in like a false reality. So the jokes don't land for a lot of people because they're not based anything that's tangible. I mean, they think it is, but they're reading. They have a bad media diet. I think I'm paraphrasing what Norm MacDonald said once about you have to have some kind of love or empathy when you're going after these people or trying to be them. You know, like he was. I think he was talking about a Trump impersonation on snl, how it kept falling flat because it was all out of hate. But like, you know, you can tell now they have a new SNL. SNL's had some kind of good moments lately.
Libby Emmons
I'm sort of the most angry at the Republicans right now because they've allowed SNL to be funny again.
Carter Banks
Yeah, they've had some pretty good moments lately.
Ian Crossland
That one girl, I don't know her name, she's awesome. This, she's new.
Carter Banks
There's a few really good. Yeah, yeah, they've had some pretty good
Libby Emmons
sketches and they've had some funny jokes at the Republicans expense. Yeah, for a while the left was so crazy that you couldn't even satirize it.
Carter Banks
They even brought back a Z's, right. You're like, we will undo the. Me too.
Libby Emmons
Right?
Carter Banks
Just, we need you for Cats.
Libby Emmons
That was such a bogus. Me too.
Ian Crossland
That was just so bogus an issue with Colbert. Like, Jon Stewart made his career. He was a nobody. Jon Stewart put him on his show, the Daily show, and turned him into a funny. You know, him and Stephen, the other guy from the office. Steve, who I have no problem.
Libby Emmons
Steve Carell.
Ian Crossland
Carell and Colbert were on.
Libby Emmons
You never hear his politics.
Ian Crossland
He's just funny as a hilarious, top level, a plus list actor. But Colbert went from potentially Jon Stewart still, pretty. Can be pretty countercultural. He's smart enough to figure out when he's wrong.
Libby Emmons
And he's, he was anti all the COVID stuff.
Ian Crossland
Yeah, he, he's like, he's like wise enough to admit it, but, but he, so he, he platforms, this guy, Stephen Colbert. And Colbert is like, could be a counter. Like he could really become counter to the media narrative, but he chose to take the big money and sit with the, with the sharks. Maybe he just doesn't know. Maybe he's like too stupid. Like he does it. Or too, too dumb. I don't know what the right word is. Too oblivious to know what he's doing or maybe just loves it.
Carter Banks
Yeah, I think it's that. I think him and his writers room are so ideologically driven that they have to, they think they have to create that kind of thing. Whereas Letterman, you know, they. Letterman, we know his politics, but on the show, the writers room seemed from a distance, focused on just good jokes, you know, and absurdity, you know, and that resonated more with people in a long time. And music. Right. He loved drums. So every time there's a great drummer, you always hear Letterman say, love your drums. You know, he loved that stuff. Paul Schaefer, Some of the greatest comedians are drummers. You know, Carson was also a drummer. Oh, interesting.
Ian Crossland
I was referencing Paul Schaefer, you know. Yeah. Letterman's number two classic, the phenomenal pianist, you know, one of the great. Does Colbert have a music. I don't even know. Like, he had a band.
Carter Banks
Yeah, he had a. I know he started with a band, you know, but I don't. It's not as awesome and interesting as it was for the other band.
Ian Crossland
No. I know that we're not like picking and choosing all these different late night hosts, but I, I kind of like Jimmy Fallon a lot.
Libby Emmons
I mean, I like about Jelly. I just think there's like, yeah.
Ian Crossland
Wonderfully brilliant and. And I have never heard musical.
Libby Emmons
I actually really like his lips.
Carter Banks
I like the roots battles.
Libby Emmons
Yeah, he has the roots, the lip sync battles.
Carter Banks
He never did it for me.
Ian Crossland
I couldn't.
Carter Banks
Conan was my guy. And Letterman had like the greatest moments in TV in terms of. I love Andy Kaufman. So anytime Andy Kaufman was on, it was great. Joaquin Phoenix doing his own. Andy Kaufman was great.
Ian Crossland
You know who's the opposite of Stephen Colbert is Bill Maher. Bill Maher was The guy that after 911 spoke up about, hey, maybe they aren't totally wrong about what we've been doing to the world. And then they canceled his Show Politically correct. And he's like, well, that's what I get for speaking the truth.
Carter Banks
That was a great show.
Ian Crossland
And he is still great.
Libby Emmons
I totally disagree with his take on 9 11. But do you guys see that he is going to be honored at the Kennedy Center? He's going to be getting like, what is it, the big Kennedy center prize? Is it the Mark Twain prize? I think it might be that he's getting that June 28th.
Carter Banks
Interesting.
Ian Crossland
He stuck to it for real. And he's like, he sees both sides. He sees multiple angles. For Steve, either Steven can't see it or he knows he'll lose his job.
Libby Emmons
I'm wondering when he lost his job anyway.
Ian Crossland
I know.
Libby Emmons
Yeah. So what he's doing next is the Lord of the Rings.
Ian Crossland
Okay.
Libby Emmons
And CBS is filling in, I think, with some sort of comedy show with like stand up or something.
Carter Banks
More Big Bang Theory.
Libby Emmons
More Big Bang Theory.
Ian Crossland
More signs that say we should get a sign in here that says laughter. I mean, just blink it every once in a while.
Carter Banks
There is one. Don't tell the people.
Libby Emmons
And then there was Chelsea Handler today going like, lashing out about the Kevin Hart roast.
Carter Banks
Oh, come on. I thought it was great.
Libby Emmons
I thought it was funny.
Carter Banks
Oh, it was great.
Libby Emmons
Pat Williams was my favorite part.
Carter Banks
I was walking around Manhattan last week and people listening to it out loud. Cat Williams part. I'm like, that's awesome.
Libby Emmons
Well, Katt Williams is killed. He's the bomb.
Ian Crossland
We were talking about doing political comedy and my first take was like, that sounds like an oxymoron. I think politics is the most unfunny, is the most serious conversation you can have. And the antithesis of comedy, they have no place together.
Carter Banks
It's nothing but funny. I think politics is so absurd and funny.
Ian Crossland
Real politics, there's no comedy in it. It's about saving lives.
Libby Emmons
No, it isn't.
Carter Banks
They tell you, they tell you. They don't mean it.
Libby Emmons
It's about a power. It's about power. I mean, politics is about. Yeah, it's, it's entire.
Ian Crossland
I, I think saving your tribe with
Libby Emmons
power entirely about power and insider trading.
Carter Banks
And it needs to be subverted through humor mostly.
Libby Emmons
Yeah. And we need to make fun of it.
Carter Banks
Yeah, they need to be roasted.
Libby Emmons
I think they should be making fun of themselves a little more. I mean, what's funnier than, you know, rich politicians going out demanding that everyone tax the rich and then being like, but not. Not me. Yeah, not me.
Ian Crossland
I mean, it's funny. Strange. It's not funny. Haha.
Libby Emmons
I think it's I think it's. I think it can. It's not funny. Haha. In a good natured way, it's funny haha. In a, in a black pill.
Ian Crossland
It's like horrific. It's like I'll laugh at the, at the little, like the guys in the military that are killing, you know, in the jungle, killing little kids and laughing about it. Like I watch their bodies flop around. It's like, not funny. But it might make people laugh, but it's not funny.
Libby Emmons
Should we look at the Chelsea Handler and see what she had to say? Here it is. I don't have a lot of. I'm 51, so like, I'm pretty secure with who I am.
Carter Banks
Yeah.
Libby Emmons
I don't care if these guys say that I'm a. Like I'm doing exactly what they're doing, except I'm a woman and I'm allowed to.
Carter Banks
And that's real.
Libby Emmons
Yeah. I'm rich, I'm famous and I'm hot, so I'm fucking people.
Ian Crossland
It's supposed to.
Libby Emmons
That's what I'm going to do and I'm going to continue to keep doing that as long as, you know, I remain as fuckable as I am. So I don't really see the problem.
Ian Crossland
Yeah, no.
Libby Emmons
And I think a lot of cringiness
Ian Crossland
should feel the same way out there.
Carter Banks
Especially women that I run into.
Libby Emmons
Yeah.
Carter Banks
Whether you're famous.
Libby Emmons
Oh, yeah. Whether you're famous or rich. That those don't apply. But like, the idea that, like, what were they gonna say about me? They couldn't say anything other than that I'm a whore or my age. I think that was the other thing that they went in and you're like, well, okay, those aren't jokes. That's not clever writing. And I knew they would be lazy because they do that for a living. And I knew enough about like Tony Hinchcliffe and Shane and their backgrounds. I had girls, ex girlfriends blowing up my DMs that had dated Shane and were telling me stuff about him. So based on that, I was like, oh, these guys are pretty bad.
Ian Crossland
So you had something on him that you was going. You could have.
Libby Emmons
Tell us now. What?
Ian Crossland
What?
Libby Emmons
It's just everything we know that they're racist, that they're bigots, that they're sexist, you know, that they think they're like invincible, that they've been cancelled for being like, you know, Shane got fired from snl, but then was on SNL years
Carter Banks
later, so he got fired.
Libby Emmons
So what happened in between those two events? So he believes this is per. One of his exes, that he's invincible. He's like, doesn't matter. I can say anything I want.
Ian Crossland
Yeah. Do you think that now a lot
Carter Banks
of, like, white comics, they feel this all. That they could say something racist and it's gonna further their career?
Libby Emmons
Oh, yeah. They're gonna get in with that group of, like, Roganites and that Austin group or Joe Rogan and all of those guys. And I just, you know, like, that's their M.O. even some girl comics have started to do it, to be, like, in with that. With that group.
Ian Crossland
Yeah. Yeah. I was like, they say this racism.
Carter Banks
Yeah.
Terry Schilling
Because I'm starting to feel that.
Carter Banks
I'm starting to feel like it's this thing.
Ian Crossland
Do you think that white comics are racist? You're like, bro, that was a racist question. Who is this guy?
Carter Banks
Have they never watched this is a
Libby Emmons
guy in a broke T shirt?
Carter Banks
Like, have they never seen on a panel, on a dais like, Deus roasting? This is. This is not new.
Libby Emmons
No, it's not. And also, like, when somebody does a character trip caricature, if you have a big nose, they're going to emphasize the nose. It's all about surface things. So if she's running around, like, you know, doing whatever it is that she's apparently proud of, that's what they're gonna make fun of.
Carter Banks
You're a walking Planned Parenthood.
Ian Crossland
Because I really want to.
Libby Emmons
Walking plant parenthood.
Terry Schilling
It's funny. She did kind of forget the. The biggest joke and the funniest line that Shane landed, which is that she went to Epstein's Island.
Libby Emmons
Right.
Terry Schilling
Interesting that she got to. She couldn't remember that third part that they attacked her over.
Carter Banks
Right.
Libby Emmons
Yeah.
Ian Crossland
Hot and. And sexable. She is. Which. And then she. She went on to be like, oh, man. Then she was, like, claiming how. How Shane thinks he's invincible. Like, Chelsea, if you fall down into a gutter tomorrow and bust your face up, you're no longer what you think you are. Like, you're. You're just a fallible hominid like all of us. So get your head out of your ass.
Carter Banks
No one remembers Chelsea's jokes in the roast.
Libby Emmons
No. Well, because she's not funny.
Terry Schilling
She's not.
Libby Emmons
Right. I mean, Shane Gillis is funny. Tony Hinchcliffe is funny.
Carter Banks
Yeah.
Libby Emmons
And the thing about these jokes. I know. Go ahead.
Ian Crossland
She can be very funny, but she seems so pissed off, like, the last seven years about stuff.
Libby Emmons
Yeah, she does seem kind of mad. And the thing, too, about these. These comics And I appreciate the new sort of more offensive leaning comedy because you actually laugh. You know, I mean the comedy that we've seen over the past several years, the sort of like woke comedy. You don't laugh. It's nothing's Discover top rated stays loved by guests. Rated highest by real guests through authentic reviews. Verbo Book a vacation rental Loved by guests.
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Libby Emmons
But you do laugh when it's like oh my goodness, I can't believe he said that. That's really fun.
Carter Banks
Go back and watch the old Dean Martin roasts, right? And they were insane.
Libby Emmons
What's his name? Oh, what's his name?
Carter Banks
Dangerfield. Rickles.
Ian Crossland
Rickles is hardcore.
Carter Banks
That was the best, bro.
Libby Emmons
He was wild.
Terry Schilling
Yeah.
Libby Emmons
Yeah.
Terry Schilling
Everyone way harder against her than Shane did. I mean.
Ian Crossland
Yeah.
Terry Schilling
Be whining like this about Shane Gillis. Like you haven't seen anything yet.
Libby Emmons
No, no. She should go back and watch some
Carter Banks
Rickles is they forgot about it.
Ian Crossland
I don't watch a lot of roast and I don't watch a lot of post roast breakdowns. Do they do post roast breakdowns?
Carter Banks
This is new. Cuz they're coping.
Ian Crossland
All the feelings I have about that roast I got like you signed up for the roast, Chelsea. Like what do you. Why are you complaining about it? You're not going to be invited back to the next one.
Carter Banks
Probably like you know, you're going to get roasted like Kevin Hart. You're getting roasted for being black and for being short. And that's what all the funny jokes like this. It was hilarious funny. And he laughed.
Libby Emmons
He was.
Carter Banks
He gets what the roast is for. You're supposed to go after that stuff.
Terry Schilling
I also think that there's the ditty parties.
Libby Emmons
They got him on the.
Carter Banks
And the ditty parties.
Terry Schilling
Diddy parties. I never went to any of those, by the way. Yeah, I wasn't cool enough to get invited. But there's also at the heart of Shane Gillis's humor is actually self deprecation. Like he's like, all right, I'm big Fat white guy who's, like, loves Trump and. Yeah, looks like I noticed race. I do notice things. Let's just dig into that. And so all of his jokes are actually making fun of himself and helping us make fun of our own selves and get comfortable. He's. He's like an attack vaccine for the rest of us.
Ian Crossland
Right.
Terry Schilling
So, like, the left is calling us racists and bigots and MAGA supporters, and he helps us not give a shit.
Ian Crossland
Yeah. When he leaned into how he looks like he has down syndrome because people were, like, putting a picture with him and a guy with down syndrome, and he's like, I do look like a guy with down syndrome.
Carter Banks
It's so good.
Ian Crossland
I was like, okay. He's the man.
Terry Schilling
He fits right in. In the special needs.
Ian Crossland
Perfect.
Carter Banks
And Tony with Kill Tony started like, he made a lot of people's careers. Like, that show is one of my favorite shows. I love watching Kill Tony. And he's got people like Cam Patterson, who started out on Kill Tony. He's on SNL now, which is probably why SNL has some better moments.
Libby Emmons
That's probably why they're doing better.
Carter Banks
He's hilarious.
Libby Emmons
Yeah. Yeah, that really.
Terry Schilling
Oh, Cam Patterson is amazing.
Carter Banks
Yeah.
Terry Schilling
I saw him at the Comedy Mothership Sick, and he. He's incredible. Kills one of the funniest human beings of all time. And I met him at the Austin airport the next day, and he talked to me for, like, 10 minutes and was, like, very personal. And I love that guy. I didn't know he was on snl.
Carter Banks
He collects rocks, too.
Terry Schilling
I like rocks.
Libby Emmons
Whenever I. Yeah, that guy's awesome. Yeah. Whenever I see, like, a celebrity who's, like, just really good to their fans, I always think of this thing with Barbara Eden. So remember Barbara Eden? She was. I Dream of Jeannie. I don't know if you guys remember. Yeah, Jeannie's old. It's like black and white television. I think it was on Nick and Knight. But, yeah, I Dream of Jeannie was. Barbara Eden said she was asked whenever there's a. Whenever you're at a Comic Con or whatever, when you're at one of these things, you always stay until the last fan has had their autograph or their picture taken. Why do you do that? And she was like, well, because these are my fans, and I wouldn't have a career without my fans. And I love them, you know? And I always see. When you see celebrities who are, like, good to their fans, I always think, yeah, that's the Barbara Eden way. That's the. That's the right way to be one
Ian Crossland
of the best upcoming. Maybe not even Tim Robinson. You guys follow. Oh, dude.
Terry Schilling
Oh my God.
Carter Banks
Hilarious.
Terry Schilling
Absolutely.
Ian Crossland
The best in the, maybe the best in the world. I mean, I think you should leave that show.
Carter Banks
Are you sure about that?
Ian Crossland
Yes. He started off as like a meme. I don't know.
Carter Banks
I just was on snl.
Ian Crossland
Oh, he was on snl and he,
Carter Banks
they just didn't take sketches. They didn't use them right.
Ian Crossland
Oh man, he's a genius. He's a genius. And the other guy, Connor that he works with. I don't know his last name. They're so funny together.
Carter Banks
Yeah.
Ian Crossland
So there maybe there's like two kinds of humor we're looking at here. There's like the clapping seal where it's like guy did thing. Emphasis, emphasis, emphasis about how bad it was. But counter that applause and people go crazy and they're like. Yeah. The way in the way they say it and then they're cued to laugh and like that's like corporate humor that you see on the. And then there's the other guys that just. You're already laughing because they said the racist word. I'm not going to say it tonight. Cuz it's a family friendly show. But they already stick it in you, you know, and you, you're like, oh my God. I, I, I just heard that. I really heard him say that. And you're already laughing and like crying, laughing and they stick before you even realize it. They got there. They penetrate.
Carter Banks
He's doing it like to me you guys can't see it at home. But he's actually. I'm feeling violated. He was got right now.
Terry Schilling
I saw that.
Carter Banks
I'm. Yeah, I'm not comfortable.
Ian Crossland
I like that humor more where it's like surprising.
Carter Banks
Well, Tim Robinson is like an absurdist.
Ian Crossland
Yeah.
Carter Banks
And like that's, I love the key and peel sketches as well. Like, and that's kind of like similar like wheelhouse punk one Like a Bird.
Ian Crossland
Tim Age on his head. Tim Heidecker, who I know people politic. He's been become very political. You. He's doing the Onion thing without. But he is amazing. Dude.
Terry Schilling
Dude.
Ian Crossland
What a him And Eric, my favorite show. Like Tim and Eric's Billion Dollar Movie.
Carter Banks
I watched.
Ian Crossland
That's so many.
Carter Banks
It's stupid.
Ian Crossland
Like it's funny if you accept how stupid it is. I love that even David Cross, I think Arrested Development. I mean I'm going off the rails right now.
Libby Emmons
I love Arrested Development.
Carter Banks
That's one of the greatest shows up there, like 30 Rock absurdist sometimes just
Libby Emmons
pops into my head when Tobias says, I think I just blew myself. And it's like he'd painted himself.
Ian Crossland
It was a Blue Man Group.
Libby Emmons
And then, and then Jason Bateman's character goes, you know what you do, buddy, is you carry around a tape recorder and you just record yourself for a couple of days and then, then you listen back.
Carter Banks
Lucille.
Libby Emmons
Well, speaking of crazy, funny things, we have Spencer Pratt, who has been absolutely killing it from, you know, from my perspective from afar in the LA mayorals race. And I think it's because I just watched Mom Donnie when in New York that I'm really rooting for Prattle. We didn't have a Pratt in New York. We had Curtis Sliwa, who keeps running for mayor and is never gonna win. He. He's very respectable man in his own right, but he also has a bunch of cats and he's never gonna win. And the gop, like, refuses to do anything about New York City. They won't back anybody in New York City. They just decide that it's fine. But Spencer Pratt is really making this great run in la. So I thought we should talk about it. We have this from the Post Millennial. Spencer Pratt reveals how threats, intimidation drove him to the gop. It says, LA mayoral campaign ads take over the Internet. So I wanted to play for you guys this clip of Los Angeles mayoral candidate Spencer Pratt, who revealed the reason behind his becoming Republican in the deep blue area of California. This is from Thomas Stevenson over at Post Millennial. And he made this comment as he's been praised for viral political ads. Many of them have been crafted with AI, and I'm not a fan of AI, but in this case, I do think he's been doing a great job with it. And part of my reasoning is that he lives in la. Gavin Newsom has been doing such a bad job with the entertainment industry, it's very hard to make things in Los Angeles. How are you supposed to afford those union rules? So by all means, you know, do the little end run around with la. But here he is talking about why he became.
Ian Crossland
Why are you a Republican? Well, you want to break some news here? Sure. When I was a hated reality star, I got so many death threats. I had so much security and police, and what did they tell me to do? Get a gun. This is real. I know people don't like guns, but LA was dangerous if you're hated. So I got a gun, my wife got a gun, and then we needed CCWs. The only people that supported a CCW was the Republican. That was what I aligned with. My safety, my personal safety, my family's safety. I know people don't like guns, but when people are threatening your life and your own security is telling you you need to have home protection train to. It's not like just I went to the. You know, go through the proper steps. That was my. That's it. And that was it. And you felt like that party was more pro second Amendment. And I know know that's a very hot button. But here's the thing. I'm also going to be the mayor that puts LAPD in front of every school to make schools safe from guns. Right now we have officers to do that. They. I talked to very knowledgeable law enforcement. All you have to do is pick one patrol unit for and you give them a nice pin that connects to that school and that's their. That's their street. So they add that one. So that's already part of mine. Just because obviously I know people on guns and we need to make everything, especially school safe. But that is where I connect to. And it's. Once you feel fear and it's real, you want to protect your families.
Terry Schilling
That's a master class in communications. That is because he's showing empathy with the people that are going to disagree with him. And it's. It's so authentic. It's so real. You really can't argue with someone that's gotten serious amounts of death threats and them wanting to have a gun and wanting their wife to have a gun. That was amazing.
Ian Crossland
He.
Terry Schilling
He's just so fresh and he's so authentic and real. And that's what happens when a city burn, lets your house burn down and then won't let you rebuild is you have nothing left to fight for. So you really don't care anymore.
Libby Emmons
I think they've only put up 400 permits for thousands and thousands of homes that have burned down. And you had also deliberate. It is deliberate because you also. What you have is the government wants those people to sell their land to the government so that they can create more government housing and essentially ruin what was a spectacular neighborhood from all accounts to raise families in, you know, or even worse, Libby.
Terry Schilling
They are just trying to steal it to give to other billionaires and rich people that want that coveted land. I've been to LA a bunch. It's one of my favorite parts of the country. It really. It's got great food, great music. I went to Long beach and I decided to listen to Sublime as I'M walking up and down and it was a life changing experience. I understood that band, I understood la. But it's so sad what they've allowed to have happen to that.
Ian Crossland
That area to Malibu.
Terry Schilling
Malibu.
Ian Crossland
Ch up. The one? Yeah. Dude, that was iconic area.
Libby Emmons
California is the one place that I wish I'd taken some time to live in, you know?
Ian Crossland
Yes.
Libby Emmons
That's like 100 worth it.
Ian Crossland
If you ever get a chance to live in California for three years, do it.
Carter Banks
It's painfully beautiful.
Ian Crossland
It feels different and the food is different. It might be the fault line, San Andreas fault, but it fe literally like the vibration different.
Terry Schilling
Right? It smells different.
Ian Crossland
I had allergies when I was there. Pacific. I was only there for like a week. What'd you do?
Carter Banks
I just.
Ian Crossland
I got really bad allergies. Interesting.
Carter Banks
It's just so unfortunate.
Ian Crossland
Or pollen.
Carter Banks
It's run by demons.
Ian Crossland
Yes. Such a big state. I don't think it should be one state. I don't think the south can govern the north and I don't think the north can govern the south. Except the water rights. I don't know how they would delineate the water because the water is coming from the north.
Libby Emmons
Well, and now we have the data centers, but I want it. Speaking of arrested development, we have this post from Jean Parmesan. This is one of the Spencer Pratt videos and I just wanted to share it with you guys.
Terry Schilling
This mayor race is really heating up. Who you guys voting for?
Ian Crossland
Haven't decided. Same. Haven't really been following it. Same, same.
Terry Schilling
Same.
Ian Crossland
I'm not MAGA or anything, but the city.
Carter Banks
City's kind of gone to though, right? Oh, yeah.
Ian Crossland
Jessica stepped on a needle at the
Terry Schilling
playground the other day.
Ian Crossland
I'm not mag or anything, though.
Terry Schilling
I'm not mag or anything, but have
Ian Crossland
you been downtown lately?
Terry Schilling
Looks like an episode of the Walking Dead.
Ian Crossland
Not that I'm MAGA or anything, though.
Terry Schilling
Spencer Pratt seems like he has some good ideas.
Libby Emmons
Not that I'm MAGA or anything.
Terry Schilling
He does seem really angry all the time, though. Well, they did burn his house down.
Ian Crossland
Also, apparently he's staying at the Bel Air Hotel. Not the trailer on his property.
Terry Schilling
Well, yeah, they burned his house down. Okay, we're all adults here. How about on three we just say
Ian Crossland
who we're voting for?
Terry Schilling
One, two, three. Spencer Pratt. Yeah, Spencer Pratt.
Libby Emmons
Spencer Pratt.
Carter Banks
Can you imagine if our wives knew?
Libby Emmons
We're all voting for Spencer Pratt. Right. Of course. Obviously. I wish I could vote like yesterday. Yeah. So that ad I thought was just so brilliant, you know, I just thought it's so good. And he's had so many of these and all of them seem to go like mega viral. Like the one where Karen Bass was Darth Vader. And they just go around the, you know, they go around showing how terrible things have gotten for just regular people.
Ian Crossland
Yeah, I wanted to say that about what he was saying about why he got a gun and why he became a Republican is this sort of aligns with what I was saying earlier about dudes that went and fought in World War II and that have put their lives on the line. And when you see fear and terror for real, if you think someone is breaking into your house for the first time for real, you wish you had a gun and you wish you were trained. So it's it. And then it doesn't make you a Republican. It just like dudes that were, that were leftists in the 1940s would be considered far right today. Like, they were, they were, everybody was like, ready to protect themselves back in the day. It was a huge part of the ethos. You know, my dad had like 14 guns growing up. He was a hunter then. He sold a bunch and bought guitars. But I, I think it's just like, it's more of a. That you become a realist when you're faced with danger and things like houses burning down and entire neighborhoods getting wiped out by fire, people, street violence, things like that. You have to become real, realist. And this guy sounds, I think you mentioned earlier, very real.
Libby Emmons
He does authentic, sincere, and you kind of want like somebody like this in all of our big cities.
Terry Schilling
He's, he's, he's just a tad unpolished, which makes him so perfect.
Libby Emmons
Which I think is okay.
Terry Schilling
I mean, so good. No, it's perfect.
Libby Emmons
Yeah.
Terry Schilling
It would be worse, it would be so bad if he was a Gavin Newsom type and sounded perfect.
Libby Emmons
Gavin Newsom is a shape shifting chameleon pretzel man. Horrible.
Ian Crossland
Has he lived in isolation for too long? Was he always like this? Because I didn't really know who he was until he was governor. But did he, did he grow up rich?
Libby Emmons
He had sort of an interesting background. His parents split up when he was young. His dad ran for, for Senate and I think lost and also worked for the Getty family and the Getty Foundation. So Newsom grew up in the shadow of wealth with a fair amount of privilege. And yeah, I mean, by the time he was like, what, out of college or whatever, he was opening a fancy wine shop with some prep school types.
Ian Crossland
It's part of the problem is Rich kids get great education and they learn how to run businesses.
Libby Emmons
And like, they don't learn how to run businesses.
Ian Crossland
They're supposed like white collar. If they get to go to prep schools, they'll be taught how to open a bank account, how to. How to file an llc, maybe. I didn't even know how to write a check in the 80s and 90s. I. I was never taught how to write a check. I didn't know how to do it because I was a poor kid. I was like a lower middle, lower class, average regular dude.
Libby Emmons
I don't know. I went to prep school and I didn't learn.
Ian Crossland
I wasn't bred for like running companies and being a politician and all that. So when you see people that come from. I don't know if Spencer Pratt's lower class, middle lower class, but he was on reality tv. He got made his mark through a reality TV show. I don't know if he. Did he come from money? Are you familiar with that background?
Carter Banks
I don't know, it's just.
Ian Crossland
It kind of breeds realism when you're, when you're from down hard times growing up, when you got. You don't get stuff handed to you, you have to work for it. From the age of 12.
Carter Banks
If he gets in, do you think he'll actually be able to make any real change out there?
Ian Crossland
I like this thing about cops having a.
Carter Banks
No. I think it's all great. I just don't know if anyone can actually make an impact anymore in politics.
Libby Emmons
I wonder about that too. I'm Kiana, and I leveled up my business with Shopify.
Terry Schilling
Once I figured out that Shopify was
Libby Emmons
a thing, I never turned back. I can create a site with my eyes closed. Shopify thinks ahead of us, you know,
Ian Crossland
and it thinks about the customer more than anything.
Terry Schilling
Every day I'm thinking about some other new business, but Shopify is doing it to me because it's so easy to use.
Libby Emmons
It's like, I can't stop. I'm addicted.
Terry Schilling
Start your free trial@shopify.com right?
Libby Emmons
I mean, the hardening schools, which is what they call it when you put a cop at schools in New York City, like when my son was in middle school there, there were cops at every entrance. You couldn't get in. Even as a parent, you couldn't get in. You had to go through the police. And I liked that about it. And we didn't have guns in the schools. There, sure there were metal detectors, but it's like, yeah, it's keeping guns out of the schools. And we have this idea, I think in America that we should behave as though we have a high trust society when we don't have that anymore.
Terry Schilling
Yeah.
Ian Crossland
What was this recent. Oh, something happened. And they're like, but it happened at a gun free zone. Oh, it's like just. It's just tried and.
Libby Emmons
Right.
Ian Crossland
Old trope of like, how could these shootings happen? We put the sign on the wall, it said no guns.
Libby Emmons
Right. How could that possibly be real, man?
Ian Crossland
You need to protect the kids through force.
Libby Emmons
Yeah. I mean, the force compared to Spencer Pratt Momdani is just such a horrific joke, you know? And you look at that and you look at what Mamdani wants to do, which is he wants the government to raise your kids, starting with 2 year olds in the pre K, pre like the 2K program. He wants you to live in government housing because he wants to seize private property and turn it into government housing. And then you're paying rent to the government. He was complaining about how the federal government is saying that if you're on food stamps, you should get a job. And he was like, well, if the government wants you to get a job, then the government should make more jobs. His vision for America is to have everyone working for the government, their kids being raised by the government, living in homes by the government, shopping in grocery stores owned by the government. There's just no liberty there. And when you look at this idea from Pratt, like one of the crazy ideas he had about fire prevention was, you know, obviously his house burned down and he's mad about that. And on the debate stage even said to Karen Bass like, you're a liar. You burned down my house and my family's house and my friends houses. Like, this is what you've done. But one idea he had was a sort of network of everybody's pools so that helicopters could go in, scoop up water from pools, know where the pools were and do that. And that's a community approach. Not like taking government and slamming it on top of everybody, but everybody teaming up, being like, you know, government is here to serve us. What can we do for our country and our community? We can share the water in our pools.
Ian Crossland
I actually like that because he's actually focusing on. On the locale. What, lavation?
Libby Emmons
Yes, he's focusing on. Yeah, exactly. He's focusing on the little things that LA needs, not like these giant overarching principles that are designed to crush everybody.
Carter Banks
I've been in Manhattan a lot recently and it is not safe feeling, you
Libby Emmons
know, like totally different than it was.
Carter Banks
Totally different My grandfather was a cop in this city in the 70s, and I heard all his stories. After he came back from the Korean war, he became a cop. And that in the 70s, the cities. The city was on fire, and there was a lot of dead bodies, and there was a lot of crime.
Libby Emmons
Bronx was burning for the insurance money.
Carter Banks
Yeah. The subways now kind of feel like those stories. And I was walking around, just walking around. I love that city. I love Manhattan. But it is the wild west again. And I noticed how, you know, it was once all of the Ghanins and Chinese people selling fake Rolexes. It's now all Haitians. That was an interesting shift to see on the streets, but, like, the amount of feces.
Libby Emmons
There's a lot on the subway, a lot of poop.
Carter Banks
It was reminded me of what you hear in San Francisco.
Libby Emmons
Yeah.
Carter Banks
And, you know, I grew up in and out of the city and grew up, like, just north of it. And, of course, there's always been moments of intense violence, and you're running for your life sometimes and get involved in some trouble, but, man, it felt like extremely lawless the past few times I've been there.
Libby Emmons
Yeah, I remember there was a moment, like, sort of in Covid. There was a moment that I felt a distinct shift. Like, I remember In February of 2020, I had been out with friends, and I'd probably had a little too much to drink, and I took the subway home, and I fell asleep on the subway in there, and I woke up. A homeless person woke me up and said, miss, miss, don't miss your stop. And he was the homeless person that lived at my subway station. Okay, thanks, sir. Like, I appreciate it, you know? Thank you. Next time I saw him, I gave him five bucks, whatever, and I got. I went home. No big deal. And it was probably that summer I remembered being on the. Oh, I was going to. Whenever it was. It was. It was later. I was going to a party on 4th. 4th street, and I remember standing there, like, just waiting to, you know, like, walk over and go in. And it felt like the power dynamic in the street had distinctly shifted, and I was the prey. And the homeless people were dangerous all of a sudden. And they hadn't been somehow previously. Like, things had changed.
Carter Banks
Drugs are different now to the point where.
Libby Emmons
Yeah, things had changed to where the point was, like, I was freaked out. And I remember distinctly, I went to, you know, the event. I think it was a magazine party. I went to the event, and I took a cab home. And that was 60 bucks.
Ian Crossland
Yep.
Carter Banks
I think the drugs Changing into more like fentanyl has definitely shifted the attitudes of the homeless. I mean, I think we've all run from homeless people on 6th street in Austin.
Libby Emmons
Sure.
Carter Banks
It's like the guy with the giant boa Constrictor on 6th street is not the most dangerous thing.
Ian Crossland
I just shook a guy's hand on 6th Street. I've taken the complete opposite approach. I love six stuff, but it is hands on.
Carter Banks
Dude, I've seen. I've seen the homeless, like, chase those women on bachelorette parties with the bikes and they're drinking beer.
Libby Emmons
But what are those women doing? I mean, come on.
Ian Crossland
Yeah, right.
Carter Banks
Like, why are they taking those women down 6th Street?
Ian Crossland
So you think that the fentanyl makes them. I don't know a lot about the chemistry.
Carter Banks
More aggressive.
Ian Crossland
More violent. Aggressive than crack?
Carter Banks
It's just a different thing, I think. Cracks, not good either. I'm just saying. And I don't know if it's fentanyl or not, because fentanyl kind of makes people, like, lean and turn into zombies. But whatever they were taking. What I've seen in Austin, what I've seen in Manhattan recently, it's. There's. They're certainly on drugs and they're certainly more aggressive.
Ian Crossland
Is there more homeless people, too? You have a better.
Carter Banks
It seemed like there was more homeless people for sure in Manhattan. And I couldn't believe the subways. So it's not like it's always been clean.
Ian Crossland
I've never seen poop on a New York subway. I've had there for six years.
Carter Banks
Throughout, like, I remember going to get, like, with my wife, get a sonogram when she was pregnant. Right. For. With our first. And a guy came on the train, was like, I want to chop your head off. It's just normal, though. It's just like, oh, it's fine. I almost feel, like, threatened. I could take him. It's all good. We got this. But the ship, there's a shift, like you're saying, felt different where everyone's now dynamic. The prey.
Libby Emmons
Yeah.
Carter Banks
And you know, and you feel like the authorities aren't really going to do much. They're kind of looking the other. The other way. Which reminded me of when I was in Yuma looking at them looking the other way from people crossing the border illegally.
Libby Emmons
So I have this one last story that I want to share with you guys. A little point of pride. We have this out from the post Millennial, but it's actually about human events breaking. President Trump endorses human events. Kenny Cody for Tennessee house as a MAGA warrior. And I would like to say congratulations, Mr. Kenny Cody. He's terrific to work with. He's our opinion editor at Human Events. He is running for office for Tennessee's 11th state House district. You know, I don't know much about Tennessee's 11th, but I do know a lot about Kenny and I think he is a terrific guy. And here is what the President had to say. It is my great honor to endorse MAGA warrior Kenny. Kenny Cody, who is running to represent the fantastic people of Tennessee's 11th state House district. A very successful school teacher, civil civic leader, conservative, journalist and activist, Kenny has dedicated his life to serving his community in the State House. He will fight tirelessly to promote East Tennessee's mountain values, grow the economy, cut taxes and regulations, advance Made in the usa, champion American energy dominance, stop migrant crime, strengthen our military veterans, promote school choice, safeguard our elections and defend our always under siege Second Amendment. So that's terrific. Kenny is a great guy. He's also a high school history teacher, which is cool. And I really appreciate him giving back and I appreciate the president taking notice.
Terry Schilling
Double. Double everything you just said. I. I've known Kenny for a while. I f. I've been f. I met him off of X and I ran into him at Trump's victory party in 2024, and he is one of the most sincere people. Kenny, I told you I support you. And I totally forgot. I literally just made a donation on your website, so hopefully we can get you across the finish line. He is. He is incredible. He's a great man.
Ian Crossland
What's the website?
Terry Schilling
Hold on. I just did a Kenny Cody for Tennessee House, novote kenny cody.com.
Libby Emmons
here's what Kenny had to say about it. I am so honored to say that our campaign has now been endorsed by the President of the United States, Donald J. Trump. Mr. President, it is the honor of a lifetime to have you endorse me in our race. I've been a loyal supporter of President Trump for nearly a decade now, and I plan on continuing to be if you send me to Nashville as your next state representative.
Ian Crossland
History teacher.
Libby Emmons
He's a history teacher.
Ian Crossland
Does he know about, like, the history of communism? And, like, is he well studied?
Libby Emmons
Oh, yeah, he's really good.
Terry Schilling
He's us. I mean, he's. He's one of us. He loves this guy.
Libby Emmons
Yeah, one of.
Terry Schilling
Dude.
Ian Crossland
History is so important. I don't know if you guys go go crazy for it, but I'm kind of obsessed with learning about the faults and the failures. Same Here, human past, you have to. And putting yourself into the minds of a Roman soldier walking up the hill, like getting ready to get a spear thrust into your gut like every moment. Like, what, these guys?
Libby Emmons
Yeah. No, I'm sorry, what's that? No, keep going.
Ian Crossland
I finished my thought.
Carter Banks
Oh, we wanted to hear the more of the guts spilling out.
Ian Crossland
It was brutal. I. I fell on my knees and I wished for my mother and my, my daughter and my wife and I. I just remembered Rome. Viva Rome.
Libby Emmons
I think it's important when you read history to read old history. Like I don't mean old in terms of when it, when the events happened. I mean old in terms of when it was written. Like recent history I think is so fabricated and overwrought to make all of America just seem racist and terrible and the biggest evil that ever existed. So I like to read history that has been written like, you know, pre 80s, kind of.
Carter Banks
I agree with you. You have to also keep in mind how everyone is ideologically driven throughout human history.
Libby Emmons
Right.
Carter Banks
So like Jeremy Ryan Slate, we've had him on the show a few times on my show a bunch. He's a. The Rome guy. And we talk about how like even things like Hannibal taking elephants, you know, to fight the Romans that might not be real. Because the Romans like to do this thing where they're writing about their enemies in ways that make them look stronger and crazier, you know, because there was no written history from Carthage. Interesting.
Ian Crossland
Or in golf closer you get to like the original documentation. Like there's a guy author named Frank Decoder that has like just recently like as soon as the Chinese records of what actually what they'll let you know happened, like first hand accounts of like the Great Leap Forward came out, he was able to get a hold of them and it's. He just kind of straightforward, factual what happened.
Carter Banks
He just.
Ian Crossland
There's no opinion really. I mean any normal person wouldn't have like.
Libby Emmons
But you're so crazy too like watching history change. Like I remember the Tiananmen Square massacre. I remember like watching it happen on tv. And now it turns out that if you grow up in China, you don't even know about it.
Ian Crossland
Yeah, yeah.
Carter Banks
I just censor entire history.
Ian Crossland
Yeah, I get wicked concerned about people telling us that the fake. Fake history. Fake history. Like what a powerful ability. If you had total control of the human narrative, would you fake any of history to get people to do what you want?
Carter Banks
So North Korea does they have fake America's bad history, like propaganda all over
Ian Crossland
their country, like saying that we did all these horrible things, so they all hate us. Maybe this Kenny. Kenny. What's his last name? Cody Kenny. You guys know him real well. But maybe Kenny Cody could come on the show someday.
Terry Schilling
He would be great. He would be very entertaining.
Libby Emmons
Yeah, he should totally be on.
Ian Crossland
Ask him about history.
Libby Emmons
Yeah, he would. He would be a great person to have on the show. Yeah, I totally think that's great.
Ian Crossland
What other history is fake?
Carter Banks
All of it.
Libby Emmons
All of it.
Carter Banks
Sorry, what about, like, you have to just assume most of it is fake to some degree, depending on who won the war. If you think they even won the war, you know who they absorbed.
Libby Emmons
What about if there even was a war? Remember that Evelyn Wa book scoop when the journalist shows up in the war zone and he's like, I'm here to report on the war. And they're like, yeah, we're just making it up. There's not really a war.
Ian Crossland
I've heard this theory that Charlemagne, who you guys were talking about earlier, Charlie, where the word Charles comes from, means. What does it mean?
Libby Emmons
Free man.
Ian Crossland
Free man comes from Charlemagne. Charles. King Charles was all made up by the Holy Roman Empire, by the Roman Emperor to create a Holy Roman Empire. That has always been. Never question it. The year is 1000 AD. This great man had unified it for you. And now the land is ours under this king and that. It was all just crafted story, which is bizarre. I don't know. I don't know if it's true or not. I don't know how to.
Libby Emmons
I think Americans also have a real obsession with authenticity. You know, I think that as a people, one of the things that characterizes us is that we're always trying to dig down to the bottom and find the real stuff, seed of everything. Whereas I think other cultures like. Like French culture is. Is happy to absorb and tell the stories in sort of a more skipping along the surface kind of way.
Ian Crossland
Does that go back to the Greeks? Was that a Greek thing too, to get to the root of truth?
Libby Emmons
I don't know. I think. I mean, I think probably there's stuff like that in all of the, you know, cultures or whatever. But I think that with Americans, I think we are obsessed with authenticity.
Ian Crossland
Part of it is because we've become somewhat invincible because of free speech. So it's like if you're wrong, it's okay. It doesn't undermine your entire society.
Carter Banks
Yeah, I mean, I believe in objective truth, but you can look at like. I wrote a story once about it. I knew a guy who was fixing a wall on a cemetery in West Point, New York, and accidentally hit a casket that popped up out of the ground. And it was the casket of a lady named Margaret Corbyn, who was a Revolutionary War hero from our area in New York.
Libby Emmons
Wild.
Carter Banks
And so while the casket popped up, they were like, I guess we should study the bones. And turned out, you know, they have a giant plaque for her. This amazing. She's got great real estate in the cemetery right on the road. And it turned out to be, like, a guy. The skeleton was a man from, like, the 1900s, early 1900s. And so I was writing the story about it, trying to find the truth, but you see how they manufactured a myth. So we're obsessed with authenticity, but we're also obsessed with myth.
Libby Emmons
Right.
Carter Banks
And Margaret, I think, is a myth, even though you can see there's gas stations named after her in Jersey. Everyone has their own Margaret Corbin or Molly Corbin. And I'm watching, going through the records at the historian's office from when they initially interred her there that the Daughters of the American Revolution, a local church, and West Point were all constructing through letters. I was reading her history. So, like, they were like, is she from Ireland or was she from Pennsylvania? Let's just agree on this. So we have this whole thing, and there's, like, an economy around Margaret Corbyn to some degree, but a lot of it is fake.
Ian Crossland
Yeah, I think that I'm obsessed with myth. I mean, Atlantis is my favorite story of all time. But that's why. But I'm also obsessed with truth, and that's why the COVID thing was so bitter for me as an American. I'm so used to figuring out what's real so that we can move forward in a healthy manner, that when they would say things that turned out not to be true about this, and it's like they were creating fake history in real time. And it was so the rest of the world almost seemed to just be. Be bowing down and playing along. And maybe there. It's because their governments were built to do that. But we have this glorious opportunity to speak up and to demand and just smash the ideology to get to the root of it.
Libby Emmons
What do you think about myths and legends being as essential as anything true?
Terry Schilling
I think it's really important. My favorite myth that I've obviously passed on to my children is the moon landing.
Carter Banks
Okay, wait, wait, wait, wait, wait.
Terry Schilling
Mom gets really passionate.
Carter Banks
I want. I hope you're being serious. I hope you're being serious, because don't
Terry Schilling
they have the reflectors on the moon
Carter Banks
that's, that's propaganda from Big Moon. Don't believe that crap.
Ian Crossland
Is an astronaut graveyard.
Carter Banks
Alex believes there is a moon.
Ian Crossland
Do you think that astronauts got launched there over and over?
Carter Banks
I think something, I think something's up there.
Ian Crossland
But what about.
Libby Emmons
What about NASA saying they're about to build this moon base?
Carter Banks
NASA's a Satanist operation. It was like literally started by Nazis and meth heads and like Jack Parsons who was a demon worshiper. Yes.
Libby Emmons
It was started by Satanists.
Carter Banks
Yes.
Terry Schilling
Jackson at the Jet Engine.
Carter Banks
Yes. The co founder of JPL was literally worshiping demons with Crowley.
Ian Crossland
So was.
Carter Banks
And we hired Werner von Braun after World War II who made the V2 rockets to start NASA.
Libby Emmons
I get.
Carter Banks
They are a Satan worshiping organization.
Ian Crossland
Were they secular or were they.
Carter Banks
No, they were meth heads worshiping demons. That's why we still, we still name
Terry Schilling
rockets after the Order of the Thalama. Whatever.
Carter Banks
Yeah, I forget like Crowley was talking to demons and stuff and that NASA still does rocket launches on like anniversaries of Crowley talking to demons. And those rockets are named after Egyptian gods of chaos.
Terry Schilling
The Beatles were like close with Crowley.
Libby Emmons
With Crowley. Like I don't let. That's so weird. Like why would you want the Scientology guys? Well, Scientology is its own.
Ian Crossland
What was up with Crowley? What was his thing?
Terry Schilling
So the British journalists or the British press called him the wickedest man in the world. But he was an overt demon worshiper, did tons of drugs, had these like sex spell orgies. But he really influenced music and there are all these songs. Black Sabbath has a whole song, Mr. Crowley, it's dedicated to him on the Beatles, Sergeant Pepper's Lonely Hearts. Cuban Lonely Hearts Club Club Band.
Ian Crossland
It's worth saying.
Terry Schilling
I know Aleister Crowley is on the COVID and there's a picture actually of them setting up the shot for it. And Hitler is to the side. Like they were going to try and put Hitler. And it's. It's a dark world. There's a. There's a really cool like seven hour documentary on this that I think everyone should watch. Just out of interest. It's called they Sold Their Souls for Rock and Roll. And it's like some Christian pastor from the 90s is doing this. But like it gets deep. Like the Satanism stuff in Hollywood and the music industry is very.
Ian Crossland
Is this why they say sex, drugs and rock and roll and they put them in a bucket.
Terry Schilling
So. Okay, Rock and roll, the name actually the term was a term for sex when it came out. They were, they viewed the music. They were Producing as sexual. The. The Ramones, when they're. They're piling in the back seat, generating steam. That's a song about having sex in the back of a car. It was. It was. It was all part of the sexual revolution. They were trying to break down all of our institutions, our norms. And.
Libby Emmons
That's a fun song, though.
Terry Schilling
Oh, it's a great song. I listened to it. It used to be my wake up song.
Ian Crossland
And the demonology Blitz creed bop.
Terry Schilling
Yeah, Blitzkrieg bop. Yes, yes, yes.
Ian Crossland
Along with breaking up the society's puritanical abhorrence of sexuality, was then the demonology, like, we're gonna break up the obsessive with Christianity? Was that why. So they're just being counterculture to be counterculture.
Carter Banks
Yeah.
Terry Schilling
Well, I think there's probably a lot of reasons for it, but obviously, like, breaking down sexual norms and rules around that. Like, Christians actually were the first ones to really make sex, like, respectable and good. We. We were the first ones actually really come out and say, ah. Actually, this whole homosexuality thing actually isn't good. You need. This should be within marriage. And the Catholic, Christian teaching on sexuality is actually very beautiful.
Ian Crossland
You know, disruption of the concubine system was probably a good thing. You know, a man with. He had his wife and his four concubines or whatever that he was really disrupted.
Libby Emmons
I mean, there's more slavery right now in the Middle east than there ever was during the transatlantic slave trade. And there's also more domestic slavery in the United States than anyone is aware of at all. You were talking earlier about those bracelets with the young girls being trapped across the border. Some of those bracelets say exactly where those girls are going to be trafficked to, and it's nowhere pretty.
Ian Crossland
I meant only that Christianity is like adherence to monogamy kind of disrupts that. That vile. I don't know if polygamy is vile. I don't know. Take your poison, whatever.
Libby Emmons
Well, it's. Polygamy is illegal, but polyamory is legal in places like Summerfield, Massachusetts.
Ian Crossland
Polyamorous means having sex with a bunch of people.
Carter Banks
Why do you know that? That's so specific.
Libby Emmons
I know that because I grew up outside of Boston, and we saw a story a couple years ago about how they were trying to say that polyamory was fine in Somerville, which is a very progressive town. And their reasoning was that when you had a throuple renting an apartment, the people who were part of the throuple, if one of them. If one of the. If the. If the leaseholder died, the other members of the throuple should get to keep the apartment because of polyamory. Oh, my God. So, yeah, I mean, it was at post Millennial, we tend to cover. Like, I try to cover. I want to cover the weirdest stuff that's happening so that people know about it, you know? And I feel like a lot of my job is to, like, bring the weirdest stuff to the top. Like, this is what local leaders are emphasizing in Portland, in Somerville, in Los Angeles.
Ian Crossland
You know, isn't polyamory just loving a bunch of different people?
Libby Emmons
No, it's polygamy. Except not Mormon.
Ian Crossland
But not. You're not actually getting married. You're just, I don't know, having sex with a bunch.
Libby Emmons
Well, they're trying to legalize it. Right? So poly. Polygamy was made illegal in the United States to protect women and girls from exploitation. Right. Okay. Seems reasonable. Right? Especially when you have a Judeo Christian background and you say monogamy is the best form of family building blocks.
Terry Schilling
The difference is legal.
Libby Emmons
Right.
Terry Schilling
So polygamy is a legal institution. Polyamory is just like, hey, we're just
Ian Crossland
kind of dating like a common law.
Terry Schilling
I'm an unofficial or, you know. Yeah, yeah, like common law.
Ian Crossland
I could go. I go on and on.
Carter Banks
I just want to say, in terms of weird news, I would like to amplify this message happening right now in Japan. Are you guys aware of the bear attacks and that Japan can't make enough robot wolves to fight the bears right now? So. And they're even trying to make handheld robot wolves for Japanese school children right now?
Libby Emmons
Haven't. Hasn't there been, like, bear worship in Japan? Wasn't this.
Carter Banks
No, no.
Libby Emmons
The wolves, part of their pagan religion, I believe, might be worshiping bears.
Carter Banks
Might be. I just. I really do worry about that. And the. The. The wolves have all gone extinct in Japan, and they've sent the military in to fight the bears, but they don't have enough, I guess. So they're building robot wolves. They have red glowing eyes. They're really cool.
Libby Emmons
They should import some American wolves. Like, we're bringing our wolves back.
Carter Banks
A great export.
Ian Crossland
We should have.
Terry Schilling
Yeah, but then you got to worry about them if they get too big. Robot wolves are better because you can shut those down hopefully.
Carter Banks
Well, hopefully, ideally.
Ian Crossland
Right?
Libby Emmons
I don't know if you can shut down the road. What if. What about when the robot wolves meet, you know, open AI and then suddenly there's some sort of, like, vague sentience?
Carter Banks
I'm actually worried about amplifying that Message. Because there's also, at the same time, Colossal Biosciences is de extincting dire wolves. And I could see them right. Eventually putting dire wolves in Japan. We fight the. To fight the bears.
Libby Emmons
Be crazy if they start de extincting massive sea monsters.
Carter Banks
Well, they're working on the saber tooth tiger right now, the woolly mammoth and the mo. Which is like a giant bird. And they just hatched artificial egg.
Libby Emmons
Bad idea.
Carter Banks
All of them are bad ideas.
Libby Emmons
Sure, they're all bad ideas, but really bad bird that can, like. I agree, you know, dive down and just start picking up our children out of the backyard.
Ian Crossland
Would you rather fight, like, giant rabid dire wolves or robot wolves?
Libby Emmons
Rabbit wolves.
Ian Crossland
Rabbit wolves. No, I said rabid, but I'm down
Libby Emmons
for either because I think a rabbit wolf could be wolf is cool.
Carter Banks
Yeah.
Libby Emmons
A good.
Carter Banks
It's like a new crypt.
Ian Crossland
Super high.
Libby Emmons
Yeah. A rabbit wolf.
Carter Banks
I'm against all. I'm against all of them, but you
Libby Emmons
have to pick one series is gonna be one.
Ian Crossland
You don't have to. But I'm asking you, please.
Carter Banks
If I had to pick one of the organic one.
Ian Crossland
You'd rather kill the animals than the robots? Yeah.
Carter Banks
Yeah, I want to work with them. Yeah. If I have to fight in that. In that war, which I do imagine
Ian Crossland
you can poison them. You can starve them.
Terry Schilling
Robots are going to have armor and
Libby Emmons
they're going to have guns.
Terry Schilling
Yeah.
Libby Emmons
They're going to have, like.
Terry Schilling
And they'll have better vision. I mean, they'll have a supernatural vision.
Libby Emmons
Track you.
Terry Schilling
Yeah, he tracked.
Ian Crossland
They don't get tired.
Carter Banks
We're in for. We're. We have kamikaze dolphins now. And the Soviets were taping hypodermic needles of poison on dolphin noses.
Terry Schilling
Sharks with lasers.
Ian Crossland
Here we have the best kamikaze dolphins. The best, according to Marco Rubio. I think we have the best in the world.
Carter Banks
I don't know. It's. It's bad. But we shouldn't be de. Extincting anything is what I want to make sure everyone. What about the.
Ian Crossland
I agreed Platypus Isn't that interesting.
Carter Banks
That is like a spawn of Satan.
Ian Crossland
We don't like it.
Carter Banks
I think it's a leftover cryptid from, like, an ancient technologically advanced civilization.
Ian Crossland
That left out.
Carter Banks
Left over. Why does that exist?
Libby Emmons
It's not exactly. Did you guys hear about the giant pigs in Japan?
Ian Crossland
No.
Libby Emmons
So in Fukushima, right? Where they had the.
Ian Crossland
Wait, I think they have like, a robot trying to.
Libby Emmons
No, they had a nuclear meltdown in Fukushima because of the earthquake and the tsunami. And then they evacuated the area, but there was farmland in that area. And so they just left their pigs and the pigs escaped and have been wandering around as you would if you're a pig trapped in a nuclear wasteland. And they have been mating with the wild boars. But the thing is that wild boars can have baby pigs like once a year. But domestic pigs can have pig piglet babies all the time. So through the maternal line, what has happened is now the boars can reproduce constantly all year and they are turning into giant pig boars.
Terry Schilling
I'm just glad this isn't like a Godzilla thing. Right, Like I thought you were.
Carter Banks
Because you know in Chernobyl there's actually cancer resistant wolves now from the effects of Chernobyl. Yeah, those are cool too. We should use those in Japan.
Ian Crossland
Like we, we, we basically we, we, we owe the Japanese a defensive pact at this phase. If they need help against.
Carter Banks
Yeah, we will drop an atom bomb on your bears.
Ian Crossland
Yeah, get the helicopters. We need Blackhawks over there patrolling. These bears we need to protect.
Libby Emmons
We could just pick up the bears and put them somewhere else. They have not very much land and
Ian Crossland
we have a lot like in the water now they'd swim.
Libby Emmons
Well, I mean there was this book by Kobo Abe called Secret Rendezvous where it turns out in the book it's fiction. Kobo Abe is actually spectacular. If you guys are interested in reading some wacky Japanese fiction which I like so much better like. Anyway, that's a different story. Kobo Abe had this story, Secret Rendezvous about how the government is breeding human beings that can survive underwater. I believe it so that when, you know, when Japan floods, they're all still fine.
Ian Crossland
Yeah, they actually happening. They developed this about 15 years ago. An injection where you can inject. Oh God, what is it? Into the body, into the bloodstream. And then it makes it so your, your oxygen, your body carries oxygen. Like you only have to breathe once every 10 minutes. This is like 15 year old tech too. No, I don't think so.
Libby Emmons
Aren't these these like Polynesians who can
Ian Crossland
go fishing and that's because of evolution. Evolutionarily they swim and they hunt underwater. So they could go underwater for eight minutes, six minutes at a time and hold their breath. And now they're building technology on top of that. It can let your common man hold his breath. I don't know if it helps you run a lot longer or what, man. I should find that story. I heard much about it.
Terry Schilling
I've been teaching methylene blue every morning and it is the Best. Your tongue is blue.
Libby Emmons
It sounds weird and creepy.
Terry Schilling
It is. But RFK Jr. Was promoting it.
Libby Emmons
Sure.
Terry Schilling
Essentially was a dye that they would give you so that they could do better. They could see your blood vessels and your. Your. In your scans and all that. But what they found is that one of the unintended effects of it is that it allows your blood to carry more oxygen and it fights against cancer. And it's. It's a new thing.
Libby Emmons
Less tired.
Terry Schilling
You're much less tired, and you're much more energetic. Bill McMorris and I have been just taking it every morning, and I wouldn't be able to. I. On the weekends, I don't take it, and I'm, like, drained.
Carter Banks
Alex Jones loves it.
Terry Schilling
It's great.
Carter Banks
We talk about it all the time. Yeah.
Ian Crossland
Undo the damage produced by seed oils. It might. I was doing some deep research on it, and I think Covid also was causing the body's red blood cells to not be able to. No. Brett Weinstein actually corrected me. I used to think that they weren't able to transport oxygen as good because of the COVID They thought it was that you weren't getting enough oxygen to the lung. But it was because the transport mechanisms were being disturbed. So that maybe it could help counter that. I'm not sure exactly. I'm not a doctor. Don't.
Terry Schilling
Don't. The only side effects are you have a blue tongue for, like, the morning and then you pee blue. And if you don't pee blue, that means there's something wrong in your system.
Ian Crossland
Are your eyes turning more blue?
Carter Banks
No.
Terry Schilling
No.
Ian Crossland
I did. I've taken it once. I just dripped it on my tongue. I was like, damn.
Terry Schilling
Oh, it tastes terrible. You gotta water it down.
Libby Emmons
Oh, so it's bad tasting on top of everything else.
Carter Banks
It's real strong.
Ian Crossland
It's potent.
Libby Emmons
It's weird.
Ian Crossland
I'm gonna go see if I'm gonna pee blue.
Libby Emmons
Okay, well, we are going to read some of your super chats and rumble rants. But first, we're going to have a word from our sponsor.
Ian Crossland
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Carter Banks
It's not a conspiracy, my friends.
Ian Crossland
It's national food security. Here's what most people don't realize. A single pound of conventional grocery store ground beef can contain DNA from hundreds of different cattle. I I, yeah. Ugh. That's true. So what's the solution? As Americans, we have to return to tradition.
Carter Banks
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Ian Crossland
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Carter Banks
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Ian Crossland
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Libby Emmons
Okay, guys, we are back and I'll read some of these super chats. I'm gonna read the ones that are not mean and weird, so, you know, just be aware of that. This is from Sylvan Monk. Breaking news. Tomorrow is the last day to submit public comment for the FCC to apply harsher ratings for kids shows pushing LGBTQ content. I just found out about this and the pro LGBTQ side is winning. Yeah, I think that happens a lot when you have public comment, period. People don't even realize it. They're not well publicized. And Sylvan Monk goes on to say, see the Variety article? Trump's FCC wants input on whether transgender and gender non binary TV programming is appropriate for children. I don't know how you even ask that question. Like, that seems like an obviously. No, it's not. We're not doing porn for kids. We're not doing this. Like, why would we do any of this weird stuff?
Terry Schilling
I think the whole LGBT stuff targeting kids is just so straight from the pits of hell. Yeah, we all grew up. I mean, we're all millennials or late stage millennials at least. But we didn't have this stuff. I didn't know a single trans kid. I didn't. I don't even think anyone in my class knew what trans was. But all it, this is, I think ultimately it's, it's the result of the sexual revolution in separating sex from procreation and family. Sex is now just a fun thing you do if you want to. And now people aren't even having like the teenage pregnancy rate is like plummeted. Which, fine, but that's not because kids. It's because kids aren't getting together. Which is sad.
Libby Emmons
Which is sad. Yeah, I posted something the other day. Somebody was complaining about something and I said, you know, teen pregnancy used to be real trendy, you know. Yeah, there was.
Terry Schilling
Yeah, I participated in that trend. Very proud of that. That's actually my best kid I have is the, the one I got in high school.
Carter Banks
Listen to this show.
Terry Schilling
I don't know, I hope, I don't know. I. She likes politics, but she's more in a music. She's going to be a teacher.
Libby Emmons
Yeah. You know, I, I have one child, I had him, you know, later in life and I mean I was married for like, I don't know what, like 12 years before I had a child. And like I'm kind of like, that was so dumb. I should have had kids like when I was in my early 20s.
Terry Schilling
This 8th kid is kicking our ass. It's like it's not because he's number eight. Like actually number eight is easier because you've got this like first of all, kids love hierarchies. They love enforcing the rules on the younger ones. So once you establish the family culture and the ecosystem, it self reinforces. It's because my, I'm 39 and my wife's 40 and we just don't have the energy that we did when we were in our early 20s.
Libby Emmons
No. And it seems, yeah. I sometimes I wish like, oh, I should have had kids when I was like 23.
Ian Crossland
Yeah. Yeah. I was like, I wanted to wait till I was older to have more money and be more stable. But then I was like, but now I want to be 80 with like a 60 year old kid and a 40 year old grandson and a 20 year old great grandson. That ain't. I'm 47 with no kids yet. So like I'm going to be 100 with like a 60 year old kid maybe or a 50 year old kid.
Libby Emmons
I mean if you're lucky. Right?
Ian Crossland
Yeah, that's if things work fast like
Libby Emmons
I hope for grandkids and it's like, oh, I don't know, time could be running out.
Terry Schilling
No, you'll get grand.
Ian Crossland
So were you guys. I missed the super chat, but are you saying people should loosen up and get banging?
Libby Emmons
Oh, we're all. Yeah, I think we're always. I think we're always saying that.
Terry Schilling
But no, we're getting beat by the public comment. So the FCC has put this regulation out there for public commentary that any children's programming that has LGBTQ content has to have a warning on it. And so the left is, like, flooding the zone on this and. And all the comments, and they're. We're losing. So we got to get our people making these public comments.
Libby Emmons
Yeah, we got to go to the FCC site to make some public comments against LGBTQ. I. A62 spirit plus, you gotta go.
Carter Banks
That what it is now.
Libby Emmons
Yeah, that's what it is. That it's what it is now. Dubious prime. Something says. So the old saying of think of the children is less about the children and more about pocketing resources for children. That tracks. Well, it certainly tracks in Minnesota and probably Washington state and California. The Spencer fencer says thousands of illegal children were found as slave labor on farm fields. Literal plantation slavery all over again. This is what real Democrat policy is. That seems about right. This one says, from real War Pig, I fought in Fallujah, Ian. So this one's directed.
Ian Crossland
Yeah, tell me about it.
Libby Emmons
I fought in Fallujah, Ian. We did not just kick indoors and kill kids, dude.
Carter Banks
I didn't. Oh, is there more?
Libby Emmons
I don't. It says W.
Ian Crossland
So I didn't say that that's all that they did. And maybe you didn't, but my friend said. And she said we kicked doors in and kind of left it open, but talked about families being there and doing a lot of horrible things to those people. And that was. It's anecdotal. Not every troop went through that. Everybody's experience is different.
Terry Schilling
And war is hell. It was not part of God's plan. There's terrible shit that happens in war, and we all know it. And I don't think. I don't think you say anything wrong.
Carter Banks
The guy who said war is hell, also Sherman, General Sherman, who did the March of the Sea, also had people killing freed slaves. You know, this is the Union killing freed slaves because they were upset with them following.
Terry Schilling
I didn't know that.
Carter Banks
To the March of the Sea and the. The Union general. I don't know if he's a general, but the Union general in charge of that was also named Jefferson Davis, oddly enough.
Terry Schilling
Yeah.
Carter Banks
Isn't that bizarre?
Terry Schilling
That is bizarre.
Libby Emmons
Jefferson Davis wife wrote a really fascinating memoir. It's like Memoirs of a Southern Belle. And in it, she talks about how when they were just like you know, part of the south, but it wasn't, you know, whatever, secessionist as yet. They would just go to parties in Washington. She talks about, like, the whole social scene there, and I think that's really interesting. Sylvan Monk is really on about this FCC thing. Public notice. FCC Media Bureau seeks comment on TV rating system to empower parents. Submit your public comments to support Docket 1941. By tomorrow night, make FCC TV ratings harsher for kids shows pushing LGBTQ content. So everybody who's interested in that, or even if you're not, you should probably just get on that. You'll make Sylvan Monk very happy. Oh, this is an amazing one. My son, Tobias Michael was born yesterday morning. We were blessed with an easy, natural home birthday. I can't wait to introduce him to our chickens. Greater Bob.
Terry Schilling
Very brave to do a home birth, by the way. Thank you.
Libby Emmons
Greater Bob.
Carter Banks
Our third was a home birth.
Terry Schilling
Is it?
Carter Banks
That was incredible.
Terry Schilling
Yeah.
Carter Banks
So good. Yeah. It was like a water birth. Yep.
Terry Schilling
So here. Here's where I think it's kind of appealing, is I don't want to get so morbid, but it's actually a beautiful death. My dad died about five years ago, and it was in our home. He died in his bed surrounded by all of it. They also. 10 kids, so he's surrounded by all 10 of his kids. That's how he died. So, like, that's.
Carter Banks
Yeah.
Terry Schilling
Birth is in being in that room. I don't know if you guys have been in the room when someone dies, but it is. It's sacred. It's. It's quiet. It remind. I've been in the delivery room eight times and it reminded. It's like the opposite of that. You're waiting and waiting and waiting until that moment. And they rhyme.
Ian Crossland
That's for sure.
Carter Banks
Yeah, for sure.
Libby Emmons
Birth and death rhyme.
Carter Banks
Yeah. Yeah, absolutely.
Libby Emmons
Yeah.
Terry Schilling
It's kind of think about death.
Libby Emmons
Yeah.
Terry Schilling
I've been thinking a lot about death.
Libby Emmons
Yeah.
Ian Crossland
Memento Morning. I got an actual shiver when you said that. It wasn't like I got goosebumps, like, from the bottom of my core. I just got a big, big. Yeah, yeah.
Terry Schilling
You were saying, live a better life when you think about your death.
Ian Crossland
And you call that memento mori.
Carter Banks
You mentioned that. Yes. The remembrance that you remember that you're going to die. You know, it's like the. The. The guy holding the skull with Hamlet.
Terry Schilling
Well, the saints used to keep skulls on their desks when they were last writing.
Libby Emmons
Poor Yorick. I knew him well.
Carter Banks
I knew you'd know.
Ian Crossland
Yeah. I Think that's Horatio digging that up, wasn't it? Or was it Hamlet himself?
Libby Emmons
That was Hamlet.
Ian Crossland
Yeah.
Libby Emmons
Hamlet with the skull.
Ian Crossland
Picking up his buddy's skull.
Libby Emmons
Well, Yorick. Yorick was the court jester. Was that right?
Ian Crossland
Yeah, I was in that play.
Libby Emmons
Yeah.
Ian Crossland
Sick.
Carter Banks
I was wondering how you all knew so much about this.
Ian Crossland
I not welded a lot of Shakespeare.
Carter Banks
Also fake, unfortunately. Sorry, guys. Shakespeare, it was a system of people. I think it was a network like Banksy, like Brecht.
Libby Emmons
I think Brecht was more of a system of people than Shakespeare. I think. I think when people talk about plays being a system of people, what they don't understand is how theatrical production works in a lot of ways. Every play is a system of people. Because you have your draft, you bring it into your team of actors. Your actors are awesome. That's why they're your actors. You bring it into the director, you do a read through. Everyone's like, oh, what if I did this? What if I did this? And then you're like, yes, I will put that in. And then the director says, what if they came in from over there instead of over there and there was a tree? And you're like, yes, I will put that in. So every. I don't think that makes it fake, that it's Shakespeare. I think that just makes it part of the way that that's just part of the theatrical tradition. That's what Brecht did, too.
Ian Crossland
I heard that it was like a British royal that or a duke or something that wrote. But the king or queen would have had him killed if they knew that he was writing. Talking trash about the monarch, the monarchy. So they had to use a pen name. And they made up this character. William Shakespeare. Yeah, and I studied the guy and people were obsessed with him, but they still thought that that was possible.
Carter Banks
Well, the plays are great. Whoever wrote him.
Ian Crossland
Yeah. Twelfth Night, that was my second play that I was ever in. I played Festy the Clown. That was a good one.
Carter Banks
I was not come back onto the show as Festy the Clown.
Ian Crossland
He's like the wise fool. I try to do that on this show.
Carter Banks
Perfect.
Ian Crossland
I hope I'm pulling it off.
Carter Banks
Just breaking the fourth wall so hard right now.
Libby Emmons
Okay, I want to read some of these. Are these the Rumble Rants? Carter's telling us to read Rumble rants, but I didn't know where they were. Sorry, guys. The beautiful babies being born in Tim cast tradition need to be reminded of the free thousand dollar payments being given out on the Trump account website. There are also yearly Trump 401ks for low income people. Never before. I agree with you, Mr. Rumble Rant Person. What is your name? Thinker for life. You're totally right about that. I think this is so such a great initiative. And the initiative where you can start a little fund for your kid and the government matches it $1,000. That's so great. That is a good use of my tax dollars. Very happy about that. Use of my tax dollars. Also the 401k is for people who have low income. This is how you build wealth. Right. And we've had so much progressive freakouts about like how, you know, the poor people can't build wealth or whatever. And this is how they do it. This is how you can. This is how you can build wealth. I think that's great. Steven Crowder did an expose on the dozens of Chinese owned pot farms. Several in Oklahoma alone. Yeah, well, you know, we should probably not have those.
Ian Crossland
Who was that? Was that a Rumble rant?
Libby Emmons
Oh yeah. The Patrick 13.
Ian Crossland
Patrick.
Libby Emmons
The Patrick 13.
Ian Crossland
I got you, Patrick.
Libby Emmons
Am I doing this right, Carter?
Ian Crossland
Yeah. Yeah.
Libby Emmons
We all can make a thinker for life again. Thank you, Thinker. We all could make a huge difference if we consistently pushed Randy fines new bill which bans foreign aligned citizens like terrorists Talib and Omar. Well, if what you're saying is that people who hold federal office should be born in the United States, I think that's a great idea. Of course, with 1 point something million Americans being raised as Chinese. I don't know that. I mean I feel like. I feel like that ship has sailed to a certain extent. Because all you really have to do is sneak in, have a kid, raise them somewhere else.
Terry Schilling
Million.
Libby Emmons
I think it's 1.15 million.
Terry Schilling
Oh my gosh. It's a lot in China. In China being indoctrinated their system and their values and their morals.
Libby Emmons
I do not understand why Congress doesn't shut down that industry.
Terry Schilling
The surrogacy and ivf.
Libby Emmons
No, the birth tourism.
Terry Schilling
Yeah.
Libby Emmons
Yes. But also surrogacy is tourism.
Terry Schilling
IVF is dark too. I know friends that have benefited. But the surrogacy.
Libby Emmons
But it's not just the surrogacy, it's the birth tourism. Like there's places where they advertise to
Terry Schilling
Chinese place to start, I think.
Libby Emmons
Come have your baby here in the Northern Mariana Islands. Should I do more of them?
Carter Banks
There's one and then we can do.
Libby Emmons
Which one?
Carter Banks
This one? The purple one right there.
Libby Emmons
The purple one?
Ian Crossland
Yeah.
Libby Emmons
Jolly. 1976 says libcast. I think we need to workshop that name. What is this website we are getting all of the articles from tonight? It is working so much better than the articles Poso was pulling up yesterday. Well, it is the Post Millennial. I will tell you that. I am the editor in chief of the Post Millennial and you have been hanging out tonight with all of us and I'm really happy about that. You can also check out my podcast, the Pod Millennial. And soon that's going to be a video podcast, I am told. Apparently they're putting a studio in my little tiny house, so we will see how that goes. I don't know where I'm supposed to put all of the books that are currently in the place where they want to put the studio.
Carter Banks
Nice.
Libby Emmons
Terry, tell everyone where they can find you.
Terry Schilling
American principles project.org and you can follow me across all social media channels at Shilling 1776.
Carter Banks
You can find me online at Shane Cashman. I host Inverted World Monday through Thursday, 10 o' clock at night on rumble and YouTube. And my new book, Good Villains is available for pre order now at Barnes and Noble Books, a million Walmart, you name it. Amazon.
Ian Crossland
Good Villains.
Carter Banks
That's right.
Ian Crossland
Oh, that's the first I've heard of it.
Carter Banks
Yeah.
Libby Emmons
Yeah, a great title.
Carter Banks
Thank you.
Ian Crossland
Yeah. Hey, I'm Ian Crossland. But Monday is Memorial Day. This is important to remember. You want the antidote to chaos is remembrance of the righteous. Is living in belief, in faith. Is having a point that you focus on God, faith, country, people, your neighbors, your people. But remember these people that had to face the horrors before you so that you don't have to and really, really put yourself, try to put yourself where they were watching documentaries of guys that came back from Vietnam that served at Hotel Hanoi, you know, dudes that were shot down, that were POWs and that, and that still still found a way. I'm not trying to drum up fake emotion about it. It's just super, super important. It really is important. And Monday is Memorial Day. I don't know if we're gonna have a show Monday anyway, so God, thanks to all you people that have served in the military. That is a big deal. Thank you. Goodbye.
Libby Emmons
And you can find me on Twitter at Libby Emmons and thanks for hanging out.
Ian Crossland
And I'm Carter Banks and thank you all for coming.
Carter Banks
We're gonna go to the after show after this and you can follow me at Carter Banks if you want to, man.
Ian Crossland
Terry, Shane, Ian, Libby, thank you for
Carter Banks
coming in and this has been fun.
Ian Crossland
So yeah, let's do it.
Date: May 22, 2026
Host: Libby Emmons (guest hosting for Tim Pool)
Panel: Terry Schilling, Ian Crossland, Carter Banks
The episode centers on the recent $90 million Medicaid and daycare fraud bust in Minnesota, discussing its scale, political implications, and connections to broader trends in government accountability, media coverage, culture, and urban safety. It expands to address issues of immigration, public accountability, and shifts in political and cultural dialogue, including late night TV and urban governance.
[05:56]–[13:46]
[15:09]–[17:12]
[25:01]–[37:57]
[46:30]–[61:59]
[74:20]–[85:51]
[91:07]–[104:06]
[105:10]–[106:42]
This episode is a must-listen for those interested in American corruption scandals, the limits of media coverage, the intersection of culture and politics, urban crisis management, and the changing nature of comedy and authenticity in the public sphere.