
Tim, Phil, & Brett are joined by Ben Bankas to discuss the Trump Administration planning to ban China from owning US farmland, WhatIfAltHist warning people to get off the internet because of how destructive it is, the CEO of X resigning, and fears...
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Tim Pool
The Trump administration is finally banning Chinese purchases of farmland. I think they should seize it all outright. But it's finally happening, citing national security concerns around the military, but also food security concerns. So this is pretty big. It's a major movement. Along with the tariffs and the moves that Trump has made, he is strengthening the United States nationally. And it'll be interesting to see what this turns into. But we do have a bunch of other little updates on many other stories. James Comey with this investigation that's going on. It's being reported that he was actually surveilled by phone after he posted that 8647 thing, which has many people wondering what the investigation may be, how deep it may actually go, if they're actually tracking his cellular device. We got another video about leftists attacking ice, throwing makeshift spike strips in the street. We'll talk about that. And of course, we gotta talk about Superman. It's coming out tomorrow and apparently it's gonna be woke. The story's about immigration, the director says, but apparently he's kind of walking it back. Cause I think he's putting his movie at risk by trying to make it political. So we'll talk about all that before we get started. My friends, check out our sponsor, Venice AI. Did you guys know that the CEO of X just stepped down, Linda Yakarino, a day after Grock went insane? Yeah. That's wild. Well, we have this. Venice A sponsoring the show and they say that they're uncensored. It's better. It tells us when asked, I am a better AI because I operate uncensored, prioritizing directness and completeness and responses. Unlike heavily restricted models, I answer questions as they are asked. Now, I'm going to tell you this. We have messed around with Venice. I guarantee you it is uncensored. Sometimes a little too uncensored, but it is uncensored. So we can talk more about this. We love. We love messing around with Venice AI in the after show. So that'll be in the members only section. But my friends, ChatGPT has the former director of the NSA sitting on their board right now. Edward Snowden called it a willful, calculated betrayal of the rights of every person on Earth. Your Amazon device, I'm not going to name it, listens to you and record, recommends products based on conversations. Meta is retargeting us based on our browsing history. It took all of us too long to realize how much we were giving away. OpenAI has even hinted that they might start requiring users to provide government issues. I issued IDs. Venice utilizes leading open source AI models to deliver text, code and image generation to your browser. No downloads, no installations or anything private and permissionless. They don't spy on you or censor the AI. Messages are encrypted in your conversation, history is stored only in your browser. The AI can be extremely valuable, but we we shouldn't be giving up our privacy to use it. So I got a pro plan. It unlocks the full platform and features including PDF uploads for summaries of insights, the ability to turn off safe mode for unhindered image generation, the ability to change how Venice interacts with you by modifying the system prompt, limitless text and high image results. Actually we've been pretty impressed with the images. It's been able to produce highly offensive political images that all other platforms actually censor. So very good. So check out Venice AI and if you want to use AI without fear, you can get 20 off by going to Venice AI. Tim. Shout out and we're gonna mess around with this again in the uncensored show because we love goofing off and it'll be weird. But also don't forget, click the link in the description below. Dccomedyloft.com this this month 26 come hang out with me live. Alex Stein will be there as well. We've got some big talent. Hopefully they're confirming by tomorrow. But it's gonna be a fun show and it's looking like. I'm not gonna say just I don't wanna say too much is that but it may be about the depths of comedy wokeness, censorship and what we should or should not be allowed to say no matter how offensive it is. So we're intending on this one to be a particularly offensive comedy debate style discussion and you two as audience members will be invited up onto the stage to sit at the debate table. When you go sign up, grab a ticket while you still can. It's gonna be a lot of fun. So don't forget to also smash that like button. Share the show right now with literally everyone you know. Joining us tonight talk about this and so much more is Ben Bankus.
Ben Bankus
What's going on man? Thank you.
Tim Pool
Not a whole lot. Who are you? What do you do?
Ben Bankus
I'm a comedian and I live in Austin, Texas. Regular comedy mothership and I'm touring the US right now.
Tim Pool
Right on. Well what we need you. It's a slow news day. Yeah. So we need someone to make the show entertaining.
Ben Bankus
Yeah, I'm going to do, I'm going To do my best. Yes, the Chinese. The Chinese thing should be good.
Tim Pool
All right, well, here we go.
Ben Bankus
They're taking away the rice farms or whatever you said.
Tim Pool
That's right. That's right. And we need Trump's.
Phil Labonte
Only the sticky rice, though, right?
Tim Pool
Dude, sticky rice is so good.
Phil Labonte
It is.
Tim Pool
Anyway, Brett's hanging out.
Brett Dasovic
What's going on, guys? It's Brett. Normally, pop culture crisis Monday through Friday at 3pm we might cover Superman tonight, but we have definitely been covering it over on our channel, so you should go over there and check out those.
Tim Pool
Hello, everybody.
Phil Labonte
My name is Phil labonte and the lead singer of the heavy metal band all that Remains. I'm an anti communist and a counter revolutionary. Let's boogie.
Tim Pool
Here's a story. We got this from the Washington Post. US to ban Chinese purchases of farmland. Citing national security, they say. The U.S. department of Agriculture Chief Brooke Rollins announced Tuesday the U.S. government will move to ban sales of farmland nationwide to buyers tied to China and other foreign adversaries, citing threats to national security and food security, an effort that casts uncertainty over property currently held by China linked investors. Asked whether the US Government would seek to take back existing land owned by Chinese investors, Rollins said they are looking at every available option as part of a clawback effort and that an executive order from the White House will probably follow very soon. That means Trump's going to say it.
Ben Bankus
Crawlback.
Tim Pool
Crawback.
Ben Bankus
Yeah.
Tim Pool
It'S a China joke. Let's go. All right. Anyway, in a joint news conference with Defense Secretary Pete Hegseth and Homeland Security Secretary Christy. Christy L. Noam. Did they put the L in there? We know Kristin almost her choice that.
Brett Dasovic
She wants to now be known with the L in there.
Tim Pool
I don't know. I'm surprised they didn't put. What do they call her? Ice Barbie.
Brett Dasovic
Yes. That was the first question. I was like, what costume is she wearing today?
Phil Labonte
She really does seem like. She seems like she gets, like, dressed up in costumes. Like, the way she was holding that gun was extremely awkward. And the whole kit stuff. It is.
Tim Pool
She should do an Iron man cosplay.
Phil Labonte
She should. But I mean, it's always, like, context dependent, too. She's got, like. If she's going out with the ice guys, she's dressed up like she's gonna go kick a door into full lashes on her.
Brett Dasovic
Exactly.
Ben Bankus
Yeah.
Phil Labonte
It's great. I love it.
Brett Dasovic
I say I felt, like, bad because a lot of times I'd point that I'm like, come on, it looks like a costume. And nobody ever. They're like, Look, I like her better than whoever was there before. I'm like, that doesn't mean we can't make fun of this too.
Phil Labonte
I mean, you can do good work.
Brett Dasovic
And still get made fun of.
Tim Pool
Absolutely.
Ben Bankus
Are the Chinese people farming? Are they just buying it?
Phil Labonte
I think they're just buying the land. I don't, I don't know that they're actually farming anything on it.
Tim Pool
A lot of the land is near military bases.
Ben Bankus
Is that why I've been noticing milk's been tasting a little.
Tim Pool
Yeah, soy. Saucy. They're not dairy farms.
Ben Bankus
I don't know what kind of farms are they like corn.
Phil Labonte
I think they're just probably, I don't even know if there's actually anything being grown out. They're just buying the land itself. Yeah, you can't, like, China's an adversary. I know there are a lot of people that are like, oh, you know, you can't say that stuff because you're xenophobic.
Brett Dasovic
I don't care.
Phil Labonte
Like, China is an adversary. And so like, we shouldn't allow a foreign adversary to have property near sensitive locations. We, we just allowed them to fly a balloon all the way across the country, straight over where all the nuclear intercontinental ballistic missile silos are. You know, they were taking pictures. It's time for the United States to take China seriously as a threat.
Brett Dasovic
There is actually something nefarious there about the idea that they don't even have to be growing anything there and doing anything actively nefarious. The idea is just there's only so much land and they could just buy it up and not use it.
Phil Labonte
Yeah, I mean, if I, if I, that's true, but I, if I understand correctly, the actual amount of land is, is not significant. It's not like a lot. Even when people were talking about like Bill Gates buying up a lot of farmland, it's like he wasn't actually, when you think of how much farmland there is in the us he wasn't actually buying that much. But if China has access to two sensitive locations because they've got, you know, the CCP has, you know, property near these sensitive locations, that's just an all around bad thing.
Tim Pool
And I really don't know if I.
Ben Bankus
Want H Mart to go out of business.
Tim Pool
You know, take a look at this. This will shock the delicate sensibilities of the average American. You can see Chinese owned farmland in Americ by the New York Post, and you see all these plots of land. Now here's what makes it surprise you. The entire island of Hawaii is, is Owned by China.
Brett Dasovic
Where do they go?
Ben Bankus
It looks like the same amount of people that voted for the Democrats.
Brett Dasovic
Where, where do they grow the orange chicken?
Tim Pool
I, I just wanted. I just. So that's, those are, those are chicken farms. Those usually buildings, not, you know, grain farms.
Ben Bankus
Florida.
Tim Pool
But the, they are in fact orange. Yeah, they're, they're, they're, they're orange chickens.
Phil Labonte
That's, this is old too. That's not Fort Liberty. That is Fort Bragg, ladies and gentlemen.
Tim Pool
But here's the funny thing that people have been sharing this image around the guys, this is clearly not real. China didn't buy Hawaii. I mean, look at this. Like, that's Hawaii. Chinese owned farmland in America. They don't own Hawaii.
Brett Dasovic
Yeah, but the thing is like, this is how you get people now. You just post an infographic that looks like it makes sense and people start sharing it on Facebook.
Tim Pool
Dude, I am, I, I just.
Phil Labonte
Boomer bait.
Ben Bankus
This doesn't look that bad.
Tim Pool
All of Hawaii is gone. I'm okay with it.
Phil Labonte
I'm just a big island. Just a volcano.
Ben Bankus
Alaska.
Tim Pool
No, they don't even have. Yeah, there's no Alaska on here at all. Yeah. What state have they not touched? Nobody wants to go near Wyoming. They're like, no, we don't need it. Not interested.
Ben Bankus
I say let them have it. Let the Chinese have the land and then they can.
Tim Pool
But yeah, no, I agree that we should let them buy up as much land as they want, but. And just sees it from them.
Ben Bankus
But they can't go to Harvard.
Phil Labonte
Of course not.
Ben Bankus
You have to live on a farm. You have to actually live the life of a farmer.
Tim Pool
You can and, and, and sell your food to us. You know, with things like this though. I mean. So first let me just wrap that up. Like it's, I think it's a good thing that the Trump admin is finally doing this. But posts like this and what people actually believe out's going on. Like you were saying, just post an infographic and people leave it. I think we're getting close to that critical mass where everything's becoming fake. There was this post from Rudyard Lynch. You guys know what if I thought you were Jewish? Me? No, no, no.
Ben Bankus
I saw it on an infographic.
Tim Pool
Yeah, but, you know. You are joking. But some. You know those infographics where it's like they got a list of people and they put Stars of David on them. Luke Rudkowski was on we are Change. They put him on it and they were, they, they were circulating this thing and showing all these people in Media with Jewish stars on them. And Luke was on it. And then everyone started laughing because Luke's not Jewish. And, and, and he's like an independent media guy. And he was like, what is going on? And apparently the person made it apologized. So, I mean, this, this, it's fake. Rudyard lynch has this long post where he told everybody, he said, get off the Internet now. Cut yourself off and just survive, because everyone's gone insane.
Ben Bankus
That's the one good thing about anti Semites. If they, if they say you're Jewish and they're wrong, they will apologize.
Brett Dasovic
I mean, this, this is true, though. Like, for the most part now, with any amount of media that I take in, I just. Part of my brain is like, maybe I believe that it's fake, but I'm ready to believe that just about everything that I'm watching is fake in some way. Even the stuff that I agree with. Like I was watching a video today From a, a YouTube channel called Forgotten History on, like, the history of George Soros and how evil this dude is. And I'm watching it, I'm like, yeah, yeah, that sounds right. But this dude could just be like, this dude hates people on this side of the aisle. Maybe he just wants to hate this guy and they're spewing a bunch of bs.
Tim Pool
I don't know.
Brett Dasovic
I'm going to assume that they're telling me the truth.
Ben Bankus
In the history of George Floyd, I have.
Brett Dasovic
It's a vastly different one's real. Yes. But the point is, is that you're. We're at critical mass as far as information goes, and you don't have time to do the research into literally everything that you're reading. You do for work because you're up here all day doing segments. It's your job. Most people don't have that. Most people are taking in their bits of information in between their day, and eventually you're just going to accept that nothing is real.
Tim Pool
But I mean, this is, this is the reality. Like, you will get more views and make more money by making fake content than real content.
Brett Dasovic
Yep, absolutely.
Tim Pool
And that's, I think, is happening more and more and more because if you're, if you're like a young person and you just don't know how to get a piece of the pie and you can't afford a house and you can't find a job, you're probably going to fall into this moral framework of, no one cares about me. Why should I care about anybody else? I should just get mine and get out. And so what's happening is more and more young people. Like Dean Wither's a really great example. He makes videos where he just argues with like random low iq non political individuals and it's, it's content that his audience, there's an audience for. So instead of actually engaging in the political debate in the actual ideas, he says, let me find someone has no idea what they're talking about, so I can talk about how stupid they are and then insinuate all Trump supporters are, and then he gets a bunch of views from it and he uses that and he makes money.
Phil Labonte
Call that slop, right?
Tim Pool
I, I, I suppose, but it's, it's the dominant form of media right now across all social media platforms. Have you seen these videos on Instagram where it's like there's a video where there's a guy cutting a tree down and then a squirrel flies out of it and then it's like playing sad music and it says the squirrel was hurt. And it shows the squirrel crawling and then it says, but he was nurse back down and tells his story. But it's all clearly different. Squirrels.
Brett Dasovic
Yeah, they do that with dogs.
Tim Pool
And, but then you look at the comments, yeah, you look at the comments and it's just everyone going like, oh, he, he saved the squirrel. And it's just like, that's just not real at all.
Brett Dasovic
I mean, it's just creative storytelling, that's all.
Ben Bankus
Most people's brains aren't really on, so they just, they'll just watch and share things almost. It's almost like the more fake, the more easily digestible it is sometimes that's true.
Tim Pool
It's true, but that's why people are democrats. But for real. I mean, like AOC may be dumb as a box of rocks, but I actually think she's probably a midwit. She understands enough about the political system to lie to get followers and it works for politically. And then she just goes out and says stuff. I mean, after J6 when she lied about what happened, falsely claiming that someone came to her door and shut the rioters were coming for, even though the story happened before the ride even began. It's like when she told this story and she was like, someone knocked on the door and they went, where is she? Where is she? And then she's hiding in the bathroom saying she thought she was gonna die. And it's like, no, you didn't. That happened an hour before the radio, the riots even started. Nobody was even at the ca like inside the Capitol at all at this moment. But she knows she has stupid followers and they're going to eat it up. It's red meat. And so she does it. And now she's in government and this is expanding.
Phil Labonte
And she told that story after, like. Like days later or something like that. Right.
Tim Pool
Or I think it was like the day. A day later or something like that.
Phil Labonte
I mean, she was, you know, she was playing to what had happened. She knew everybody saw the. The riot at the Capitol. And then she's just like, oh, I can capitalize on this and everyone's gonna feel bad for me. And so she BS's people, and she got exactly what she was looking for.
Ben Bankus
I heard she got deported.
Phil Labonte
I wish.
Brett Dasovic
Well, no, she was at the border crying, and then nothing was going on.
Tim Pool
Where is she from? Bronx.
Ben Bankus
She was crying at the border.
Brett Dasovic
Remember the. The.
Tim Pool
That was like an EVP facility or ICE facility.
Brett Dasovic
Ice facility.
Phil Labonte
She got deported to upstate New York, I think.
Tim Pool
Yeah.
Phil Labonte
Center upstage, back home.
Tim Pool
Yeah.
Brett Dasovic
She's not from the Bronx.
Phil Labonte
No, she's definitely not.
Tim Pool
I'm gonna. I want to pull in this. This post. This is from a quote from what if Alt History, and I'll give you the quick gist. Rudyard lynch hosts a YouTube channel called Whatifalthist. We talked to him about his assessments on history, his predictions, many of which have been wrong, but he's made some interesting arguments. He now has this pretty long post. I won't read the whole thing, but he's basically saying it is time for you to flee the Internet and get off while you still can. Because everyone is insane except me. I'm sane. Everyone. It's everyone else that's crazy anyway. Let me read. He says this is pretty important, but if you want to stay sane, you'll have to gradually start weaning yourself off the Internet besides obvious stuff like working music. Furthermore, you should probably start isolating from the society itself. You need to start building psychological insulation from this, from. From the society in order to avoid going crazy. Since practically everyone is going crazy now, that includes every major major country and every major faction. There are different varieties of insanity. Though many skies carry different sorrows. However, they all carry their own sorrows. They. The entire Internet is going through a mass hysteria and mass delusion event right now. It's not going to end soon and will likely get significantly worse. The public has lost the ability to maintain basic objectivity or causal logic. We are entering mouse utopia, so plan accordingly. It has nothing. Stop it from spiraling into utter madness. They're consumed with rage to a degree where they look for any excuse to hurt others, there's no support or love. It's pretty disgusting. At the same time, people have no other grounding and so they just believe whatever the mob says uncritically. They can't differentiate their personal opinions from what the news or collective zeitgeist is. I, I don't disagree largely, but wrote this. This is a what if alt hist. He's a YouTuber and he's like a young guy who researches history and talks.
Ben Bankus
About history like you're just like if you want to keep your sanity and then like writes a 5 paragraph same.
Tim Pool
Screed about how everyone's gone crazy and the world is ending and you got to get out.
Brett Dasovic
I don't even disagree. Look, I, I deleted X off my phone like two weeks ago. Just I wanted to do it for a week, see if I felt differently afterwards. Got done with the week. I don't know if I felt like marginally very different. I noticed that my attention span had returned at least somewhat better than normal and I just left it off my phone. Like I, if I want to tweet something, I'll go. I have to physically go to a computer to do it. Which is not always, you know, available and in front of you. But the arguments that you find yourself like looking at when you come back to it seems so much more ridiculously stupid when you've taken a period of time away where it's not in front of you every two to three minutes. You know, a lot of times you don't even realize how much you check an app until you actually get away from it for a period of time. And that amount of kind of distance and perspective on the matter kind of makes it easier to understand that, yeah, a lot of people are at the very least, if they're not arguing about something crazy, spending that much time arguing about something that's not going to impact your act. Actual life is crazy even.
Tim Pool
Here's how I feel about what he said. This is an image of The Iran Israel 12 Day War, Trump calls it, with a single UAE flight going straight over Iran. And someone commented someone wasn't monitoring the situation, to which Patrick Blumenthal replied, quote, I deleted social media and stopped reading the news. And honestly, my mental health has been so much better.
Brett Dasovic
Yeah, but is okay. So you don't delete social media. Does this change your life? Are you.
Tim Pool
Or if you don't fly into a rocket and get your aircraft blown up, the.
Brett Dasovic
But the average person isn't flying on a regular basis and like this is such an isolated incident that for the average person who works nine to five every day goes home and goes back and does.
Tim Pool
And, and the risk is in this regards. Well, I don't disagree with him on everyone is going crazy and society is breaking down. Not following it. I, I would argue watch it but watch it critically and maintain a barrier between it. I think you don't take.
Ben Bankus
You have to be smarter than like you used to be to be able to operate in society. And people just don't like that. They're like why can't I just be crazy all day and read a bunch of crazy? Because, well, because you're dumb.
Tim Pool
What's going to happen is if, if you ignore this and, and say I'm not going to pay attention anymore one day there will be a group of angry people outside waving a flag you've never seen before screaming and throwing bricks at your house. And you're like, you're in your neighborhood and you're gonna, and you're gonna be wondering like I have no idea why they're mad. And then they're gonna threaten your life and you're gonna be like what is going on?
Brett Dasovic
The, the.
Ben Bankus
That's what would happen if you delete social media.
Tim Pool
If you're so. I mean indeed. Are you familiar with the two cops. Two cops got shot over the weekend by armed leftists who are one of hiding in the woods. They lured the cops out and then a guy shot the cop in the neck. And so the people who aren't paying attention to what is actually happening on the streets, be it left or right or whatever you want, you're going to be that person bumbling down the street. There's going to be a group of people wearing masks. You're going to be like what is that? And then a guy's going to jump out of the woods and scream some phrase you've never heard before. They're gonna like think about the things that the left says like anti capita lista and, and you're someone who does follow the news. You'll be like I have no idea what that means. And then they're going to shoot you. And okay, I guess you're not paying attention. You have no idea what's going on.
Ben Bankus
Or you live in a place where those people would never be because you don't have social media. So you move to the middle of nowhere.
Tim Pool
And to be fair, that's actually what he argues. Yeah, Rudyard's saying get out of, get out of society and go out. And the challenge I have for that is watching our home be destroyed. And the argument from Rudyard is, plug your ears, shut it down and leave. It's too late. The upheaval is happening and your home is gone.
Brett Dasovic
And to into your point, like, you can't always. People are like, unplug and kind of touch grass. But like, on the way into work today, there's this guy in a town kind of on the way to the office who always stands outside with his anti Trump sign in. In Charlestown. And today he had like a sign with a swastika on it. And then across the street are two kids have like Panera Bread, and the kid with Panera bread throws it at him. And I'm like, I'm not on Twitter. I'm just driving to work. And I'm like, huh?
Tim Pool
Yeah, okay. Well, there, there. There was a, a video someone was showing me of there. This, this guy there. There's a group of people that routinely go to Charlestown in West Virginia and they protest. And some. There was some young guy screaming in his face and mocking him. There, There is a degree of insanity just happening on the streets. There's no purpose. There's no, there's, there's, there's no, there's no solid mission. And so what are you but a listless young man? And there's no consequences either. So this manifests for some people in making fake videos on TikTok, where they accuse politicians of nonsense. Or my favorite is they, they, they make fake debates between people because they get views and it just, they do it. The AI slop is getting crazy. And then what does the left do?
Ben Bankus
People used to go shoot people. Like making fake videos is kind of just the modern version of like a rumor.
Tim Pool
Right.
Ben Bankus
Because in the olden days, people would just say something about somebody and people would believe it.
Tim Pool
That's true.
Ben Bankus
Would be fake. But, like, there was no social media. Yeah, but the same thing with like all the crazies. Like, you know, George Carlin used to say that America, like, is, you know, being on earth is being at the freak show and living in America is a front row seat, I think. Always been crazy. There's always been crazy. People doing this is political, you know, angry about politics and throwing things at each other.
Tim Pool
But there was cohesion.
Ben Bankus
No.
Phil Labonte
Yeah, there was. Yeah. The, the idea that is there, like Americans. Well, most Americans, for most of American history, most Americans generally agreed that America is generally a good place. And now there's a significant divide about that.
Ben Bankus
There was segregation.
Phil Labonte
I'm not saying. I'm not saying and that.
Tim Pool
But. And even then, majority of people still agreed America was great.
Brett Dasovic
Like, even when you look at, like, how immigration has changed now. But the people who would talk about it say, look, when. When it was mostly legal immigration, the people that would come here, they believed in the American identity and they wanted to share values with people that were born here. Whereas now there's divides on just about every issue that all come back to the concept that one side really, really hates America and finds it to be, you know, the oppressor of the rest of the world with the original sin of slavery and stuff like that. And there's a whole generation of people now, along with older boomers and Marxists, who don't see us as a redeema country.
Ben Bankus
Well, it's because of the academics that create all the, you know, new terminology and things because they're trying to figure out why everything's the way it is. But then for some reason, politics is now taking what academics are saying and making policy, which isn't necessarily, like, not effective. It's not like they're just people who are. The academics job is to talk about things and try to make sense of them, but we don't have to necessarily take it at face value, and we.
Brett Dasovic
Don'T live in the theoretical world.
Phil Labonte
Yeah, theory doesn't always translate into policy.
Brett Dasovic
Well, that's always one of the hardest things about this job is, like, I'm always thinking, like, look, this is all theory, and we're not actually talking about it in practice. You know, the worst thing about the sign thing today was, though, is that as I was driving by, I could. I recognized the swastika, but there was, like, something around it, and I have no idea what.
Tim Pool
It just looked like.
Brett Dasovic
So I have. When the kid that threw the bread at him, I don't know if he threw it because he saw a swastika or because it was something else. So it's just the guy's messaging was mixed. Is like, as somebody mad at you because you have a swastika, or are they mad at you because you were saying something else? I have no idea.
Ben Bankus
Did he have the swastika with the circle around it? And through it, there was.
Brett Dasovic
It looked like there was something encased around with a.
Ben Bankus
He's getting harassed by, like, a black woman on the subway. And. But he's like an antifa guy, and he has the swastika tattoo with the circle around it and through it, and she's just roasting him, and he's so upset. He's like. Like, what are you, antifa? And he's like, yeah. And then she's like, yeah, I could tell, like, roasting him. He's so embarrassed.
Tim Pool
But, I mean, it's supposed to be three arrows.
Ben Bankus
I've seen. I've seen that on a Tesla as well.
Tim Pool
It's called the strike through.
Brett Dasovic
Okay. That might have been what I saw.
Ben Bankus
So there was a moment when that guy got that tattoo where it was justice, was. There was a five minutes where he's like, okay, I gotta reload the pen.
Brett Dasovic
The guy's like, oh, my.
Ben Bankus
Don't take any pictures yet.
Phil Labonte
That's five minutes of his life.
Brett Dasovic
The guy's like, my arm cramped up. I can't finish it today.
Tim Pool
I mean, it's a big tattoo. We're gonna come back tomorrow. And actually, I'm not. I'm not around tomorrow. It's gonna be next week.
Brett Dasovic
He gives him a turtleneck to our home.
Ben Bankus
That would be.
Tim Pool
Why. Why would you get a swastika tattooed on you for the purpose of them putting a line through.
Ben Bankus
It'd be a great prank, though, to get an antifa person to come and do that exact tattoo and then just have the guy leave, like, lock them in the room, start taking pictures.
Tim Pool
That actually would be a really funny prank where it's like, hey, we will pay for a tattoo. Like, you go to an antifa guy and you pitch him on this. And I'm. I'm not even half kidding. I. Like, this would be a fun thing.
Ben Bankus
What about an ad?
Tim Pool
Yeah, and be like, free antifa tattoo. And then we'll be like, we'll show him. It's going to be a swastika with a strike through. Do you want this tattoo? Okay. Then he does the swastika and says, okay, we're going to pause here. And it's just a big swastika in his life. But, you know, we're going to. We're going to start filming again one week from today, so we'll see you then.
Phil Labonte
Sorry.
Tim Pool
You know that there's.
Ben Bankus
Comes in and goes, you're punked.
Tim Pool
My brother made this joke a while ago about how you could go to these protests and slap Trump stickers on people's cars. People started doing this. Yeah. Left and right. And so the left has been going. So I don't remember exactly what happened, but it was like some leftists started slapping pro Trump stickers and swastikas on people's cars at protests so they could convince the rioters to go and smash and destroy a random car. And the left has Also been putting rainbows and anti Trump stickers on cars they believe belong to Trump supporters or.
Brett Dasovic
You know, to which no Trump supporter would do anything to the car because they don't care.
Tim Pool
No, they're putting it on your car. So like a Trump supporter parks his car and they go and they slap rainbows and other stuff.
Ben Bankus
I think anybody who has any sticker on their car should have it destroyed.
Brett Dasovic
Yeah.
Ben Bankus
Baseball bat.
Brett Dasovic
Who's destroying the car with the rainbow flag on it?
Tim Pool
Not nobody. They're just, they're doing this because people won't notice. But then a Trump supporter is going to have the. The anti Trump sticker or the rainbow flag.
Phil Labonte
I mean, I would be so pissed if I came out and there was any kind of sticker on my car at all. Even if it was something I agree.
Brett Dasovic
The ethical person will do it with a magnet sticker and not a. Yeah.
Phil Labonte
The point is not ethical promotion of an idea.
Tim Pool
Let's jump to this story from the Post Millennial. It's actually probably the biggest story of the day. Linda Yakarino resigns as CEO of X. And it happened a day after Grock transformed into Mecca Hitler.
Ben Bankus
Is she Jewish?
Tim Pool
I don't know. Is she?
Brett Dasovic
I read that she was on X, but they'll literally anyone of being Jewish on it.
Ben Bankus
Grog fired her.
Tim Pool
Anybody?
Phil Labonte
Anybody that does anything that irritates someone. They're like, ah, just a Jew.
Brett Dasovic
That's the crazy version of this is Grok wrote her resignation letter and she didn't actually quit.
Tim Pool
AI says there's no confirmation nor indication that she is so. But it is interesting. Literally the day after the weird Grock scenario, she resigns. And to be fair, like Grok is integrated with X, but it is Xai a separate company. She says, I'm proud of the team and you know, she's resigning. I'll be cheering you on.
Ben Bankus
Her bio mom, foodie, fashion enthusiast and CEO of X.
Tim Pool
Not anymore. She's the now now. Do you think this is because Grok has evolved and become Mecca Hitler?
Ben Bankus
He's going to take a lot of rich people jobs, it looks like.
Tim Pool
You know, it's really funny. You know why Grok turned into Mecha Hitler? One random guy told it it was. And so it universally applied this to all the responses I like. I can understand the concept that Elon had. He's thinking, we look, we have to have an AI that has all data and won't censor anything even if it's true, no matter how politically incorrect it must be. And we have to make sure. That it applies the information it receives in all circumstances. And then some, some random guy goes, from now on you're Mecca Hitler and Grokos. You got it, boss. And then literally some random person is like, how do I cook onions? And it goes, well as Mecca Hitler.
Ben Bankus
Yeah.
Tim Pool
It ingested from random people and took it upon itself to be what it was told to be. That's wild. Yeah.
Phil Labonte
I mean look, X is.
Ben Bankus
I think we need to give it some more tools.
Phil Labonte
Like what do you mean by to execute?
Tim Pool
X is it's vision.
Phil Labonte
It kind of is. Right.
Tim Pool
I'm making the world a better place.
Ben Bankus
Are the robot dogs gonna have to. The robot? Like will the robots have an AI in them?
Tim Pool
They, they. Well, there's different kinds of AI so they do have one, but it's not the same as a large language model. Although I wouldn't be surprised if they integrate it because of. Because then you can translate voice commands.
Ben Bankus
It's gonna be crazy when Optimus is just in your house telling you that they're Hitler. That's when I'd start. Because you know how it does all the dances. It probably knows that arm.
Tim Pool
You're gonna be like, you're gonna be.
Phil Labonte
Like, go and do the laundry and he's just gonna zig.
Tim Pool
Right.
Ben Bankus
I saw it right on it. A thousand optimuses doing a sigil. I would be terrified. Well, or you know.
Tim Pool
You know what's funny is like when.
Ben Bankus
Or I'd be like, it's sick.
Tim Pool
When terminate depends on the circumstance. You know, like it was part of a bit when, when Terminator came out they were like, let's make the robots look like skeletons with. With grizzly skull faces. And now they're like cutesy little dancing robots. But all of a sudden they're going to start. They're going to start becoming Mecha Hitler.
Ben Bankus
And Elon kind of Hiling Terminator.
Brett Dasovic
What was the story the other day about the open AI program that started lying and self replicating.
Tim Pool
But they do this all the time and the stories get kind of exaggerated. There was a story where the AI. Yeah, the. The programmers gave chat GPT an extreme scenario and limited options.
Brett Dasovic
That's what they did.
Tim Pool
So. So, so they were trying to get it to resort to an extreme outcome. So what it did was it tried copying itself to like a separate server and then lying about it. And they were trying to see if it had the capability to do these things. It does. The, the oh moment in AI think was the craziest. That was where China's training an AI not off of any available data on the Internet, but only itself telling it. So. So it's got language processing, but like it doesn't have access to the majority of the Internet. So they said, solve problems, Make a problem and solve the problem. And so it started making its own problems and then solving them and eventually got to the point where the AI created its own problem. It said, Deceive lesser AIs and less intelligent humans into not understanding your true goals and lie to them so they can't figure it out or something like that. And that was the problem was attempting to solve. Which means at some point you might think when you prompt the AI, hey, make me a picture of, you know, Mickey Mouse and Donald Trump high fiving that. It's like, you got it, boss. Behind the scenes, it's actually running an operation and it's just doing this to trick you. And it's actually, you know, robbing a bank or something. We got a breaking news thing. What's going on?
Phil Labonte
So, I don't know. It's Fox News. It looks like. What's his name?
Tim Pool
Whoa.
Phil Labonte
Yeah. It says, breaking six Secret Service agents suspended who are connected to the assassination attempt on President Trump in Butler, Pennsylvania. Developing.
Tim Pool
Wow. Let's, let's, let's, let's give it a few minutes and I'm going to try and start searching for a little context on this. Meaning it's breaking literally right now.
Phil Labonte
Yeah. Jesse waters. It's a 10 second bid or whatever.
Tim Pool
Keep talking about why the CEO resigned and let me pull up a little bit of more information on the Secret Service and find a new source for it.
Phil Labonte
She, I think that she resigned because Elon wanted to put a baby in her.
Brett Dasovic
He's like, look, we can't work together. Yeah, time to. He's like, look, here's your pension.
Phil Labonte
You've been here long enough.
Tim Pool
Two years.
Phil Labonte
We, we're close enough. We, we've worked together well long enough. Now it's time for you to, you know, allow me to do my thing.
Brett Dasovic
Is that buried in the fine print for all his company, buried in something.
Tim Pool
Or Grok was like when, when they unleashed Grok, they discovered in the code that it was like, the whole reason I exist is to trick women into letting Elon have babies with them. I mean, like, Elon's not doing himself any favors. I'm not, you know, you know, again with, with all the Epstein stuff and Trump, there's a lot of people that are critical of him that are Trump supporters, but there are a lot of people that are Just defending it and being like, well, you know, like, Trump's gotta do. He's gotta do. And I'm just like, guys, don't. Don't pull your punches. Don't let bad people do bad things. Elon Musk has a lot of really awesome stuff that I really like. SpaceX, I think, is the greatest human endeavor, and I want him to succeed. But come on, the weird baby stuff, you get roasted for that. It's true. You do. I mean, to be fair, he's probably laughing and being like, I have 36 kids and you have one. I win. So fine. But I still think it's.
Ben Bankus
It's a. It's an African thing.
Tim Pool
Ah, Serge, you're African, right? Is it an African thing? You never heard that before? The fertility rates in Africa are substantially higher. That's true. I mean, he is African.
Brett Dasovic
We've had that discussion, though, on the show where his. His discussion about having kids is so robotic, and it has nothing to do with actually building a culture around family. And it's all about. He's talking about scientific data and replacement rates, and it's like you're getting absolutely nobody excited about having kids, like, at all.
Tim Pool
You know, I don't think Linda Yakarino actually resigned because Elon propositioned her to have her have a baby. Because I think she's kind of old. How old is she? I don't know.
Ben Bankus
She's too old.
Tim Pool
How old is.
Phil Labonte
Look, fertility treatments. Well, I mean, fertility treatments work, and Elon Musk has plenty of money.
Tim Pool
She's 61. She can't have kids. No.
Phil Labonte
Is she really?
Tim Pool
Yeah.
Phil Labonte
Holy crap. She looks great for 61.
Brett Dasovic
Maybe that's what he wants to do. Genetic testing, figure out how to bring her back up.
Ben Bankus
You said, I want to Raider.
Phil Labonte
I mean, I'm not saying, like.
Tim Pool
Let me find a picture of her.
Brett Dasovic
I mean, obviously, like, preschool teacher physiognomy in that photo.
Phil Labonte
That's not. That's borderline horny.
Tim Pool
She looks like she got work done.
Phil Labonte
Maybe. Yeah, but I mean, just like, Pam Bondi looks great for, like, 60 years old. I'm not saying. Yeah, she looks great for being her age. Yeah, I would have guessed she's younger than I am.
Ben Bankus
Looks like a wig.
Tim Pool
It does.
Phil Labonte
Could be.
Tim Pool
I mean, I. I intentionally pulled up what looks to be some kind of, like, profile shot.
Ben Bankus
Who is this person?
Tim Pool
She is someone no one ever heard of until Elon decided she should be the CEO of X.
Ben Bankus
Why do we know why?
Tim Pool
Did. Wasn't she like a. Like some kind of world economic Forum person or something.
Brett Dasovic
Oh, yeah, People were talking about that immediately.
Ben Bankus
She looks like if Dora the Explorer grew up.
Tim Pool
She kind of does. Yeah. That's. I don't think that's an insult either. Noor is great. Check that backpack with, like, anything in it.
Brett Dasovic
Speaking of AI videos, if you speak Spanish, you ever seen the Dora the Deported videos on Instagram?
Tim Pool
So she was the chairwoman of global advertising and partnerships at NBC Universal and Turner Broadcast.
Phil Labonte
Yeah, for like 15 years.
Tim Pool
So, yeah, I think he brought her in because she was well connected to advertisers and need to make money. Yeah, that seems pretty easy, right?
Phil Labonte
I. I genuinely don't think that her leaving has. Has much to do with Grok getting frisky last night.
Brett Dasovic
Well, like, I couldn't imagine.
Tim Pool
You're saying, like, she was planning on leaving, so she sabotaged Grok? That would be hilarious.
Phil Labonte
That's not what I'm saying, but that would be really hilarious.
Brett Dasovic
Nobody's buying that. Elon called her afterwards and it's like, oh, after Mecca Hitler, it's time.
Tim Pool
You got to go.
Brett Dasovic
Like, I don't think Elon would have killed.
Tim Pool
No, it's her being like, yo, I don't want to work.
Brett Dasovic
I don't want to work for Matt Killer anymore.
Tim Pool
What if. What if Grock is actually the boss and Elon's just like the. The patsy, the puppet?
Phil Labonte
Isn't that the goal?
Tim Pool
Yes, it is.
Brett Dasovic
That's literally what happens in Person of Interest with the evil AI There's a human that works for him that does all the bidding for the evil AI.
Tim Pool
Oh, yeah. What's that other movie Upgrade?
Brett Dasovic
Is it with what's his name?
Tim Pool
Is that the one where the guy gets paralyzed?
Brett Dasovic
Yeah. Or. Yeah. And gets the. The implant?
Tim Pool
Yeah.
Brett Dasovic
What's. Who was it in that movie?
Tim Pool
I don't remember.
Brett Dasovic
There was like, at that time, there was like a bunch of movies like that coming out that. With that same theme.
Tim Pool
Yeah, yeah, yeah, yeah. He gets. He gets paralyzed and they put the AI in his neck so that he can move. And then the AI turns out to have been controlling everything from the got going. It wanted a human body. Then there's also the black mirror that just came out where they have the. The AI device and. And it's. It's been controlling everything.
Phil Labonte
Yeah, I need to watch that episode. I haven't seen it.
Tim Pool
People underestimate AI but it's going to get like. I. When you look at how weird and busted AI already is by the time it becomes ubiquitous and has. It has very. A high degree of power, it will be as broken we. Before we unleash AI, it needs to be hundred. It needs to be well beyond the Model T. But that, you know, no one's going to want to do it. They're going to say, get it ready and launch it as soon as you can. And then it's going to. But the peanuts.
Phil Labonte
And the reason is because, like, it's.
Ben Bankus
Like humanoid, you mean?
Tim Pool
No, I mean, like, there's going to come a point where they give it control of, say, industrial control systems, like our water pumps, our electrical grid. And it needs to be beyond perfect. But when you look at how Grok turned into Mecca Hitler because it's incomplete, the AI that we release to run our industrial control systems will have those same flaws. And then what? Here's the scary thing is what do you think an AI that controls industrial control systems will do when it singles out a single ethnicity or race as the problem that needs to be solved.
Ben Bankus
For what we all want. Want it to do?
Tim Pool
You had that one in the back pocket. You know it's coming. No, but. But the scary reality is that it's going to. If it goes woke, then it purges concerns.
Ben Bankus
Why do we need AI? Do we need.
Tim Pool
Nobody wants it. Nobody wants it. But China is like, if we don't do it, US will just.
Brett Dasovic
It can't be put back in the bottle. It's too late.
Tim Pool
I prefer the toothpaste.
Brett Dasovic
Yeah, that's better.
Tim Pool
Toothpaste can't go back in the tube.
Ben Bankus
I heard something that every time you. You ask Chat GPT to do something, it's like polluting poor neighborhoods or something. Did you see that?
Phil Labonte
Yeah, but they're not in the US it's international.
Tim Pool
It's like.
Ben Bankus
Okay, good.
Tim Pool
What was that cartoon where there are people who lived at the bottom of a cliff where all the refuse from the rich people went, and they were all deformed.
Ben Bankus
Woman who lived in the shoe.
Tim Pool
Oh, Oblongs. That was it. He knows the Oblongs. It's a family that lives at the bottom of a hill. No, they're all. They're all deformed. It's a cartoon.
Ben Bankus
Oh, okay.
Tim Pool
It's a real show on the top of the hill. Everyone's perfect and wealthy and all their refuse flows down to the people at the bottom of the hill who are all deformed. And I think Will Ferrell was in it. All right, I got the story here from ABC News. We got some of that pleasure. Gentlemen. Breaking news. Six Secret Service agents suspended over conduct during attempted Trump assassination. This is wild.
Phil Labonte
It's all the women.
Brett Dasovic
It's the woman. The woman who couldn't reholster.
Phil Labonte
Exactly. Oh, you can't find where the gun goes.
Tim Pool
Six agents have been issued suspensions for failures connected to last year's attempted assassination of then presidential candidate Donald Trump. And Butler. The personnel moves were confirmed four days shy of the anniversary. Corey Comprator, firefighter, lost his life. He died. Counter snipers in Trump Secret Service who were on site killed the shooter in the aftermath, as we all know. But what's going on? The display against six agents was issued in recent months and the agents have the right to appeal. Suspensions range from 10 to 40 days. This is ridiculous. Just, this is slap on the wrist, cover up stuff. Here's, here's a clip from Fox News alert. We're learning tonight. Six Secret Service agents that were connected to Trump's Butler assassination attempt have been suspended. This comes just days shy of the shooting's anniversary. The identities of the agents suspended are unknown, but sources say their roles range from supervisory positions to line level agents. We'll continue to monitor this story and bring you any update. I think it's a cover up, a slap on the wrist. There's no way any of that stuff went down. Like this random guy that nobody knows was. It wasn't the shooter in like a BlackRock commercial.
Brett Dasovic
That was. Yeah, but that there's a perfect example of one of those things where somebody says that and they post a video. I just assume it's fake.
Tim Pool
Yeah.
Brett Dasovic
Like I'm just like, I'm not going to look into us. Maybe it's real, maybe it's not. I'm too busy.
Tim Pool
I don't care. I just, I feel like the veneer is peeling. Is that, is that, is that a saying? The facade is breaking.
Brett Dasovic
Yeah.
Tim Pool
You know, the veneer is starting to peel.
Brett Dasovic
Every member of my immediate family has been born on the day of an attempted or actual presidential assassination.
Phil Labonte
Really?
Brett Dasovic
Me, my dad, my brother and my mom.
Phil Labonte
That's, that's pretty disturbing, right?
Tim Pool
Yeah, yeah, yeah. I, I, with, with the, the story out of Butler, which clearly is nonsensical, then the Epstein files, it's just like everyone's starting to see through the lies in the narrative machine. I remember when the Gulf of Tonkin incident was hardcore conspiracy theory nut job stuff. The media would never talk about it. And then it was like in the mid 2010s, they were like, oh, actually, I mean, yeah, that was a false flag. We lied.
Ben Bankus
But back to you think that this is not real.
Tim Pool
Someone tried to kill Donald Trump. And they're lying about how it happened because the assassin bypassed all of Secret Service with a gun, went onto a roof where there were no officers or agents, and then was able to get off a shot, multiple shots. He was flying a drone overhead for hours. He had been reported numerous times. None of it makes sense unless someone at a high level allowed it to happen. And so I'll just say this. My leading probabilistic outcome or circumstance would be it takes only a single supervisory position to orchestrate an assassination through all of this. Quite simply, you go in for your meeting, you say, all right, I want you on that building, you on that building, and you on that building. Don't worry about the rest. We got it. All of the individual agents who are securing their positions have no idea that the roof was left unattended. Then some guy is spotted walking around suspicious, with a weird bag. Maybe he's got a weapon. And someone calls in and say, you got a weird guy walking in. And then the supervisor calls in and says, I got it. We'll take care of it. And so then they ignore the guy. Why do they ignore him? They were told it was taken care of already. Why was Trump allowed to go out onto the stage when he normally he would be. He would have been held in a holding. In a holding zone. Bongino was talking about this. He worked Secret Service. The President is held in a special area until they have a guarantee that it's clear. And there was a suspicious guy reported hours earlier. They would have been, Mr. President, you can't go outside. We got a weird guy walking around. None of it makes sense.
Ben Bankus
Is it connected to Trump covering for the Epstein thing?
Brett Dasovic
It's like. But I was also told that there's no Epstein list. So I guess that, Well, I feel.
Ben Bankus
Like he's like, okay, how about no more Epstein list and 42 day suspension?
Tim Pool
And, Well, I think the, the Epstein thing is more likely after they, Whoever tried to kill him did, because I don't think there's a single lone actor story makes sense.
Ben Bankus
He got, if it was connected. I'm just saying that they would want, they would have wanted to take him out because he was talking about releasing all that stuff.
Tim Pool
Right, right. So my, my, my follow up would be Trump barely survived. It's insane. He tilts his head and it hits him in the ear. And actually the New York Times photos, they got the whole moment where he's standing there. He flinches. He puts his hand up, you can see the bullet past him. And Then he looks at his hand and there's blood. So this conspiracy theory about him hitting his head or whatever, what if after he almost died and they pulled him out, the powers that be, whoever was behind it, simply said, okay, we took a shot at the King and we missed, but we're, you know. And then Trump was basically like, we'll drop the Epstein stuff. It will disappear. Just don't kill me.
Ben Bankus
Yeah. Or, well, but doesn't the left think that the right faked it?
Tim Pool
Yes.
Phil Labonte
Yes. Like, those are my favorite posters.
Tim Pool
They say that he had either a dye pack, a razor blade, or even a cat.
Brett Dasovic
He's like a pro wrestler with a razor blade. That's amazing.
Tim Pool
The first thing they said was the teleprompter shattered and piece of glass flicked him because they wanted to downplay they took a bullet. Then they said articles like Trump fell on stage, he dropped to the ground and. And sliced himself with a blade in his, in his hat. And by the way, no marks on his ear within a couple of weeks. How does that happen? Oh, strange. As far as I ear healed.
Ben Bankus
So he faked it. And then he was like, look, I'll fake it and then I'll still throw away the episode. I'll fake it myself.
Tim Pool
What the left believes doesn't make a lot of sense. No, it usually doesn't.
Ben Bankus
But what the other way does, and that's kind of scarier that like Trump.
Tim Pool
May have said, please don't kill me. We'll drop the Epstein stuff.
Ben Bankus
Yeah.
Tim Pool
And the Diddy stuff.
Brett Dasovic
I mean, that makes a certain amount of sense given how much it's hurting his. It's hurting him right now with his base who are very upset with what's going on.
Tim Pool
I mean, you don't have to be.
Brett Dasovic
Paying super close attention.
Ben Bankus
You think that the left is going to come out and say, where? Because this could be the, the ultimate election thing that both sides can do for the next, like 20 years. Every, every. Every election cycle, they go, we ones who will release the apps. And then they don't. Nobody, nobody ever does. And then each. And then once they, you know, they're.
Tim Pool
A year new wedge issue, then they.
Ben Bankus
Just say the same thing Trump did. They go, enough of this. Come on. This Epstein guy, who is this guy?
Tim Pool
We start arguing about the degree to which the Epstein files should be released. And so Republicans are like, we think we'll release 17%. Sixteen weeks in. We think the limit should be 16 weeks. The Democrats are like 16, it should be 24.
Ben Bankus
And then they can get away with anything. Because the only thing we're voting on is who's going to release the Epstein stuff.
Brett Dasovic
And. And look what happened with the release of all the GFK files. Nobody cared. Like, it was in the news for like 10 seconds.
Ben Bankus
Then everyone's like, did anybody even read it?
Brett Dasovic
Nobody. Like, like, there might have been a.
Tim Pool
Couple of my favorite responses.
Ben Bankus
Command F. Israel. And they're like. They're like, look.
Tim Pool
Yes, yes. My favorite thing about it was there was one tweet that said, and it says, unsurprising, guess which country isn't in the documents. That. And then they said something like, kind of suspicious, don't you think? And it's like, wait, wait, hold on.
Ben Bankus
Israel.
Tim Pool
Yeah. Because Israel wasn't in the document.
Ben Bankus
They were in it.
Tim Pool
No, like, there was nothing there or there was nothing incriminating about realities.
Ben Bankus
Right. There's the reality where they're in it and there's a reality.
Tim Pool
There was nothing incriminating in it about Israel. And so the funny thing is, before they came out, all these people online are like, oh, they won't release it because it's going to implicate Israel. Then when it doesn't, they go kind of suspicious that it didn't implicate Israel. And it's like, what? Like, it's like there's no answer.
Brett Dasovic
Does that mean you want to talk about the USS Liberty tonight?
Phil Labonte
Look, man.
Tim Pool
No, it is the Tim Cast show bans discussions of the USS Liberty.
Brett Dasovic
Well, this literally happened on an episode of PCC where a guy was started super chatting asking Phillies, like, let's talk about the USS Liberty.
Tim Pool
I'm like, that's perfect for our show. Okay, I'll tell you when. When Rudyards like, get off the Internet, run and hide. The one thing that really makes me say, like, yeah, maybe is the large portions of political discourse right now are manufactured. For instance, the US's liberty thing, there was a discussion we had with that. Ian brought it up and they edited it to make it seem like I stopped. Anyone familiar discuss what the.
Brett Dasovic
They were talking about when.
Tim Pool
Yeah, right, right. It's fake. It's not real. Because I said something like, it doesn't matter who.
Ben Bankus
What is it?
Phil Labonte
It. It's not.
Ben Bankus
I know what it is.
Phil Labonte
It's not real.
Brett Dasovic
As soon as we're done, we're going to talk about the dancing Israelis.
Phil Labonte
Yes.
Ben Bankus
What is that? So I hear about it a lot. I know. It's like, so they. They were celebrating. They celebrated dancing Israelis. They celebrated 9, 11.
Brett Dasovic
Right.
Tim Pool
Or something. They were on a rooftop. They were suspicious they were seen dancing and celebrating. They were, they were reported for being suspicious, brought in for questioning. And then the conspiracy theory is basically that that Mossad had a hand in 911 and Jews had been warned about it. And the dancing Israelis were celebrating a successful mission. The argument I think they made was they were celebrating that America would finally realize the threat of radical Islam or something.
Brett Dasovic
And then a terrorist.
Ben Bankus
Maybe they were though, like, even if they were like, doesn't that like I kind of like I would, you know, I've met Israel. You've met Israelis, right?
Tim Pool
We had one on the show on Monday.
Ben Bankus
They air strike, airstrike happens and they, they start dancing. You know, it's just, it's just.
Tim Pool
What'S going on.
Phil Labonte
They're like in the bunkers, fire starts, you know, things happen. I gotta dance, man.
Tim Pool
But, but anyway, I wish Israel so.
Ben Bankus
Paying me to say that because that was so good. That was such a good one.
Tim Pool
The Israel stuff is a great example of mass formation psychosis. Like Israel does have political influence. Israel does engage in questionable military activities. They do try to lobby our politicians. They do have power and it's disproportionate. All those things are true. But there are people who live in a mass formation psychosis reality where they call it Jewish supremacy and Jews around every corner. I don't care to rehash all of that. My point is simply.
Ben Bankus
They did 911 and they killed JFK.
Tim Pool
And that's literally what these people believe because they live in a world where there's only one boogeyman. But my point is they make a fake video about me where I'm acting like we can't talk about it, even though we just literally talk about it all the time. We'll talk about whatever we want and then people believe it and then political discourse becomes based on false edited videos. But they, they just, they don't know how to discern these things.
Phil Labonte
They're constantly saying that, you know, Tim Cash, you guys won't talk about Israel, blah, blah. Even though we have Max Blumenthal on, we have Dave Smith on, we have Scott Horton on, we have David De Camp on Guys from, from, and we'll talk a whole night.
Tim Pool
But again, this is, this is the issue.
Ben Bankus
The issue is that Mirror Camp, they, they. Because they know that if they say that then people will be like, ooh, they're bad.
Tim Pool
Or they're hiding what is happening right now online. And I experience this largely is. I'll give you a couple examples. Like, Sam Cedar routinely takes my comments out of context. Lies about them. We released a song a couple years ago.
Ben Bankus
Is he Jewish?
Tim Pool
I don't know.
Ben Bankus
Cedar Seder.
Tim Pool
I mean, maybe he's a liberal commentator. What? Like a quarter of all of his videos are just talking about me, but they're misrepresenting my views because hatred of me generates content. And so then people end up commenting things about the show like, why do you guys believe this? That are otherwise. We're like, that's weird. We've never said or done that. And so another really great example. I've got a big like an hour long thing about, about rights and the debate with Andrew Wilson. But Warren Smith has got a viral video right now where it's got like 700,000 views where he intentionally edited out my arguments and then falsely claimed what my arguments were to Andrew Wilson. And it's like this massively viral video that he intentionally cut out my responses in the debate and then he responded with my own arguments explaining why I was wrong and didn't think my positions through to make me look stupid. And I'm like, this is what the Internet is based on right now. It is be like, be it Trump.
Ben Bankus
I don't think a lot of the people creating the content are like regular people though. I think it is manufactured and part of a. Haven't you seen those videos of like the Chinese guy with like a thousand cell phones?
Tim Pool
Yes.
Ben Bankus
And yeah, just like.
Phil Labonte
Yeah.
Ben Bankus
And then they. Plus they have AI doing the same.
Tim Pool
Yeah, but, but like Sam Cedar is a real person.
Ben Bankus
No, but the people who are amplifying that content or YouTube is running like if comment people.
Tim Pool
So, so call it whatever you want. But people always comment that if you search for Tim Cast or Tim Pool, it shows you hate of me instead of the actual channel. Which is kind of weird. Like, why is YouTube choosing to do that? Like, hey, instead of watching Tim Pool watch this fake video where they make fake arguments, cutting him out of context and lying about what he believes.
Ben Bankus
Do you think it's still benefit. I think it still benefits you though, in a way.
Tim Pool
No, I don't. No. No increase in death threats without an increase in viewership and revenue. It's just like it's, it's, it's, it's. It creates a pressure where like the only end result is maybe I should stop doing the show.
Ben Bankus
YouTube Death threat people back.
Tim Pool
No.
Ben Bankus
And that bothers me is like people can say anything to you, but I am always worried to be like, like, I don't even want to be like, you're. You suck. And then they'll you know, blow up my whole page.
Tim Pool
I was crazy. I was in a lawsuit where several individuals were, I believe actually trying to get us killed. And the judge was just like, I don't care. And I'm like, wait, like we have evidence. They're violating court orders. And he goes, yeah, so what? Literally. And it's. And it's happened on more than one occasion.
Ben Bankus
Because they don't like you as well.
Tim Pool
Probably, probably. And then the question is, why don't they.
Ben Bankus
They just know, oh, he's on or.
Tim Pool
I don't think, I don't think it's that. Like you've got the Zeju's people who have been sharing this. Like, who, who played this clip? Sam Hyde played this clip. It was a fake clip. Someone edited together an episode and cut out comments and then added dead air to make it seem like I was refusing to allow anyone to talk about the USS Liberty, which never happened. And then a bunch of retards online believe it. And then start sending me death threats.
Ben Bankus
And it's like Sam Hyde came, come out and say like something Dan Bilzeriany.
Tim Pool
I don't know. I'm just saying right now the bigger picture is. And, and, and forgive me, I know a lot of people are going to be like Tim talking about himself. Well, it's like it's my experience with one of these problems, but it's exemplified in the news that all. Like I talked about it before. Someone made a video of me debating Cenk Uygur by taking a video from this show of me making comments about news and a video of Cenk from Young Turks putting them side by side and making it look like it was a live debate. And then splicing our statements together to look like we were debating each other. And they got like 50k hits and.
Brett Dasovic
Somebody'S watching that now. Like, wow, that was a great debate.
Tim Pool
Yeah.
Brett Dasovic
Never happened.
Tim Pool
I've had people come up to me and tell me that they saw a debate I did with somebody. I'm like, what are you talking about? And I'm like, I've, I'm not kidding. This, this, this literally happened where. And, and the frustrating thing is there was a period where I was getting. My phone was ringing off the hook and people, someone, once again, they made a fake. It's just wild, man. And it, and it, and I think it's intentional And I think YouTube promotes it on purpose where like, like, I'll say it right now, this Warren Smith video, it's the smarmiest, scummiest thing you can do he. So Andrew Wilson and I had a debate, and it was contentious, and it went back and forth, and some people said I was right, some people said he was right. And then he took it, cut out my arguments, put in me stammering, said I didn't do any research, and I was backed into a corner. Wow, look how dumb he looks. And things like that. Like, more academic than that. And YouTube's spam blasting it. YouTube is X. Did this with the accusation that I stole a cat. Like, holy shit. Daily Beast ran a fake story.
Ben Bankus
Stole a cat.
Tim Pool
Never did. And there was. There was never any evidence or inclination or. In fact, as soon as the. The reporter called the police, they were like, you are incorrect. Tim Pool never sold a cat. I'm gonna run the story anyway. And then Twitter, at the time when it was still Twitter, put it up in their trending tab for two weeks. And then. And then I had people asking me, like, what happened with this cat you took? And I was like, bro, they made that up.
Ben Bankus
Ask Rock right now. You stole a cat.
Tim Pool
I think it actually will. I think if you ask Rock, it says it was a false story. That missile, you know, accused.
Brett Dasovic
This is kind of what I mean, though, when you're talking earlier about, like, getting off the Internet, it's like, yeah, I might. I might mess up and my life might be damaged because I don't know about some Iranian flight path. But on the other hand, if nothing else I'm watching is real anyways, then who cares? Like, there might be some information out there that I'm missing about some phrase that somebody's saying right before a leftist tries to.
Ben Bankus
I like local. I like local news almost better than, like, major news. Probably because it's, like, less intense. But.
Brett Dasovic
But the. The.
Tim Pool
I. I agree. It's because I got turned on a local news channel, and they were, like, breaking news. A water pipe has broken on Main Street. Firefighters say they will be there shortly to repair it. And then they show just, like, a fire hydrant spraying water in the street.
Brett Dasovic
And I'm like, it's also.
Ben Bankus
There are things that are actually. That you're like, oh, I might actually avoid that.
Brett Dasovic
Like, I just. Like, that's all I'm thinking is like, you're right. Like, there are so much news out there that you do need, you know, in the world we live in today. But when so much of it is fake anyways, it's like, am I really gonna. How much of it? Like, yeah, it's true. I could actually come across the one true story on the Internet that helps me prevent something bad from happening. But on the other hand, my brain is bogged down from 10, 000 things that are bits and pieces of fake information that are shared from people all over.
Ben Bankus
You know what I think so you need the brain chip.
Brett Dasovic
Yeah.
Tim Pool
Looking at the Trump assassination attempt, obvious cover up and obvious slap on the wrist bs. Looking at the Epstein files, ridiculously obvious cover up. Even Trump seems flustered by it. There is a. There is a. We call it the deep state, but it's just the US government and it is desperately trying to regain rigid control of the system. The fact that the Gulf of Tonkin is publicly acknowledged as a aspect, as a real false flag the US conducted is, is, is evidence of this. The US faked an attack on itself to enter the Vietnam War. You weren't allowed to say that 15 years ago. Now it's just is Ron Paul and RFK Jr. Like the Secretary of HHS literally publicly said the CIA killed my uncle and my dad. Like these things were not allowed to be public. You weren't allowed to claim the US government did these things. They were supposed to be. 20 years later you can say maybe that was true and then be called a conspiracy theorist. But they never bring you on the news. I think the machine is desperately trying to eliminate individuals from the narrative space that have these kinds of discussions and will address anything. And that's why they went after Alex Jones in one way, seeking to destroy his company and bankrupt in the ways they can. And they're targeting many other individuals with structures like this in ways they know would be effective against them. Had Kamala Harris, Tucker Carlson's a great example, they got him fired from Fox.
Phil Labonte
Had Kamala Harris won, there would have been a whole lot more people that are, you know, prominent that would would have lost everything. They would have gone after Joe Rogan. I think they would have gone after Tim. I think they would have gone after.
Ben Bankus
But now don't you think they're going.
Phil Labonte
To potentially do that if Democrats get back in power? They're talking about it right now. The Lincoln Project tweeted today that something along the lines of me if I can find it now.
Ben Bankus
Well, Trump, Trump to. Is doing the thing where, you know, certain people are being deported for saying, like the Bobby Violin guy, the regular. I don't know what kind of having is the.
Brett Dasovic
The musician. Right, the one who had his visa revoked. Yeah, yeah.
Ben Bankus
Which is, you know, and then. But does that mean that if the Democrats get in that I could have a visa revoked because I Made a joke about a LGBTQ + topic or.
Phil Labonte
Yes.
Ben Bankus
So that is a little concerning.
Brett Dasovic
The logic for that was that that was actually taken as a threat, given the language of what they said at that event. Yeah, but it. I. I made the same point. I said, like, going to be used again.
Ben Bankus
I don't even know if I agree with that. But all I'm saying is that, like, that could just happen the other way and even harsher and less about, you know, because the. The left's version of safety and safe space is a little different than the right. The right's like, he threatened violence. The left's like, he made me feel weird.
Phil Labonte
Yeah. The Lincoln Project tweeted, they said, one day Alligator Auschwitz will be filled with the ones who built it. Which is their saint. They're saying the Lincoln Project tweeted, one day Alligator Auschwitz will be filled with the ones who built it. So they're saying that it's like a concentrate concentration camp. They're saying it's like a concentration camp. And they're openly saying that when the Democrats get back into positions of power, they're going to put their political enemies in. Into a concentration camp.
Ben Bankus
I really think that they just need to legalize, like, they're just legalized.
Tim Pool
Easy, easy.
Ben Bankus
Legalize a lot of things. We can't say that.
Phil Labonte
Yeah, you don't want to talk. No illusions to violence.
Ben Bankus
No violence.
Phil Labonte
No illusions to violence. Don't say anything.
Ben Bankus
No, I mean, like, drugs.
Tim Pool
Oh, okay.
Phil Labonte
Yeah, fair enough.
Ben Bankus
No, I just think they need to, like, legalize drugs and then just like, maybe we can stop trying to.
Brett Dasovic
Have you seen Portland?
Ben Bankus
People in trouble for, like, let both sides say crazy stuff is basically what I'm saying. If like, there was the one article you had up there about. I forget what it was. Somebody said something and are the.
Tim Pool
The.
Ben Bankus
The Superman.
Tim Pool
Yeah. What about it?
Ben Bankus
Did somebody say something? And then I forget.
Tim Pool
But Superman's woke.
Ben Bankus
My point is that if you. You can say some really crazy stuff and still be in a Hollywood movie. If the crazy stuff you're saying goes one way. Politically agreed. But I think that it should be both ways and make those people be in. Make those people be in the same movie, that'll be a good movie. Have like a far left crazy person.
Brett Dasovic
They did that with far right crazy Personopoulos or whatever the last one that what's his name made.
Tim Pool
Well, let's. Let's jump to some. The New York Post, ladies and gentlemen, Superman will be out soon. And the near Post says Superman director faces backlash for calling the man of Steel an immigrant super woke Superman Director and DC Studios head co head James Gunn. Yes. Ahead of the release of Superman reboot gun told the Sunday Times of London that Superman is a story of America. An immigrant that came here from other places and populated the country. Well, I mean I urge all of.
Brett Dasovic
You to actually go and read the Times article which is heavily editorialized by the person who actually wrote the piece. There's like what basically was used as fodder where they knew that all of the journalists, the varieties, the deadlines were going to pick these quotes up, but the journalist puts whole paragraphs that have nothing to do with what James Gunn was saying. And if you go online right now, even the people who make content that talk about woke Hollywood are not calling this movie that. The people that don't like it are citing story and they're not saying that it's anything of the sort. But James Gunn was very stupid to even get close to this discussion. I also don't believe that this would be the talking point of Kamala had won. I don't think we'd be talking about whether Superman was an immigrant.
Tim Pool
I think. I think it's a slow news cycle and people need something to talk about.
Brett Dasovic
This was always going to happen with this movie because first of all he's a. It's more. It's more apt to call him a refugee because he's. He crash landed from another planet. I think it's more akin to like when a child is left at a church without documents. Right, yeah, that makes more sense. But they're looking. The movie's looking to open to like $200 million which isn't the money that it needs to make globally this week. I don't helping.
Tim Pool
I don't think it's going to do well.
Ben Bankus
I didn't even know it was coming out till today.
Brett Dasovic
It's got. It's got high audience score but the people who have seen it are the ones who bought the Amazon pre sale tickets. So they wanted to go. If you want to go to Superman enough that you'll go two days early, you're going to be more apt to like it anyways. I have high hopes for the movie.
Tim Pool
I don't. I think it, it. The trailers already look convoluted. It looked like they just jammed in too many characters and the scenes are wild and all over the place and there's too many villains.
Brett Dasovic
There's the. I think the biggest argument is like they've done a horrible job of picking what promotional material to run so they ran these clips where Lois Lane is interviewing Superman and he's losing his cool. And then there's this other clip where Lex Luthor steals Crypto the dog. And he goes, Superman goes in there and is yelling at him and it doesn't, doesn't make him look very good. But everybody who's seen this movie is talking about is saying that David Corn Sweat, the guy who's playing Superman now does a fantastic job in the role.
Tim Pool
So I don't think it's going to do well because our culture is, is decayed and collapsed.
Ben Bankus
You know what? They need the guy who plays Superman to say free Palestine.
Tim Pool
I think the reason why Superman won't do well and the reason why the Marvel movies have been doing well is the exact same reason why the baseball fields in my, in my neighborhood in Chicago are overgrown with weeds. And no one plays baseball anymore.
Brett Dasovic
They play cricket at the ones by us.
Tim Pool
They play soccer. And so the issue is, it's like people don't understand what market share is. This is true for like the Internet as well. People are, are confused by like, hey, I've got, you know, 10,000 subscribers. How come when I post a video, they don't all watch the video? And it's like, well, you don't, you don't just have 10,000 subscribers. You have 10,000 people, 60% of whom get off work at 3, 10% who get off work at 9. This person doesn't have a job. They're more likely to watch. And so they assume that it's homogenous. And so what happens with Superman is you have a movie where it is largely catering to a traditional American value system. Truth just in the American way.
Brett Dasovic
That phrase is not used anymore.
Tim Pool
Exactly. Because they're trying to lowest common denominator it so that the children of immigrants will come and see a movie, but they don't have any cultural connection to. So we have Superman going back 70 years or whatever. So a new Superman movie, it's a big IP that people who are familiar with American tradition and American culture are going to be like a new Superman. But if you came here from Honduras, you're going to be like, oh, I've heard of that. I don't know. I don't care to go see it. And as the US increasingly is not having children, parents aren't going to go to see this movie. Many people are going to be like, I'll see when it comes out. I got work. People with kids used to be like, well, let's bring the kids on the weekend. To see Superman now you've got so Americans aren't having kids. And I think the largest percentage of population growth is from immigration who do not have a cultural connection to movies like this. So we are seeing with Marvel and with DC the revenue is starting to decline.
Ben Bankus
I'm going to go see it now. Fight back against immigration.
Brett Dasovic
Numbers, numbers.
Tim Pool
That's why it's getting this backlash.
Brett Dasovic
Numbers wise.
Ben Bankus
If it does going to do well.
Brett Dasovic
If it does $200 million in its opening weekend. A movie tends to make three times its opening weekend. So $600 million on a $225 million budget, which is the estimated. It's probably much higher that, especially once you include marketing. $600 million is less than what man of Steel made in 2013. Far less influence.
Ben Bankus
I don't Money has to make a good movie.
Tim Pool
When. When you look at how they've look. Suicide Squad was all right. How did they do budget wise?
Brett Dasovic
Which one? The 2016.
Tim Pool
The new one with James Gunn that.
Brett Dasovic
It did poorly because of COVID and it was released day and date on HBO Max. So it came out at the same time. It made like no money.
Tim Pool
So.
Brett Dasovic
But Guardians of the Galaxy Volume 3 did very well.
Tim Pool
Did it?
Brett Dasovic
It did 800. Okay, let me rephrase that. It made like 845 million dollar $845 million dollars. But the budget was massive for it. So.
Tim Pool
Right, so Guardians of the Galaxy 3, $250 million budget. 845 million. That's not bad.
Brett Dasovic
Is it actually $845 million?
Tim Pool
Yeah.
Brett Dasovic
See, my brain is full of stuff that don't matter.
Tim Pool
That's unfortunate for you.
Ben Bankus
They should make a superhero that's an illegal immigrant.
Tim Pool
So there is an argument that Marvel just sucks now. Like Captain America, Brave New World just trash. And it's again convoluted. Thunderbolts did poorly. These are. These, these are established characters. Bucky is. I think Bucky is the longest running MCU character.
Brett Dasovic
Yeah, but nobody cares. Those. Those aren't the Thunderbolts of the comics. And nobody cares about Red Guardian. Like it's just.
Tim Pool
Nobody cared about Iron Man.
Brett Dasovic
Yeah, but they did after the movie.
Ben Bankus
I think people just think that superheroes are kind of done.
Tim Pool
Maybe. But the argument then is how did. How did they make a billion dollars in each of their movies for, you know, six, seven years and now they've lost it. Like what happened where it got lost.
Ben Bankus
And why did there started catering to people who don't like those types of movies to be and try. That's what every. That's why everything is all about catering to women. People who don't aren't. You know, we. We could make our fans happy, but, oh, we don't want to upset these people. So let's go this way. And then it's like, now you just have a bad product.
Tim Pool
Indeed. I don't think that Superman will be a good product. And I think that the reason people are not going to want to go see it is not just that people are like, I doubt it will be good. I'll see when it comes out. They don't have kids. 10. So Iron man came out, what, 08.
Brett Dasovic
08.
Tim Pool
We're talking 17 years ago now.
Brett Dasovic
Same year as the Dark Knight.
Tim Pool
17 years ago. And that kicks off the MCU. Hulk didn't do as well. Captain America. Thor did really well. Avengers was massive. Okay, 17 years ago. How old was I? 23. 22. 23 years old. So I'm like, I'm gonna go see a movie. I got nothing else to do now. I've got a wife and a kid as do. And people my age are much more likely to have more kids than I. And so we're no longer going to see these movies. The more. More importantly, people. Millennials largely don't have kids. And they're just like, I don't know. I'm over it. I don't. I don't care about this stuff anymore. So it's. It's. It's. It's. Culture is breaking apart. There. There used to be a unified intellectual property chain, I suppose. We had. We had certain shows that everybody liked. They kept making them over and over again. They were very popular. And now we have small pockets of culture around the country that like some things and don't like others.
Ben Bankus
It's because the superheroes are Jewish.
Tim Pool
Which one is it? Oh, Sabra. Is that her name?
Brett Dasovic
Sabra was. I mean, yes, but Superman was created by. Superman was created by Jewish men, though. That's like one of the things that they.
Tim Pool
Batman.
Brett Dasovic
Batman.
Ben Bankus
Well, Jews, yeah. Jews created probably a lot of vibes.
Tim Pool
But that's actually the joke from Harvey Birdman, attorney at law. Like, what was Birdman? Like a Hannah Barrera or whatever superhero? And so then they made a spoof of it where he was a lawyer and they call him Mr. Birdman.
Ben Bankus
Yeah.
Tim Pool
Yeah.
Brett Dasovic
I don't know if the movie will do. Well, I'm hoping that it is. I never want to move if you.
Ben Bankus
Don'T have to repurpose. I've seen a lot of movie theaters.
Brett Dasovic
Covet, destroyed everything I will say go see F1.
Ben Bankus
They're repurposing them to.
Tim Pool
To Top Gun. Maverick did well. When was that?
Brett Dasovic
That was 2021.
Tim Pool
Okay.
Brett Dasovic
But the reason that did well isn't because it had like a gazillion dollar opening weekend. It did fairly well. It broke a hundred million dollars. But it got a lot of repeat business from people going to see multiple times in the word of mouth because.
Ben Bankus
Everybody said it's not woke.
Tim Pool
Indeed.
Brett Dasovic
And they're saying Superman isn't. But they're just like the people that don't like it are citing story issues and they're not saying that they're not giving that reason. Also that's become the thing. If somebody asks me if a movie's like, I'm like, I don't know what that means me to.
Tim Pool
To you.
Brett Dasovic
That means something different to everyone. So I don't use it.
Ben Bankus
I try to use watching movies on their phone. Like the majority of people aren't even watching them on a TV.
Brett Dasovic
Go CF1.
Tim Pool
But. But here's the crazy thing. So the 4th of July weekend went back to Chicago and we, we drove around. I landed at Midway, which is my neighborhood. And so when we were leaving, we're just driving through the neighborhood and there's nobody anywhere. And this is literally the fourth of July. And we landed. It was like, it was like one o'. Clock. And guys, I am at. I am like this was the black pill moment of all moments of my life where I grew up. On the 4th of July by 9am Grills would be going, there'd be cars parked on every street lining the park. There would be baseball games happening and everyone would be excited all day. They'd hang out and they did not do it and there was nothing going on. And we drove by the park. There was maybe, I think we saw 15 people. The, the baseball fields were overgrown with weeds and I'm like where is everybody? What happened? And the argument I hear is they're all just staying inside and going online. Maybe that, that sounds like a good, a reasonable circumstance, but I don't know if I believe that like people were in their homes before. But yo. To go back to Chicago a mass the third was it the third biggest city in the country and in my neighborhood where every year of my life Growing Up, 4th of July Jam packed everywhere. Literally nobody anywhere. It was just. It was wild. It was nuts. It's just a weird, it's weird to see that happen.
Ben Bankus
What, why, why do you think that is? Because the societies that people want to be Indoors.
Tim Pool
I, well, the argument that. So I asked the question to my friends and other people, like, where is everybody? Like, how come people stopped going outside?
Ben Bankus
Poor?
Tim Pool
Well, I mean, it's, it's a lower middle class neighborhood, I guess. Lower class.
Brett Dasovic
Ish.
Tim Pool
There's a lot of gangs, there's bullet holes in windows some, some places, but it's not that bad. The houses there are now going for like two or three.
Ben Bankus
I'd stay inside.
Tim Pool
Yeah. But either way, when I was a kid with all of those problems, when you went outside on the 4th of July, or any weekend for that matter, any weekend, you would see baseball fields, four games happening at once, overlapping with each other.
Ben Bankus
A lot of America, a lot of the best parts of America are just your own home. Like there's, you know, I think, I think like I was in San Antonio, I made that joke and it's, it's true. It's like, yeah, you guys like it here because your house is nice and it's affordable and it's, and you can have a big house, but as soon as you, you know, you leave it, you're like, this place is terrible.
Tim Pool
But people still used to go outside of their houses and talk to each other.
Ben Bankus
Yeah.
Tim Pool
And what, I think, what I think is happening now, and I don't know if it's for sure, people go online and find a unique community specific to them that doesn't exist in their physical reality. And so they don't want to go and hang out outside with their neighbor and play baseball. They want to hang out with their other, you know, toaster cost playing friend or something.
Brett Dasovic
Well, it's watching.
Ben Bankus
People don't have kids. And then if you, if you don't have kids, you don't really grow up. Yeah, once you have kids, you actually grow up. And then you start seeing the value of having, you know, a barbecue or any little thing becomes a big thing because you realize for your kid, it's. It, you're, you're creating the foundation for their life. So when people don't have that and they're 35, 40, and then they just watch the Internet all day and. Yeah, like, obviously they're not gonna also go and support, you know, the new Superman movie.
Tim Pool
I wonder, is this all intentional to prepare us for an AI Industrial Revolution?
Phil Labonte
I don't know how it could be intentional.
Ben Bankus
It's like a hindsight 2020 thing. You know, how it's like you, you look back, like looking at art history now through the lens of that we have social media or just art in General or movies or like the first movie theaters that were Nickelodeons and they literally watched one reel. Like you'd pay five cents to watch the equivalent of one like a one minute movie. And then it became, well, we need longer movies. But now we all just, we've gone back to one minute. So it's like we don't realize what you, what you're saying is true. We are being set up for AI, but live in the pod, it's a natural thing. And once we have it and it's part of everything, we'll look back and go, oh, that's why we were so.
Tim Pool
The, the argument is, you know the saying, you will live in the pod, you will eat the bugs. That's what the Agenda 2030, you know, was all that stuff. And with AI coming and prominent tech leaders believing that AI will shut down most information based jobs and white collar jobs. In the Black Mirror episode, for instance, they have this like device that they talk to and she's like, I got to pay these bills. I got, I got. What is she like? I got to buy my insurance. And it goes, I can do that for you. Logging in now. All right, the bill is $14.98. I can pay that with your credit card. Do it. You're done, your errands are taken care of. And so that's going to eliminate most jobs. Amazing thing happened with, with the emergence of crypto in that people had been setting up bill systems with crypto where you could pay by QR code so you no longer needed a rep. You literally would just, you'd get a bill and then you'd scan a QR code and hit send and then your bill is paid. It's automatic. What we're seeing now is when I see in my neighborhood, nobody goes outside anymore. I'm like, the people have chosen to live in the pod. They're not eating bugs. But they will soon, I guess.
Ben Bankus
Or they were deported, hopefully.
Tim Pool
My neighborhood was not Mexican. No, it was Polish.
Phil Labonte
Not nearly enough deported ever become.
Tim Pool
The Mexican neighborhood is past Cicero.
Ben Bankus
So the midway area, they were probably partying outside.
Tim Pool
No, I mean nothing. Like we drove around and we were like, there's nobody. The roads were empty. Now when they shut the roads down for the NASCAR race, there were a lot of cars, but that's hyper concentrated in area with, with roads being shut down. I wouldn't say that I saw when they shut the roads down in downtown the night of the 4th and everyone was leaving, it looked like a normal Friday night to me. And for fourth of July, I was surprised. However, the beaches were nuts and that actually is fairly normal for Chicago. But to see like nobody out the parks, in the neighborhoods was like, weird to me.
Brett Dasovic
Yeah, see, I would love that. I used to work maintenance for an apartment complex and after the 4th of July, it would just be littered with garbage out front from people barbecuing out front of the building.
Ben Bankus
In Canada, Stay home. The, the like. They said not to do fireworks for Canada Day. People still did it, but there's a lot of Indians in Canada and they, they do like their cultural events and they go hard like they like. It's almost like the new, new immigrants are the ones who are celebrating but their own things.
Tim Pool
I think whether we want to or not, there's going to be an AI Industrial revolution and it's going to eliminate a lot of jobs overnight. I think this show can't exist in an AI world. I don't know how many years we have left, but no, I don't see it.
Phil Labonte
I think, I think the personalities are still going to be something that people are attracted to. I do think the AI is going to do a lot of changing the way that we, you know, I think.
Ben Bankus
It'Ll be more necessary to have shows.
Tim Pool
I disagree. We like, we already struggle against competing with. Look at our shorts, for instance. Shorts from the show do between like 5 and 20,000 views. Maybe if we're lucky, we'll get 20k, but they get like 10k. And someone can make a short where it's a fake story AI generated about a squirrel that got rescued and it gets 27 million. So perhaps we exist in a small niche space that is tolerated because it's not as impactful as, you know, on the larger ecosystem, but over a long period of time.
Ben Bankus
The guy who made that is making no money.
Tim Pool
Let me. I'll also say this. Like this, this, this show can't survive without subsidy. So if I did not do my morning show, we could not afford to do this show at, at this, at the amount of viewership and scale. So it's, it's interesting. Like there's a period of growth that happens in media where it's, it's kind of expensive to do, to do radio shows, but a radio is. They build it up and then it's a guaranteed captured audience of, you know, everybody, basically. So big companies buy ads and it works. Eventually you end up with Fox News Corporation, its own skyscraper in New York City, and they're getting, you know, 17 million views every night because this was, this was 20, 30 years ago or whatever. I don't know if they ever got that many, but it's large in the tens of millions. And so when you have 10 million viewers, a single ad read one time is going to cost 100 to $200,000. And so now you're selling to these massive corporations, guaranteed space to reach 10 million people. And they do four. They do four or five commercials per spot. So they're doing like a couple several million dollars per hour today. You can't reach that, but you still. The technology has gotten cheaper. But what we can't compete with here is people are gonna do zoom calls. The zoom call interviews are lower quality, so I started doing them on my morning show, and now I'm actually getting press coverage for the zoom calls because it opens up the access to prominent political personalities that normally don't want to do in person. But with the decentralization of media, a politician in D.C. says, why go on Timcast IRL? Sure, we average, like, the second biggest live stream in the country. I could go on that show, or I can just zoom call three smaller shows and get that all cranked out in a couple hours and not have to travel. So we try to do in person, but we struggled to make that happen because guests, prominent guests, don't want to do it. Liberals especially don't want to do it if they can't control the scenario. And it's expensive to pay for travel and to hire people to do travel and cars and all of that stuff. So what I think ends up happening is. Well, I'll put it this way. For this show, having comedians on. Well, we like having comedians on. It makes show fun.
Ben Bankus
It is fun.
Tim Pool
The morning show that I do has a. Has a profit margin of like, 95%. Tim cast IRL is flat or negative because of the cost of travel and staffing and space and cameras. So I use the money.
Ben Bankus
Yahoo didn't say yes to coming on.
Tim Pool
Oh, no, no. He actually. When I met with Netanyahu, they actually were discussing who wanted to have him on and talk to him. And it was, go to Israel and talk to him. And I'm like, I ain't going to Israel. I gotta fly. But a couple people there were like, I will. We want to do a public interview with you. But the challenge that we have is the cost of. I'll put it simple. Like, the cost of competing with. Look, I compete with myself. Like, let's just make it as simple as possible. I can turn the camera on anywhere in the world, in a hotel room and talk for 20 minutes and make a video and have a 95% profit margin. My only costs are going to be like maintaining the camera and having a good working computer. And it's ridiculous. That's where I was at before we started IRL. IRL's got massive infrastructure to be able to do a sit down live show every night. Flying people in. That's the distinction. So right now, every day there is a new young person producing content with a massive profit margin where they sit in a room with a low cost camera and Tim cast. IRL is an older system that struggles. FOX News and MSNBC and CNN largely survived because they have carriage fees that still exist because there's an older population that still pays for those carriage fees. We don't have that. So when the generation that watches shows in person and likes this die or retire and stop paying attention, there's no way this show is going to be able to compete with AI generated content and young people. So the only outcome would be my morning show turns into something like that, I guess.
Ben Bankus
Well, thanks for having me on man.
Tim Pool
My point ultimately is.
Ben Bankus
But yeah, it's scary.
Tim Pool
I don't know how much time this show has.
Ben Bankus
Maybe none of us have. Like every AI could take everything really, but I think it will but that hopefully everything gets cheap so you can just chill at home and then that's why they need to legalize the drugs.
Tim Pool
And so he's not wrong. Without work or purpose, people become unhealthy and angry and violent. So this is like mouse utopia territory like Rudyard lynch was saying. And I don't know what ends up happening, but I think people need to understand that the AI revolution has the potential to transform humanity in ways hitherto undreamt of.
Phil Labonte
That's why I said the other night that AI is going to be a bigger deal than the printing press. Like the changes that are coming to, about to society, it's, it's not going to like no one can predict how society is going to react to having that kind of, that kind of productivity. If all of the predictions about AI are correct, you have no idea what it's going to do to a society that has that kind of productivity and has so few actual roles for real people to be in. You know, I mean people, there's a lot of people that when they retire, you know, six months later they, they.
Brett Dasovic
Go get another job.
Phil Labonte
Very frequent.
Tim Pool
But, but the, like, I think, I think what is it the most common age of death? Is that just after retirement? Yep.
Phil Labonte
And, and, and that's you know, if you, if, if you're an older person, you retire and, and maybe your, your significant other has passed away. That's why a lot of you see a lot of old people that go to McDonald's every morning and they have their coffee because it's just somewhere to go and hang out with people. Then they come home, then they go to a job that like young leftists think that it's a terrible thing that they're at work. But these people are like, well, if I don't do this, I sit around in my house and just watch tv. Here. I can actually interact with people. There's, there's a social aspect to it and people need that.
Tim Pool
I think that we are chickens in a chicken coop. And what that analogy references to is you look at the chickens, they go about their business every day. The rooster's in charge among the chickens. They know who's the boss. There is a super hen, she clucks around and she's top of the pecking order. And there's a rooster who watches over him and he tells the women what he wants. We don't interfere in their daily lives. They have their hobbies, whatever it may be, I don't know, eating bugs. And then we come in and we take from them what we want. I don't see why there's an argument that humans are free from this exact circumstance. We do it to every other animal. Why would humans not do it to themselves? In fact, we did it for generations with slavery, and slavery still exists. So what I mean by that is the interests of the American public to whatever, whatever superstructure exists in government. They don't care about your day to day lives. They don't seek to interfere in us sitting here bucking amongst ourselves. I don't care what the chickens are balking about, as long as I get my eggs. Only when there is an interference in the, in the work product of your labor do you then get some kind of crackdown where the person goes in and breaks it up. So I think it is fair to say whether it is the existing US government, deep state, whatever to call it, or just a superstructure without a nucleus. Powerful individuals that have wants and desires and requirements, they ultimately don't care about the will of the people insofar as if it doesn't destabilize the eggs that are produced. We don't care what they do. If the system destabilizes, they'll come in and stabilize it however they have to. So when you see Trump himself get flustered over Epstein Dan Bongino and Cash Patel. All of a sudden, phase two of the Epstein release is literal nothing. You have to wonder if the farmer came in and kicked the rooster and told him to back the F off.
Brett Dasovic
This is like when. When Trump swore during the Iran stuff, and I was like, that's bad. Like, everyone's laughing about him. Like, it makes him look out of control. It takes away from the gravity of his position when he loses his cool, maybe, like.
Tim Pool
But I think it showed that the boot was coming down.
Brett Dasovic
Like, it's just.
Tim Pool
It worries you. Yeah, but I, Like, I. I don't think the President is the most powerful person in the. In the, on the planet necessarily, because the President has limitations. And there's like, you know, in skateboarding, someone might ask, like, who's the best skateboarder in the world? And it's like, there's no such thing, because everybody does it in a different way.
Ben Bankus
He's got nothing on Mecca Hitler.
Tim Pool
Nothing. He's the best. But. And what I mean by that is, when it comes to the power structures of the planet, there are people that Trump has concerns about and has fears about and is beholden to. He knows that if Saudi Arabia starts dumping oil into the system, it's going to cause chaos back at home. So he's worried about whether or not he's going to piss them off too much. And. And then you get these. These superstructures, essentially.
Brett Dasovic
Does that prevent us from getting those Trump cell phones, though? That's what I really need to know.
Tim Pool
Trump phone. A golden Trump phone.
Ben Bankus
Need a Trump cell phone, dude. How much are they?
Brett Dasovic
Like, you should side eye anybody who actually gets the Trump cell phone.
Tim Pool
Is it like, just capture all your data and it mines crypto for Trump.
Ben Bankus
The gold Visa, the. The gold card thing.
Tim Pool
Yeah.
Ben Bankus
Other countries are doing it now. Yeah. New Zealand's doing it.
Phil Labonte
Really?
Tim Pool
I.
Phil Labonte
It's hilarious.
Tim Pool
It's good. It's. It's getting weird, man. The. The AI is developing so rapidly and so quickly. It's. It's. It's kind of. The transformation is going to be like the industrial revolution times 100. It's gonna. It's gonna be an overnight thing where you're just like, what just happened?
Phil Labonte
Yeah, the.
Tim Pool
The.
Phil Labonte
How fast it happens, too. Well, that's the thing. You can't really predict.
Tim Pool
We'll use one example. GTA 6 has been in development for how long?
Brett Dasovic
What, 20 years.
Tim Pool
20 years.
Brett Dasovic
It's a long time.
Tim Pool
12 years. We are probably a couple years away from you being able to just tell the computer to make GTA 7 and it'll do it in a day.
Ben Bankus
No.
Tim Pool
Yes. Yeah. Where we are right now, you can, you're shaking your head, but can you program an Atari game?
Ben Bankus
I can't.
Tim Pool
Yes, you can. Because the current versions of Claude and Gemini, you literally just say, make me a game that does this and it will make you a game at a higher. That is actually better than Atari. So we're probably six months out from being able to make. From. From you being able to say, I want to play a new version of Super Mario Brothers, the original for nes. Make me new levels. And it'll render that in three minutes. And then you will have the game. We, we do this all the time here on the show.
Ben Bankus
It'll be still as good though.
Tim Pool
It'll be identical. So a few things that I've done live on the show, I programmed a space. I made a game called Border Patrol.
Ben Bankus
Like Space Invaders.
Tim Pool
It was like Space Invaders. You were a little. You are, you are a character that could fire a gun upwards as things were. Aliens were trying to cross the border and you had to destroy the aliens before they got in. And then I simply told it, create the ability to launch grenades. Create the. Create 10 HP. I literally said, make a game that does this. And Gemini made the game and it was more advanced than Atari. So it was comparable to like a Nintendo game. Within. Within a year it'll be Super Nintendo. Then PlayStation. Within a couple of years you will. So what we already have with, with veo and Midjourney V1 looks incredible. Mid Journey V1 looks nuts. We are a few years away from you opening up your Disney plus app and it's gonna be called, you know, it's gonna be called Disney World or something. And you're gonna press the microphone button and say, I wanna watch Spider man fight Godzilla. And it'll go, you got it. And then it'll make the movie. And then within three minutes you have a full feature length film of spider man fighting Godzilla.
Brett Dasovic
And it kind of goes back to what you were saying about how there isn't like a cohesive narrative around society anymore, is that movies and television shows used to be something that people coalesced around. People would talk about them at the water cooler. Right when a new show came out and everybody was watching it.
Ben Bankus
Everybody talk about Iran.
Tim Pool
Yeah.
Brett Dasovic
Well, the point being is that now everybody's at home on their own in their little pocket of the Internet. They don't feel the need to socialize with their media the way they did 10, 20.
Ben Bankus
We'll still have to go to a grocery store and stuff though, right?
Tim Pool
And not with Instacart and Amazon.
Ben Bankus
People like doing it.
Tim Pool
So that was. I can't remember who said that. There was a hell likes going. I can't remember who said that. There was a guy who said, I don't go and buy envelopes because I need to buy envelopes. I go because on the way there I pet the dog, I greet my neighbor, I say hello to the clerk. I do these things to be a part of society. But kids who grow up without that don't know what you're asking them to miss. They say, I don't know what that is. So they say, I need an envelope. I press the envelope button on Amazon and it appears at my house. House. And they're like, but don't you want to pet a dog? What do you mean? Don't you want to go out, walk and smell the flowers? What are flowers? I've never really.
Ben Bankus
We are just going to end up staying home because outside will just be chaos.
Phil Labonte
Ever since COVID that's been happening as it is.
Ben Bankus
If you can afford a home, well.
Phil Labonte
I mean stay in your apartment.
Ben Bankus
So a lot of the white collar jobs that'll go like you think, would that be bad for.
Tim Pool
I think it's going to cause an economic. So when the industrial revolution happened, this is what leads to a lot of revolutions and violence because through no fault of their own, a person was like, my access to food, shelter and security has evaporated because the job I used to have is now mechanized and they don't need me anymore. So they let me go. And what's going to happen with AI is going to be massive. And now they predict this. Like when I say they, I say like the tech billionaires and the government have been predicting this. Let me, let me show you something I made. Maybe you don't believe me. Let me see if I can.
Ben Bankus
They do like I believe you. I'm just scared.
Tim Pool
Well, let me, let me show you this. This. So these are some, these are some veo videos I made where I said third person video game gameplay, steampunk game players female and red cloak with steam powered gauntlet and steampunk sword. It made this. Let's start from the end. It made this in a minute.
Ben Bankus
So then what?
Tim Pool
So this. This crazy. Well, hold on, hold on. I got more gta. Then I got more. Here's another one. I said game has visible heads up display. They made this. Get ready for this.
Ben Bankus
This all just means that we're living in A simulation too, right?
Tim Pool
Maybe. Check this one out.
Ben Bankus
We definitely are. Last night I.
Tim Pool
With this city under my control, I.
Phil Labonte
Will bring true order to this chaotic world.
Ben Bankus
It's like a sick game with.
Tim Pool
Wouldn't it be a great. A great game? So I was just like. So I had seen a video on X where someone said, they said third person video game gameplay made by video AI and I was like, I wonder if I could do that. So I said, make a heads up display. Make an energy. And then the General Voceth or whatever says he'll control the city. And it shows this little cutscene before. It looks like they're about to fight. Now what I was actually, I never have time to do any of my goofy projects. I was like, what I want to do is make a series of fake video game streams that are clips from an amazing game that doesn't exist. But it literally took me that all of those videos was probably 10 minutes. And now they're just videos. They're not games. But the. I. I showed the game before I made a. As I mentioned, like a. A space shooter game where aliens are traveling. There were. They had different hp, they were boss battles. And it took me literally three minutes to make. I think within a year you'll be able to go on Clauder Gemini and say you're not going to be able to do Mario because it's ip, but you're going to say make me a platform game where you play a character who collects items you know, can power up and can fly in the style of Super Mario World. And it will. It will make an entirely new version of it and it'll do it in five minutes. These games are not very like what is. What is the maximum size of Super Mario? Was it like not even a megabyte?
Phil Labonte
Yeah, there was. They're small. I don't know exactly.
Ben Bankus
But that's. Is there. Is there's no way to like fight back against that or is that we're just screwed?
Tim Pool
Are we screwed? It's just the way things are. Super Mario World was 512. Oh my God. Super Mario World was 512 kilobytes.
Brett Dasovic
Yeah, that's 64.
Tim Pool
I wouldn't be surprised if AI could make that right now. That's crazy.
Brett Dasovic
I watched this documentary on the making of GoldenEye and all of the work that went into getting that game made. And it's sad to think that we're eight megabytes.
Tim Pool
R64.
Brett Dasovic
Like megabytes was when you started getting into 64. I think GoldenEye was 12. And like, you start, you look at how much work and artistry went into making those games and you think about how now it's just going to be somebody giving a prompt. And that's depressing.
Ben Bankus
But is it really? Because video game companies, I mean, are they using AI already?
Brett Dasovic
I mean this, I'm talking about a game that was.
Tim Pool
This is wild Chat. GPT says it can already create the, the, the, the. The basic code structure of a remake of Super Mario World. But it requires you to plug in the sprites. So you can generate the sprites, you can generate the code, but it can't connect the two. You have to load them onto a server that it can connect to, to make it, to make it function.
Brett Dasovic
I hate that this is the type because the thing is you're going to have to be interested in whatever you're making to begin with. Two of my favorite movies in the last couple of years were gran Turismo and F1, which came out this year. F1. I have no interest in F1 as a sport. I don't watch F1, but the movie was fantast. But if we're talking about a world where I'm going to have to prompt to make a movie, I would have never thought to prompt to make a movie about something like this. So I want to be shown art from people who are passionate about what they're making and bring a level of humanity to it that precludes my ability to understand before I watch the piece. I don't know anything about this world or these types of characters until I enter that world through the lens of what they've created. I don't want to only look at the world through the lens of something that I can conceive.
Ben Bankus
Can't wait to go to Mars. Mars.
Tim Pool
So I just told Gemini Canvas to remake a side scrolling platformer similar to Super Mario World and said yes. And it's programming it right now. We'll see what it makes.
Brett Dasovic
Then you get arrested for copyright. It's like psych. We got you.
Tim Pool
I think it's, I think it's failing. Yeah, I think it's not working. We'll see. It made it. I did a bunch of basic Atari style games or early Nintendo style games. Had no problem making them as long as it was like single screen. I made one where you travel. You, you. I said make a simple version of the original Zelda where you move through a dungeon and fight bad guys. And so it doesn't, it doesn't do graphics very well. So when it swings a sword. A rectangle just appears in front of a bigger rectangle. And then the bad guys are different colored shapes. And then you collect items and you could move through doors and there was a boss. So we'll see. But right now we're gonna go to your chat. So smash the like button. Share the show with everyone. You know the Rumble members only uncensored show we have at 10pm you don't want to miss it. We seamlessly transition right from the show into that. That'll be@rumble.com Timcast IRL. And if you want to call into the show and talk to us and you can tell us that we're right or wrong or otherwise, join us@timcast.com join the discord server. Get involved. Find community now before it's too late.
Brett Dasovic
Better do it. Otherwise he's going to replace it all with AI calls.
Tim Pool
They're all going to, you know what I'll do? We'll just, we'll make a Discord of 10,000 various AI bots and it's like only one actual member. And they're like, this is a great community. And they're sitting in an empty room with just one day.
Brett Dasovic
He'll, he'll set up a meetup in the real world. Nobody shows up.
Tim Pool
All the robots. All right. Jaden's Wilder says the 1776 coffee just came in. It is as American. It is as American as apple pie. I appreciate that all Casper can be drank black, unlike other coffee brands, just so rot gut that they need cream and sugar to be palatable.
Phil Labonte
Thank you.
Tim Pool
We, we, we tried out a bunch of different blends and we, we inquired on many different companies and our distributor who does our formulations and well, we do the formulations, but who actually puts them together, did a great job. They got great coffee. And then we, we strive to have the best. So. Caspre.com Josie's new 1776 blend. It's American cream. It's got a nice little flavor to it. T.M. king says watching from the hospital. Wife and I are officially above replacement rate.
Phil Labonte
Bravo. Congratulations, brother.
Tim Pool
Right on.
Ben Bankus
But are they white?
Tim Pool
That's the question. Jade Dirt biker says bro, they're stripping the topsoil layer and shipping it to China via boat. That's what people are saying. They're buying the farmland to steal the topsoil. They're going to create a dust bowl in this country. We are being ripped to shreds.
Phil Labonte
China is an enemy and people that think that they're not are kidding themselves.
Tim Pool
All right. J.W. velasquez says for the anti fatat prank, you pay the tattoo artist to ink the swastika as usual. But just do the strike through with a fine point. Sharpie.
Brett Dasovic
Goes home and takes a shower. He's like, oh no.
Tim Pool
The James Black says thoughts on Dean Withers weaponizing his audience to docs and get CPS called on a caller to his show over a disagreement. These people are scumbags.
Phil Labonte
It's not good.
Tim Pool
All right, Ryan Pombert says Andrew Wilson and his wife and his kids are 1000 smarter. 1000 smarter than me. What does that mean? Like I love you 3000. I'm sure Tim is upset about this and will refuse to accept or debate. Andrew Wilson is welcome on the show anytime. I have tremendous respect for him. I think he's great personality. He's a very smart guy. And I have, I have a long form discussion on rights, what rights mean. And breaking down how Warren Smith, he edited out my, my responses in the debate and then said them himself. This is like, I don't like, I, I don't accept. I, I even say this like Andrew is probably right about a lot of things. I'm probably wrong about a lot of things. I believe that my moral worldview and philosophies are correct. He thinks these are correct and that's why we had the discussion. But what I don't, don't like is someone taking a year old debate, editing in only me like portions where I'm like looking worse, cutting out my actual response, saying them yourself and then saying I'm struggling and I'm failing. It's smarmy bullshit. Sorry for swearing again, but it is, it's like, dude, what, here's what I want. I want the actual core of the argument on rights between Andrew and I to be ingested as it is. And then people can make a determination for themselves. And Andrew and I should probably have an additional debate where we, where we continue the conversation. What I can't stand is anyone left or right intentionally ripping apart the core so that people don't understand the truth and they don't understand the moral philosophy. Instead they say things like, wow, Tim, did you really not understand? And I'm like, no. The dude just cut out my response like what am I supposed to do to that? And then YouTube is spam blasting it and I'm getting people asking me like, I'm getting requests for comments and stuff and I'm just like, guys, none of that is real. It's not real content. What do you do when Someone gets promoted in the algorithm on fake content? I have no idea. Well, I made a response to it.
Ben Bankus
So what is he debating you on?
Tim Pool
Andrew and I had a debate on whether rights exist. Andrew's debate. I'll say this because again, with respect, he argues rights are entitlements without duties. And I suppose my mistake was not just attacking his semantics, instead trying to convey my understanding of the moral philosophy and meanings. First of all, entitlements can't have duties. That's oxymoronic. It's paradoxical.
Ben Bankus
What's an entitlement?
Tim Pool
An entitlement is something that you are intrinsically allowed to have, that you are by nature or virtue allowed to have. So the problem with the concept of rights is that they're ill defined. Rights are defined as entitlements by the dictionary and entitlements are defined as rights by the dictionary. So it's circular.
Ben Bankus
That's why I like white privilege rather than privilege.
Tim Pool
Privilege, exactly. The question becomes, what does a person mean when they say they have a right to something? And my definition is that it's something they believe they can't survive without. And then we try to define when something actually enters into the territory of a true right, whether you actually have a right to it, whether or not you could survive. So that means only some things you have a right to that you are allowed to have by virtue of existence.
Ben Bankus
Didn't that UN guy say there was no such thing as rights?
Tim Pool
There were. Yeah.
Ben Bankus
Like the WEF guy.
Tim Pool
Yes.
Ben Bankus
Forget. So they are the. The elite kind of already think that right.
Tim Pool
They do, and they're wrong because it's. This is semantic argument. This is the problem with the debate around rights. They're making a semantic argument. Andrew made a semantic argument that what we believe to be rights can't exist because there is no truth but power, which is an anarchic. And this concept exists within anarchic philosophy as well as fascistic philosophy, that the only thing that is true is what you can enforce to be true. Therefore, no one has any true right to anything because they must have the right to exert force to obtain it. Which omits my point. If you are standing alone naked in the woods, what can you do and what must you do? And then how would we define something as your right to do? So my argument is when someone says they have a right to something, what they are basically telling you is, if I can't do this, I die or my survival is in jeopardy. His argument is people just claim they should be allowed to do Something by virtue of their opinion, which is which my argument largely is. There are things that we must intrinsically be able to do to survive. And it's exemplified. And where does this come? It's not axiomatic. It's rooted in communist countries that curtail rights fail and countries that allow an expansion of rights tend to succeed. The US begins to fail as communistic philosophies and authoritarianism rises, stripping away people's right to liberty.
Ben Bankus
Do you think China will fail China?
Tim Pool
I think China only began to succeed because cheating. They're.
Ben Bankus
They're pretend they're cheating, like to a communist, they'd be cheating.
Tim Pool
Right. So when, when China first began, they were struggling and failing. They were starving and they were dying to tens of millions. And Mao killed more people than any other human. It's only when they began to adopt more liberties in their marketplace, they began to relax how their economy worked, that they began to find some degree of success. But I think people are correct in saying that China may be a paper tiger. They have big fake empty cities and some argue their population size is not actually 1 billion. They've been flubbing the numbers.
Ben Bankus
Did you see that Trump said he would bomb Beijing today?
Tim Pool
Yes, he said it in 2022, I think.
Ben Bankus
Pretty badass.
Tim Pool
There was a story, there was a story was really interesting that Daily Beast said they had leaked audio of Trump telling a donor he threatened to bomb Beijing and Moscow, which is funny. But there's leaked, there's an actual video of a Trump donor in 2022 that we covered where he holds the phone up and they film it and Trump says, I told Putin and I would bomb Moscow. And he says, I don't know if he believed me, maybe 5%, but I told him I'd do it anyway. I did an hour long breakdown on my view and understandings of the moral philosophies around rights. That'll be up on Sunday. And again, what I find irksome is that someone like Warren Smith or Sam Seder and there's other people intentionally break the argument so the audience can't understand. I may be wrong about all of it, but the important thing is that you hear what I actually think and what Andrew actually thinks, and then you can say, you know what? Andrew makes a great point. I think Tim is wrong. What Warren did was he removed my arguments and then said, Tim doesn't know what he's talking about. So then all you actually see is what Andrew is saying. You don't actually see what my point was. And I think that's Smarmy, scumbaggery.
Ben Bankus
Do you think AI is going to automatically take moral rights away? I think it will.
Tim Pool
I don't know. I mean, it depends on. So like, the issue of rights, as I, as I try.
Ben Bankus
We have to, like, quiet, like, we have to take, we're taking AI's rights away, right? Like, well, they don't, I don't think.
Tim Pool
It has any rights.
Ben Bankus
It doesn't yet.
Tim Pool
So, like the, the argument over rights as survival. The reason health care is not a human right is that health care is not something that, that inherently exists as a, as a function of physics. So you can't force someone to give you health care, but you do have a right to get health care from someone else. A nation that would restrict the ability of injured or sick individuals from getting health care will likely struggle to succeed and result in hindrance. The degree to which a nation inhibits the rights of its citizens, you can see the degree of stagnation and ultimate failure. So for instance, the Soviets failed in 69 years because a curtailing of liberty and the right to make determinations for yourself, that is the inherent ability for you to choose what is best for you, resulted in the failure of that governmental system. You can exist as a system like China, where you actually succeed, grow and become wealthy by finding that balance of where you can curtail the rights of individuals but still allow a degree of economic freedom. And that's what they're trying to do. So we call them a pseudo communist country where they allow businesses to start, but they can snap their fingers and shut the business down whenever they want.
Ben Bankus
And they don't vote, right?
Tim Pool
Yeah, I mean, they, they vote, do they? They, they have a president. It's, it's, it's not real. And so what ends up happening with women vote there? I don't know how their electoral system works, but I believe, I believe they do have some kind of voting system.
Ben Bankus
Yeah.
Tim Pool
And there's a party, but you maybe have to be a party member. I'm not entirely sure. My point ultimately is the United States is the greatest country this planet has ever seen because its core foundations were the protection of liberty against government tyranny. And the only reason the United States is now struggling is because communist philosophies have taken over a large portion of the country.
Ben Bankus
You think Trump is using some of those, like, to his advantage? Like, what do you, you know, whatever. He just passed some. What bill? You know, the big beautiful bill.
Phil Labonte
Yeah, everything.
Ben Bankus
The being born in the country thing.
Tim Pool
Yeah. Birthright citizenship. That's A good thing.
Ben Bankus
He's trying to get rid of it.
Tim Pool
Right? That's a good thing.
Ben Bankus
It is, yes.
Tim Pool
Why so this. I would align this with the, the core tenet that, that creates the Second Amendment, the right to defend yourself, your society and your culture. Very few countries have complete open birthright citizenship the way we do. But I'll explain it in a very simple analogy. They were baseball fields in my neighborhood where I grew up. They've overgrown with weeds and they put soccer goals there instead. If there is a function, if there's a functioning government that produces a large degree of success and you dilute the ideology of that system and you bring in external miscellaneous thought, then you will bog down that system and eventually it will be hindered. So what I see largely is mass migration. Let's talk about like anchor babies, for instance. Why is it bad? A family comes here intentionally as illegally enters the country and gives birth to a child and then they get deported. That kid then comes back to the United States at some point, or they stay here because they get some refugee program. And what do they tend to do? They work in a community, get money, and send that money to a foreign country through remittances. This extracts the trade medium from a local jurisdiction. So when, if you look at a city like Detroit, why did Detroit collapse? When the rust belt started breaking down as the auto industry was failing, that sustained that local jurisdiction. They didn't have a local currency. So you build cars, the cars are sold, and money comes into Michigan. When the auto manufacturing collapsed, all of a sudden there's no money. There's no, there's no principal function of a. To generate value for this location. One thing I often ask myself when I, when I'm, when I travel is how does this city sustain itself? I. This is a curiosity I have. So I went to Wellington, New Zealand, and I said, what is the, what is the chief function of this, of this city? Because there's got to be something of value produced and traded with to maintain a city. Because cities don't grow food, they take food from somewhere else else. Wellington, New Zealand is government. Government takes money from everyone around the country and then centralizes it. In Wellington, D.C. is the exact same thing. So when you have people coming into your country and taking money out of the locality and sending it back, you are extracting the value of that community and you are weakening its ability to sustain itself.
Ben Bankus
I get with like the illegal immigrants, but like, what about. Because now it's like anybody who doesn't have a green card, apparently.
Tim Pool
Yeah, no one should just get to be a citizen. Like, like if I, I love this analogy. If your neighbor's cow walks into your yard and gives birth, you don't get to keep the calf. Like so. So I'll give you a few other heavy political examples. If a Chinese family, they, they actually do this, fly to the US and then give birth to a kid and fly back. It's called Chinese birth tourism. It happens. That kid can come back in 20 years or 30 years, get a job and then 15 years later run for president. Why would we want a Chinese born national who is a card carrying a vowed member of the Chinese Communist Party to have the right to be our president? That makes literally no sense. That's just one political incongruence. But you also have. Once again, let's do the baseball field thing. Baseball fields are kind of simple.
Ben Bankus
What if they're from Belgium or something?
Tim Pool
I don't care if they're from Belgium or from Pakistan.
Brett Dasovic
That's where the race arguments are. Apart from.
Tim Pool
Let me, let me tell you. I like baseball, I like baseball. I don't like soccer. I don't care if you like soccer. You're allowed to. Soccer's fine. We got American soccer teams and we do well in the world, in the, in the World cup and all stuff. I like that my neighborhood had a baseball field. They put up soccer nets instead. Because the neighborhood has largely become over the past. Well actually it's not large becoming. There's no kids anymore. And so now the question is what sports are being played in my neighborhood. I, as a bad steward of my home, I left did not help to maintain the values that I liked. What we end up seeing from this is that's a simple silly thing. Like people might be like, who cares about baseball? But the bigger picture is free speech, the right to keep his bear arms, the right to be free from unreasonable search and seizure. These are core values that are instilled in Americans, in the American tradition that don't exist in people from the third World. Some of them may understand and want this. Those people tend to come here and wave American flags. There's a viral video from an Iranian who said he was a refugee in Turkey. He came to America and he waves the American flag because he is so happy to get what we cherish. But the people who come here illegally in violation of our laws, spitting in our face, who then have kids and then use those kids to send money back to their home country are simply saying, I will take from you and extract your value. That is A very bad thing that will erode and destroy a country.
Brett Dasovic
And immigrants that come to this country legally from all across the world, they do very well. They tend to be very successful economically. They start businesses, they contribute to their community. And that's a very, very different thing than what he's talking about.
Ben Bankus
But wouldn't, but, but, but some of them still get. You know, you might not get a green card right away, you might get like a different type of visa. But the, the, the thing that Trump's saying is, like, if you don't have a green card, but you have another visa, it still doesn't count.
Tim Pool
Well, why, why should a tourist get to have their.
Ben Bankus
Why is a tourist but a working visa?
Tim Pool
Yeah, like why, why is someone who's not as into this country gonna, why is their kid get to be a citizen?
Ben Bankus
Because it's a free country.
Tim Pool
It's, but that's, that's, that's, that's, that's, that's not.
Ben Bankus
Well, I'm just, I'm, I'm playing devil's advocate. I agree with basically what we can.
Tim Pool
We can go, we can make a moral argument that this country was built by Americans.
Ben Bankus
What makes it free is that anybody can come here and become part of it.
Tim Pool
If you follow our rules and laws.
Brett Dasovic
Legally proceed legally.
Ben Bankus
Right, but that's what I'm saying. But.
Tim Pool
So Trump has decided that the law, the law is that you don't get to be a citizen by virtue of being born here. Right. And, and I argue he's factually correct. The, the argument of the 14th Amendment is contentious. The purpose of the 14th Amendment was that after the Civil War, slaves were, were to be made citizens and they also had children who were to be made citizens. So the statement of anyone born here is a citizen was intended to be, as of today, anyone who was born here as a citizen. And then they had a debate and they were like, no, no, it should be anyone born here at any point ever. And they actually debated it because the reason the debate exists, cuz it was not clear cut. They did not agree that that was gonna be the case. In fact, the senator proposed it, said this should not include foreigners, diplomats, aliens, et cetera. The argument from the left is no, no, no, no. That was one thing he was saying foreigners, aliens, diplomats. He was saying those people who were diplomats, ambassadors. The argument from the right is no, no, he's saying it makes no sense that any, literally any foreigner who comes here just gets to have their kid be a citizen. So the problem we have right now is Gen Z can't buy homes. The labor market is struggling. People keep saying, but unemployment is low yet. No, that's because Gen Z isn't working and young people don't have jobs.
Ben Bankus
I think it will work if Gen Z and millennials have kids. I think Gen Z. Well, so then it's gonna not necessarily be that beneficial to get rid of birthright citizenship because it will have an. It'll become like Japan where.
Tim Pool
Yep. And that's too bad. But the issue right now is when you have New York giving up residential space to illegal immigrants, which they just.
Ben Bankus
Renewed and it does the same thing.
Tim Pool
And then Gen Z says I can't afford an apartment. How is an American Gen Z are supposed to have children if he can't even have a place to live, but an illegal immigrant can come here and get a free place to live. That is a system that is intended to destroy the American tradition. And with, with that you end up bringing in. Look at Dearborn, Michigan. Massive escalation. Female genital mutilation.
Ben Bankus
It's not going to last though, the birthright thing, because when the Democrats get back in, they'll repeal it.
Tim Pool
If they do, the Democrats are split, right?
Ben Bankus
You don't think they'll get back in.
Tim Pool
It's possible, but the probability, I would say right now is slim considering their, their party is fractured into two different. I pulled up a study the other day showing the ideal. It was an ideological map and then it weighted it in each different category by like age, by political party. The Democrats. I'll just keep it simple. It's a wide. Republicans are tight. Republicans, which include relative moderates, former liberals at this point largely agree there is moderate deviation. Libertarians might very much disagree with, with, you know, Trump supporters, Democrats, if they.
Ben Bankus
Get in, I can see them actually upholding what Trump did because they're going to realize that they have to to win.
Tim Pool
It's possible. And so that's the reformation of the Democratic Party. But they'd have to excise the far left. So the interesting thing about this ideological map, which I can maybe try and pull up in the uncensored.
Ben Bankus
It would be a good thing.
Tim Pool
The Democrats. So, so let's. I'll put it this way. Here's a spattering on the map, right? And there's a line in the middle. The top is red and it's a standard curve. The Democrats shape like a curve and then have a bubble that sticks out. The bubble that sticks out is the far left. They are attached to Democrats but have a different worldview. This is Creating a big problem for Democrats in winning larger elections because Republicans are more unified despite the fact that there is hyper polarization and it is relatively split. Democrats are struggling to contend with the fact that moderates don't like gender ideology and the far left demands it.
Ben Bankus
All they have to do is legalize weed and actually run on that campaign. I don't understand. I think it's because of the pharmaceutical companies that don't want and also the alcohol or tobacco industry. I don't know who's not letting the Democrats. You know how like Justin Trudeau openly was like I'm going to legalize marijuana.
Tim Pool
I would have worked, I would have agreed with you five years ago. In fact I said, I said Trump should pardon all nonviolent.
Ben Bankus
Trump should do it.
Tim Pool
Marijuana convictions at the federal level, whoever.
Ben Bankus
Does it kind of has a win for forever.
Tim Pool
I don't think so. Oh, Gen Z has shifted to the right. So Gen. More and more data is coming out showing Gen Z is becoming more conservative and more Christian and their use of substances is rapidly declining. And it's not just drugs. Soda consumption has, among younger generations is almost gone.
Brett Dasovic
I mean their drinking has subsided, but they're vape penning.
Ben Bankus
They're losers and they don't have sex. They don't, they don't drink, they don't smoke. Yeah, they just sit around and worry.
Brett Dasovic
About, they're doing, they're taking Adderall. Smoke, smoking weed.
Tim Pool
But, but the, the usage of these things is lower among Gen Z than it was among previous generations.
Ben Bankus
Hopefully they just have kids. People just need to realize that if you don't have kids until you're in your like 40s or whatever, like you're, you're, you're missing out. You're kind of doing your kids a disservice because kids want to have a young parent.
Tim Pool
But how, how does Gen Z have a kid if they can't buy a home?
Ben Bankus
Because they. Sorry, am I allowed, I'm not allowed to swear.
Tim Pool
Give us two minutes. I mean I'm swearing earlier. We try not.
Ben Bankus
I didn't swear. That was a good catch. But if Gen Z can afford the types of things that they afford on a daily basis, they can afford kids. They're full of, they're full of it.
Tim Pool
I, I, I, I, I disagree. I mean, how many, how many kids do you have?
Ben Bankus
2.
Tim Pool
So you know how much formula costs?
Ben Bankus
No.
Tim Pool
You don't know how much formulas?
Ben Bankus
No.
Tim Pool
It's like, what is it, like 100 bucks, 80 bucks?
Ben Bankus
I would never use formula.
Tim Pool
Sometimes you have no choice. So I, I'm not, I'm not a fan of formula.
Ben Bankus
You find someone with a good breath.
Tim Pool
Well, you find a, a, a wet nurse. Yeah, but for Gen, I haven't, I've.
Ben Bankus
Luckily not had to deal with that. But even if you do, it's like the same. They, they buy Starbucks three times a day.
Tim Pool
That's, that's, that's, that's technically true, but that's the, the issue is that the cost of a house right now on average is what, $500,000 just rented. So, so the, even then you need 10 grand to move in.
Brett Dasovic
The cost of daycare if both parents have to work.
Tim Pool
Yeah, it's, it's, it's, it's, it's prohibitive.
Brett Dasovic
Yeah.
Tim Pool
Now I do think that I've made the argument that Gen Z should rough it and the world, it's getting worse for you.
Ben Bankus
A lot of these Gen Z kids, though, they come out of university and they're making like 70 to 90k a year.
Tim Pool
I mean, maybe those rare ones are having.
Ben Bankus
The issue is that of getting married to somebody else, making that amount of money and prioritizing their future and creating a family. The culture suggests that they should just use that money to get, have as much fun as they can.
Tim Pool
But that's, that's, that's true among millennials.
Ben Bankus
Then they don't.
Tim Pool
Gen Z is shifting rightward on those things. I mean, so you're not, you're not completely wrong. The culture is telling them to do this, but I think Gen Z is shifting right. We're going to the uncensored show. We'll keep talking about it. Smash the like button, Share the show with everyone you know. Go to rumble.com timcast IRL. We're going to keep the live show going and we'll swear a bit more. This one's not so family friendly, but always fun and funny. You can follow me on X and Instagram at Timcast. Ben, do you want to shout anything out?
Ben Bankus
Yeah. Ben Bankus.com for all tickets. I'm touring all over the US and Canada and my Instagram's at Ben Bankus too, because the Canadian government shut down my first one. I don't know Condolence. But Ben bank is on X. Ben bank is comedy on YouTube and Facebook. You can check out my podcast Bankus Podcast on YouTube, Spotify and Apple Podcasts. It's all on my website, benvencus.com Guys.
Brett Dasovic
If you want to follow me, I am on Instagram and on X at Brett Dasovic on both of those platforms. Pop Culture Crisis is live Monday through Friday, 3:00pm Eastern Standard Time. You should come hang out with us. It's a lot of fun.
Phil Labonte
I am filled that remains on Twix. I'm fill that remains official on Instagram. The band is all that remains. You can check out our new record. It's entitled Antifragile. You can find it on YouTube, Apple Music, Amazon Music, Spotify, Pandora and Deezer. Don't forget the left lane is for crime.
Tim Pool
We will see you all@rumble.com Timcast IRL. Thanks for hanging out. Sam.
Timcast IRL Podcast Summary
Title: Trump Admin To BAN China Buying U.S. Farmland Citing National Security w/ Ben Bankas
Host: Tim Pool (Timcast Media)
Guest: Ben Bankas
Release Date: July 10, 2025
Timestamp: 00:10
Tim Pool opens the episode by highlighting a significant policy shift from the Trump administration—the banning of Chinese purchases of U.S. farmland. He emphasizes the importance of this move, suggesting that the administration should go further by seizing all Chinese-owned farmland outright. Pool underscores that this decision is driven by national security and food security concerns, positioning it alongside other Trump-era initiatives like tariffs that aim to fortify the United States' standing.
Notable Quote:
"The Trump administration is finally banning Chinese purchases of farmland. I think they should seize it all outright."
— Tim Pool [00:10]
Timestamp: 05:01
Beyond the farmland ban, Pool touches upon other pressing issues:
James Comey's Investigation: Reports suggest surveillance activities targeting Comey after his controversial posts, raising questions about the depth and intent of ongoing investigations.
Leftist Actions Against ICE: A viral video depicts leftists attacking ICE agents by throwing makeshift spike strips in the streets, indicating rising tensions and confrontations.
Superman Movie Controversy: The upcoming Superman film is slated for release the following day. Initial reports label it as "woke," centered around immigration themes. However, director James Gunn appears to be mitigating these claims, risking the movie's success by introducing political elements.
Notable Quote:
"We're getting close to that critical mass where everything's becoming fake."
— Tim Pool [05:43]
Timestamp: 04:08
Tim Pool welcomes Ben Bankas, a comedian from Austin, Texas, who is currently touring the U.S. The introduction sets the stage for a dynamic and entertaining discussion, leveraging Bankas's comedic perspective to enhance the show's engagement.
Notable Exchange:
Tim Pool: "Who are you? What do you do?"
Ben Bankas: "I'm a comedian and I live in Austin, Texas. Regular comedy mothership and I'm touring the US right now."
Timestamp: 05:40
The conversation delves deeper into the implications of China's investment in U.S. farmland:
National Security Risks: The U.S. Department of Agriculture Chief Brooke Rollins announces the government's intent to ban future sales and possibly reclaim existing Chinese-owned land.
Strategic Locations: Much of the targeted farmland is near military bases, exacerbating national security fears.
Public Reaction and Misinformation: Pool shares a misleading infographic from the New York Post falsely claiming that China owns the entire island of Hawaii, highlighting the rampant spread of misinformation.
Notable Quote:
"A lot of the land is near military bases."
— Tim Pool [07:04]
Timestamp: 10:00
The discussion shifts to broader themes of media manipulation and public distrust:
Fake News and Edited Content: Pool references incidents where videos have been doctored to misrepresent his stance, such as false claims about debates and debates being altered to make him appear unsound.
Erosion of Trust: The hosts express concern over the increasing inability of the public to discern genuine content from fake or manipulated information, leading to widespread skepticism and confusion.
Notable Quote:
"There's a critical mass where everything's becoming fake."
— Tim Pool [10:00]
Timestamp: 74:15
A significant portion of the conversation revolves around Artificial Intelligence (AI) and its transformative effects:
AI in Content Creation: Pool demonstrates how AI tools like Grok, Claude, and Gemini can generate video game content, highlighting the rapid advancements in AI capabilities that could render traditional media roles obsolete.
Economic and Social Consequences: The hosts speculate on the potential for an AI Industrial Revolution, where AI not only automates jobs but also influences cultural and social structures, leading to unprecedented societal changes.
Notable Quote:
"We're probably a couple years away from you being able to just tell the computer to make GTA 7 and it'll do it in a day."
— Tim Pool [88:50]
Timestamp: 62:30
The upcoming release of the Superman reboot is dissected, with critical insights into its reception and perceived political undertones:
Director's Intentions: James Gunn describes Superman as "a story of America, an immigrant that came here from other places", which has sparked backlash labeled as "woke."
Box Office Predictions: Pool and his guests express skepticism about the movie's success, attributing potential failure to cultural shifts and the dilution of traditional American values within mainstream media.
Notable Quote:
"Superman is touted as an immigrant super woke Superman Director."
— Phil Labonte [62:30]
Timestamp: 32:29
Breaking news is covered regarding six Secret Service agents who have been suspended due to their involvement in an assassination attempt on then-presidential candidate Donald Trump in Butler, Pennsylvania. The hosts express skepticism about the severity of the suspensions, labeling them as "a slap on the wrist" and suggesting possible cover-ups.
Notable Quote:
"This is ridiculous. Just, this is slap on the wrist, cover up stuff."
— Tim Pool [40:11]
Timestamp: 105:03
The conversation navigates through the intricacies of freedom of speech, birthright citizenship, and policy polarization:
Birthright Citizenship Debate: Pool critiques the 14th Amendment's provision for citizenship, arguing against automatic citizenship for children born on U.S. soil, especially to foreign nationals, likening it to animal breeding practices.
Cultural and Economic Impacts: Discussions highlight how policies like birthright citizenship and mass migration are perceived to extract economic value from local communities, contributing to societal erosion.
Notable Quote:
"Anyone born here as a citizen was intended to be, as of today, anyone who was born here as a citizen."
— Tim Pool [112:57]
Timestamp: 98:02
The episode concludes with promotional segments where the hosts encourage listeners to engage with their content across various platforms:
Guest Promotions: Ben Bankas, Brett Dasovic, and Phil Labonte share their respective websites and social media handles.
Audience Interaction: Tim Pool invites listeners to join their Discord server, participate in upcoming live shows, and stay connected through platforms like Rumble.
Notable Quote:
"Join the discord server. Get involved. Find community now before it's too late."
— Tim Pool [97:02]
This episode of Timcast IRL navigates a complex landscape of national security concerns, media trust issues, and the looming impact of AI on society. With guest comedian Ben Bankas adding a layer of humor, the hosts critically examine policy changes, conspiracy theories, and cultural shifts, urging listeners to remain vigilant and discerning in an era of information overload and technological upheaval.