
Tim, Phil, & Brett are joined by Tim Young to discuss Trump celebrating the first 100 days of his second presidential term amid a record number of lawsuits from Democrats, America facing a soft civil war, the Wisconsin Supreme Court suspending...
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Tim Pool
I don't know if you knew this but anyone get the same Premium Wireless for $15 a month plan that I've been enjoying? It's not just for celebrities.
Phil Labonte
So do like I did and have.
Tim Pool
One of your assistant's assistants switch you to Mint Mobile today? I'm told it's super easy to do@mintmobile.com Switch upfront payment of $45 for 3 month plan equivalent to $15 per month Required intro rate first 3 months only, then full price plan options available, taxes and fees, extra fee, full terms@mintmobile.com it is Donald Trump's first 100 days as of today and boy is he celebrating. He's got a big old rally and he is talking about everything he's facing and he is facing record amount of lawsuits. 220 he's facing a record amount of unconstitutional universal injunctions and I guess what we call a judicial coup. And Matt Taibi is writing. He writes an article asking is this a soft civil war and perhaps we've crossed the point of no return. I know everybody's talking about it, but I guess it just remains to be seen if there's gonna be an off ramp or not. In other news, the judge from Wisconsin has been removed from the court, which is pretty crazy. And we do have a a a bunch of other issues. I got a funny one for you. Chuck Todd is arguing that they did nothing wrong in the Biden story. They didn't cover it up. They didn't miss this. That's a right wing narrative. Oh boy. So we're gonna talk about that plus a lot. What's going on with this Kilmar Brago guy? Turns out there's a 2018 report where the husband, the ex husband of the guy he's married to now, of the lady he's married to now, claims he was in a gang. It was a threat to his children. It's gonna get interesting before we get started, my friends. Make sure you head over to cast brew.com and buy some delicious Cast Brew coffee. We have so many different choices. We got Phil's gingerbread, two weeks till Christmas and get it while you can. Alex Stein's prime time grind is about to sell out and it will be gone forever. So maybe you just want that crazy bag of that crazy guy's face then I recommend you get it now@casper.com because it will be discontinued soon. That we will. We will be launching something different with Alex Stein in the future. Also don't forget, head over to timcast.com click join us, become a member to get access to our Discord community where you my friends can call into our after show on Rumble and get up on stage with us at the Culture War Live. So this Saturday night we will be live for the Culture War show. Will Chamberlain will be debating be debating Pisco Lydia, liberal lawyer, over whether or not it was legal or right to deport Kilmar Abrego Garcia. And considering this new information that's coming out, it's going to deeply influence what these guys think about this debate. Now we have about 15 or so submissions from our members, 60 seats sold and it not a big venue. So it's a pretty tight knit event. But we are going to have you guys as members come up on stage and join the debate. And it's a pilot. We're gonna see how it works out. If you want to get involved in our Discord community, be on the show and other things like that. You go to timcast.com you click join us. You get the Discord server or you get the Discord app. Join our Discord server. Don't forget to also smash that like button. Share the show with everyone you know. Joining us tonight to talk about this and so much more is Tim Young.
Tim Young
Hey, what's going on man?
Tim Pool
Who are you?
Tim Young
Oh, what do I do? I don't know. I'm the Heritage, the Heritage Foundations media fellow for strategic communication I'm CEO of a company called Veebs, which is pretty cool. And I'm. Tim runs his mouth on social media and more importantly, I'm not you. And that's what I wanted to come here and talk about is that, you know, you have very intelligent listeners and viewers and then you have some that kind of fall a little short. And when they're upset at you, they tweet at me.
Tim Pool
I have to imagine those are the hate watchers and they're probably the liberals who catch the show after the fact or they're probably just watching a clip from the show posted by some liberal. Took it out of context.
Tim Young
But we don't look anywhere near each other. We're both hat wearing fellas.
Tim Pool
That's about it. I don't.
Tim Young
There you go. I'm a little chunkier right now. I'm going to work on that. But you know, I just, you know, so the haters out there, if you could just note the difference.
Tim Pool
Although I do really like the same.
Tim Young
I think I've just been kind of riding the, riding the wave. When they hate you, man, it just gets me some.
Tim Pool
I appreciate you taking all of that trolling so I don't have to, you.
Tim Young
Know, I'm just helping you out from afar.
Tim Pool
I appreciate it. Should be fun. Thanks for hanging out. We got Brett hanging out.
Brett Dasovic
I couldn't even tell the difference between the two of you. What's going on, guys?
Tim Pool
It's uncanny.
Brett Dasovic
It's uncanny. They look exactly like Brett here usually. Pop culture crisis Monday through Friday at 3:00pm Eastern Standard Time. Let's talk about stuff.
Phil Labonte
Hello, my name is Phil Avanti. I'm the lead singer of the heavy metal band all that Remains. I'm an anti communist and a counter revolutionary. Let's get into it.
Tim Pool
It is a meaningless holiday. I guess it's. It's Trump's first hundred days and most of you may not know this, but it's meaningless. It just is made up by the press a hundred years ago because FDR was doing a bunch of crazy stuff and they were like, look what he did in his hundred days. And then from then on people are like, a hundred days. It signifies nothing. You can't guarantee things get done, but sure, here we are. Now, Donald Trump may not be fdr, he's got a bunch of other things under his belt. ABC News reports 220 lawsuits in 100 days. Trump administration faces unprecedented legal blitz. The administration has been sued over nearly every element of Trump's agenda. And then of course, this report which We've covered from Congress.gov several times, talking about how Donald Trump has more universal injunctions filed against his administration than all other administrations. And he has around 40% of all universal injunctions ever issued. And, well, I got to say, they're unconstitutional. But, you know, right now, the big question is, how are we doing? How does Donald Trump hold up in your view? Do you hold him in great esteem in these hundred days?
Phil Labonte
Look, he's just for the results at the border alone, I give him a B plus. Right. Because we went from having a massive influx every day, tens of thousands, thousands or tens of thousands of people coming into the country every single day, to, to, you know, almost none or very, very, very few. And that was simply by enforcing the law and implementing what really amount to small changes. You know, there, there, there have been no significant changes. Maybe, maybe they're, maybe they're, they're a decent size changes because there are, there, there are military assets at the border. So he, he did have, he activated the National Guard, I guess, or, or actually, I think it was the Marine Corps. But they're actually in, you know, doing something that alone that was fulfilling one of the major reasons that people voted for Donald Trump. So right off the bat, I think he's, he's at least doing okay.
Brett Dasovic
I think it's interesting that the discussion this time around in the second term has changed the focus from, I feel like in the first term now maybe it's just been such a long time since I focused on that was that it was about the building of the border wall, and it was about trying to get the financing and the funding for the border wall. But what focusing on deportations has done is it's thrown into just how similar previous administrations were on this topic to show you just how far left things have gone within certain sections of the Democratic Party. Because if you look at the numbers when Barack Obama was in office, between deportations and turn aways at the border, you see something fairly similar. Despite the fact that they were letting a lot of people in, they were getting those numbers up by turning people away at the border and reclassifying those deportations. So for those who are willing to, like, look into it and those who actually want to grow and see where politics has changed, you can look at what things were like in between 2008 and 2016, and you can see a vast shift. And I think maybe that's not the focus of the first hundred days, but for the people that are paying close attention, it kind of helps form a narrative for things I I'm going to.
Tim Young
Go with the grading because you went with the grading. I'm going to go B plus as well. Not just because of the border, though. He is balls to the wall with executive orders. He's doing everything he can possibly do. You have to remember when you're, when you're putting in Cabinet members, nothing can really get accomplished until you have the staffing for those Cabinet members. So you have a bunch of people in there with a bunch of great ideas that hopefully will have the backup soon to be able to enact them. But as far as what he can do personally from the White House and from the Oval Office, I think he's done more than what any other president has ever done, especially as a conservative and a Republican. He came in, I think he learned from his first four years. He came in like a bull in a china shop and signed everything, literally. I don't even know when the man has a break from signing executive orders at this point.
Tim Pool
Basically, I don't know when the man sleeps. Apparently he sleeps six hours a night.
Brett Dasovic
Sounds about right.
Tim Pool
That's crazy. So the big question here, though, is this is approval. So RCP approval ratings in aggregate has Trump at minus 7. But I do want to stress completely meaningless. Society is collapsing, the end is nigh, and these polls are. I'm exaggerating, guys. The polls mean absolutely nothing is what I'm trying to say. You've got npr, abc, CNN, and I believe, Daily Mail and New York Times and cbs. They're all saying in the past week, Trump has double digits underwater. Right. That's crazy. Now Rasmussen has a minus four, and they tend to be more accurate. And, you know, we had the guy from Rasmussen on recently, and they have been very, very accurate. But my issue with, with the aggregate polling right now is that you can have two polls, one saying Trump is up one, and the next day he's minus nine, or I should say the next period, then he's minus two. They're all completely different and random back. You know, let's, let's just go back eight years when I used to cover a lot more of this stuff in the first Trump term. And I'd always go for these polls and I'd be tracking them every day. They were fairly similar. They'd all have Trump at like minus six or seven, and they, they wouldn't change that much because what's really going on, how is it that you've got these corporate polls showing Trump double digits underwater and the swing from the polls is insane this week? It's plus that, then it's minus that. That's why I say it's largely meaningless. But what I will say is Trump is down. Okay. Rasmussen had Trump up the beginning of the month at, I believe he was plus four and now he's minus four. So it was a big swing. This is, this is not good for Donald Trump, but I don't think it's apocalyptic. Now the reason why I don't want to use aggregates is I often say people are going to be like, Tim, you always say use egrets. It's because they're all randomized at this point. All the polls, they, all these pollsters have changed their, their systems up and now they're giving wildly different numbers across the board. Now you can make the argument that, you know, NPR, ABC, CNN, Daily Mail, they all show Trump, you know, minus 10, 12, 10, 14, 13, 10. That's pretty comparable. Right? But this whole, these, this whole 100 days, it's like during the same period, one of these polls would have Trump at plus nine and one would have him like minus three. And like, how is that possible that we're getting such wildly different numbers? What I do think matters is that if you track any single poll that you trust, and so Rasmussen we trust and they are showing Trump down. So comparing Rasmussen to itself, you don't necessarily know if it reflects the greater population at this 100 days, but you do know that reflects the movement of how people are feeling, because Rasmussen polls generally the same way every time. So if we want to argue that they're the most accurate or they tend to be very accurate, and they do, I believe the past several elections, they were all within the margin of error. Pretty spot on. Then this shows that Trump has gone down a bit. The question for you guys, I think is do you believe the American population really holds Trump at a double digit negative view right now, or do you think that the corporate press is just playing games? Corporate press?
Tim Young
I mean, he's, isn't he still down in Iowa? 14 points. Remember that poll that came out just before the election?
Tim Pool
Yeah.
Tim Young
I mean, what's more important here too is do you think the White House cares? And you know, when you have this constant spin with, with the, the tariffs and everything that he's, he's doing, he's taking very, very bold moves, very, again, the strongest moves I've seen from a president just in general in my lifetime coming in, other than maybe Biden, who tried to reverse everything from Trump as soon as he came in I'm loving this.
Tim Pool
Right. Joe Biden, who tried to decree a constitutional amendment and they're saying Trump is a dictator.
Brett Dasovic
Is this what's going to happen? So every time we get a new administration and it switches to the other party, they're just going to undo everything that everybod executive order.
Tim Pool
No, no, no. Because society is collapsing. In the end is nine.
Brett Dasovic
So by the time the next administration comes in, there won't be a government.
Tim Pool
No, I'm kidding. Like, I do think you're largely correct. But I will stress, obviously, we have this, this Matt Taibi article where he's asking about civil war. And it's because people largely missed this story, which is interesting. He's just writing about it now that a whole bunch of uniparty Democrats wrote a letter vowing to mobilize and stop Trump recently. And I'm just seeing this, I'm like, okay, I didn't realize that. And mobilize is a very specific term, but there's a. By mobilize, we know what it means. When, when the Democrats say go out in the streets, they're not saying to sing songs, hold hands under a rainbow like Kumbaya, Right? They're saying, they're saying form a gigantic mass so that far left extremists can firebomb buildings.
Brett Dasovic
Were you talking about Democrat politicians or just people who support the Democratic Party.
Tim Pool
Establishment shills, like people who worked in the deep state in Clinton and things like this? We'll get it. We'll get into that story. What I was going to say is one story that's been bubbling up recently is that this is the year the demographic cliff is supposed to start. And you know, I didn't know about this because when the financial crisis happened, I guess, how old was I? 22 years old? 21. 22. And for me, I was broke as a joke, as it was. So when the market crashed and bottomed out, here's, here's the, here's the floor. Right. I'm right here. Everybody else is here. They go down. I didn't really notice much. I was like, still poor.
Phil Labonte
Yeah.
Tim Pool
But when this happened, what most people at the time were talking about is that people stopped having kids. And so now it has been 18 years. We are supposed to see a new generation of workers entering the workforce, going to colleges, and they don't exist. So this is going to cause a massive train wreck in our economy in ways that people, we don't exactly know how that's going to happen. So when I say society, it's Crumbling. And it's not. I'm just thinking about, you know, these movies that are bombing, these video games that won't sell. And for a while I'm thinking. I really do think the issue is there's no kids anymore. There is. There is a shortage of young people.
Tim Young
Well, toys right now are the number one consumer of toys are people our age.
Phil Labonte
Yeah, it's re. It's really.
Tim Pool
Yo, I gotta. I gotta. My buddy bought me a Tim Pole. Shout out Andy. He bought me a Tim Pole Pokemon card and, and Pokemon toy because I'm a Pokemon. Most people don't know this. I. I literally am a Pokemon. They made a Pokemon after me. How many of you get to say that? Look, you think I'm joking? Take a look. Tim Pole. Did you guys know that that's. There you go. Tell me that the, the little blue and black frog with headphones on named Tim Pole is not me when that is the colors we use for the company and he's wearing headphones. I digress. You are right. Adults are buying toys. They made the adult Happy Meal. There's no kids. So what I will say is to your question, Brett, when you ask, every administration's gonna change and do this. I was thinking about what happens to a civilization when they undergo a population collapse. Now, I don't know for sure. It's probably stupid for me to speculate in this way, but there were the English peasant revolts after the Black Plague. And this was because with massive labor shortages following the. The Black Plague, the governments were trying to suppress like the workers basically had a lot of leverage. So they were like, you need us for day to day operations in ways like you can't do. So we can have whatever we want. So the government tries suppressing them to stop them. So they tried using force against the leverage they had, which resulted in revolts. So I'm wondering, you know, I don't think we're looking at as big a population drop off as like the Black plague. There's like 30 to 60% of the population of Europe. But I am wondering what's going to happen when we were just sitting the other day in Charlestown, West Virginia, businesses are closing because they can't find workers. There's. I mentioned this all the time. There's restaurants that we've been to where they say that they closed after Covid and they can't reopen because they can't find anybody to do the work. So simple version, the next administration that comes in, if there will be one, it is going to be radicals. And they are there with, with what this crisis brings, I think we're going to end up with hyper polarized ideological solutions and factions vying for power that if they get the power, will try to enact very radical things. So with that being said, the Trump administration is doing something absolutely radical and a lot of people want to, might want to say, no, no, this is totally normal as America. But hold on, the past 30 years has been uniparty neoliberal rule with the, with the Republicans saying slow down their Democrats, they've opened our borders, advised our children, the children of this nation to not have their own kids, to stop having kids because of climate change or to get abortions. Then they open up the borders to allow tens of millions of people in. And Trump is seeking to reverse it in a way that is very, very different. They now are calling to mobilize against them. So there you go. Rant over.
Brett Dasovic
Yeah. So does that pave the way for like a Bernie AOC ticket for 2028?
Tim Pool
AOC maybe. Yeah.
Brett Dasovic
But Bernie, not Bernie.
Phil Labonte
Well, Bernie's too old.
Tim Pool
It's not just that, it's. I, with all due respect, I'm not trying to be a dick to Bernie, but he's past the average life expectancy for a male, considering he's never actually done a job in his life that may either. You know, I'm actually curious. I would assume that if you've never worked, you probably would live longer. Less stress, like an animal in captivity. However, you also might be weaker. You know, look at Joe Biden.
Tim Young
I mean, he was in. How long was he in government office?
Tim Pool
Yeah. 50 some odd years, right?
Tim Young
Yeah.
Phil Labonte
All of his adult life.
Tim Young
Bernie Sanders nation's history.
Tim Pool
You know, Bernie's never had a real job, right?
Tim Young
Of course not.
Tim Pool
He's only ever worked in government.
Phil Labonte
I do wonder if, like, I mean, I don't think Bernie's going to run at all, but I, and I think that not only is it his age, but I think that he couldn't win because he's, he's too much, he's too spineless. I really like, he really, he bent over and took it from the Democrats. And I don't know if that's because he didn't really want to be the president bad enough to actually do it or if that he was just afraid. But you know, he kissed the ring for Hillary Clinton and I can't get over like when he was on stage and those two women came up and essentially took over. Yeah, he just, he was like, well, I don't know what to do. I don't know how to assert myself and keep the stage without obviously breaking every left leaning faux pas there is.
Tim Pool
You know, I think what might happen is AOC may win a primary narrowly and then she gets a really low turnout in 2020. People are saying she might run 2028. I think that'd be silly. I don't think she should, but maybe she will because they never got nobody else. But we don't know the Republicans have either. But if it's, if it is Vance or it is some popular, you know, Trump has got these Trump 2028 hats and people are joking, you know that Trump's gonna run again. He said he wouldn't do it. Could be Don Jr. Who knows? Yeah, it could be another Trump.
Tim Young
AOC has gotten better. She's finally gotten better at public speaking. She's, she had many, many a bad interview. Obviously we make fun of her all the time, but like when you see her in front of these crowds, she's pulled it together. The voice is still kind of eh, but she's actually taken proper advice from people.
Tim Pool
I hear you, but guys, the way you sound matters. Deep voices matter. And I know people are going to say it's sexist and the feminists are going to get angry. Don't know, don't care. I'm going to tell you the secret right now.
Brett Dasovic
Like height matters.
Tim Pool
I've told it on the show before. I did non profit fundraising for several years and I imagine it's the exact same thing with sales. There is one characteristic above all else among men and one characteristic above all else among women that typically, that I would say confers. They will sell very, very well. And among men, what do you think that trait is?
Phil Labonte
Deep voice. No, no.
Tim Young
Height.
Tim Pool
Height.
Phil Labonte
Oh, okay.
Tim Pool
You got to be very tall. Yeah. Among women, what is the one trait that tends to confer this woman will sell? Well, sounds easy, guys.
Phil Labonte
I mean, I want to.
Tim Pool
Easy boys. Big boobs. Big boobs.
Ryan Reynolds
And I wanted to say that.
Phil Labonte
I'm like, I don't know, should I say it?
Tim Pool
That's because, because feminists are going to get angry about it. But guys, let's be real. If there's a woman with big breasts standing on a street corner and she waves to you, every single guy will stop. 100% of men. And then when she, when she blinks and she smiles and says, I want you to buy this product from me or sign up for this program or donate a charity, the guys go, okay, now if you have a tall guy Same thing happens the other way around. Men and women stop for tall guys. So for aoc, being an average height woman trying to be a leader, this is a, this is a challenge that women will always have. And I know they're going to. The left is going to clip this and they're called sexist. I am literally saying there is an inherent sexism in all of human beings. And they will look at a woman and think she is too small and weak to be war chief. And that's what a president is. They're. They're the commander in chief of the armed forces. And this will. The only way. No.
Tim Young
Oh, okay.
Tim Pool
Is if the Republican and the Democrats both run a female in the primary and they both win. So I believe it was Gerald Ford. Someone, someone said the first female president will be a VP and the president while they step down or be removed, and that VP will become president. And then if she runs again, and let's say the Republicans, the Democrats primary a woman. That's how you get a female president. But how that woman wins in a primary, I don't know. Which is probably why when the Democrats ran Hillary Clinton, the field was nothing. You guys remember this in 2016?
Tim Young
Yeah.
Tim Pool
Nobody ran. There were like, what, two guys?
Phil Labonte
Yeah, well, I mean, and one of them was Bernie Sanders. And he, you know, he. I mean, I know you say that about, about I. And I don't disagree with any of your points about height and, and whether or not, you know, men or America would vote for a woman. I don't know. That being said, if there is a woman that could win, I think AOC would be it. I think, because, because even though her voice is a little grating when she's actually talking to people and when she's in, on, on camera, when you can see her, she's very charismatic and she knows how to use social media. Again, I'm not, I disagree. I'm not disputing any of your points about whether or not, you know, about what people want. But if I think that, I think that. I think, I think that she is talented and I think that, that she's compelling.
Tim Pool
I agree with that. But I will also agree with the feminists when they say it is hard for a woman to sound commanding and not.
Phil Labonte
Yeah, totally is.
Tim Pool
I agree with the feminists on that one.
Phil Labonte
But it's possible. I mean, and maybe, maybe AOC can't. But you can look at people like Margaret. Margaret Thatcher was a great example because she didn't sound shrill.
Tim Pool
How old was she?
Phil Labonte
She was probably 50. When she did this is.
Tim Pool
Think this is the. The other issue I will add is.
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Tim Pool
Supply what do people look up to in terms of authority? And it's, it's going to be older people so you can have a guy. I, I feel like. And, and I could be wrong about all this. Whatever. I work, when I, when I worked in nonprofit stuff, this is exactly what we saw in every single office. Busty women always came back with tons of memberships and tons of money. And the tall guys and there were. I remember this one really short dude, he was like 54 and he was chubby and he sold like crazy. He signed people up left and right for these Nonprofits.
Phil Labonte
She was 53 when she was elected as a Prime Minister of the UK in 1979. So sorry.
Tim Pool
This, this, this dude who did really well was a fast talker who seemed very slick but very charismatic. And so here's a guy who developed the ability and the style and was able to succeed through skills. Right? But I think this long story short, I believe AOC is going to have that hurdle. She's too young. She's too young. And there's going to be a lot of older guys who are going to say, yeah, right, it's not going to happen. But let's jump to this next story from rackets from Matt Taibbi. Are we in a soft civil war? Indeed. Are we? He writes. I'll try and go quick because he does write a lot, but it is interesting On Sunday, April 27, Donald Trump Jr. Joined an event in Bulgaria hosted by a controversial crypto firm, Nexo. Nexo in 2023 was fined $45 million by the SEC. We get it. The visit by Trump Jr coincided with sharpening public relations campaign at home. Former Treasury Secretary Steven Ratner argued in the New York Times that we've we're witnessing a new low in corruption to the Trump meme coin. He goes on to say it also came days after 200 former diplomats and security officials signed a group letter titled, quote, the Assault on American Democracy, a call to action featuring signatories like Susan Rice, Anthony Lake and impeachment witness former Ukraine ambassador Marie Yovanovitch. The letter contained eyebrow raising language. Quote, many of us have served in countries where democratically elected leaders followed a path to autocracy and we know this crisis requires an urgent and unified, unified response. Waiting passively for the electoral calendar to fight back does nothing more than give the administration additional time and running room to impose its authoritarian stamp. No American can afford to be a bystander. Each of us in different walks of life must speak out, mobilize, defend our way of life. The moment requires nothing less. We must recognize the seriousness of what is taking place and act collectively to restore our democracy and our security. He goes to mention the word mobilize been appearing a lot in op eds and political speeches. He says the recent letter received no press outside of Bulgaria, making it necessary to reach out to signatories like former CIA intelligence officer Ann Gruner to confirm authenticity. The call for ex officials to act now instead of waiting passively for the electoral calendar appears to have been organized by former ambassador to Bulgaria Eric Rubin, who gave an interview about it on Bulgarian TV Saturday. Rubin has not responded for requests to comment. He goes to mention the first hundred days of the Trump admin have been marked by blunt offensives against political opponents. From executive orders targeting law firms like Wilmer, Hale, Perkins, Coey, Jenner and Block and the firing of career officials, the National Security Council, the doj, to the stripping of security clearances for figures like Kamala Harris and Hillary Clinton. These moves prompted a cascade of news stories describing an unprecedented assault on the constitutional order. And those increasingly are accompanied by editorials calling for mobilization or revolution. Now there's more. He mentioned David Brooks calling for a national civic uprising, JB Pritzker calling for mobilization and mass protests. Not to mention, I will add to this the judicial coup with more universal injunctions against Trump than any other administration, and 220 lawsuits. Right now, he is calling it a soft civil war. Eric Weinstein called it an administrative civil war. The question then is, are we actually in this conflict and does it get worse?
Tim Young
It gets worse. I think it definitely gets worse. It's not, it's not lightening up. If you would have told me, by the way, this is that quote from that letter. If you, if you can pull it up real quick for people that, that if, if you went out on the street and said, who said this? You know, Hitler or somebody else, people would lean towards Hitler on this.
Tim Pool
That's actually a really good idea for someone to go out, do a man on the street. Maybe we can have a lot do it a lot.
Phil Labonte
Yeah.
Tim Pool
Here's the quote. Who's. Who said this? What famous historical figure? I actually don't know who wrote the letter. Waiting passively for the electoral calendar to fight back does nothing more than give the administration additional time and running room to impose its authoritarian stamp. If you said, you know, who said this? The Democrats or Hitler? I don't know. I actually don't know.
Tim Young
Mobilize. Defend our way of life. I mean, you could just see it like.
Tim Pool
I mean, yeah, they'd say Hitler.
Tim Young
Oh, yeah.
Tim Pool
Defend our way of life. Yeah. What is that way of life for Democrats? Like, you know, you know, this is. I got to be Honest, this is 200 former diplomats and security officials. They probably all live in Loudoun county, in, like, McLean, Virginia. And when they're saying defend our way of life, they're talking about the government giving phony grants to NGOs to pay them as lawyers.
Brett Dasovic
Yeah, it's their castle. Their castle is their way of life. I mean, it sounds a lot like what our foreign policy would have sounded like post nine, 11, you know, defending our way of life.
Tim Pool
Yeah, indeed.
Phil Labonte
I mean, and. And it. One of the alluring factors of that phrase is it's like Obama's hope and change. Yeah, it's. It's nebulous. It doesn't actually mean anything. So the listener can apply what's their way of life? What is. What way of life is being threatened? Well, it's your way of life. It doesn't matter what someone else is or how someone else conceptualizes it. Just like what hope and change meant to every person that was listening was totally different.
Tim Pool
It meant whatever you wanted it to mean.
Phil Labonte
Yeah, absolutely.
Brett Dasovic
I don't think things get better, not in the advent in the age of social media. I don't think things can get better. People are going to be continued to be fed whatever Information confirms their own bias towards a specific situation. And it's just going to continue to get worse.
Tim Pool
You know, I was thinking about, I was Talking with the Mrs. Today and we're talking about general investment. Like, what do you do? And of course, you know, I've got crypto, I've got gold, I've got emergency food. And I was like, I think we should probably build a shed and get some general tools for, for, to, like, we need to be able to produce things that we need in the event the supply chain breaks. Because they're talking about shortages over the tariffs. Maybe, maybe not. I don't know. There's already reports that shipments from China for the month of April are basically gone, basically, which means we got about a month or so before we start noticing the ripple effect. Resources from China that are used to make products in America and then products directly made in China will be absent. Obviously. Now that may be bad in the short term, it may be good in long term. I don't know. But the idea is, like, what do you do when you go to Target and there's no baby formula? What do you do when you go to Target and. Or, you know, Walmart and there's no T shirts or, you know, certain materials? You, you know.
Brett Dasovic
Well, what happened during COVID was people ran out of toilet paper and then they started fighting each other, so.
Tim Pool
Indeed they did. So you combine this with what I keep harping on about this demographic cliff, a shortage of new labor, and it's looking pretty worrisome in the short term.
Phil Labonte
Yeah, I mean, I could imagine. I don't think that we get a significant portion of our food from overseas.
Tim Young
We don't.
Phil Labonte
So I don't, I don't imagine that we're going to have, you know, that kind of fighting over, over, over, you know, garbage, plastic stuff, that, that kind of stuff. It's going to affect the economy. There are going to be people that are not, you know, they're going to be bummed out. But I think that the, the real, you know, real inflaming things are like, when there's not. When food isn't hitting the shelves and stuff like that. So I don't know that there. I don't know that I'm convinced there is something that actually sets it off. Not that I'm saying that not there, there aren't a million things that I possibly could over be overlooking here. And I'm certainly of the opinion that, you know, I don't know where the off ramp is, but I. We've Talked about, you know, civil conflict or whatever on the show a couple times in the past or frequently. And I'm still of the opinion the normies don't get involved over, you know, over, you know, people throwing firebombs at Tesla.
Tim Pool
No, but toilet paper.
Phil Labonte
Yeah, yeah.
Tim Pool
They were fighting for. Those videos were nuts.
Brett Dasovic
I was always like, my, my perspective on it as like a, as like a dummy was like, it doesn't seem like the fighting would really begin. I'm not talking about political fighting, but, you know, the general population until food short came because we have so much technology and general convenience that people have been kind of zapped into a sort of zombie ism where they're not really taking stock of what's going on in the world. But once the food shortages come, but now they can't get a new iPhone. And the food shortage, what you're talking.
Phil Labonte
About isn't the kind of, isn't political strife, though. That's like end of the world stuff.
Brett Dasovic
No, that's what I'm, that's what I'm saying is like when I, when I think about what pushes someone towards a specific political message could be that type of food shortage.
Tim Pool
I'm not worried necessarily about that point where society totally collapses and then people are fighting in the streets for the last can of beans. I'm worried about some, you know, mustachioed guy in a flannel with suspenders on trying to raid my chicken coop in the middle of the night. Before you get to the point of total collapse, you'll see an escalation in crime from people who are trying to steal because that's, that's how they secure resources. So I'm worried about if we start seeing businesses going under, shortages of supplies, not just food, you're going to see a lot of crime.
Phil Labonte
Beanies.
Tim Pool
Yeah, Things like that. So I don't know what I will. What I will say is one of the most valuable things in the event of total clubs. Let's just do this. Let's say Ben Davidson is completely right. He's a space weather guy, which is that massive power outage in Europe. Let's say it wasn't a cyber attack, it wasn't an error, and the magnetosphere is weakening and we're going to get blasted by solar radiation and the power goes out. You know, I've been thinking about the most valuable thing at that point is going to be some books. No joke, right? People really take.
Tim Young
Yeah.
Tim Pool
Yep. How to build stuff, how to distill alcohol, how to use alcohol to distill other. I mean, like, just think about how to extract an element from, like, how do you get iron out of dirt?
Tim Young
You're looking at me.
Brett Dasovic
I gotta find a book.
Tim Young
Yeah, yeah.
Tim Pool
And there are people who know this stuff, like, how you find an iron deposit.
Tim Young
Not enough people, though.
Tim Pool
How do you separate the iron from the other? Like, how do you. How do you get the heat? How do you get a fire hot enough to actually smelt? And it's crazy that, like, this is commonplace back in the day, but very few people know how to do this stuff.
Tim Young
And you won't have YouTube to look it up on, which, oh, I fix everything.
Phil Labonte
This is something that, like, if you. If you pay attention to the prepper community, like, one of the things that they say all the time is like, the. These things should be your hobbies. Now, when they can be hobbies, you should be learning. Like. Like Tim says, you know, get chickens. You should have that stuff, you know, as a hobby. So that way, if there's a time, if a time ever comes where you need it, you're valuable to your community. Because if you. If you're a blacksmith and you make, you know, knives for fun, or you make whatever it is for fun, Right. If something like that happens where there's a significant issue with. With the way our society works and, you know, we have to rewind the clock by 150 years, then you become one of the most popular guys in town, because they can't. No one can come and steal your knowledge of blacksmithing. You know, it's not like you have a thing that people can come in and kick the door and take.
Tim Pool
Except you do know why smith is the most common name, right? It.
Phil Labonte
Well, because there was a lot of blacksmiths. No, why?
Tim Young
Because there's one blacksmith who did it a lot.
Tim Pool
Because when war broke out in Europe, they would never send a blacksmith to war.
Phil Labonte
Yeah.
Tim Pool
And when conquered, the. The conquerors would not murder the blacksmiths.
Phil Labonte
Yeah.
Tim Pool
So the smiths were able to have lots of kids.
Phil Labonte
That's my point. Like, if you know how to do something, whether it be blacksmithing or. Or, you know, whether it be farming or whatever it may be. Like, you know, if you have a. If you're. If you're. If you're a gardener and you have, like, this big, massive garden, it's like you become valuable. And. And while you have the time now, it's not a bad idea to make one of one or some of these things into a hobby when it's, you.
Tim Pool
Know, can you imagine, like, what's going to happen. If, if these shortages get really bad and we do see the economy just train wreck, what's a, like, feminist dance major gonna do? Yeah, it's like you show up on the farm and it's like they'll do what they've always if you want to eat, if you want to eat, you gotta work.
Tim Young
There'll be only fans. But in books.
Brett Dasovic
Yeah.
Phil Labonte
Yeah.
Tim Young
Have we had that in history before? That'll be all right.
Tim Pool
Let's have this next story from the Post. Millennial breaking. Wisconsin Supreme Court temporarily suspends Judge Hannah Dugan after FBI arrest. They say the Wisconsin Supreme Court temporarily suspended the judge after she was arrested for facilitating the escape of an illegal immigrant from a courtroom. When Dugan learned that ICE was planning to arrest the defendant, Eduardo Flores, she got him out. Yep. Quote, it is it ordered. In the exercise of that constitutional authority and in order to uphold the public confidence in the court of the state during the pendency of the criminal proceeding against Judge Dugan, we conclude on our own motion that it is in the public interest that she be temporarily relieved of her official duty. She's charged with a felony and a misdemeanor and if convicted, could face up to six years in prison and a $350,000 fine. The Milwaukee Journal Sentinel reports that typically in crimes of this kind of, sentences are substantially shorter than the maximum. However, I will say the feds have like a 90 plus percent conviction rate.
Brett Dasovic
So you never take a case you can't win to court.
Tim Pool
I think she's gonna take a plea of some sort. Unless she goes full resistance and then comes out, gets a microphone and says, I will not let Trump Hitler, blah, blah, blah. And then she makes $20 million in donations.
Tim Young
Yes. And then she becomes a member of Congress. And whenever her sentence is up, that's exactly what's going on.
Tim Pool
No, no, no. She just runs in the midterm. Oh, regardless of her sentence.
Tim Young
Yeah. I mean, this is, this is Wisconsin. So she'll win. It'll magically, those votes will come in and she will win.
Phil Labonte
I.
Brett Dasovic
Is this a form of just toxic empathy, this type? I understand that she's politically radicalized.
Tim Pool
It's, it's, it's, it's, it's cult behavior because the victims that were mercilessly beaten by this man were in court, too. So it wasn't an issue of empathy. It was an issue of hatred. She hates Trump and the right so much that she wanted this man to escape, to cause pain to, to, to Trump in his base, despite the fact.
Brett Dasovic
That she was able to see the victims firsthand and the victims were waiting.
Tim Pool
And she ushered the guy out the back door to escape also.
Tim Young
Anybody with half a brain. Now, like you said, she knows that she's going to turn into a hero here to the left. She's going to make a lot of money, and she's going to become a member. I. I'm not even, like. That's not even, like, hyperbolic. She's going to become a member of.
Brett Dasovic
Congress to hang out with that lady who testified against Kavanaugh during his hearing. What was her name?
Tim Pool
You know, it's just remarkable how evil these people are.
Tim Young
Lacy Ford.
Ryan Reynolds
Who.
Tim Pool
Who were we talking to recently? I was talking to somebody, and they are talking about how they were surprised when they got into, like that, when they went from the private to the public sector, how instantly people they knew turned on them. And I was. I was. I was. I was like, yeah. Huh? Yeah, I've certainly experienced that, too. This Christine Blasey 4. Was that her name? Yeah, she. Her story was psychotic nonsense. I have two doors on my house now because I'm scared. It's like, you have a back door and a front door like we talking about. No, I had to create two front doors because I'm scared. Then a report came out. No, she split her house to Airbnb one portion of it to make extra money, and she goes, I've been afraid to fly ever since. How'd you get here? I flew. Do you ever take a vacation? I do. How do you get there? I fly. What the. She's just lying. You got the E. Jean Carroll lady where it's like 30 years later, she's like, Trump, like, brought me into the Bergdorf Goodman. Nobody was there for some reason. And we unlocked a dressing room door somehow, and I was wearing a dress from the future.
Brett Dasovic
One of the things that I think is true about this is like, to the. These arguments are always very, very persuasive to normies. Because when you ask the question, well, why would she lie to a. To a normie, they can't imagine a world where your politics are so insane that you would say something so blatantly not true for the sake of political gain.
Tim Pool
Unless you said, well, she's actually. She's far right and she's lying because she's trying to trick the left. Oh, now I understand why she would lie. I call her right wing. It's like a 6D chess sixth, sixth dimensional. Back in multiversal time travel.
Tim Young
Who was the. Who was the follow up To Blasey Ford. Remember they gave her a New York.
Tim Pool
Oh, yeah, yeah. That was the one. Where was that? The one where she claimed that Kavanaugh was waiting outside of. There was a line of men.
Tim Young
There was a train.
Brett Dasovic
Yeah.
Tim Pool
And they were. And they were. They kidnapped women and put them in the room and then ran trains on them by waiting outside.
Phil Labonte
That is so insane that someone that tried to reward it.
Tim Young
I mean, she. She got the. Who did the. The photo shoot for. Wasn't the famous photographer did the photo shoot for her for the New York magazine.
Phil Labonte
Yeah. I mean, look, the New Yorker or whatever. I know, you're right. It just. It. It blows my mind. And especially when you, like, bring these things up out of context and see so. So that we can, like, think about them with. Without being in, like, steeped in the emotion of it now.
Brett Dasovic
It's like the moment when it was happening.
Ryan Reynolds
Yeah.
Phil Labonte
That person Liter. Tried to pass off the idea.
Tim Pool
Julie Swetnick.
Phil Labonte
Yes, Swetnick. Pass off the idea that there were.
Tim Pool
Pete.
Phil Labonte
That there were, like, running trains on kidnapped women in. In a college. Like. Like that was like, the norm.
Tim Young
I want to see like, a. Where are they now? Like, I'd love to see what does sweat. Nick. Go back to her regular job after that and then just go, you know.
Brett Dasovic
I mean, it all.
Tim Pool
Remember. Remember the. There was another guy who claimed that he, like, raped women on a boat. And when the feds contacted him, he contacted him. He, like, recanted and got charged or something. They were just. Yeah, let me see if I can. Let me see if I can find this one.
Tim Young
It was absolutely insane. And. And again, all totally rewarded. All of this is rewarded. So, like, for a normie who still has some morals and values, you think, oh, I'm gonna get busted lying. But in these instances, it's like, hey, you can just get away. Look, you're gonna get probably a book deal, which didn't. Didn't Placey Ford get a book deal?
Phil Labonte
Probably. I don't.
Tim Pool
Yeah.
Tim Young
Yeah. I mean, at least you'll be famous for a while. You get a couple of speaking gigs, you'll make some good money, get out there, get taken care of. You know, it's just unbelievable how this is rewarded.
Phil Labonte
It really is. Especially again, when you look back on it and you think you go through the. The. Some of the claims, like. And it was all because they. Just because they didn't want this guy to be on the Supreme Court.
Tim Pool
A guy claimed that in. He wrote a letter to Sheldon Whitehouse's office concerning a Rape on a boat in August of 1985. And I think he ended up getting criminally charged for that. I'm not entirely sure. But this is the thing. They, they make these stories up. I've told this before. There are people that I've known that I consider to be really good friends from back in the day. I used to skateboard with them. All of a sudden they're on X, making up stories about me tweeting at leftist podcasters who gleefully post this. It's a world of psychotic cult like behavioral lies. So anyway, back to the main point. You asked a question. You know, what is, is she doing this because, because of empathy? It's because it's a cult. Like, really, these are, these are low cognition people whose whole worldview is, oh, now's my chance to get something for me. I think they're evil. I, I, I, you know, I was talking to Jack Posobic. I said, jack, you know, I'm not a Christian. The, the resurrection story, really, I just, it doesn't do it for me. But I'll tell you what does. Possession. You tell me these people are possessed by demons. And I'm more inclined to believe in your religion. And I'm not joking about that, because there are people that I know that I've known my whole life that all of a sudden have turned evil and I can't comprehend how.
Tim Young
Yeah.
Phil Labonte
Oh, yeah.
Brett Dasovic
And you say that's even scarier. Say, low cognition people. I'm like, well, she's a judge. Like, I used to imagine that judges were intelligent, but if you can be both a judge now and psychotic, then that's insane.
Tim Young
I went to law school. There's a bunch of dumb people in law school. I mean, there's no, you don't have to be a genius to get through. You just have to, you have to memorize enough stuff to pass tests. That's it.
Phil Labonte
Yeah, it's, it's, you really, you need to know. Precedent kind of is one of the.
Tim Young
Things that, yeah, literally. So there are like kind of cheat sheets, like Cliff Notes back in the day, but there's like three, four pages. They sell them, they're laminated. And bookstores, most bookstores, so you can get like constitutional law, tort law, stuff like that. And my professors back in the day in law school were like, don't go get those. And I'm like, oh, I'm gonna go get this then. And literally everything that was on the final exam was on a six to eight page laminated thing. And that's the same stuff that's on bar exams.
Tim Pool
Doesn't take much.
Phil Labonte
That's so unreal.
Brett Dasovic
That's so depressing.
Phil Labonte
Unreal.
Brett Dasovic
And into your point about the story about when they talk about Brett Kavanaugh and suddenly he's in a dorm room and they're running trains on women. And it sounds like a bad Hollywood movie, right? Like some crazy story. That's because politics is. It's Hollywood for ugly people.
Tim Pool
They claimed that Brett Kavanaugh was party to these. These. These events where they would force women into a room, men would line up outside the door, taking turns raping her while she's screaming. And like. Like everyone's just drinking and laughing about it.
Phil Labonte
Just unreal. Just so completely and totally unreal. And. And that was actually. I mean, granted, it didn't do what it was intended to do, which is prevent him from getting on the Supreme Court. So there was some, you know, reasonable. There were some reasonable people that were like, okay, this is nuts, but even still, like, to think that. That that's a, you know, a moral way to behave and then to. Again to do those kind of things and then afterwards act as if you are the upright citizen of good character.
Tim Pool
What was the next thing they tried doing to Kavanaugh?
Phil Labonte
I. I don't remember. I mean.
Tim Young
Oh, yeah, there was a guy around his house, right?
Phil Labonte
Yeah.
Tim Pool
Showed up at his house with tools to kidnap and murder Brett Kavanaugh. So when I see the ruling, sometimes I'm just like. You can see which. What they're thinking, like, Amy Coney Barrett is terrified. She. She comes in, she helps overturn Roe v. Wade. I'm pretty sure she was. She was at the conservatives on that one. Now she's just ruling liberal the whole time. Yeah, somebody got to her. And maybe it was the death threat against Kavanaugh. With a guy showing up, she's probably thinking, you know, it really just comes down to which horse you're betting on. You think Trump's going to win, you think he's going to lose. And if you think he's going to lose, you better play ball. Otherwise they're coming for you.
Brett Dasovic
And they'll keep doing it, too. Because one of the things is when you believe that fervently, in almost a religious manner, that what you're doing is right, you will start to believe that the ends, just the means, and that will justify them to do, whether it's lying about something that very clearly never happened in college at the, you know, at the expense of someone's reputation, or attempting to Harm someone who you believe is politically opposite of you. If you believe that you are in the moral right there. And they do, they're willing to go above and beyond any all measure to do harm to them because they believe that what they're doing is cosmically justified.
Tim Young
Also, we don't know half the things that happen security wise to these Supreme Court justices. We knew the one story about Kavanaugh. I mean, this is probably a regular thing that happens. These death threats come through and if you're not used to them, I mean, it's so weird to be like, hey, I get them. When I'm over the target, I get them. It's fine. Concealed carry. It's fine.
Tim Pool
Let me show you this post. I put this up a week ago, but it exemplifies this. It's from the Reddit thread. Change my view. A person will post an opinion and then say, argue against me. And they wrote, american conservatism is objectively a dangerous ideology and those associated with it do not deserve a platform writing. Conservatism is undeniably a dangerous ideology. It seeks to fundamentally destroy and undermine democracy, targets minorities, has led to authoritarian regimes, and has destroyed the US economy more times than I have fingers on my hands. The far right pro capitalist system they seek to implement only benefits the rich while leaving the poor, middle class and everybody else to rotate lot. They also seek to destroy education and brainwash children to believe in their hateful ideas. Conservative conservatism is not about freedom and small government. It's about control. Anybody who identifies as a conservative, or for that matter even a moderate right leaning person, should not get a voice. They are equally as guilty for the destruction of the of American democracy as Trump and his cronies. Enabling conservatives to speak their minds is dangerous and leads to more harm to minorities. Giving conservatives a voice further leads to fascism. Fascism ideas being implemented. It's time conservatives shut their mouths, listen to the real experts and see that their hateful divisive rhetoric and views are leading to fascism before our eyes. Let me, let me just summarize it real quick for you. Conservatives are a threat to democracy, so we must end democracy.
Phil Labonte
Yeah, this person is clearly anti capitalism. That's what it is. They're, they're, you know, making an anti capitalist argument and ignoring the fact that capitalism is the engine that has pulled more people out of abject poverty than any other system that we've ever had and they're totally unaware of it. It's mind boggling that people will make these arguments when they're literally sitting in a comfortable life because of things like capitalism and markets.
Tim Young
But do you know how infected our society is with this and this anti capitalism.
Tim Pool
It's bad.
Tim Young
And like one of the things not to like shout out my company here but like one of the things that we work on is exposing all of these organizations and these like corporate oversight boards like the human resources. No sorry human oh God, what's the Human Rights Council who used to just do gay marriage now they do like corporate governance and they give scores on how woke these and how DEI these these companies are. And same with there's a thing called B corpse and B Labs. They're, they're our capitalist companies. Our American made companies are going and, and just being giving over their oversight to these crazy leftists with those ideologies.
Brett Dasovic
Yeah, Hollywood, Hollywood has done a very very good job of othering the idea of the billionaire. It's one of these things where they've turned you into a super villain no matter what and they've turned you into some type of evil person. I was talking earlier this week, they're, they're rebooting a show called Royal pains from the USA Network back in like 2008. And in that show there was lots of really, really had concierge a concierge doctor in the Hamptons. And most of those rich people were portrayed as eccentric and weird but generally good hearted. And I said they will never allow the ultra rich to be portrayed in any type of positive way right now because they want to make sure that you as an average everyday person hold nothing but contempt for those who have made something for themselves and have built companies that employ thousands of people.
Tim Pool
Yeah, well it's just about destroying the system them. Yeah, you look at everything that the unit party has given us over the past 30 years and it was to gut and dismantle the United States. Let's jump to this next story from the Post Millennial Maryland man Kilmar Abrego Garcia. No, no guys. They put Maryland men in quotes said to be a, to have been a gang member in 2018. Court documents quote she is dating a gang member. I think we have the images here. Jenny Tayer says the New York Post has obtained court docs from 2018 showing Kilmar Garcia was being accused of of gang membership by his ex. Ex, his wife's ex and the father of her two kids. So let's, let's pull up this document right here which actually that's harder to read now. It says motion and affidavit for and Then it's stamped over filed. It says one the underside party is acting to safeguard the children who are now in the physical custody of Jennifer Vasquez. S. It says the children are in serious danger because she try. I'm going to read it verbatim. Okay. She tried to kill herself and she left the kids with 11 year to take care off then and I'm afraid of my kids live are in the danger because she is dating a gang member. I know these facts are true to be true because I was there and the police was there too. I have made the following attempt to notify Jennifer Vasquez. Sir, her response was the court can't give you that custody of the kids because that I. That I have no idea what that says. Terrific. Told me. Is it meant to be therapist?
Tim Young
Therapist.
Tim Pool
I don't know. There's no H there.
Brett Dasovic
So sounds like I wrote this and.
Tim Pool
Well, there you go. So fascinating that this just keeps getting worse and worse for Democrats that more and more evidence keeps emerging that this man is a gang member. And they kept defending him. They're going to keep defending him. And what I absolutely love, as I mentioned this the other day, but on the David Pakman subreddit, they were angry at conservatives saying they saying something like conservatives genuinely believe that Abrego Garcia is some gang member trafficking people and not just a family man who escaped El Salvador to say to. To be with this, like to practice family. And it's like, why do you believe that? Why. Why do the liberals believe that narrative? Because there's no evidence that's true. The only evidence we have is he's been stopped multiple times, accused of trafficking, accused of being in a gang, numerous times adjudicated as being a gang member. He's not from here. The media lied about him being a Maryland man and they still believe this stuff.
Brett Dasovic
They never would have known that the media lied because they never would have looked into it any deeper than the headline.
Tim Young
How long until they redefine what a gang member is? A gang is like a festival of friendship.
Tim Pool
Yeah. Gang just means three people hanging out.
Tim Young
Yeah.
Tim Pool
So he's a member of a friend group. I have a friend group. I'm a gang member now.
Tim Young
I don't think we're far from that.
Brett Dasovic
I saw.
Tim Pool
I agree.
Brett Dasovic
I saw west side Story. Those are practically jolly out there snapping and dancing.
Phil Labonte
That's all. That's all it is.
Tim Pool
Well, the. The definition of gang is an organized group of criminals.
Phil Labonte
Yeah, but who's to say what a criminal is?
Tim Young
Yeah, I didn't think the gang. Gang were a bunch. We're all criminals back in the day.
Tim Pool
You know, IJ walked earlier today.
Phil Labonte
Everybody, you know, everyone breaks like two or three felonies a day, whether you realize it or not. So who's to say what's actually worse than. Than another. You know, I know.
Brett Dasovic
We should.
Phil Labonte
We should all just be. Have. Have compassion.
Brett Dasovic
Well, that's what I was talking about earlier. The toxic, toxic empathy and toxic compassion from Americans who really do. I think a lot of it is just the average everyday person doesn't want to seem like they're not, you know, sympathetic to other people.
Tim Pool
I. The reason why I don't believe it is because I have friends who are liberals and they post psychotic nonsense, and so I send them messages saying, hey, hope this helps. And they don't care. So it's not an issue of trying to empathize with someone, because if Kilmar Grego Garcia is the bad guy and there are. Or how about we do this? The guy, the dude in the. In the Wisconsin case, he's the bad guy. He mercilessly beat a man. I believe it was a man. There were women there as witnesses. I'm not sure if they were the victims, but let's just say he mercilessly beat someone. And Fox News said he beat. Punched him in the. Struck him in the face like 40 times and then strangled them. It is not empathy to let the. The bad guy escape. Is that a bee or a fly?
Tim Young
I don't know, but it's pretty fast for a be. It's fly.
Tim Pool
Maybe there's a bee that lives in here. It's probably dead by now, but it's like it's just exploring for some reason. I got no beef with honeybees. They're all right. But anyway, what were we talking about? Oh, yeah, they. They don't empathize. They simply seek to be a part of the cult. So they will let villains escape so long as it's what the cult wants them to do.
Brett Dasovic
I guess I see it more as, like, there's layers to this type of interaction, which is like you have the journalists who write the bias story, you have the influencers and the politically initiated who parrot the story. And then you have the average everyday person who only reads the headline, and their empathy says, well, why would he deport a guy from Maryland? And then they never look any farther into it. And those people vote, too. Yep, that's my problem with it.
Tim Pool
And they. And they answer polls. Yeah, I got to be honest. I don't think anybody Answers, Polls. I think it's fake. It's like the polls are just sitting there and you're like, let's just say Trump's doing well.
Brett Dasovic
Like the people saying, last time you got a poll, the Nielsen ratings. I'm like.
Tim Pool
To be. To be fair, I get. I get requests from Civics all the time. Yeah. Civics will email me, like, nonstop. And I do them sometimes.
Tim Young
I think 2003 was the last time I got any kind of phone call or anything like that. Maybe I just have a lot go to spam, you know.
Tim Pool
You know why I don't answer now when I get the phone calls, though, is because when I do, the only thing I hear is it. It goes like. And then I hang up. I'm not kidding. Have you guys gotten those phone calls?
Tim Young
You know my telus, when they say Timothy.
Tim Pool
Oh, yeah. No, but you know those. Those phone calls that people have been getting where you answer it? It's just like a person speak. It's an automated Chinese phone call.
Phil Labonte
I have not. Not.
Tim Young
I have not gotten.
Tim Pool
You've never seen this? Yeah. Big story. I was Chinese robocalls. So I just stopped answering my phone.
Tim Young
I only get American robocalls. American made. No. What's interesting here about these cult members, by the way, you see who goes to these Democrat rallies now. You see who's, like, lapping up the Bernie and the Tim Wall real quick.
Tim Pool
Sorry, guys. Look, this is from two weeks ago. North Carolina's Chinese Americans of robocalls posing as officials. It's been going on for some time. Two weeks ago, the DOJ is warning about this. This is Trump administration.
Brett Dasovic
I like the idea that we're going to get, like, Chinese Americans to start recording these calls now that we're bringing manufacturing back home.
Tim Pool
We need Chinese robot. What were you saying?
Tim Young
Oh, yeah, yeah. So that you take a look at the people who go to these. The Tim Waltz events and the events you talk. These cult members, they're old hippies, right? And. And they're trying to relive their childhood. They're trying to be a part of something when we. We've had it too good in this country for too long. And I know things are bad, but we haven't had a civil war. We haven't had some sort of major action in a long time. And they want to feel like they're a part of something. So it's much easier to get them into this cult because they feel like they're affecting change by getting out there and screaming about Trump and they've got.
Brett Dasovic
I'm sure a little bit of guilt from how successful they are without ever seen that picture that was going viral like around the time of the election. It was like the husband and the wife, they're out to this really nice dinner and they have their champ.
Ryan Reynolds
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Brett Dasovic
Paying glasses and they're like, these two boomers are voting for Kamala Harris this election. And the top response is like, great, one more FU on the way out before they. That's what I think.
Tim Pool
Did you see the poll for boomers in Canada? In Canada they asked the different generations what their biggest concerns were in the election. And Gen Z said the cost of housing, the cost of food, good jobs. And the boomers said Trump in Canada. The boomers were like, we're voting for the liberals because we hate Trump. And Gen Z was like, we need.
Brett Dasovic
Food and Social Security and like Medicare and stuff like that that they will benefit from, but the kids will not.
Tim Pool
I'm saying this is January. A bunch of articles came out about this demographic cliff because this is the beginning. 2007 is when people stopped having kids. Like the numbers tanked.
Brett Dasovic
Look, all those kids were at the Minecraft movie. We'll be fine, dude.
Tim Pool
And, and, and the other thing I'm hearing too is that of the Gen Z Gen zers who are like around 18, 19, who do work, they have anxiety disorder, they don't answer their phones, they're terrified, they're socially Awkward.
Brett Dasovic
Did you see the stories about kids bringing their parents to job interviews?
Tim Pool
What?
Tim Young
Yeah. Yeah.
Phil Labonte
No.
Brett Dasovic
Oh, yeah. That's a thing.
Tim Young
That's the thing.
Brett Dasovic
They were bringing their parents to their job interviews.
Phil Labonte
How could you expect to actually get.
Brett Dasovic
Some of my favorite people to, to watch on Tick Tock?
Tim Pool
If I'm watching 26 of Gen Zers brought a parent to a job interview.
Brett Dasovic
Watch, watch some of these Tick Tockers that are like hiring managers who have Tick Tock accounts that are, that have huge followings because it's just them talking about the insane stuff that Gen Z is doing.
Tim Pool
Wow.
Brett Dasovic
Yeah.
Phil Labonte
I, I can't even imagine how you as a, as an employer would say yes.
Tim Young
You just play along with that and let him go. I mean, I, I could. You don't want to deal with somebody's family.
Phil Labonte
I think that.
Tim Pool
You think.
Phil Labonte
No, I mean, you think pronouns are bad. Come on.
Tim Pool
I, I would probably be as mean as I could be, but in, in a way that wasn't too direct. You know, like if, if someone applied for a job and they showed up and their parent was there, I would not do something like, you are pathetic. What a loser. I'd probably bust out laughing and then.
Phil Labonte
Ask them where the camera was, berate their parent. You think this is okay? This is you teaching your child how to be independent and be an adult. You helping your coming to the interview ashamed yourself.
Tim Young
How do you handle that? Like, can you tell me what's really good about your son, sir? What are his best qualities? Is he clean his room?
Phil Labonte
Are you both.
Tim Pool
We already know your greatest weaknesses. Let's move on from that question. I don't need to ask.
Phil Labonte
Are you. You're both gonna show up. Do I have to provide a desk for both of you?
Brett Dasovic
You know, I mean like if you just.
Tim Pool
No, you know, you know what you do when they show up with their parent? You walk up and shake the parent's hand and then ask the kid to wait in the car.
Phil Labonte
Go in the car, son.
Tim Pool
Yeah. Be like, thank you for coming. We. We. I'd love to hear what you can bring to this job. Oh no, I'm the parent. Sure. You kid. Hey, wait in the car. We're gonna talk about this job. Going to get going outside.
Phil Labonte
Your daddy's going to talk to the.
Tim Pool
Wow. How old are you? I'm 47. Really? And what did you. What, what did you. What do you do for a living? I'm a lawyer. You're hired. I mean it's a low paying, entry level job, but thanks for coming for the interview.
Brett Dasovic
No, they don't do that anymore.
Tim Pool
No, it's my son who's coming for the interview.
Brett Dasovic
What there is to qualified. So the 47 year old lawyer going in for the, you know, the job, mopping up at the grocery store is not going to get the job. He's overqualified.
Tim Pool
I'd hire him. I'd say you sir, are hired. But it's my son who's here for the job.
Phil Labonte
We don't.
Brett Dasovic
But this wasn't even for like entry level jobs. These were for, or these were for like jobs for people with degrees out of college. And they're bringing.
Tim Pool
So Gen Z is developmentally disabled and Gen Alpha doesn't exist. Yeah, Gen Alpha is projected to be between 40 and 48 million down from. So Gen X is like mid 60s, boomers are like mid 60s, millennials are like 72 and Gen Z I think is like 69 million. Gen Alpha is supposed to be around 40 to 48 because millennials stopped having kids. And then you've got Gen Z developmentally disabled and then you've, and then you've got Gen Alpha who just doesn't exist.
Brett Dasovic
There's also a deep sense of nihilism amongst Gen Z where they just don't see a future for this country. And they don't really. It's like don't quitters never lose so why bother trying if it's the game has been rigged against you? And that's kind of my.
Phil Labonte
Never lose.
Brett Dasovic
Like. Well that's kind of my argument. Like if you, you can say all you want that AOC can't win an election, whether it has to do with their voice or whatever it is. But when things get bad enough and somebody starts waving in front of you, a catch all solution that is the government. You have to be worried about something like that. Even somebody with a mediocre presentation can win if the, the population is desperate enough and the solution they're offering is all encompassing. Even if we know that that's a lie.
Phil Labonte
Yeah. And I, I don't think that that Gen Z and younger will know it's a lie because this generation's gonna, you know, this generation sees cars that drive for you. Right. That's normal now like not every car does, but it's normal to be like, oh yeah, my Tesla can drive for me. They're going to be the first generation that sees a significant amount of, you know, actual humanoid robots walking around. Five years there are going to be a lot of humanoid robots walking around society doing things that used to be done by people within five years. That's going to be, it's going to be normal enough where people are like, oh, and the impression that they get is we don't have to work anymore.
Tim Young
It turns into Wally.
Phil Labonte
Yeah, yeah, exactly. Yeah, yeah, exactly what they're. Because they're already talking about it. You hear people talking about that on Reddit saying, oh, you know, the super, super abundance is coming when the singularity comes. Etc. They have, they all have the notion that there's no point in trying because in just a few years, just a handful of years, everything's going to be automated and you're not going to have to do any work.
Brett Dasovic
Yeah. And then they'll just introduce the ubi.
Tim Pool
Let's jump to this next story. Let's jump to the story from the Verge. Reddit bans researchers who used AI bots to manipulate commenters Indeed, Reddit's lawyer called the University of Zurich researchers project an improper and highly unethical experiment. So I was browsing Reddit, as I often do. I like to read what the liberals is doing and I saw this post that said, you know, it was like alerting people to I think it was the Change my View subreddit that researchers were using bot accounts to manipulate the opinions of people who are browsing by spam blasting them. This has resulted in this story where they've banned it. They say commenters on the popular subreddit change change my mind. Pretty sure it was changed my view found out last weekend. They've been majorly duped for months. University of Zurich researchers set out to investigate the persuasiveness of large language models in natural online environments by unleashing bots. Pretending to be a trauma counselor, a quote, black man opposed to Black Lives Matter, and a sexual assault survivor on unwitting posters. The bots left 1783 comments and amassed over 10,000 comment karma before being exposed, they say. Reddit's chief legal officer Ben Lee says the company is considering legal action over the improper and highly unethical experiment. That is deeply wrong on both the moral and legal level. I mean guys, Reddit's all fake. These comments have been bots for a long time. We've known about this, that Democrats hired companies to tell people what to respond to other people. So what would happen is you'd go on like the Joe Rogan subreddit and Joe would say something interesting and these, these liberal leaning organizations hired staff to go in and comment specifically like this is wrong and here's why. So that you Constantly felt like you were on the wrong side of history to force public opinion. So them doing this, this is just them exposing what they've. They, these companies have been doing forever.
Brett Dasovic
You know, Tim, that's how they're going to take Superman down in the James Gunn Superman movie. Did you hear this?
Tim Pool
Are you joking?
Brett Dasovic
There's a rumor, a rumor that Superman is going to fight online trolls and that Lex Luthor has mutant bot farms that go against Superman. Hashtag super. I literally, we just did a video on it today.
Tim Young
Is that how Brainiac is?
Tim Pool
So, so hold on. So in, in the trailer for the new Superman, you see him, like, walking in the building, throwing stuff at him.
Brett Dasovic
It could actually. I mean, I don't like. Again, this is a rumor. I have no idea if this is true. But James Gunn, given the fact that he got fired from Disney because of people taking offense to his tweets, it'll be the greatest self insert ever. And I know himself Superman. Well, my biggest complaint for this whole movie is that he's made the whole movie about him, and it's not even about Superman anymore. So this will be the biggest self insert ever as Superman has to take on online trolls. I'm just imagining, like, a world where Superman is, like, constantly dealing with Lex Luthor, the reply guy on X.
Phil Labonte
Bring back.
Tim Pool
In the movie, Superman is frustrated by social media backlash, with the hashtag super being mentioned several times as really getting under his skin. Meanwhile, in Lex's interdimensional world, hundreds of mutant monkeys are shown typing furiously at keyboards, flooding social media with hate against monkey bot farms. Okay, that's real. Hold on. There's no way that's real, but I hope it is.
Brett Dasovic
I hope it is.
Tim Pool
So I will see that movie twice.
Tim Young
That would be amazing.
Brett Dasovic
I'm telling you. Like, it's, I'm here for it. It's. It's absolutely ridiculous.
Tim Pool
Yo, that, that sounds like something James Gunn would do, and I seriously hope he did.
Ryan Reynolds
They did.
Brett Dasovic
I don't, I mean, I don't think people will like it. I, I, I will like it because it'll be hilarious, but they tried this with she Hulk, and it didn't work there. So I don't know if this is going to work.
Tim Young
It would make sense with the attitude Guy Gardner in it, like, kind of the, the, the good guy who doesn't care about the, the commenters because he's kind of a dick on his own.
Tim Pool
Is he?
Tim Young
Yeah, yeah, yeah. He's. He's like the nasty Green Lantern with the attitude.
Tim Pool
Mr. Has a bowl cut. Because he doesn't care what people think about him.
Brett Dasovic
Mr.
Tim Young
Terrific haircut. Yep, that's the Mr.
Brett Dasovic
Terrific would have a, like a really good social media page.
Tim Pool
He's.
Tim Young
He's the tech guy. This actually lines up if you look at the characters. I think that's. I mean, maybe not the Monkeys, but I think this is real.
Brett Dasovic
I don't know if hot girl has social media, though.
Phil Labonte
Up.
Tim Young
She's just there because they need to only fan. Yeah. They're trying to shut down her only fans at the same time.
Brett Dasovic
Oh, no.
Tim Pool
Lex is using the Monkeys to mass report her account.
Tim Young
She was, she was trying to not be a violent superhero, but because she lost all of her income from only fans.
Brett Dasovic
Think. Think of the money you can make when you're immortal too, and you get reborn. You just start right over.
Tim Pool
But there's like a period where you're old and you can't do it. So you can only do it like, like 20 out of 80 years.
Brett Dasovic
She was, you know, before that she was doing just Playboy. And then as the generations go on.
Tim Pool
Did they change that story from. They were reborn to their aliens?
Brett Dasovic
I don't know if that's.
Tim Pool
They're aliens now. Right.
Tim Young
Actually, my favorite, by the way, if we're gonna go down this nerd route is Justice League Unlimited, which I think is probably the best DC product that's ever been made.
Tim Pool
It was. I agree. Yeah. Yeah. I mean, Justice League show in general was some of the best iterate iteration.
Brett Dasovic
Yeah.
Tim Pool
Of those characters. Why are we talking about Superman fighting platforms.
Brett Dasovic
Platforms. That's. If, if bot farms can take down Superman, it can certainly take down Reddit.
Tim Pool
Where did this rumor come from? MTTSH came from AI.
Brett Dasovic
Oh, yeah, no, I pointed out in the, in the video, it's my time to shine. Hello. Which is extremely unreliable. I point that out.
Tim Pool
Oh, you've got to pay for it too.
Brett Dasovic
Yeah.
Tim Pool
Oh, please. I mean, please. I, I, I, I, I hope that is the plot.
Brett Dasovic
I apologize for derailing everybody.
Phil Labonte
Don't apologize. That was actually good.
Tim Pool
You really.
Tim Young
You brought us on the rails. Yeah, we were.
Tim Pool
Yeah.
Tim Young
Before then.
Tim Pool
But look, I think Dead Internet theory is a real thing and I think the Internet's fake. And look, man, most of your most. These podcasts people think are big are not big. I mean, not most, but a lot of them. Yeah. I just think that's where we're headed. The. It's perception is reality. And I, I've been just looking at everything, you know, because I know we've been talking about the Demographic cliff quite a bit cuz it's, it's on my mind I guess. But I'm, I'm wondering if one of the results of population collapse is that we are going to automate everything. Have you guys seen the automated McDonald's? Yeah, it's like the robot arm like grabs the burger and then like drops it it and then it goes and like scoops the fries.
Phil Labonte
Why not it actually. And a lot of that stuff, I mean I hate to say it but a lot of times when you, when they automate stuff like that, you're getting a better prepared product. And you know, accurately, you know who.
Tim Young
Doesn'T bring their parents to a job interview? Robots.
Phil Labonte
Robots don't. I mean look man, actually to be.
Tim Pool
Completely honest, robots actually do 100% of the time. Like the guy who manufactures or owns the robots is doing the pitch as to why you should, should pay for their robots. Like this is the robot, I've made it, you should get it.
Brett Dasovic
It's part of this also. Okay, so you're saying like that they're not like Gen Alpha aren't getting first time jobs in like entry level fields and Gen Alpha or I'm sorry Gen Z is not populating entry level jobs. Okay, right so and, and they like.
Tim Pool
So obviously there are Gen Z that are completely capable. Many of them work here. We've stolen all of them. There's three but no of the millions 70 was it 69 million Gen Z, something like that. Many of them are not working, many of them are not 18. There's a gap in this period because of the Great Recession meaning you're gonna find there's there, there's a dip in the age of 8 which is so weird. So when this happens you've got what is, what is a Gen z? It was 97 to 2012 I think.
Brett Dasovic
Is that what it is?
Tim Pool
Yeah, I think it's what estimated range. So you've got kids are being born like normal. There is a declining birth rate, don't get me wrong, but relatively stable with a slight decline up till 2007. Then a massive fertility drop off. Then it slowly rebounds in 2010, 1112. So there's going to be a lot more 27, 26, 25 year old Gen Z and right now relatively few. 19, 20, 18 and then a lot of younger there's going to be this weird drop off. It's, it's, it's, it's a weird phenomenon. So right now in this next couple of years is where we're gonna really get hit by this lack of 18 year olds. Largely, what this means is the universities are screwed. They're going out of business. The, the story I read earlier was a 180-year-old university went under because there's no one to enroll anymore. They build up this big infrastructure. As population expands, they add new buildings, they add more professors, more jobs. Then there's less and less young people. There's more and more competition goes under. Liquidate the assets, shut it down. This is, this is what's crazy about it. This, this is what I, the analogy I used this morning. If there is one shoe store, everybody's got to buy shoes, right? So let's say there's one shoe store and 10 people live in town. They go to the one place to buy the shoes. The shoemaker, the cobbler, he's good. Good. Then one day, you know, a bunch of people start moving into the town or people are having babies. Now you have 100 people in the town. Massive population boom. That one shoemaker can't cut it. He can only handle 10 shoes. So what happens? Nine more shoe stores pop open to provide shoes for all of the other people who live there. You now have 10 shoe stores. If you get an abrupt population collapse by 50%, down to 50 people, it does not go down to five shoe stores. It goes to zero. Because what happens is you have all these shoe stores that are open, and if it's a short term hiccup, those 50 people will split their, their resources among 10 different shoe stores. They'll all fall short of the money they need to survive by 50% and go out of business simultaneously. You may go down to one shoe store, you'll get shortages. But this is what happens with fixed infrastructure. So what we're looking at right now, we're gonna see. It's gonna be Detroit Times 10.
Phil Labonte
I suppose we'll see all because we. Because of a lack of actual manpower of.
Tim Pool
But lack of manpower also means lack of economic stimulus in general.
Phil Labonte
Yeah.
Tim Pool
People who aren't working also aren't buying things. But you know what, you know what I see from this and why I loop it back into the, the, the, the bot farm stuff. The end result really does feel like it's going to be live in the pot and eat the bugs. Like, there's gonna. Look the restaurants out here that are closing because they can't find labor, they're gonna be like, yep, the only food we have to feed you now is going to be oatmeal. Oatmeal and, you know, pea protein, because lack of labor. The robots can make oats and peas, but we can't really. No more delicious sushi. Sorry, that's too complicated for the robots. But if you plug into the neuralink, meaning whatever you want, you put the neuralink headset on, you go into VR world, and you will eat a smorgasbord of everything you've ever wanted.
Brett Dasovic
What other industries would be hit the hardest? Other. Because I guess when I was thinking about this, you're talking about how they're not able to find employees. And then I think back to when I was that age and it was more that the, the boomers weren't retiring and you had a generation of people who weren't finding careers after going to college because they went, they got their degree, but nobody was retiring, so there were no positions for them. And it's now where the opposite end of that.
Tim Pool
You know, man, it's such a big picture and it's so hard to see everything. But a lot of Gen Z are developmentally disabled. And I'm not saying it to be a dick, I'm saying they have social anxiety disorder. They are hikikomori. They don't want to go outside, they don't know how to get jobs, they live at home. They're in their early 20s. Failure to launch. It's happening to a lot of Gen Z. What happens when the boomers die? And we're, we're, we're, we're 10 years or so away from a major mortality cliff, which is what they're calling it. Boomers are going to drop down to an estimated 20 million in the next, in 10 years. Because they're hitting life expectancy.
Phil Labonte
Yeah.
Tim Pool
These older Gen Z whose parents are either, you know, older, like, like Gen X or younger boomers, they're not gonna have anyone to, to feed them. They're not going to have a source of income. If all you're doing is sitting at home playing video games, you're not getting a job and it's failure to launch. Sooner or later, those resources go dry.
Brett Dasovic
What happens, I mean, I would like to think that hoping against hope is that the failure to launch is also the parents. There's the discussion about whether, you know, I don't necessarily agree. I don't agree that you should just kick the kids out at 18. Right. Which is something that's happened to a lot of people. But also like, if the parents die and they don't have anybody protecting them anymore, then their own nature, they have to go and make something happen. Otherwise you can't Just lay there and die. So they have to go do something for themselves and maybe that allows them to grow up in a way that their parents aren't allowing them to do now because they are in the safety of their home.
Phil Labonte
There's going to be a lot of, the crisis of competency is, is going to be massive. You know, there's going to be a lot of.
Tim Pool
We're, we're there. Yeah, yeah, that. I've been saying we have a managerial crisis for a long time time. I've been, I've been talking with other people who run businesses and there is a managerial crisis. I, I don't know what, what happened but it may be that there's not enough young people or this, this, this gap in this age demographic because of the financial crisis has been persistent in terms of training as well. There's not enough people to have taught, been taught these jobs. So let's, let's, let's, let's, let's go. Hard analogy doesn't apply. 100 let's say you've got you know, 10 brackets, 10 year old, 20 year old, 30 year old, 40 year old, 50, 60, 70, 80. And you know, at 30 a person is now a master of their profession. At 40 they're training a 20 year old. The 20 year old becomes a master of their profession, turns 40, trains a 20 year old. Let's say you drop all of the 20 year olds. The 40 year old goes, I have known a train. So they keep working and this gap persists. The next group, 10 year olds move up 10 years into that bracket. There is now no one to train them when you have this. So I think we may be facing this managerial crisis because the forced retirements during COVID meant that people were leaving without training their replacements. And you have a demographic drop off so you have substantially less people to learn the trade and an abrupt firing which resulted in people not training the trade. And now you have businesses that can't hire people they're failing to run and they're shutting down. And then of course you have jaded Gen Z, you've got the developmentally disabled ones who are suffering from social anxiety disorder. They can't answer the phone, they can't talk to people properly and then you have others that just think it's pointless. You don't get me wrong, there's a lot of Gen Z that are moving to the right that are reportedly finding Jesus and Christianity and so they're gonna, they're gonna survive, they're gonna make it work, they're driven to do so. But these other ones, I don't know what happens. But I will tell you, people don't just roll over and die.
Brett Dasovic
But how would this have happened prior to this generation? Right? You said like a 40 year old trains a 20 year old. Can you give me an example of like, because again, like when I think of this, I don't think of them. I don't think of them as training someone and then leaving. I think of, of what we talked about in my generation was the boomers never retiring. So you train someone to then never leave your job anyway.
Tim Pool
So that's part of the problem. That's why I'm saying it's not necessarily one for one. I'm trying to highlight that this is a problem. It's granular and it will have a percentage based effect on the market. So if normally an older generation trains a younger generation, but now you have abrupt retirements and you have less of that generation, we might see what does that result in.778% economic downturn because there's not enough people to run these jobs.
Phil Labonte
Yeah.
Tim Pool
The demand will return if the generations after are inflated. But Gen Alpha is half the size of, of millennials. It's like a little bit more than half. So there's going to be no demand and no labor.
Brett Dasovic
Yeah.
Tim Pool
So you will live in the pod. You will eat the bugs. Let's jump to this next story from the New York Post Ozempic where Govee took my vision, says grandma of 11 and New Jersey man as more users report devastating side effect. The story is quite simple, my friends. People are reportedly going blind from taking a drug to make them lose weight. My understanding is all the drug doesn't make you vomit.
Brett Dasovic
I don't know.
Tim Pool
Am I wrong about that?
Brett Dasovic
It suppresses your appetite.
Tim Young
Yeah. Doesn't it slow down your digestive system?
Tim Pool
Yes. But like how does it suppress your appetite?
Phil Labonte
I've heard other things that, that it actually does affect your ability to what? So it, I've heard that it, that it actually works to help make you more disciplined. If you're, if you have cravings for alcohol, it helps with that. If you have cravings for nicotine, it helps with that. So it's not just, you know about, it's not just about it slows down.
Tim Pool
How, how fast food leaves your stomach making you feel full longer after eating.
Brett Dasovic
They call it, Phil, they call it intrusive food. Thoughts. Thoughts like people who eat late at night.
Tim Pool
This is, this is. It really is crazy to me that there are people who can't Just like they have no control over their bodies. No, like, for real, like, honestly, there are, there are, there are a lot of people, and I know it's normal, but I just don't comprehend this, that are like, I wish I didn't eat that food, but I'm gonna eat it anyway. And it's like, have you considered just not doing that?
Phil Labonte
There are a lot of people that think disc that are, that think that discomfort is something to be avoided at all costs.
Tim Pool
That's not what I mean. I'm saying that there are people who quite literally go, I wish I wasn't eating this pizza right now. And I'm like, just put it down.
Phil Labonte
But the thing, the thing that's making them continue to eat it is they want to, they have the desire and to say, I'm not going to indulge that desire, which is, this is my point.
Tim Pool
They have no control over their bodies. They're like, they're like, help me please. I can't. My hand, it's making me drink this.
Tim Young
Well, you have to add in all the steps to go to the store to buy it or order it as well. I mean, there's, there are multiple levels to this. Two weeks ago, I just did a, I went for a 72 hour water fast and made it 88 hours. I know I got to get my stuff together. It's just a mental game. And you know, if anybody out there is thinking about it again, like, it's, it's literally just all in your water.
Tim Pool
Fast, fast, water, fast.
Tim Young
So all you do is drink water for, oh, oh, 72 hours. And for a second I thought you.
Tim Pool
Meant like you fasted.
Tim Young
No, I would drop dead.
Tim Pool
Water.
Tim Young
That's the opposite.
Tim Pool
No, no, I'm an idiot.
Tim Young
But no, I mean, it's, it's very good for you. I, I, I saw nothing negative about it. I feel like, you know, for me in particular, I'm, I'm overweight right now and I think I could probably go if healthily done a couple of weeks. And, and your body's energy.
Tim Pool
So they say that when you fast, your body's the first thing your body does for energy. When it goes to, when it goes for stores, it takes damaged cells, it breaks down. So I think Ian always talks about it. Apoptosis. No, that's something else. Autophagy. There you go. Serge has got me. He's got me. Apoptosis, when bad cells get destroyed by the body. And autophagy is when your body consumes the energy from bad cells, which makes you Better. And caloric deprivation increases lifespan.
Tim Young
Well, and you realize very quickly that, like, you know, around day three, like, it's all mental day three, you wake up and it's like, oh, it's just another day. I'm eating because of habit.
Tim Pool
I'm not saying that. Like, they're like, look, if there's somebody who's overweight. If you're overweight and you're like, whatever, I don't care. Like, I don't. I'm not saying that. I'm saying that it's crazy to me that there are people who are like, I wish I wasn't so fat, but I'm gonna eat anyway. I know. I will inject myself with this drug instead.
Brett Dasovic
There are people who have taken out, like, massive loans to be able to pay for their Ozempic and their wegovia prescriptions.
Tim Young
There was. I don't know how far and wide this. This interview went, but Sharon Osborne was on Ozempic.
Brett Dasovic
Oh, yeah.
Tim Young
And she did an interview with. Who was it? The comedian.
Brett Dasovic
It, like, destroyed her body.
Tim Young
Yes.
Tim Pool
It.
Tim Young
Her. Her body basically didn't restart.
Brett Dasovic
Yeah.
Tim Young
And so she wasn't able. Her body wasn't getting the calories it needed, and she looked like death.
Brett Dasovic
Yep.
Tim Pool
That's crazy today. Like, my. My problem is getting enough calories when I'm skating or exercising. So I took, like, a third cup of rice flour, poured water in it. It stirred it up, microwaved it, put peanut butter on, and just jammed it down my throat. Because otherwise, I don't get the calories when I'm skating. I have the inverse problems. I can't. I understand. People are going blind. Yeah. And this is a known side effect. And they're like, whatever, let's do it anyway.
Brett Dasovic
Well, it's from decades of the commercials for any medication. It says these side effects that list the worst things that could have ever happened to a person.
Tim Young
Lump in your neck.
Phil Labonte
And.
Brett Dasovic
And these things are now advertised. We were at the mall recently, and there were ads for Ozempic as a weight loss medication, not as a. As a diabetes medication, which is what its actual labeled use is for. And, you know, people these days, they. They look at that. They look at the easy fix. And it's a generation of kids. The other thing that I thought was interesting about is, like, you've got a whole generation of kids raised on Adderall who never ate that much growing up. Anyways, Then they go off the Adderall and they're like, holy crap, food tastes great.
Tim Young
Oh, yeah.
Brett Dasovic
They look for another medical Solution.
Tim Young
I'm going to throw this in in code so I don't violate any rules, but could you imagine if the thing from a couple of years ago, they told everybody it made you lose weight at the same time.
Brett Dasovic
They're like.
Tim Pool
Like, the problem is, what's his face. Who was the m. The Blasio was like, look at these delicious French fries. Look at this cheeseburger. Oh, boy. You can have one of these, too. It's. It's. It is. Look, I can understand, like, if you're addicted to a drug or smoking, but I just don't understand that that type.
Brett Dasovic
Of eating hits the same pleasure center in the brain, but it feels to.
Tim Pool
Me like you're possessed.
Phil Labonte
The best way that I can.
Tim Pool
Like, how do you not control yourself this way?
Phil Labonte
That I'd ever been found to describe, like, wanting a cigarette when I was, like, relating it to someone else. It's like being hungry when I'm. When I was really, like, really wanted a cigarette. The closest thing that I could describe it as is, like, being really hungry without the stomach pains with that. It's still a very similar. Just like, man, I really want to eat that. Whatever. It's like. It's the same kind of, like, motivation then, you know.
Tim Pool
You ever hear that book that's like. You know, this book? What is it called? It's like, this book will make you quit smoking or something.
Phil Labonte
There is a book called that. Yeah.
Tim Pool
And, like, it actually tells you to smoke while you're reading it. By the time you're done, you'll never have another. Another cigarette. And I've heard people swear by it. Like, it works.
Phil Labonte
I don't know, man.
Brett Dasovic
And then you get into, like, Gen Z talking about, look, I'm never gonna own a home. My life is going to be miserable. So their. Their idea of splurging now is to buy good food and, like, go to the grocery store and buy good food. So a lot of it is that food is used. You know, they talk about eating emotional.
Tim Pool
This is why they're not getting houses. Yeah. I mean, you're probably never gonna. You guys see that viral clip from Boy Meets World where Topanga and whatever the. Everybody knows her name because.
Brett Dasovic
Corey.
Tim Pool
Corey. There you go. I don't know his name. He was like, the house is $80,000, and you'll need 4,000 down. It's like, where are we gonna get $4,000? It was something like that. It was like a really cheap house. And this was in the. In the late 90s. Now it's like, A Gen Z couple, you know, they're like 23, 24. They're getting married. They want to. They want to buy a house. Well, the down payment on this house is a hundred thousand dollars, and it's 500 grand. If you want to live in your town where you work, it's like, okay, I can't do that. I could, you know, like, we're in the middle of nowhere out here, and the houses are like 500 grand.
Phil Labonte
Yeah.
Tim Pool
You're not gonna own a house, say.
Brett Dasovic
So I'm gonna go and buy good food instead. Because if I'm gonna be renting for the rest of my life, then damn it, I'm gonna eat well while doing it.
Phil Labonte
Yeah, I, I.
Tim Pool
You know what, man? Or you just don't and you save your money.
Tim Young
It's hard for people, you know? You know, they can't control themselves.
Tim Pool
I think it's entirely orchestrated, to be completely honest, because there's no way. All of these things I feel could be an accident. Right. You've got the Democrats. I would say it's the Unit party establishment saying, don't have kids. It's bad for the environment. The world is overpopulated. Don't have kids. Then you get a financial collapse. Oh, no, now you can't have kids. Better not. Then you have. Go have an abortion. Just have abortions. Don't have kids. Then you have TV shows like Michelle what's her face. I remember. I don't remember her name. But you had the Netflix special where she was like, you get an abortion and you get an abortion.
Tim Young
Oh, yeah.
Phil Labonte
Michelle Walt. Wolf.
Tim Pool
Wolf. That was her name. You have all of these things, Then you have. Then you have YouTube promoting van life. Remember that viral trend of van life where they were like, look how great it is to live in a van. It's the best thing ever.
Brett Dasovic
And then there was email jobs. Those vans cost as much as some starter homes.
Tim Pool
But they were trying to. Indeed, they're. But to be fair, I built the van that I had. I think it was like 35, 000. So it's not like. Like, it's cheap, but it's not a house.
Phil Labonte
No, Right.
Tim Pool
And then you get a big social push saying, why don't you go live in a van down by the river? And young people all wanted to do it, and many pursued it. And it is really funny to see how many people tried it. And then afterwards they were like, I was miserable and it was the worst thing ever. Yeah, like, you lived in a car, dude. What did you think? It was gonna be like, he's like.
Brett Dasovic
I didn't realize I wasn't gonna be able to sleep in any parking lot I wanted any time, and that they were gonna be chasing me off place places.
Tim Pool
The seventh night in a row of a cop banging on my window with a billy club telling me to move along or I'm under arrest was when I realized this actually doesn't work.
Brett Dasovic
I do believe though that a lot of the resentment comes from whether it's millennials or Gen Z and their parents, like, don't buy that coffee or you're never going to be able to own a home. And you're like, the home is $500,000. My seven dollar coffee isn't putting a dent in that. Even if I do it every day for the next 20 years.
Tim Pool
If they put $7 in a bitcoin every day for 20 years own a.
Brett Dasovic
House, that's a different conversation entire.
Tim Young
So you're telling me by the way, that you don't like have you ever seen the plus size park hoppers? Oh, the plus size park hoppers? No, that have been suggested to me on Instagram.
Brett Dasovic
Every day you have to get, you have to look up plus size park hops.
Tim Pool
No, because I'm gonna start spam blasting.
Tim Young
Yeah, well there are, they are a friend sizes 2x to 5x that show you inside Disney parks whether or not you can fit not just in rides but in restaurants where like, you know, you get concerned. Like, are there arms on the chairs that I won't be able to fit down, fit in to eat seat?
Brett Dasovic
They're putting like the thing over them to see if they fit. It's.
Tim Pool
You know what, I got to be honest at this point, anybody who like, I feel like most informed people who are paying attention and care about themselves would not care if every, if Trump intentionally collapsed everything as a purge. Trump's just looking around, he's like, it's a bunch of lazy, degenerate, overweight filth. He burns the economy like he has no interest in America. It's literally just I want like he's, he's going to create his, his ubermensch just by destroying the economy. That's it. Destroy the economy, close the border and then anybody who survives deserves to.
Tim Young
But please, if, if it's the segment from the plus sized park hoppers called if I fits I sits that does it. I need to know just anybody from the please just let me know White House.
Tim Pool
To be fair though, the morbidly obese can survive a long time time without food. Absolutely it's water and vitamins that your.
Brett Dasovic
Plan, your plan that you just proposed by Trump, that's like the ultimate meritocracy collapsing.
Tim Pool
But you know, it would be funny if Trump's just like looking around at a Gen Z that won't work to save their lives. Millennials that want to have babies to save the country. Morbidly obese homeless people. And he's like, maybe we need some depression.
Tim Young
All I need to do is stroll through the streets of D.C. i mean, there was a guy, there was a guy on the metro that I forget his name, but he was a naked, morbidly obese guy that just people knew was showing up on the Metro for a long time in Washington D.C. and they wouldn't remove him.
Phil Labonte
Why wouldn't they remove him?
Tim Young
He's probably too big.
Tim Pool
Too big.
Tim Young
And also like he's. He was literally naked. Like he never wore clothes. It was just a very large.
Phil Labonte
He just lived there.
Ryan Reynolds
Yes.
Brett Dasovic
Too big to fail.
Tim Pool
Man. I don't know. I'm just saying, like I. I feel like if in social order completely collapsed that.
Ryan Reynolds
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Tim Pool
And it's largely the Trump side of things that would make it all make it through all right.
Brett Dasovic
Yeah. Cuz they know that your groceries don't come from the grocery store.
Tim Pool
Indeed. Or they have backyard chickens and that's it.
Brett Dasovic
I mean, not just that, like there'll be plenty of them that do go shop at the grocery store that just still Understand the importance of hard work and that nobody's coming to save you. And even if they don't necessarily have the chickens in the backyard or are farming, they understand that it's pointless to argue about whether it's right or wrong for the world to be so cold, but just accept that it is and push forward pragmatically.
Tim Pool
It's funny because I've had this conversation probably like you guys probably have, but for 10 years now, I've talked to a bunch of people. I did an interview with some survivalists. I think it's like 10 years ago. And I asked them, what do you think would happen in the event of, like, social collapse? Which political faction would survive? And these guys were actually kind of. They were like moderate, urban liberal, but more like where we are not far left crazy woke. And they're like, oh, they're right. In two seconds, they're like, I mean, just come on. These tend to live in rural areas already, tend to live far away from gas stations and stores, tend to stock up on supplies more than when you live in a city. You have no groceries in your fridge. You walk downstairs. Like, if you live in New York, you could literally live above. Literally live above a restaurant.
Brett Dasovic
More likely to know somebody who knows those skills in the book that they're going to have to go and find. Yeah, you know, I know it themselves.
Tim Pool
I'll tell you, one of the best place I ever lived. It was brief, but above a Subway. Every morning you wake up to the smell of fresh Subway bread. And then I walk downstairs and I get my sandwich made for a couple bucks. It was great.
Brett Dasovic
Make sure Jerry doesn't sneak into your room at night.
Ryan Reynolds
Gross.
Phil Labonte
Gross.
Tim Pool
That was never a thing.
Phil Labonte
Thing.
Tim Pool
He wasn't going to sneak in your room.
Brett Dasovic
He couldn't have fit anyway.
Tim Pool
You were too old.
Brett Dasovic
You were living on your own. You were living on your.
Ryan Reynolds
It gets worse.
Tim Pool
All right, we're gonna go to your chats, my friends. So smash the like button. Share the show with everyone you know. Don't forget, the uncensored call in show is coming up in about 30 minutes. You don't want to miss it. It's not so family friendly, but it's always fun and funny. And you as members of the Tim cast, Discord, get to call in and talk to us. But in order to watch, you got to be a member of Rumble Premium. Use promo code Rumble. I'm Sorry, promo code TIM10@Rumble.com to get 10 bucks off your annual membership. All right, we got Badmouth Bandit. He says I'm a millennial journeyman tool and die maker. Learn from a boomer. It is one of the most overlooked trades that has died out and we need more. I hope I have some younger people to pass the trade on.
Brett Dasovic
And beyond just the skill set itself being useful in the real world. One of the greatest markets you can be in right now if you're looking to create social media content is any type of niche skill. Makes for like, you do huge numbers not just on tick tock, but YouTubers and stuff who have like cobblers. Right. Or anything. Woodworking stuff like that.
Phil Labonte
You're an electrician and you do like really, really clean installs of. Of wiring and stuff. People want to see it.
Tim Pool
All right. Happy Garon says. Did anything ever come of the idea of buying the Lenin statue for your chickens to poop on? I think we briefly explored it and then basically abandoned the idea. That's why I was like, guys, don't, don't, don't give us any money for this. We don't know if we can do it. But I do love the idea. Maybe we should put together a give Send go to raise the funds to buy it and then donate it to a gun tuber.
Phil Labonte
Is there a. If there's a. An artist, a sculptor in the discord that could actually sculpt one for you?
Tim Pool
No, no, no, no, no, no. Make. And to make a statue of Lenin. Now how about. How about you make a statue of Trump spanking Lenin and then we put it up in City square somewhere? Like we done it to a city. No, you know, we do. Do we make Trump spanking Lenin and then we sneak into New York in the middle of the night and drop it off in front of the bull? You know, they did that with that. The girl defying the bull. That's still there.
Phil Labonte
I can't believe that. It's so idiotic.
Tim Pool
Yep.
Phil Labonte
There are no men in New York that would just put their foot down and say, no, ladies, you can't put the girl in front of the bull.
Brett Dasovic
Is that like on Wall street or something? Yeah. Okay, that's the one I'm thinking of.
Tim Pool
Like, just north of Wall Street. Read it. All right. Commander says, hey, Tim, if you have a chance, I think you, you all with Phil should look into the song lyrics for the song Toxic by Starset. As it is what you have been saying for months. Indeed. All right, we'll take a look. Sh. Water says, oh, no. The cheap knockoff Chinese items on Amazon are going to cost more. Whatever will we do? I guess we're just gonna have to buy the real, the legit products.
Phil Labonte
Yeah. There was a lot of talk about how the White House was responding to the idea of Amazon putting the information about the tariffs and stuff. And I mean, personally, my first thought was, I don't have a problem with Amazon making it clear when you're buying a Chinese.
Tim Young
Yeah.
Phil Labonte
Knockoff. I don't have a problem with that at all.
Tim Young
I saw a car commercial the other day when they said our cars aren't affected by. I forget what I think it was.
Tim Pool
Toyota.
Tim Young
Yeah. They're not affected by tariffs. And, and at the very end, they go because they were made in the United States. And it was like, why don't you just say American made?
Brett Dasovic
American made a way better selling point.
Tim Young
It was so weird how it was framed.
Tim Pool
All right, Alpha Turkey says Fallout show is the way to do it. Not Last of Us. Yeah, well, the funny thing about the Last of Us is. So I, I was looking at the reviews today. There were a bunch of reviews from people who never played the game. And there's like, boomers, and they're angry that Joel dies because they did not play the game. They didn't know that the game basically ruined the whole story or have just.
Brett Dasovic
Never been online ever a day in their life. If, because if you have, you would have known that that happens even if you haven't played the game.
Tim Pool
I mean, look, if you're 60 years old and you're watching what's on HBO.
Brett Dasovic
Or whatever, not Joel, I need my Pedro Pascal.
Tim Pool
I'm terrible casting choices. What are they thinking?
Brett Dasovic
Okay, okay, here's the thing. He is overcast and everything. You are 110. Correct. But the only reason that first season had any emotional resonance at all was because he did a fairly good job of being an average to above average actor. He is just overexposed.
Tim Pool
What were they thinking with the, with casting? Bella Ramsey.
Brett Dasovic
Yeah.
Tim Young
Is that the they Them. She goes by they.
Tim Pool
Does she?
Tim Young
Yes.
Brett Dasovic
Ah, she does.
Phil Labonte
So annoying.
Tim Young
Well, not Pretty Girls anymore.
Tim Pool
Was. Was the first game Super Woke. My understanding it was not. No, the second game was super woke, though.
Brett Dasovic
It was the. It was the second. There's a YouTuber named Greg Owen who does a great video dissecting the second game and how it could have been improved upon to make the show better. He had a video a couple weeks ago. I recommend every going checking that out.
Tim Pool
You know, I, I, I just, I watched season one and I, I wanted to finish the season because I, you know, it's, it's a, it's A cultural item. But the gay sex scenes that were in it that weren't in the game, I thought was gratuitous and strange.
Brett Dasovic
Well. And it just brought the whole thing to a stop. Right. It wasn't integrated in any sort of way that felt like they were writing it to actually move the story forward. It just episode three, and then it's just. Just bam. And everything stops.
Tim Pool
And I just want to stress that's not in the game. Yeah, they were like, we're going to deviate from the game storyline to give you a whole episode just literally about gay sex. It's. It's not from the game, but it's not just.
Brett Dasovic
It's not just that episode. It was also like episode seven in the mall in season one also brought it to a grinding halt.
Tim Pool
Also not in the first game. Yeah, it was. It was like the. The bonus after game or whatever where it's like, did you know that Ellie is gay?
Brett Dasovic
If you want to watch a fantastic show based on a video game, you watch the Twisted Metal series on Peacock. That show is really.
Tim Pool
Oh, yeah. When did that come out last?
Brett Dasovic
Two years ago. The new second season comes out, like next month or something.
Tim Pool
Oh, I should watch that. Yes. I didn't really. Yeah. Never even check that one out.
Brett Dasovic
Nobody watches Peacock.
Tim Young
I really liked Fallout. Anything Goggins right now? Other than White Lotus, I mean.
Phil Labonte
No.
Brett Dasovic
You go watch Justified.
Tim Pool
Fallout was good. Yeah. Yeah, I thought it was. I thought it was good. No. There you go.
Brett Dasovic
If you want Walton Goggins, it's Justified.
Tim Young
As Boyd Crowder or Baby Billy and I. Righteous Gemstone.
Tim Pool
The funny thing is there was an article from Collider that said that it's being review bombed, but it was like the review bomb isn't isolated to Rotten Tomatoes. And then I'm like, guys, if every review aggregator is negative, it's probably because the show sucks. But, you know, they were like, people are just targeting minorities and women. You're basically saying a bunch of white guys went online with nothing better to do to just spam your show that it sucks. Maybe it's just a bad show. All right, what have we here? Amerito Barrio says it's 10pm do you know where your kids are? For the last time, no.
Brett Dasovic
Have you ever watched those.
Tim Pool
What's the reference?
Brett Dasovic
Have you ever watched those old commercials? The. It's 10pm do you know where your children are?
Tim Pool
I watched them when I was.
Brett Dasovic
Yeah.
Tim Pool
A kid.
Brett Dasovic
Yeah. Watching back now. It's crazy. It's like your parents just forgot you were there. It Was they needed a TV commercial to remind you. To remind them that you existed and hum along.
Tim Pool
That's weird.
Brett Dasovic
At Home Alone.
Tim Young
It was really. Especially during the holidays. Don't leave your kid at home, you know, twice.
Brett Dasovic
I mean, the best part is, like, they come home in the first one and they just kind of leave immediately. Go into the kitchen.
Tim Pool
Like, no, wasn't the second one, like, he got on the wrong plane or something?
Brett Dasovic
Yeah, he got on the wrong plane. And like, that's. That's another one pre 911 air travel, where they're like, he hits the. He's running into the. Into the, like the. Like where you get on board and he knocks all the tickets out of the lady's hand. They're like, board it him just. We should let him go.
Tim Pool
Look, I've been saying I want to do this forever, but we just need, like, a good producer. Because I'd love to make short films just mocking these movies. Because if you did Home Alone Today, it would be so funny. It would be like that, you know, she gets on the plane and then she goes, Kevin. She freaks out. The next scene is her being arrested with, like, Child services coming and taking the kids away. All of them. And she's crying and they're like, disgusting. It's just like, that's the end of the show.
Tim Young
You know, also, don't Forget here, if 911 would have happened, you know, Kevin would have been. And it would. Okay, fine.
Phil Labonte
Yeah.
Brett Dasovic
It's like Ryan Coogler is going to be bringing the X Files back. And I just laugh because it's like I see an alien click, and then they just have the photo. And he's like, oh, though you could write around that. You could be like, the alien has some type of, like, armor every time. That stops it from showing up on phones.
Tim Pool
Well, no, but like, X Files. X Files was a bunch of different. It's an anthology, right? It was a bunch of different things. So it's like the FBI guy goes, we have a report of a strange beast seen in, you know, Northern Virginia.
Brett Dasovic
Don't go watch the Jersey Devil episode.
Tim Pool
And we're gonna. We're gonna go check it out. And then it's. The guy is like, every time he tries to film the monster, and then his phone, he drops it in the lake. No, the proof. Then the next episode is like, there may be. Someone was found exsanguinated with two bite marks in their neck. We think it might be a vampire. And it's like, was there any photos? No. And then it shows the Scene of the vampire getting the guy, and the vampire bites the phone. Phone. Dang it. My phone.
Brett Dasovic
Every time they solve it by somebody just realizing. To upload to the cloud.
Phil Labonte
Default uploads stream it.
Tim Pool
Every single phenomenon also breaks your phone, no matter what it is.
Brett Dasovic
Yeah.
Tim Pool
It's an alien ship comes, your phone vaporizes. The mummy has the ability to levitate cell phones. You know, vampires emit electromagnetic pulses. Which camera.
Brett Dasovic
I was saying, like, a good writer could actually write around that. The fact that, you know, the. The meme version of the show is like, I'm gonna get it this time. And every time it gets knocked out of his hand.
Tim Pool
You can never have a witness.
Brett Dasovic
Nope.
Tim Pool
Or you can just do a short modern version where it's like. Hey, Scully, we got a report someone was found exsanguinated with two bite marks in the neck. Mulder, are you saying it's a vampire? Yeah. There's a video of it. Look.
Brett Dasovic
Social media being what it was, people wouldn't believe it because they just think that it's faked somehow. Because nobody, Nobody wants to be fair.
Tim Pool
That's actually how you write around it.
Brett Dasovic
Yeah.
Tim Pool
So they have the video and they're like, fake. None of this is admissible. None of it proves anything because it's probably just fake. Yeah, and they have to go and see for themselves.
Brett Dasovic
Boulders. Gonna have to wear a body cam.
Tim Pool
Are they bringing Mulder back?
Brett Dasovic
I think. I think that him and Scully will make appearances, but it'll likely be passing it off to new agents.
Tim Pool
What about the Smoking Man? Is he still alive?
Brett Dasovic
He's. I. I don't remember what happened. Remember they brought it back in 2016. From 2016 to 2018, but that was.
Phil Labonte
He's still alive. I'm gonna buy a pack of marrows.
Brett Dasovic
That actor is still alive. William B D Davis.
Tim Pool
All right. Trevin lane says the U.S. supplies roughly 1 third of the world's grain supply. We are largely food self sufficient as well as energy independent. It is manufacturing that is a big issue as we have exported it to the ccp.
Tim Young
Well, you did say we'd be eating oatmeal.
Tim Pool
Yeah, corn. I ordered some of Cousin T's gluten free pancakes and it's a. It's corn flour. Yeah.
Phil Labonte
That means you're going to have grits.
Tim Pool
Sounds really good. Actually.
Phil Labonte
Grits are great.
Tim Pool
Sounds very good. I've been. I've been putting Cousin Tea's syrup on. Look, I'm. I'm the dad, so I'm in charge of breakfast, which means waffles. It's all I can make. I mean, I could probably make something else, but I don't want to. So. What. I figured it out, though. So what I'm doing is four eggs, lots of eggs. And then I'm just mixing up the. The grains that I use. Almond flour, maybe some rice, maybe some cassava. Different. So it's not always the same thing. It's just the same shape type.
Brett Dasovic
Not an omelette guy?
Tim Pool
No, no, no. Because you need some kind of grain or fiber. You know what I mean? So you do some almond. We. We used chickpea flour the other day. Lower carbs, higher protein, higher fiber. It's great. And then we just schlop some Cousin T's, blueberry syrup all over it.
Phil Labonte
Nice. I got chickpea pasta. It's great.
Tim Pool
It's good stuff. Great. Yeah, we actually, we. We deep fried chicken and chickpea batter. Super crispy and. Good.
Phil Labonte
Sounds good.
Tim Pool
Good.
Brett Dasovic
Yeah.
Tim Pool
Absolutely amazing. All right. What. What have we here? Omg, Puppy says, Tim, if you have chickens, you can make gunpowder. Look up neer beds. Is that what that is from chicken poop? Indeed. So when the world ends, chickens will be the most valuable thing ever. Phil, dude bro says, if you need a shirt, go to Goodwill. There is so much we can reuse.
Tim Young
Goodwill's so expensive now, though, though.
Brett Dasovic
Yeah, they've.
Tim Young
They've caught on to people, and there's resellers and stuff, and so ever since.
Brett Dasovic
The phone in your pocket now they look up the price of everything on ebay. And half those Goodwills sell on ebay as well.
Tim Pool
I remember when I was a teenager, I found a pair of like, 500 blue jeans at a thrift store. What were they called? Salvation Army. Was a Salvation Army.
Brett Dasovic
I found a copy of Turtles in Time at a Goodwill.
Tim Pool
Oh, nice. Interesting. Let's see what we got here in the old rumble ranch. Pakora rod says Dan P. Here. Do you think we can get more America first congressmen in during the midterms and have them put into law many of Trump's executive orders Possible.
Phil Labonte
All depends on the economy.
Tim Pool
Yeah, I don't.
Tim Young
I don't know if I like our chances in the midterms right now.
Brett Dasovic
Nope.
Tim Pool
Shadow says must read skateboard that says be gay. Use the left lane. So the. The. The idea was, you know, the left has that meme. Be gay, do crime.
Phil Labonte
Yep.
Tim Pool
So I was like, I'm gonna make a skateboard that's just white with black bold letters saying don't be gay, which is the inversion of that, but obviously that's considered offensive. And so my point is how come they can make merch and sell it? Nobody cares as b gay do crime. Even the conservatives are just like whatever. But if I were to make a skateboards that don't be gay, you'd know they'd lose their mind lines. So then you know, Andy was like, do both make one that says be gay. And I was like, oh, it's like give the people a choice.
Brett Dasovic
You can only sell them. There's a pack. You have to buy both.
Tim Pool
That way everyone's. Yeah, we made it for everybody so now everybody will like us. Yeah, it would be black bored with all white writing saying be gay. And then I did a poll saying which, which board graphic should we make? Don't be gay or be gay. And obviously don't be gay wins. But everyone agreed that we would sell out instantly if we, if we met like a thousand of them. They just instantly would all sell out. People would hang them on their walls.
Brett Dasovic
Yeah, they would.
Tim Pool
Ah, maybe. All right, Pinochet says they do understand that three out of five people would rather take out the establishment with violence as opposed to stand with the establishment in protest. That's a question. Well, I don't know what the far left would do. They just hate Trump. They hate the right. All right, Evan Fria says, what are yalls thoughts on the meme coins that were done by Trump for him and for Melania largely don't care. So I don't talk about it. I'm indifferent.
Brett Dasovic
I would have avoided it optics wise.
Tim Pool
I think I have some.
Tim Young
I don't buy merch for anybody ever.
Brett Dasovic
I don't either.
Tim Pool
I have, I have some stock, I have like 13 shares of, of Truth Social because I thought it was funny. And then what the left does because they lie is they act, they were, they were acting like I had thousands of shares or I spent like hundreds of grand on dojo. I was like, I'm sorry, not on Dojan. True Social. I was like it's like 100 bucks. It was like oh boy, I can have like a little souvenir. I'll buy it. And they were like haha, look you're losing your money. And I was like bro, I lost like $20. I, I lost a hundred dollars the moment I bought them. It's, it's, it's worth nothing. I don't know.
Brett Dasovic
I bought like a dollar of mu dang coin when Mudang came out. I'm, I'm down to like 43 cents.
Phil Labonte
I kind of wish that I got in early on Mudango.
Tim Pool
Spike says get bullets, golden canned tuna. Same as the sword, jewel and mirror. When I was talking about setting up a. A shed, I was largely thinking of having like generally books for production. But yeah, making like a sewing machine, probably a wood splitter, you know, like maybe some, maybe like a gear powered hand crank, something so you just, you know, it spins and it goes back and forth. You put the wood in, then it goes and splits it. Yeah, gear ratios, man and pulleys, all that stuff. And then probably a kiln, you know. You what? What is it? A crucible? Yeah, actually we have a crucible and a kiln. Yeah. And then you know, make stuff.
Tim Young
If things go under, I'm just going to be a criminal. I have no viable skills other than stealing. So that's what I would go with.
Phil Labonte
Trickery, criminal criminals, way more dangerous than you think if that kind of situation.
Tim Pool
Yeah, because in a social collapse, con man isn't a thing. So it's basically barbarian or you know, why loose civilian. Like either you just let me run.
Tim Young
With this idea and be done quick.
Phil Labonte
Ah, fair enough, Fair enough. You're like looking for the fast exit. I see you.
Brett Dasovic
If anybody's looking for a good show about the end of the world that they might not remember it was called Jeremiah. I think it was like Showtime back in like 2004. Very, very good. I recommend watching that one better than the Last of Us.
Tim Pool
What is twisted Metal about?
Brett Dasovic
So it's basically like the collapse of society. He moves stuff from one place to another. He's like a courier.
Tim Pool
Oh, it's not about people in arena driving around using.
Brett Dasovic
No, no. There's going to be scenes in that in season two, but it's, it's, it has a plot and that's what the reason I like what I loved about him. Like the, the shows of the games that are going to be successful are the ones that have limited story structure so Hollywood can't F them up. Like the reason Sonic is so successful is cuz despite all of the Sonic lore that the weirdos online know about, like the people that are going to go to the Sonic movie are the people like me who are millennials who would. You know, you'll bring your kids or you'll go with your friends to go see Sonic, the Knuckles show is okay too.
Tim Pool
Yeah, it is funny how they tried to do like realistic versions of things thinking that would work and then it doesn't.
Brett Dasovic
It doesn't. It doesn't. Yeah, it doesn't work.
Tim Young
What are they doing?
Brett Dasovic
Echo the dolphin I. I asked that one just. I'd want that for the soundtrack alone. It'd be like. Like a. Like somehow have Echo the Dolphin and Free Willy show up together. But they'd have to make it all cgi. That would suck.
Tim Young
Episode three, Like, Echo just drowns.
Brett Dasovic
Yeah.
Tim Pool
Isn't it kind of weird that they made that game? Like, they used to make games back in the day that made no sense.
Brett Dasovic
Yep.
Tim Pool
You know, like Toe Jam and Earl. I bought it recently, and then I found out it was Part two, and I'm angry. I want to straight with a hammer. Because obviously Toe Jam Mineral One was a great game where you're walking around, you get roller skates and, you know, and you go over the water. Part two is like a weird platform. It makes no sense. I don't want to play that.
Brett Dasovic
Games were awesome back then.
Tim Pool
Yeah, I was. So I went to. I went to. There's a store in Winchester, Virginia. Virginia, called Back to the media. Yep. And that's great. So I recommend them. You guys, check it out. Because they got all the old stuff. They got any assets? Any ass.
Brett Dasovic
I mean, I know.
Tim Pool
It's just.
Brett Dasovic
It's so like, the only. The only stuff that I have is, like, I don't play modern games. I play retro games. And it's so, so damn expensive if you want to play retro games.
Tim Pool
But. But I was there, and I was just looking at all of the different games, and then I'm just remembering, you know, you know, these Gen Z and these Gen Alpha, they just don't. They don't know what they missed. Because when we were growing up, you had, like. We had a rack with, like, 30 NES games in it, and it was just like, what am I gonna play now? Wrecking Crew member, Wrecking Crew. It was like Mario with a sledgehammer and you gotta break lockers or something and brick walls. And now there's like, if you're Gen z, you had one game, GTA 5, for 10 years. It's the same game no matter what. Yeah. There's different online versions, so it's no surprise. They all just played Minecraft. And Minecraft, Fortnite, Fortnite and gta because no new games get made.
Brett Dasovic
Yeah. I can go back and play Streets of Rage and Streets of Rage 2 and Still Love it as much now.
Phil Labonte
I just missed the days when, like, a game was released and the game was actually done when it was released.
Tim Pool
Well, to be fair, that wasn't always true. But what would happen is if the game got released and there was a Bug or a glitch, it would become an exploit that players would learn about and use in the gameplay. So like Mario 64 for instance, when you watch Speedruns, when they do the, like any percentage speed run, they jump through walls, they, they use the glitches as a skill component of the game. In Smash Brothers Melee, there was something, something called wave dashing, where this is a fighting game for those that don't know. If you did an air dodge and hit the ground at the same time, you could do it so quickly you basically glide across the screen. They went, oops, that was a mistake. So the next game that came out, they said, get rid of that, we don't want that. And it was a skill component of the game. You didn't know how to do it. So now games are all ruined with updates. Because I remember like Destiny is a good example example. In Destiny, it's like a first person shooter and you have a vehicle called a sparrow. When the game first came out, you could ride, you could, you could walk up to a wall. And then if you pulled out the Sparrow vehicle, like it's a future. So it just like forms in front of you. You could go through the wall and explore, you know, zones you're not supposed to be in. And then they went, oops, can't do that. You're banned. And we're patching this. You can never do it again. And that's like, well, that was fun for a second.
Phil Labonte
Now banning people over that is completely and totally bro. World of Warcraft watched move.
Tim Pool
The worst thing they ever did in World of Warcraft was, was make flying. Big mistake. And in the, like back in the OG days, 20 years ago now, you could glitch through walls and jump up and climb around and explore this whole world they made. And they'd ban you if you went into, if you went to the wrong zones. And then they eventually updated the game so you can't do it anymore. Whack. Gen Z doesn't know what they've lost. Lost.
Brett Dasovic
I still go play. I play my N64 all the time.
Tim Pool
Isn't it amazing how like a link to the past is one of the best games ever made and, and they just don't. Here's, here's something I was thinking about. A link to the past for snes. Super Mario World Fresnes. Those are great games with great formats. They don't make games like that anymore. No, obviously they've, they've tried remaking Mario. Like they've made platform Mario versions again because they realize people like it and they did Mario Maker here. But literally take the same graphics, the same 16 bit in the music and make a new version and sell it. Because just because it's rudimentary technology doesn't mean the game isn't fun. Like chess is, is, is a thousand year old. Like chess is like 50,000 year old technology. It's a little carved blocks and the game is, is what? A thousand years old. So a game like a link to the past. This top down view and he's running around and you know, you swing your sword and you hold it and he spins. Every time. They make a game now, it's got to be this updated third person 3D open world version.
Brett Dasovic
Old Castlevania.
Tim Young
Look at the new stupid Mario Kart where it's like, why do I need an open world in Mario Kart?
Tim Pool
They did that?
Tim Young
Yes. The new, the new 80 switch to Mario Kart is open world. So you can just stop racing and go.
Brett Dasovic
And it's lost.
Tim Young
Yeah, they're out of ideas.
Tim Pool
Actually. That sounds pretty fun. You can just like go for a drive to the mountains.
Tim Young
I think you. Yeah, but you do it kind of once and you're like, I, I kind.
Tim Pool
Of want to do that. But can you even get the Switch 2 right now?
Tim Young
No, I don't think so. It's like 500 and then the games are 80 bucks now. So it's like, you know, so if.
Tim Pool
If they, if they took the exact same graphics and style of like a link to the past, because the graphics were all what they needed to be. They don't need to be any more than that for that game. It's like a board game. It's like a digital board game. They could just be like, like here's the next adventure of, of Link and Hyrule and there's new dungeons and it's a new map with new quests. I would buy every one of those. Those are the games I would play. I have no problem playing GTA or, you know, I like playing trials. Super good at, you know, trials, fusion and rising. Those games are fun, make new levels, keep the same gameplay. I'm totally fine with it. But they stopped making games like Nintendo games like the OG games like Genesis. They didn't need to stop those game formats. Yeah, that's what's weird.
Tim Young
I was the first kid on my block to have a super Nintendo back in the day when it first came out my I, we couldn't afford a Nintendo, a regular nes because I'm so old and, and we Grew up in Baltimore and they said, my parents told me when SNES comes out or whenever the next best thing comes out, we'll get it for you. And I remember going to Macy's and getting it.
Tim Pool
I remember when my dad rented SNES from Blockbuster.
Brett Dasovic
Yeah, we rent. We rented a 64 before I ended up getting one. I was basically that kid in that video. Nintendo 64.
Tim Young
Didn't you have to put down like 50 bucks or something?
Tim Pool
Deposit I. Very little.
Brett Dasovic
We had a. We had like a local. It wasn't a chain, but like a local rental store where you could rent an N64. I still. Those were a lot of core memories, like renting the whole console for the weekend and Mario. Sorry, regular Sega Genesis, not Nintendo 64.
Tim Pool
So it's also kind of crazy that super like Mario 3 Epic Games, always going to be good. Super Mario world, amazing. Mario 64, amazing. And after that, what do we got?
Brett Dasovic
Nothing like on that system.
Tim Pool
No, I just mean in terms of really great games that were surprisingly revolutionary and fantastic. Like what's that? What's the Mario where you got the jet, the water pack?
Tim Young
It's like Super Mario Sunshine.
Tim Pool
Sure, it's whatever, I guess.
Phil Labonte
Sunshine, yeah.
Tim Young
The best thing to come out of that was what's the song? Gusty Gulch or something like that that a lot of people use for weddings.
Tim Pool
Oh.
Tim Young
So. Yeah. Yeah.
Tim Pool
Really? Yeah.
Tim Young
Yeah.
Tim Pool
Well, how about that?
Tim Young
It's a late night when I'm not looking up plus size park hoppers, I'm looking up, looking up nerd weddings.
Tim Pool
The real Hydra says, I buy a game and I find out it was part two. Imagine that I was going to break it because I was so wrong. I would. I would say that if your cognitive capabilities are such limited that you don't understand what sarcasm is or hyperbole, then you, sir, need assistance in watching a show such as this. Or maybe it's not the kind of show for you.
Tim Young
Or part two is, you know, part one for you. And then you get the prequel.
Tim Pool
It's a different game. Have you played it's been a Long Time. Have you played that one? You guys remember it?
Brett Dasovic
It's like I remember it, but I didn't play it.
Tim Pool
Yeah, you're like walking around and you get an elevator, go to the next level and then you get items and it's just silly. It's fun. You know what the craziest thing about these games? You can't play them on HD D. Yeah.
Tim Young
Oh, really?
Tim Pool
Because the pixels are so big. It's. You can't see anything. It's so weird.
Brett Dasovic
I play like any like anytime I play my Sega or my N64, I have a smaller old TV to to play it on.
Tim Pool
My friends, we're going to go to that members only calling show. So smash the like button. Share the show with everyone. You know, word of mouth. That's why, that's what makes shows big. Makes them big because everybody's like, dude, you got to watch. You can follow me on X and Instagram @timcast that uncensored show will be@rumble.com Timcast IRL. You got to be a Rumble prem member. Use promo code TIM10 to watch. Not so family friendly but always fun and funny. So it should be fun. Tim, you want to shout anything out?
Tim Young
Yeah, go follow me at Tim runs his mouth and that's kind of it. I mean you guys can go, oh, you know what? I should do this. I, I CEO of a company, go get the Veebs app on your phones, the VE's app. Make sure that you don't give money to companies that hate you. You can go scan UPC codes when you go to shopping, when you go shopping. And it shows you just how conservative or liberal products are. It's kind of fun.
Tim Pool
Oh, interesting.
Tim Young
Yeah.
Brett Dasovic
Guys, if you want to follow me, I'm on Instagram and on Twix at Brett Dasovic on both of those platforms. But what you should do is watch Pop Culture Crisis. We are live Monday through Friday, 3pm Eastern Standard Time on YouTube. Check us out there. It's a lot of fun.
Phil Labonte
I am Phil that remains on Twix. I'm Phil that remains official on Instagram. The band is all that remains. Our new record dropped on January 31st. It's called Antifragile. You can check it out on YouTube, Apple Music Music Spotify, Pandora, Deezer. You know the Internet. And don't forget the left lanes for crime.
Tim Pool
We will see you all over@rumble.com Timcast IRL in about 30 seconds. Thanks for hanging out.
Timcast IRL Podcast Episode Summary
Episode Title: Trump Celebrates 100 Days Amid RECORD Lawsuits & Unconstitutional Judicial Actions w/ Tim Young
Host/Author: Timcast Media
Release Date: April 30, 2025
In this compelling episode of Timcast IRL, host Tim Pool alongside guests Phil Labonte, Tim Young, and Brett Dasovic delve deep into the tumultuous landscape of Donald Trump's first 100 days in office. The discussion encompasses a broad spectrum of topics, including the administration's unprecedented legal challenges, allegations of unconstitutional judicial actions, potential civil unrest, and the looming demographic crises that could shape America's future.
The episode opens with Tim Pool highlighting the significance of Trump's centennial milestone, albeit casting it in a controversial light. Trump has reportedly faced 220 lawsuits within his first 100 days, more than any predecessor. Additionally, the administration is grappling with a record number of unconstitutional universal injunctions, which Tim refers to as a "judicial coup."
Tim Pool [07:15]: "Donald Trump may not be FDR, he's got a bunch of other things under his belt... I think he's done more than what any other president has ever done, especially as a conservative and a Republican."
Phil Labonte commends Trump's actions at the border, giving him a B+ grade for enforcing immigration laws and activating military assets to curb illegal crossings.
Phil Labonte [07:30]: "From having a massive influx every day to almost none or very, very few... that's what's driving Trump's approval."
Tim Young adds to the praise, emphasizing Trump’s aggressive use of executive orders and his relentless signing of directives.
Tim Young [09:05]: "He's doing absolutely radical things. A lot of people might say these are normal, but they're anything but."
The hosts discuss the mixed signals from approval polls, with corporate media outlets portraying Trump as "double digits underwater," while Rasmussen shows a smaller decline. Tim Pool criticizes the reliability of aggregate polling, suggesting that only consistent sources like Rasmussen provide meaningful insights.
Tim Pool [10:55]: "These corporate polls are just playing games. If you track any single poll you trust, like Rasmussen, they are showing Trump down."
Matt Taibbi's article is referenced, raising alarms about a potential "soft civil war" driven by escalating political tensions and legal maneuvers against the Trump administration. The discussion underscores fears that the administration's actions are undermining democratic norms.
Tim Pool [14:57]: "With over 220 lawsuits and more universal injunctions than any other administration, we are witnessing an unprecedented assault on the constitutional order."
Eric Weinstein's concept of an "administrative civil war" is cited, emphasizing the deepening divide between political factions and the risk of increased authoritarianism.
A critical segment of the podcast focuses on the "demographic cliff," a term describing the projected decline in birth rates since 2007. This decline is expected to precipitate a labor shortage, leading to economic downturns as businesses struggle to find workers.
Tim Pool [15:00]: "People stopped having kids. Now we’re entering a phase where there’s a shortage of young people, causing businesses to shut down due to lack of labor."
Tim Young elaborates on the consequences of this demographic shift, predicting a cascade of business closures and a fundamental crisis in economic productivity.
Tim Young [17:00]: "When there's an abrupt population collapse, fixed infrastructures like businesses can't scale down effectively, leading to simultaneous closures and economic train wrecks."
The hosts discuss potential societal impacts, including increased crime rates and the erosion of community structures as older generations pass away and younger ones are insufficient to sustain the workforce.
The podcast addresses Reddit's controversial decision to ban researchers from the University of Zurich who deployed AI bots to manipulate conversations on the platform. This experiment involved bots posing as various individuals to assess the persuasiveness of large language models.
Tim Pool [29:57]: "Reddit's lawyer called the project an improper and highly unethical experiment. This isn't new; Democrats have been using similar tactics to sway online opinions."
The hosts criticize the use of AI in shaping public discourse, arguing that such manipulations undermine genuine conversations and skew public perception.
Brett Dasovic [58:36]: "Journalists write biased stories, influencers parrot them, and the average person only reads headlines, forming opinions without deeper understanding."
A significant portion of the discussion centers on the perceived decline in the quality of modern media and video games. The hosts lament the shift from innovative, story-driven content to formulaic and politically charged narratives.
Tim Pool [91:11]: "Super Mario World, Mario 64 were revolutionary. Now, games are just updated 3D versions lacking the charm and challenge of their predecessors."
Phil Labonte and Brett Dasovic express frustration over the homogenization of gaming experiences, where once-unique titles are recycled with minimal creativity, often tainted by political correctness.
Phil Labonte [122:44]: "It's unreal how genre-defining games lost their essence with every update, driven by corporate agendas rather than player enjoyment."
The conversation also touches on the negative portrayal of certain demographics in media, including the stigmatization of the ultra-rich and the overemphasis on diversity to the detriment of storytelling.
The hosts delve into the behavioral and mental health issues plaguing Generation Z, attributing these problems to societal neglect, excessive screen time, and a lack of practical skills.
Tim Pool [62:18]: "Gen Z is developmentally disabled with social anxiety disorders. They can't answer the phone or interact properly, leading to a failure to launch into adulthood."
Brett Dasovic highlights the negative coping mechanisms adopted by younger generations, such as reliance on medication like Ozempic for weight loss, leading to severe side effects like vision loss.
Brett Dasovic [89:15]: "People are going blind from taking Ozempic, yet they're using it to control their appetites instead of addressing their issues head-on."
As the episode wraps up, the hosts reflect on the intertwined crises of political instability, demographic decline, and societal fragmentation. They emphasize the urgency of addressing these issues through grassroots activism, self-sufficiency, and a return to foundational values.
Tim Pool [94:35]: "The end result feels like living in a post-apocalyptic world where self-sufficiency is paramount. We need to prepare by acquiring practical skills and reducing dependence on failing systems."
The discussion culminates with a call to action for listeners to engage with the Timcast community, participate in upcoming live shows, and stay informed through direct, uncensored conversations.
Notable Quotes:
Tim Pool [07:15]: "Donald Trump may not be FDR, he's got a bunch of other things under his belt... I think he's done more than what any other president has ever done, especially as a conservative and a Republican."
Phil Labonte [07:30]: "From having a massive influx every day to almost none or very, very few... that's what's driving Trump's approval."
Tim Young [09:05]: "He's doing absolutely radical things. A lot of people might say these are normal, but they're anything but."
Tim Pool [29:57]: "Reddit's lawyer called the project an improper and highly unethical experiment. This isn't new; Democrats have been using similar tactics to sway online opinions."
Tim Pool [15:00]: "People stopped having kids. Now we’re entering a phase where there’s a shortage of young people, causing businesses to shut down due to lack of labor."
Brett Dasovic [58:36]: "Journalists write biased stories, influencers parrot them, and the average person only reads headlines, forming opinions without deeper understanding."
Tim Pool [91:11]: "Super Mario World, Mario 64 were revolutionary. Now, games are just updated 3D versions lacking the charm and challenge of their predecessors."
This episode of Timcast IRL offers a critical examination of the current political and societal upheavals, blending sharp analysis with spirited debate. For those seeking an unfiltered perspective on America's most pressing issues, this episode provides a comprehensive and thought-provoking listen.