The ThoughtCrime crew discusses the most essential topics of the weed, including:
-What do they make of Mattel's first-ever autistic Barbie doll?
-Does AI mean that Hollywood actors are obsolete forever?
-Who is "Amelia" and why is she the new avatar of European nationalism?
Watch every episode ad-free on members.charliekirk.com!
Get new merch at charliekirkstore.com!
Support the show: http://www.charliekirk.com/support
See omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.
00:00:03
Speaker 1: My name is Charlie Kirk.
00:00:05
Speaker 2: I run the largest pro American student organization in the country, fighting for the future of our republic. My call is to fight evil and to proclaim truth. If the most important thing for you is just feeling good, you're gonna end up miserable. But if the most important thing is doing good, you'll end up purposeful. College is a scam, everybody. You got to stop sending your kids to college. You should get married as young as possible and have as many kids as possible. Go start at turning point, you would say, college chapter. Go start at turning point, you say high school chapter. Go find out how your church can get involved. Sign up and become an activist. I gave my life to the Lord in fifth grade, most important decision I ever made in my life, and I encourage you to do the same.
00:00:45
Speaker 1: Here I am.
00:00:46
Speaker 3: Lord, Use me.
00:00:48
Speaker 2: Buckle up, everybody, Here we go. The Charlie Kirk Show is proudly sponsored by Preserved Gold, leading gold and silver experts and the only precious metals company I recommend to my family, friends and viewers.
00:01:09
Speaker 1: Hell, ladies and gentlemen, welcome to another edition.
00:01:12
Speaker 4: This week's edition of Thought Crime Thursday it's a great week. It's a great week in America. Donald Trump's ice officers and agents are out on the ground in Minneapolis. The lib hordes are running towards them, and they are vomiting on the snow because of the tear gas that is being launched and volleyed in their direction. Incredible scenes, incredible content. Sorry to all the people who say nothing ever happened. Sorry to all the black pillars out there, the Peannicans, you are losing. We are winning. Donald Trump is winning, America is winning. But tonight we're here to commit some thought crime. So who do we got tonight? We got Andrew there. I think we got Blake yo, yo.
00:01:56
Speaker 3: We've got three guys at the desk. We're maintaining that consistently. I'm very proud of you guys.
00:02:02
Speaker 5: I'm very proud to be here.
00:02:04
Speaker 3: I you know, I now live in this area.
00:02:06
Speaker 6: Yeah, you know, Tyler, Tyler wondered if I'd ever come, and it just you know.
00:02:11
Speaker 7: Charlie, Charlie wanted to get Charlie wanted to get Andrew to move to Phoenix for many years and.
00:02:18
Speaker 5: Sort of gave up.
00:02:18
Speaker 6: And it's a weird, uh, you know, I feel grateful to be here despite all the things.
00:02:25
Speaker 4: And I, on the other hand, think that God didn't intend for people to live in Arizona.
00:02:31
Speaker 1: Because it's a desert filled with nothing.
00:02:34
Speaker 3: And you've thought about it where I was.
00:02:36
Speaker 1: Seems like just seems like God doesn't want people to be there.
00:02:39
Speaker 8: Yeah, Whereas when I go to d C or Pennsylvania and you know, drive through Philadelphia, I really think like this is the place God intended people to be.
00:02:47
Speaker 6: No.
00:02:47
Speaker 4: DC is obviously you're not You're not gonna You're not gonna convince otherwise of that.
00:02:54
Speaker 3: Didn't you in Pennsylvania just have that like what was it?
00:02:56
Speaker 5: Cook County?
00:02:58
Speaker 6: The DA there was like, we're was it a mayor who was like breaking our bucks County, we're breaking our agreement with ice, and we're not going to cooperate with DHS anymore.
00:03:09
Speaker 5: That's Pennsylvania to me.
00:03:11
Speaker 4: We got excuse me, you want to talk about the Arizona governor at the Arizona Agent.
00:03:15
Speaker 5: Yes, I do. We're gonna get rid of her.
00:03:18
Speaker 1: Get how about how about wait, wait, tyler, how about this state of Arizona.
00:03:22
Speaker 6: Senators, this state went six points for Trump in November.
00:03:26
Speaker 5: How many points did Pennsylvania go for Trump. I'm glad it was.
00:03:30
Speaker 4: Tight, but it was a bigger but it was a bigger swing was but Tyler, No, in all seriousness, though, did you talking about thought crimes? You saw that story about Kirsten Cinema and her uh and her bodyguard today, right.
00:03:42
Speaker 7: I'd missed it.
00:03:45
Speaker 3: At the believe it or not, we literally, like.
00:03:49
Speaker 1: The keeper of the Tea of Arizona missed this.
00:03:52
Speaker 8: Oh, Tyler, we had two so, believe it or not, we've had two different Democrat lawmakers who won an election in twenty eighteen who ended up having a weird, lurid sex scandal with a staffer today which is not today, this.
00:04:06
Speaker 7: Is the one with her with her bodyguard.
00:04:07
Speaker 5: Yeah.
00:04:08
Speaker 8: So she got sued because she apparently had a drug fuel allegedly a drug fueled affair with her her bodyguard and caused the dissolution of his fourteen year marriage. And in North Carolina, where the suit has been brought, alienation of affection is still a valid.
00:04:23
Speaker 3: I loved that. That should be a rule everywhere.
00:04:25
Speaker 6: Secondly, I do feel so I just know it's the wife of the guys for.
00:04:31
Speaker 5: The guy I bring suing the wife of the guy body.
00:04:34
Speaker 6: Yes, So I do feel a little like, you know, tepid about my response here because Christin Cinema came out in defense of Erica Kirk, like wapook took a shot.
00:04:44
Speaker 3: At her her wardrobe choice or something.
00:04:46
Speaker 6: Like that, and Cinema actually chimed in and was like, can we just stop this effing stuff right, you know, for once and for all?
00:04:53
Speaker 5: And I was like, eh, eh, I haven't.
00:04:56
Speaker 6: I haven't thought this highly of you, Christen Cinema since since you block nuking of the filibuster by the crazed Dems.
00:05:02
Speaker 8: My favorite part of the story, which is not new exactly, but I learned of it, which makes it actually new, because that's what matters, is that apparently her post senate career has been lobbying to liberalize laws around hallucinogenic drugs, specifically some there's a lot.
00:05:18
Speaker 1: Of hallucinogenic drugs in this story.
00:05:21
Speaker 6: Wait, hol is it Scott Perry Not Scott Perry, who's the Texas guy Department of Energy former Department of Energy ran for was governor of Texas. Perry Rick Perry. Rick Perry is like really into ayahuasca. There was a whole New York Times yeah, yeah, that's a feature on it. Yes, I was literally thinking like no, sir, Yeah, he's really into it. Like there's a weird cross section of people that are into ayahuasca and you know, getting getting high on this uh you know this stuff you get in the rainforest so that you can get over past traumas. I happen to think it's all bunk. I would love to hear your thoughts on it. You know, Pharmakia in the Bible is what they often referred to as sorcery, sorceries.
00:06:13
Speaker 5: The word is pharmachia.
00:06:15
Speaker 6: I believe that when you put substance in your body's a highway to hell. You're just inviting witchcraft so that you can.
00:06:22
Speaker 1: I believe all of the crime, believe it.
00:06:25
Speaker 6: Yeah, So the people that are big ayahuasca, I'm like, if I was the devil and I wanted to convince you that taking drugs is really good, I would leave you with a positive impression of your drug experience.
00:06:36
Speaker 3: And there are.
00:06:37
Speaker 1: People who take it though that have really bad experiences too.
00:06:40
Speaker 7: Though.
00:06:40
Speaker 4: To be sure, when people get sick, some people like there's been violent crimes associated with it, So it's it's really kind of like a playing Russian roulette for a lot of people. But the way, the way that I always look at it is like that's you know, as and and you know as a Christian, right, so you read the Bible, and witchcraft is clearly discussed in the Bible. The occult is clearly discussed in the Bible, and we are told not to do it. However, that doesn't mean it's not real.
00:07:08
Speaker 1: It is real.
00:07:09
Speaker 4: The problem is is that you're connecting with spirits and entities on the spiritual plane that you have no idea who you're coming into contact with. Okay, that's not a little machinelf. Okay, that's a demon, all right. You're being connected with the demon right there, and you are being tricked by that demon to probably do something that you shouldn't do. So the way that we're taught to do this is through Church, is through the Bible, is through Christ. Obviously, that's the way to connect to the spiritual side of good and not all of this insanity of the demons and fallen angels.
00:07:42
Speaker 5: All right, So check it out here just real quick.
00:07:44
Speaker 6: This is the New York Times, the Long Strange trip of Rick Perry, the former Texas governor, Trump Energy secretary has now dedicated his life to promoting the powerful psychedelic i'b again, that's what it was, ib again not iowasc That sounds.
00:07:58
Speaker 8: Like a hair loss medication, Yeah, I say, as an expert on hair loss. Yeah, not the medication to prevent it. All right, we should get right, We can get into will transition the demons. We got our We already have our first rumble rant tonight from Kyrie. I know she's a regular. Thank you very much, Kyrie, She says. First, Hey, guys, great to have four out of five of the TC crew tonight. I agree to y'all need to make a thought crime T shirt and Tyler's in God we trust hat available.
00:08:24
Speaker 5: Fine, we will do it.
00:08:26
Speaker 3: And then she asks, can we can we reveal number three? Is that? Okay?
00:08:31
Speaker 1: Oh?
00:08:31
Speaker 8: Yes, yes, so we can. All right, so she asked, when is Daisy's baby coming? She's, of course member of the staff here. The baby has come.
00:08:39
Speaker 6: We even got her a little little box of goodies. Beautiful and the baby is healthy. We actually were okay.
00:08:46
Speaker 7: Beautiful, beautiful.
00:08:48
Speaker 5: Kind of on the small side.
00:08:49
Speaker 6: I was worried because Daisy likes to eat carrots and broccoli and I'm like, eat, eat a steak, eat a hamburger. No, Daisy doesn't do that sort of thing. And the baby was like trending on the small side. But then it came out it was totally healthy, really good way, baby's doing great, really cute baby.
00:09:05
Speaker 8: Now I will know I have not personally confirmed the existence of the baby, So this could all be a pictures.
00:09:11
Speaker 3: Oh you can fake those, which is we're gonna.
00:09:13
Speaker 7: Talk about actually have a great.
00:09:16
Speaker 8: Daisy deep Fay, we have to investigate this. I have to go confirm the.
00:09:20
Speaker 6: Exist I have a one that's blackpilling me on all of the AI slop because he's trying to find out when we did the strike against Venezuela, if a bomb landed on what was it the on Hugo Chavez is grave basically.
00:09:34
Speaker 8: Right, but it didn't really well that was we were seeing AI that suggested it was.
00:09:39
Speaker 1: Yes, I don't think it was ever actually substantiated.
00:09:42
Speaker 8: Yeah, it wasn't know, but there was there were videos that people were sharing that were saying, this is it on fire? But then like the BBC weapon took a photo and this auslehum.
00:09:51
Speaker 6: And listen if if like Blake nef cannot ascertain the veracity of a certain image that is not a I or is AI. Can you imagin what our parents are dealing with right now on Facebook?
00:10:02
Speaker 3: Oh they're cooked.
00:10:03
Speaker 8: I mean they're getting bamboos Facebook slop about giant pumpkins.
00:10:08
Speaker 3: Yeah, we've got to make that. We've got to make that, you know.
00:10:12
Speaker 6: You know what, like in ancient societies, they would go like and bring their adult parents and to live with them. It was very communal or whatever, or they would go live with their adult parents. In today's day and age, it's gonna be less about living with your adult relatives and elderly relatives is like monitoring their social media and it's gonna be endless bad.
00:10:32
Speaker 3: It's bad, and that's why we have to get to our first topic.
00:10:34
Speaker 8: I think we've got to lead with this now is Team Takes are going to destroy Hollywood.
00:10:39
Speaker 3: So we have reached the point where.
00:10:42
Speaker 8: The men can an use AI programs to just essentially replace all actors because they've gotten good enough at making people resemble other people. So we have a few highlight clips that are really representing this. So first we have this is a man using AI to become I don't I've never watched the show, so Jack's gonna have to confirm. But apparently he's using AI to become different things from stranger things. Let's shut show four sixty three so we can see here he's gesturing and it's just it's all him, just waving to the camera. But then it's constantly changing him to different people. Where those accurate representations of the well gender.
00:11:31
Speaker 4: Than you know, so they're incredibly accurate, except for the second to last one.
00:11:37
Speaker 1: He seems to have race.
00:11:38
Speaker 4: Swapped one of them, the character Dustin with the he has the hat and the curly hair.
00:11:43
Speaker 1: Not this one.
00:11:44
Speaker 4: I think it's this one right here, So he's he's a white character on the show. But this this guy apparently has race swapped him. Because hey, with AI, you know, if you want to if you want to race swap someone, if you want to gender stop someone, it's you can do so with the touch of a button and a tan.
00:12:01
Speaker 6: Is that it's tan, it's it's it's he looks he looks white to me.
00:12:06
Speaker 1: No, that's definitely no.
00:12:07
Speaker 4: Not this guy, the guy before this guy one, it's not this is this is a hopper.
00:12:13
Speaker 1: No, not this there right there.
00:12:16
Speaker 7: As a tan. Jack, have you.
00:12:19
Speaker 5: I get this all the time. You guys think I'm Mexican because.
00:12:22
Speaker 1: You are Mexican.
00:12:25
Speaker 7: Hey, Jack, in Order Philadelphia, they call this a spray tan.
00:12:31
Speaker 3: Yes they did. It is that that's a little bit of Jersey. That's Jersey.
00:12:34
Speaker 4: But here's some other my point. But whether he did or not, it's not my point. The point is with a I you could get whatever you want. You could do whatever you want. And if you're a filmmaker and and Andrew, you have a Hollywood background, so if you could speak on this, but if you're a filmmaker, you can literally just pick and choose, like whatever you want in your film.
00:12:52
Speaker 1: You don't even need actors anymore.
00:12:54
Speaker 6: I had a bunch of friends when I was living in Los Angeles that were like working at dream Works and that working at Disney you know, as animators. One of my buddies had like they had like this special card that he could get just as many people into the park as he wanted to. So that was actually the first time I went to Disneyland. I think I went when I was really little, but that was the first time that I could remember going. And uh, he I keep thinking about him with all this stuff because he was really really talented, like an actual artist. But now it's all like what kind of job. I mean, I guess he could direct. I haven't he could direct.
00:13:26
Speaker 3: AI.
00:13:27
Speaker 7: I have a really interesting band on this because I don't think that this is advanced enough where I could replace somebody for a full movie. But I do think just even off that clip, think about like Fox News and CNN and MSNBC. I don't trust MSNBC or whatever they call it now at all. They can basically swap out anyone that they want to come onto MSNBC. So all they have to get to do is get a sign off from that person, probably to say, hey, we'll.
00:13:56
Speaker 8: Pretend like it's like you could get a type proved text, and then they just.
00:14:03
Speaker 7: Or somebody else. An actor could just be like Hillary Clinton, for example, It's really hard to get Hillary Clinton to go on MSNBC. But if Hillary Clinton approves it, maybe somebody goes.
00:14:13
Speaker 3: On surrogate, Like a campaign surrogate is that person.
00:14:16
Speaker 7: So the surrogate now becomes the person, dude, or think about how that's going to screw up other things.
00:14:21
Speaker 3: Think about other stuff you.
00:14:22
Speaker 5: Could do that Joe Biden could have used this.
00:14:24
Speaker 7: Yeah, like they probably did.
00:14:26
Speaker 5: They probably did.
00:14:29
Speaker 4: Yeah, I'm pretty sure Joe Biden himself was and like the first time we saw the real Joe Biden was on the debate stage because they couldn't figure out the tech to how to like yeah.
00:14:38
Speaker 1: Exactly, they couldn't get it. They could get it first.
00:14:42
Speaker 7: Wait, that's not actually Joe Biden.
00:14:44
Speaker 3: I mean, there's so many other spins.
00:14:46
Speaker 8: It's not just mo So as an example, imagine if we had so for example, let's say we had a movie we had We'll say James Bond movie came out, and you have an actor and it is playing the villain, playing the love interest, playing someone, and then they have a scandal they donated to the wrong you know, defense fund for like someone or you know, they have a sexual harass.
00:15:07
Speaker 1: We didn't do this with Kevin Spacey, And.
00:15:09
Speaker 8: Then what if they just edit they just literally swap them out of the movies, like their appearance isn't in the film anymore, and like they're still.
00:15:16
Speaker 4: In the I'm almost certain they did something like this with Kevin Spacey and they replaced him with like Chris Plumber when when his scandal came out. I don't know if it was technology was used, but they sort of like digitally inserted Chris Plumber into scenes, but it was new footage.
00:15:30
Speaker 1: It wasn't like an AI version.
00:15:33
Speaker 4: But they've already done stuff like this already, where if you've got an tacker who's associated with something, it's crazy. But but what I would that wouldn't get to another level?
00:15:42
Speaker 3: Yeah? Oh, I mean that would be a relatively benign The.
00:15:47
Speaker 4: Princess Leiah they had they had carry Fish because carry Fisher died when the One Star Wars came out, and then they had like a young carry Fisher came on. I think they had They did it with Alec Guinness.
00:16:00
Speaker 1: Our wors has done this a couple of times.
00:16:01
Speaker 6: This happens more than people think. And didn't happen to James Gandelfini. Didn't he die in production or something? They had to like kind of change the storyline this last film or.
00:16:10
Speaker 3: Something, oh of like Those Saints or whatever.
00:16:12
Speaker 5: I don't know, but.
00:16:14
Speaker 3: Maybe he died.
00:16:16
Speaker 6: But you know, I was just watching a TV show where, uh that where they dedicated the episode.
00:16:23
Speaker 3: I was like, who is that? And I looked it up.
00:16:24
Speaker 6: It was like, oh, he died on episode four of a ten part series. So they just kind of wrote him out, but like, now you could.
00:16:30
Speaker 5: I don't know.
00:16:31
Speaker 3: That's a moral conundrum.
00:16:33
Speaker 8: Yeah, and or other ones. So for example, I don't think one thing that could happen. What if we got, for example, people like Indiana Jones movies, but they don't like eighty five year old Indiana Jones played by Harrison Ford, and of course they want Harrison Ford is gone. What if we just got infinity Indiana Jones movies starring perpetually forty year old Harrison Ford.
00:16:53
Speaker 4: Well they do that benefit of it all, Yeah, they do at the very beginning.
00:16:58
Speaker 8: What if we did it indefinitely, we could get twenty or something.
00:17:03
Speaker 7: Yeah, yeah, we're half at least half. I would do that.
00:17:09
Speaker 3: Would be good.
00:17:10
Speaker 5: Yes, Okay.
00:17:12
Speaker 3: Robertson with Robert de Niro, Al Pacino and Joe Pesci in The Irishman.
00:17:16
Speaker 5: That was like a famous one that they did.
00:17:18
Speaker 7: There was another one recently done, Curious Case of Benjamin Star Wars and uh, what was the what's the what's the one.
00:17:29
Speaker 5: Broke one?
00:17:30
Speaker 3: The one that was bad.
00:17:31
Speaker 7: The people say it was good and they put the old guy in there from episode four.
00:17:35
Speaker 3: Yeah, Grandma Tarkin, Yeah that's right. Yeah, No, we're not going to defend road.
00:17:39
Speaker 1: That was Andrew. This is what I would to get into.
00:17:42
Speaker 4: So because because we're talking daging, we're to but I think we're going to go into a wholly different level here. I think we're going to get to the point where people are just going to be sitting in front of a computer and they can just type it out.
00:17:54
Speaker 1: I want this actor and this one.
00:17:55
Speaker 4: To look this way, and this one to look this way, and this one look this way. There's not going to be any people at all, and you might even get to the point. So I think on Spotify right now, like the number one artist on Spotify is like an AI artist.
00:18:07
Speaker 6: Right And there was that worship song that was written by AI that was trending out.
00:18:11
Speaker 1: I saw that too.
00:18:12
Speaker 3: Yes, the spirit of God be in a worship song written by a computer, I'm sure can.
00:18:16
Speaker 6: I mean, God will use whatever he wants, but the Holy ghost in the machine.
00:18:21
Speaker 4: Oh So I guess the question is, though, what what does this do to that that whole industry is done?
00:18:29
Speaker 1: I'm sorry, they're just done.
00:18:30
Speaker 5: Well, you know what's interesting.
00:18:32
Speaker 6: So I was thinking about this because if you see some of these, I think the crypto did this right, where Crypto has these what do you call them, n f T or NFP NFTs right, NFTs. But people will buy like cartoon digital memes basically and there'll be a value associated with them. So you're not wrong that there is a marketplace jack that would support even financially completely made up images, and we call themnase. Trump has done this. But but you could do this with just about anything. And Crypto is kind of this first wave of this. So if you created computer generated characters that had unique personality types and maybe they were just maybe they just really hit hit gold by creating some character that you know, really appeal to people. In theory, you could own the trademark on the character you created and then create You could as an agent or a manager of this AI character.
00:19:29
Speaker 5: You could then.
00:19:32
Speaker 6: Cast this character in movies. People could become enamored by a completely made up AI movie star, and that person that owns the rights to the AI would then or be like it'd be like owning Brad Pitt, but like you don't have to feed him and you don't have to have them, and you don't have to pay it yet, or you just own it.
00:19:51
Speaker 8: A person could recreate themselves as a dynamic popular political figure such as we actually had. They the team went and they made me record a video of myself with the ai that those people were just put up for eighty put up four eighty.
00:20:07
Speaker 3: This could really bad. Just oh my gosh.
00:20:10
Speaker 8: So that is me as Barack Obama making various facial gestures. That's also me with a moderate amount of hair. Did they get me with more hair?
00:20:19
Speaker 1: Now?
00:20:19
Speaker 8: It's just nos them. I asked them to give me a luscious mane of hair. So that's me as an eighties hair metal star, although they kind of gave me a whoa, that's.
00:20:32
Speaker 3: You're kidding me? What are you doing? Whoa?
00:20:35
Speaker 8: Oh that is a creepy not that is an uncanny valley.
00:20:41
Speaker 3: That was That was uncanny Valley Trump, for sure.
00:20:45
Speaker 5: Obama's not bad. Obama's pretty good.
00:20:48
Speaker 3: We have our first response to that, which is.
00:20:50
Speaker 5: Eke, yeah, yeah, for real.
00:20:54
Speaker 6: I would have been curious to see him do like Abraham Lincoln or something. They could probably make it like, by the way, by the way, I want to like ban people doing this to Charlie like that. That's like candidly, that's where my head instantly goes. I'm like can well, yeah, can we pass a national law that if you mimic Charlie?
00:21:11
Speaker 7: Then the good news is that they always mess up Charlie's whenever they do this, they mess up Charlie's facial features because he had kind of unique facial features and it kind of messes with it.
00:21:20
Speaker 3: When but it'll get to.
00:21:21
Speaker 4: The point where it can do it. It'll it'll get to the point where this is, this is the worst it's ever gonna look. You know, it's only going to get better from here. So you know, they will get to the point where they can do this to Charlie and we're cooked. Yeah, you know, I guess there, I guess because it goes down to like who owns the rights to your likeness? So I would imagine that that's like family, and you know, certainly hope that nobody would would think to do something like that, like and you know, you could have like AI Charlie endorsements or stuff like that, or just get him to say stuff.
00:21:54
Speaker 1: It'd be disgusting, it'd be completely discussed.
00:21:59
Speaker 6: My pillow wants to say a heartfelt thank you to our listeners for your continued support. To show their appreciation, they're offering an incredible after Christmas sale with some of the best prices that they've ever had and all when you use promo code kirk ki RK right now, you can get their luxurious Giza dream sheets for as low as twenty nine to ninety eight.
00:22:20
Speaker 5: That's pretty insane.
00:22:21
Speaker 6: You'll also find cozy blankets, comforters, and duvet covers starting at just twenty five dollars. Six pack towel sets are only thirty nine ninety eight, making it the perfect time to refresh your home. But the savings don't stop there. Everything is on sale, from dog beds and socks to couch pillows and much more. This is the best opportunity of the year to stock up on My Pillow favorites. Take advantage of these unbeatable specials.
00:22:44
Speaker 5: Don't wait.
00:22:44
Speaker 2: Head to MyPillow dot com kle eight hundred and seventy five zero four two five now and don't forget to use promo code KRK.
00:22:49
Speaker 5: These offers won't last long.
00:22:51
Speaker 6: Call eight hundred eight seventy five zero four to two five or visit my Pillow today and use promo code kirk. We have some, we have some, we we do we do I thought, should we get into this all right, Yeah, let's do that.
00:23:06
Speaker 8: So we have Jack, you're the one who's from that land called Poland. If you can see this, I think I'll be around Shayules.
00:23:14
Speaker 3: For DJT kr z.
00:23:16
Speaker 8: That's like a shit sound in Polish right, Otherwise it's kree as Jules. I apologize, I cannot know these. Cajulis, casulis Casules. We'll go with that, casulis for dj T. Just received a copy of the Island of Free ice Cream by Jack Sobek for my grand dadies. Thank you Jack for bringing back smart learning. More of this please. And then Dylan Ivy, a warrior of the chat easier all the time, says keep moving forward. We appreciate all your efforts and it's time to take all It's going to take all of us to prep the twenty twenty six midterms, but we have the twenty twenty six energy God bless. And then lastly, they didn't include the name on this one. Uh that is from Zuzu's pedals. That's another one. We see a lot of Howdy Zuzu's no way to this AI craziness. I would rather watch Doris Day movies and an old movie theater that only plays classic old movies before I support AI movies. I will do high school plays before AI.
00:24:17
Speaker 6: Hold on Zuzu, I completely agree. I'm just trying to play down the line here a little bit, like think think down the timeline. There will be people that own AI characters that then demand huge bucks because they know that their character that they created is gonna be marketable.
00:24:35
Speaker 5: And I.
00:24:38
Speaker 6: Imagine like Steven Spielberg just created like some random character with AI, cast him in a movie and it's like it does big numbers at the box office, and then people want to see that person again.
00:24:48
Speaker 5: That character.
00:24:49
Speaker 3: The uniqueness of that character, the storyline, the backstory.
00:24:52
Speaker 4: The.
00:24:53
Speaker 6: Act, the intonation, the turns of phrases will all be trademarkable to this unique AI character. And they're gonna start marketing movies with this because I the only reason I think that this is true is because you can't. You got to not think like a like an exer or a boomer or a millennial or even a gen zer.
00:25:11
Speaker 5: Candidly, you gotta.
00:25:11
Speaker 6: Think like a Asian teen, like go think of like make you put your head in like Hong Kong nineteen year old girl. They're already doing this stuff like on some level and so many other things. You know, Zuzu says, I'd rather watch old movies in an old movie theater.
00:25:26
Speaker 3: But it's gonna be crazy.
00:25:27
Speaker 8: What if what if someone like how many of us actually know every movie they made in the nineteen forties? What if someone made an Ai pretend Doris Day nineteen forties movie and they say, you know, you hadn't heard of this one. Yes, the style of an forties movie. And that's not even getting into Okay, this is spoofing. This is just spoofing actors and actresses, spoof your family members, and how many boomers are going to be like, Oh, someone in you know, some scammer in Karachi, Pakistan gots like audio recordings and videos of your granddaughter and then makes videos pretending to be your granddaughter, live like live action, pretending to be them, and they use that to scam you for money. Well, so bad stuff's going to go down.
00:26:10
Speaker 4: The thing I wanted to add on Andrew what he was saying though, is not only are they going to create these actors, but think of it, They're going to have a whole team dedicated to like create like playing that that actor so and actress. So they'll have social media, they'll have tiktoks, they'll have reels on Instagram and so and yet all of these things will be created. It'll be totally written and scripted, so that'll be part of it as well.
00:26:32
Speaker 1: And the best part, Blake, I'm sure you can appreciate.
00:26:34
Speaker 4: This too, is they're going to make sure that it has to be woke and it has to be like it has to you know, uphold all the right virtues as well and say all the right things, even if it's not even a real person. They'll make sure that. So will it be possible to cancel an AI uh? And I would an AI actor, and I would say yes, one hundred percent that if you because that's how that stuff works. It is a theology. It is not as it's not common sense. It's not an ideology or excuse.
00:27:02
Speaker 1: Me, it's not a you know, you know, it's not an ideology. It's a theology.
00:27:05
Speaker 3: And so think about this too, Jack, think about this.
00:27:08
Speaker 1: All of that is going to be scripted though.
00:27:10
Speaker 6: Yeah, but you have like tomb Raiders series, right, which started as a video game, then it becomes real life Angelina Jolie. But just imagine instead of casting Angelina Jolie for it. You just create an AI version of the video game character that looks humanoid, right, flesh and bones, and it's not obviously not cartoon, and you just that that becomes a piece of intellectual.
00:27:30
Speaker 7: Property complector yeah, like a fake.
00:27:34
Speaker 1: That's entirely my point. That's what they will do.
00:27:37
Speaker 4: You mention that because because they've never really been able to find a tomb Raider. Laura Croft is the character, and I don't think they've ever really been able to find one actor. I think that series have been rebooted like three times or something.
00:27:49
Speaker 6: Well, I mean, Angelina was pretty good and then they rebooted it, and then they rebooted it again.
00:27:58
Speaker 3: Guys, breaking news that I just found out. You guys are gonna love this.
00:28:01
Speaker 6: This is actually a legit like study out of the UK and Poland Jack Blue Hair and Blue in the Blues. Dyeing your hair unnatural colors is associated with depression and one of the one of the instances that they're studying is borderline personality disorder.
00:28:16
Speaker 3: True story.
00:28:16
Speaker 6: Oh, I just tweeted about it, but that just I had.
00:28:20
Speaker 1: Wow, we're so surprised.
00:28:21
Speaker 3: I had, I had, I said, color me shocked.
00:28:24
Speaker 7: So I actually have a theory behind that too.
00:28:26
Speaker 5: Sorry. Angela is probably like, guys, we have a we have a.
00:28:29
Speaker 7: Shower that goes into unnatural colors. Is that I think that when people change their hair color dramatically, even that's like a more natural color dramatically, it also is a side I think.
00:28:41
Speaker 6: Yeah, and there, Jack, you said earlier today, I'm gonna I'm gonna bring this this image up. Hold on, here we go. Angela is saying, not all he loves the conbo. Hey, throw this one up. This is Jack, this is your ideology. Gotta throw it up studio there. Well that's that's one, but that's this one. This one's this. This gave me today watching this. This is a pink hair Jahati in the snow in Minnesota.
00:29:05
Speaker 1: Get absolutely so beautiful.
00:29:10
Speaker 3: Oh there's nothing wrong with that image.
00:29:12
Speaker 8: What if we get what if we get syopped though, where they just they get us trapped in cocoons where they give us like fake AI slap of like base things happening, and it lowers our bases like energy to actually go do things like no you imagine me, like imagine like some sort of containment thing on on Facebook or Instagram, and like people are they're like lobottomized. It just gives them constant headlines like Trump elected President of Earth and like Trump awarded Nobel Peace Prize.
00:29:39
Speaker 6: No, it depends what they do though, because if they if they're feeding the AI slop of pink hair, jahatis getting like face planeted in the snow this like, this is energy for me, Jack Jack Will forty eight.
00:29:50
Speaker 7: Tweets this is gas in the tank.
00:29:53
Speaker 3: Yeah, this is great, this is fire.
00:29:54
Speaker 1: This incredible stuff. This is not DV.
00:29:56
Speaker 4: But however, changing yours just just slightly, so something we should mention. Another breaking news, by the way, that I saw was that you know, and we're writing it up over at Post Millennial. It's going to come out in a minute here that the number one book on all of Amazon right now, in all books, the entire website is Reframe Your Brain, the user interface for Happiness and Success by Scott Adams. And for those who don't know, Scott Adams, the creator Dilbert, the host of Coffee with Scott Adams, incredible author of multiple New York Times bestsellers, huge Trump supporter. Day one member of the MAGA movement did pass away this week.
00:30:38
Speaker 1: And you know, AI is something that he talked about a lot.
00:30:42
Speaker 4: He talked a lot about AI, and there were a few times where he was working with a number of people sort of in his community and to create a sort of AI model of Scott Adams that could kind of live on online based on his work and based on these books, that could live on beyond him. No, I don't think we're quite at the level where it can be interactive. But he did make a couple of videos where they were taking, you know, chapters of his book A Reframe Your Brain, Loser, Think Win Bigley, how to fail at everything and still win big and they would they had this AI Scott Adams, and they would have him just reading to you from his book, but they made it look like he was on his podcast saying it to you, and gosh, I should have grabbed one of these videos before before the show today. And if you watch this thing, you'd have no idea. You'd have no idea. You'd think it was exactly Scott. You'd say, that's that's Scott. And he would say, look, I didn't actually read this. This is just this is AI Scott reading from my book. So it's something that he wrote himself, like his own words. And then Joshua Leisaik, who's my co author, was the editor on that book Reframer Brain and some of the other ones.
00:32:02
Speaker 1: And so I wouldn't be.
00:32:04
Speaker 4: Surprised if Scott Adams has a project like this that's in the works.
00:32:09
Speaker 1: That's all I'm saying.
00:32:11
Speaker 6: So we might get a little, a little gift from Scott from beyond it if he sanctioned it.
00:32:16
Speaker 3: It's way different than like in Charlie's instance, totally.
00:32:19
Speaker 1: Sanctioned, right right, Charlie would have be sanctioned.
00:32:21
Speaker 6: Charlie would never have greenlit something like that. Never.
00:32:25
Speaker 9: Never.
00:32:26
Speaker 6: He was all about real, all about real and I as God, God's creation.
00:32:31
Speaker 8: Yeah, you don't like you know, whenever people would say like, oh the AI, Charlie will Charlie is not with us. Charlie is somewhere else and we cannot pretend otherwise. I think it would be morally wrong.
00:32:43
Speaker 3: Not just gross gross, it is gross, but that that is getting at the part of it.
00:32:48
Speaker 5: All right, we have our next next topic.
00:32:50
Speaker 1: When he was anti AI, like some people are militantly anti AI, he.
00:32:54
Speaker 3: Loved using it, but recreating he loved using it.
00:32:56
Speaker 6: He was really and he was really like he was he was obviously no, no, no exactly, So yeah, to be clear, no, that's a fair critique.
00:33:03
Speaker 5: Charlie was very pro AI.
00:33:05
Speaker 6: Actually, he would use it on the show, he would use it to research things, he would use it on the fly. But he got really into getting good at prompts, so he was always like tweaking his prompts to get AI to do what what he wanted it to do. So he's he was, you know, he was good with it. But it just I think recreating human beings, that's that's sketchy. And by the way, this just shows to go you this whole only fans models, you know, gaming the one visas.
00:33:30
Speaker 1: Only fans are done, only fans is done.
00:33:33
Speaker 6: Yeah, like you don't like only fans, you know. I mean this is a question is there is their job secure? Right, because yeah, there's a lot of perverts. But like you could have I mean some of these you could you could create women only fans AI models out of this.
00:33:50
Speaker 3: We don't they already have, they already have, but we don't need to already have.
00:33:54
Speaker 5: We don't need to get.
00:33:57
Speaker 1: How would you know? Right?
00:33:59
Speaker 4: So this I think there's there's a good horror movie about this called I think it's called cam where you know this this girl gets like she's one of these camera girls, but then she gets like some I don't know, they don't really explain it. There's some demon I guess takes over her social media and then she's inside the camera basically controlling different things, and the you know, the real girl's dead or whatever point being is, how would you even know? Like literally, how would you even know that the girl you're talking to is a real girl?
00:34:32
Speaker 5: It's like cat fishing.
00:34:33
Speaker 3: But but I mean it's the same.
00:34:35
Speaker 8: If they can do it there, it's only the I think the most optimistic thing is it will have to revive in person interactions because it's just the only thing you'll be able to trust, the only way.
00:34:47
Speaker 4: Yeah, well, Blake, Blake, here's here's here's what I gotta say, though, Blake, make sure you do the FaceTime because when you're on FaceTime, they can't run their filters, they can't cast glamour Because Blake, I would I would hate to see you get into a situation like you did, you know, last last fall. What the whole thing I mean, obviously we don't need to get into it on air, but.
00:35:08
Speaker 7: That whole situation.
00:35:09
Speaker 3: You know, all right, all right, Jack, what about that joke.
00:35:13
Speaker 4: We don't need to talk about Honduras with the AI.
00:35:16
Speaker 6: Cat disman, Jack, whatever, whatever you say, whatever you say, Jack.
00:35:21
Speaker 7: All right, the one with the AI catfish. You don't remember do.
00:35:25
Speaker 3: We have the Do we have an AI catfish?
00:35:26
Speaker 6: We could probably turn we could probably turn Tyler into a giant catfish.
00:35:32
Speaker 3: We paid for it.
00:35:35
Speaker 5: We paid that by the end of the show.
00:35:38
Speaker 8: Let's get these guys into catfish by the end of the show.
00:35:41
Speaker 3: Please. Anyway, So we have to talk about barbiees. So Mattel and half.
00:35:46
Speaker 5: The audience is like, Baryea, we're talking about barbies.
00:35:49
Speaker 3: Millions, millions of gay men play with with barbies, don't they.
00:35:53
Speaker 1: Jack.
00:35:55
Speaker 8: Anyway, So they've made a there's a new Barbie doll and it has come out and it is the Autistic Barbie. So first off, let's set this up. There's someone who's doing kind of a profile of it, so we have clip for sixty six.
00:36:11
Speaker 9: So I was a little concerned when I heard that they were coming out with an autistic Barbie, because autism is a spectrum that affects everybody differently, and it's also an invisible disability.
00:36:20
Speaker 10: So she has an AAC device, which I think is one of the most important details about her. I think AAC devices are really important to show that's representation that really really matters. Then she's wearing headphones, she has a little fidget toy, and I really like her clothing. It's very casual and cozy. You know, a lot of autistic people have sensory issues with clothes. Her eyes are slightly looking sideways, like they're not looking straight, and you know a lot of autistic people have issues with direct eye contact, which I thought thought was a really cool little detail. But the last thing I want to say about her is I'm really glad.
00:36:57
Speaker 9: That they did not choose like a white, blonde hair, blue eyed standard Barbie. I'm assuming that she is a person of color because whiteness is so overrepresented in autism spaces, and autism affects everybody.
00:37:12
Speaker 5: So glad she wasn't a white girl.
00:37:13
Speaker 8: Well, so, as it happens, we sent Stapfer, Emma and McKay on a saga across the Phoenix area and one apparently this is a hot item because we had to check three different stores to find the.
00:37:27
Speaker 3: But we haven't stab it. Take a look at it.
00:37:34
Speaker 4: Wow, like, did you just did you just buy an autistic Barbie?
00:37:39
Speaker 6: No, the show bought an autistic barbiepense. The person who will have to approve this expense and therefore is responsible for it, is probably Andrew. So how much was was auto taking this out of somebody's page?
00:37:53
Speaker 7: Was autistic Barbie more expensive?
00:37:55
Speaker 3: I don't know if it was. I don't think so.
00:37:59
Speaker 5: It will tell you a lot if there was a premium on this.
00:38:02
Speaker 7: But oh my gosh, it comes with all these wait her eye line is all these vaccines to at the bottom.
00:38:08
Speaker 3: Do you see this her?
00:38:10
Speaker 7: It comes, It comes with her whole vaccine schedule.
00:38:14
Speaker 6: Is there literally a COVID shot? It's like the the what is it? The M and R am.
00:38:22
Speaker 7: Now with more more vaccinations than any other Barbie in American history.
00:38:27
Speaker 4: Wow, she's got she's got bottled fluoride water.
00:38:31
Speaker 7: Yeah, that's right.
00:38:32
Speaker 3: She's got like all seed oils drink.
00:38:37
Speaker 1: You can see and just touching seats everywhere.
00:38:41
Speaker 7: Straight from the tap.
00:38:42
Speaker 8: She does have the fidget spinner on her hand here, and so that's I know, that's a popular This is real, Yeah, this is real.
00:38:48
Speaker 6: She has not she has she has headphones on Emma Fountain.
00:38:53
Speaker 5: Where did she find it?
00:38:54
Speaker 6: I think a Walmart or no kidding, And then the a SE device, So I guess she's presumably nonverbal because I think AAC is if they have that, they can use it to communicate where they can point at letters or point at concepts because a lot of them are actually literal, yeah or otherwise where, but they're just non verbal. So you saw you saw autistic Barbie the video on it, Like, let's just contrast. This is an important contrast in our culture. Saw autistic Barbie. There, Now we go back to nineteen seventy one Barbie, Malibu Barbie for sixty eight, Mali Barbie.
00:39:30
Speaker 11: She's Michael super new suntanned Barbie.
00:39:33
Speaker 1: Hey, Barbie's got a cold, super.
00:39:37
Speaker 11: Cold Malisou Barbie has her own beach towel and sunglasses and Malibu friends, all with that sun tan skin that makes them look great wherever they go in any of the groovy new fashions and Ruby.
00:39:50
Speaker 4: We used to have a supper and can I'm really I was literally just gonna say that we used to be a proper country.
00:39:56
Speaker 5: I'm really used to be a country.
00:39:57
Speaker 8: That girl's hair was like the proper country the Barbie hair in a way that I found disconcerting.
00:40:02
Speaker 3: The girl playing with the Barbie.
00:40:05
Speaker 1: I don't know.
00:40:06
Speaker 3: The girl in the ad had the same hair as Barbie.
00:40:10
Speaker 5: Maybe like that.
00:40:11
Speaker 1: They may be long before truon Barbie. Do they have the true Barbie yet?
00:40:18
Speaker 5: No, we got the autist anything.
00:40:21
Speaker 8: So they have on the side here some alternative Barbies that we have Barbie. They oh, wow, I mean to be maximumly progressive. They probably need to, but I think what's interesting here they have a variety here. They have three different wheelchair Barbies. They have wheelchair Ken, wheelchair normal Barbie, and wheelchair black.
00:40:36
Speaker 4: Barbiees No, they had there's been a Barbie for three years.
00:40:42
Speaker 3: There's literally three different wheelchair Barbies.
00:40:47
Speaker 7: What but is there autist Ken? And and I want to know what podcast he listens?
00:40:52
Speaker 6: Is there like paradox gamer Ken who comes with his computer that has his map game on it where he's conquered.
00:40:58
Speaker 7: Autistic ten If there's no artist that can this.
00:41:01
Speaker 3: Is three different Barbies in a wheelchair. Wow.
00:41:05
Speaker 6: Yeah, I don't feel like that is proportional to the population.
00:41:11
Speaker 8: And it's the old time he you know, push you push? Do people mostly do that? Or do they mostly use like powered chairs these like, Yeah, you know, I genuinely don't know.
00:41:22
Speaker 5: No, I think I think if you can push yourself, you choose.
00:41:25
Speaker 6: It's good to stay in shape. Yeah, it's like your former Yeah, around on that thing.
00:41:30
Speaker 1: And I've seen both. I've seen both. It depends how it's referenced.
00:41:35
Speaker 3: Someone says, where's that might be too dark of a joke to make.
00:41:39
Speaker 4: By the way, guys, it looks like Laverne Cox, who is a trans actor, actress whatever, has had a Barbie since twenty twenty two. So we got the first troon Barbie in twenty twenty two.
00:41:53
Speaker 1: It's been the.
00:41:54
Speaker 7: Back of this box also has thick Barbie back here, thick Barbie Barbie. Is that what you just said? There's thick Barbie.
00:42:01
Speaker 3: Did you notice that?
00:42:02
Speaker 4: It's funny how they go like like like that's the one that Andrew would like.
00:42:06
Speaker 6: It's not named that. She's just a little bit girthier. What I think is very sturdy. It was very sturdy. She's hard to push over.
00:42:15
Speaker 1: She's actually actually thick Barbie.
00:42:18
Speaker 4: Thick Barbie might be a good segue into one of our other topics.
00:42:21
Speaker 6: Yeah, it's so what I will say. What I will say is interested in the New York I remember.
00:42:28
Speaker 8: I remember in the nineties, the controversy was all that like Barbie wasn't a feminist figure, so they had to give Barbie all the different jobs. So you got physicists like scientists Barbie, and eventually Barbie astronaut Barbie.
00:42:44
Speaker 3: I remember we have not had a woman president.
00:42:46
Speaker 8: I can because that Donald Trump, thank you, because of things that might make me time the target audience for toys like the event. I can remember specific ads from when I was in the like nineteen ninety eight. I remember the Olympic figure skater Barbie and s by Tara Lipinski. I remember the song they played, go for It, Tara, We're cheering for you.
00:43:06
Speaker 11: Go.
00:43:08
Speaker 3: I haven't seen that ad in thirty years.
00:43:10
Speaker 7: And guys, I'll say this, I think it exploitation of the autist community.
00:43:15
Speaker 5: I really nineteen ninety eight.
00:43:17
Speaker 7: Genuinely, I think this is genuinely like a little bit of exploiting people. But I would say this is that this is better. The chat just said this is better than fine than having furry Barbies and only fan Barbes.
00:43:29
Speaker 3: I think it's fine.
00:43:29
Speaker 1: Like I don't think we're going.
00:43:31
Speaker 7: To get time before we get an only fans barbie.
00:43:33
Speaker 3: No, we're gonna get furry barbies.
00:43:34
Speaker 7: Furry barbies.
00:43:36
Speaker 3: I think it's fine.
00:43:37
Speaker 8: I don't think it's bad to say, like a kid can get a doll that resembles them.
00:43:41
Speaker 3: Like, yeah, I think it's fine.
00:43:42
Speaker 6: I think it's exploitative, like well, it's approved by the Autism Selfey network.
00:43:48
Speaker 7: Like, but like I'm saying, they're like taking advantage of like the idea that they're making. They're trying to like make I mean this, they're trying to make money.
00:43:56
Speaker 3: Who cares, Like we believe in making money, Like.
00:43:58
Speaker 7: No, I know, but they're they're they're doing in the back of people who are disabled.
00:44:03
Speaker 8: I think they should make the audiences the disabled people, like by the on the spectrum because you buy it.
00:44:09
Speaker 3: I didn't buy it a staffer body technically, I think yeah, And.
00:44:16
Speaker 7: Who I had I had a great dunk of a response there if I was just trying to be like a little careful.
00:44:23
Speaker 5: I didn't.
00:44:24
Speaker 6: Personally, I want to I want to take us to New York Post.
00:44:28
Speaker 1: Can we get well?
00:44:29
Speaker 4: I just want to ask, like if they make like the couples, like could we get like talking about Tarlet Finsky, I want to get Nancy car.
00:44:45
Speaker 7: I mean, the Olympics are happening right now. Instead of talking about Olympic Barbie like.
00:44:49
Speaker 4: Earlier, you were talking about a certain type of person that's really into Barbie even when they're older and remembers Barbie commercials from even years ago. I'm just I'm just just cann acting dots here, just just I know.
00:45:02
Speaker 8: And as we all and then we establish that Andrew bought the Star so he might be in that.
00:45:07
Speaker 6: Grin might record of the bio sexuality here, here's you know, hold on, actually, so you guys can educate people Barbie Emma, I can't call.
00:45:19
Speaker 1: This but but but on the orders of Blake.
00:45:23
Speaker 5: Blake, well okay, yeah, exactly what okay?
00:45:26
Speaker 6: So what so I guess you just so responsibility for the purchase falls.
00:45:30
Speaker 5: To But no, this is actually important.
00:45:33
Speaker 6: What do you call these Disney like freaks that are, you know, forty year old like Disney adults? What is that of Disney adults? Are just feels similar like similar vein to be one.
00:45:47
Speaker 8: Serious, the men who collect Barbies, there's basically like gay men who really like Barbie like from that dimension.
00:45:52
Speaker 1: And then just there's a whole.
00:45:53
Speaker 3: There is like my little little different.
00:45:57
Speaker 8: Yes, the MLP guys, there's like a I watched this whole like like uh documentary. There are multiple documentaries on guy like men like weird men who are obsessed with my little opponent.
00:46:09
Speaker 4: Yeah, there was a yeah recently that yeah, those are like school shooters basically.
00:46:14
Speaker 3: Yeah, that would like be found out that we are school.
00:46:16
Speaker 7: Shooter There's something like super connected with it.
00:46:19
Speaker 3: It's very scary. This is true.
00:46:22
Speaker 6: It's a brand new year and a brand new opportunity to change the world for the better. This is one of our most important partners. It's easier than you might think. You can save babies by providing ultrasounds with preborn together during this Sanctity of Human Life month, We're gonna save babies right here on The Charlie Kirk Show to show the world that not only do we believe life is precious, but we're going to do something about it. Your gift to preborn will give a girl the truth about what's happening in her body so that she can make the right choice. What better way to start this new year than to join us in saving babies and twenty eight dollars a month will save a baby a month, all year long. A fifteen thousand and I know there's some of you out there that can do this. A fifteen thousand dollars gift will provide a complete ultrasound machine that will save thousands of babies for years and years to come. And we'll also save moms from a lifetime of regret. So start this year right by being a hero for life. Call eight three three eight five zero two two two nine. That's eight three three eight five zero two two two nine, or click on the preborn banner at Charliekirk dot com today. Uh wait, go to the New York Post s this is this is This is like a all I see is BBL implants.
00:47:38
Speaker 8: From Okay, we had to get this. There was a lot of hype for it, so all right, we'll go into this. This is also about I guess body stuff. And note that Andrew is the one. He's really excited to read about it.
00:47:47
Speaker 3: No since Anel wants to talk about it in the premise.
00:47:51
Speaker 6: So Jack, Jack was prefacing or promoing our thought crime on Bannon's war room. And you said that Bannon about spit out spit out his coffee when you mentioned this topic, yeah.
00:48:03
Speaker 1: But almost lost it.
00:48:04
Speaker 4: Wait I don't have the actual Uh, I don't have the actual article handed it's here, all right, well it's.
00:48:13
Speaker 3: Yeah, so let's let's throw it up. But basically what it is is, oh man, that text is extremely tiny. I can't read that.
00:48:21
Speaker 6: But basically, these people are getting the opposite of what this will do for you. Yes, so people are getting Brazilian butt lifts. That is what a BBL is and breast implants.
00:48:33
Speaker 8: Remember from from well okay, but you're the one who wanted to talk. They're from donated cadavers. So they're they're taking corpses and people who need to get some.
00:48:46
Speaker 5: It's off the shelf, fat, yeah.
00:48:48
Speaker 4: Off the shop. This right, So this is this is that Kardashian look. That's like kind of the rage, or it has been the rage for a while, you know, prior to Sydney Sweeney, like the Sydney Sweeny body taking you know, taking a back a lot of the a lot of the spectrum, a lot of the airspace on this and so yeah, so across the country, a growing number of patients are turning to injectable fillers. So fillers are all over the place, This also came up on Stranger Things. By the way, not a BBL but the lip fillers from dearly made from the dearly departed donated fat in order to lift, plump, and sculpt their bodies.
00:49:25
Speaker 1: I feel like I need.
00:49:26
Speaker 4: To read this in a different kind of voice, including for hot ticket procedures like Brazilian butt lifts and breast enhancements. Many of us in New York City are very excited about this, particularly because our patients are sometimes very thin or maybe have already had life assuptions that doctor Melissa Doffed, a board certified plastic surgeon in Manhattan, and Instagram video. The injectable filler is made from donated tissues from human cadavers that's been specially processed for cosmetic use.
00:49:49
Speaker 1: Can you sell so, like, can you sell.
00:49:52
Speaker 6: Your this is my question? Your family member that is like, hey, gotta make it.
00:49:58
Speaker 1: Who gets paid for the butt fat? Does? Does my I need to know this? Would my wife get paid for my butt fat?
00:50:03
Speaker 4: Not that there's a lot, because I mean, you know, I've been working out a little bit lately, so there's not a lot. But you know, if we're selling, we're talking about selling butt fat. You know and then and then Tyler lost all his So there's guys in there.
00:50:14
Speaker 6: Yeah, Tyler is not a not a but who gets candidates want the filler called alo clay hit the US market last year, Like who at the f d A, what is it?
00:50:25
Speaker 5: Like? Who who approved this?
00:50:27
Speaker 1: Alok doesn't know about this?
00:50:30
Speaker 6: I guarantee no, you know, to be funny as if you asked him like why did you guys you know green light could have butt filler, and he'd be like.
00:50:38
Speaker 1: Did you green light the butt fat?
00:50:40
Speaker 3: Bobby?
00:50:41
Speaker 5: Did you green light?
00:50:42
Speaker 6: I gotta ask Alex, I gotta ask the MAHA expert about the the kudaver butt fat. I'd say that less than probably five percent of board certified plastic surgeons have it. Doctor Sachin and shred Harney Harani, who began offering procedure at his Manhattan clinic lux surgery in Earth. Gosh, these guys are such like lux urgery. I mean, come on, this guy is a grifter. He's just like this stuff is so gross.
00:51:14
Speaker 8: It looks like injecting someone with like a candle. This is very very ikey looking. Oh you know what's crazy. By the way, so this the thing they're using this for the BBL. It's actually like one of the most like high risk cosmetic surgery. I think it's the most high risk cosmetic surgery it has Apparently you can get something called a fat embolism and die, and there's like a death rate of like one in three thousand, which is pretty high for a cosmetic thing. The technical term for it is gluteal fat grafting, which is a great name for any procedure gluteal fat but fat but grafting under the body, And it is a very fast growing esthetic procedure in the United States, several.
00:52:01
Speaker 5: You know what this is?
00:52:03
Speaker 7: Can I can?
00:52:04
Speaker 5: But you know it's funny.
00:52:05
Speaker 6: It's all these weird skinny chicks, price skinny white chicks that do this.
00:52:09
Speaker 7: Can I inject something here?
00:52:11
Speaker 1: So I guess, Can I inject something? Is it more but fat?
00:52:14
Speaker 5: Interject?
00:52:15
Speaker 7: Yeah? And inject something and inject something here? Interject. So after World War Two there was like a huge hubub in America because there was all these rumors that human body parts were being used in common cosmetic products just in general. Uh, Like this was like a big big deal where people like got freaked out and like everybody believed it, Like everyone believed that, you know, the Nazis and other bad people were using human parts. Two that went that went into cosmetics, and and that was debunked. And even like there's the people today that still believe the alaw of that. But I think this is super weird that couldaver fat. Like basically what everyone freaked out about in the in the forties and fifties and maybe probably beyond that is basically what's happening now with these injections that they're using cadaver fat. They're using cadavers to inject into people. That's pretty sick.
00:53:14
Speaker 4: You know, it's ironic about our conversation or in China with the forced organ harvesting and prisoners fail.
00:53:20
Speaker 6: Too, by the way, Yeah, you know, it's what's ironic about our conversation thus far. The way it's traveled is it's gone from complete elimination of need of humans in Hollywood, complete AI to this like weird insertion of humans in a way that shouldn't be inserted.
00:53:37
Speaker 5: Does that make sense.
00:53:37
Speaker 6: It's kind of like the one place you wouldn't want irl humans is in your butt fat from a cadaver, and yet the one place you thought you would want humans is in a Hollywood movie, and yet we're getting rid of them. I'm just saying, we're living in strange times, very strange times.
00:53:54
Speaker 5: Blake doesn't seem convinced.
00:53:55
Speaker 1: I still want to know who.
00:53:56
Speaker 3: I don't want the fat. But this is a butt fat dilemma.
00:54:02
Speaker 6: We have been told they have they have created an important AI video that we should display, So let's show it right now. That is us as as all a bunch of catfish, as requested. I don't think those are really They don't really show whispers, so they don't seem to be catfish.
00:54:19
Speaker 3: But this looks like a Star Wars' amazing Yeah.
00:54:22
Speaker 8: Yeah, it's like you know, glop splatto or whatever they name those Star Wars characters.
00:54:28
Speaker 5: I definitely like.
00:54:29
Speaker 6: Mine the most, I'd say based on I guess based on nothing.
00:54:36
Speaker 3: Look at that vacant stare of the jack of the jack catfish, It's like there's nothing. Okay, I think I'm done with butt fat. All right, well, let's forge ahead.
00:54:48
Speaker 8: We have we still have more fun stuff to get to, so we have to talk about, uh, the HR game out of the UK. So this is a very fun one, you guys. I'm gonna have to guide you guys through this a little bit. But basically, the British government paid somebody, probably paid someone a very inflated amount of money to make an interactive HR style game about how you, as a young person, should not be entrapped by radical politics because it could be illegal and you.
00:55:15
Speaker 3: Might go to jail.
00:55:15
Speaker 6: This feels like that one movie that became a big deal. What was that movie where it was like a white kid gets radicalized and stabs somebody or something.
00:55:25
Speaker 8: Ance and like everyone had to watch it and they were like interrogating politicians.
00:55:30
Speaker 7: I was gonna say, but.
00:55:33
Speaker 1: Following actually, like Williams.
00:55:37
Speaker 3: Yeah, but this is what's crazy. Everybody knows.
00:55:39
Speaker 6: It's the like immigrant communities that are like raping the women, that are like stabbing people on the subways or the tube or whatever, and that they make this movie Adolescence and they they try and tell that story, but then they race swap for a young white.
00:55:52
Speaker 3: British kid, like.
00:55:56
Speaker 5: Is infuriated. All right, the psyop is real.
00:55:59
Speaker 3: So this is this game is called Pathways.
00:56:02
Speaker 7: I think you need to leave the clip.
00:56:04
Speaker 8: Yeah, so what happens is you play through the game, and so we're gonna do that. So we need to some set up here. It's called Pathways. It was funded by the British government. I believe it was made for the North of England.
00:56:17
Speaker 3: Or something like. I think East East Yorkshire. Something made this. But let's just dive into it.
00:56:23
Speaker 8: This is the intro thing, so you when you play it, you choose to play as a boy or a girl, regardless of who you pick. I'm not making this up. The character is named Charlie and he is a young adult. So let's play a clip for seventy four.
00:56:38
Speaker 11: Charlie was enjoying an online game with friends.
00:56:41
Speaker 1: I like how this is starting.
00:56:43
Speaker 11: Charlie had not long started attending a new college in East Riding, and they were so relieved to have made new friends, having recently left. Right now, Charlie has started rousing new games and websites that some of the new friends use.
00:57:00
Speaker 1: No adult sites, Charlie don't.
00:57:01
Speaker 11: Sometimes, though, the people on these websites say things that seem off, even slightly concerning. Someone on this website has encouraged Charlie to download a video, but Charlie.
00:57:15
Speaker 1: Is unsure it's thought crime.
00:57:21
Speaker 11: How should Charlie react?
00:57:22
Speaker 8: If you read it, the top result is teller trusted at all, this is a college student.
00:57:28
Speaker 3: To continue, but he chose.
00:57:30
Speaker 8: They chose the radical option, which was to download and watch the video.
00:57:34
Speaker 1: Let's go.
00:57:35
Speaker 11: Charlie downloaded the video and shared it with different people online, different Charlie felt Charlie and also sharing it. Deep down, Charlie wasn't sure if this was the right thing to do, as some of the ideas in the video were extreme and violent. It's important to remember that downloading of streaming certain content can lead to a terrorists.
00:58:06
Speaker 1: A video of a guy walking down the street in Minneapolis.
00:58:09
Speaker 5: You missed that.
00:58:10
Speaker 3: It was like it could result in a terrorist defense Like.
00:58:13
Speaker 8: If you download and watch wait and videos, you can go to prison in the UK. That is one real And so this goes through there's like six different cases. And what's what's making this amazing? So it's making this amazing? Is what happens in the next.
00:58:25
Speaker 4: Part for the context, Are they making kids like play this in school? Is this like a training thing?
00:58:30
Speaker 3: I think it was. It was the intent that you could use it in like high school age kids. I think.
00:58:33
Speaker 8: So, like before you go out into the world and start attending college, you have to be careful because you might watch illegal videos of Charlie Kirk that will cause you to go.
00:58:41
Speaker 3: To prison basically, because it's.
00:58:44
Speaker 1: Reminds me when I was in the military. We did we did?
00:58:49
Speaker 4: You know, you had to watch these like compliance videos once a year on different things, and it was very similar, like you had to play.
00:58:56
Speaker 1: Game and pick the right answer or go all the way through.
00:58:58
Speaker 4: Anyone anyone's in the military Awareness Challenge all that crap, you'll know exactly what I'm talking about.
00:59:04
Speaker 1: Where you'd have to take it every every year.
00:59:06
Speaker 4: Then every quarter and then it was like, oh, but does your does your training officer have the certificate because you didn't do it yet or whatever, and like they would force you to do this, and it just reminds me of that. But of course for all children, Yeah.
00:59:19
Speaker 3: This is like hr commissars coming for your kids.
00:59:23
Speaker 1: But like, yeah, literally, like I'm getting pts that.
00:59:27
Speaker 6: I'm trying to figure out what it is about the UK psyche that makes them so prone and like vulnerable to the worst excesses of this mind virus.
00:59:39
Speaker 3: Freedom loving people got on the Mayflower.
00:59:42
Speaker 7: Well, that that is part of it, truly, like part.
00:59:44
Speaker 3: I think they lost all the good guys in world.
00:59:47
Speaker 5: I think that's a huge.
00:59:48
Speaker 3: Part of it.
00:59:48
Speaker 7: So many good people laughed. I mean even after World War Two, like so many British people that were like freedom, love.
00:59:54
Speaker 3: Everybody, without an ounce of testosterone or something.
00:59:56
Speaker 7: I mean, the Americanization of Western Europe definitely created a h I think, a vacuum. But I think more partly it's it's the whole commy concept. Right, It's like they've just built so so tall in some of these places, like even this is the problem in Europe in so many places, places that were once considered extremely and this is happening in America too, extremely conservative are building straight upwards.
01:00:19
Speaker 6: Oh you're talking about actual physical buildings. I thought you were like symbolical. I think you were talking physically, like a symbolic communist built so much communists on top of it.
01:00:29
Speaker 7: You know, there's something that's tied to when people live on top of it.
01:00:33
Speaker 5: I totally agree with this.
01:00:34
Speaker 7: Are closer together, you can actually.
01:00:36
Speaker 6: Find where there is a I remember doing this because Charlie came under all this scrutiny because we were talking. Charlie said something and then he got roasted by like media Matters or something like that, and then it got Daily Beast or whatever, and he was talking about how urban density creates libs. People that live far apart, not on top of each other and rentals are conservatives. And there actually is a density number like people per square mile at which you can watch it because I did a whole deep dive, I wish I remember this, but a density where people flip from Republican to lib right, there's like actually a statistical number at which you can figure out when people how many people you can put in a square mile before they turn LIB. And that should be the guiding principle to go like less dense than that.
01:01:23
Speaker 8: There are right wing societies that are denser than the United States, and there are highly decent.
01:01:28
Speaker 6: Like well, I don't know, variable, it's multivariatet that you're right, variables in America though, it's like a thing completely.
01:01:40
Speaker 5: A thing.
01:01:42
Speaker 3: Super blue.
01:01:42
Speaker 5: But why why are cities why?
01:01:47
Speaker 8: I don't, Well, I think cities kind of attract LIB type people. Also, we've turned cities.
01:01:51
Speaker 6: And self selecting the Well, yeah, I think there's a lot of self selection.
01:01:55
Speaker 8: I think who actually lives in cities. You have like urban underclasses that we subsidized to live there, and then you often have.
01:02:03
Speaker 6: Curious so like in the seventies, when cities were much wider, were they voting more conservative?
01:02:09
Speaker 8: I mean there has been eras where New York City would sometimes vote Republican and elections. I think the last time they did it was the twenties.
01:02:15
Speaker 4: Nancy's father was the Republican mayor of Baltimore.
01:02:21
Speaker 5: Fascinating.
01:02:22
Speaker 4: Yeah, I think at least anything about Democrat mayor, but he was a white mayor of Baltimore.
01:02:27
Speaker 3: Anything about how cities vote today is downstream.
01:02:30
Speaker 8: Of the fact that like in the sixties, we blew up city democratic graphic. We did a giant We basically did like ethnic cleansing of cities where there would be a riot and everyone would have.
01:02:39
Speaker 3: To leave and all of that.
01:02:41
Speaker 4: Yeah, if he was an interesting you don't talk about the white flight and the soft ethnic cleansing of the nineteen sixties through the nineteen nineties in the urban areas. I don't think you can explain this properly because it's not just density.
01:02:54
Speaker 1: It's about who's actually there.
01:02:55
Speaker 5: So it's it's not just demographic.
01:02:59
Speaker 1: There's a quality to function.
01:03:00
Speaker 3: To this.
01:03:02
Speaker 7: To that part.
01:03:03
Speaker 8: For example, Miami is one of the most dens of major American cities. It's all high rises right along the ocean, and Miami was one of the most Republican cities in the last election, but not where the high rises are downtown Miami, Miami.
01:03:17
Speaker 3: Miami is on Staten Island or Orthodoxy.
01:03:23
Speaker 6: But the point, yeah, yeah, the but the but that's the thing, it's the people that live there.
01:03:27
Speaker 5: I mean, it's fair enough.
01:03:28
Speaker 6: I mean because even in Miami they're all like Venezuelan you know, diaspora or Cuban refuge.
01:03:33
Speaker 7: But we can't overlook the greater concept here though, And I want to just say this with Jack too, is that kammis love people on top of each other. Because something happens with my you're able to hive mind, culture and concept. It actually is far more uh maneuverable when you have people all living right on top of each other with each other. I'm telling you. It's just there's a reason why communists always have that happen. They build This.
01:04:04
Speaker 6: Is like a tragedy of the common story too, right where like you get you get this in like Russia.
01:04:09
Speaker 1: And China about it well.
01:04:14
Speaker 4: In China, German Mao was not able to get support in the city, so we went famously went on the long march to the rural areas, and it was in the rural areas.
01:04:22
Speaker 1: Where he recruited for basically the pours, you know, for the Red Army.
01:04:28
Speaker 4: And then there was really a city or a you know, conflict of the rurals versus the urbans, and Shang Kai Shek had more support in the urban areas.
01:04:35
Speaker 1: So I mean, I get what you're saying.
01:04:37
Speaker 7: That's that's that's what I mean, that's what Lenin did too. But here, I mean that's that was like the Russian Revolution to a certain extent too. But I mean, yeah, look, I mean the peasants, but that that was more that it has versus have not that that that entire concept. My point is after they've constructed communism, they want to control people. And to that point is that you know, we've injected and everything can be right simultaneously, which we've injected more poor people into the cities. Yeah, right, and and.
01:05:07
Speaker 6: That rejected well because now, but hold on, well, well part of the sixties.
01:05:11
Speaker 5: You're right, So this is.
01:05:12
Speaker 7: Why ownership, This is lack of home ownership, lack of landownership.
01:05:16
Speaker 6: Well, the sack is Blake could give us a history lesson on what drove because like you had the you had the southern California scenario where a bunch of like there was basically rumors were going around in the southern United States that like California, there was no racism. So like all of these black communities from the south and maybe urban poor centers even in the North came they went to they went to South LA and so South LA used to be kind of just this like suburban area. Then all the blacks moved in, and then you had this led to like Watts riots.
01:05:47
Speaker 5: It led to the dynamic that you ended up seeing.
01:05:48
Speaker 6: The sixties and seventies, uh, because you had a militarized police force or a bunch of like World War two vets that that like that's how they dealt with stuff. So but then what you also had was the nineties they got re entrified. So in the nineties you had Mayor Richard Reared in La. Then you had Mayor Giuliani in New York. So then they had all these police flooding in. And then you had regentrification in the early two late nineties, early two thousands, So then you had a bunch of like the cities got safer, crime dropped. I just don't know what happened demographically in those cities.
01:06:18
Speaker 5: I mean, over all, the.
01:06:18
Speaker 6: Country was becoming less white, was more more mixed. But I'm just curious, Like I haven't actually studied that. I'm curious.
01:06:26
Speaker 8: It just I mean, it's complicated because cities are different. When they got blown up happened at different times. Some of them weren't actually blown up, they were fine, or they were growing.
01:06:35
Speaker 3: That's where you get a lot of you know, like Tampa.
01:06:37
Speaker 6: Yeah, and but it's also you see things like, uh, you know Phoenix.
01:06:42
Speaker 8: Phoenix is the city that was booming. Phoenix didn't get blown up in this period. That's when Phoenix explodes.
01:06:46
Speaker 3: Phoenix. People moved to Phoenix from cities.
01:06:48
Speaker 5: Well Austin.
01:06:49
Speaker 3: Austin is a city that is Austin's modern but it's beat.
01:06:52
Speaker 6: But I would think Austin's kind of a weird one because it's gotten so liberal. But it was always kind of no, it's always liberal, it's just gotten bigger. That's so selection issue because it's a lot of self It was like, keep Austin weird, so all the weirdos moved there and kept it.
01:07:06
Speaker 8: A self selection. It's cultural intensification. So cities are bluer and rural areas are redder. That's just also happened.
01:07:13
Speaker 6: You've seen this in Dallas, where Dallas was kind of this conservative urban place.
01:07:17
Speaker 3: It wasn't. Dallas has always been gay. It has to be non. Fort Worth is still conservative. Fort Worth's less than it was.
01:07:24
Speaker 5: It's less, it's less. Houston is now liberal.
01:07:27
Speaker 6: But that's a lot of immigrants have moved in Houston demographically.
01:07:31
Speaker 8: Is Houston got a lot of a lot of people fled Katrina to Houston and never left. And really yeah, like large not like tens of thousands of people.
01:07:40
Speaker 6: That was like, you got a bunch of much of the poor communities that like left.
01:07:46
Speaker 5: Okay, interesting, I didn't know.
01:07:49
Speaker 12: This is Lane Schomberger, chief investment Officer and founding partner of y REFI. It has been an honor and a privilege to partner with Turning Point and for Charlie to endorse us. His endorse means the world to us, and we look forward to continuing our partnership with Turning Point for years to come. Now Here Charlie, in his own words, tell you about why refy.
01:08:09
Speaker 2: I want to tell you guys about why refight dot com that is why are e f y dot com. Y refi is incredible. Private student loan debt in America told us about three hundred billion dollars. Y refy is refinancing distress or defaulted private student loans. You can finally take control of your student loan situation with a plan that works for your monthly budget. Go to yrefight dot com. That is why refight dot com. Do you have a co borrower, why ref I can get them released from the loan. You can skip a payment up to twelve times without penalty. It may not be available at all fifty states. Go to yrefight dot com. That is why are e f y dot com. Let's face it, if you have distress or default the student loans, it can be overwhelming because of privacuit loan debt, so many.
01:08:47
Speaker 3: People feel stuck.
01:08:48
Speaker 2: Go to y refight dot com. That is y r e f y dot com Private student loan debt relief yrefight dot com.
01:08:58
Speaker 8: I want to continue in this game because it actually gets an amazing with the next bit, because it goes for several segments and this next one is great.
01:09:03
Speaker 5: So this is we.
01:09:04
Speaker 8: Didn't clip the whole part. So the segment that it is is this guy, you're Charlie. He's going to class at the community college and he's studying for something, and he's going about to get an important grade, but it's not a good one, and it leads to something interesting. Let's play it for seventy five.
01:09:19
Speaker 11: Charlie is receiving an important grade on a piece of work they submitted for their hospitality course at college. Charlie put in a lot of effort for this work and is excited to receive good feedback. Charlie takes a seat in class and waits to get their grade. To their disappointment, Charlie doesn't do as well as they expect. They got sixty out of one hundred for their work, but they wanted at least seventy five out of one hundred. To make matters worse, somebody else got eighty out of one hundred, and the teacher said that this person has received a job offer.
01:09:58
Speaker 3: For those who can't see at this person is, Charlie.
01:10:01
Speaker 11: Is applied to dozens of jobs but hasn't had any look yet.
01:10:05
Speaker 3: I love how they refer to Charlie's.
01:10:06
Speaker 11: Somebody else in the class tells Charlie that this is proof that immigrants are coming to the UK and taking our jobs.
01:10:15
Speaker 8: And then Charlie has the choice, does he agree with what this person said? And it's this woman, Amelia.
01:10:19
Speaker 11: Charlie approached the classmate angrily. He agreed with the ideas and began shouting about them in class. Charlie know that the school has a zero tolerance on the hate speech. The teacher was concerned by Charlie's outburst and tried to get to the bottom of it. Charlie became more agitated and ended up having to sit alone for the duration of the week's lessons because of the hurtful things they said.
01:10:51
Speaker 3: Charlie has to go to community college.
01:10:53
Speaker 7: Did you not notice that they kept referring to Charlie as now I will.
01:10:59
Speaker 1: I'm still used about that.
01:11:01
Speaker 3: Well, so they do.
01:11:02
Speaker 8: In the in the game, you can choose to be a boy or a girl, and in both of them, your name is Charlie. And I think they just recorded it once, so I don't think it's super duper pronoun police thing. I think it's mostly laziness. I don't know, I don't know whatever, But now we are only a couple more. But I want to do this one This is four seventy six. Let's continue this is This is the next appearance of Amelia.
01:11:25
Speaker 11: Amilia, Charlie's close friend, has made a video encouraging young people in Bridlington to join a political group that seeks to defend English rights. Amelia encourages Charlie to join a secret group on app Charlie hasn't heard of before. Charlie isn't sure whether to join, explore further or ignow.
01:11:47
Speaker 8: And of course we have to choose to join this group defending English rights.
01:11:52
Speaker 11: The friend posted was so funny they couldn't believe how many likes Amelia's memes. We're getting it.
01:12:00
Speaker 3: Was inspiring Amelia memes.
01:12:04
Speaker 11: Charlie joined the secret group on this new platform. The phone wouldn't stop buzzing with messages of supports and invitations to participate in.
01:12:13
Speaker 1: Charlie, she's fed.
01:12:14
Speaker 3: It's not true, Amelia.
01:12:16
Speaker 11: Mom was not so pleased.
01:12:18
Speaker 3: And I will fight, I will fight for it. She's fed fed.
01:12:24
Speaker 8: Amelia is an English honors all over again. So for those who can see, Amelia is shown. She has purple hair and like a choker on. She looks like a goth chick. Basically, she's a right wing anti immigration English patriots.
01:12:37
Speaker 6: She's literally the AfD or like reform yeah, UK one, it is there.
01:12:44
Speaker 3: They're like, oh, who likes Nigel Farage.
01:12:47
Speaker 6: We're going to stereotype them and put them in a like videos there.
01:12:51
Speaker 8: So I don't want to show all because the next one, the next one you do, she recruits you. Now in Jack's argument, in the next clip, if you did it, she recruit you to go to a protest that she is not allowed to attend herself. And then Charlie attends the protest and he gets arrested because he gets in a fight with some people.
01:13:11
Speaker 3: No, no, it's not true.
01:13:13
Speaker 4: Then is really funny They stopped White Nighting for Amelia.
01:13:17
Speaker 6: No, I will White Night for Amelia forever because the game and this, if you choose.
01:13:23
Speaker 8: All the radicalized options, this is one of the endings you could get in the game. It seems they took it out, but it was still accessible if people downloaded the game Let's do for eighty one.
01:13:33
Speaker 11: Charlie was furious that the teacher felt they needed to part with their political views. Charlie was so insulted that they stormed out and went to see their friend Amelia together. The pair increased the amount of content that shared, attracting the attention of not just the teacher, but their parents and police too. By not accepting help in time, Charlie had given themselves an opportunity to break the law with the things they were saying and the actions.
01:14:01
Speaker 3: That big brother stuff man. And then Charlie gets arrested.
01:14:05
Speaker 8: The cops came in and they stopped, They shut down him and Amelia.
01:14:09
Speaker 4: Yeah, just like just like Winston gets set up by Julia in nineteen eighty four.
01:14:15
Speaker 1: All right, it's literally the same block he's getting set.
01:14:18
Speaker 7: They should not have been talking so openly online. This is just ridiculous how they were talking online.
01:14:24
Speaker 8: Yeah, and then that's why we have to liberate the UK. And so this was made by the British government and was available till yesterday online you could go play this.
01:14:32
Speaker 3: They have taken it down, but just like you know, the least the British government they funded this.
01:14:40
Speaker 8: They said east writing east riding New Yorkshire, so like East Yorkshire is a region of the UK, and they were using this.
01:14:45
Speaker 3: But they cannot kill an idea.
01:14:47
Speaker 8: So people have already generated her owic ammounts of ai slop of our new wi fu Amelia.
01:14:52
Speaker 3: Let's roll the four seventy nine b roll.
01:14:55
Speaker 8: So people have been making AI clips of Amelia protesting.
01:14:59
Speaker 3: That's her with with the Union Jack, the Union Jack.
01:15:03
Speaker 1: Wait, so, so Amelia is like the based right wing meme.
01:15:06
Speaker 8: Now, yeah, it's like Joan of our Amelia. There he's got the English flat on her shield.
01:15:14
Speaker 5: We got more, we.
01:15:15
Speaker 3: Got smoking Alia.
01:15:16
Speaker 6: You are a woman watching this right now, and you resemble this female in some way, shape or form. Email Freedom at Charliekirk dot com and Blake is gonna date you.
01:15:28
Speaker 3: Men want just one thing and it's disgusting.
01:15:31
Speaker 5: It's like.
01:15:33
Speaker 1: For all the stories now and there you go.
01:15:40
Speaker 6: I will accept you if you're into watch this last one here, this is a great one.
01:15:44
Speaker 3: It turns.
01:15:47
Speaker 8: Look we just we have to defend we have to defend the West here.
01:15:50
Speaker 6: And yeah, oh man, if you're listening on podcasts, you gotta check this clip out. Jewel Amelia, Amelia, Amelia, Amelia is based on So the British government tried to make a game about how you shouldn't be offensive on the internet.
01:16:05
Speaker 5: It's amazing.
01:16:05
Speaker 3: Stead they have made an unkillable idea. You know, it's crazy though. That's a really good point.
01:16:09
Speaker 6: I hope this becomes like a like a I hope this meme has life, because this is exactly who you want to see come up through the ranks in British culture and be amazing.
01:16:21
Speaker 5: In the outfit that's not like a German outfit.
01:16:24
Speaker 4: Right.
01:16:24
Speaker 3: It wasn't like I have no idea.
01:16:26
Speaker 6: I'm not endorsing, I'm not controlling what the people do. So all I'm saying is, you know, reform is probably going to take back England. Who knows how successful they would be if they get control back. But I do think that this national populist rise uprising across Western civilization is a really really positive thing. And the fact that you have whole government apparatus machinery trying to fight it, and with this terrible big brother, it's like a wet blanket of a of a simulation of a of a game.
01:17:04
Speaker 8: Which they probably paid way too much for government contracting process. Someone got paid like one hundred thousand dollars to make.
01:17:11
Speaker 6: You know this is like, you know, you've got data Republican, You've got Mike Bens that have unearthed a ton of this stuff with the trans Atlanta. I mean, this is a really like hilarious version of it, and it's so on the nose that it's easy to mock. But there's some people that are very sophisticated about how they undermine a country's love of itself, a country's pride.
01:17:30
Speaker 3: In its own heritage.
01:17:30
Speaker 5: And it's really disgusting.
01:17:32
Speaker 6: And we've gotten slammed with it in the West and we're fighting, We're like building immunities to it. That's why this is such a fun story, because we have we're building immunities.
01:17:41
Speaker 3: Go ahead, go ahead.
01:17:41
Speaker 4: Yet I guess I was gonna say that, you know, And it's just you know, my take on it.
01:17:46
Speaker 1: You know, I'm not I'm not British.
01:17:47
Speaker 4: I'm thinking of us. Are here are British? Tyler might have some British I don't know. Oh no, no, Andrew, you've got British.
01:17:53
Speaker 7: British I'm like quarters British heritage, but we came over on the Mayflower.
01:17:58
Speaker 6: So I'm like, no more, I'm a British and in Irish, I am America.
01:18:05
Speaker 4: There's there's a huge like cultural affinity for obviously rule following and procedure in the UK, like like queuing and lining up is like really big.
01:18:18
Speaker 1: Just having visited there a few times.
01:18:20
Speaker 4: There's also a lot of obsession around like health and safety, risk assessments and compliance.
01:18:26
Speaker 1: So like with those with those risk assessments.
01:18:29
Speaker 4: So the problem, I think is that if you get you know, if you start crossing the line between and blurring the line between what is in the good of the nation, what is in the good of the health and safety of the people with things that are are bad, right, so you cross that line into tolerance. So the British system then will force you into tolerance more than any other possible system, like you know, the bureaucracy. C. S. Lewis, of course in Screwtape Letters famously writes that a dean is a bureaucrat, right, hell is a bureaucracy with civil servants and and so it's it's just something that's very culturally British rules order doing things properly.
01:19:12
Speaker 1: You know that that you see a lot there.
01:19:16
Speaker 4: We have to avoiding fuss chaos, like they really they really hate that stuff.
01:19:20
Speaker 3: And so unfortunately the license for that name you a license for thatme.
01:19:25
Speaker 4: So like this is a this is a place where like the you know, fairness and hate speech and feelings gets kind of caught up with your traditional British British cultural cultural mora of wanting to follow the rules, be fair and having and prioritizing health and safety.
01:19:45
Speaker 6: Well, I uh, I can't wait for whatever this regime that is ruling the minds uh and pocket book books of the British government fund rarer. Obviously Here's Starmer is a wildly unpopular figure even in the UK. I feel like all of their politicians are unpopular. That's its own funny thing. Like there is a British sort of there is a kind of a tendency to just be they're kind of doomers.
01:20:10
Speaker 3: Like the whole culture is doomers.
01:20:12
Speaker 8: It's a it is a civilization that seems to have given up on itself in a very disturbing way.
01:20:17
Speaker 3: I'm telling you they lost all their good dudes in World War One.
01:20:20
Speaker 8: And they did although this exertion countries that didn't even have a World War mm hmm, like the countries that weren't in the World War, like Sweden was in neither World War, and they still hate themselves.
01:20:29
Speaker 6: Sweden's kind of they're finding a back but I liked I some of these groups are finding a backbone. But I think the Scandinavians though, there is something there's a bit of a pushover. I don't know, man, these are the dudes who used to go around in boats and like pillage in conquer Ireland and all that stuff.
01:20:47
Speaker 4: And now but it's like, how did they go from w how did they go from the Vikings to.
01:20:52
Speaker 1: That to what they are now?
01:20:53
Speaker 4: Or maybe maybe just the the Swedes that are are there now are the ones.
01:20:56
Speaker 1: Who stayed you know, maybe but a soda Vikings all left.
01:21:01
Speaker 5: Oh, I don't know.
01:21:03
Speaker 6: These are conundrums that we're going to have to ask Ai to help help usself.
01:21:07
Speaker 3: No, we're not going to ask Ai. We're going to ask ourselves.
01:21:10
Speaker 4: But this in Minneapolis, because you're surrounded by these Scandinavians who you're sitting around and like, my brother Kevin, go follow him. Kevin Pasobik, he's down there on the ground. He's been in Minneapolis all week. He was standing next to the FBI truck as it was being looted last night, and he's filming all this and you know, it's like and then he went down to the state Capitol though for this high school walk out, you know ice out thing they were holding yesterday with Keith Ellison and he goes in. All the kids in the high school are Somali and then the fig is Somali. So it's like, what is wrong with the Scandinavians? Why will they not wake up and understand that they are being invaded?
01:21:48
Speaker 6: And they lot Indavians, a lot of Scandinavians in Seattle too, and they.
01:21:53
Speaker 4: Have yeah, and it's like, well, you just got to be welcoming in a You just got to be welcoming in a You just got to be good to your neighbor as.
01:21:58
Speaker 5: Yeah. Irish, now I don't know. I can't do accents.
01:22:02
Speaker 6: I can do like a I can do Scottish accent because I watched enough Brave Irish.
01:22:06
Speaker 8: Don't We need to make people aware of the Irish don't get enough flack for how like unbelievably left wing they are.
01:22:11
Speaker 3: Now they're letting themselves get war.
01:22:14
Speaker 4: We have very they have a very bad There's some there, there's there's some rumblings of of a switch in Ireland.
01:22:23
Speaker 3: Hopefully UH is trying to rise up right.
01:22:27
Speaker 4: Yeah, A huge rally that was in I think was Cork last last year about this. They are starting to like push off because the Irish defined themselves for so many years as being anti colonial because they were anti British. And then so they were like, oh, we'll just take the side of like everyone who else who's anti British, like the Palestinians and everyone in Africa and everyone in the Middle East, and we'll let them all in.
01:22:51
Speaker 1: And and it's like, oh, shortened in the Irish gold everywhere we shore.
01:22:55
Speaker 4: Who are we to say, you'll kind of come to ire Island then, you know, short and short and short.
01:22:58
Speaker 1: And Jesus Jesus and six, you know, and so it's like.
01:23:05
Speaker 3: In Vain, we don't do that. What I do is Ireland.
01:23:09
Speaker 8: So you mentioned that Jack and Ireland got very attached to the idea that they are like that is starting to shift though, but Ireland got very attached to this. So the thing is Ireland is like pilb the country. And they got very attached to the idea that because they were pro third world like propos and that they were this like moral superpower in the world, they had so much like credibility. And then the recent events have happened, and this is the headline in the Irish Times was Ireland's reputation as a tiny diplomatic superpower, just a flash in the pan fantasy.
01:23:41
Speaker 5: So they actually took like pride in this.
01:23:43
Speaker 3: They apparentlyived that like Ireland.
01:23:46
Speaker 6: Like country people listened to Yeah, because you know when I when I spent time in Europe, and I remember everybody multiple times, but there was actually lived over there for a bit. They everybody would always say, oh, the Irish are the nicest, the ranked ranked is the nicest country in Europe. And I kept going like, well, that's you know, it's funny that I hear this. So many people would tell me this, that it was obviously kind of like a known thing. And I think if you internalize the fact that you are nice, then you will like culturally start you know, opting to be nice as opposed to any other.
01:24:22
Speaker 5: Attribute, and you just get walked over.
01:24:24
Speaker 6: I think if you think of yourself as this diplomatic superpower.
01:24:27
Speaker 3: You just remember nice is the lowest of the virtues. Yep.
01:24:32
Speaker 4: So I can I can explain this from an East Coast perspective that East Coast people.
01:24:37
Speaker 1: Are not nice.
01:24:39
Speaker 4: We are you know, like like definitely not nice, Like that's the Philly New York, like Boston. You will not find nice on the list of of our attributes. However, however, there's a difference between nice and kind. And I was actually talking to Lilly Evans about this yesterday, and the difference between that is it's nice is sort of the way you carry yourself, the way you talk, the way and you see this with Trump all the time.
01:25:03
Speaker 1: By the way, right, Trump is not nice, but he actually is kind. Right.
01:25:07
Speaker 4: Kind means you follow things through with what you say you're going to do, You help people, You put people's best interest first. You try to do what you can to actually help others. That's being kind. Being nice is like being obsessed with you know, words or did you say something in a nice way?
01:25:23
Speaker 1: Or oh, did you have a mean tweet? You know?
01:25:26
Speaker 4: No, Trump doesn't care about mean tweets. He cares about getting the job done and actually helping people. That's being kind. And so I think people mistake being nice and being kind. And by the way, you want to go all the way back to it demand himself, jac Jesus Christ in the Bible is not always nice.
01:25:45
Speaker 1: Right, you get out you you pit of vipers, you.
01:25:47
Speaker 4: Denti vipers, overturning the you know, the the money lenders and all the rest of it. There's so much there and the difference. But is he being kind? Of course he is. He's being kind by rebuking the sinner.
01:26:02
Speaker 5: I agree with all that.
01:26:03
Speaker 6: Yeah, I think nice and kind is a super important distinction to make because actually a lot of Americans we think of we think of ourselves as nice.
01:26:11
Speaker 3: Hr ladies are always nice. There rarely and they're fish.
01:26:13
Speaker 1: Yeah, what's what's the what's the one in Harry's savage.
01:26:16
Speaker 3: Like everybody eats her? Umbridge? Yeah, Umbridge was well Umbridge. Yeah, she's not always nice, but she's often superficially nice.
01:26:22
Speaker 4: Yeah, that's what I'm saying. Nice is superficial. You don't you don't want nice? I mean, yes, nice is good to be in general, like you want to be polite, but there are times where nice should not be a priority. Being kind should be a priority. And I think, I just really think that a lot of people get this wrong. By the way, I'm getting getting a little bit of breaking news in that the at F speaking of the the fbi UH firearm.
01:26:50
Speaker 1: That was stolen last night.
01:26:51
Speaker 4: I'm just getting some word in that ATF has arrested the man who stole those fire.
01:26:56
Speaker 6: Arms from consequences account, So I am worried.
01:27:01
Speaker 4: Don't steal federal weapons because those are actually really easy to track in federal weapons lockers.
01:27:06
Speaker 1: Like, don't don't do that, Like just so I can, don't do that, but like, don't be stupid, because that's really stupid.
01:27:14
Speaker 8: I can tether this to the Ireland topic. So, an interesting problem the British had in Ireland late in their ownership of it is there would be people who would do crimes against British authorities in Ireland, or they might attack police, and they couldn't get convictions from Irish juries. Irish juries would just do jury nullification on things, and so the British had to start I can't remember the name of the law, but they basically had to start essentially saying, in these areas where this is a common problem, we basically have to suspend the right to a jury trial and allow magistrates to basically act. You have judicial rulings on this, because it's the only way to have actual criminal justice. And I wonder if we have to worry about that, Like, what are you going to do in Annapolis if you just can't panel a.
01:27:59
Speaker 3: Twelve member you don't even need. It's not Smali jurys. I'm worried about.
01:28:03
Speaker 1: It's Eastern Virginia.
01:28:05
Speaker 3: You know who Renee Goods on a jury.
01:28:07
Speaker 8: Yeah, and they're the ones who are just going to say categorically, yeah, you do, of course, And so you might need to say, we're going to need to move these jury trials to new locations, or you're gonna have to find other ways to make people fear the law.
01:28:22
Speaker 3: The more tribal we become, the less useful juris become. And it's bad because the jury is a great thing. Not every country has jury.
01:28:30
Speaker 4: The jury system is is a is again, I believe a British system that comes from British common law. And it again, it derives itself, like so many other American traditions, derives itself from a specific group of people, and it's like, oh, well, we follow these procedures. I was just talking about procedure rules. There are other groups of people and other cultures around the world. And go watch a Nick Shirley video if you want to learn more about those that don't care about rules and don't care about honor, and don't care about stealing.
01:29:02
Speaker 1: It's yeah from tribe.
01:29:05
Speaker 6: This feels like a very good place to leave us. The leave the show is stop importing people that hate us. Please politicians vote for a more time. And by the way, one of my favorite things that happened this week Trump blocked seventy visas from seventy five different countries, so that third world travel band and it included places like Brazil, which is fascinating.
01:29:29
Speaker 1: He's in there that weren't really third world.
01:29:32
Speaker 5: Yeah, but I'm okay with it.
01:29:33
Speaker 6: I mean, listen, the more than I mean, I would do an immigration moratorium, so I'm just like, I don't care which country it gets added to the list.
01:29:41
Speaker 3: Really, I would do it net zero though.
01:29:43
Speaker 6: You know two to three hundred thousand people leave the United States every year, and it's like, okay, well, if somebody leaves they indicate that they are relocating somewhere else, then I will take somebody to replace them. But I don't need extra so I would do that for ten years.
01:29:57
Speaker 3: That would be my vote.
01:30:00
Speaker 6: But anyway, generally, and that happened, and Trump is saying that he's going to be defunding Sanctuary City starting February first, So let's go give it clap.
01:30:09
Speaker 5: Can we get a clap from the Yeah?
01:30:10
Speaker 3: From the studio.
01:30:11
Speaker 6: So that's the whole point. Stop importing cultures that don't assimilate, that you can't have zero compatibility with. And that's that's just how I feel about that. The Irish need to get there, the Brits need to get there soon. The Germans maybe are getting there. It's looking bleak in Germany.
01:30:30
Speaker 1: Man Poland, on the other hand, does not have this problem at all.
01:30:34
Speaker 5: Based city based city you go.
01:30:36
Speaker 4: You go, you go east of Berlin and people are like, they're like, yeah, I would we want people are not like us and to come to the country with not interested in that, thank you.
01:30:47
Speaker 5: And hungry. What else country?
01:30:50
Speaker 3: Denmark? Actually I've gotten pretty good. Denmark's kind of based Denmark's kind of bammigration. We shouldn't we shouldn't we.
01:30:56
Speaker 1: In a little bit of trouble in in Hungary. By the way, that'll actually one years.
01:31:02
Speaker 3: It's hard to be in power almost twenty years.
01:31:04
Speaker 6: Yeah, it is gonna make enough enemies. You have to tell enough people know over the years they got bones to pick with you. All right, Well, this was an amazing episode, Uh Jack, well done, Thank you for zooming in. Uh Tyler, thank you as always. You know you're making a lot of time for us, even though you're running Turning Point Action. We've got a lot of news on that we should do like a.
01:31:25
Speaker 7: We've got a lot coming out this next week actually, with some big announcements happening in New Hampshire, Nevada.
01:31:30
Speaker 5: So you'll go on Monday, the Charlie Kirkshaw on Monday.
01:31:32
Speaker 3: Let's talk about it.
01:31:33
Speaker 7: We're gonna announce on Monday.
01:31:34
Speaker 5: Oh good, let's do it all right?
01:31:36
Speaker 3: Uh.
01:31:36
Speaker 5: In the meantime, Jack, you know.
01:31:38
Speaker 3: How to do it.
01:31:39
Speaker 4: Keep committing, ladies and gentlemen, go out there and commit more thought crime.
01:31:51
Speaker 3: For more on many of these stories and news you can trust, go to charliekirk dot com

