THOUGHTCRIME Ep. 118 — Looksmaxxing and Jestergooning? $500 Faces? Blame Canada?
The Charlie Kirk ShowMarch 14, 202601:21:5237.54 MB

THOUGHTCRIME Ep. 118 — Looksmaxxing and Jestergooning? $500 Faces? Blame Canada?

The Thoughtcrime team hits the most important topics in the entire world, including:

-Should we all be hitting our faces with hammers to improve our appearance?

-Who should go on an American $500 bill?

-Is Canada an apartheid state?

 

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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 3: Here I am 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 4: All Right, welcome to Thought Crime Thursday. We are I got my jacks, Yeah, I forgot my jacket rule, and then so I put on. 00:01:17 Speaker 3: He keeps forgetting the jacket roll. You can't defy the jacket rule. 00:01:20 Speaker 4: I get cold in the studio. They haven't turned down to like sixty one for the equipment here. Anyways, welcome tot crime. I'm totally I do not do well with cold. 00:01:30 Speaker 3: I'm a I'm a brown skinned. 00:01:32 Speaker 4: You don't want to catch Andrews Southern European quarter Mexican. 00:01:36 Speaker 3: He doesn't have his jack jacket. I had his din din yet. 00:01:39 Speaker 4: So we got to get into some breaking news here because I'll be honest with you in the audience, I'm pretty upset, pretty pissed off, I think is a good way to say it. We had a shooting in West Bloomfield, Michigan, about twenty miles down the road from Dearborn, Michigan, which, as many of you know, is the epicenter for the islamafak of the country. And it looks like new intel has come in. Bill Malusion tweeted out it looks like we have that at twenty four that this person appears to be the car is registered to a Lebanese naturalized US citizen, So assuming that it wasn't a carjacking or a stolen car. It's safe to assume that this would be a naturalized US citizen that committed this crime. Will wait for those details to come in, But even if that turns out to not be the case, we have another shooting in Virginia. This one's even more egregious on some level. It's a naturalized citizen from Sierra Leone. Again, when I say naturalized, that means that they were. 00:02:42 Speaker 3: It means we had this person here and we thought this person is awesome. Means we let them in. We should give them the right to live in America. We should let them vote and nothing can make them leave. They should have the right to vote, the right to all of our welfare programs. Correct, This is the type of person we want in America. This person was known by the FBI. This person had been radicalized by ISIS, had traveled abroad multiple times. In twenty sixteen, he was prosecuted, right Blake twenty sixteen. Yes, yes, he was imprisoned. 00:03:13 Speaker 4: Imprisoned, and we let him back out on the streets for some reason because. 00:03:17 Speaker 3: He was a naturalized citizen. 00:03:19 Speaker 4: Yeah, because he's a naturalized citizen. But add that just to this month and I'm gonna read from a tweet from Wilkine here said this month, Austin shooter, You remember that one Austin radicalized said property of Allah, property Islam. 00:03:35 Speaker 3: Property of Islam. Shout at Ala Lochbar. 00:03:37 Speaker 4: Austin shooter naturalized citizen, the od shooter naturalized citizens. The New York City teen bombers thankfully did not go off children of naturalized citizen. And now the Michigan synagogue attack naturalized citizen. We are giving full citizenship rights in this country to people who hate us and want you dead. We have a legal ima greation problem in this country, and today shines a very bright spotlight on this horrible reality that we've created ourselves. So we need to start there. Blake Jack thoughts. 00:04:11 Speaker 5: Well, and I want to I want to go in because the the one in Michigan, I believe it was also a car ramming, right, so it was a and I think there was a preschool that was on the premises as well, and so it was a car ramming. 00:04:27 Speaker 1: And then not all the details are exactly out on that just yet. 00:04:31 Speaker 5: Because this is breaking news, but it was a car ramming, and then you know, an attempt at shooting as well, I think is what we saw, and that that the shooter. So yeah, car ramming and the shooting incident has now been killed. Bill Malugen says something about the corpse actually being on fire, So I think that I'm sure there's going to be an investigation into whether or not explosives were used in that case. 00:04:56 Speaker 4: Yeah, well, they're actually still clearing the scene as far as we're aware that because they're they're. 00:05:01 Speaker 3: Looking for devices or bombs. Yeah, exactly, we're. 00:05:04 Speaker 1: In the middle of it. 00:05:05 Speaker 5: Similar to the you know, whether they're explosives, similar to the individuals in New York City. And you know what's what's crazy about those two from New York that attempted bombing was you know, I was looking at this that town where they grew up in apparently that Newtown, PA area that's not far at all from where I grew up where I'm from. The only differences is that Newtown, Pa is one of the I mean, they lived in the lap of luxury. It's one of the nicest towns in the United States. The idea that there could be an ices cell there is just it's jarring. My whole family is talking about this. They went in and there was a suspicious you know, there are suspicious items found in a storage locker that they had that the SWAT team and bomb squad had to go in and they were I think it was a material or residue they say that they will raid. 00:05:59 Speaker 1: It was a potential explosive. 00:06:01 Speaker 4: What they call it the Daughter of s or something like that. 00:06:05 Speaker 1: Well it was. 00:06:05 Speaker 5: It was t a t P, which is a very common but also powerful explosive that can be made in home. So t a TP is a precursor and an explosive that you would see in the Middle East in in you know, isis bombings, et cetera. So and it's and it's not, by the way, something that you would find that you would you know, just go on YouTube and you know, watch you know, a tutorial on it's something that's actually quite serious. 00:06:30 Speaker 1: And so the real questions as to whether or not they were. 00:06:32 Speaker 5: Others involved, were bomb makers involved that were not that were not caught at the scene. And I just want to say again about this town, Newtown, Pa. I mean, this thing is it's it's an idyllic town there. It's it's you know, very luxurious. 00:06:46 Speaker 2: It is. 00:06:47 Speaker 1: They have a great downtown. It's kind of like. I had this tweet that went pretty viral. 00:06:50 Speaker 5: I said, this is like, you know, if you're not from PA and you don't understand, it's like the town out of Gilmore Girls. 00:06:56 Speaker 1: Okay, it's like the town out of Gilmore Girls. 00:06:58 Speaker 5: It is just a sleepy, nice suburb where with you know, it's absolutely gorgeous. 00:07:05 Speaker 1: The people there are very affluent, and. 00:07:08 Speaker 5: The idea that an ISIS cell could be operating out of there is shocking to anyone in the area. But at the same time, Andrew to your point, when we look at the higher percentage of farm born individuals that now reside in so many of these places, obviously Dearborn being one of the hottest of all the hot spots for that in terms of Middle Eastern migration, you know, should we really should we really be surprised? And look, I know the FBI has been out saying we're tracking you know, in cash hotel over there is doing a great job saying, hey, we're tracking these things. But at the end of the day, what you've done is you've imported farm populations that in many cases are going to be inherently hostile, inherently hostile to your way of life, inherently hostile to your values, inherently hostile to your society. And the only way that this can be dealt with is mass deportations. And this is something that Charlie, right, and we all know that that Charlie was talking about this in the day his last days in check on the planet. This is exactly what he was talking about. 00:08:08 Speaker 4: So what we're I mean, yeah, mass deportations, but we're talking about a whole different thing here. We're talking about the fact that every year in fiscal year twenty twenty three, we issued one point one seven million Green cards. In fiscal year twenty twenty four, preliminary data shows nine hundred and eighty thousand Green cards were issued through the first three quarters. We're talking about legal immigration. These are people that have been brought here that, as Blake said, we did this to ourselves. We chose to bestow upon them the full rights and privileges of United States citizenship, and they turned the gun on us, and they're trying to kill Americans. And I'm sick of it. I don't know when we're ever gonna like wake up from this idiocy and actually start saying, oh, I don't know, maybe we shouldn't be importing people that hate us. Maybe we shouldn't be importing people that have a loyalty to something, some religion, some country other than our own. Because guess what, I was born in this country. I'm gonna die in this country. My kids were born in this country. They're gonna die in this country. We love this country. First, I'm so sick and tired of bestowing the rights and privileges of an American citizen upon people that don't give a crap about it, or their children then grew up to not give a crap about it. What if the reason you feel a little off some days has more to do with what's missing than what you're adding. We talk a lot about cutting things out of our diets, sugar, processed foods, junk, But what about what we're not getting enough of. Whole foods contain phytoonutrients, natural plant compounds your body uses every day to function properly. And let's be honest, most of us aren't eating ten servings of produce today. 00:09:42 Speaker 3: I know I'm not. 00:09:43 Speaker 4: That's why I use Balance of Nature. Their vacuum cold process helps stabilize those phyto nutrients, so you're getting the benefit of real fruits and vegetables in capsule form. I also love their Whole Health System. It's trademarked Whole Health System fruits and veggies plus fiber and spice forty seven ingredients of whole food nutrition. And their freeze dried snacks are a great option too. If you're ready to fight the good fight, go to Balance of Nature dot com to subscribe and save today. Join hundreds of thousands of customers in one simple routine that's changing the world. That's Balance of Nature dot com. 00:10:20 Speaker 5: Well and Andrew in Europe, where they're already also dealing with this issue, they do have something that they view as a new way forward, and it's called remigration and President Trauma. President Trump has has endorsed this in many cases. He you know, we do hear kind of occasionally different signals out of the White House over what is going to be prioritized at any given time. 00:10:45 Speaker 1: Actually Supports had a story about that this week. 00:10:47 Speaker 5: But President Trump has said many times that he believes, specifically by the way remigration and reverse migration. And I'll tell you exactly the last time you said it was Thanksgiving. When on last Thanksgiving, So just what you know, four months ago, here we had the shooting of two National Guard members, one male, one female, the female who was killed on the scene, and the male was obviously just at the State of the Union a couple of weeks ago, and those were done by Afghan migrants who, again, we're here legally, and President Trump said, no reverse migration, remigrate them all. Perfectly fine with that, Totally fine with that. It's got to become a priority. And you know, I got into it with a certain senator earlier today and for saying specifically this that we need to take this thread seriously. 00:11:37 Speaker 1: We need to take it seriously. 00:11:38 Speaker 5: It needs to become one of the highest priorities in the United States. 00:11:41 Speaker 1: There's no question about it. 00:11:43 Speaker 5: And little did I know that, you know, just on the same day that that happened, that there would be two more Muslim migrant attacks. 00:11:53 Speaker 3: Blake, I think there'll be more. There will probably be another one by tomorrow. I think, yeah, we're getting we're getting a lot of we're seeing the consequences of throwing open America to basically the entire planet and saying everyone deserves to be in America. No one should ever be forced to leave America. There should be no penalties for attacking Americans again. Today marks I think the first time we've had a repeat offender on literal terrorism. 00:12:23 Speaker 1: The guy, can you walk through that case? What was the We know there was a previous case. 00:12:28 Speaker 3: Seems that in twenty sixteen. I haven't read all the details, we'll get those soon enough, but it seems that he supported ISIS in twenty sixteen. So they arrested him, they imprisoned him, He received I think twelve years, was let out after about eight. So he gets out in twenty twenty four. And because in our great wisdom, we made him a naturalized US citizen, and our lawmakers, in their great wisdom, do not allow us to denaturalize citizens for crimes like joining foreign terrorist groups that want to murder Americans. He just got out and they stopped monitoring him, and he thought, okay, well, you know, first time didn't work out, but second times a charm. So he got a gun and he went and started shooting up Old Dominion. And thankfully now he is dead, so he cannot offend a third time, though I'm sure we'd find a way to do that if he were still with us, And I suspect this won't be the last time because we pathologically want to let in people who will attack and kill us. Zuzu's pedals, by the way, donated in a Rumble rant. It feels like even our legal immigration system is designed to kill Americans. Yes, yes it is Zuzu. That is clearly the case. I think one of the most enraging things to me is there are so many obvious problems and flaws in our immigration system that I mean, at a minimum, Republicans could whip up a short bill with ten different items on it and just vote on it and force Democrats to vote against it. I would include things like you get denaturalized if you join a terrorist group. I would include things like you can't get a green card for a child bride. Did you know you're allowed to do out in America? 00:14:00 Speaker 1: You can? 00:14:01 Speaker 3: You can bring in a child bride to marry you. That happens. It happens regularly. Like there's several cases a year, bunch of of things. Maybe you can't get a green card for someone who's your first cousin. 00:14:11 Speaker 4: This is great, but like I'm gonna play a clip for you here about that. This is the Virginia shooting. This guy was like known by the FBI, okay, because like we can't even get to the point where we're getting known threats off the streets, let alone you know, passing immigration reform through our stupid Congress cut sixteen. 00:14:34 Speaker 2: But so little details that we knew about the schemes or how are you able to confirm. 00:14:39 Speaker 3: That this or this living in an act terrorism? 00:14:42 Speaker 6: How it was an act of terrorism. I can tell you that we have confirmed reports that prior to him conducting this act of terrorism, he shouted all our stated ala akbar, and he was formerly a subject of an FBI investigation in material supporting terrorism. 00:15:05 Speaker 3: Asia. Yet he was walking free and more will because our illustrious leaders just choose to let it happen. 00:15:13 Speaker 5: Here's something I tweeted as well that there's a you know, there's a tendency I think for a lot of people to call the say oh, this is a sleeper cell and then create this picture that oh, they you know, they're directly working for Iran or the IRGC and they've been contacted by Iran in some way to you know, press the trigger and activate the. 00:15:36 Speaker 1: You know the cell. It's it's got that like that old Clardanes Homeland. 00:15:40 Speaker 5: Show kind of thing, But that's in reality, that's not really what it's like in reality. In many cases, these are self radicalized individuals. 00:15:48 Speaker 1: They are people who they. 00:15:50 Speaker 5: Are, you know, supportive of vices for their own means, and they're again just part of a hostile population that we've allowed into our country because I think Zuzu's pedals is right, because we have an immigration system that is designed to kill Americans. The point of a system is what it does. And so whether it's killing you through what they're doing in terms of depressing wages and putting pressure on our housing market and wreaking havoc on us economically, or in this case literally and actually directly picking up guns and killing us, it almost seems like that's exactly what's been happening over and over and over. 00:16:30 Speaker 1: So no, I don't think this is just. 00:16:32 Speaker 5: Some like like oh, we're you know, we're We've got the call from the new Ayahtola who like nobody can see anyway, like he hasn't even like put any actual audio out yet or anything. 00:16:43 Speaker 1: It's like Schrodinger' is iatola. But no, it's it's not like that. 00:16:46 Speaker 5: It's just they want to do this, and there's Ryan Grimm, who you know, is well sourced and has done a lot of reporting in this area, says that the guy who was from Lebanon, that apparently his family lived in one of these villages or one of these towns that was under attack, that was in you know, caught up in some of the bombings with Hesba Lah and so he lost family members, and you know, it may have been a motivation for his attack on this synagogue in preschool that you know, you you took out my family, and you took up my kids, I'm going to take out your kids or something like that. 00:17:20 Speaker 1: Again, if if you know, if that reporting is true, is to be believed. 00:17:24 Speaker 5: But again, these are the types of low back problems that you get into when you embark on the invade the world, Invite the world policy. And that's exactly what Charlie would talk about over and over all. 00:17:37 Speaker 3: Right, guys, to hit it topic number two. Should we hit ourselves in the face with hammers? 00:17:44 Speaker 4: It would be more intelligent than our yah system, So yeah. 00:17:47 Speaker 3: Sure, why not? All right? Yeah? So, of course, as I'm sure anyone under the age of probably twenty five knows the reason you would want to hit yourself in the face with a hammer is so that you can look smacks. Do you know what that is? 00:18:01 Speaker 1: Andrew? 00:18:02 Speaker 3: I do know? 00:18:02 Speaker 4: What looks Maxing is? Oh, he looks max No, you don't know, can't you tell? 00:18:08 Speaker 1: I don't know. 00:18:09 Speaker 3: I mean it's pretty, it's pretty worry something. 00:18:11 Speaker 1: Blake tried to look max once but it didn't take. 00:18:14 Speaker 3: Oh, I know, I'm gonna think. 00:18:16 Speaker 4: The beard is about The beard is literally looks Maxing now. 00:18:19 Speaker 3: But the problem is this, I'm you know, I'm getting I'm getting bald mogged. And so You've got Jester gooning and bald mogging. And I refuse to say that. You're gonna have to say it. You're gonna have to, you know, that's the jack is say it now. 00:18:30 Speaker 4: I saw Jack say it on on a show the other day, and I was like, I'm not saying it. 00:18:37 Speaker 3: Jack Can said, it's a jack is I said. 00:18:39 Speaker 5: What all I said was all I said was Lindsay Graham is Jester gooning for uh for war? That Lindsay Graham loves to jestergon for war. He doesn't care where the war is or really who's in the war. It could be in Ukraine, it could be in the Middle East. It could be in Latin America, but that's Lindsay Graham. He loves he loves Jester Goony War. 00:19:01 Speaker 3: Okay, so we probably should explain this a little bit because we do have listeners who are a little bit older, even year old. So yes, of course, Okay, well, well so looks max and we can start with silly looks literally just acting silly. Also, also, eleven year old probably shouldn't listen to the entire idea is this is the PG thirteen show. Okay, thirteen year old? Yeah, yeah, so yeah, so we've got but so so looks Maxine is a subculture that's emerged. It comes out of online internet forums. I believe it comes out of the the in cell community, which is of course a community on the internet. Uh. And so it's the guys who say in this in these harsh times where we have more and more inequality and more and more extreme outcomes, the only path towards success is you have to massively maximize your physical appearance. And that doesn't just consist of eating right or you know, lifting weights so that you look stronger. It includes things like aggressively reshaping your face. And so there is a I believe is it? Is it clovicular? Jack Clovicular is the guy who hits his face with a hammer in order to The idea is that breaks your bones in your face and then as a result, you get sharper features, and so they all have a stronger chin, stronger cheekbones, and you will become more of a giga chat which is what you should all aspire to be. Others not mewing. 00:20:20 Speaker 1: You guys, remember you guys heard have you guys heard of mewing? 00:20:23 Speaker 3: Mewing? Is that the one where you you put your tongue on the roof of your mouth. 00:20:27 Speaker 1: Yeah, yeah, so you you. 00:20:30 Speaker 5: Mewing is the one where you put your tongue on the roof of your mouth and then you use it to sort of like spread out your your upper mandible so that it so that it spreads. 00:20:41 Speaker 1: The size of your jaw. 00:20:43 Speaker 5: So the idea is that that I don't know why it's called mewing, but but that's what mewing is. And there's also there's also people who eat or chew. It's not mewing, but in in in other you know, jaw related looks. Maxing is because the people will eat like chew like hard guy like mastic gum or like something that's like a really really extra chewy gum that they'll just like chow down on all the time. And there's been some videos of guys with like this. I saw this one clip. I don't know where it is where, you know, this guy was like super skinny and like looked like he didn't go to the gym, but the only muscle in. 00:21:17 Speaker 1: His entire body that he worked out was his jaw. 00:21:20 Speaker 5: So he had this like massive, like expanded your kind of situation going on there. 00:21:25 Speaker 1: No, No, I mean, of course makes you talk like a hapsburg. 00:21:29 Speaker 3: That that sounds weird to us, But I think do we have to admit that this is just the correct way to go about life? Do we have to maximize our physical appearance at all costs to inequality? Yeah? Look at him, he's he's hammering his face with that. 00:21:41 Speaker 5: Uh that's not a hammer, that's a that's that's like a massager. 00:21:46 Speaker 1: It's like a massage guy. 00:21:47 Speaker 3: Well, it might be for the more mild version of it, well maybe maybe the higher budget version of it. He definitely breaks bones in his face. 00:21:54 Speaker 7: I know that we have ideas that it's like stronger cheek bone, I guess, or maybe it's like it's like calcifies something like. 00:22:06 Speaker 4: That's exactly what it is. So you break the bones, they grow back stronger and more. 00:22:11 Speaker 3: You know, Hey, everyone, we're excited to tell you about Charlie's favorite supplement. If you experience brain fog, low energy, frequent illnesses, or if you just wake up stiff and achy every day, you've got to try strong cell. Charlie took it every single day. He frequently talked about it on the show, and he even traveled around the country bringing it with him. For Charlie, strong cell helped keep his mind sharp and focused for all the debates he was engaged in. Strong cell gives clean, natural energy without jitters, weird spikes, or afternoon crashes. It makes you feel like a younger version of yourself. 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So if you're tired of feeling tired, battling brain fog, or just not feeling like yourself, check out Strong Cell today. Visit strong Cell dot com and use the code Charlie for twenty percent off your order. Charlie always recommended giving strong Cell six to eight weeks to experience its full benefits. So do yourself a favor. Get strong Cell today and give it the time it needs to work its magic. 00:24:30 Speaker 2: That Strongsell dot com forward slash Charlie, and don't forget to use special discount code Charlie at checkout to get a special twenty percent off just for Kirk listeners. Strong Sell dot com forward slash Charlie. Check it out right now. 00:24:47 Speaker 3: Yeah, And so it's become this whole thing because we have these different look smacksing people. They all seem to have bizarre names. So we have Clovicular, we have Andrew Jenic, we have there's a local tie in here. There's a guy who's I only know him as ASU frat leader. We all know that Arizona State is a particularly fratty school and particularly yeah, then ASU frat leader in fact a ASU frat leader. I think we have a clip about this where he got publicly cortisol checked by andro Jenic. Do we have do we have clip nine? Is that? Is that live? Or is that just b roll? 00:25:18 Speaker 1: Listen virus mate? 00:25:19 Speaker 3: If I will avenge clouds if it's a loss in. 00:25:21 Speaker 1: A dude, well, I have the blast five grams of chest. 00:25:24 Speaker 7: I'm coming too. 00:25:25 Speaker 1: I'm coming on having in a few weeks. 00:25:27 Speaker 3: The oh dear, Okay, so I guess apparently what happened is that clip was that ASU frat leader got publicly cortisol checked by andro Jenic, the number one undisputed lookx maxim protege of clavicular. He is avowed to avenge clivicular who I believe got frame mogged by ASU frat leader. Jack, do you know about frame mogging? 00:25:48 Speaker 1: Yeah? 00:25:48 Speaker 5: So, what funny is a lot of like the gen Z slang is actually just like right wing slang from twenty fifteen twenty fourteen, So like mogging is something that yeah, like the meg Taw guys used to say this, and like the Manisphere guys used to say this. 00:26:02 Speaker 1: Oh, apparently there's. 00:26:03 Speaker 5: Also a I gotta watch it, uh because I heard it. 00:26:06 Speaker 1: I heard it's interesting. 00:26:07 Speaker 5: There's a new Manisphere documentary out on on Netflix or something, So I've gotta I've got. 00:26:13 Speaker 1: A pirate that and watch it, you know, watch it later. 00:26:16 Speaker 5: And so magging used to just mean like like going beast mode on somebody and just showing how how much more powerful you are than them, like mog someone in the gym, like was the was the original you know, was the original. 00:26:30 Speaker 1: Take on it. But then mogging sort of took on a new form. 00:26:34 Speaker 5: Where it was if you had if you had like a if you're just bigger than somebody, uh physically, that you were mogging them, and that if you stand next to someone in an image like this because you're in the same frame that you are, then frame mugging them. 00:26:49 Speaker 4: I got accused of chin chin mougging somebody chin mogging by whom it was in that when I when I was debating Adam Meckler or Mackler, whatever his name is. You remember that that h. 00:27:03 Speaker 3: Right now, you're hard to. 00:27:04 Speaker 1: That guy at all. It's really not hard to mock him, not even a little bit, because he's got that he's got that like I felt that about it. 00:27:10 Speaker 3: Yeah, I saw a couple of comments there. First you chin whim now you pronounced mo? I was. 00:27:14 Speaker 5: I was chinlogging him originally because I was making fun of his soul patch. He had that little like head, that little like food catcher, and then he got I think he shaved it after that. 00:27:24 Speaker 4: Funny enough, he was on you know that that whole Abby Philip controversy about Islam and stuff like that. He was on that that panel that night, and I was like, I know that guy, like I oh really, oh yeah, he's it was. It was interesting because back behind scenes he was really kind and nice and he was I've actually heard that about him. And then he got on stage. It was like Doctor Jekyll, mister Hyde. 00:27:48 Speaker 3: It was. 00:27:49 Speaker 4: It was completely animated. Unfair jumping to conclusions. 00:27:55 Speaker 3: U yeah, anyways, but yeah, what's funny? What I do? 00:28:00 Speaker 1: Oh wait, wait, by the way, court wait, Blake. 00:28:02 Speaker 5: The other one that I wanted to get in because you mentioned it a couple of times. Cortisol. So cortisol face is if you have a round, puffy or bloated facial express appearance. So I guess perhaps the uh, you know, the hammering might help with this. So if you have a high stress level which give you a qu cortisol spike, then you have lack of facial definition, you could have double chin and then and then you could even get cortisol belly. 00:28:24 Speaker 1: So I watch out for the cortisol. 00:28:27 Speaker 3: So what I think is kind of interesting about this is if you look at all of these guys, they basically are all gen Z white guys. And this definitely grows out of, as Jack would say, like right wing slang on the internet. It does feel big time. It feels implicitly a bit right wing. I think they've all been denounced as essentially like right wing extremists at some point, and yet they're actually kind of not. I guess that's probably merciful because otherwise we'd end up with like Clovicular running for president or something. But in fact, they they've actually they've gotten attention for, like they've basically one of them. 00:29:06 Speaker 1: I think that's gotta be surgery. 00:29:09 Speaker 3: What are we showing here? They're showing b roll here. Yeah, I mean a lot of them gets part of it. 00:29:13 Speaker 1: That's like that guy with the horns. I don't like. 00:29:17 Speaker 3: The bigger picture thing here is that there is something like I think on the right, we talk about it's desirable to excel, it's desirable to improve your appearance, Like we shouldn't embrace obesity. We shouldn't embrace uh, like being a loser. You should try to improve yourself. And yet like this looks maxa thing. Technically it is a form of improving yourself. You're trying to make yourself more attractive. How far is too far? 00:29:42 Speaker 4: This is too far. You shouldn't be making your bones or like micro breaking your bones to like change the shape. 00:29:49 Speaker 3: Come on, Okay, But so is botox immoral? Because botox you're you're you're injecting yourself with the deadliest poison in the world and paralyzing your face. 00:29:58 Speaker 4: You know, I kid's arguable, but it it It doesn't strike me as nearly as insane as some of the pictures I'm looking at right now, Like these these images that were throwing up on screen, they have obviously crossed another line. 00:30:13 Speaker 3: Or what about if it didn't exist, If it didn't exist and these guys were inventing it, how do you think we'd react to something like braces? Like, oh, would they bind metal bars to their teeth to straighten their teeth. 00:30:24 Speaker 1: My kid's got braces right now. 00:30:26 Speaker 3: Yeah, I just it's a whole different thing. Most places don't do braces. This is like a weird American thing. 00:30:31 Speaker 4: Yeah, but no, but there's actually a medical reason for braces, because the shape of your bite, your your shape of your palette can affect the way you breathe at night, can affect affect the you know, uh, sleep apnea. I had a buddy that had to get his whole palete because he didn't get braces when he's a little kid expanded so that he because he was literally dying slowly because of his sleep apna, and it was so bad that the machine wouldn't work. So had he had to do that, if he would have gotten braces as a young kid, it probably would avoided that. 00:30:58 Speaker 1: Yeah, flick about what about wisdom teeth? Do you guys have your wisdom teeth? 00:31:02 Speaker 3: Mine were removed, Yeah, I have. I got mine out in high school. I think when I was seventeen or eighteen. 00:31:09 Speaker 5: I have the two lower ones still you the tiller ones. So I've been hanging on to mine. I've been hanging on to mind my whole life. And every time, like I'll go to the dentist and they'll be like they'd be like, ah. 00:31:20 Speaker 8: You know you've got this your g we read your teeth. They're going to grow, it's gonna jam out your jaw. And I was like, well, if it becomes a problem, I'll take them out. And it's never become a problem. 00:31:31 Speaker 5: And I'm like, I feel like this is just kind of a scam in some cases. 00:31:35 Speaker 1: I mean, they get paid. 00:31:36 Speaker 4: I totally have got the same thing. I've got the same thing because you know, human beings have existed with wisdom teeth since human beings have existed, thank you, So like, why do we have them if we didn't need them? I mean, I guess you could make a argument that your your first round of molars fallout because of I don't know, cavities and we didn't have dentistry at the time and you needed replacement set. But I just kind of don't buy that at all. 00:32:02 Speaker 3: Actually, so yeah, I just I don't. 00:32:04 Speaker 1: I've never bought it now. 00:32:05 Speaker 5: Funny enough, in the military, so like in the Navy, for example, you can get it taken out for free. 00:32:11 Speaker 1: So it's it's something like they always try to push. 00:32:13 Speaker 5: They're like, oh, you should get these taken out, she get is taken out. 00:32:15 Speaker 1: And if you here's an interesting one. 00:32:19 Speaker 5: If you sign up for submarine service, they take your wisdom teeth right away, Blake, do you know why? 00:32:25 Speaker 3: Because they don't want to have to operate on you if you have a problem. WHI, let's see, don't they also like take your appendix out or something. 00:32:30 Speaker 5: No, but why do they specifically take wisdom teeth out automatically for sub mariners? I don't know, because if it has to do with pressure and the pressurization of the submarine, which is like similar to you know, going an airplane when it's pressure rised, and if you have a problem with your wisdom teeth. 00:32:48 Speaker 1: And they impact, they can actually explode when you're underwater. 00:32:52 Speaker 5: And apparently it's it's you know, it's happened in the past, and so at this point they don't even mess with it anymore. And so even if you like we you're in boot camp, we had a ton of guys. Every single person who who signs up for undersea service gets gets their wisdom teeth. 00:33:08 Speaker 1: Taken out, no questions asked, like you just have to do it. 00:33:11 Speaker 3: Yeah, So do people get their wisdom tooth taken out for appearance. I thought that was just because like they can just mess you up health wise, and so it's just you. 00:33:17 Speaker 5: Know, but that's that's what I'm saying, is that like in some cases, I don't think it's medically necessary. 00:33:23 Speaker 3: Oh, we do have someone asking kids today are saying kids today would not make it in the nineties. There's definitely reason to believe this. One of these looksmaxers is apparently in tears because someone puts cheese on his burger. I guess that's not a look smaxing approach. Jeez, see is the same? I have a question that's too far ahead. 00:33:42 Speaker 5: Is is looks maxing really all that different from metrosexualism that was like in the early two thousands, Like, isn't this kind of that's just the same thing as that. 00:33:54 Speaker 3: I think the closest analog for for looxmxing actually might be uh, male to female transgenderism. I think it's because think about it, because think about it, a male to female transgender failed, male to female transgender. 00:34:08 Speaker 1: Let's not forget your your breath. You're pioneering work. 00:34:12 Speaker 3: I'm about to say, I'm about to say, Okay, so exactly so a male to female transgenders as they're auto gynophiles in many cases, so many they basically their their kink is they kind of they have a fetish for, like the idea of themselves turning into a woman, and as a result, they have a very stupid, pornified version of like what a woman is. So like you look at Caitlyn Jenner, Bruce Jenner did not become He was sixty years old when he started going through all that. He didn't become a sixty year old woman. He doesn't look like your grandma. He tried to dress up like he's a twenty nine year old model bombshell. And that's what they get into. They had They want to imitate this super stereotyped version of like what women are into or how they look and how they behave and everything. And you know, they'll talk about like it's so hot, like getting our periods. Like women don't get weird excitement about getting their periods. They don't like them. And so this is like the dude version. They're basically male to male transsexuals. So these guys are going and they're like, let's inject ourselves and do these insane things so we look like our cartoon version of a dude, Like I mean, look, throw up one of the ASU frat leader picks again, Like the dude literally looks like a cartoon character, like you would think it was AI generated. Yeah, except he's apparently a real. 00:35:33 Speaker 4: Po I know it's going too far, And botox is like I don't know, I put it in a different category. Although I've heard people make the same argument about botox, but like here here's you could tell when he starts crying, the narcissism and the fragility, Like, that's not masculine. So the whole point is that you're sort of like creating this hyper masculine veneer to cover up this hyper insecure interior, this hyper narcissistic interior. It's not godliness, that's not I mean, listen here, how about this. It's a somewhat similar because I think about this with weightlifters or bodybuilders, like there can be you know, like a discipline in that right. You know, I'm not totally against it, but like sometimes it's like, Okay, how much are you going to focus on your physical form here? So one Timothy four to eight for physical training is of some value, but godliness has value for all things, holding promise both for the present life and the life to come. This is a trustworthy saying that deserves full acceptance. That is why we labor and strivee because we have put our hope in the Living God, who is the savior of all people, and especially of those who believe so. The physical body yet there's some value to it, But having good character, being godly, that has eternal value. So this stuff just all the sirens are growing off for me, all the flags. 00:36:51 Speaker 3: The online world moves fast, and it's moving even faster these days. That's why TikTok approaches teen safety with families in mind from the start, because as discovery and creativity are both wonderful things, but it's important to make sure that safety comes first as well. On TikTok, teenagers have over fifty built in protections right from when they join. Accounts routines all start private by default, They're not open to the entire world, and for those under sixteen, direct messages are turned off. Only their friends can comment on their videos. And that kind of approach matters because feeling confident and comfortable about these platforms your teenagers are on shouldn't mean digging through a bunch of menus and trying to set everything up yourself and worrying that you got it wrong. TikTok is taking a proactive approach. Their protections are built in from the moment those teenagers join, so that safety and peace of mind for parents is there right from the start. All of this is to say when safety comes first, discovery and creativity can follow without fear. Learn more by going to TikTok dot com slash guardians guide. That's TikTok dot com slash guardians guide. 00:38:01 Speaker 5: Well before we before we move, I know we got a couple of rumble rants in, so I do want to hit those. 00:38:08 Speaker 1: Oh and apparently we have a sound effect for that now. 00:38:11 Speaker 3: Yes we do. Yeah, well we've had the sound effect for a while. How about we do b Jordan's first questions? 00:38:18 Speaker 1: Yes, of course. 00:38:19 Speaker 3: Oh, I'll got it here. Yeah. So since Jack mentioned Netflix, was it determined that they dropped their attempt to buy Warner Brothers because of the Trump administration would block approval. 00:38:29 Speaker 1: So yes and no. 00:38:31 Speaker 5: There were serious anti trust issues with this because it wasn't just like the Trump administration. There were actual serious anti trust people coming out and saying that if you have the number one streaming service buying the number three streaming service, that you're going to run. 00:38:46 Speaker 1: Into very serious issues. 00:38:48 Speaker 5: But in this case, so when Paramount came in, that became sort of the number I think like number four, number five streaming service, Paramount plus buying the number three. So it just it just wasn't in the same category as Netflix consolidating the market. It just didn't really trip you know, it didn't really hit the trip wires for that would trigger an anti trust situation, and they kind of knew that, so, you know, I think that honestly, I think that regardless of who was in office in the White House right now, this probably would have run into some very very serious issues. And then also Paramount came in with a with a deal that was just so much higher than where Netflix was for Warner Brothers. 00:39:33 Speaker 1: Plus, the Netflix deal was only for. 00:39:36 Speaker 5: A a portion of the Warner Brothers assets, so it didn't include, for example, I think CNN and some of their other TV assets, whereas the Warner excuse me, the Paramount deal came in and said we want to buy the whole Enchilada. 00:39:50 Speaker 1: So they came in and said we're buying everything. 00:39:52 Speaker 5: So in the short answer like like yes, but it's actually more complicated than that. That being said, if you guys remember, you know, I was definitely targeting Netflix and bringing this up as. 00:40:05 Speaker 1: A huge, huge issue. 00:40:07 Speaker 5: Way back during the Stranger Thing situation, right, which of course happened right when this deal was first announced. 00:40:14 Speaker 1: And look, you know, what can I say? Guys? What can I say? You lost? 00:40:19 Speaker 5: You deserve to lose, and you have totally lost. And also, by the way, how great is it? How great is it now that HBO has now been bought by Paramount instead of woke flicks? 00:40:31 Speaker 1: And perhaps, just perhaps the new. 00:40:33 Speaker 5: Duncan Egg series, which is amazing, will be able to continue without being super wokefied lovely. 00:40:40 Speaker 3: And then the other one that we have here is oh too many of these here? All right, we have a question, just as old dominion Ozuzu again asked the old dominion, Tarras was sentenced to twelve years in federal prison, was out in three How did that happen? I think it was a little more than three. I think it was twenty seventeen to twenty four or so. But nevertheless did get out very quickly. And the answer is because our prison sentences are not as long as they are supposed to be, although the federal system is better. The federal system at least has no parole, and there's like a cap on how much good behavior credit you can get. So I want to say, what's the most you can slice off a federal sentence, like a quarter of it, something like that. I don't know, all right, it's something like that. It's less than your full sentence, but you don't The federal system doesn't have these cases. You get in many a state, even many red states, where you get sentenced to twenty years and you're out in three and a half and then you go and stab someone again, and everyone asks. 00:41:37 Speaker 4: Who, how did this happen? 00:41:39 Speaker 3: There's no way we could have prevented this. 00:41:41 Speaker 4: Well a lot you were talking about that, George Soros Virginia. 00:41:46 Speaker 3: Is it the district attorney a commonwealth attorney? They call the same idea. Yeah, you know, we just have commonwealth attorneys who love not prosecuting people and love letting criminals out immediately, and love love letting them roam around and stab people. There's a guy right crazy enough, that old dominion shooter. His last name was Jallo. We have had two different shooters in Virginia in the past month, who are immigrants from Africa with the last name Jallo, who have violent criminal histories, who have murdered somebody. 00:42:14 Speaker 4: So we should just like you know, we have like the Muslim band, we should just we should just do like ja Jelo band. 00:42:20 Speaker 3: We can call it the Jello band. Just someonet adjusts the pronunciation there a bit. I think I think we we we could at least, you know, shut it down until we figure out what is going on. But speaking of shutting things down, how do we how do we feel? Do you do you guys feel like beating up on Canada or do you guys feel like talking. 00:42:36 Speaker 4: About money both are very good money or do they have like the looney? 00:42:43 Speaker 3: Is Canada even a real country? Though? So Canada is a real country. It's a very problematic country. 00:42:48 Speaker 1: It's great, not a real country. 00:42:50 Speaker 3: No, I think we have to admit it's a real country. We have to stare evil in the face. All right, you pick you blake. You know, Canada fills me with so much rage. I need to dial back my ang. I want to embrace the money first, all right, let's go money, alrighty, So this is a different Anglo country that's committing suicide. This is the United Kingdom. We have a lot of fondness for the Brits. I don't know how much they return it, but we love the Brits. We do. But the problem is Britain made a big mistake. They made this idea where they're thought, well, everyone in the world but just surely love to be British. So we don't need to care about maintaining our cultural homogeneity, or our religious homogeneity, or our doesn't want to destroy the UK homogeneity. So they let in a bunch of people. Now they're full of people who don't like the UK and so the lovely people. Besides abolishing jury trials for a bunch of crimes, they are also abolishing people. 00:43:41 Speaker 4: On the money and people on the money. 00:43:43 Speaker 3: So that Winston Churchill, Jane Austen. 00:43:47 Speaker 4: That would be like it would literally be like us removing George Washington or something. 00:43:53 Speaker 3: Well the space. I'm sure we'll get on that. 00:43:55 Speaker 4: It would be like Eisenhower from the fifty cent piece, like taking all of that money. I know they don't make him anymore, right, but I mean, this is kind of what we're talking about. World War two. Figure Winston Churchill is you know, broadly beloved. Obviously, there's some people that have claimed he's the real villain of World War Two, which I wholeheartedly reject. 00:44:14 Speaker 3: Charlie loved Winston Churchill. Yeah, I think do we have a do we still have a Churchill object here? I think that's I think that's old Churchy up there with the. 00:44:21 Speaker 4: Phones, Churchill up there on the shelf. I love Churchill, and I think this is offensive because, yes, exactly. 00:44:29 Speaker 3: I think it actually. 00:44:32 Speaker 8: Never quick. 00:44:34 Speaker 3: You know, in general we should maintain traditional things, but especially actually if you're embracing all of this mass migration, I think it's actually essential. You've got to keep people on your money. You need to have national heroes. You have to force people to accept them as national heroes. 00:44:48 Speaker 4: They're replacing Churchill with wildlife badgers, hedgehogs, otters, barnels, newts and beavers. 00:44:57 Speaker 3: I think that's what it. 00:44:59 Speaker 5: Was ding Sonic the Hedgehog on British money, which was funny because Sonic is of course originally Japanese. 00:45:05 Speaker 3: I guess no, Sonic the Hedgehog is really big in Britain. I'm not sure why, but he actually is insanely popular. 00:45:10 Speaker 1: There. 00:45:11 Speaker 5: Oh really, yes, Like is he more because there's like a new Mariam. I mean I guess, I mean Sonic is popular in the US, but I mean I guess Mario has like always been more popular. 00:45:22 Speaker 3: Mario, I've never heard of heard of this? 00:45:24 Speaker 4: Is this like the Catholic? Is it a Catholic thing? 00:45:27 Speaker 3: Mary? Oh? 00:45:30 Speaker 1: Wow, that was just awkward. Yeah, that's how we're talking. That's that's like the Philly way of saying. 00:45:38 Speaker 4: It's the Philly way. Okay, okay, you didn't get Kevin to confirm. How does he say Mario? 00:45:43 Speaker 3: All right? 00:45:44 Speaker 9: But yeah, Kevin's got like the more fully like the real you know you Mario. 00:45:52 Speaker 4: You know, we spend a lot of time on this show talking about culture, about why strong families matter, why why values matter, why faith matters. But here's something practical. If you actually want to build a strong family someday, you have to start by meeting someone who shares those same convictions. And in today's dating culture, that's not always easy. A lot of apps are built around casual connections, instant gratification, no long term vision, and that's just not what many of you are looking for. Let's be honest. That's why I like what Upward is doing. It's a dating app designed around faith and shared values people who care about commitment, integrity, marriage and family. You're starting from common ground instead of trying to negotiate your core beliefs three months into a relationship. That kind of clarity matters if faith is central to your life, or even if it's something that shaped how you were raised and how you see the world. Upward connects you with people who take that seriously. If you're tired of the confusion and you're ready to date with intention, with marriage and family in mind, download Upward and start building on the right foundation. Because strong relationships don't just happen by accident. They start with shared values. 00:47:06 Speaker 3: Upward okay, Yeah, And like you know, once they take they put the wildlife on, they'll like never be able to muster the cultural courage to put someone on the money, or if they do, it's gonna be someone horrible. They're like, Okay, we need to put the person on the money who's like the first multicultural gay basket weaver to serve on the city Council of leeds and just put them on the money the way they do in the US. Where did you know that the quarters they're making now are like women of the United States, and we're just getting like Asian rights activists in San Francisco are getting on money. 00:47:41 Speaker 4: I feel like we dispersed the quarter thing like across the states, so everybody gets to play kind of thing. That. 00:47:47 Speaker 3: Yeah, that was their strategy. We did all the states, then we did the National Park. 00:47:51 Speaker 4: God forbid, we have any future white men on our currency. Do you think it's gonna happen? Do you think it's possible that we could get another white man on a new white man like like you could get it like. 00:48:05 Speaker 3: A Charlie Kirk, Charlie Elon. We actually were discussing this. We were discussing this. 00:48:11 Speaker 1: Why can't we get Charlie Kirk quarters? 00:48:13 Speaker 3: I want to? I want a silver dollar? 00:48:16 Speaker 5: Yeah, like likes like they typically do. They'll have American activists on you know, coin, silver dollars, uh quarters, this type of thing. 00:48:27 Speaker 1: Why why not Charlie. 00:48:28 Speaker 3: Look, if Alabama can put a radical anti American communist on their state quarter, I think we could get Charlie Kirk on a quarter. We should try. I'm referring to Helen Keller, of course was a communist, but. 00:48:42 Speaker 1: Of the Treasury. 00:48:43 Speaker 4: Oh wait, hm hmm, let's advance this. I know there actually was talk at the Treasury to get something pushed. I'm gonna I'm gonna revisit that because Charlie deserves Yeah. 00:48:54 Speaker 1: No, I feel like this came up before. 00:48:55 Speaker 3: Actually, yeah, it'd be neat. So one of the things that's worth noting, we haven't added a new dollar bill denomination in long time. In fact, we've reduced them. We used to have larger denominations. We had thousand dollar bills back when that would represent like ten thousand plus dollars more than that. Yes, we think we had a ten thousand dollars bill. We had a one hundred thousand dollars bill, but it was more like kind of a bank transfer certificate thing. Yeah, there we go. It's one thousand dollars. I think that's Grover Cleveland. We put Grover Cleveland on money. That's okay. See, I wouldn't recommend, but I feel like it'd be time. I think you could get away with a five hundred dollars bill at this point that would probably be. 00:49:28 Speaker 4: Worth Yeah, it's basically what one hundred dollars? 00:49:31 Speaker 3: So who would you put on a five hundred dollars bill. 00:49:34 Speaker 4: If you would, So my vote would be one of two, and if you can force me, I'll pick but Teddy Roosevelt or Calvin Coolidge? 00:49:44 Speaker 3: All right, do we have a mockup of that? Do we have a mockup of that guy, Teddy Roosevelt on a five hundred dollar bill? Okay? That looks solid. That looks solid. And I also like that's kind of the old look of dollars. They've gotten all fancier. I wouldn't mind restoring that, the old mid century, the mid century, grayish green. 00:50:02 Speaker 4: You say that, actually because when they kind of came out with a little more colorful twenty dollars bills and things like that, he actually was young enough that I was really fascinated with it. And actually, when you look at dollar bills, they're actually going in, Yeah, there you go, what are we looking at here? Oh, we have the whole list of all the dollar bills you guys came up with. We have Tom Brady twenty eight. 00:50:22 Speaker 3: Yeah, throw out tom Brady. Tom Brady on Tom Brady on a five hundred dollars bill would be pretty like just like, and he'd be the first seven time Super Bowl winner to be on currency. That's really funny. Okay. 00:50:32 Speaker 4: So the original though, was McKinley, Right, I've already said yes if you throw five. The actual five hundred dollars bill was McKinley image forty. 00:50:40 Speaker 3: No, that's actually a mock up we did where that's Willie McKinley, except with the giga chat face. Oh giga chet which giga. Donald Trump definitely thinks McKinley was a giga chat and he beat up on Spain, he went to Cuba, he took the Philippines, he did all the things Trump wants. 00:50:53 Speaker 4: Okay, so everybody knows that Nixon is now on his reclamation tour. He's he's been reclaimed by the patriots. Roger Stone has always been on this train. But did you know that apparently Nixon took one for the team, that he actually fell on the sword for the sake of the nation. I want to get James Rosen on the show. Who did that New York Times. 00:51:18 Speaker 3: Up at about? 00:51:18 Speaker 2: Oh? 00:51:19 Speaker 4: For sure, for sure, this is Nixon on the five hundred dollars bill twenty three there it is beautiful. 00:51:24 Speaker 3: Yeah, tell us, By the way, who do you guys want? We could probably make a mock up. If someone has a good has a good suggestion as as a five hundred dollars bill, Honoree, please tell us. 00:51:36 Speaker 1: Teddy No Teddy Rosevel. 00:51:37 Speaker 5: I mean I think it you'd be hard pressed. Funny enough were I just showed my kids Night at the Museum for the first time, like two nights ago, and they loved it, and we were talking about Teddy Roosevelt. 00:51:50 Speaker 1: You think about the rough. 00:51:51 Speaker 5: Riders, Cuba, the Spanish American War, Teddy Robust, built, built, trust busting. 00:51:58 Speaker 1: Who I was gonna say, built from Panama. 00:52:00 Speaker 5: Yeah, again, trust busting, trust bust, just like with Netflix Parks, you. 00:52:07 Speaker 1: Know, the National Parks. 00:52:08 Speaker 5: I mean, you just you think of the amount of accomplishments that he's had. And I've also long said that Teddy Roosevelt would be an excellent sort of avatar and hero for the New Right because he's someone who's a Republican in good standing. But you know, you talk about how he's he isn't. He wasn't a looksmaxer, but what was he? 00:52:28 Speaker 1: He was a rugged maxer, so he believed in going outdoors. 00:52:32 Speaker 3: It's kind of funny because he was like he really had to train at it because he was a softie. He was super sick all of the time when he was a kid. 00:52:39 Speaker 5: Any Yeah, but you see, by the way, if you any equin find that picture of him from when he was younger, and he was like a boxer when he was in college or something. 00:52:46 Speaker 1: There's like a he's like super ripped and. 00:52:49 Speaker 5: Just like does not look like you'd expect Teddy Roosevelt to look as he did older in age. I mean, he was shot and like still kept speaking, similar to a certain president that we all know, and just just someone who had had a view of politics that was totally different from the George W. Bush sort of you know, mindset of it. He was a class trader in so many ways, in ways that his cousin FDR was not. I think that the Bull Moose should absolutely be. 00:53:19 Speaker 1: And should have. 00:53:20 Speaker 5: We did a Cernovich and I did an event years ago that we called the Bull Moose Party, and it was like a sea pack after party kind of thing, similar to how Amfest got started. And I've always said that we should we should really bring back the bull Moose. 00:53:33 Speaker 1: And plus the aesthetics are just great. 00:53:35 Speaker 3: Yeah, Roosevelt's pretty good. People like that idea. Someone took Gibberish suggests Ike on money, I do like we had it, we have one of those. He would be a kind of I think we have a mock up. He would be we need it in general, do like some Ike awareness. Charlie was actually passionate about that last year. He was just thinking, we have a lot of stuff about You could definitely see that this was made with AI. It's not a perfect artis in power port to there. But we have a lot of people who remember Reagan. Obviously a lot of people like Nixon. But we're actually, you know, we're now at the point where living memory of Eisenhower as president is fading out of American life. And Eisenhower was a great president in a lot of ways. Created the highways, created the highway system, had a whole military industrial con against the military industrial complex. He was like the last president I think he had his progressive you know, this incremental approach towards like civil rights questions before we spiraled off into inverting the Constitution and like making affirmative action country. He was the one who said, oh, we're going to actually just we're going to have equal rights for Americans, not just unequal rights in a different way he balanced the budget. He actually cared about continuing to balance the budget. It was a period where America was we're in debt from the wars, yes, and he wanted to pay that down. It was a period where America was innovative, where America was had thriving trad cons and it was a period where Americas still put Americans first. We hadn't thrown open the borders. 00:55:05 Speaker 4: Yeah that was preheart seller. Yes, yeah, preheartseller. 00:55:08 Speaker 3: Eisenhower, great American any won World War Two, by the way, you know, throw that in there sometimes. 00:55:13 Speaker 4: Okay, So there's this movie, Jack, do you know the movie where I think it's called November twenty second, nineteen sixty three, and it's got like the yeah James Ranco where they they're back in the reassassination of JFK and I I often put myself in that same like. 00:55:34 Speaker 3: Like thought pattern. 00:55:35 Speaker 4: Because the Heart Celler Act Night sixty four changed the country permanently, Like we didn't necessarily feel the change. We talk about naturalizing all these immigrants and things like that, we didn't feel the change for decades. We really didn't feel it in earnest until after the nineteen ninety Immigration Act which is interesting. People don't know this, but JFK's brother was part of the sixty four Heart celler Act and he is also part of the nineteen ninety immigration reformat. 00:56:02 Speaker 3: Oh yeah, totally. 00:56:03 Speaker 4: Nineteen ninety went from in nineteen ninety, we went from five hundred thousand green cards a year and we just like more than doubled it to about one point two million. 00:56:10 Speaker 3: Or totally total insane, suicidal stuff. It's one Kennedy went. 00:56:15 Speaker 4: And by the way, what's ironic about this is Robert Kennedy dies and he's assassinated. JFK dies iss assassinated. The one Kennedy that actually had all this impact through immigration almost died in the car accident, but then he survived, and we you know. Anyways, it's an irony of history. 00:56:33 Speaker 3: It truly is. 00:56:37 Speaker 4: Hi, folks, Andrew Colvett here, I'd like to tell you about my friends over at why REFI. You've probably been hearing me talk about y REFI for some time now. We are all in with these guys. If you or someone you know is struggling with private student loan debt, take my advice and give them a call. Maybe you're behind on your payments, maybe you're even in default. You don't have to live in this night Mary anymore. Why ref I will provide you a custom payment based on your ability to pay. They tailor each loan individually. They can save you thousands of dollars and you can get your life back. We go to campuses all over American and we see student after student who's drowning in private student loan debt. Many of them don't even know how much they owe. Why reef I can help. Just go to y refi dot com. That's the letter, why then refi dot com And remember y Refi doesn't care what your credit score is. Just go to y refi dot com and tell them your friend Andrews sent you. 00:57:36 Speaker 3: Pull the staff on who they would put on the money. And so they created some of their national heroes. I think this is a Caboose said he wanted to put master Chief on the money. 00:57:47 Speaker 4: Master Chief, Yeah, master Chief. 00:57:49 Speaker 3: You know he defeated the Covenant. That feels very cool. What you don't you don't think defeat Americans? Achievement? American? Do we know is master Chief? And is master Yeah? They say he is an American syst You're you're denying citizenship to that great American hero. 00:58:04 Speaker 4: What about Baron Trump? Baron Trump who came up with that one forty one? There it is. Yeah, but the problem with this is you don't get a sense of out of tall. 00:58:14 Speaker 3: Yeah. Yeah, you gotta make it like I think it's got to be like a vertical bit. 00:58:17 Speaker 1: Why would you have Donald Trump before Baron Trump? 00:58:21 Speaker 4: Well, it's like the most obvious option, Like I'd be pro. 00:58:29 Speaker 3: What's that? 00:58:30 Speaker 1: I'm all in on Teddy? 00:58:32 Speaker 3: I like Teddy? 00:58:33 Speaker 1: Wait? 00:58:33 Speaker 3: How come I got no love like history? Love for uh? Calvin Coolidge? You went on this cable Coolish is good too. The thing about Calvin Coolidge is he's good, but he's so he's a somewhat unexciting type of good. 00:58:45 Speaker 4: Oh I love that. We need more unexciting good. Yeah you would agree with this, Yeah, yeah, for sure. 00:58:51 Speaker 3: He's a great one. You know, if you want to if you want a truth thought, Michael Jordan would be good. Michael Jordan Brady got seven championships. Jordan only got six. But Jordan was m VP I believe six different times. No wasn't he wasn't he the finals MVP all six times? Why do we do some of them in color? And some of them not we bow down before the AI gods. And also you can't make people. You've got to have the red on Jordan, otherwise people will wonder if he's wearing the Wizard's jersey and that'd be really lame, obviously, Lucas. No, you can't have what if? What if? 00:59:22 Speaker 1: They say, did you guys see the George Lucas meme this week? 00:59:24 Speaker 6: Yes? 00:59:25 Speaker 3: What if we had George Lucas? But it specifically said like Lucas, but only the originals like in PARENTHESI I could say. 00:59:32 Speaker 5: That, but as as as I'm as much, I'm loath to say. There was this meme of George Lucas earlier this week where it was just a picture of him and he was like, so, do you still think trade route disputes are a boring plot point? 00:59:49 Speaker 3: Yes? Yes, yeah, I'm I'm already tired of the strait of horn Moose. 00:59:53 Speaker 5: What about It's like, you gotta give him credit, you gotta give him credit on that, and I will I will say that as boring and terrible as a movie as Episode one is, and I'll die on that hill. That was just it was, It was it was trite that that that meme was certainly earned. The meme was certainly earned. 01:00:12 Speaker 4: So I have a I have a random thought that I don't know if I'm a last Star Wars. 01:00:15 Speaker 5: Continues to be faking gay What Star Wars. 01:00:20 Speaker 1: Continue to be faking gay shit? 01:00:24 Speaker 4: You know? 01:00:24 Speaker 3: If I have an actual I have a genuinely thought crimey I was about the thought. Oh, okay, you can thought crime in your money. But then I want a thought crime on money. No it's not. Oh it's not about money. Oh, so mine is still on the money one like a genuinely thought crimey thing. I think it would be cool to put on the money, and we've done it before, but people would lose their minds if we did it today. Did you know in nineteen thirty seven we put Walter Raleigh and Virginia Dare on the money. I did not know. So Walter Raleigh created the Roanoke Colony, which was lost, but it was the first English settlement in America, and Virginia Dare is the first person of English descent born in the Americas, and so in nineteen thirty seven, I believe it was the three hundred and fiftieth anniversary of the foundation of Roanoke and so they made a commemorative half dollar for it. And I think that'd be cool because we have we've had that discussion, Like, guys, is America diverse country? Yes? Is America people from all over? Yes? But America is descended from the English. It is an English country. What makes America great is the stuff we inherited from the English. And we should actually emphasize the English character of America. We should do it with Jamestown, we should do that with the Plymouth Colony, and we should do it with Roanoke. And so we should put Virginia Dare back on the money. 01:01:45 Speaker 4: Which is why throughout forty eight we should make a big deal about Calvin Coolidge. Look at that English bloke is actually English. I just had a good idea, probably, but probably go ahead. 01:01:57 Speaker 5: I just had a good idea, and I'm surprised that it didn't come to me intild now. And I don't know if this I'll have to look it up because I haven't done this, but just off the top of my head. 01:02:05 Speaker 1: Christopher Columbus. 01:02:08 Speaker 3: Columbus, Okay, but not angry. 01:02:10 Speaker 5: Christopher Columbus, because when you mentioned the first, how Virginia was the first, you know, sort of born American. 01:02:16 Speaker 1: That one thing. 01:02:17 Speaker 5: That I teach my kids is that Christopher Columbus was the first American. And we talk about this, you know, a lot, and he'll and they'll say, like, well, sometimes our our teacher says that Christopher Columbus wasn't the first American because the Indians were here and I was. And I pointed out, I said, well, if your teacher says that, then you can remind your teacher that the United States of America didn't exist until the European settlers got here because there. 01:02:39 Speaker 1: Was no America at that point. It's exactly such. By the way, Columbus is still the first American. 01:02:45 Speaker 4: If you have you ever read Christopher Columbus's journals and things like that, his personal writings, the man was extraordinarily godly actually, at least from his writings. Obviously we didn't know him, and maybe he was a closeted something or other, but like his his writings are incredibly I would say spirit filled. 01:03:05 Speaker 3: Actually, so yes, oh, Thomas, Well, I mean Columbus. 01:03:09 Speaker 5: The reason that he wanted to get the gold from the Indies was because if you look look at the time frame, so Constantinople had fallen in fourteen fifty three, so fourteen ninety two, you're about forty years later. He wanted to find to use the money to found a new crusade to retake the Holy Land, and starting with Constantinople, which had fallen into the Ottoman Turks at the you know, just a couple decades prior. 01:03:34 Speaker 1: And then after Ferdinand and. 01:03:35 Speaker 5: Isabella had finished had completed the Ray Conquista in Spain. You know, he was saying that, look, we need to retake Constantinople, we need to retake the Holy Land. 01:03:44 Speaker 1: And I'm going to. 01:03:45 Speaker 5: Go to the the you know, the Indies, collect all this gold and then we'll use that to fund the retaking of Constantinople. 01:03:51 Speaker 1: So again unfinished business. 01:03:53 Speaker 3: We've got some fun suggestions in here. I think I like the parents. Someone suggests Davy Crockett and James Bowie, both Alamo defenders. That could be an exciting one. Maybe someone can rip that up. Someone also suggested Rush and Charlie as as a dual team. Let's see Dylan. Dylan Ivy says Yuck to Coolidge, you should uh, you should should take that back, Dylan. You're very mistaken on that front. Cool keep cool with Coolidge. That was a great time to be American. He was a great American president. He uh was just good times under the coolster. 01:04:31 Speaker 4: He he believed in taking your medicine as a country. So instead of just inflating your way out of debt and spending yourself into oblivion, he was like, no, we're gonna let the markets correct and guess what, bad capital is gonna be wiped off the books, and we're gonna start from a much more firm foundation. Economically at the current America could never deal with that, but it was the right choice. So, by the way, just I know this is back to breaking news. You know these students at Odieu killed the shooter. Yeah, yeah, I want a Ratzi guy stabbed him. 01:04:59 Speaker 3: Yeah, that's that's pretty I. 01:05:01 Speaker 1: Didn't know that. 01:05:02 Speaker 5: Yeah, I've been on air a lot today and I'm not like I just I just haven't been following the news as much. 01:05:08 Speaker 1: What happened. 01:05:09 Speaker 4: They they he targeted the r O t C guys and killed one of the r O t C instructors and then one of the students R O t C guys killed him. 01:05:19 Speaker 3: What a hero. Totally put that guy on the money. Put him he can put him on money next to uh Zuzu suggested David Hasselhoff. Can we get that one? Although maybe could we get David Hasseloff maybe on an old reichs Mark because he was really big in Germany? Wait, okay, that's interesting. Who's the other guy with the mustache? Settler? Hitler was big in Germany. I don't know. I don't think. I don't think we should put I don't think we should put Hitler on the money. 01:05:44 Speaker 4: He was a lot of talking about Tom Selleck, right, okay, yeah, Tom selling. 01:05:51 Speaker 3: Tom Selleck didn't lead Germany in World War Two. 01:05:53 Speaker 4: I mean, you know, but he magnum p I was big in Germany. 01:05:57 Speaker 3: True story. Yeah, no, it is very funny. There's a lot of American celebrities who just become big in foreign countries. Did you know? Did you know the book Anne of green Gables is huge in Japan, So like Japanese tourists will go visit Prince Edward Island in Canada because they want to go visit green Gables. You know what we should do? Go ahead? 01:06:17 Speaker 5: Oh no, I was just gonna say in uh when I was in China, I remember that finding out that friends is like massive in China, like they just they love it. 01:06:26 Speaker 1: They all watch it to. 01:06:27 Speaker 5: Like learn English. They think it's the coolest thing. And then of course when I was there, I'd be like, yeah, I was. I was more of a Seinfeld guy, and they're like, what I guess like the I guess like a lot because you think of it though, so much of Seinfeld humor is like wordplay and puns and stuff like that, and it just it doesn't translate. 01:06:45 Speaker 3: Well, yeah, Dylan, Dylan says he takes it back. He was thinking of Harding the whole time we had this conversation. You can't mix up Harding in Coolidge. There there are totally different presidents, different people. One of them is a boring, forgettable twenties president and the other is an awesome forgettable twenties. So glad you're with me on the Coolidge. Yeah, Coolidge was great. Coolidge is the best Harding heart. What was funny about Hardin Harding was an extremely popular president while alive, and then he died and never owned realized there were a lot of problems. 01:07:13 Speaker 4: This is their election plant. Great here it says safe, sane, and steady. You guys can't see it, but we have, We have. 01:07:19 Speaker 3: Coolidge, We have Coolidge and DAWs. 01:07:24 Speaker 4: Every day Americans make choices that shape our country's future. Write down to which cell phone provider we support. Here's what most people don't realize. Patriot Mobile isn't just a wireless provider. They're an activist organization funded by selling top tier cell phone service. They've been out on the front lines defending our freedoms long before it was cool, standing in the gap when others wouldn't. The best part is they deliver prioritized premium cell phone service on all three major US networks, giving you the same or even better coverage backed by one US based customer support, get unlimited data plans, mobile hotspots, international roaming, and more. And when you switch to Patriot Mobile, you'll help grow a movement that fuels the Christian Conservative cause. Every bill you pay helps advance the values of faith, family, and freedom, and switching is easier than ever Activate in minutes, keep your number, keep your phone, or upgrade. 01:08:18 Speaker 3: Take a stand today. 01:08:19 Speaker 4: Go to Patriotmobile dot com slash Charlie, or you can also call nine seven to two Patriot and use the promo code Charlie for a free month of service. Once again, that's Patriotmobile dot com. Slash Charlie or call nine seven to two Patriot and use promo code Charlie for a free month of service. 01:08:37 Speaker 3: Canada since we have a five. All right, we very briefly have to hit Canada while we're talking about this stuff. Foundation that's not gonna have anything cool. 01:08:43 Speaker 1: We are. We finally going after the Great Satan. 01:08:46 Speaker 3: We need to go after the Great Satan because it's going it is going viral today. So what happened was in the benited nation of Canada, people are getting mad at a judge over this, and they really should not get mad about the judge. So this fellow he he murdered his girlfriend Everton javonn. Downey stabbed his girlfriend Melissa fifteen times in the stairwell of a shopping center in twenty twenty one, ending her life, and he they originally were seeking a sentence of well, so this is Canada. So what they do is you get sentenced to life in prison, but it's fake life in prison, and so they're like, okay, well he's sentenced to life in prison, but how long until he can get out from his life in prison? I saw your tweet on this and they were saying it was going to be fifteen years. They were seeking fifteen years, but British Columbia Supreme Court Associate Chief Justice Heather Holmes has decided to slash that pun intended to twelve years before this command can get out in Parrol because despite his you know, aggravated criminal record involving violence and firearms, she's required under a She's required under Canadian law to account for the fact that he's black and therefore he's probably just face depression in his life and so they shouldn't punish him as much. This is a requirement under Canadian law if you're black, or if you are a First Nations person. The Canadian law explicitly says you have to get special consideration for reduced sentences in criminal cases. 01:10:18 Speaker 4: That's insane. I loved your tweet about this. By the way, you should read it. Oh, I'll read it for you. Go for it out of respect for your good contribution here. Canada is an explicit apartheid state. By law, superior casts are punished less for crimes than inferior ones, with native born white Canadians as the most inferior group of all. Naturally inferior castes can also be legally excluded from jobs that are reserved exclusively by favored groups. Equality under the law is a moral principle, dating back all the way to the Torah. Canada is throwing that out. 01:10:54 Speaker 3: Charlie would always talk about. He loved to talk about how in I can't remember where exactly, but in the Torah, they're is a law that says like, you shall have the same law for rich and poor, for foreigner and in yourselves, like you have to have that basic quality the law. And he loved to tout that. And in America we're obviously imperfect on that front, we've eroded it in a lot of ways under leftism, but it's at least an ideal. In Canada, it's just explicitly legal, says some races get stricter punishments than others when they commit crimes in Canada. Like in America you have this song and dance where oh, we want to take diversity into account for this high ing and it's a travesty and we'd hate it. But in Canada you can just straight up post a job listing for and you say white men are not allowed to take this job. 01:11:41 Speaker 4: Really, like it's the inverse physics famous signs like blacks only. 01:11:44 Speaker 1: Yeah. 01:11:45 Speaker 3: Yeah, it's just straight up this job is only for a racial minority or a woman period. 01:11:49 Speaker 4: And by the way, they're going to do their darnedness to just keep importing more and more and more racial minorities to the point that the laws only favor the new majority. 01:11:56 Speaker 3: Yeah, and they're doing this all the time. They're also they have a whole mess going on where if you own property, they can avoid it. If a if an Indian tribe, if a First Nations tribe says that their oral tradition is that they're their traditional lands, where where yours, where your house is, they can take your house. That's unholy. A version of this happened in Los Angeles. 01:12:16 Speaker 4: Actually, remember Ryan James Gerdeski was suing on behalf of this because they made some law in the nineteen eighties to you know, essentially send more money in smaller class sizes for minorities schools, which they so now it's any school that's like over twenty five percent white is actually a segregated school exactly. So what's hilarious though, is that now this actually discriminates against the only minority that's left in Los Angeles, which is white schools, which so it's it's which is a massive minority in Los Angeles. 01:12:47 Speaker 3: So that's how Uh, wasn't their blake. 01:12:51 Speaker 5: Wasn't there something like now this this isn't in law, but wasn't there something similar kind of in practice when they were when they were looking at jury in group versus out bias in the United States, and they were trying to determine whether or not you know, you know, white juries and black juries and and you know, different different groups on juries were more biased regarding the the race the defendant. And I'm trying to summarize all this, you're right, And they found that that. 01:13:19 Speaker 1: White juries were the least the least likely. 01:13:23 Speaker 5: To show a racial bias, and in fact, would would punish their own, you know, their own race as much as anyone else. But it was the exact opposite when you had other juries. 01:13:33 Speaker 3: Yes, And we really shouldn't be surprised about this because actually, if you if you dive in to the psychological literature, one of the most important developments in Europe, in Northwestern Europe specifically, is they really developed this like kind of the extreme openness of treat everyone basically the same, don't favor your clan explicitly like that level of equality under the law and high trust, which is also what's causing all of our problems. That's the same. It's the same psychology that says it was a we could bring anyone into our country and have yeah, well and exactly right. 01:14:08 Speaker 4: So it was a societal advantage to have blind justice and equal rights for all, and it has now become a societal weakness that's been exploited by the open borders lobby and many others to damage our cultures and trying to honestly, it's the erasure of Western culture if you want another truant to. 01:14:30 Speaker 5: Canada, and and this and this of course came up when like right after Charlie was killed and they were trying to like pull you know, all the like Barack Obama was trying to pull certain quotes and take all this stuff out of context. But the point is is, like we here on this program, and as Charlie is, as far as I know, always said that we're for you know, what are we for? 01:14:52 Speaker 1: We're for color blind meritocracy. 01:14:55 Speaker 5: Just everything should just be based on merit, right, So it's now in this we're not talking about in this case, but we're talking about in just actual standards, just one standard for everyone and no caste systems, no fast lanes. No oh you get extra access to something, or you get extra points in the you know, in the admissions process because of like something that happened to your group or whatever. 01:15:18 Speaker 1: No, we're not doing it. We're just not doing it. 01:15:19 Speaker 5: We're for total blank you know, color blindness across the board and one standard. 01:15:25 Speaker 1: That's it, just one standard. 01:15:27 Speaker 4: Let the best man or woman win, depending on Yeah. Sometimes let the chips fall where they Let the chips fall where they may. 01:15:34 Speaker 3: I love that. 01:15:36 Speaker 4: Listen, we uh, our studio has a busy, busy uh weekend to here. So we're gonna wrap up. But this has been an important show in many ways because I actually think with everything that happened today, with these naturalized citizens, everything that's happened since the Iron Conflict kicked off, that if we don't change our ways now, if we don't actually get momentum behind reforming some of these issues, I'm not sure we're gonna die. We're gonna die. People are gonna die. And it you know, people like to turn this into a conversation about bigotry or xenophobia or racism. It's not that we did not have to worry when we got into foreign conflicts that you know, our Muslim new new citizens were going to be offended and start attacking us. You know, when we I don't know, went to war in World War two or even the Vietnam War. You don't even have to pick a popular war, pick an unpopular one. We didn't have to worry about this. You didn't have to worry about this in the Golf War. 01:16:33 Speaker 3: Yeah, and we won that war. Yeah. 01:16:37 Speaker 4: Anyways, Jack, thanks for joining us. Man any final thoughts. 01:16:43 Speaker 1: Thanks for joining us on thar crime. 01:16:48 Speaker 3: Co is committing them. 01:16:52 Speaker 5: I I know, no, I was just trying to think, guys, what should we So, you know, what should we all do for LUKX maxing this week? We all got it. We've all got to pick something real quick. Blake, I'm gonna I'm gonna do the mewing. I'm gonna you're gonna do how many I'm going to. 01:17:05 Speaker 3: Do one hundred and fifty push ups tonight? Okay, that's pretty good. 01:17:08 Speaker 1: Are you going to do push ups every day? 01:17:10 Speaker 3: I can do that one hundred fifty. 01:17:11 Speaker 1: I'm gonna I'm gonna mew I'm gonna start. 01:17:15 Speaker 5: You can't really chocolate your mewing, But I'm meaning right now, if it's great, going great, real great, and we'll see what my progress next week is. 01:17:24 Speaker 3: The point didn't make you look like this? Why No, it's gonna make a jaw like out, Like what do you mean? 01:17:32 Speaker 1: It's not gonna change your lips? 01:17:33 Speaker 3: All right, but if it. 01:17:34 Speaker 5: Does, I'll just get I'll just get like collagen and botox and stuff would be good. Oh, by the way, you know, just just since since we're we were mentioning looks maxing women, stop getting your Google fat removed. For the love of God, I guess Marco Robbie got it removed or something. It is awful. It is a war crime. It's a crime against nature. Stop it immediately, Yeah, removed. 01:17:56 Speaker 3: It's so bad. It's so bad here. It's the stuff like it makes you kind of baby face in your cheeks. And some people take it out and they think it makes them. 01:18:03 Speaker 5: Look but they, yeah, they take it, take it out, and it just looks. I'm sorry, it looks awful. It just looks what do you call it? 01:18:08 Speaker 3: Buckle fat? Like buckle, yeah, buckle, google something like that. 01:18:14 Speaker 1: Yeah, you look at it and after and it's never good. It's never good. 01:18:18 Speaker 4: Okay, all right, here we gotta throw this up. We got it because because now it's no, it's a thing. But these those that image is like kind of far far apart here. Oh yeah, it makes her look older for sure. 01:18:33 Speaker 3: No, I don't like it. 01:18:34 Speaker 4: Oh my gosh, oh hold on, hold on. 01:18:37 Speaker 3: I think there's there's like like, oh no, oh gosh, what are you doing? Hold on here? 01:18:45 Speaker 9: Yeah, here we go that she looks like, she looks like she looks like what's she looks like Uma Thurman right in in pulp fiction, like right before they have to stab the needle in her in her heart because she did the because she was o ding like I argue doing this. 01:19:00 Speaker 4: I don't know if that's actually her on the left, but that's her on the right. Afterwards, it kind of is like but honestly, it's kind of full circle. 01:19:07 Speaker 1: Put the other one up, put the other one up. 01:19:09 Speaker 3: It's it's actually a little frightening to me because you realize, like the intense pressure celebrities and movie stars get under, and you realize like they've always been pretty insane. But now we have more advanced ways for them to be completely insane, and they can they can go really nuts and like really mess themselves up. 01:19:28 Speaker 5: Only for a couple more years because AI is about to take all those jobs. 01:19:32 Speaker 3: Do you guys know that Oprah's like really thin? Now? 01:19:34 Speaker 5: Finally, Blake, Blake, You're not getting out of this without saying how you're gonna look Max. 01:19:40 Speaker 3: I'm gonna look Max by slamming my face into a table until it really toughens up my face and gives me an iron l facial features. 01:19:47 Speaker 1: All right, start right now, no time like the president. 01:19:51 Speaker 3: This reminds me. This reminds me of when Charlie did the banana. 01:19:54 Speaker 1: Pece, the ice box, the ice the ice bowl. 01:19:57 Speaker 4: Okay, I have a really studio right that right there. Hold on this. This is actually the best one I've seen right here. Throw this one up. This is probably pretty true to him. There's a little like German words in the middle here that it's. 01:20:13 Speaker 3: I don't like where they have that concavity in their cheeks. It doesn't It looks very wrong. 01:20:18 Speaker 1: Yeah, well you look like when she was on coke in pulp fiction. 01:20:23 Speaker 5: Right before they remember and they had they had stabbed the adrenaline into her heart. 01:20:27 Speaker 1: Yes, John Travolta, Yeah, pulp fiction. 01:20:30 Speaker 3: Yeah, I'm just I want to say that to upset people. I saw in Glorious Bastards and I think that was enough Quentin Tarantino for me. Full fiction so much, which I know Charlie watched, because Charlie would always pronounce the word nazy, which is it's glorious, like you clearly watching Glorious Bastards, and I I'm not sure if he thought that was the way it was, because he would say it even in serious you know, that's funny. 01:21:00 Speaker 4: I said the same thing I said, Don Lemon, and apparently a lot of people didn't know why I kept saying it that way. I got a bunch of people saying, like, why did you keep saying it, Don Lamon. 01:21:08 Speaker 3: I was like, it's that's well. You see. Half a decade ago, there was a running joke on a now canceled Fox News program in. 01:21:16 Speaker 4: Which Blake used to actually was writing the pronuncia. 01:21:21 Speaker 3: Imagine someone trying to do spelunking as a historian two hundred years from now and figure out. I guess they'll just have AI do all the work in the future. 01:21:30 Speaker 1: But it's like when I say, Jake Taper, Taper, we should end. 01:21:36 Speaker 3: This was a lot of fun. 01:21:38 Speaker 5: Jack take us away, Ladies and gentlemen, as always go out there and commit more thought crime. 01:21:47 Speaker 4: For more on many of these stories and news you can trust, go to Charlie Kirk dot com.